Culture The bloody truth about period poverty in America - Somebody needs to pay for this tampax!

Half the world's population gets a period every month. And yet, even in America, there is such a stigma surrounding menstruation that the majority of girls and women still feel uncomfortable talking about it.

"We all have that story where we get our period at school or at work and we stick [a tampon] up our sleeve... and sort of like walk that walk of shame to the bathroom," said Congresswoman Grace Meng, D-New York, in the CBSN Originals documentary, "Period." "That's just something that we've grown up with, right? I've always thought that it was something embarrassing that I had to hide from my peers, and I think that it is something that our society in America needs to feel more comfortable talking about. It is a demonstration of how genders are treated inequitably."

In fact, that stigma — and the secrecy that it spawns — have given rise to a painful reality known as period poverty, which quietly affects millions of American women every day. In essence, period poverty means not being able to afford to purchase feminine hygiene products, like tampons and pads. And while many of us probably take access to these sorts of products for granted, there are growing populations of women and girls who have to make impossible life choices every month, just to survive their cycles.

"If you have to pick and choose, do I buy food for my child or do I get my sanitary needs, that's kind of hard and no one should have to experience that," said Brooklyn native Nicole Johnson, who went into a homeless shelter in 2005 with her four children. "It's demeaning. It makes you feel very sad. ... It's a heartbreaking situation."

Johnson now lives in transitional housing, but she is one of the more than 16 million American women — 1 in 8, according to 2016 U.S. Census data — battling poverty every day.

"If you can't even put a loaf of bread on the table, how do you expect a person to buy a box of tampons that may be $5 and change?" she explains. "Most people don't stop and think about it. I guess they feel they're able to get their own pads and tampons. It's the littlest things that people don't focus on. Yes, you need food, you need water. There's plenty of soup kitchens. But the personal items, the sanitary napkins, the soap, the toothpaste, deodorant… it's not that easy for people."

To make matters worse, women cannot buy tampons or pads with public benefits like food stamps. They are not included in flexible or health spending account allowances. And they are not covered by health insurance or Medicaid.

So the only financial assistance women can really hope for is in the form of taxes. After all, every state has the ability to pick and choose products they'd like to make more affordable by exempting them from sales tax. All 50 states have given tax exemptions to prescription medications, even optional male enhancement ones like Rogaine. Louisiana did it for Mardi Gras beads. Idaho did it for chainsaws. Illinois even did it for BBQ sunflower seeds. Yet, to date, only 15 states and Washington, D.C. have officially exempted pads and tampons from sales tax.

"It raises some questions about what kinds of parameters we're putting around how we define a necessity, and who's making that call," said Jennifer Weiss-Wolf, author of "Periods Gone Public." "There have been times and places where legislators have actually stood up and said, "Well, wait a second. This is only going to benefit women, so it's sexist… somehow missing the point that if only women are impacted by it, or paying it, is it not sexist?"

The activists of the booming menstrual movement certainly feel that is.

"You know, people will say that we're seeing how broken the systems are and it's time to fix them," said Weiss-Wolf. "I don't actually think of it that way. I think the systems are working exactly as they were intended to do, which was to keep women out of power. ... And ignoring menstruation is just as much of a part of that as all of these other arguments and cases that we're arguing now."

Celebrities like Busy Philipps, who regularly advocates for women's rights and the destigmatization of women's health issues, have now taken up the cause, as well, by bluntly and nonchalantly discussing their periods on both social media and national TV.

"Something that happens to half the population once a month shouldn't be a taboo subject," Philipps told CBS News. "I mean, to be totally honest, and I'm sure I'm not the first person to say this, but like if men had their periods, it would be like f***ing celebrated. You know, it would be like a holiday. They would get the week off of work and probably the week before and then like the four days after their period ends, so that they could recover. It would just be a different experience. But men do not get periods. Women get periods."

But as the country takes a hard look at the long hushed-up history of sexual harassment and assault, menstrual activists hope that the time may now be right for the public and its representatives in government to also take a fresh look at the truth about menstruation in America.

"I think that in the United States of America, the fact that there are women, whether they are girls in schools, women in prisons and homeless shelters, to women working in large companies... who aren't able to afford these products and as a result may miss school, may miss work, face certain stigma," said Congresswoman Meng, who put the Menstrual Equity for All Act before Congress in March. "I think it's a human rights issue that, especially in the United States of America, women should not have to be dealing with."


CBS News cannot stop posting this video on social media. Apparently American women are ALL stuffing toilet paper in their panties and are waiting for the government to come and rescue them, and telling NO ONE. Women are too poor and stupid to provide their own basic needs and pay taxes like everyone else. The ultimate goal of this video is to get sales tax on tampons and pads repealed, but it quickly gets distracted. There are a couple of sob stories about the homeless. Busy Phillips says she was told not to open her show once with period talk, therefore it's a taboo subject in America and no one discusses it. India is mentioned but of course American women are suffering worse because reasons.

A couple of highlights:

At 10:39, a veteran with the ironic name of Melissa Barbee talks about what a burden it was to count to 28 and shove a panty liner in her crotch so that she wouldn't bleed all over herself while wearing white pants in formation. Apparently you can get into the academy only being able to count to 27. Preparedness is a non-essential military skill.

At 15:43, Rep. Grace Meng D-NY, shows us an empty feminine hygiene dispenser in a ladies room and complains that she does not have a quarter and that it does not take credit cards. I've never seen a congressional office, but I guess she does not have a desk drawer or a purse where she can keep her own supplies. Mostly I find the lack of office furniture in congress disturbing.

Grace wants to put "free" pads and tampons in all federal buildings. This will not be abused.

Not sure if this is news or a lolcow thing. Or news with lolcows.
 
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The price of a single latte at Starbucks can pay for a box of tampons. There are so many more realistic and less silly scenarios you can bring up if you need a "wahmin are oppressed" narrative I don't understand why they keep bringing up this one.
 
I don’t find the concept of providing feminine hygiene products in public bathrooms surprising in the slightest. It should be the next level of creature comforts expected by residents of reasonably developed countries, right after toilet paper. Everyone understands the need to wipe the shit off your arse, why not the bits of shed uterine lining that routinely leaks out of roughly half the population? Even people who can afford to buy their own tampons can be caught by surprise. It’s almost a rite of passage to be asked to lob a tampon into some unlucky soul’s toilet stall after she discovers that she needs one.

Still, the Congresswoman’s comment makes me want to tell her that these loot boxes can only be unlocked after she checks her privilege.

Edit: a word
 
Nobody needs to talk about your periods cause that shit's gross, just like nobody needs to hear about the shit you masturbate to or the people you bed. Unless people specifically ask you about those subjects, just don't bring it up.
 
Why does this need to be said?

Period blood is human waste. Throw it out.

Nocturnal emissions / ejaculate of any kind are also human waste. Clean it up.

Fæces and urine are also human waste. Flush it.

If they think women are being shamed for having periods, they are scraping the bottom of the oppression barrel, dug through, and have created a small well. 🕳
 
I always thought it was sort of weird that one can get government assistance to buy food with zero real oversight, leading to people buying stupid shit like ice cream and potato chips on food stamps... but getting assistance specifically for basic toiletries and such, from TP to soap to pads/tampons, was simply not there.

I mean, it's "whatever" really, as basic toiletries aren't usually super expensive anyway. Just really odd.
 
Holy hell... they mock you if you're not over 6 feet tall, are balding or have an average or small penis, and then complain about something that is an equal burden to all women within reproductive age. I swear the learned helplessness of these SPECIFIC slags is driving me further away from seeing them as human beings. This is literally a first world problems template called: "Being alive is too tough, so shoulder your responsibility and ours."

You will not see in the coming days any of these liberated skanks and their weak male feminist supports actually talk about being motivated into putting their money and efforts to make this easier on themselves. They are the Christian Weston Chandlers of gender.
 
For everyone suggesting rational solutions, you're all getting an optimistic from me, because there's no way that pampered, 1st world women, especially millennial women, are going to reduce the amount the spend on frivolous shit just so they can buy necessary sanitary products. They'll demand this shit be paid for, because they don't realize that their minimal tax contributions aren't going to pay for this, anymore than it'll pay for their pipe-dreams of college debt forgiveness, or universal healthcare, or any of the rest of the pie-in-the-sky lunacy that this little pseudo-socialist twits keep stomping their feet and throwing tantrums over.

They're a generation of bubble-wrapped narcissists, eternally protected by their helicopter moms, alienated from the dad she divorced because he had was working stupid hours to satisfy the addictions and spending habits of a narcissist and coped by stuffing his secretary's box, and told they deserved whatever they set their eyes upon, without any effort on their part. They simply can't fathom not having their desires handed to them, and they especially can't understand that a free lunch is never actually free.

Edit - To clarify, I'm not just throwing millennial women under the bus on this, as far as idiotic socialist bullshit; the man-bun, soy-guzzling, hipster faggots are just as guilty of it, too.
 


CBS News cannot stop posting this video on social media. Apparently American women are ALL stuffing toilet paper in their panties and are waiting for the government to come and rescue them, and telling NO ONE. Women are too poor and stupid to provide their own basic needs and pay taxes like everyone else. The ultimate goal of this video is to get sales tax on tampons and pads repealed, but it quickly gets distracted. There are a couple of sob stories about the homeless. Busy Phillips says she was told not to open her show once with period talk, therefore it's a taboo subject in America and no one discusses it. India is mentioned but of course American women are suffering worse because reasons.

A couple of highlights:

At 10:39, a veteran with the ironic name of Melissa Barbee talks about what a burden it was to count to 28 and shove a panty liner in her crotch so that she wouldn't bleed all over herself while wearing white pants in formation. Apparently you can get into the academy only being able to count to 27. Preparedness is a non-essential military skill.

At 15:43, Rep. Grace Meng D-NY, shows us an empty feminine hygiene dispenser in a ladies room and complains that she does not have a quarter and that it does not take credit cards. I've never seen a congressional office, but I guess she does not have a desk drawer or a purse where she can keep her own supplies. Mostly I find the lack of office furniture in congress disturbing.

Grace wants to put "free" pads and tampons in all federal buildings. This will not be abused.

Not sure if this is news or a lolcow thing. Or news with lolcows.
It's almost like women need men to take care of them so these issues can be avoided altogether.
 
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