Women's Rights & Issues
Related: About this forumOur Periods Are Not Your Population Solution
Our Periods Are Not Your Population Solution
PUBLISHED 5/1/2025 by Colby Siegel
Using menstrual education to boost birth rates isnt empowermentits exploitation dressed up as policy.

Students from around the country rally in front of the Department of Education in Washington on Jan. 28, 2018, in support of free menstrual products for students. (Bonnie Jo Mount / The Washington Post via Getty Images)
Menstruation is natural. Bleeding every month isnt a political act. And yetsomehow, it often ends up as one. From tampon taxes to Tampon Tim, to now being name-dropped in federal proposals to boost fertility rates, periods are weaponized by the powers that be. The Trump administrations latest pro-natalist agenda includes a pitch for government-funded menstrual education. At first glance, this sounds like a step in the right direction: Actual, factual education about menstruation would be a meaningful reform in a country where shame and misinformation still reign supreme.
But this isnt just about education. Its about control. The motivation behind this health initiative is to push up the birth rate and spur reproductive output, not to advance rights. Menstrual cycles churning the national economic policy gives off serious Handmaids Tale energy.
Something as fundamental as menstrual literacy is being twisted into a social engineering experiment. You cant fight for real equity, while cutting access to birth control or defunding womens health services. You cant claim to care about education, while promoting fertility-tracking apps as a replacement for full-functioning contraception. Thats not empowermentits gaslighting.
Menstrual education is vital. But it needs to be rooted in autonomy, inclusivity and sciencenot in some patriarchal fever dream of repopulating the country. At feminist-focused menstrual equity organizations like the Desai Foundation, transformative menstrual health programs that impact womens health, dignity and independence are not about controlling bodies or pushing a fertility agenda, but rather giving people tools to understand and navigate their own health.
And while the U.S. has made progress in tackling menstrual stigma and inequity, were still facing major setbacks. One in three adults struggle to afford period products, making it clear that period poverty is still rampant in the country with the highest GDP in the world. Trans and nonbinary people are left out of most conversations. And we still have state laws like those in Florida, where young students are banned from talking about their periods in school. Before turning to public incentives to influence private decisions, we should be asking how we might better support menstrual access and equity. That starts with accessible period care, science-based education and policies that center autonomy and carenot control. And maybe, just maybe, trust people to decide when, how and if they want to have children.
https://msmagazine.com/2025/05/01/periods-women-trump-menstruation-sex-education-equity-birthrate-pronatalism/

love_katz
(3,010 posts)Back in the Sixties, birth control was referred to as family planning. Trusting people to know what is best for them and any possible offspring is bedrock basic. Not everyone wants to be a parent, which in an intelligent society is a choice that would be respected.
I despise this hateful and oppressive paternalistic attitude, that fundy fanatics know better than anyone what is good for them.
And the people who push this forced birth $hit have no desire to provide jobs that pay a livable wage, or healthcare or child care, etc, ad nauseum.
Their stupid religion sells them a fantasy world where it's acceptable and sustainable to fill the planet up with wall-to-wall people packed in like sardines in a can because somehow their Gawd cares only about human life and will miraculously fix everything for them.