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-- Texas to require women to wait 24 hrs for abortion
Texas to require women to wait 24 hrs for abortion
Senate to OK 24-hour wait for abortions
Bill wins preliminary approval; final vote could be today
By David Pasztor
AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF
Wednesday, May 21, 2003
Women in Texas would be required to take 24 hours to reflect on their decision before receiving an abortion under legislation tentatively approved Tuesday by the Senate.
On a 21-10 vote, senators gave preliminary approval to a bill that would establish a waiting period for abortions. The bill also requires the state to publish information packets that women can study during the mandated wait, including data on medical risks and adoption alternatives and color photographs of fetuses at two-week intervals of gestation.
"Providing women with information, options and resources empowers them to make decisions," said Sen. Tommy Williams, R-The Woodlands, who sponsored House Bill 15 in the Senate. Under the bill, he said, "they have a period in which to reflect on that decision."
Critics, however, decried the bill as an unnecessary government intrusion into a woman's private decision.
"They have the intelligence, the free will, to make their own decision," said Sen. Gonzalo Barrientos, D-Austin. "Women are not too ignorant. Women are not too helpless."
Under the bill, doctors would face fines of up to $10,000 if they perform an abortion less than 24 hours after a woman requests the procedure and if they don't provide her with the state-produced information packet.
"The information is the same type information someone might see in a high school biology textbook," Williams said. "The woman always has the right to refuse to read it."
The Senate defeated an amendment offered by Barrientos that would have exempted victims of rape and incest, or women whose fetuses suffer from a severe abnormality, from the waiting period.
Exempting rape and incest victims would "undermine the reflection period," said Sen. Bob Deuell, R-Greenville. Many victims of tragedy opt to have their babies and find it is the right decision, Deuell said.
The Senate also rebuffed an amendment by Sen. Leticia Van de Putte, D-San Antonio, that would have required the state-published materials to say that no clear scientific link has been established between abortions and breast cancer. The bill specifically requires that the possible link be included in the materials.
The Senate is expected to give final approval to the bill as early as today. If the House accepts one small wording change made in the Senate, the bill will head for Gov. Rick Perry's desk.
So,
This will most likely become law because for the first time in many years, all branches of the Texas government are controlled by Republicans (i.e. pigs). I don't really know what to think of this bill however. Will it really help women decide? Or, is it demeaning in the sense that someone has already thought long and hard about the decision to have an abortion before they show up? There was another anti-abortion bill that passed requiring the woman to be over the age of 18 or have parental approval. The minors could also circumvent this by going to a judge, and pleading their case in front of them.
I believe a woman should have a right to choose whether to burden herself with the responsibilities of motherhood. This seems like a roadblock by anti abortion people though.
My dog you should see some of them; Very radical.
Comments?

I think this is a good law, or at least a passable one.
a 24 hour waiting period is not an unreasonable thing to ask of a woman who is about to end a life. I think in some states aborition is illegal altogether? (not sure on this)
I do however think that they should have made an exception in the case of rape or incest.
I also think that linking breast cancer and abortions is needless propaganda.
I don't see anything wrong with this. It's probably a bit pointless seeing as most women probably would have already thought long and hard about it before committing themselves to having an abortion ("oh look, I'm pregnant. Honey, could you drive me down to the abortion clinic?") so I'm not sure how much difference another 24 hours is going to make.
But still, so long as the material in the booklet is impartial and medically sound, I don't see any harm in it.
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| Originally posted by JohnSmith I think this is a good law, or at least a passable one. a 24 hour waiting period is not an unreasonable thing to ask of a woman who is about to end a life. I think in some states aborition is illegal altogether? (not sure on this) I do however think that they should have made an exception in the case of rape or incest. I also think that linking breast cancer and abortions is needless propaganda. |
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| Originally posted by Renegade I don't see anything wrong with this. It's probably a bit pointless seeing as most women probably would have already thought long and hard about it before committing themselves to having an abortion ("oh look, I'm pregnant. Honey, could you drive me down to the abortion clinic?") so I'm not sure how much difference another 24 hours is going to make. But still, so long as the material in the booklet is impartial and medically sound, I don't see any harm in it. |
I'll have to say that I'm on the conservative side with this one, although I'd still be a little bit speculative of what "information" actually is printed on these packets.
I think a life is a life is a life. Babies have the ability to learn even before they are born. Psychologists around the world have proven this. They are a living being. They have a brain and a heart. I cannot understand why anyone would want to kill them, except in the case of rape. Clearly, in a situation of rape, a woman has no choice but to have the baby, and that can alter and inhibit her life forever. In any other situation, however, the woman always has the choice not to have sex. If you are not ready to support a baby, you shouldn't be having sex. And if you are, you should take responsibility for your actions. That means both the father and the mother.
I believe the "pro-choice" view is bullshit on this issue. They say "the woman has a right to chose," but that is ridiculous. Why should anyone have the right to chose whether someone else lives or dies?
I understand that my argument is based solely on the notion that a fetus is a person. While I acknowlege that some may not believe this, I will argue that because it can learn, it is, therefore, a seperate entity, and not part of the woman. At least in the third trimester.
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| Originally posted by cougar23 I'll have to say that I'm on the conservative side with this one, although I'd still be a little bit speculative of what "information" actually is printed on these packets. I think a life is a life is a life. Babies have the ability to learn even before they are born. Psychologists around the world have proven this. They are a living being. They have a brain and a heart. I cannot understand why anyone would want to kill them, except in the case of rape. Clearly, in a situation of rape, a woman has no choice but to have the baby, and that can alter and inhibit her life forever. In any other situation, however, the woman always has the choice not to have sex. If you are not ready to support a baby, you shouldn't be having sex. And if you are, you should take responsibility for your actions. That means both the father and the mother. I believe the "pro-choice" view is bullshit on this issue. They say "the woman has a right to chose," but that is ridiculous. Why should anyone have the right to chose whether someone else lives or dies? I understand that my argument is based solely on the notion that a fetus is a person. While I acknowlege that some may not believe this, I will argue that because it can learn, it is, therefore, a seperate entity, and not part of the woman. At least in the third trimester. |
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| Originally posted by occrider I guess it all depends on when you believe that a fetus is considered a human being. Although a life is a life is a life? Then according to your arguments we shouldn't be using spermicide since that's killing a life ... But here's what I don't get about pro-life believers. If you believe that a fetus is a living human being and woman should not have the right to choice then why would you make an exception for a case of rape??? On the one hand, you're establishing that the fetus is a living organism with a right to live that transcends the mother's right to make a choice to bear that fetus, and on the other hand, you are denying that fetus's right to live simply based upon the circumstances of its conception. Does the first fetus have more rights granted to it than the second despite the fact that they are equal in all other respects? The pro-life argument is inconsistent with its own fundamental thesis. |
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| Well I don't think you have a clear understanding of what goes on at these abortion clinics. Typically they're surrounded by a bunch of religious nuts who protest the clinics, harrass the medical workers, and harrass the women who try to get in. You can imagine what kind of a predicament a woman is in if she's already in a semi-vulnerable state. If a woman gets harrassed by going to a clinic to register, think of the harrassement she'll receieve the next day when she actually goes to get her abortion. |
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| I think a life is a life is a life. |
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| Babies have the ability to learn even before they are born. Psychologists around the world have proven this. |
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| They are a living being. |
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| They have a brain and a heart. |
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| In any other situation, however, the woman always has the choice not to have sex. If you are not ready to support a baby, you shouldn't be having sex. And if you are, you should take responsibility for your actions. That means both the father and the mother. |
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| I believe the "pro-choice" view is bullshit on this issue. They say "the woman has a right to chose," but that is ridiculous. Why should anyone have the right to chose whether someone else lives or dies? |
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| I understand that my argument is based solely on the notion that a fetus is a person. While I acknowlege that some may not believe this, I will argue that because it can learn, it is, therefore, a seperate entity, and not part of the woman. At least in the third trimester. |
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| Originally posted by Renegade Cougar23: A Fetus = Life. A Fetus does not = a life. A Kidney = Life. A Kidney does not = a life. |
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| It's not an issue of life, it's an issue of personhood. So far as I'm concerned, up until the period where fetus's stand the slightest chance of being able to survive separated from their mother (about 22 - 24 weeks) they do not deserve to be considered a "person" and thus do not deserve the same rights that people do. I don't think that "potentiality" for personhood is a valid argument either, otherwise we'd have to send every boy who's ever masturbated and every girl who's ever menstruated to trial, because, after all, they've killed off living material that had the potential to become a person, didn't they? |
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| I would suggest only later on in the pregnancy (6 months +) when the fetus is well developed and is approaching the cusp of what we may call personhood. This is a third trimester issue, though, and third trimester abortions are much more contentious for this reason. Do I agree with third trimester abortions then? Only in cases where the fetus is badly malformed (some debilitating conditions cannot be identified until fairly late on in the pregnancy) or where the fetus endangers the life of the mother. Otherwise, the mother would have a hard time convincing me that the abortion isn't something approaching infanticide. |
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| They are living, but they are not a being. They do not attain the status of a being until they are capable of surviving independantly of the mother. The fetus is no more deserving of being labelled an independant entity than the appendix is. |
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| The nervous system - from what I can remember from my abortion speach in year 12 - doesn't begin to form until about 18 weeks (the heart slightly earlier). Before this mark, the fetus is no more capable of "feeling" than any other parasitic growth in the body - how can it be considered a person? |
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| You aren't a catholic by any chance are you? |
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| I think we've gone past the days where sex was merely used for procreational purposes. |
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| Sometimes, even if the couple were being "responsible" with contraceptives and so forth, pregnancies do happen. So, if a couple do have sex and do, inadvertantly, conceive, then what do you propose? |
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| Force the woman to have the baby against her will? Even if she is not mentally or finincially capable of caring for it? Do you force the woman to ruin her own life and that of the child just because you're a bit morally sqeamish about the legality of the fetus? |
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| What if the baby is disabled or disformed, requiring lots of attention and astronomical medical fees? Do you force the parents to go through that? If you're not faint of heart, look up "harlequin fetus" in Google (essentially a fetus born with run-away scabies), and tell me that any parent should be forced to give birth to one of these - and this is just one of many similarly grotesque abnormalities that can occur in fetal development. Personally, I think it is far more immoral to force a woman to give birth to a child she does not want or to a child who obviously has no possibility of living a normal, happy life, than it is to abort the pregnancy earlier on. |
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| Aren't we doing that - according to your definition - every time we have sex or masturbate? Deciding whether a baby lives or whether the matter necessary to create a baby dies? |
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| What's your stance on abortion pre-tri-semester then? (Remember, 3rd trimester abortion is illegal virtually everywhere.) |
um... isnt this unconstitutional, and against doctor/patient rights? also why is it that most men, and a few woman (if any in texas senate) voted on this and not women themselves....
for those people who say they are on the conservative side... thought you people were less government, not more!
Haha. So true.
States rights? What about individual rights?? 
It's clearly an anti-abortion bill.
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