Like many women who are also human beings, I?ve been following the twists and turns of the ?War on Women? meme for weeks now, wondering what the heck it is we?re all meant to be fighting about. It seems that some women are worried that a President Mitt Romney and Republican Congress would?as they have promised?move against fair pay for equal work, toss between 14 and 27 million people off Medicaid (of whom about two-thirds are women), cut child care, health care, and food assistance for about 20 million children, defund Planned Parenthood, do away with Title X, and maybe seat a Supreme Court willing to reverse Roe v. Wade. Republican women, in their defense, argue that these and other legislative initiatives don?t constitute a war on women, so much as a difference in philosophy, or as 14 Republican Congresswomen put it yesterday in Politico: ?We don?t see our lives as a product of government handouts. In fact, we resent the idea that we owe our success to bureaucrats, and not our own initiative.? As the writers conclude, ?We have a right to be self-confident, and we have a right to be suspicious of politicians who say we should be dependent on government programs.?
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