“ERA – JUST ONE MORE STATE!!!!”
For
baseball fans like me, ERA stands for “earned run average,” which used to be a
pretty good measure of a pitcher’s ability.
It has been replaced (sort of) by more modern measurements, but it still
remains a good one. I’m thinking of that
because Major League Baseball season starts this week, and though I’m not a fan
of a particular team (I would be more of a Braves’ fan, if they would drop
their racist name and “tomahawk chop”), I do enjoy the game. Baseball at least has minor league teams in
which the players get some of the money.
Many of us are now watching college basketball’s March Madness – none of
those players get any of the billions made on the tournament.
But,
the spring has made me digress – the more important definition of “ERA” is
Equal Rights Amendment, first introduced in Congress in 1921 by Alice Paul and
others of the National Women’s Political Party.
The National Women’s Party still exists, and their headquarters is in
the amazing Belmont-Paul National Women’s House in DC – go see it, if you have
not already done so!
The
current version of the ERA reads like this: “Equality of rights under the law
shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or any State on account of
sex.” This past week (March 22) was the 47th
anniversary of Congress and the Senate adopting the ERA as the proposed 27th
Amendment to the Constitution and sending it on to the states. The first state to approve it was Hawaii, and
in the early 1970’s it looked like it would pass the necessary 38 state
legislatures. The right-wing got fired
up, however, because they correctly perceived that the ERA would permanently
codify the fact that women should control their bodies. The FGFBM (Forced Gestation and Forced Birth Movement)
started a campaign of fear and repression and appealed to the male supremacy
that is deeply embedded in our culture.
The movement to pass the ERA in the 1970’s stalled at 35 states, but
many people continued to work on its passage.
Especially after the election of the misogynist Donald Trump as
president, the movement has regained some momentum. Two more states (Nevada 2017) and Illinois
(2018) have approved the ERA as a constitutional amendment, so only one more
state is needed to ratify it – yes, that’s right – JUST ONE MORE STATE.
Some
of the states that have ratified it have since rescinded their ratification,
but that act will not likely stand up in court.
If you’re wondering if we still need the ERA, just remember “Brett
Kavanaugh” and just remember that three white, male supremacist states from the
pro-slavery South (my state of Georgia being one of them) have just adopted the
“heartbeat” bill, which would effectively institute the FBFGM in these
states. There are 13 states left who have
not ratified the ERA: nine states in the
former Confederacy, and these four outside the Confederacy: Arizona, Missouri, Oklahoma, and Utah. Tennessee and Texas legislatures have
ratified the ERA, and these 9 pro-slavery states are still holding out: Arkansas (my home state), Alabama, Florida,
Georgia (my current state – it was introduced this year but got nowhere in the
white male supremacist culture of the state legislature), Louisiana,
Mississippi (my forebears’ home), North Carolina, South Carolina, and Virginia.
Why
all this detail? So that all of us in
these 13 states can work for one (or more) of these states to adopt the
ERA. It would be a fitting tribute for the
100th anniversary of the passage of 19th amendment,
giving women the right to vote, in 2020. The work towards the passage of the 19th
Amendment officially began in 1848 in Seneca Falls, New York, at the first
national women’s convention to obtain the right to vote for women. Seventy-two years later it became law, and
only one person (Charlotte Woodward Pierce) who had attended the 1848
convention was still living at that time.
In last week’s blog, I talked about “intersectionality,” and I noted how
women’s rights were always at the center of the discussion of
intersectionality. Nowhere is that seen
more clearly than in the struggle for the ERA – its passage would not end the
struggle, as we have seen with the 14th Amendment, but at least
fundamental, constitutional rights for women would finally be codified. If you’re living in one of the 13 states
named above, join me in getting to work on our state’s passing of the ERA –
JUST ONE MORE STATE!