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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsToday SCOTUS decides whether it will hear case requiring mandatory cremation/burial for abortions
Today SCOTUS decides whether it will hear an Indiana case requiring mandatory cremation/ burial for abortions AND miscarriages based on "dignity of personhood" If they take it, & decide medical waste is a person, ROE IS DEAD. PLEASE PAY ATTENTION.
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Buckeyeblue
(5,505 posts)I agree, though, if this passes, it's all over. Red states will run up absurd laws tied to reproductive rights and make the humiliation factor so high that women will not really have any choices.
spanone
(135,950 posts)fleur-de-lisa
(14,629 posts)Freethinker65
(10,116 posts)The Catholic hospital where I had a D and C during/after a spontaneous abortion (miscarriage) offered to hold a service for the "remains". For the record, pathology found absolutely no fetal tissue. I declined. Turns out they went ahead and did it anyway informing me the following year when I was invited to the yearly remembrance service (when my current struggling to survive son was in NICU). I was confused at the call thinking perhaps my son in the NICU had died and lashed out at the sister offering her service. How dare they!
ehrnst
(32,640 posts)marybourg
(12,650 posts)of life. When my mother was born, in 1920, her mother appeared to be dying after childbirth and my mother was completely neglected by the good sisters of St. Cs Hospital in lower Manhattan, under the theory, as they told the sister of the apparently dying woman, my mothers aunt, that the surviving husband wouldnt be able to take care of the infant, so it would be better if she didnt survive. My mothers aunt, took both her dying sister and niece home to their tenement, and nursed them back to life. Family story.
ck4829
(35,096 posts)Part of me wonders if that's a feature and not a bug of the right wing agenda... Make the poor poorer and the rich look richer by comparison.