Womb Jealousy and Infant Stealing: Yet Another Expectant Mother Found Murdered

Also at ThisBlackSistasPage.

Darlene Haynes, who was murdered for her eight-month-old fetus, from a family photo (Courtesy: ABC News)

Just what is it about this phenomenon of women killing women for their close-to-term fetuses? The shrinks had better be working on why something like this happens, and the sociologists had better start talking about how we stop it.  Not only do pregnant moms have to worry about abusive boyfriends or husbands, but they now have to wonder about friends, acquaintances as well as total strangers.
One thing I’ve noticed is that murders like these seems to happen among lower-middle class women and poor women.  I think it is a modern outgrowth of what I think is years of baby worship among Americans, with a by-product promulgated from those in the right-to-life movement.  They’ve been able to get to this subset of Americans.  

As a result, Americans fixate on babies, but they don’t necesarily appreciate what motherhood means.  They fixate on new life, sometimes without fully supporting and providing what the child will need to grow, to thrive, and be educated, clothed, and socialized.  They all seem to say, later for all that, which is one of my quarrels with the right-to-life movement–and with Nadya Suleman.

Don’t get me wrong.  I don’t want to get responses saying that I hate children or something.  I certainly do not hate infants, toddlers or older children.  That is not the point.  Neither am I putting down women and couples who know what it is to be mothers and parents.  I fully support women and couples having wanted children…within reason and with common sense and resources.  But it’s also true that many women do have babies as a means of self-expression and to create meaning for themselves by using their bodies.  

I think, though, some other women are watching this fecundity with more than a touch of jealousy and anger.  The fact is that the attention a mother-to-be gets is not like the attention a mom pushing a carriage with a three- or four-year-old or running around town with a ten- or a fifteen-year-old each day.  I think this is part of what triggers the jealousy.  Nobody pays attention to them.  Nobody appears to care about their lives as well.  And what is worse, they don’t care about themselves.

These women want a baby, or they can’t have a baby, or they want a biracial baby, or a girl or a boy.  They may already have two or three children themselves and suddenly, they want another.  And they are murdering in order to get these babies.  There is no color or culture which seems exempt from this behavior, but so far this crime is delineated by class.  You don’t hear about upper- or middle-class women pulling this kind of thing.  

These women plan these atrocities thinking that they can get away with it.  They don’t.  And each one thinks that they can.

Nine times out of ten, the infants die after being cut out of the womb, defeating the whole sordid purpose.  The expectant mothers die, butchered brutally and horribly.  I’m shaking my head as I write this, thinking how can a woman could visit this kind of thing on another woman or another human being–it’s something out of Nazi experimentation.  How can anyone not hear screams of someone being done away with?  Now it comes out that suspect Julie Corey lived in the same building as Darlene Haynes.  If it is true that the infant found with Corey is Darlene Haynes’ newborn daughter, then this is only the second child I have heard of to have survived such an ordeal.

According to the Boston Herald, Darlene Haynes had had a hard life.  An intellectual zero with an IQ of 70, Haynes was ready to bring a fourth daughter and child into the world:

[H]er family claimed she was born with fetal alcohol syndrome and suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder and an attachment disorder. The report also states that the state Department of Mental Retardation was involved in her care.  

Her uncle, Karl Whitney, told Gordon that Haynes was raised by her paternal grandmother, Joanne Haynes, because her birth mother was abusive, the report said.

Haynes, who attended the Developmental Learning Center in West Boylston, had her first child, Jasmen, 5, when she was 18. Her daughter Lillian Rose, 3, was born in March 2006. The father of the children is unknown, and Joanne Haynes was granted custody, probate court records show. Haynes shared legal custody of the youngest, Kristine, with [ex-boyfriend Roberto] Rodriguez, but the dad had physical custody, according to a Nov. 17, 2008, judgment.

Darlene Haynes functioned at the level of a 12- or 13-year-old.  As with many developmentally disabled people, she was described as being very trusting and open.  Yet Haynes was not that insensible about herself and her surroundings.  She had shared with a relative a growing suspicion that her movements were being watched.

A restraining order against Roberto Rodriguez was issued recently, because he was accused of domestic violence during Darlene’s pregnancy.  He is the father of Haynes’ daughter Kristine, 1, and the as-yet-unnamed newborn.  In TV news reports, he was shown swearing vengeance against “the monster.”  Naturally one would suspect the boyfriend with the domestic violence paper trail, but this time, it wasn’t the case.

Like I said, I don’t get it all, and I had a minor in psychology, but I certainly get that this phenomenon among women seems to be growing, or perhaps the mainstream media is becoming more cognizant of it and milking it for ratings.  Like with drug addicts, the right people need to intervene, right now.

Deep Thought

Having lived through the right-wing insanity of the Clinton years, I should have been better prepared for the insane response of the Republicans to a Democratic administration. For some stupid reason I guess I thought the Bush years woulda learned these people sumpthin’.

In Country – Wild Wild Left Radio # 29

I remember when I was young, hearing guys coming home from VietNam always referring to it as being “In Country.”

“In Country” explained everything I didn’t understand, and nothing. You see, there are different rules In Country and almost anything goes. Spying, assassinations, special ops, whole villages with kids and grandparents. It explained the constant alert too, always feeling like you had to look over your shoulder, cuz “In Country” the boogie man behind you was fucking real, man, and would kill you as soon as look at you. “In Country” you could die of a simple infection, there were no doctors, and people were starving, and no one could drink the dirty ass water. Not to mention the poison clouds that made “In Country” leave lingering deaths at home. No jobs, no future, nothing but death on the horizon, our GI’s as hopeless as the “gooks” they were fighting. It was through the looking glass, and I saw the eyes of the men who lived through it. Empty, and Aware.

Welcome. You no longer need to leave your couch, dudes.

You ARE “In Country” here and now.

We have ramped up to a Police State, where they can come right in your homes and drag you away. We have NORTHCOM for a while now, meaning our own troops are deployed against US “In Country.” We had Cheney trying to deploy them in Buffalo, and now Obama trumping them up for the Swine Flu. NSPD51 has not been repealed, and our military, not just our spooks are now spying on us, on Peace Activists. We have no Health Care, we have no choice. There is poison in everything around us, and they are using as a Guinea Pigs for untested shots so the Playah’s can make their money, money that is our taxes, shots that may maim or kill us… but of course they have immunity. Kind of like the Pigs in Washington who sent them to VietNam.

You may not be fully aware, little froggies, but the boil is on, the mass graves are at the ready, and you are…

In Country.

More tonight:

Join Gottlieb, Ed Encho and I tonight at 6pm EDT on Wild Wild Left Radio, via BlogtalkRadio, for an interesting hour of Political Reporting and Commentary.

If you aren’t convinced yet, this hour will convince you.

The call in number is 646-929-1264

Listen to The Wild Wild Left on internet talk radio

The live chat link will go live around 5:15.

CHAT LINK:
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/FlashChat/Chat.aspx?cohost=y&HostUserURL=DianeG

Serious Questions

I know Max Baucus is basically a fraud, but do you think he’s going beyond whoring for corporations to actually operating in bad faith? Is he aware that Chuck Grassley is never going to agree to anything worth passing or that can pass? Has he stalled this process intentionally or because he’s stupid?

Willful and Weaponized Stupidity

Daily Kos polling continues to humiliate the Republican Base and the southern region of our country. This week, the polling reveals that 58% of Republicans either don’t believe the president was born in the United States or are unsure. This compares to 7% of Democrats and 17% of Independents. Also revealed, Republicans do not know or believe in basic geology. Asked if they believe that America and Africa were once part of the same continent (they were) 76% of Republicans said ‘no’ or ‘not sure.’

The relationship between ignorance, Republicanism, and the South comes through in shining clarity in this polling. Whereas, all other regions of the country have at least a plurality who understand plate tectonics, only 24% of Republicans and 32% of Southerners do. While 93% of Democrats and 83% of Independents affirm that Obama was born in this country, only 42% of Republicans agree. But look at these numbers (combined percentage who do not believe or are not sure that Obama was born here, by region): Northeast 7%, Midwest 10%, West 17%, South 53%.

How does that happen? It’s actually a minority position in the South to affirm that the president was born in the United States. It’s even more of a minority position in the Republican Party. Aside from the startling demonstration of regional wingnuttery, I have to note that it would never occur to anyone on their own that the elected president of the United States might be ineligible for the job. These numbers represent the degree of penetration of the conspiracy theory as well as, probably, a regional difference in relative gullibility. It’s natural that an area of the country that is less supportive of the president would be more inclined to believe bad things about him, and that definitely accounts for some of the discrepancy. But it can’t account for the yawning gap between the South and rest of the country. The question about continental drift demonstrates that clearly.

Lou Dobbs Ratings Fall

I guess that “birther” thing didn’t work out as well as he hoped it would:

Mr. Dobbs’ first began reporting on Obama birth certificate conspiracy theories on the night of Wednesday, July 15. In the roughly two weeks since then, from July 15 through July 28, Mr. Dobbs’ 7 p.m. show on CNN has averaged 653,000 total viewers and 157,000 in the 25-54 demo.

By contrast, during the first two weeks of the month (July 1 to July 14) Mr. Dobbs averaged 771,000 total viewers and 218,000 in the 25-54 demo. In other words, Mr. Dobbs’ audience has decreased 15 percent in total viewers and 27 percent in the demo since the start of the controversy.

I guess he’ll have to go back to his illegal immigrant crusade. Either that, or jump to Fox News where the audience is likely more inclined to believe any nonsensical thing they hear just so long as it bashes Obama.

Over There – Afghanistan ed.

In Afghanistan:

The death in southern Afghanistan brought to 40 the number of U.S. troops killed in July, by far the heaviest monthly toll in the 8-year-old war. The worst previous month for U.S. forces was in September 2008, when 26 were killed.

Within a few months we will have occupied Afghanistan for eight years. Eight years, and the Taliban still exists. Al Qaeda still exists. The central government we helped create is corrupt, ineffective, and controls little of the country, if anything, outside Kabul. The illegal drug trade is thriving. We kill innocent civilians as often as we kill those Taliban members who fight against us. We have the strongest, most deadly military in the world, but we cannot enforce the peace.

Which begs the questions: what exactly have we accomplished, what do we hope to accomplish and what are we doing over there? Do you have any good answers for those? I don’t.

Friday Foto Flogging

Welcome to Friday Foto Flogging, a place to share your photos and photography news. We were inspired by the folks at European Tribune who post a regular Friday Photoblog series to try the same on this side of the virtual Atlantic. We also thought foto folks would enjoy seeing some other websites so each week we’ll introduce a different photo website.

Website of the Week: Street Portrait Photo How To, by Clay Enos (video).
This Week’s Theme: Random. Show us whatever you want to show us.

AndiF On Random Ground

Moss Sprouts

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After Summer Rain

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Just checking to see if you’re paying attention

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olivia’s random

Remembering autumn

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Remembering winter

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Remembering summer

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Next Week’s Theme: Simplicity.

Info on Posting Photos

When you post your photos, please keep the width at 500 or less for the sake of our Bootribers who are on dial-up. If you want to post clickable thumbnails but aren’t sure how, check out this diary:
Clickable Thumbnails
. If you haven’t yet joined a photo-hosting site, here are some to consider: Photobucket, Flickr, ImageShack, and Picasa.

Previous Friday Foto Flogs

Online Voter Registration Reaches Some Citizens, but Won’t Close the Electoral Gap

Cross-posted at Project Vote’s Voting Matters Blog.

Access to voter registration continues to be an issue in the U.S. where only 71 percent of the voting eligible population is registered to vote. With young, low income, and minority citizens lagging behind in voter registration and participation, this fraction of registered voters only represents a skewed picture of the American people.
In an effort to make voter registration more accessible, several states have joined Arizona and Washington this year by passing laws to provide certain citizens the convenience of registering to vote with the click of a mouse. Colorado, Indiana, Louisiana, Oregon, and Utah are among the states that recently enacted such laws while Kansas has just made voter registration accessible online to eligible citizens in the state, according to the Associated Press this week. However, a new memo by Project Vote consultants Jody Herman and Doug Hess finds that, while online voter registration is a “welcome new convenience,” its impact will most likely be limited in reducing the tremendous demographic disparities that currently exist in the electorate.

Using Nielsan and Census data, the report examines the limitations – and benefits – of online voter registration by describing the U.S. households that do not have internet access and comparing the findings to voter registration rates in those households based on race/ethnicity, age, educational attainment, and income.

“In most cases, the demographic groups that are already less likely to be registered are also the least likely to have internet access in the home,” Herman wrote. Among these groups are low income citizens, those without high school degrees, and Latinos, rendering online voter registration less effective for the very people who need access to the electoral process most. According to the memo:

*    Low income households are not only less likely to have internet access (41%), they are also least likely to be registered to vote, compared to other income brackets (65%).

*    Educational attainment appears to have an affect on access to both voter registration and internet. Just 36% percent of those without high school diploma have internet access – 41 percentage points lower than the national average. Similarly, this group registers to vote at a rate that is 21 percentage points lower than the national average (50%).

*    Black and Latino households are less likely to have access to the internet, with only 63% of households in each group. However, Latinos are disproportionately underrepresented in the electorate, registering at 12 percentage points lower than the national average.

“An additional problem is that online voter registration systems that require an online registrant to have an existing signature in a state database–such as in a driver’s license database and/or state voter registration database-will further limit the accessibility of an online voter registration system to disadvantaged groups,” according to the report. (A 2007 study on voter ID accessibility in Indiana exemplifies this issue, as voters with only high school education, as well as low-income and minority citizens, were found to be less likely to posses identification required, in this case, to vote.)  

While online registration seems to disproportionately reach mostly those who are already overrepresented in the electorate, it may open doors for one group that is notoriously plagued with voter access and participation issues: Youth. Citizens ages 18 to 34 register to vote at a rate of 10 percentage points behind the electorate as a whole. However, young people are most likely to have internet access, with 88 percent of younger households connected to the Web. This may prove beneficial in incorporating America’s future decision makers in the electorate.

When Pelosi Attacks

I like the rhetoric:

A day after formally delaying a vote on a healthcare bill and having to accept a further weakening of a public option to compete with private insurers, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) lashed out at the health insurance industry and urged her members to do the same during the August recess.

“They are the villains in this,” Pelosi said of private insurers. “They have been part of the problem in a major way. They are doing everything in their power to stop a public option from happening. And the public has to know that. They can disguise their arguments any way they want, but the fact is that they don’t want the competition.”

But I will be more impressed if Pelosi finds some tangible way to punish the Democrats who are doing the villians’ bidding.