
For three days, the image (pictured above) of a beautiful little girl stood 29-feet high and 16-feet wide over the Soho district with the words:
"The Most Dangerous Place for an African American Is In the Womb."
As criticism of the racially motivated billboard, labeling the wombs of African-American women "dangerous," reached a fever pitch, Louisiana-based Lamar Advertising ordered it removed from the corner of Sixth Avenue and Watts Street, in New York City.
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The Texas-based organization, Life Always, responsible for the blatantly prejudicial message also forgot one small detail:
They didn't get permission from the child's mother to use her daughter's image.
Two years ago, when Tricia Fraser took her four children to take modeling photos, she thought that she would not see the pictures again. Fraser says that she had no idea about the ad until a friend told her about it, and in disbelief, she and 6-year-old Anissa Fraser, went to see for themselves.
"[My daughter] said, 'Look mommy, it's me!'" Ms. Frazier told Fox5 News. "That's as far as it goes with her. I would never endorse something like that, especially with my child's image. I know what I went in to that shoot for, and that's not something that I would have agreed to."
According to Life Always spokesperson Marisaa Gabrysch, "The image was properly licensed through a reputable stock image service. We'll be looking in to the origin of the image and are certainly open to talking to the family directly if they have any concerns."
"It's down," Peter Costanza, the general manager for Lamar Advertising, said in a telephone interview on Thursday. "Why did I take it down? Yesterday, somebody came in to the restaurant [Lupe's East L.A. Kitchen] harassing the waiters and waitresses. I don't want any violence to happen around the buildings there."
According to a statement issued by the Women of Color Policy Network, NYU Wagner, Mr. Costanza responded affirmatively that they would remove the billboard in direct response to phone calls and letters of criticism.
In response to the controversial billboard, NARAL Pro-Choice America spokeswoman Mary Alice Carr said, "They're attacking women for choosing abortion while simultaneously destroying family planning. Their hypocrisy is as large and as obnoxious as this billboard.
"The issue here is that they are doing a campaign, targeting one group of women and making them feel guilty and shameful about family choices that they are making," Carr continues. "You can't take a woman and lift her out of her experience."
According to Rebecca Wind, a spokeswoman for the Guttmacher Institute, it is true that "African-Americans have high abortion rates compared with other demographic groups." However, the disparity stems primarily from "lack of adequate services" in many black communities, which "has resulted in more unintended pregnancies."
Civil Rights leader Rev. Al Sharpton was prepared to go to war on the campaign:
"The billboard was offensive, especially during Black History Month, and I had intended to hold a press conference Friday in front of the billboard to protest the message of racial profiling and against a woman"s right to choose," Sharpton said Thursday.
This is a victory for the pro-choice movement, albeit a measured one. The poisonous rhetoric polluting these campaigns is where the problems lies, not with the underlying message itself. I don't believe that pro-birth advocates are even aware of what that billboard message conveys or how it subliminally reflects society's low opinion of African-American women.
If you really want to have a relevant conversation, let's discuss the hypocrisy of conservatives donating to these organizations, while simultaneously advocating for severe cuts in social programs and maintaining a strong opposition to improving health care for low-income families.
Let's talk about the refusal to see women, of any color, as the only ones who control their bodies, demonstrating that misogyny is alive and well.
I abhor the history of Planned Parenthood, and as such, would never utilize their services for even so much as a pap smear; however, they do serve a purpose. Eighty-two percent of their clients receive services to prevent pregnancy, not terminate them.
That is a fact that many "pro-life" organizations like to brush over as they target the reproductive rights of African-American women.
If pro-life groups are genuinely concerned with the well-being of African-American children, the key lies in first being concerned with the mental, physical, emotional and societal health of their parents.
The problem has never been about empowering women with choices, but attempting to shame them in to one.


Comments: (72)
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By: Robert on 3/02/2011 2:56AM
I'm a lesbian White woman who will NEVER have children naturally. I think ALL women should stand up and have free choice. I know most of you can't afford sugar for your Kool-Aid but when it comes to birth that's your CHOICE! It's the only freedom you DO have. I was just telling my adopted Asian daughters (I have 6 all from the same village isn't that weird?) just yesterday that they have a right to CHOOSE. I think Black women are making too much of a fuss I mean all they have to do is take their Ivy League salary and go to the abortion clinic like my straight friend Barbara does when she makes a "mistake" at one of her parties. I mean she has a successful career why should she sacrifice it by being weighted down NOW, in her 40's! And gay rights for all races I mean wouldn't it be great to just walk down a street in Alabama and say "I'm gay and I'm proud!" Those Southerners are so nice to me (as long as they don't know I'm gay, tee hee) And legalize pot, I mean we women have all the freedoms we want, what's left except legalizing my relaxtion time. Raising 6 girls on a strictly vegan diet is exhausting! Save a whale, kill a baby!
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By: michael lofton on 3/05/2011 7:34PM
“@ Michael...I agree with most of your comments except about President Obama. The black community has many issues that were there before he became president and I for one do not expect him to try and solve every black issue especially the issues that relate to personal choices and responsibilty.” by pimpinperry2
......More than any other function, all elected officials are under oath to respect the rule of law, which is true for every issue, be it Black, Caucasians, Hispanic, etc., etc., as it related to any U.S. citizen who petitions his or her elected officials for redress for the atrocities of government.
Unfortunately, the Black community and/or past, and present elected Black leaders place more value in serving unions, illegal/undocumented immigrants, and/or personal friends....
.....at the expense of the essence of what it means to be an elected official.
http://whoneedsahypocrit.blogtownhall.com/
http://onetime.blogtownhall.com/
http://againstallodds.blogtownhall.com/
With good reason I have contempt for President Barack "the Magic Negro" Obama, multiple members of the Congressional Black Caucus, and/or other elected Black leaders at the city, county, State and/or Federal levels who have no regard for his or her oath of office to uphold the rule of law, the U.S. Constitution, any respective State Constitution…..
……when these individuals are petitioned for redress for the atrocities of a government seriously gone awry. As it stands, the Black community more than any other community, is a community subject to “Taxation Without Competent Representation”
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