Anti Abortion Groups Furious Americans Aren’t Being Jailed Yet For Mailing Abortion Pills

skews13

Diamond Member
Mar 18, 2017
9,424
11,820
2,265
Another day, another story about how anti-abortion conservatives really, reallywant to start throwing people in jail. The Washington Post goes to Texas for this one, though much of the actual planning and grumbling is due to the same national anti-abortion groups that are always involved in these things.

The core of the story is that anti-abortion activists are fuming that access to abortion-inducing pills is allowing many Americans to end pregnancies even though a particular cult of theocrats insists that they no longer have the right to, so that means it's time to start throwing the book at people.

"Everyone who is trafficking these pills should be in jail for trafficking," quoth the ever-animated president of the Susan B. Anthony antiabortion group. If you mail banned pills to a family member in Dumptruck, Texas, who isn't yet pregnant but wouldn’t have the money to flee the state for a desired or medically necessary abortion if did happen, it's prison for you. That Republicans got their asses handed to them in every election contest in which abortion rights played a substantial role is irrelevant, except in that it's making anti-abortion groups even angrier at the Republican efforts to downplay anti-abortion battles in an attempt to recover from the bruising.

Did anyone seriously think that abortion opponents would be content with any restriction on abortion that didn't end in jail time for the people who don't abide by their religious edicts? It's self-evident. You can't criminalize out-group religious beliefs and have no real penalties for the out-group. That isn't how theocracies work. You don't impose laws saying that God is offended by women showing their faces in public unless you've got a possibly-volunteer, possibly-official goon squad on hand to dish out vicious punishments to those that don't comply, and you don't spend your life demanding that abortion, contraception, or same-sex sexual activity be criminalized without coming up with plans for what to do with all the criminals.

The newest Texas Republican plan is to "require internet providers to block abortion pill websites in the same way they can censor child pornography," reports the Post. But that won't by itself keep people from being able to order the pills by getting an out-of-state proxy to do it for them, so abortion opponents are demanding that Texas find those proxy Americans, prosecute them, and jail them.

It's still not going to solve the theocrats' problems. The only way to prevent pregnancy-preventing pills from getting into Texas is for Gov. Greg Abbott to order the National Guard to seize U.S. mail at the borders and open each package, and that's ... probably ... not going to happen.


They should go to Iran, and get some pointers on how to perform executions for God. You know, in the name of religious freedom.
 
Another day, another story about how anti-abortion conservatives really, reallywant to start throwing people in jail. The Washington Post goes to Texas for this one, though much of the actual planning and grumbling is due to the same national anti-abortion groups that are always involved in these things.

The core of the story is that anti-abortion activists are fuming that access to abortion-inducing pills is allowing many Americans to end pregnancies even though a particular cult of theocrats insists that they no longer have the right to, so that means it's time to start throwing the book at people.

"Everyone who is trafficking these pills should be in jail for trafficking," quoth the ever-animated president of the Susan B. Anthony antiabortion group. If you mail banned pills to a family member in Dumptruck, Texas, who isn't yet pregnant but wouldn’t have the money to flee the state for a desired or medically necessary abortion if did happen, it's prison for you. That Republicans got their asses handed to them in every election contest in which abortion rights played a substantial role is irrelevant, except in that it's making anti-abortion groups even angrier at the Republican efforts to downplay anti-abortion battles in an attempt to recover from the bruising.

Did anyone seriously think that abortion opponents would be content with any restriction on abortion that didn't end in jail time for the people who don't abide by their religious edicts? It's self-evident. You can't criminalize out-group religious beliefs and have no real penalties for the out-group. That isn't how theocracies work. You don't impose laws saying that God is offended by women showing their faces in public unless you've got a possibly-volunteer, possibly-official goon squad on hand to dish out vicious punishments to those that don't comply, and you don't spend your life demanding that abortion, contraception, or same-sex sexual activity be criminalized without coming up with plans for what to do with all the criminals.

The newest Texas Republican plan is to "require internet providers to block abortion pill websites in the same way they can censor child pornography," reports the Post. But that won't by itself keep people from being able to order the pills by getting an out-of-state proxy to do it for them, so abortion opponents are demanding that Texas find those proxy Americans, prosecute them, and jail them.

It's still not going to solve the theocrats' problems. The only way to prevent pregnancy-preventing pills from getting into Texas is for Gov. Greg Abbott to order the National Guard to seize U.S. mail at the borders and open each package, and that's ... probably ... not going to happen.


They should go to Iran, and get some pointers on how to perform executions for God. You know, in the name of religious freedom.
Yeah.....so vote for the Pedophiles in the Democrat Party.
 
Another day, another story about how anti-abortion conservatives really, reallywant to start throwing people in jail. The Washington Post goes to Texas for this one, though much of the actual planning and grumbling is due to the same national anti-abortion groups that are always involved in these things.

The core of the story is that anti-abortion activists are fuming that access to abortion-inducing pills is allowing many Americans to end pregnancies even though a particular cult of theocrats insists that they no longer have the right to, so that means it's time to start throwing the book at people.

"Everyone who is trafficking these pills should be in jail for trafficking," quoth the ever-animated president of the Susan B. Anthony antiabortion group. If you mail banned pills to a family member in Dumptruck, Texas, who isn't yet pregnant but wouldn’t have the money to flee the state for a desired or medically necessary abortion if did happen, it's prison for you. That Republicans got their asses handed to them in every election contest in which abortion rights played a substantial role is irrelevant, except in that it's making anti-abortion groups even angrier at the Republican efforts to downplay anti-abortion battles in an attempt to recover from the bruising.

Did anyone seriously think that abortion opponents would be content with any restriction on abortion that didn't end in jail time for the people who don't abide by their religious edicts? It's self-evident. You can't criminalize out-group religious beliefs and have no real penalties for the out-group. That isn't how theocracies work. You don't impose laws saying that God is offended by women showing their faces in public unless you've got a possibly-volunteer, possibly-official goon squad on hand to dish out vicious punishments to those that don't comply, and you don't spend your life demanding that abortion, contraception, or same-sex sexual activity be criminalized without coming up with plans for what to do with all the criminals.

The newest Texas Republican plan is to "require internet providers to block abortion pill websites in the same way they can censor child pornography," reports the Post. But that won't by itself keep people from being able to order the pills by getting an out-of-state proxy to do it for them, so abortion opponents are demanding that Texas find those proxy Americans, prosecute them, and jail them.

It's still not going to solve the theocrats' problems. The only way to prevent pregnancy-preventing pills from getting into Texas is for Gov. Greg Abbott to order the National Guard to seize U.S. mail at the borders and open each package, and that's ... probably ... not going to happen.


They should go to Iran, and get some pointers on how to perform executions for God. You know, in the name of religious freedom.
.


After reading page upon page upon page of your best prose -- the original stuff, not the cut-and-paste from the DailyKook -- I sent a sample to these guys. They were very excited about your writing. You should be hearing from them any day now.

iu
 
Right or wrong (I believe it very misguided) if you mail a illegal (in TX) abortion drug into TX then you should be charged.

Hell if I had my rathers I'd help pay for abortion pills by the wheelbarrow loads to be sent to TX's dem run cities but since that's illegal there I won't....How hard is that to figure out?
 
If I mail a firearm to an gunophobic jurisdiction, will the libs in Chicago or Mexico City or wherever be furious with me?

Different jurisdictions have a right to have different laws.
 
Another day, another story about how anti-abortion conservatives really, reallywant to start throwing people in jail. The Washington Post goes to Texas for this one, though much of the actual planning and grumbling is due to the same national anti-abortion groups that are always involved in these things.

The core of the story is that anti-abortion activists are fuming that access to abortion-inducing pills is allowing many Americans to end pregnancies even though a particular cult of theocrats insists that they no longer have the right to, so that means it's time to start throwing the book at people.

"Everyone who is trafficking these pills should be in jail for trafficking," quoth the ever-animated president of the Susan B. Anthony antiabortion group. If you mail banned pills to a family member in Dumptruck, Texas, who isn't yet pregnant but wouldn’t have the money to flee the state for a desired or medically necessary abortion if did happen, it's prison for you. That Republicans got their asses handed to them in every election contest in which abortion rights played a substantial role is irrelevant, except in that it's making anti-abortion groups even angrier at the Republican efforts to downplay anti-abortion battles in an attempt to recover from the bruising.

Did anyone seriously think that abortion opponents would be content with any restriction on abortion that didn't end in jail time for the people who don't abide by their religious edicts? It's self-evident. You can't criminalize out-group religious beliefs and have no real penalties for the out-group. That isn't how theocracies work. You don't impose laws saying that God is offended by women showing their faces in public unless you've got a possibly-volunteer, possibly-official goon squad on hand to dish out vicious punishments to those that don't comply, and you don't spend your life demanding that abortion, contraception, or same-sex sexual activity be criminalized without coming up with plans for what to do with all the criminals.

The newest Texas Republican plan is to "require internet providers to block abortion pill websites in the same way they can censor child pornography," reports the Post. But that won't by itself keep people from being able to order the pills by getting an out-of-state proxy to do it for them, so abortion opponents are demanding that Texas find those proxy Americans, prosecute them, and jail them.

It's still not going to solve the theocrats' problems. The only way to prevent pregnancy-preventing pills from getting into Texas is for Gov. Greg Abbott to order the National Guard to seize U.S. mail at the borders and open each package, and that's ... probably ... not going to happen.


They should go to Iran, and get some pointers on how to perform executions for God. You know, in the name of religious freedom.


MODS

why is there not a button for OPs that are BORING
 
I understand the frustration, but at the end of the day, it is up to whoever wants them whether or not they be purchased and swallowed too.

God bless you always!!!

Holly
 
Right or wrong (I believe it very misguided) if you mail a illegal (in TX) abortion drug into TX then you should be charged.

Hell if I had my rathers I'd help pay for abortion pills by the wheelbarrow loads to be sent to TX's dem run cities but since that's illegal there I won't....How hard is that to figure out?

So if the medication is federally legal, and I ship them from Kentucky. Tell me again how Texas can enforce anything?
 
Another day, another story about how anti-abortion conservatives really, reallywant to start throwing people in jail.
If someone outside the state of CA was caught shipping 30rd M16 magazines to someone inside the state of CA, how do you think the supporters of the ban on those magazines woud react to the state of CA not prosecuting those involved?



 
If someone outside the state of CA was caught shipping 30rd M16 magazines to someone inside the state of CA, how do you think the supporters of the ban on those magazines woud react to the state of CA not prosecuting those involved?
How would anybody know? CA doesn't have some informer bounty system for gun accessories like Texass does wrt abortion.
 
Right or wrong (I believe it very misguided) if you mail a illegal (in TX) abortion drug into TX then you should be charged.

Hell if I had my rathers I'd help pay for abortion pills by the wheelbarrow loads to be sent to TX's dem run cities but since that's illegal there I won't....How hard is that to figure out?

Interstate commerce comes under the control of the federal government.
 

Forum List

Back
Top