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Megan Rapinoe offered a tearful call to action after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade

Jun 25, 2022, 02:59 IST
Insider
Megan Rapinoe.AP Photo/David J. Phillip
  • On Friday, the US Supreme Court announced that it had overturned Roe v. Wade in a 5-4 decision.
  • The ruling strips away Americans' constitutional right to an abortion.
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The US Supreme Court has overturned Roe v. Wade, the 1973 landmark ruling that made access to abortion a constitutional right across the country.

In a 5-4 vote announced on Friday, conservative justices Samuel Alito, Clarence Thomas, Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, and Amy Coney Barrett erased nearly 50 years of legal precedent on one of the most polarizing topics in modern American society. The decision inspired fierce backlash across the United States — including within the sports world.

During a press conference Friday, US Women's National Team star and outspoken progressive Megan Rapinoe offered her thoughts on the court's ruling. The famed striker became emotional while speaking to members of the media and issued a tearful plea to "please let this be the siren that you need" to act.

Read through her full comments below:

Rapinoe then took questions from reporters, beginning with Nancy Armour from USA Today.

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Armour: You were one of the 500 female athletes who submitted an Amicus brief to the court in this case, making the link between Title IX and Roe v. Wade, that without Roe, the gains of Title IX would not be possible. Obviously yesterday was the 50th anniversary of Title IX. Can you just talk about the fact that this decision came down a day after that, and also just from an athlete's perspective... how it allowed you to take advantage of everything that Title IX provided?

Rapinoe: First of all, it's just oddly cruel for this to happen during this time. With Title IX [we're] celebrating a piece of legislation that gave so many women the opportunity to make our own choices about what we wanted to do with our life. And obviously in the context of athletics, gave us the opportunity to pursue a unicorn talent that all of us have to be professional athletes or to go to college, or honestly gave people so many opportunities to go to college and get an education and potentially change their situation or choose for themself what they, what they want their situation to be.

For me personally, I obviously have this once-in-a-lifetime talent that I'm able to use to take me into the rest of my life. It's what brought me to college. It's what obviously has brought me beyond. But it was very clear very early on [that] my parents were not in a position to financially support both my twin sister and I going to college, where they had to pay for it.

So I was able to use Title IX to get an education and my sister was able to use Title IX to get an education. God forbid soccer doesn't work out — which it does not work out for almost everybody who tries to play professional soccer. I can't understate the importance and the impact of Title IX in the world, not just in our country, but in the world at large.

This is, yet again, another assault on women's autonomy to do what they want, because it won't stop here. And lack of healthcare, the disgusting and cruel attack on trans kids, the bathroom bills. I believe from what I've read, Obergefell comes up a lot in this decision about Roe v. Wade.

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I think gay marriage is under attack. I think that trans rights are under attack. I think that women's rights are under attack. We know voting rights are under attack. We know civil rights are under attack of all kinds. I don't think you can understate the importance of Title IX and also the dire situation which we are in — in which a very small number of people are dictating the lives of quite literally hundreds of millions of people.

The Athletic's Steph Yang: You did just mention Obergefell and gay rights. I've got colleagues in this space who are talking about, "Let's go get married at the courthouse today, just in case." I was just wondering if there was any discussion amongst you and other teammates about the impact of this on queer communities, not just in terms of gay marriage, but for the queer community as bodily autonomy is also a really huge issue.

Rapinoe: It's a very emotional day. Of course. I see everything as an intersection. I absolutely think gay rights are under attack. I absolutely think we will see legislation pop up state by state by state that will eventually come to this radical Court. I have zero faith that my rights will be upheld by the Court. I have faith in our country, and I have faith in people, and I have faith in the voters. And if you ever needed a fucking motivation to vote, to get involved, quite literally lives depend on it — like actual lives. We're talking life and death and also your life in terms of what does it mean to even be alive, if you can't be your full self, like what the fuck is the point?

I mean, we've absolutely had these conversations. I think we'll continue to have these conversations. I think this is obviously very new and very raw. I mean, obviously we heard about the leak, which to whoever leaked that, thank you for giving us a heads up, because this is a lot to take in. To be surprised by this would've just been fucking out of control.

But yeah, people are scared. And for me, I'm scared because this is just awful. And I know how important it is for me to express myself and to be who I am, but I'm going to be fine. I said that — I'm rich and white and super-privileged and famous and live bicoastally. I will not be subjected to so much of the impact that this will have, but other people are not that lucky, and they will be affected immediately. They're likely already being affected.

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So yeah, it is an emotional day. It is a scary day. We have to be vigilant. If there is any needed motivation for getting out and voting and using our voice and by any and all means necessary protecting the progress we've made, but also fighting like hell for what we still need, please let this be the siren that you need.

Soccer journalist Grant Wahl: Your team plays in Utah a couple of days.... My understanding in Utah is that they have some sort of trigger anti-abortion law that goes into effect. What do you want to see US Soccer do when they schedule games in certain locations — in states that have anti-abortion laws? How do you feel about playing in Utah in a few days?

Rapinoe: Obviously we're not moving the game, and we're not protesting the game. I think, as you guys have seen, the most powerful thing we can always do is show up and not only express our supreme skill and talent and joy on the field, but to be able to have that platform.

I think moving forward, we should do any and all things necessary as people, organizations, the media corporations, government, national governing bodies, and everybody in between to ensure the rights and liberties of every single American.

So I don't know exactly what that looks like. Thus far we've felt extremely supported by US Soccer, by everyone here individually.... We will always be supported to use our voices, and we always have been in this Federation, and we will continue that. And I think we understand that as a team, we have an incredible platform to do good in the world. And to me, this is not a political issue at all. This is a human rights issue.

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I think the players in US Soccer and everyone in this environment and back home in Chicago feel that same way and will support a group of women who rely on the autonomy of their bodies to do the thing that they love and to make this circus run. So I think that it is only in the benefit of everyone to do whatever we can to provide an environment where the players feel protected, supported, and have the utmost autonomy in their bodies.

The Philadelphia Inquirer's Jonathan Tannenwald: As you mentioned a few minutes ago, there are a lot of men on the Supreme Court, and there are a lot of men in Congress, and there are a lot of men in the White House and state houses across the country. And there are a lot of men on this Zoom call, to be frank, who are not going to have to carry a child through pregnancy as our mothers did. What do you hope that the men say to stand with you all?

Rapinoe: You've been silent to us — as a whole, I'm speaking in a monolith. You stand up, say something. This is your wife. This is your sister. This is your friend. This is your girlfriend. This is the mother of your children. This is all of us, and you are allowing a violent and consistent onslaught on the autonomy of women's bodies, on women's rights, on women's minds, on our hearts, on our souls.

We live in a country that forever tries to chip away at what you have innately, at what you have been privileged enough to feel your entire life. So I should not be the loudest voice in the room. No woman should be the loudest voice in the room. This is what allyship looks like. This is what, frankly, doing the right thing looks like.

If not for men, we would have none of these laws. We would have none of the inequality in terms of gender rights and this sort of onslaught of abortion rights and the onslaught on abortion. None of this would be happening. We did not do this ourselves.

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And I would take it personally. What I'm saying as an accusation, as a come-to-Jesus moment, as a look-in-the-mirror: You are complicit in all of this, and you also have the opportunity to do better every single day. You have the opportunity to show up, make your voices heard, whether that's in the workplace, on a media Zoom, in stadiums, in your family, the way that you vote. It is not a women's issue. It is everyone's issue.

So this is a call out, but also a call in: We are always willing to have more support and more voices. We clearly cannot do this on our own with the composition of the power structure in our country. And frankly, that falls on you.

Readers can watch the full video of Rapinoe's press conference below:

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