Not if Congress does it job: pass laws. Same as in any other country, except North Korea and Cuba I guess. |
hard to pass laws when the rules and a political party are hell bent against it |
Court system is messed up bad The prosecutors did not prove that drug use caused the still birth or the miscsrriage Nobody got convicted on a trial, the legal system is replaced by plea deals This is all at the discretion of the prosecutor I think the judge should review these more closely, we are returning to the age when people were accused of witchcraft |
I found this at reddit and am not on Twitter so I can’t go find the link myself and figured, eh, I’ll post the screen grab. Go Cards Against Humanity!
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Meanwhile...FL and TX grow and grow, while blue states shrink and shrink.
PPs, here's some tough math for you. Reality =/ Twitter. |
Well… if you force birth, you will grow. That’s true. |
You are a fool if you don't understand how this will unfold. Doctors aren't going to risk prison and financial ruin. Women in red states are screwed. |
How easy or hard is it for a doctor or an NP to get licensed in another state? |
Apologies if this has already been covered, but what is the risk that a fetal personhood case makes it’s way to the Supreme Court? If SCOTUS rules that a fetus is a full-on person, wouldn’t that negate any state or Congress from codifying Roe? I believe medical decisions about my body should be a constitutional right and not a law that could be taken away later.
- a woman who is glad to see some pausing of extreme state bans but is still terrified that a fundamental right of women to make their own medical decision has been taken away by SCOTUS and who worries it could get worse with the current extreme make-up of our highest court |
The birth rate will actually decline, not increase, in this environment. There is very legitimate concern now about going through a pregnancy in TX and many will try to avoid it. |