Anonymous wrote:You don't have time to consult a lawyer in a life or death situation, and most doctors don't want GOP idiots to report them or sue them or send them to jail for an "abortion."
It's probably going to take a number of women dying for the GOP to want to do anything about it, and those women will mostly have to be white and wealthy.
Anonymous wrote:Republican women don't have miscarriages, so they're fine with the rest of you dying in childbirth.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought Texas had a health/life exception?
See, that's the problem with this bullshit. Even with a "health/life exception" it ends up being lawyers arguing and wasting time rather than allowing the doctor to save lives.
You really screwed up, Republicans. You do not understand the first thing about how things work in real life. It's all just this glib magical thinking of sound bites.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought Texas had a health/life exception?
See, that's the problem with this bullshit. Even with a "health/life exception" it ends up being lawyers arguing and wasting time rather than allowing the doctor to save lives.
You really screwed up, Republicans. You do not understand the first thing about how things work in real life. It's all just this glib magical thinking of sound bites.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought Texas had a health/life exception?
The trick is, how do you determine exactly when the mother's life is at risk? A patient can seem stable, then go downhill quickly. Doctors are going to be too afraid to risk it before they are absolutely certain the woman will die. At which point, it may be too late.
Google Savita Halappanavar to see how this ends up playing out in real life.
Anonymous wrote:I thought Texas had a health/life exception?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought Texas had a health/life exception?
We gonna go through this again? You seriously didn’t learn your lesson from the 10 year old rape victim who was denied an abortion in her home state so that the hospital would be in compliance with the law? Seriously? OP.
Anonymous wrote:I thought Texas had a health/life exception?
Anonymous wrote:I thought Texas had a health/life exception?
Anonymous wrote:Munoz said he faced an awful predicament with a recent patient who had started to miscarry and developed a dangerous womb infection. The fetus still had signs of a heartbeat, so an immediate abortion — the usual standard of care — would have been illegal under Texas law.
“We physically watched her get sicker and sicker and sicker” until the fetal heartbeat stopped the next day, “and then we could intervene,” he said. The patient developed complications, required surgery, lost multiple liters of blood and had to be put on a breathing machine “all because we were essentially 24 hours behind.’’