Culture Oklahoma enacts total abortion ban - Zygotes are now fully human

Oklahoma lawmakers have approved a bill that would make performing an abortion a felony except in the case of a medical emergency.

It's the latest conservative legislature to approve a new restriction on abortion, as Republican-led states across the country push to limit reproductive rights.

The recent wave of bills restricting abortion comes as the country awaits the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in a landmark reproductive rights case. Some legal experts predict the conservative court could weaken or even overturn the constitutional right to an abortion in the first two trimesters of pregnancy guaranteed in Roe v. Wade.

"The only person who should have the power to decide whether you need an abortion is you — no matter where you live, or how much money you make," Tamya Cox-Touré, executive director of the ACLU of Oklahoma, said in a statement after the bill was passed. "But Oklahoma is facing an abortion access crisis that poses an immediate threat to our community's health and reproductive freedom."

What the Oklahoma bill would do​

The legislation, SB-612, prohibits people in Oklahoma from performing abortions unless they are doing so to "save the life of a pregnant woman in a medical emergency."

A person convicted under the bill would be guilty of a felony and could face a fine up to $100,000 or a maximum 10-year prison sentence.

A pregnant woman could not be charged with a crime for having an abortion.

The Oklahoma House approved the measure by a 70-14 vote on Tuesday. It had been approved by the Senate in March of last year.

"Senate Bill 612 is the strongest pro-life legislation in the country right now, which effectively eliminates abortion in Oklahoma," Republican State Sen. Nathan Dahm, one of the bill's authors, said in a statement.

The bill now goes to Gov. Kevin Stitt for his signature. The Republican has previously said that he would sign all anti-abortion bills the legislature sends him, according to NPR member station KOSU.

Stitt's office did not respond to a request for comment from NPR.

In March, the Oklahoma House passed a bill that would ban many abortions and allow private citizens to file civil lawsuits against anyone who performed an abortion, a legal framework similar to a Texas law.

After that law took effect in Texas in September, Oklahoma reportedly saw a surge in women from Texas seeking abortions. Nearly half of the patients being seen by Oklahoma providers are from Texas, the ACLU said.

GOP lawmakers are counting on Roe to be overturned​

Although the Oklahoma bill will most certainly invite a legal challenge if it becomes law, experts say the measure's supporters are likely unmoved by that prospect.

"I think that this is just a reflection of the fact that lawmakers in Oklahoma, as in much of the country, are pretty confident that the Supreme Court is going to overrule Roe and that it's just a matter of time until a law like this can go into effect," Mary Ziegler, visiting professor of constitutional law at Harvard Law School, told NPR.

Roe v. Wade's future is in doubt after historic arguments at Supreme Court

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Roe v. Wade's future is in doubt after historic arguments at Supreme Court

Ziegler said the law may even be blocked from being enforced in the short term, but that Republican lawmakers in Oklahoma are likely counting on the Supreme Court to toss out Roe in the summer, clearing the way for such a law to take effect.

"They may lose the battle but they will think that they're going to win the war," Ziegler said.

Even as the constitutional right to an abortion has remained in place, states have left pre-Roe abortion bans in place or passed "trigger" laws that would prohibit the procedure if the Supreme Court ever allowed states to make that decision. More recently, lawmakers in conservative states from Alabama to Idaho to Arizona have passed new restrictions on abortion.

Laws criminalizing abortion used to be common​

Some states are passing laws that would be enforced by private citizens filing civil lawsuits, while others like Oklahoma make performing an abortion a crime.

Laws that explicitly criminalize performing an abortion were common at the end of the 19th century, Ziegler said. "At one point in time almost every state had such a law," he said.

But that changed in the 1960s and 1970s as advocates pushed to repeal such restrictions in the years before the Roe decision, which ultimately guaranteed the constitutional right to an abortion nationwide.

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The question nobody asks is, do you really want more nigger/poor babies? Solely based on that I'd support abortion, maybe even encourage it
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Niggers are gonna spawn regardless of abortions. Most sheboons who get abortions are bound to have at least a few kids anyways. Your own chart states they still outbreed whites
 
Yeah. I'd rather die than be forced to birth that full term.
When I was pregnant, I spent a retarded and autistic amount of time on thefetus.net. I hoped to god every minute that I would not be pregnant with the multiple insane disasters that were often featured there. I am not for abortion because I was lazy and she said she was on birth control or my pullout game is top. I am for it only in medical cases because the amount of things that can go wrong is insane and I actually feel sort of lucky to not be one of the disasters. Some are neither maternal or fetus related like Ammonic Bands Syndrome. It just happens because ??? .
 
You think that SCOTUS case is going to go down alignment lines, but I bet you that it's gonna be 7-2 if it gets a verdict after October, on account of the incoming justice.

...not because she wants to save kids, per se, but it might just work for good either way.
 
We're going to have secession. Just based on multiple states passing laws that a corrupt marxist SCOTUS* will inevitably strike down en masse. But throw in "Texas, et al. have no standing to contest the federal election" and "you have to bake the cake for everyone" but "your business cannot operate during a pandemic" and there's just nothing left for it but packing our shit and getting out.

*Roberts will be paid off to resign, Thomas will be Scalia'd. They have to have total control and they'll use SCOTUS to make everything "legal". And don't forget about packing the court. They could easily have 15 justices. More jobs to reward their best cronies with, after all.
 
Ensuring there's 50 million more blacks voting Democrat in 30 years to own the libs

But seriously abortion is some fucked up shit I don't accept that there was a point in my existence that I wasn't human and had no rights and I guess the stork magically switched the non-human me with the human me the instant I wasn't inside my mom's body anymore. Nobody noticed it flying into the delivery room for the ole switcheroo
 
Based. Now make it so thots get the rope if they kill their fetus anyway. I'll glock em myself.

P.S. Can they do something about the women who intentionally drink/smoke/starve themselves stupid during pregnancy in order to birth a retard welfare ticket? I feel these types are even worse than abortion thots. Intentionally causing your baby damage like that should result in crucifixion.
We aren't talking about crackhead mom's popping out crack addicted babies. We know no sweet Fundie is adopting one of those off the wall spergs.

Many retard tickets might come further down the line from a wanted pregnancy, and these laws prevent that. In Arizona you cannot abort defective babies.

And, in time, contraception will be banned. Blackburn had indicated interest in it.

A third of Catholic girls get the yank. It isn't just drunk college girls getting the football treatment.
Based, but I'm not sure it'll last. Aside from the newest 'cannot define a woman? and don't be mean to pedos' SC appointment, the Trump appointments have often been wobbly, not clean defenders of life.
Well, considering there's a thread of tard babies, and the things they go through and what taxpayers go through to keep them alive, I can't see how that's life.

The vigilante laws were written to avoid federal enforcement. It's clever in its own sinister way. In Idaho the father of the unwanted baby, rape included, can sue to keep that child.
I can make it work.
At worst he dies, at best he makes a bitchin' Metal Slug Mars People cosplay.

Ok RL yeah that's pretty brutal.


You and I both know that's not what I meant. If doctors can prove the fetus is DOA or the mother's life is in peril then yes it's a completely different case. However, 99% of the time we know it's horny teens/college sluts who don't like the idea of responsibility for their actions.
You haven't seen the one we're the develop one eye like a cyclops, or Harlequin Icthyosis (sic). Literal demon babies that'd be stuck in a forest once born.

Even if the fetus is non viable many states mandate they be brought to term. Remember the Ohio scandal where they wanted to reimplant ectopic pregnancies or else it was murder? Yeah we're at that stage.
 
You're really scraping the bottom of the barrel if you try making a thread on some acranic simian frog.
Well with Chris potentially never getting out of Western State Hospital, or wherever they're keeping him, there won't really be much else to choose from as lolcow studies are going to go all downhill from here.
 
except in the case of a medical emergency.
People forget that abortion is a medical procedure, not some political statement. If the mother is in danger or there is not a chance for the baby to survive or have acceptable living conditions, then an abortion is definitely something any doctor would recommend to avoid the family unnecessary pain.

Being a whore aint' included in any of these.
 
Well with Chris potentially never getting out of Western State Hospital, or wherever they're keeping him, there won't really be much else to choose from as lolcow studies are going to go all downhill from here.
True. Desperate times call for desperate measures.
 
Ensuring there's 50 million more blacks voting Democrat in 30 years to own the libs
So we sterilize them. If we can manage to stop abortions from happening, why can't we solve other problems? Everybody treats every issue like we're stuck in an eternal "now" where we can't make better decisions to protect our civilization.
 
i'm generally against abortion, but i didn't even think you could ban it completely. i thought the six weeks was the limit.
interestingly, the texas six week thing basically bans anything but Plan B
 
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