If we elected Presidents by popular vote you’d be onto something.
I call it breakfast in bed.i wonder what the stock of the "morning after pill" is going to look like in a few weeks? or did the politicians already buy that up?
I thought the problem was women who have too much sex, not cat lady spinsters aged 25-40Speaking of...
If anyone wants to show those cases not being covered I’m all ears. Otherwise, yes it’s hyperbole.So you’ve read each individual state’s laws that ban or propose to ban abortion and you know for a fact that they have clearly detailed which specific cases abortions will be allowed as exceptions to the law?
I know you haven’t and I’m also quite certain many of the places that ban or propose to ban abortions don’t really care about those little details. So much for hyperbole.
I’ve never advocated for popular vote. So no.And if the situation were reversed, you wouldn't dream of bringing this up.
Lol... that's what you said about voter suppression laws, that no one was having their voting rights denied. Then Texas happened.No one is in danger of not being treated for those conditions in the near future or later. That’s pure hyperbole.
as far as coat hangers and vacuums go, what about is that don’t own a vacuum.
Ah, okay. You’re going to believe what you want to believe with no factual basis for it. Gotcha.If anyone wants to show those cases not being covered I’m all ears. Otherwise, yes it’s hyperbole.
Every single state that has an abortion law ready to go, has a medical exception. So ya, facts and suchAh, okay. You’re going to believe what you want to believe with no factual basis for it. Gotcha.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.politico.com/news/magazine/2022/04/28/the-new-abortion-restriction-no-one-is-talking-about-00028171%3f_amp=trueBut here’s the thing: I wasn’t in the same immediate, actively dying, distress that my grandmother endured all those years before — the kind often associated with the “life of the mother” exception to abortion restrictions, called the “life-or-health” exception in legal circles. To look at me, having healed from the damage caused by the heart attacks, I was healthy and ambulatory. And yet a team of medical professionals — from cardiologists to cardiac geneticists, high-risk OB-GYNs, endocrinologists, rheumatologists and medical ethicists — all said that carrying this pregnancy would be tantamount to suicide.
So this lady is making a really big deal about “imminent” and “immediate”.As usual the devil is in the details.
This lady explains that her previous heart conditions would put her at a very high risk of death if she were to carry a pregnancy fullterm. Yet, as the definition of risk to the mother becomes more nebulous and up for interpretation she would have had to carry the pregnancy fullterm under many current or predictably, future laws, which in doing so would have been "tantamount to suicide" in her words.
When abortion providers are run out of a state and doctors can be charged with a crime for performing an abortion intended to save the mother's life, even if that doesn't yet meet a narrow definition defined by anti-abortion zealots, where will someone find a safe provider?
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.politico.com/news/magazine/2022/04/28/the-new-abortion-restriction-no-one-is-talking-about-00028171%3f_amp=true
No doubt they are brains. I always knew you were super smart tho. Congrats!I would love to have someone explain to me how someone can be "over educated". Really? Sorry....you just have too much information and are too smart.
Yep...I should have told my daughter, who is graduating tomorrow with her doctorate in dentistry (humblebrag).....or my daughter who is graduating in August with a masters in Language and speech pathology (double humblebrag), that they should have never pursued that much education because...then you will just be over educated.
What an idiot.