Agnostic.com

7 14

LINK Texas Abortion Ban: What It Means and What Happens Next : NPR

With the U.S. Supreme Court mum, a new law went into effect in Texas that bans abortions after about six weeks of pregnancy. That's well before many women even know they are pregnant.

The law allows private citizens to sue abortion providers and anyone else who helps a woman obtain an abortion — including those who give a woman a ride to a clinic or provide financial assistance to obtain an abortion. Private citizens who bring these suits don't need to show any connection to those they are suing.

The law makes no exceptions for cases involving rape or .

Here's why the law is one of the strictest abortion bans in the country.

What does the Texas law prohibit?
It bans abortion as soon as cardiac activity is detectable. That's around six weeks, which is before a lot of people know that they're pregnant. Other states have tried to do this, but those laws have been challenged by abortion-rights groups and blocked by federal courts again and again.

How is this law different from other states' efforts?
Groups who oppose abortion rights have pushed for this Texas law, hoping that it will be harder for federal courts to knock it down. Instead of requiring public officials to enforce the law, this law allows individuals to bring civil lawsuits against abortion providers or anyone else found to "aid or abet" illegal abortions.

This law empowers individuals to enforce an abortion ban. How would that work in practice?
Anyone who successfully sues an abortion provider this law could be awarded at least $,000. And to prepare for that, Texas Right to Life has set up what it calls a "whistleblower" website where people can submit anonymous tips about anyone they believe to be violating the law.

"These lawsuits are not against the women," says John Seago with Texas Right to Life. "The lawsuits would be against the individuals making off of the abortion, the abortion industry itself. So this is not spy on your neighbor and see if they're having an abortion."

In a federal lawsuit challenging this, a coalition of abortion providers and reproductive rights groups said the law "places a bounty on people who provide or aid abortions, inviting random strangers to sue them."

While Texas doctors say they will comply with the new law, they must address patients' concerns and questions, including about how to get an out-of-state procedure.

What does the law mean for patients and abortion providers?
Dr. Bhavik Kumar, a family medicine doctor who works for Planned Parenthood in Houston, says the law creating a lot of uncertainty for patients and providers. But Kumar insists he will comply.

The ban, though, will likely mean a lot of questions from patients about how they can get an abortion outside of Texas, Kumar said.

"I know that there are many people who don't have to ability to make it out of state ... The logistics and ability to do so is not an option for them," he said. "So I'm really concerned about what's going to happen to people."

Dr. Ghazaleh Moayedi, an OB/GYN, told NPR over the weekend that patients are apprehensive. "They understand that the abortion that they're having this week, last week, the week before, is something that they wouldn't be able to have next week. They've been asking about it and asking, you know, 'If I were here in September, would I be able to get this?' "

What does this mean for abortion laws in other states?
If the federal courts ultimately allow this law to stand, it's very likely that other conservative states will move to pass similar laws. Seago, with Texas Right to Life, said his organization is working with activists in multiple states who are eager to replicate this model if it succeeds in blocking access to most abortions in Texas.

"It is still a bit untested. We're still working on what these lawsuits are going to look like if the industry decides to break the law," Seago said. "So it is a new model that we're still testing out."

What happens next?
Multiple court challenges to the law are underway, including several lawsuits in state court in Texas targeting anti-abortion-rights groups including Texas Right to Life. Abortion rights groups are also organizing protests and demonstrations in Texas in opposition to the law.

A spokeswoman for Texas Right to Life told NPR that no lawsuits against abortion providers are imminent, and abortion providers say they will comply with the law as long as it is in effect.

HippieChick58 9 Sep 2
Share

Enjoy being online again!

Welcome to the community of good people who base their values on evidence and appreciate civil discourse - the social network you will enjoy.

Create your free account

7 comments

Feel free to reply to any comment by clicking the "Reply" button.

4

Texas is insane with evangelism and right wing malicious cunts.

8

I had an abortion in San Antonio back in 1995. I was married , speaking enough English to enter university , ( just bcz medical terminology is greek and Latin and that saved my ass ), terrified to have a child in a country that I was not familiar with . My husband was constantly out of state and country as a marine officer , and in short , having a baby wasn’t the best for anyone at that time , including the baby .
I was on birth control pills and this was a huge surprise to me .
The abortion was done in a sketchy clinic , all by my self , and I was treated at least like a Ho .
I hate texas w passion and I will never live there even if my only option . Fuckers .

@Pralina1 I also had an abortion when I was married. We had just had our son and I was also on birth control. Our reasoning was it was too soon for another one and we didn't want another one yet. The clinic I went to wasn't scary at all, the employees there were very nice and I remember driving up to the clinic, the crazy pro lifers were trying to block me from entering the parking lot, I revved up my engine and floored my car, fuck them! A volunteer from the clinic had to come and escort me into the building all the while I was yelling obscenities and flipping off those crazy fuckers! My body my right! Fuck them and fuck Texas!

@MichelleGar1 I love u ♥️

@Pralina1 Love you too! ❤️

@MichelleGar1 Good for you

You should never feel like that, you are a lovely person

@altschmerz Thank you! It was crazy, it was the 90's and that's when I believe all the pro lifers were wanting to kill doctor's performing abortion's crazy time's and now crazier.

@altschmerz Right! Fuck them!

2

That abortion law is an abortion of reason, logic and humanity, and it amounts to a declaration of war on fertile women.

4

One thing for sure is that a lot of donations to help women who need an abortion travel to the saner states to get one. I already donate to one such organization and will increase my pledge. The woman who founded FFRF got started by supplying abortion funds before Roe v Wade. Her daughter is now the co-president.

6

Guess what?
Welcome to the American version of Sharia Law. Women in Texas get your hijab, niqab and burkas washed and ironed, looks like you're gonna need them. 🤬😢🤬

7

What if women got up en masse and moved to blue states? -Just a thought, since this appears to be a war on women. With republicans, the cruelty is the point. They certainly can't claim to be pro- life. 😛

Republicanism is just Sharia under another name.

3

Please don't get excited.

I like NPR but it is super nerdish. It has become a radio for the elites, more academic. It does a news piece on violin playing right at the top of a morning peak rush hour when you are trying to get important news.

As for this what comes next on Texas abortions, I can tell you better.

"Democrats will make noise but will do nothing and Republicans will keep winning just like they pulled down one Democrat governor down on the East Coast and now they will do the same in CA. They hate both liberal states. What happens next is we stay sissies and they keep kicking our ass. Their goal is re-fight and win the confederate war with our chessboard. The war is a democratic war with a thousand cuts starting from the control of school boards to local governments to state legislatures to US Capitol chambers, the SC and every other democratic institution. Guns, the Bible and church will be our way of life while we are naively just thinking elections. It is much deeper and bigger. While they treat this as a fight to win, we self congratulate ourselves as the righteous and nice guys."

You can take this to the bank.

The Gr-r-r is partly for Texas and partly for your “…take this to the bank.” attitude.

@yvilletom

I am blunt which is hard to digest. No one likes being called stupid. Prostitute does not like the word 'whore'. She would prefer a 'sex worker.' We Democrats are weak and our heroes/leaders are lousy. Just look at Biden. Still doing infrastructure which has more bi-partisan approval.. but can't get it done. Trump got money for the wall which was outrageous in both parties and among voters at large.

@St-Sinner This time the Gr-r-r is for your generalizing with “We Democrats....” when you are qualified to write only for yourself. Blunt is okay; try honesty.

@yvilletom

My observation is of what Democrats in Congress are doing and how we as Democrats/progressives here love our leaders for being nice and gentleman. If you don't fit that bill, say I don't like our Democrat leaders too. That's is what I am saying. I see Republicans are scoring victories in stopping our legislations and winning where they control legislatures. Most in our progressive groups don't seem unhappy about Biden fumbling the Afghanistan withdrawal, not being able to pass large initiatives like voting rights, infrastructure while Texas and Florida and Georgia are kicking our ass. Isn't saying what I think honesty?

@St-Sinner You’re still generalizing. Not thinking.

@yvilletom

I don't understand how. We said Democrats won the White House in 2020, many Bernie lovers did not like it. They could say the same.

Write Comment
You can include a link to this post in your posts and comments by including the text q:620014
Agnostic does not evaluate or guarantee the accuracy of any content. Read full disclaimer.