Senethro
Overlord
Ok, I get it, I have to demonstrate barriers but you don't have to demonstrate population differences. You're allowed to just assume specific ones that are useful to you exist in particular circumstances, due to their general existence being so obvious. Very dishonest framing.in order to claim barriers, you must demonstrate barriers in that particular case.
No, you don't. You can have racist policy without a word of race in the text of the law. Just like how if the law omits mention of stairs, that doesn't prevent stairs from existing previously, occupying a position of false neutrality/naturalness, and existing as a barrier.in order to claim racism, you must demonstrate discrimination of the policy itself on basis of race. that is not possible by looking at statistical disparity alone, for reasons we've already covered (aka doing that takes us back to the moon).
report from their department of health:
https://www.partnersforfamilyhealth.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/2018_PAMR_Report_FINAL_MF.pdf
unsurprisingly, while their overall maternal death rate is higher, the trends otherwise follow the national average. as in, it is still objectively false to claim that it's "people of color" who have a higher maternal death rate. only black americans suffer the increased mortality rate.
looking at a breakdown of what counts towards the statistic, it's easier to see why that is.
ignoring "maternal deaths to weapons or physical trauma" for now, if you are not prepared to conclude that there is systemic bias in favor of hispanic mothers wrt maternal mortality, then you must specifically claim that black americans in particular either have worse health baselines or receive worse care (or some combination). *why* does that happen? have to keep going back along a causal chain until you get there, and will probably encounter dozens of factors making it hard to pin any one factor down.
- a surprising % of people identified as pregnant/toward maternal mortality weren't, and that was only somewhat up from the previous year. this is a common mistake, apparently?
- #1 cause of maternal death was accidental overdose, followed by vehicle crashes and homicides.
- actual pregnancy-related death proportions align more closely to us national average (3.2x)
- it seems even the government reports fall into the same pattern of mentioning observed disparity, and generalizing outcomes for black americans to "people of color" or "non-white" generally, which is false. They go so far as to claim "implicit bias/racism" as a result, despite that such "logic" implies louisiana is biased in favor of hispanic mothers (do we actually believe louisiana of all states would explicitly favor hispanic americans over both white and black americans?)
to claim that it's "systemic based on isolated observed outcomes alone" is to skip doing that work and attribute equal basis to the moon's tidal forces. aka, nonsense. we don't consider that sound reasoning in other disciplines and it doesn't suddenly become sound reasoning for abortion policy either.
You did get that I was quoting the original text in mockery, right? Not sincerely?
Because he was doing what you were doing? And are still doing.