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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsAbortion access has gotten so dire in Oklahoma that women are going to Texas for care
Abortion access has gotten so dire in Oklahoma that women are going to Texas for care
And Oklahoma's drive to become the most "pro-life" state in the country show no signs of slowing
By Katie Mcdonough
You know things are bad in Oklahoma when women are forced to cross into Texas where sweeping new abortion restrictions went into effect this week in order to access reproductive healthcare.
And Oklahomas drive to become the most pro-life state in the country show no signs of slowing, as MSNBCs Irin Carmon reports.
While Republican lawmakers like state Rep. Mike Ritze sound off comparing abortion care to Nazi science and declare that the war on women doesnt exist unless you go to an Arab country, women like Jessica Davis the women Ritze was elected to serve are being forced to use their life savings to pay for abortion care that is no longer accessible in their home state.
More from MSNBC:
Earlier that month, at home in Oklahoma City, the Davises were told that the boy she was carrying had a severe brain malformation known as holoprosencephaly. It is rare, though possible, for such a fetus to survive to birth, but doctors told them that he would not reach his first birthday. He would never walk, lift his head, Jessica, 23, recalled in an interview.
I could let my son go on and suffer, she said. Or she could accept a word she didnt like abortion and do the best thing for my baby.
The Davises ordeal was always going to be painful. But the grim path that led them to a night in the car was determined, nearly every step of the way, by a state that has scrambled to be the most pro-life in the nation. There are no exceptions for families like the Davises.
The University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, where the Davises were diagnosed, once provided later abortions for women whose fetuses had been diagnosed with lethal anomalies. It is now forbidden from doing so by a 2007 law banning abortions in public hospitals.
A second law, passed in 2011, banned abortions statewide after the 20-week mark of a pregnancy on the theory that fetuses could feel pain at that point. In Oklahoma, that law has no exceptions for fetal anomaly.
more...
http://www.salon.com/2013/10/31/abortion_access_has_gotten_so_dire_in_oklahoma_that_women_are_going_to_texas_for_care/
cali
(114,904 posts)babylonsister
(171,075 posts)TxDemChem
(1,918 posts)the restrictions to start today while the case moves forward. Planned Parenthood is shutting down 12 clinics.
cali
(114,904 posts)I know no one wants to hear this, but we are badly losing the war for choice.
babylonsister
(171,075 posts)babylonsister
(171,075 posts)Appeals Court Allows Unconstitutional Texas Abortion Restrictions to Take Effect While Legal Challenge Proceeds
https://www.aclu.org/reproductive-freedom/appeals-court-allows-unconstitutional-texas-abortion-restrictions-take-effect
Sigh. We are going backwards, aren't we.
TxDemChem
(1,918 posts)You are up on everything! Way to go babylonsister. I love running into your posts and reading your threads.