On this episode of Now & Then, “Abortion: Whose Choice?” Heather and Joanne discuss Texas’ Senate Bill 8, one of several controversial new “heartbeat” laws that limit access to abortion.
The question that the abortions rights activists never answer is "how many days, weeks, months, years after conception should abortion be legal?" Until and unless there is a united and common supported answer there should forever be opposition to abortion.
Do you think such agreement is even possible? I know people who consider conception to be the commencement of life and they consider anything that interrupts even that single cell to be murder. How does one find a united and common supported answer? I don’t think it is possible.
There are two extremes. One side is clear on their position and it is not shared by all but a smaller percentage of voters. The other side is silent and so it appears that the extreme is held by all
This podcast is one of the top posts for this year.
Kansas is getting into lock step with Texas. Is this legislative activity centrally coordinated to overturn Roe v Wade?
I’ll just note this, per the online Sunflower State Journal: in about a year the public in “Kansas will vote on a constitutional amendment that would reverse a state Supreme Court ruling that found that abortion is a right protected by the state constitution.”
The question that the abortions rights activists never answer is "how many days, weeks, months, years after conception should abortion be legal?" Until and unless there is a united and common supported answer there should forever be opposition to abortion.
Do you think such agreement is even possible? I know people who consider conception to be the commencement of life and they consider anything that interrupts even that single cell to be murder. How does one find a united and common supported answer? I don’t think it is possible.
There are two extremes. One side is clear on their position and it is not shared by all but a smaller percentage of voters. The other side is silent and so it appears that the extreme is held by all
This podcast is one of the top posts for this year.
Kansas is getting into lock step with Texas. Is this legislative activity centrally coordinated to overturn Roe v Wade?
I’ll just note this, per the online Sunflower State Journal: in about a year the public in “Kansas will vote on a constitutional amendment that would reverse a state Supreme Court ruling that found that abortion is a right protected by the state constitution.”