Jessica Valenti With an Important Reminder

I’m searching the campaign coverage, but I can’t find, um — help me out: did the Supreme Court get re-elected??

Oh wait. Right, they weren’t on the ballot. Life tenure, all that.

That helps explain this nightmare I had: We were getting ready to march again, from Selma to Montgomery, to get voting rights and women’s rights back. It was gonna be a slog: there was this road sign:

Yeah, so we started walking past it . . .

But then my glasses seemed to get clouded up. I took them off, cleaned them with my shirttail, put them back on, and blinked.

Now the sign said

 

 

 

 

 

 

I blinked again, then checked my phone’s GPS:

We weren’t in Selma, 50 miles west of Montgomery.

Five hundred miles west meant we were somewhere near Shreveport, Louisiana.  We had to walk across bayou country, then through Mississippi, and after that 60 or so miles of west Alabama, just to get back to Selma.

An 18-wheeler roared by. I stuck out my thumb. Unless we got a ride, this would be a helluva lot longer slog than even I figured.

Then I woke up, and it was Wednesday, and it looked like maybe we could get a ride, at least part of the way. . . .

Here’s Jessica Valenti. Her column came out before the voting; but the main points are not much changed the results.

The New York Times— Nov. 5, 2022

OPINION: GUEST ESSAY

Ms. Valenti publishes a newsletter in which she writes about abortion every day.

Despite Republican‌ assurances that their draconian abortion bans wouldn’t hurt women, a flood of heart-wrenching accounts from across the country prove otherwise. Yet even with that outpouring of stories, plus polls showing broad opposition to the bans and an increase in women registering to vote, it’s still unclear if the issue will be the deciding factor for voters in the midterm elections on Tuesday.

It should be.

This past summer, after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. W‌ade, I started publishing a daily newsletter tracking abortion news, ‌following everything from state bans to stories of women denied vital health care. After months of writing about abortion, it’s clear that stripping this right from half of Americans has had a swift, damaging and pervasive impact.

What happens in the midterms won’t be about Republicans or Democrats, but whether people cast a vote for the continuation of suffering, or attempt to end the anguish that banning abortion has caused.

This isn’t hyperbole. Laws that privilege fetuses over those who carry them haven’t just relegated women to second-class citizenship, they have also led to the denial of lifesaving care in case after case. In‌ affidavits, Ohio health care providers reported having to comfort a sobbing cancer patient who was refused an abortion, and seeing at least three patients who threatened to commit suicide after being denied abortions.

In August, a woman in Texas who was denied an abortion for an unviable pregnancy ended up in the intensive care unit with sepsis. Another Texas woman, pregnant and in failing health, was recently told she shouldn’t come back unless she had a condition as severe as liver failure or stroke. A woman in Wisconsin was left bleeding for more than 10 days after an incomplete miscarriage just days after the Supreme Court’s decision; a doctor ‌in Texas was told not to treat an ectopic pregnancy until it ruptured.

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