Don't move to Texas

bnew

Veteran
Joined
Nov 1, 2015
Messages
61,801
Reputation
9,328
Daps
169,740


Texas sues Biden administration to limit teenage access to birth control​


Minors can receive contraception confidentially under Title X in the state with the highest repeat teen birth rate

Mary Tuma

Fri 26 Jul 2024 13.07 EDTLast modified on Fri 26 Jul 2024 14.25 EDT

3460.jpg


Texas attorney general Ken Paxton makes a statement at his office in Austin, Texas, on 26 May 2023. Photograph: Eric Gay/AP

Ken Paxton, the Texas attorney general, has sued the Biden administration over a longstanding federal program that provides teenagers access to contraception without parental consent, the state’s latest attack against the federal government’s reproductive healthcare policies.

“This suit is likely a preview of where the Texas GOP – and national Republicans – stand on attacking contraception access,” says Mary Ziegler, a professor at University of California, Davis, School of Law and reproductive health expert. “While Republicans say they don’t want to take aim at contraception, this is another sign that this is actually where we’re headed.”

Title X, created in 1970, offers comprehensive family planning and preventive health care services for low-income and uninsured residents. Texas is among a handful of states that require parental consent before a teenager can get birth control – but Title X-funded contraception was the exception. Under the program, minors can receive contraception confidentially.

Texas has the highest repeat teen birth rate and one of strictest abortion bans in the US.

In 2022, US district judge Matthew Kacsmaryk dealt a blow to Title X when he ruled that the program denied Texas father Alexander Deanda’s “fundamental right to control and direct the upbringing of his minor children”. Texas now stands as the only state that requires Title X-funded clinics to mandate parental consent before granting teens birth control.

An appeals court largely upheld Kacsmaryk’s decision in March, finding that Title X does not supersede Texas parental rights law, but left in place a Title X rule that explicitly forbids clinics from requiring parental consent before providing services.

The new lawsuit is in part an attempt to clarify that mixed ruling. Paxton argues that a 2021 Biden administration rule emphasizing that the federal program “may not require consent of parents or guardians for the provision of services to minors” is unlawful.

“By attempting to force Texas healthcare providers to offer contraceptives to children without parental consent, the Biden administration continues to prove they will do anything to implement their extremist agenda – even undermine the constitution and violate the law,” said Paxton.

Carmen Robles Frost, a Texas mother, has joined the suit. She claims the Title X rule will “facilitate sexual promiscuity and premarital sex” and weaken her ability to raise her children “in accordance with the teachings of the Christian faith”.

Jonathan F Mitchell, architect of the state’s bounty-hunter style abortion ban and abortion travel bans, represents Robles Frost in the suit, and also represented Deanda in the initial legal challenge.

The suit, filed in Amarillo, will be heard by Kacsmaryk, who is the sole federal court judge in the Northern district – and the reason conservatives often file in that jurisdiction, a strategy known as “judge shopping.” The far-right former religious liberty lawyer, appointed to the bench by former president Donald Trump, previously sided with anti-abortion advocates who sought to roll back access to abortion drug mifepristone, a case that reached the US supreme court, where justices ruled the activists failed to have standing.

In their filing, Texas attorneys cite the US supreme court’s 6-3 decision in Loper Bright Enterprises v Raimondo, which overturned the “Chevron doctrine” – a legal framework that previously directed courts to defer to the expertise of federal agencies. Legal experts have warned that all manner of federal regulations are now at risk.

This is far from the first time Texas leaders have taken aim at the Biden administration’s reproductive health protections. In 2022, Paxton sued the federal government over rules seeking to protect hospitals and doctors providing emergency abortion care. The state ultimately secured an injunction from a Trump-appointee district judge in Lubbock, in a ruling upheld by the Fifth Circuit. And last year, Paxton filed suit challenging federal guidance that directed pharmacies to fill prescriptions for abortion medication.

The lawsuit comes amid a broader national push from the right-wing to strengthen so-called “parental rights,” in areas including education and gender-affirming care for LGBTQ+ students. Critics and educators say conservatives are using the term “parents’ rights” as a guise to advance a far-right agenda.

“The GOP has focused on the parental rights strategy to gain influence and control in schools and other areas of life,” says Ziegler. “Here, parental rights are used to strike up fear and create a stigma that contraception is dangerous for minors.”
 

cyndaquil

Lv 100 Bold natured
Joined
Sep 2, 2014
Messages
8,747
Reputation
2,579
Daps
31,589
Reppin
JOHTO REGION
Carmen Robles Frost, a Texas mother, has joined the suit. She claims the Title X rule will “facilitate sexual promiscuity and premarital sex” and weaken her ability to raise her children “in accordance with the teachings of the Christian faith”.
:mjlol: access to birth control is not the determining factor in whether teens have premarital sex or not. Why should everyone else's children have to lose access to this just because she's worried her kids will go get it?
 

bnew

Veteran
Joined
Nov 1, 2015
Messages
61,801
Reputation
9,328
Daps
169,740


Texas woman died after being denied miscarriage care due to abortion ban, report finds​


Josseli Barnica died days state passed six-week abortion ban and doctors delayed treatment, ProPublica reports

Carter Sherman

Wed 30 Oct 2024 13.17 EDT
Share


888.jpg

Josseli Barnica’s death was preventable, experts told ProPublica. Photograph: Courtesy of the Barnica family


Just days after Texas banned abortion past six weeks of pregnancy, a woman died after doctors in the state delayed treating her miscarriage for 40 hours, ProPublica reported on Wednesday.

Experts told ProPublica that the September 2021 death of Josseli Barnica, a 28-year-old mother, was “preventable”. Barnica is the third woman reported by ProPublica to have died in recent years after being unable to access abortion legally or having her medical care delayed.

Although US abortion bans – which more than a dozen states have enacted in the two years since the supreme court overturned Roe v Wade – technically permit the procedure in medical emergencies, doctors across the country have said that the laws are worded so vaguely that they don’t know when they can legally intervene. Instead, many physicians say they have been forced to wait until a patient is on the brink of death – then attempt to pull them back.

Barnica went to the hospital with cramps when she was just over 17 weeks pregnant on 2 September 2021, the day after the Texas six-week abortion ban took effect, according to ProPublica. (Texas enacted the ban almost a year before Roe was overturned; it now bans abortion from conception.) When her bleeding worsened the following day, Barnica returned to the hospital, where a doctor concluded that a miscarriage was “in progress”. Another soon concluded that a miscarriage was “inevitable”.

Barnica’s cervix was dilated at nearly 9cm, a condition that left her vulnerable to fast-acting infections, ProPublica reported. Normally, in cases like Barnica’s doctors will offer medication to speed up labor or perform a procedure to empty the uterus.

an autopsy report document
View image in fullscreen

Josseli Barnica’s autopsy report. Photograph: Highlighted and redacted by ProPublica. Courtesy of the Barnica family

But Barnica’s fetus still had a heartbeat. And under the Texas ban, doctors could not intervene unless a “medical emergency” – a term that was not defined in the law – developed.

About 40 hours after Barnica’s second arrival at the hospital, doctors stopped being able to detect a fetal heartbeat, according to the report. A doctor expedited her labor using medications and delivered Barnica’s fetus. But after she returned home, Barnica’s bleeding continued and worsened.

Within days, she was back at the hospital, where she died of sepsis involving “products of conception”, according to her autopsy report. Her widowed husband is now raising their four-year-old daughter, ProPublica reported.

Multiple experts, including OB-GYNs and maternal fetal medicine specialists, told ProPublica that delaying Barnica’s care ran against the medical standard of care due to the risk of infection. Had she been given options earlier, they told the outlet, Barnica might have survived.

Doctors involved in Barnica’s case did not respond to ProPublica’s requests for comment. In a statement, HCA Healthcare, the hospital chain that treated Barnica, told ProPublica that doctors exercised independent judgment and “our responsibility is to be in compliance with applicable state and federal laws and regulations”.

Abortion and the consequences of banning the procedure have become one of the top issues in the US election, as support for abortion rights has surged in the years since Roe fell and dozens of women have come forward to say they were denied medically necessary care. Kamala Harris has made protecting abortion rights a key plank of her policy platform, while Donald Trump and other Republicans have tried to evade discussion of it or flip-flopped on the issue.

“My heart breaks for the Barnica family,” Colin Allred, a US representative from Dallas running for a Senate seat, posted on X on Wednesday. Allred is running against Ted Cruz, the avowedly anti-abortion senator, and has made abortion rights a centerpiece of his campaign. “Josseli Barnica should be alive today but because of Ted Cruz’s cruel abortion ban, Texas women have been denied the life-saving health care they need. We can’t afford six more years of Ted Cruz.”

Cruz has recently kept quiet on abortion. He declined a ProPublica request from comment, as did the Texas governor, Greg Abbott, and the state attorney general, Ken Paxton.

In the weeks since ProPublica first reported on two Georgia women, Amber Nicole Thurman and Candi Miller, who died after being unable to access legal abortions in their home state, Trump has also largely avoided commenting on their specific cases. However, during a Fox News townhall, the host Harris Faulkner told Trump that Thurman’s family was holding a press call.

“We’ll get better ratings, I promise,” Trump joked. The crowd laughed.
 

bnew

Veteran
Joined
Nov 1, 2015
Messages
61,801
Reputation
9,328
Daps
169,740


Newborns are being left in dumpsters in Texas, but Republicans don't seem to care​



Why the GOP is unwilling to prevent infant abandonment​


By​

Senior Writer

Published January 2, 2025 6:00AM (EST)​


Texas Governor Greg Abbott (Photo illustration by Salon/Getty Images)
Texas Governor Greg Abbott (Photo illustration by Salon/Getty Images)

Abortion bans don't just kill women. They kill babies. This is evident in the data, which shows a dramatic rise in the state's infant mortality after Texas banned abortion. As the Washington Post documented last week, it's also happening in a viscerally disturbing way, as the number of newborns found abandoned to die has spiked, as well. Babies, mostly dead, are being found in ditches and dumpsters throughout Texas, traumatizing the people who find them and the emergency workers who are called to help.

Only the biggest liars in the anti-choice movement — and to be fair, there's stiff competition for that award — would deny that the state's abortion ban is the main cause of the sharp increase in dead, abandoned babies. The Washington Post also notes that Republicans have repeatedly cut funding for prenatal care and family planning services. In addition, draconian approaches to illegal immigration have led to undocumented women avoiding medical care, for fear of being deported. The result is what one Texas law enforcement official called "a little bit of an epidemic" of infant abandonment.

Texas Republicans show no interest in educating people about safe haven laws, however.

One would think that the "pro-life" movement would be alarmed by all the dead babies, moving heaven and earth to make sure pregnant girls and women in desperate circumstances have safe alternatives to giving birth in secret and throwing the baby away. But that would only be true if anti-abortion activists were, in fact, "pro-life." Instead, the reaction of anti-choice leaders and Republican legislators so far has been a collective shrug, if they bother to acknowledge the problem at all.

There's one telling detail in the Post report that underscores how much Republicans don't care the slightest if babies die because of their abortion ban. As Molly Hennessy-Fiske reports, "Republican leaders who control state government have long declined to fund an awareness campaign so that new mothers know where to turn should they decide that they cannot keep their baby."




Texas has a so-called safe haven law that allows women to relinquish babies to the authorities, no questions asked. For years, it was trendy for Republicans to pass these laws to create the illusion of concern for infant life, and to bolster their false claims to be "pro-life." But it was never a sincere effort to allow women in dire circumstances a chance to save a baby's life without getting into legal trouble. The programs are underfunded, barely advertised and subsequently barely used. "Despite the legislative promise that the safe haven laws will increase child safety and legal compliance, the efficacy is suspect as the laws do not appear to protect mothers or their babies," Alexandra Schrader-Dobris explained last year in the Minnesota Journal of Law & Inequality.

Texas Republicans show no interest in educating people about safe haven laws, however. Instead, as Hennessy-Fiske reports, they allocated $165 million to "alternatives to abortion," mostly so-called crisis pregnancy centers. The goal of a crisis pregnancy center is not to help women in crisis. It's to do whatever it takes to keep her pregnant until it's too late to get an abortion, including through lies, threats, bullying, shaming, and false promises of help. The goal is not "life," but punishing the young woman for perceived sexual transgression, either because she had consensual sex or because she "tempted" a man into raping her.

Because the goal is punishment, there's no reason for Republicans to invest in safe haven laws, which shield young women from legal consequences for abandoning a newborn. When a young woman throws a baby in a dumpster, however, that's a crime and she can be arrested. More resources into the safe haven program would save lives, but would reduce the number of women that can be thrown in jail. Given a choice between living babies or imprisoned women, Republicans pick the latter. Even the Republican who wrote the state's safe haven law, Rep. Geanie Morrison, explained that she has no interest in making it easier for women to use it. "The problem is, if you do state funding, then you’re tied to it," she explained, not even bothering to come up with a more plausible-sounding non sequitur.

The reaction to the Washington Post article from anti-abortion activists has been muted. The holidays are a busy time, yet many of them continued to post about what they do think matters. "Fornication and masturbation are self-abuse," wrote Lila Rose, an anti-choice leader and outspoken proponent of the Texas abortion ban, on the day the Post report came out. Two days later, she circled around to the topic again, declaring, "'Sexual compatibility' is a myth," and that only shallow people insist on it before making a lifelong commitment to another person.

From top to bottom, the Christian right's view of womanhood is a grim one. Even if a woman follows all their rules about waiting for marriage and eschewing birth control, her "reward" is being lectured about how it's immature to want sexual satisfaction within marriage. The vast majority of women take one look at this prescription of a life of thankless service to men and patriarchy and take a pass. That's why the GOP is so focused on abortion bans and other restrictions on sexual health care. If they can't get women to volunteer for lives of meaningless drudgery, at least they can punish them for trying to have something more fulfilling.

The unwillingness to prevent infant abandonment is in line with the recent Texas decision to suppress investigations into maternal mortality after the abortion ban went into effect. Such investigations could result in a better understanding by doctors of how to treat pregnant women in a medical emergency, rather than letting them die. But in the GOP-controlled state, they're fine with a passive form of the death penalty for being a sexually active woman. It's unlikely there will be much investigation into the rising number of infant deaths, either. The torture of bringing a baby to term, only to watch it die, is also within the Republican realm of acceptable punishments for women.
 

ADevilYouKhow

Rhyme Reason
Joined
May 11, 2012
Messages
34,991
Reputation
1,438
Daps
62,540
Reppin
got a call for three nines
they'll say "we can't build affordable homes if we're not allowed to replace an already cheap material (OSB) with nothing."

Maybe my depth perception is off or it’s the resolution but those look like 2x4s…

The stupidity/greed of not using osb is just lol because instead of the osb rotting first you’ll be reframing your house granted it’s caught in time 😂 but just basic critical shyt like sound/heating/cooling wtf is this :dead:

Also haven’t the hurricanes snd snow storms been getting worse and more frequent

These houses won’t even make it 30 years
 

hashmander

Hale End
Supporter
Joined
Jan 17, 2013
Messages
19,880
Reputation
5,021
Daps
85,566
Reppin
The Arsenal
Maybe my depth perception is off or it’s the resolution but those look like 2x4s…

The stupidity/greed of not using osb is just lol because instead of the osb rotting first you’ll be reframing your house granted it’s caught in time 😂 but just basic critical shyt like sound/heating/cooling wtf is this :dead:

Also haven’t the hurricanes snd snow storms been getting worse and more frequent

These houses won’t even make it 30 years
well 2x4's isn't the problem. that's pretty common in florida. i built my shed to an engineer certified 145 mph wind load with 2x4's. maybe 2x6s are more common up north because they provide more space for insulation.
 

ADevilYouKhow

Rhyme Reason
Joined
May 11, 2012
Messages
34,991
Reputation
1,438
Daps
62,540
Reppin
got a call for three nines
well 2x4's isn't the problem. that's pretty common in florida. i built my shed to an engineer certified 145 mph wind load with 2x4's. maybe 2x6s are more common up north because they provide more space for insulation.
Why not just 2x6 at that point the wood cost is probably the same and you’ll have a tougher shed lol

insulation but also fire code… the last door I framed was even 2x6
 
Top