Thinking SB 8 Through a Little Further
Thinking SB 8 Through a Little Further
You can't swing a dead armadillo anymore without splatting someone opining on SB 8, the new Texas abortion law. Either it's the apocalypse and we should all buy stock in Greyhound and clothes-hanger manufacturers, or it's the strongest pro-life, pro-child legislative effort since Republican Gov. Abbott's ban on school mask mandates guaranteed more sick, permanently disabled, and dead Texas kids. Either way, though, it's worth looking past the well-deserved outrage to start thinking through the entire can of worms that this new law has opened. This can is so big that there are generations of worms as yet unhatched whose squirmy effects will be felt in ways we can't even imagine.Most immediately obvious is the way that support for SB 8 marks so many proud conservatives as monstrously hypocritical. Remember all those anti-mask protesters saying, “My Body, My Choice,” in apparent mockery of the abortion rights slogan? If they didn't really mean it, maybe we should finally move forward with all the mask and vaccine mandates needed to pull out of this everlasting pandemic. Either making an informed choice regarding your own body is controversial, or it isn't. Choose wisely.Then there's the “pop culture” definition of Communism that bears little resemblance to Marxist thought, but which is certainly effective as a scare word in today's political landscape. Communism, in this case, is simply the idea that the government is going to take away everything you have and give it away to someone else. This is why conservatives get all worked up over the eviction moratorium, public assistance, and even free school lunches for children. Charity is acceptable, but it must be optional for the donor. It's not murder to withhold resources like food, money, or housing from those in need, even if they'll die without it. It's exercising your freedom.Yet, if landlords should have the right to kick tenants out on the street, knowing they may die of exposure or illness, one would expect women to have even more profound rights over who they allow to take shelter within their own bodies. If it's not abuse to deny commodity foodstuffs to hungry, growing kids, why should a woman be obligated to feed anyone with nutrients from her own bloodstream? If “Communism” is the spectre of a government commissar coming to forcibly take your stuff and give it to someone who “needs it more than you do,” how is forced gestation and birth not this very thing? If you don't truly own the rights to your own body, then how is it meaningful to claim inviolable moral ownership of one's investment property, bank account, or canned goods?
An embryo at 3-4 weeks from conception, which is 5-6 weeks into a pregnancy. It's 0.19 of an inch long, and the "host" may not even know it's there. Image by Lunar Caustic via Flickr, CC BY 2.0.
Sources:
Impact of Texas’ Abortion Ban: A 20-Fold Increase in Driving Distance to Get an Abortion
The staggering implications of the Supreme Court’s Texas anti-abortion ruling
Florida House Speaker José Oliva called pregnant women 'host bodies' 5 times in interview on anti-abortion bill
Having a baby: Stages of pregnancy by trimester
Letters from an American, September 3, 2021
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About Dawn Allen
Dawn Allen is a freelance writer and editor who is passionate about sustainability, political economy, gardening, traditional craftwork, and simple living. She and her husband are currently renovating a rural homestead in southeastern Michigan.