Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
They are. Unfortunately I live in Southern Texas and three ob/gyns that I know of have moved to New Mexico. It's scary.
Of course they have. Who does not know a women who had struggled with a difficult pregnancy it miscarriage or any number of other reproductive issues that are impacted by this new legal environment?
Instead of working with your doctor, you now have the state of Texas way overly involved in your reproductive life. I really would not want my DDs to carry a pregnancy in texas at this point.
Anonymous wrote:
They are. Unfortunately I live in Southern Texas and three ob/gyns that I know of have moved to New Mexico. It's scary.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please look at this moronic Republican from SC talk about the inevitable impacts of the heartbeat bill he voted for. Anyone with half a brain knew this would happen and for him to act like it’s news…I just cannot. They do not care about women.
https://www.wistv.com/2022/08/18/video-upstate-lawmaker-emotional-over-teen-impacted-by-abortion-ban-he-supported/
Am I understanding this correctly? He cried over the impacts of the heartbeat bill but rather than vote against it, he chose not to vote at all?? Words and tears mean nothing if you aren't actually going to do anything about it.
That’s right moron. Your vote may result in a teenager either dying or losing her fertility.
Anonymous wrote:More trigger bans loom as 1 in 3 women lose most abortion access post-Roe
No paywall: https://wapo.st/3Af1k9n
Anonymous wrote:EMTALA was based on a Texas law that was passed after too many pregnant women in labor and/or in distress were turned away at hospitals. The combination of overwhelmed county (charity) hospitals and uninsured patients, colliding with increasing costs, led to the requirement to treat patients, regardless of finances (or anything else).
Now Texas is trying to get around it. Shameful.