The Daily Escape:
Barn with cotton candy clouds, Allegre, KY â July 2022 photo by Fuller Perspective Photography
The Supreme Courtâs overturning of Roe has opened a Pandoraâs Box of ethical and legal issues. The infamous story about the pregnant 10 year-old Ohio rape victim who was forced to travel to Indiana to receive an abortion is the best example. It was reported in the Indianapolis Star on July 1.
After the Dobbs decision, Ohio Governor Mike DeWine (R) had issued an executive order putting in force a 2019 law that had banned nearly all abortions after six weeks of pregnancy. The 10-year-old was reportedly six weeks and three days pregnant.
Then we saw a Right-wing smear campaign:
- A WSJ editorial called the Indianapolis Starâs report a “fanciful tale“, and claimed that there is “no evidence the girl exists.”
- Tucker Carlson said that the story of the 10-year-old girl who had to travel to Indiana to get an abortion was “not true.”
- Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost said in an interview with USA Today, that the story was likely a “fabrication.”
- The New York Post, which, like Fox News and the WSJ, is owned by Rupert Murdoch, published an opinion piece by law professor Jonathan Turley under the headline “Activist tale of 10-year-old rape victimâs abortion looks like a lie.”
All of those shouts and murmurs soon disappeared when a 27-year-old man from Columbus, Ohio, Gershon Fuentes, was arrested and charged with impregnating the 10-year-old Ohio girl. Apparently, Fuentes “confessed to raping the child on at least two occasions.”
Subsequently, Â the WSJ recanted and published a different editorial correcting the record. Why would they accuse the Star of fabricating a story? From Judd Legum: (emphasis by Wrongo)
âThere is a reason why so many people, particularly on the right, were eager to push the idea that Bernard’s story was a lie. If they acknowledged the story was true they would have to answer this question: Do you believe that a 10-year-old rape victim should be forced to give birth?â
By the way, Covid appears to have increased early-onset puberty around the world. Getting your period âearlyâ now means when youâre younger than 8. People who think a pregnant 10-year-old strains credulity should bear this in mind.
The Nieman Lab, a Harvard-based group focused on journalism on the Internet, took the WaPoâs Glenn Kessler, author of their âFact Checkerâ column to task for not checking his facts about the Starâs reporting. One of Kesslerâs so-called âfactsâ was: (brackets by Wrongo)
âAn abortion by a 10-year-old is pretty rare,â Kessler notes…..[but] The Columbus Dispatch reported that in 2020, 52 people under the age of 15 received an abortion in Ohio.â
Your mileage may vary, but if one under-15-year-old gets an abortion every week in Ohio, it canât be thought of as âpretty rareâ. The press needs to wise up and get the data before diving headfirst to a conclusion.
There are other ways the Dobbs decision will impact lives. Unsure doctors in Texas are already turning away ectopic pregnancies, fearing legal liability. According to The Lily (a WaPo newsletter):
â…a South Texas woman diagnosed with an ectopic pregnancy was refused an abortion by her doctor…..she was advised to seek help out of state.â
Under the unclear Texas law, a doctor who removes an ectopic pregnancy that is not actively causing the patient to bleed to death may face legal consequences.
It doesn’t end there. The laws surrounding in vitro fertilization (IVF) could also be facing threats of lawsuits even though these women aren’t seeking abortions. Slate reports:
“Fertilizing eggs in a Petri dish often results in extra embryos, which are usually frozen….Leftover embryos are frequently discarded or donated to research….In some abortion-restrictive states, this may no longer be possible. Louisiana defines âa viable in vitro fertilized human ovumâ as a âjuridical person which shall not be intentionally destroyed,â and at least five states have introduced bills establishing fetal personhood.â
States probably wonât ban IVF outright, but as some countries have done, they may limit the number of embryos that can be created in an effort to prevent embryo destruction. All of this would make IVF far more difficult and expensive than it is, and it could possibly reduce the number of IVF clinics in those states.
This is the tip of the iceberg of the issues women will have post-Dobbs. Technology will always be ahead of our laws and ethics. Just as will some men’s (and religions’) need to control women.
Time to wake up America! Elect a filibuster-proof Senate this fall. To help you wake up listen to Willie Nile, perform his ode to Covid, âThe Day the Earth Stood Stillâ:
Sample lyric (that could be about the end of Roe instead of Covid)
So if you feel some heartache
And if you feel some pain
And if you see some lonely soul
Standing in the pouring rain
Offer up some kindness
Compassion if you will
And remember well the way it was
The day the earth stood still