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North Carolina forced ultrasound law struck down on First Amendment grounds
Sunday, January 19, 2014 2:13 PM
NIKI2
Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...
Quote:The "Woman’s Right to Know Act" of 2011 demands that North Carolina physicians show and talk about a fetal ultrasound before a woman can have an abortion, but that mandate violates the First Amendment rights of doctors, a federal judge ruled late Friday. In 2011, the Republican-led North Carolina legislature overrode then Democrat Gov. Bev Perdue’s veto of the law. The ideological bent of the law is ultimately what stumped US District Judge Catherine Eagles, who ruled Friday that the legislature can’t force doctors to forego a patient’s interest in order to utter words predicated on politics. “The Supreme Court has never held that a state has the power to compel a health care provider to speak, in his or her own voice, the state’s ideological message in favor of carrying a pregnancy to term, and this Court declines to do so today,” Eagles wrote in her ruling. http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/2014/0118/North-Carolina-forced-ultrasound-law-struck-down-on-First-Amendment-grounds
Quote:“The founders would roll over in their graves if they knew that the First Amendment is being used to keep women from receiving sound medical advice about their own bodies,” Tami Fitzgerald, director of the North Carolina Values Coalition, told the Raleigh News & Observer in an email.
Sunday, January 19, 2014 8:57 PM
SHINYGOODGUY
Sunday, January 19, 2014 9:05 PM
MAGONSDAUGHTER
Monday, January 20, 2014 9:26 AM
Monday, January 20, 2014 10:31 AM
GEEZER
Keep the Shiny side up
Quote:Originally posted by Niki2: Such bull-fucking-SHIT, and they know it and everyone knows it and it's disgusting.
Monday, January 20, 2014 2:38 PM
Quote:Both women who were denied an abortion and those who had one reported mixed emotions about their experience. In fact, of the women who reported feeling regret about their near-limit abortion, nine out of 10 also reported relief. Furthermore, feeling negative emotions after an abortion did not indicate that women considered it the wrong decision—-more than eight in 10 women who experienced primarily negative emotions felt that abortion was the correct choice. http://www.guttmacher.org/media/nr/2013/08/05/index.html
Quote:Before Roe v. Wade legalized abortion in 1973, American women inserted knitting needles and other sharp objects into their cervixes to end unwanted pregnancies. They put dangerous drugs like the tissue-destroying potassium permanganate into their vaginas, which typically failed to terminate pregnancy but sometimes caused hemorrhage. Elihu Sussman, a retired New York City pediatrician who was working as a medical student at Boston City Hospital in the 1960s, says, “There were thirty beds, and some of them were always filled with women who came in because of septic abortions—four, five, six at any given time.” His wife, Geraldine Sussman, was a student nurse at Bellevue in New York during the same period. “They’d use coat hangers, laundry detergent products,” she says. “A lot of them would rupture their uteruses and end up with hysterectomies. People now don’t realize what it was like. It was awful.”
Quote:Women continue to purchase abortion drugs on the Web without medical guidance, an undertaking that is more dangerous and fraught. Misuse or fraudulent pills could cause complications. A woman could misjudge the length of her gestation or just decide to take the pills after nine weeks. Or she could unknowingly have a risk factor, such as an ectopic pregnancy.
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