This Is What the First Hours of a Near-Total Ban on Abortion Look Like
This Is What the First Hours of a Near-Total Ban on Abortion Look Like
The Texas law SB 8 will force abortion clinics in the state to turn away about 80 percent of all patients.
By Amy LittlefieldTODAY 11:56 AM
Like many abortion activists in Texas, Amanda Beatriz Williams stayed up most of the night on Tuesday and awoke to a terrifying silence.
Her organization, the Lilith Fund, helps people pay for abortions in Texas. On a typical shift, they hear from between 30 and 50 people. On Wednesday, as a near-total ban forced clinics across the state to stop providing most abortions, the fund heard from fewer than 10.
This is a huge drop in the number of people that we normally hear from and that just tells us that those people are out there, pregnant against their will, Williams said. It is absolutely devastating. As she speaks, Williams breaks down into sobs.
The law, Senate Bill 8, bans abortion after embryonic cardiac activity can be detected, which usually happens between five and seven weeks after a womans last period, before many women know theyre pregnant, and before an embryo has developed anything resembling a heart. Experts have estimated that the ban will force Texas clinics to turn away about 80 percent of all patients. It deputizes any private citizen to enforce the law by filing suit against anyone who aids and abets in a banned abortion, a definition so sprawling, opponents warn, it could apply to a patients friend or spouse, the Uber driver who takes them to the clinic, or a donor who writes a check to an abortion fund. Those who sue have an incentive; they can win at least $10,000 per abortion and even if they lose, the person they sued will still have to pay their own legal fees. Clinics and grassroots activists like Williams had hoped for a last-minute reprieve from the Supreme Court after the US Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit canceled a lower-court hearing on a challenge to the ban. But the Supreme Court failed to act and then, late Wednesday night, denied an emergency request to block the ban.
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https://www.thenation.com/article/society/texas-abortion-ban-sb8/
2naSalit
(86,534 posts)Rape a compulsory rite of passage.
Skittles
(153,147 posts)but have no problem making a woman carry a rapist's baby to term
that is some fucked up shit right there
2naSalit
(86,534 posts)I'm so glad I managed to never have to need an abortion and that now I am beyond having to worry about it. This all pisses me off to much that there aren't words foul enough to express what I think.