๐ฑ The Canary in the Cole Mine | Women Who've Led the Way
Part III: Old Laws Trap US in Patriarchy
Hey y'all, welcome back! ๐๐ผ
Despite old man Comstock, his old timey friends, and some modern-day capitulation trampling on women and queer freedoms, there are also countless femmes in history who have fought back and won. We can learn from our femme ancestors and the hermanas who fight globally today. Read on for more...
In Case You Missed It:
๐ฑ for activists: ๐ฑ The Comstock Act Rising from the Dead
๐ for communicators: ๐ How Do You Learn?
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- ๐ AG Ken Paxton Arrests Latina Midwife in Texas - ๐ค Texas GOP ramps up its legal misogyny by charging a midwife in Texas for felony abortion. Itโs no coincide they chose clinics that โprovided health care to a primarily Spanish-speaking, low-income community.โ (Very relevant to todays topic)
- ๐ Khalil Mahmoud Sues Columbia University for Privacy & Data - ๐ค The man who was kidnapped by the Trump Admin and extradited to Louisiana to manipulate our laws and silence activists who speak out. He is listed amongst Columbia and Barnard students in a lawsuit against Columbia University to stop the release of student records and private information to the U.S. House Committee on Education and the Workforce. This is the canary in the coal mine. Without our 1st Amendment protections, we let fascism takeover.
- ๐ธ MicroPlastics Takeover - ๐ค Dana Zhaxylykova, a microplastics researcher points out that every living organism is infected with microplastics so itโs challenging to run control tests. Cool cool! The fossil fuel/plastic industry spend lots of money to bury the truth and harms of unstoppable plastics growth. (read plastic series)
- ๐ฌ The Irish on the U.S. & St Patrickโs Day - ๐ค โYou die your river green. And let it be seen by the world. That we love Ireland. You can keep it. You can keep your leprechaun hats, And your novelty paddy caps, Swap it for a keffiyeh.โ
- ๐๏ธ Abortion Laws & the Legal Fight for Reproductive Justice - ๐ค One of our subscribers, Carolyn Silveira, from the Extraordinary podcast shared a timely episode with Mary Ziegler, a legal historian and expert on the American abortion debate. They explore the legal history of abortion from the 1800s to the present, and how it evolved along with changes in medical science, politics, and the Supreme Court.
๐ฟ Donโt forget to scroll to the end and watch our weekly video for activists where we dive into on a weekly news topic.

- โ๐ผ Protect Mahmoud Khalil and Our Right to Political Protest - ๐ค "The arrest and kidnapping of legal green card resident, Mahmoud Khalil, is a blatant act of authoritarian violence, which will not end here. The MAGA regime is testing its ability to silence political dissent, beginning with immigrant students who protested for Palestinian human rights." Use Get Free's easy tool to email your representatives demanding our "leaders" defend and expand our freedom to protest.
- ๐ Talking to Friends About Trumpโs Abuse of Executive Power - Ryan Harter has a helpful and easy to read guide of ALL of Trumps abuse of executive power. He's created it specifically to help you talk to your people who supported Trump or are ambivalent. Trump supporters have been lied to and are being taken advantage of. We can't move our world out of this hellscape without talking and organizing. (Read our series on Deep Canvassing)
- ๐ Weโre on BlueSky & Mastodon - ๐ค Good news! We are live on BlueSky thanks to the decentralized internet. Iโve linked our Mastodon and BlueSky accounts so I can interact on both platforms without switching apps and being locked into platforms. Learn more about bridging your decentralized social profiles. (Follow us on BlueSky and Mastodon)
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Believe the Canary in the Coal Mine
Part III: Old Laws Trap US in Patriarchy (See Parts I, II, III)
The series I wrote for Women's History Month in 2024 was meant as a manual to prepare for the election. Now, it is a manual for how they will attack women's rights and what we can do about it. This month, I'll be re-releasing our series from March 2024. (YouTube video)
Originally aired: March 29, 2024
Last week's newsletter was a big one and very timely! Abortion rights are on the ballot in the U.S. election this year and the right-wing is not hiding their eagerness to keep taking more and using old man Comstock to do it. Just this week, we had two reminders:
- Justice Sam Alito's hairy ears must have perked up last week because he seems very excited about the future prospects of the Comstock Act. In this week's hearings on possibly banning the abortion pill, Alito was giving away the plan without using the name Comstock. The court may be skeptical in this case, but that won't last long. I highly recommend listening to the 17-minute update from Strict Scrutiny about the latest on the mifepristone case.
- On a more positive note, Democrat Marilyn Lands won a landslide victory in deep red Alabama! And y'all...it wasn't even close. The special election results have her up 25 points, which is a pretty big reversal from her 7 point loss in 2022. She ran directly against the recent fetal personhood ruling by Alabama's Supreme Court and resulting short-lived IVF ban. She also ran for expanding freedoms and accessible, affordable healthcare.
Believe the Canary in the Cole Mine
Both of these news stories illustrate my point for this week. We are nearly two years out from the overturning of Roe v. Wade in June 2022 and many of the predictions that abortion activists and other women, queer, trans, and non-binary people were yelling at the time have come true. It's been frustrating, to say the least, to watch as right-wing judges and lawmakers do exactly what they've said they would only for the press and moderate lawmakers to act surprised.
Reading the book 'The Man Who Hated Women: Sex, Censorship, and Civil Liberties in the Gilded Age' by Amy Sohn for this month's series was really illuminating. Not only did it highlight the repressive forces in our history, but also the progressive people who helped influence and bring about change despite the overwhelming forces of white supremacist capitalist patriarchy (as bell hooks refers to it). While Comstock's law kept us back to remain puritanical, countless people, mostly women and trans people, stood up to educate the public and give working class people more power and agency. Their stories reminded me that we have always faced these forces against women and LGBTQ+ folks and that there have always been people who have successfully pushed back and influenced change. I recommend you read the whole book, but here are a few stories:
- Margaret Sanger โ is most well known for combatting Comstockery. Starting in the 1910s, she began selling contraceptives, which eventually led to founding the American Birth Control League in 1921. If that doesn't ring a bell, then you might know Planned Parenthood Foundation, which it later became.
- Ann Lohman - was a successful abortionist, under the alias Madam Restell, at a time when men were using government and the creation of medical schools and accreditations to push women out of the field. "to understand the mid-19th century crackdown on abortion, one must understand it as a business that has been dominated by women." By 1878, Comstock had found his cause to arrest her, she was indicted, and she ultimately chose to commit suicide. Comstock had a reputation for driving his targets to suicide.
- Dr. Sara Chase โ was a 41-year old single mom and physician who wouldn't have it with Comstock's claim that sharing information about sex education, reproduction, and feminine hygiene was illegal. She was fierce in pushing back against the suppression of medical information and contraception and advocated for women leadership in medicine.
"Anthony Comstock's reign was devastating to American women, but his era was a thrilling period of transformative feminist activism. [The activists] placed women's bodies, and pleasure, at the center of the debate over sexuality and obscenity." โ Amy Sohn
Women at the time recognized the need for class solidarity in the movement to overcome patriarchy and ensure the freedom of everyoneโs bodies and the ability to act with agency. This is why Alabama's special election can be another stepping stone to a much bigger movement.
Taking a Lesson from Nuestres Hermanes

I heard USF Professor Elisabeth Jay Friedman speak about the womenโs movements in Latin America over a year ago but it still sticks with me. In addition to her wild rainbow sleeves and green bandana๐คฉ, I loved what she had to say about modern feminism.
She told the story of the Ni Una Menos movement and the movement to end feminicรญdio in Latin America. The term feminicรญdio speaks to the brutal violence perpetrated against women and trans people simply because they are feminized. The mass movement is one of the largest in Latin America and brought in a wave of progressive legislation to end gender-based violence and bring in more representation in government leadership. The movement started in 2015 in Argentina, but quickly spread to other countries in the region because of the success of the social media campaigns. My favorite factoid is that the movement's name comes from a 1995 phrase by Mexican poet and activist Susana Chรกvez (not related).
Elisabeth emphasized that this massive movement for solidarity was built through smaller conversations. Through salons or listening parties similar to what feminist activists did during the Comstock Era. Women and LGBTQ+ people were able to share their experiences of gender-based violence and what it was like generally to live in a society that does not stop this kind of violence. By hearing other women's experiences, they were able to build a mass movement of true solidarity that spanned class, race, and religious lines. They started their movement through deeper connections as well as using social media and tech to bring more people into the movement. Itโs worth it to learn more about Ni Una Menos and their movement of solidarity to end the harmful machismo culture and build a progressive future.
Joy is Central to Mass Movements
Lately, Iโve been thinking about joy in activism. We know how the right-wing recruits people to its movement, through fear, rage, and the desire to return to the repressive past of the Comstock Era.
In contrast, our movement is about a bold and positive vision for the future for everyone, but it's also mixed with anger against an unjust system that continues to try to silence women, LGBTQ+ folks, Black people, and all marginalized groups. That is the kind of energy that worked for Ni Una Menos. It was a mixture of righteous anger at an unjust society and the joy of camaraderie within the movement.
The Alabama special election win is an example of that. It's in a long line of Democratic and pro-abortion wins since the Supreme Court's decision. Listen and remember this:
Every single time. I keep hearing, my friend, Natalie Burdick's advice in my ear every time abortion comes up. (want to feel hope before the election? listen to our podcast episode.) If anyone doubts that abortion will be on the ballot this year, then they're not paying attention to election results.
"they will exist until women rise in one big sisterhood to fight this capitalist society which compels a woman to serve for the interest of menโ
โ Margaret Sanger
We can be a part of a mass movement to say no to people who try to control us and limit our freedoms. It's a movement that needs to be multi-racial, multi-generational, inclusive, and joyful in our vision mixed with a little righteous anger.
By the turn of the century, the U.S. was turning more progressive and Comstockery was laughed out of town for its prudishness, control, and repression of thought. The Comstock Act was pushed back into the deep shelves to gather dust. Let's do the same again in 2024!
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Chuck Schumer and Democratic Leadership aren't meeting the moment. Here's how we can demand more. Watch the clip on YouTube
And that's a wrap on this weekโs newsletter! We hope you found this helpful in your work. Forward this to a friend and help democratize communications! If you have any topics you want covered, questions, or curious about our Assist an Activist program, please reach out and let me know.
In Solidarity,
Sam Chavez
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