Gawfer

"We have staked the whole of all our political institutions upon the capacity of mankind for self-government, upon the capacity of each and all of us to govern ourselves, to control ourselves, to sustain ourselves according to the Ten Commandments of God." James Madison

Saturday, September 16, 2006

ACLU Goes After Toys R Us on Breastfeeding issue

This is another example of why I dislike the ACLU so much. It seems that after popping her boob out in the middle of the store, Chelsi Meyerson was approached by '5' store employees and was eventually asked to holster the mammary. I am a firm advocate of breast feeding, but modesty does have its place. I have seen several mothers over the past decades of my life use common sense while breastfeeding their children, generally a blanket over the exposed flesh sufficed. However, I have been exposed to the occasional mom who was really nothing more than an exhibitionist, flaunting the perpetrators.

Knowing the history of the ACLU, and the fact that they are seeking compensation from Toys R Us, leads me to believe this is nothing more than another scam to 'milk' large sums of money from corporate America.


Hat Tip: STOPTHEACLU.COM

ACLU’s own press release

Toys “R” Us Violates Law by Barring Breastfeeding in Store, NYCLU Warns (9/14/2006)FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@aclu.org
NEW YORK -- The New York Civil Liberties Union today warned the Toys “R” Us company that it violated civil rights law by telling a mother that she could not breastfeed her infant in a store.
"It's ironic that a store that caters to children would prohibit a mother from doing what is best for her child," said Donna Lieberman, NYCLU Executive Director. "One would think that Toys “R” Us would have moved past the puritanical notions that this incident reflects."
According to the NYCLU, on Monday September 11, a saleswoman approached Chelsi Meyerson after she began to breastfeed her seven-month-old son in an out-of-the-way section of the Toys “R” Us store on 42nd Street in Manhattan, where she was shopping with her family. The saleswoman informed Meyerson that she was not "allowed" to breastfeed in the store unless she moved to the basement and that her breastfeeding was "inappropriate" because there were "children around." When Meyerson asserted that she was in the right and refused to move, four more store employees began to harass her, and the original saleswoman called security.
"Breastfeeding is not a crime, and the right to breastfeed is simply not a right that I am willing to give up," Meyerson said. "This incident was humiliating and dismaying. I'm asking Toys “R” Us to guarantee that it will never happen again."
In a letter to the company sent today, the NYCLU sought a meeting with Toys “R” Us officials; an apology; appropriate compensation for Meyerson; and a written guarantee that Toys “R” Us would permit breastfeeding in its stores and would train its staff about the policy. Galen Sherwin, Staff Attorney for the NYCLU Reproductive Rights Project, added: "This is about public health, not public morality."
Twelve years ago the NYCLU lobbied for and secured the passage of a law that specifically establishes the right of all New York mothers to breastfeed in public. That statute, a section of New York State's Civil Rights Law, provides that "a mother may breastfeed her baby in any location, public or private, where the mother is otherwise authorized to be." "Prohibiting public breastfeeding is bad public health policy -- and it's also against the law," said Elisabeth Benjamin, NYCLU Reproductive Rights Project Director. "Health care providers and the law agree that families who choose to breastfeed their children should be able to do so whenever and wherever necessary."
The NYCLU's letter is available at: www.nyclu.org/pdfs/toys_r_us_ltr_091406.pdf