Question. Under this Handmaiden/Maoist law, how will Texas courts handle the deluge of cases resulting from the massive increase in orders for Mifepristone to be delivered by US Postal employees? Am appalled at the dystopian law circumventing existing law.
Question. Under this Handmaiden/Maoist law, how will Texas courts handle the deluge of cases resulting from the massive increase in orders for Mifepristone to be delivered by US Postal employees? Am appalled at the dystopian law circumventing existing law.
As written their knowledge or lack of knowledge would be determined in lawsuits? My point is that this vigilante promoting law put the burden on those who aid (intentionally or not?) and abet while abortion drugs are available from sources outside Texas.
Think I’ll keep my concerns and energies focused on the women in need of clinic services. I have yet to suspect postal service employees of snooping in the mail they are paid to protect.
Of course. I am not accusing postal workers of reporting folks. Rather it's the frivolousness of the law that will, encourage other folks to sue people who might "help" folks (like a postal worker who delivers or the unber driver who gives a lift to a site out of Texas or the husband who gets his wife this drug, as examples) my message apparently bot caught in my sarcasm.
Question. Under this Handmaiden/Maoist law, how will Texas courts handle the deluge of cases resulting from the massive increase in orders for Mifepristone to be delivered by US Postal employees? Am appalled at the dystopian law circumventing existing law.
How are postal employees supposed to know what’s inside a parcel?
As written their knowledge or lack of knowledge would be determined in lawsuits? My point is that this vigilante promoting law put the burden on those who aid (intentionally or not?) and abet while abortion drugs are available from sources outside Texas.
I guess I’m asking who’s going to know or how will anyone know such things unless someone commits a crime and opens another person’s mail?
Or sees the product and open package? Or is snoping.
Think I’ll keep my concerns and energies focused on the women in need of clinic services. I have yet to suspect postal service employees of snooping in the mail they are paid to protect.
Of course. I am not accusing postal workers of reporting folks. Rather it's the frivolousness of the law that will, encourage other folks to sue people who might "help" folks (like a postal worker who delivers or the unber driver who gives a lift to a site out of Texas or the husband who gets his wife this drug, as examples) my message apparently bot caught in my sarcasm.