No Legislation Without Fat And Female Representation

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Unless you’ve been living under a lovely rock this week (and I would love to crawl under there with you), you’ve heard about the Congressional investigation into the Affordable Care Act’s birth control mandate spearheaded by Congressman Issa.

Here’s an image showing who was allowed to speak.

Congressman Issa's All Male Birth Control Panel

Congressman Issa's All Male Birth Control Panel

Here are a few words from a woman who originally was asked to speak and then denied that right by Issa:

The only people asked to speak at this conference were men. Not only were they men, but they were all religious leaders who are anti birth control.

So much for fact finding, huh?

As I looked at this panel, my thoughts went to an earlier panel, convened in 2003 to consider “Obesity And Dietary Guidelines.”

Here’s the first panel:

2003 Congressional Obesity Fact Finding Panel

2003 Congressional Obesity Fact Finding Panel Part 1 (image courtesy of C-Span)

Hmmm, why is this so familiar?

And here’s the second panel:

2003 Congressional Obesity Fact Finding Panel Part 2

2003 Congressional Obesity Fact Finding Panel Part 2 (image courtesy of C-Span)

So Congress looked into the question of obesity, and thought it completely reasonable to (a) not include any women and (b) not include any fat people!

Back in 2003, I was working as an attorney and happened to read about the hearing. This was before I had an inkling that there was such a thing as fat activism, but I remember remarking to a fellow lawyer (who was pretty slim) that I thought it was wrong to have a hearing about fat people without any fat people present. The response I got was something like, “Of course, there aren’t any fat people there. Fat people obviously don’t know what to do about the obesity epidemic!”

At the time, her response really hurt. Even if I wasn’t a fat activist, I didn’t like seeing my body as part of a societal problem. And I thought my colleague was wrong. Legislation is supposed to be well-thought out. Our representatives are supposed to see the intended and unintended effects of the legislation they write, and part of that process is hearing from experts. After a lifetime of being fat in our society, I was an expert on fatness. I knew what it felt like to lose and gain weight over and over, to have trouble finding clothes, to feel like a second-class citizen solely based on my body size. There were millions of us that could have shared our story, so why weren’t we asked?

And the decades-long, sad history of the war on fat is that it has been waged on women’s bodies especially. The message we get, again and again, is that we should take up as little space as possible. That our voices shouldn’t be heard too much, and that voice is only valid if reverberating from a slim, youthful-looking, fair-skinned body. The war on fat is part and parcel of the war on women and the war on people of color.  The message we get is that we should let men (and only men) figure out what’s best for us.

Congressman Issa’s panel wasn’t just a blip, a weird moment in political history.  Neither was that obesity panel.  It is all part and parcel of the war on women’s bodies, and on the right of privacy, and bodily autonomy.  We have to keep fighting for real representation.

Elizabeth Cady Stanton "To deny political equality is to rob the ostracised of all self-respect" quote

Still True Today -- Elizabeth Cady Stanton (public domain image)

Golda is a certified holistic health counselor and founder of Body Love Wellness, a program designed for plus-sized women who are fed up with dieting and want support to stop obsessing about food and weight. Go to http://www.bodylovewellness.com/free to get your free download — Golda’s Top Ten Tips For Divine Dining! And, please join her and twenty of the biggest names in HAES(R) and Fat Acceptance at the Body Love Revolutionaries Telesummit.

4 thoughts on “No Legislation Without Fat And Female Representation

  1. On Fox News the other week one of their nightly commentators (i’m sorry- I really don’t know anyone at Fox’s name) had a panel to discuss this issue. There were about 10 or so people on it and they were all men. More than that they were all some form of religious leader. And of course their advice was that we womenz-typez start having somez betterz moralz. No women were ever asked for THEIR opinion because what say should we have in something that effects us? Duh….none! /End sarcasm

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