An occupational hazard of being a left-activist in Hull is that more often than not, very simple arguments you’d thought you’d won a long time ago rear their ugly Dickensian heads to take another pop. This Tuesday evening it was the turn of the ‘pro-lifers’ under the guise of the Christian Network to turn up the heat. The speaker - a PhD student from Oxford but who was not a woman - was from a very shady organisation known as the Christian Medical Federation, a group that presents bigoted religious views as medical fact. Seemingly above the ‘moral’ standards that they preach, this organisation has lied continuously about the effects of abortion (see www.ministryoftruth.me.uk/tag/christian-medical-foundation).While the talk given was very academic and set out as a ‘conversation’, the conclusion was very moralistic... and there was no conversation (the bloke spoke for about 30mins, then we we’re allowed questions, then he spoke for roughly another 20mins). The speaker claimed that abortion was entirely moral and not at all political - this was a major problem - It is entirely political. The reasons women terminate pregnancies are not because they are "immoral beings", but because of emotional and socio-economic circumstances, but like most pro-life activists this was dismissed as irrelevant. Perhaps if working-class women had more faith they would forgo any choice over their own bodies?
Hull-left activist Steve Wood made the point to the speaker that if his dream of criminalising abortions was to come true, then the rich would still be able to afford decent black-market abortions on the sly whilst working-class women would be forced back to the alleys, but he wasn’t budging. At the end quotes from the good-book were given as a salute to the Christian majority in the room, and for those of us who were wondering when the attempt of conversion was coming, an invitation to attend future prayer meetings and the like.
So what should we learn from this experience? Well, the next time I take my free water outside Asylum on a Wednesday night, I’ll remember the motives of the people handing them out. Far from benevolent youngsters organising BBQ’s and football matches, these are people with a very clearly defined position on our rights as students, or more specifically, as women’s rights as women: Abortions should be illegal, and if you have an abortion, you are immoral.
We were shocked at the lack of Union representation at the event – especially as access to abortion is a student welfare issue. Indeed the only opposition came from Hull-Left activists and members of the women’s committee (notably minus the women’s officer elect).
No need to spell out where Hull-left stand on this:
Unconditionally for a women’s right to choose ; Unconditionally against religious bigotry on our campus!
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