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From the LA Times.  Check out this dude's promotion of the idea that a
woman's brain chemistry is altered by having multiple sex partners.  Now
where do you think he stands on ESCR?  Ray

"Bush's bizarre appointment
Erick Keroack is too extreme to head the federal office for family
planning.
November 27, 2006

PRESIDENT BUsh made some winningly conciliatory remarks the day after
his party's Nov. 7 electoral drubbing, saying he looked forward to
governing in a more bipartisan fashion. Then he turned around and
started naming kooky ideologues to key posts.

The latest recess appointment, Eric Keroack as head of the federal
government's family planning office, is an extremist so out of line
with scientific thought that it is difficult to describe his views
without laughing.

As medical director of A Woman's Concern, a small chain of nonprofit
pregnancy counseling clinics that offer no information on birth
control, Keroack has agitated against abortion and even contraception -
including for married women. The organization continues to push the
discredited nonsense that abortion increases a woman's chances of
breast cancer and is more dangerous during the first eight weeks of
pregnancy (when, in fact, the risk of complication is actually at its
lowest). Birth control, according to A Woman's Concern's tortured
logic, is somehow "demeaning to women." And Keroack has argued that
women who have sex with multiple partners alter their brain chemistry
in the process, making it harder for them to form close relationships.

This is the man who will oversee $283 million in annual Department of
Health and Human Services grants for providing access to family
planning education and contraceptives "to all who want and need them."

The administration is still wasting $158 million a year on
abstinence-only education programs that the Government Accountability
Office concluded this month have not been shown to work and at times
put forth misleading information about condoms and AIDS.

Keroack does not need Senate confirmation, so there is little Congress
can do about a president who continues to select anti-scientific
ideology over basic competence, aside from making it clear that funding
for these programs depends on HHS using the money as intended.

But the real check on Bush's silliness comes from voters. On Nov. 7,
efforts to limit women's reproductive rights were routed not only in
California and Oregon but in South Dakota and Kansas. Appeasing social
conservatives is not just bad policy, it's becoming losing politics as
well."

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