#I ' %. OPINION Monday, October 23, 1989 a Oage 4 The Michigan Daily Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan 420 Maynard St. Vol. C, No. 34 Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Unsigned editorials represent a majority of the Daily's Editorial Board. All other cartoons, signed articles, and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. omen fight back One week for the rainforests low a AFTER MONTHS of hard work or- ganizing, rallying, defending women's clinics, and sponsoring educational forums, pro-choice forces saw the po- litical climate in this country shift in their favor during the last few weeks. Last week, Florida's traditionally anti-choice legislature drove this point home, soundly rejecting calls by Gov- ernor Robert Martinez to tighten re- strictions on abortion. A Senate committee killed bills designed to limit a woman's right to control her own body, including a bill that would have banned the use of state employees and facilities for abortion, a bill that would have required women to wait seven days after making their choice before they could receive an abortion, a bill that would have mandated expensive and unnecessary fetal testing, and one a that required parental consent for women under eighteen years old who are seeking abortion. Governor Martinez claims that his opposition to abortion comes as a result of his religious training. "The concern I've got," he declares, "is that [abortion] makes life disposable..." Pretending to value life, Mr. Martinez sees no contradiction between his sup- posed concern for yet undeveloped fe- tal tissue and his support of the death penalty. Yet his constituency - increasingly critical of his performance - recog- nizes this contradiction for what it is: an effort to conceal legislation that dis- criminates against women behind rhetoric which plays on genuine human anxieties about the alienation and vul- nerability many face in a contemporary U.S. society that places precious little value on life. This anti-women discrim-