WTF is wrong with Republicans? Why do they seem so intent on controlling women's bodies and moving back to the 1950's?? It's like the dying, grasping gasp of people who are losing their ability to control others.
I bet you that much of this, IF NOT MOST OF IT, stems directly from religion and that most over-quoted and abused "good book" otherwise known as the Bible. THIS is what you get when you continue to elect superstitious neanderthals to public office.
Women are NOT going back to the Dark Ages, people! You may succeed in passing bullshit for a period of time in your regressive state legislatures, but eventually you will be turned back and revealed for the idiots that you are.
I tell ya, these religious zealots cannot die off fast enough for my taste.
Republicans Push 700 New Laws to Regulate Women's Bodies
During the first three months of 2013, legislators in 14 states introduced provisions seeking to ban abortion prior to viability. These bans fall into three categories: measures that would prohibit all abortions, those that would ban abortions after a specified point during the first trimester of pregnancy and those that would block abortions at 20 weeks after fertilization (the equivalent of 22 weeks after the woman’s last menstrual period, the conventional method physicians use to measure pregnancy). All of these proposals are in direct violation of U.S. Supreme Court decisions.
Legislators in 11 states have introduced proposals that would ban all, or nearly all, abortions. In eight states (AL, IA, MS, ND, OK, SC, TX, VA and WA), legislators have proposed defining “personhood” as beginning at conception; if adopted, these measures would ban most, if not all, abortions.Seven states are edging closer to achieving full approval for laws that would reduce or essentially eliminate abortion access.
Enforcing unconstitutional abortion laws isn’t just a threat to women’s rights — it’s also costly to the states caught up in legal battles. Last year, Kansas spent $628,000 defending its unconstitutional abortion restrictions. North Dakota is in the middle of spending $400,000 to defend its ban, and Arkansas is set to do the same.
But if the number of proposed abortion restrictions is discouraging, the upside of the Guttmacher report is that states are moving toward the prevention of unintended pregnancy through sex education: It finds that two states — Montana and North Dakota — are pushing for more restrictive, less informative sex education laws, but that both Colorado and Hawaii are pushing for more comprehensive, inclusive, and scientific sex education for students. Colorado’s would even prohibit abstinence-only instruction, which has been proven to be more harmful than effective.
ThinkProgress’s own survey of state legislation has found a total of five states that, like Colorado, are pushing for better sex ed. These findings track with popular opinion that increasingly recognizes the value of sex education.
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