Major gun-rights group joins abortion advocates in protest of Texas pro-life law



In a surprise development last week, an influential gun-rights group sided with abortion advocates in protest of Texas' new six-week abortion ban.

What are the details?

The Firearms Policy Coalition filed an amicus brief in support of abortion providers in a legal challenge to the new law, arguing that the legislation sets a dangerous precedent that could potentially be exploited to limit constitutional rights, Bloomberg Law reported.

The law, which took effect in September, bans abortions after fetal cardiac activity is detected, something that typically occurs at around six weeks gestation. But unlike similar laws passed in other states that have been blocked by the courts, Texas' ban relies solely on private individuals for enforcement by empowering citizens to file civil lawsuits against those who perform, aid, or abet an abortion after six weeks.

That unique approach has angered abortion advocates both in the state and across the country and now has attracted opposition from a gun-rights group that is usually supportive of conservative causes.

"The approach used by Texas to avoid pre-enforcement review of its restriction on abortion and its delegation of enforcement to private litigants could just as easily be used by other States to restrict First and Second Amendment rights or, indeed, virtually any settled or debated constitutional right," representative counsel Erik Jaffe wrote in the brief on behalf of FPC.

Jaffe — a former clerk to Justice Clarence Thomas who has elsewhere defended abortion restrictions — claimed that such a result "is wholly anathema to our constitutional scheme regardless [of] what one thinks of abortion or, indeed, of any other hotly debated constitutional right, such as the right to keep and bear arms."

"It's hard to miss the parallels between abortion and guns," he said, Bloomberg reported.

What else?

Similar arguments have been offered by those on the other side of the political spectrum, such as Brigitte Amiri of the American Civil Liberties Union.

Take almost any individual constitutional right and it "could easily fall into a similar scheme by any state that disfavors that right," Amiri, an attorney representing the Texas abortion providers in their complaint, argued, according to Bloomberg.

She suggested that the Texas case is essentially about whether a state can "pass an unconstitutional law and do so in a way that would evade court review," not necessarily about the right to an abortion.

Since its passage, the Texas law, known as Senate Bill 8, has been the target of legal challenges. It was briefly blocked earlier this month by a district judge before being reinstated only days later as the result of an appeals court ruling.

The jockeying comes as the Supreme Court prepares to hear arguments on a separate state abortion ban out of Mississippi that could also have major implications on abortion precedent in America.

Pro-abortion churches in Texas vow to fight the state's new pro-life law, 'take God back' from the religious right



A growing number of pro-abortion churches in Texas are vowing to fight a new state law that prohibits performing abortion procedures after a fetal heartbeat is detected, which typically occurs at around six weeks' gestation.

The churches, known as "Reproductive Freedom Congregations," are united in their public support for a woman's right to an abortion and are determined to "take God back" from the religious right.

What are the details?

The initiative was spearheaded last week by the religious group "Just Texas: Faith Voices for Reproductive Justice" with the aim of training pastors on how to preach on reproductive health issues from the pulpit, the Religious News Service reported.

It was officially organized in anticipation of Texas's new pro-life law, which allows private citizens to file a civil lawsuit against doctors who perform abortions after six weeks or anyone who "aids and abets" the procedure.

During a press conference on Wednesday, the group said 25 congregations had already agreed to hold the designation and another 70 were going through the process.

According to Just Texas' website, to become a "Reproductive Freedom Congregation," a church must publicly affirm three principles:

  • We trust and respect women.
  • We promise that people who attend our congregation will be free from stigma, shame, or judgment for their reproductive decisions, including abortion.
  • We believe access to comprehensive and affordable reproductive health services is a moral and social good.

Just Texas also encourages member churches to go through training sessions in preparation for testifying about reproductive health care or for participating in marches and protests about reproductive freedom issues.

What are people saying?

"The church is an ideal place to love people into wholeness and what our church has been about for a long time and inviting people to speak their truths and not be silenced about reproductive issues," said Rev. Dr. Daniel Kanter of the First Unitarian Church in Dallas.

"We live in a country where a third of women have had an abortion, which means that on a Sunday morning when I'm preaching to my congregation, I can assume that a third of the women there have had an abortion," added Reverend Dr. Colin Bossen, senior minister of the First Unitarian Universalist Church of Houston, in an interview with KRIV-TV on Sunday.

"There are progressive liberal mainstream churches that are synagogues and mosques and temples that are out there and believe in reproductive freedom for women," Bossen continued. "We're going to make our voices known."

The reverend claimed that Texas's new abortion ban is "straight out of" the "fascist playbook."

What else?

But Just Texas' mission extends far beyond just reproductive health care, according to Rev. Erika Forbes, the faith and outreach manager for Just Texas.

It may have started with preaching abortion access, but the end goal is a drastic shift in how the American church views an array of social issues.

"I am on a quest, we are on a quest, to take God back from the hostage situation that the conservatives have hijacked, and I absolutely feel that the God that I believe in, the God that I serve, called by many names, and no name at all, trusts and respects women," Forbes said.

'As many abortions as possible': Inside the 'race' to terminate pregnancies before Texas ban kicked in; women 'relieved,' 'happy' after having last-minute procedures



Desperate abortion-seekers and abortion providers described their "race against time" in the final hours before Texas's new ban on abortions kicked in Wednesday, and it shows just how little thought is given to countless unborn lives that are routinely terminated.

What are the details?

At a Whole Woman's Health clinic in Fort Worth, it was "a race to perform as many abortions as possible until midnight," the 19th reported. After that, the new state law — which prohibits abortions after a fetal heartbeat is detected, or roughly six weeks gestation — would make having the procedure nearly impossible.

That Tuesday, scores of patients gathered outside the clinic hoping to undergo a last-minute operation, but there were too many patients and too little time.

Inside the clinic, Marva Sadler, the director of clinical services, tried to motivate her team of eight, saying, "We are not the bad guys here. We are doing everything right and we're going to help everybody that we can. If there's someone that we can't help, it's not our fault."

A similar scene played out at Whole Woman's Health clinics across the state. The abortion provider wrote in a tweet thread that "waiting rooms are filled with patients" and that doctors and other staff would be working until the very last minute to service them.

From Whole Woman’s Health CEO @AmyHM: We have staff and doctors providing abortions in Texas - still at this hour -… https://t.co/CC0CEoWn5B

— Whole Woman's Health (@WholeWomans) 1630463927.0

"This is what abortion care looks like. Human right warriors," the group said.

What else?

Abortion-seekers, too, gave little thought to the life inside of them while describing the chaotic final days before the ban took effect.

"It was a race against time for me," said 21-year-old Hope Hanzlik, an Army service member, in conversation with the Lily.

She recalled scheduling her abortion procedure on Aug. 23, knowing that the Texas ban could take effect soon. On the day of the appointment, she got approval from her commanding officers and then drove three hours to the clinic with a friend. She arrived 48 hours before the ban was implemented.

Hanzlik said she felt "relieved," adding, "I'm not ready to have a child."

Anything else?

Another woman, a 21-year-old sex worker who remained anonymous for fear of reprisal, told Jezebel she was "sick with worry" that she would "have to have the baby" due to the new Texas law.

"Ever since I was a teenager — and then especially when I started doing sex work — I knew that if I got pregnant I would get an abortion," recalled the woman, referred to in the article as "Jen."

"I know Texas is very conservative, and I figured there might be a lot of judgment and it might be a little hard, but I never seriously considered it that I wouldn't be able to get an abortion at all," she added.

Jen, however, was able to get an appointment on the last day before the law kicked in. She said the clinic was packed with at least 30 people at a time when she was there. Afterward, she said she felt "happy" and "relieved" but sad for others who weren't able to have the procedure.

"I feel a little woozy from the sedative still, but other than that I feel very fine and very happy," Jen said. "I feel so relieved — this is a big weight off my shoulders."

(H/T: Insider)