Posted on 10/10/2014 10:44:23 PM PDT by Morgana
Abortion is a right is a claim often made by the media and USA Today is no exception.
USA Todays Editorial Board penned a piece entitled, Abortion safety as a pretext: Our view on Oct. 10. In it, the staff called abortion a right burdened by so many unnecessary obstacles and detailed how abortion foes are chipping away at Roe v. Wades guarantee.
From the beginning, the piece claimed, States have every obligation to ensure that abortions are performed safely. But when states use safety as a pretext to put providers out of business, the staff argued, they make abortion riskier for all women and deny some a right. (Babies not included.)
Pointing to Texas, the staff wrote how an abortion has become almost meaningless for many women, after downsizing from 41 abortion clinics last year to eight today. The staff blamed the change on the states onerous regulations that translate into costly renovations and force providers to affiliate with hospitals.
Among other concerns, USA Today warned, Women unable to travel might turn to dangerous alternatives. Or gasp they might rethink their choice to end a babys life.
With abortion foes chipping away at Roe v. Wade, clinics are so burdened by restrictions that abortions are hard to obtain, the piece whined.
The staff acknowledged the case of Philadelphia abortionist Kermit Gosnell but only to say The industry itself and some states are guilty of failing to weed out bad actors.
If states are really interested in safety, the piece continued, they'd look to Maryland for instruction. In Maryland, regulators consulted with all sides and drew up new rules after a botched abortion in 2010. They included some hospital-like requirements, but only those that made sense.
But to whom? The staff deduced, The changes satisfied abortion foes and advocates alike, from a New York Times piece. (Satisfied was a stretch. The one pro-life voice commenting on the regulations in the piece, Jeffrey D. Meister, the legislative director of Maryland Right to Life, merely said, After 20 years of not having any regulations whatsoever, it is a step in the right direction.)
Of course, the family of Jennifer Morbelli may not be satisfied with Marylands abortion regulations. The 29-year-old died as the result of a late-term abortion at Germantown Reproductive Health Services in 2013, as reported by none other than USA Today.
Still, theres always hope: Surely, at least one case is heading to the Supreme Court as federal courts debate the constitutionality of Texas-style restrictions, the board wrote.
When it arrives, USA Today concluded, the justices ought to recognize that a right burdened by so many unnecessary obstacles ceases at some point to be a right at all. Huh. Tell that to Maryland gun-owners.
Since Texas clinic closures, the media have been in a huff, from The Daily Beast calling the move draconian to Meet the Press Host Chuck Todd criticizing the GOP for disliking all regulation but those on abortion clinics.
[ Like owning a gun? ]
No, you cannot own a gun because you might kill someone who is intending to do harm to you...
But you have every right to hire a professional hitman to slice and dice up a innocent life living inside of you and extracting it out one arm and leg at a time...
Sorry to hear about son, FRiend. And likewise, your friend, Debbie’s loss. Losses no parent should ever suffer.
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