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Coincidentally, yesterday also saw the opening up of over 150 hours of tape and 30,000 pages of documents previously unavailable to the public by the Nixon Presidential Library. These new materials contain some choice sound bites concerning Nixon's views on abortion and interracial relationships.
“There are times when an abortion is necessary. I know that. When you have a black and a white,” he told an aide, before adding, “Or a rape.”
As elle over at Shakesville points out (as do virtually all the feminist blogs I regularly read), interracial relationships are in no way shape or form analogous to rape . . . the first being, you know, a relationship and the other being a specific act of violence. The fact that this was the first circumstance that came to Nixon's mind in 1973 as a situation warranting abortion -- before he even thought to mention sexual violence, almost as an afterthought -- is a fascinating example of the way he made sense of both race and abortion.
Anyway. May all the Nixon historians out there have fun and do good work with these new resources, many of which have been made available online.
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