| But it’s also innocuous. This doesn’t turn American women into mere incubators (and many pregnant woman would probably appreciate the boosted child-support benefits). The dystopian headlines just aren’t true.
One of the bill’s co-sponsors, Sen. Steve Daines (R–Mont.), touted the legislation in a statement: “Raising kids takes a village, and we should be doing everything we can to support new moms before and after they welcome a new baby.”
The federal government should not and cannot be that village, and littering the web with another .gov website ain’t gonna be the thing that alleviates hardship for a struggling new mother. Community is frequently forged locally and in person, and this bill, trotted out for Mother’s Day, would do very little to make women’s lives easier.
Noem vs. Natives: South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem, a Republican who recently made headlines by disclosing that she shot her dog and fabricating a meeting with North Korea’s Kim Jong Un, is now amusingly barred from visiting about 20 percent of her state. “The Yankton Sioux Tribe voted Friday to ban Noem from their land in southeastern South Dakota just a few days after the Sisseton-Wahpeton Ovate tribe took the same action,” reports the Associated Press. “The Oglala, Rosebud, Cheyenne River and Standing Rock Sioux tribes had already taken action to keep her off their reservations.”
Noem has a story about why they don’t like her.
“We’ve got some tribal leaders that I believe are personally benefiting from the [drug] cartels being there, and that’s why they attack me every day,” Noem said at a forum in March. “But I’m going to fight for the people who actually live in those situations, who call me and text me every day and say, ‘Please, dear governor, please come help us in Pine Ridge. We are scared.'”
It’s not clear what Noem is referring to, exactly. There have been some reports of cartels embedding themselves in reservations—NBC has a long report of how this has happened in Montana—and it’s true that many reservations have big drug addiction problems. “Right now it’s as if fentanyl is raining on our reservation,” Marvin Weatherwax, Jr., a representative in the Montana state House who also serves on the Blackfeet Tribal Business Council, told NBC. But Noem hasn’t pointed to anything specific that’s happening in South Dakota. She seems to just kind of be jousting with Natives to position herself as a Republican veep contender.
Noem has, to her credit, called for an audit of how federal funds are being used by South Dakota’s tribes, alleging corruption. (In my view, audits of how federal funds are used are pretty much always a good idea.) |