I'm going to go out on a limb here. I basing this on nothing more than the photo and what is said in the Tweet. That thing Biden is talking to is a male to female trannie. She was probably dinging Biden for not supporting full Federal funding to trannie surgery including helping trannies get pregnant.
That's my guess. I'll research this and get back to you shortly.
"Womxn" has been used in a similar manner as womyn and wimmin. Due to transgender women and women of color's perceived exclusion from the usage of these respellings, an "x" is used to "broaden the scope of womanhood," to include them. The Women's March on Seattle uses womxn.
Best I can tell it's another way of saying "give me free shit" and I love Communism.
The term “reproductive justice” was coined in 1994 by a group of black women activists to emphasize the necessity of placing reproductive rights and health in a broader social justice framework. What that means in practice is that we can’t divorce the battle for abortion rights and reproductive health care from struggles against racism, economic inequality, homophobia, and transphobia—because these things also affect whether and how people are able to make decisions about their bodies, their families, and their lives.
It’s not enough to ensure that contraception and abortion are legal if many people are still unable to access them because of poverty and marginalization. Reproductive justice also means that those who choose to parent should be able to raise their children in safe and healthy surroundings, free from violence, discrimination, and environmental pollution.
As Naa Hammond of Groundswell Fund notes in the above video, “historically, this is a movement that has been deeply intersectional”—one that centers the experience and insights of women of color, low-income women, and LGBTQ people.
Reproductive justice advocates in the United States are fighting to ensure that people have access to abortion, contraception, comprehensive sex education, and prenatal and childbirth care. But they’re also asking why parents in places like Flint, Michigan, must raise children without clean water because of environmental racism, challenging flawed immigration and criminal justice systems that tear families apart, and working to end violence against trans and gender-nonconforming people.
Comments
That's my guess. I'll research this and get back to you shortly.
But it is a trannie
Telling
"Womxn" has been used in a similar manner as womyn and wimmin. Due to transgender women and women of color's perceived exclusion from the usage of these respellings, an "x" is used to "broaden the scope of womanhood," to include them. The Women's March on Seattle uses womxn.
The term “reproductive justice” was coined in 1994 by a group of black women activists to emphasize the necessity of placing reproductive rights and health in a broader social justice framework. What that means in practice is that we can’t divorce the battle for abortion rights and reproductive health care from struggles against racism, economic inequality, homophobia, and transphobia—because these things also affect whether and how people are able to make decisions about their bodies, their families, and their lives.
It’s not enough to ensure that contraception and abortion are legal if many people are still unable to access them because of poverty and marginalization. Reproductive justice also means that those who choose to parent should be able to raise their children in safe and healthy surroundings, free from violence, discrimination, and environmental pollution.
As Naa Hammond of Groundswell Fund notes in the above video, “historically, this is a movement that has been deeply intersectional”—one that centers the experience and insights of women of color, low-income women, and LGBTQ people.
Reproductive justice advocates in the United States are fighting to ensure that people have access to abortion, contraception, comprehensive sex education, and prenatal and childbirth care. But they’re also asking why parents in places like Flint, Michigan, must raise children without clean water because of environmental racism, challenging flawed immigration and criminal justice systems that tear families apart, and working to end violence against trans and gender-nonconforming people.
What is Because you elected a corrupt and incompetent city leadership for $500 Alec?
or was this a rhetorical question?