I am completely and utterly
against this new empowering “requirement” that is being bestowed against my
kind. As a woman, my rights are being challenged.
New state law requires
that to have an abortion in Texas women must (twenty-four hours prior to the
abortion) get an ultrasound of the fetus that they are intending on
terminating. Anyone that is whatsoever analytical should be able to figure out
what’s so wrong with this horrifying demand.
With the help of our
outstanding Governor, Rick Perry, he pushed and then passed this bill. This is
the man who’s pro-life but according to The Huffington Post is also for the death penalty. If Perry can believe in the
saying “abortion is murder” how can he not say the same thing about the death
penalty? Ironic, I know. Then to be making decisions for the sake of women all
over Texas, it’s nauseating. To think that he is not only Governor of Texas but
was also a presidential candidate blows my mind.
It seems as if Texans are
slowly losing their rights as American citizens, why not add this one to the
list? In this case women are losing their right to privacy as well as our right to free speech because it violates the rights of both doctors and patients.
Let’s say a teenage adolescent chooses
to not abort because of these distasteful sonograms that the government is forcing
women to see. What happens then for the well being of the child? What happens
when the maturity level of this teen mom can’t handle having to take care of
somebody else? According to new data from the CDC, siblings of teen parents are
two to six more likely to become pregnant as teens than younger siblings of
teens who are not parents. So why don’t we take a reasonable approach to
this delicate circumstance and stop trying to brainwash women into thinking
what they’re doing is ill-advised. It is their god given right to do what they
want with their own body, and nobody else should have a say so.
If you decide on having the
child instead of an abortion, then so be it! But you shouldn’t have to be persuaded to give birth, you should want
to have a child and be ready for one. The government shouldn’t be poking its
nose into other people’s business and especially
men trying to make decisions about what women can and cannot do.
Louise Melling, director of the Center for
Liberty at the American Civil Liberties Union once said, “Even if we
disagree on the issue of abortion, we can agree that these are private personal
decisions we all must be able to make based on our own circumstances, beliefs,
and values… It is neither my place nor our government's place to make such an
important life decision for someone else...”
So no matter what your stance on abortion is, the decision to
have one should not be based solely on what the government endorses but your own personal convictions.