This power move from elected officials might not be so important and overlooks developments in technology.
Remember . . .
More than six in 10 US abortions in 2023 were done by medication — a significant jump since 2020
A clinical setting would probably be safer for everyone involved but the REALITY is that, according to several online reports, medication is often obtained from out of state via "tele-medicine" and regulation is getting tougher for authorities to regulate whilst the American birth rate continues to plummet.
The future . . . Abortion pills will eventually be sold over the counter and then at convenience stores. Meanwhile, locals will have to submit to an on-site colonoscopy just to get allergy medicine that actually works.
Check-it . . .
"Now, after voters approved the amendment, called Amendment 3, last month, Republican Attorney General Andrew Bailey says that’s not the case.
"While Bailey has acknowledged that the amendment makes the state’s near-total abortion ban unenforceable, he also argues that Amendment 3 does not impact a slew of restrictions on abortion providers that have severely limited access to the procedure.
" 'Amendment 3 affirmatively protects a woman’s right to choose life for her unborn child,' Bailey wrote in a Nov. 25 court filing, arguing that a web of restrictions on providers should remain intact. Those restrictions include a requirement that women wait 72 hours between seeing a doctor and having an abortion.
"Bailey made the argument in a 128-page response to a lawsuit from Missouri’s Planned Parenthood affiliates who are pushing to formally block the abortion ban and restrictions. The filing comes just before a key hearing on Wednesday in which a judge will decide whether to block the restrictions as providers seek to restore access to the procedure as early as this week."
Read more via www.TonysKansasCity.com links . . .
Missouri AG Bailey argues Amendment 3 won't impact restrictions that limit abortions
Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey argued in a recent court filing that Amendment 3 does not impact a slew of regulations on abortion providers.
Kansas City doctor says Missouri abortion ban forced years of 'care delayed and care denied'
Dr. Betsy Wickstrom, a high-risk OB-GYN in Kansas City, is a Republican and a Christian but supported last month's abortion-rights amendment. She's concerned about what the future may hold with Missouri lawmakers threatening to overturn some of its protections.
Comments
Post a Comment
TKC COMMENT POLICY:
Be percipient, be nice. Don't be a spammer. BE WELL!!!
- The Management