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history of American democracy, to say the least, has been checkered.
Our nation was founded at a time when people of African descent were
held in bondage. After slavery was abolished, they were forced to endure
legal discrimination for another 100 years.
When our country was formed, women were not just
second-class citizens. They were third- or fourth-class citizens. Women
couldn't vote or play a significant role in the political life of the
nation. Women, in many cases, couldn't own property and were legally
regarded as subservient in marriage. The educational and economic
opportunities open to women were extremely limited. And, of course,
women were unable to have control over their own bodies.
In the last 50 years, as the result of an enormous
amount of effort on the part of the women's movement and its male
allies, we as a nation have made significant progress in the fight for
gender equality. Clearly, much, much more needs to be done, but few
would deny that our country has come a very long way in this struggle.
In Vermont, Governor Madeleine Kunin has given years of service to our
state after becoming the state's first female governor in 1985. She is
an inspiration to girls throughout Vermont and the country in allowing
them to know that the opportunities they have are unlimited.
At rallies in Vermont and across the country this
weekend, our message was clear. We are not going back. Not only are we
not going to retreat on women's rights, we are going to expand them. We
are going forward, not backward.
We are not returning to the days of back-room
abortions, when countless women died or were maimed. The decision about
abortion must remain a decision for the woman, her family and physician
to make, not the government.
We are not going back to the days when women could not
have full access to birth control. Incredibly, here in the year 2012,
that is exactly what the Blunt Amendment, which we defeated last month
in the Senate, was all about. The Blunt Amendment would have allowed any
employer who provided health insurance, or any insurance company, the
right to deny coverage for contraception or any other kind of procedure
if the employer had a "moral" objection to it. While I am glad that we
defeated this horrendous amendment, it certainly was a sad day in our
country when every Republican, save one, voted for it.
We are not going back to the days of wide-scale
domestic violence, even if 31 Republican men in the Senate recently
voted against the reauthorization of the Violence Against Women Act
because it expanded coverage to the gay community and Native Americans.
We are not going back to the days when it was legal
for women to be paid less for doing the same work as men, even if the
governor of Wisconsin recently signed a bill to repeal that state's
pay-equity law.
Further, not only are we going to protect and expand
those laws which deal directly with women's rights, we are going to
vigorously defend the important laws and programs which protect all
working people in our country - women and men alike.
In the midst of this terrible recession we say NO to
cuts in Social Security, a program which is so important to all of our
seniors, but especially to women.
When 50 million Americans have no health insurance we
say NO to cuts in Medicare and Medicaid which protect tens of millions
of Americans, but is especially important to women and their children.
The right-wing in this country is waging a war against
women and, let me be very clear, it is not a war that we are going to
allow them to win.
But if they want political warfare, we must expand the field of battle, and we must be on the offensive.
Let us wage a moral and political war against the
billionaires and corporate leaders, on Wall Street and elsewhere, whose
policies and greed are destroying the middle class of America.
Let us wage a moral and political war against the
gross wealth and income inequality in America, the worst in the
industrialized world, which is tearing this country and our economy
apart.
Let us wage a moral and political war against a
dysfunctional health care system and fight for a Medicare-for-all
single-payer system.
Let us wage a moral and political war against war
itself, so that we can cut military spending and use that money for
human needs.
Finally, let understand that when we stand together,
we will always win. When men and women stand together for justice, we
win. When blacks, whites and Hispanics stand together for justice, we
win. When straights and gays stand together for justice, we win. When
young and old stand together for justice, we win. When working families
stand together, we win.
Vermont is a national leader in the fight for a new
health care system, for the transformation of our energy system, and in
support of family farming and organic agriculture. We were the first
state in the country to pass a civil union law and the first state to
pass gay marriage legislation without a court order.
Now, we must continue and expand our efforts to be national leaders in the fight for gender equality.
I have seven beautiful grandchildren, four of whom are
girls. Let us all work together in making sure that those four girls,
and every girl in our state and country, has the same opportunity as
anyone else to fulfill their dreams and live their lives without gender
discrimination of any kind.
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