The Supreme Court allows Texas abortion law to move forward. |
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WEAR A DAMN MASK! SAVE A LIFE! TRUST SCIENCE AND MEDICAL EXPERTS! THE CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC IS FUCKING REAL!
GET VACCINATED! IF THE OPPORTUNITY TO GET THE VACCINES ARE AVAILABLE, GET IT WHILE IT'S STILL FREE! THE MEDICAL EXPERTS SAY THE VACCINES DO WORK AND IT REDUCES THE RISK OF CORONAVIRUS INFECTION. OVER 675,000 AMERICANS ARE DEAD FROM THE CORONAVIRUS.
HOLD THEM ACCOUNTABLE NOW! VOTE THESE DUMBASS LAWMAKERS OUT OF OFFICE! STOP SUPPORTING ALL FORMS OF EXTREMISM!
GIVE PUERTO RICO, GUAM, AMERICAN SAMOA, U.S. VIRGIN ISLANDS AND NORTHERN MARIANA ISLANDS THE RIGHT TO VOTE IN THE U.S. PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS! GRANT STATEHOOD TO THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. MAKE IT THE DOUGLASS COMMONWEALTH.
GOOGLE'S BLOGGER IS STRAIGHT UP TRASH! THE BLOGGER INTERFACE IS A TOTAL DISASTER AND IT'S RIDICULOUS!
WHITE PRIVILEGE IS REAL! IT'S "SUIT AND TIE" WHITE SUPREMACY ON TELEVISION, RADIO, THE INTERNET AND AMERICAN POLICY!
WE'RE NOT THE ESTABLISHMENT! WE ARE THE VOTERS WHO SUPPORT CANDIDATES THAT AREN'T THE NOISE! REJECT EXTREMISTS ON THE LEFT AND ESPECIALLY ON THE RIGHT!
YOU CAN'T FIX STUPID!
EXPECT MORE!
I am not a fan of termination of a fetus but I am not a woman. I believe women should have the right to make a decision involving their health. Women should have equal rights, equal pay and equal tasks.
Women should not be subjected by the government on what's right for their health or safety.
If a person was born biologically male (or female) but identifies as a woman (or a man), it's not my business to decide on who she (or he) is. I respect her (or his) right to be who she (or he) identifies as. Transgender Americans deserve the right to be who they are.
The Karens in Texas have successfully pass its voting restrictions law and its six week abortion law.
The Karens also got a boost of support from five of the Supreme Court justices.
The War in Afghanistan is over. But the civil war in the United States is on. The culture wars are ramping up again and the Republicans are playing on the fears yet again to make a desperate attempt to win back Congress and later the White House.
You know, I thought conservatives were the people who want "freedom." These are the same idiots who want to say it's "My body, my choice" when it comes to wearing face masks. These idiots are screaming at women's health providers for performing these difficult decisions.
No women thinks abortion is good. It's a painful procedure and it does live traumatic effects on women.
Terminations of fetuses often are in regards to a woman's decision on the grounds of:
- Rape and incest.
- Not being financially stable to raise children.
- Life threatening issues to the woman's life or the fetus.
Unplanned or unwanted pregnancies happen. A woman could face post-traumatic stress when they have children. A woman could be unfit to be a mother. The Republican state governments already trying to strip away the safety net which allows food stamps, rent relief, disaster relief and daycare.
The very same idiots want women who have multiple children from different partners to stop having children. They want single mothers to work. The same idiots who believe "no free lunch" applies to a single mother raising children.
Why should the government be in the business on how to decide on what's the right decision for a woman?
There are procedures done in the health care provider. It's safe and effective.
The pill can be given within 10 weeks of a pregnancy. It will induce a miscarriage which leads to cramping, pain and heavy bleeding.
Surgical abortion which requires a gentle suction and it be done with local anaesthetic.
Also a dilation and evacuation can be done.
These procedures are safe, effective and will not affect the woman's body. Again, it will be painful but not life threatening. Women who decide to carry a termination are often scared to do it. It's no free ride to have these procedures. It can cost up to $40,000 for a termination.
The laws these states are trying to pass are infringing on a woman's right to make a difficult decision on whether they should term a pregnancy. The far-right and Christian extremists are trying to intervene by protesting near providers and harassing women for carrying out the decision.
The Supreme Court has proven time and time again that they're out of touch with America. This should be an early indicator for Democrats to move forward in ending the filibuster or win the Senate and improve the majority.
Amy Howe of SCOTUSblog wrote on the emergency decision being rejected by the five Karens in the Court.
The Supreme Court on Tuesday night took a step that anti-abortion activists have hoped for, and abortion-rights supporters have feared, since the death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg nearly a year ago. By failing to respond to a plea for them to intervene, the justices allowed a Texas law that bans nearly all abortions to go into effect early Wednesday morning. The abortion providers challenging the law say that it will bar at least 85% of abortions in the state and will likely cause many clinics to close. The justices could still act on the providers’ request at any time.
The Supreme Court's conservative majority once again takes progress back. |
The law bans abortions after about six weeks of pregnancy – a time when many people do not yet know they are pregnant – and allows private citizens to sue anyone who helps a patient get an abortion. The Texas legislature passed the law as part of an effort to undercut the Supreme Court’s landmark decisions in Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey, which established a constitutional right to have an abortion before the point of fetal viability, generally understood to occur around 24 weeks of pregnancy.
Court watchers and people on both sides of the abortion debate kept vigil into the early hours of Wednesday morning, waiting for an order that never came from the justices. Many experts expected the court to act before midnight central time, when the law was scheduled to take effect. Instead, the court – at least for now – declined to block the law despite the fact that it defies Roe and Casey, the future of which are squarely at issue in a separate case, to be argued in the upcoming 2021-22 term, involving a Mississippi law that bans most abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy.
The law at the center of the Texas case, known as S.B. 8, prohibits doctors from performing abortions if they can detect a fetal heartbeat, including the kind of cardiac activity that normally occurs at roughly the sixth week of pregnancy. In a twist intended to make the law harder to challenge in court, the law does not rely on state officials to enforce the ban. Instead, the law tasks private individuals with bringing lawsuits against anyone who provides or “aids or abets” an abortion. Anyone who brings a successful lawsuit can collect $10,000 or more from the person who is found to have violated the law. The unusual private-enforcement scheme distinguishes the Texas law from other states’ abortion bans, all of which have been blocked by court rulings ordering state officials not to enforce them because they run afoul of Roe and Casey.
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott signed the law on May 19. Abortion providers went to court to challenge the law in July. They argued (among other things) that the law violates their patients’ constitutional right to end a pregnancy before viability.
After the district court denied the defendants’ motion to dismiss on Aug. 25, the defendants turned quickly to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit. The court of appeals granted the defendants’ request to put the district-court proceedings, including an Aug. 30 hearing on the challengers’ request for a preliminary injunction, on hold, and it denied the challengers’ request to expedite the appeal, setting the stage for the challengers to seek emergency relief in the Supreme Court on Monday afternoon.
In asking the court to block the law from going into effect, the challengers stressed that the six-week mark is “a point in pregnancy at which a State may not prohibit a patient from deciding whether to end her pregnancy.” They assured the justices that they could stop the enforcement of the law without necessarily tipping their hand on the substance of the underlying dispute, but they painted a dire picture of the consequences if the court did not act. They told the justices that, because the court of appeals had rejected their plea to expedite the appeal, “the rights of Texas women to obtain a legal abortion” will be “in jeopardy for months or more” while the litigation winds through the courts.
Texas' abortion law will be in the Supreme Court. |
The Texas attorney general and other defenders of the law urged the justices to stay out of the dispute. Even if S.B. 8 were unconstitutional, the state contended, there still would be no reason for the Supreme Court to intervene because courts are limited in their power to grant relief before laws have actually been enforced. In general, courts can bar people from doing something, but they have no power to “expunge the law itself,” the state said. And in this case, the state contended, the challengers sued Texas government officials who “explicitly do not enforce the law” as well as an anti-abortion activist who has testified that he will not bring any lawsuits under the law. That means an order from the Supreme Court at this point would have no effect and would exceed the court’s authority, the state argued.
The fact that the challengers can’t sue state officials before the law goes into effect, the state continued, does not make the law unconstitutional: If the abortion providers are sued in state courts for violating S.B. 8, the state assured the justices, they can defend themselves by arguing that the law is unconstitutional.
As the deadline for the law to go into effect approached, Whole Woman’s Health – the lead plaintiff in the case, indicated on Twitter that its staff and doctors would continue to provide care right up until 11:59 central time. Shortly before midnight, Whole Woman’s Health CEO Amy Hagstrom Miller tweeted that the company had “just finished care for our last patient in Texas today.” Summarizing the state of play, Hagstrom Miller concluded, “And now we wait.”
This article was originally published at Howe on the Court.
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