Pages
Tuesday, September 20, 2022
Commentary: America’s Dominant Abortion Provider Faces a Struggle to Adapt
Since the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade in June, Planned Parenthood CEO Alexis McGill Johnson has tried to present new state laws restricting abortion as an opportunity for the nation’s largest abortion provider. “Now that we are in a world where we are no longer defending Roe,” she told Time magazine, “we have actually an opportunity to reimagine and reconstruct something better.”
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
You hate to see a business model like that come to an end...
ReplyDeleteWait a minute. Didn't they claim that abortions were just a small fraction of what they did and they offered many other important services for women?
ReplyDeleteDaryl
With only 3% of Planned Parenthood's mission being dedicated to abortion, I just figured that Roe v Wade would not really make any difference. Of course, I knew about what the studies in this article showed.
ReplyDeleteKermit Gates to the rescue.
ReplyDeleteThere's a promising vaccine for the upcoming pandemic, a business-model reboot for family reduction...
The overturning of Roe v. Wade was not a conservative victory. It was a states rights victory. If Virginia decides that an abortion is legal in the 30th trimester (yes, the post pregnancy fetus would be 9 years old), then the Supreme Court is not going to stop them.
ReplyDeleteFurthermore, the democrats in congress and the Democrat president could pass a law making all abortions legal in all 50 states. They won't. Too much money in being able to scare 50 year old women about the dark days of abortion returning.
I always thought that abortion was fine, so long as they made them retroactive, and let us choose the ones that were on the receiving end.
Delete