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Search resuls for: "Elizabeth Reiner Platt"


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Via Zoom, a minister prompted Mikayla to look in a mirror to reflect on self-empowerment and recite: “One’s body is inviolable, subject to one’s own will alone.” After swallowing the first pill in the two-drug regimen, Mikayla recited a tenet about prioritizing science. The minister advised that after the pregnancy tissue was eventually expelled, Mikayla could recite: “By my body, my blood. Arguments for exemptions might also be persuasive because most abortion bans have some exceptions, like rape, experts said. “These should be very strong, compelling cases, but I also acknowledge that this is a highly political issue,” Ms. Platt said. “We’re in a completely new landscape,” Ms. Platt said.
Persons: Mikayla, , , Elizabeth Reiner Platt, ” Ms, Platt, Josh Blackman, Ms, Adria Malcolm Organizations: Law, Columbia University, South Texas College of Law Houston Locations: Albuquerque
Missouri's abortion ban completely outlaws abortion with limited exceptions. The clergy, who come from denominations of Christianity, Unitarian Universalism, and Judaism, said the abortion ban violates their religious freedom and subjects them to "the religious dictates of others." "It came from religious leaders and communities, who have been explaining for decades that they see reproductive freedom as essential to religious freedom." But Missouri lawmakers openly discussed their religious beliefs on abortion while writing the abortion ban in 2019 according to the lawsuit, saying things like "Life begins at conception. There have also been more than a dozen cases challenging abortion restrictions on religious freedom grounds since the Supreme Court's decision, according to Platt.
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