North Carolina
Preparing my daughter for the fight: Lessons on freedom after Roe • NC Newsline
When Roe v. Wade was overturned, my teenage daughter came out of her room, crying, and asked me to stop working for a minute and just listen. She said she knew if she ever needed an abortion, I would make sure she had access. “But what about my friends?” she asked. Terrified and enraged at the Supreme Court’s decision, she said she felt the country was going backwards.
Those same thoughts ran through my head just 30 years earlier. When I was a teenager in the Pacific Northwest, my unplanned pregnancy happened while I dealt with my own personal and family struggles. As a 19-year-old full-time college student and new U.S. resident, I was lucky to recognize and leave an abusive relationship. I was also lucky to be living in Washington – a state with very few restrictions on access to abortion care.
My friend Gabby supported me through every step of my abortion: from my decision-making process to scheduling my appointment to the aftercare. The clinic offices never made me feel ashamed. Although I was nervous, I trusted the medical staff attending me, and I didn’t stress about a 72-hour waiting period or unnecessarily invasive ultrasound. The office was professional and compassionate – unlike many “anti-abortion centers” that now feature without pictures of babies and families to elicit unnecessary guilt on an already difficult day.
As a queer, Latine mother, I can’t stand on the sidelines while my daughter’s generation has less freedom than I did and when they are forced into futures they don’t choose for themselves. To be clear, the criminalization of contraception, limiting of sex education, weaponizing access to life-saving healthcare, and the ongoing coercion and sterilization are not the civic or public health traditions I want to pass down to her.
What I do pass down to my daughter is the history and the importance of the Green Wave Movement – the global Latine-led movement for reproductive rights that made abortion access possible in Mexico, Argentina, Colombia. In the Green Wave, it’s reiterated that Latine folx have been having abortions for centuries. We have shared medicines, teas, and passed on our rituals and approaches outside of Western medicine. Our ancestry breaks the taboo and interrupts the shame that keeps us as women, as queer, as immigrant pregnant people silent. We are many.
My daughter, now a college senior, is my moral compass. I aim to create a better world for her and for generations after her. And so, as the election approaches, I want to tell her and maybe all of us: do not lose hope—do more than vote.
Across the nation, a growing number of states—including Iowa, Florida, Arizona, Texas, South Carolina, and Georgia—impose severe early abortion restrictions that profoundly affect women, especially in the Latine community. The 2023 disciplinary action against Indiana’s Dr. Caitlin Bernard also highlights how state level sanctions have serious impacts as patients and providers across state lines. In North Carolina, SB20 restricts abortion care to up to 12 weeks, while other strict yet vague laws cause confusion around the healthcare that pregnant people can get, endangering mothers, forcing them to give birth in unsafe locations and miscarry in public restrooms. These, combined with immigration-targeted bills like HB10, seem to be an assault on Latine lives.
Since the fall of Roe, abortion access has most significantly impacted Latine communities in the U.S. via the intersection of state-by-state legislation, geographic densities and age. Criminalization, punishment, and stigma will only continue to endanger our lives, limit our economic opportunities, and jeopardize our self-determination. Even after the harm of denied care, we are denied justice – like in Texas v. Zurawski. Generations of Latine voters are activated by the racism and sexism perpetuated by state laws, and we demand a fresh start for the whole of our country.
We must stand together as we march towards access to quality, medically necessary care. We must rise to be counted as part of a transnational, multi-lingual, racial, and cultural movement to combat machista culture and dangers of Western conservative patriarchy.
Stigma and criminalization should have no home in health clinics. The right to legal, safe, and shame-free reproductive freedom and care is needed now! Our call to action is clear: no fear in healthcare. May our voices at the ballot box, on social media, and at our kitchen tables be the Green Wave that we need and deserve.
La Marea Verde no para. The Green Wave does not stop.
North Carolina
North Carolina's November employment figures released — Neuse News
Raleigh, N.C. – The state’s seasonally adjusted November 2024 unemployment rate was 3.7 percent, unchanged from October’s revised rate. The national rate increased 0.1 of a percentage point to 4.2 percent.
North Carolina’s unemployment rate increased 0.1 of a percentage point from a year ago. The number of people employed decreased 1,747 over the month to 5,065,649 and increased 4,027 over the year. The number of people unemployed increased 109 over the month to 197,114 and increased 9,135 over the year.
Seasonally adjusted Total Nonfarm employment, as gathered through the monthly establishment survey, increased 15,000 to 5,042,000 in November. Major industries experiencing increases were Professional & Business Services, 6,700; Construction, 3,800; Education & Health Services, 3,400; Other Services, 2,600; Leisure & Hospitality Services, 900; Trade, Transportation & Utilities, 400; Government, 300; and Financial Activities, 200. Major industries experiencing decreases were Manufacturing, 3,000; and Information, 300. Mining & Logging employment remained unchanged.
Seasonally Adjusted Unemployment Rates since November 2023
North Carolina
North Carolina governor commutes death sentences of 15 inmates
LAUREN TAYLOR: North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper commuted the death sentences of 15 men on his final day in office. All fifteen will still serve life sentences without the possibility of parole.
The commutations reduce the state’s death row, which has 121 others on it, by more than ten percent.
Cooper is leaving office after eight years due to term limits. Fellow Democrat Josh Stein, currently the state attorney general, will assume the office on New Year’s Day.
Cooper’s office said they reviewed petitions for clemency from 89 different people on death row before choosing to act on the fifteen cases.
In a press release, Cooper said, “These reviews are among the most difficult decisions a Governor can make and the death penalty is the most severe sentence that the state can impose. After thorough review, reflection, and prayer, I concluded that the death sentence imposed on these 15 people should be commuted, while ensuring they will spend the rest of their lives in prison.”
It’s a smaller set of commutations than President Joe Biden issued earlier this month for federal death row inmates. The president commuted the sentences of 37 of the 40 men on death row to life sentences without the possibility of parole.
It’s a move that received major criticism from Republicans, with President-elect Donald Trump saying he thought the move made no sense.
Although North Carolina allows the death penalty, the state has not executed anyone since 2006 as lawsuits work their way through the legal system.
Cooper also issued two other commutations for people convicted of crimes that did not come with a death sentence, as well as two pardons for people who have already served their sentences.
For Straight Arrow News, I’m Lauren Taylor.
And for all the latest updates on this and other top stories, download the Straight Arrow News app or visit SAN.com.
North Carolina
North Carolina officials issue warning over Helene-hit community
Western North Carolina suffered another setback after Hurricane Helene battered the region and left many residents dead in September.
Over the weekend, minor flooding and rain destroyed roughly 20 makeshift roads and bridges erected as temporary solutions in Boone and Newland after Helene wiped out whole infrastructural systems, according to relief group WNC Strong’s comments to a local news outlet.
As temperatures are expected to drop below freezing in the region, nearly 700 families are still living outside in tents in the hard-hit area. Benjamin Vanhok said nobody has helped the 15 families his organization has identified that are “completely displaced.”
“It’s not over,” the WNC Strong representative said. “It’s only going get worse before it gets better.”
With the weekend flooding, some residents in the rural area are completely stranded from accessing the emergency services and are completely reliant on grassroots efforts to receive vital supplies.
“They’re stranded again and they will be stranded for the next week until this cold snap passes,” Vanhok noted. “With military-style trucks, they can get across and get them out, but them taking their own cars, they can’t.”
Avery County Manager Phillip Barrier, who represents the city of Newland, warned that more than 20 residents in the county are unreachable by first responders after nearly a dozen emergency footbridges built by volunteers after Helene washed away over the weekend.
“There are several people that we can’t get emergency access to,” he told NBC News during an interview, noting that recovery efforts have “been super slow.”
Likewise, residents in Yancey County, another community devastated by Helene, said Monday that “the need for a bridge or a safe road does not seem to be a priority,” noting the dearth of infrastructure has left “close to 75 families stranded.”
“It seems this community has been overlooked,” one Yancey County resident wrote in a Facebook post. “… My son and his wife are expecting a baby, and have to go in and out with the worry of getting stuck, or with the fear of the bridge being underwater, like it is now. My mother-in-law is on oxygen and luckily was able to make it to the hospital a couple of weeks ago by ambulance.”
Bridges for Avery, the volunteer group that constructed many of the makeshift bridges for residents, is back at work building new infrastructure for those affected.
“For many, these footbridges are the only way home,” according to the organization.
CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
Bridges for Avery and WNC Strong are just two of the countless private grassroots efforts that emerged as the primary source of help for North Carolina residents after Helene struck.
“These small towns in the heart of Appalachia is what made the area so special,” WNC Strong posted on Instagram. “We exist to help rebuild the region in multiple ways. Right now we’re seeking more local businesses we can partner with to bring back to life economically.”
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