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What Texas’ Abortion Ban Could Mean for Tennessee

The abortion ban that went into effect in Texas on Wednesday is a part of a national agenda to end abortion access in the country, according to the head of Planned Parenthood of Tennessee and North Mississippi. 

“People in Tennessee have got to watch what’s happening in Texas really closely because Gov. [Bill] Lee and the General Assembly could very easily replicate S.B. 8. here,” said president and CEO Ashley Coffield. 

The attacks on abortion access are relentless and have been ramping up in Tennessee, she said, citing a 2020 executive order from Lee that excluded abortions as an essential healthcare service. 

Texas law, S.B. 8, which bans abortion at around six weeks or when there is cardiac activity, went into effect Wednesday. Abortion providers say this is before many women even know they are pregnant. 

“This means as of today any pregnant person who lives in Texas will simply not be able to access an abortion,” Coffield said. 

The law makes no exceptions for pregnacies resulting from rape or incest. 

Unlike other six-week bans, Texas’ law turns over enforcement of the ban from the government to private citizens. The law allows anyone to sue abortion providers and anyone who helps a woman get an abortion. Those sued could have to pay up to $10,000 in damages. Coffield said the law was designed to “nefariously skirt” being struck down in court as unconstitutional.

Tennessee passed a “heartbeat bill” last year, but it was immediately blocked by a federal court from going into effect. However, the court allowed a portion of the law, which prohibits abortions based on a Down syndrome diagnosis or because of the gender or race of the fetus, to take effect. 

The case is currently being reviewed by the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. 

Under current Tennessee law, abortions are illegal after viability (which is around 24 weeks), except in cases where a woman’s life is endangered. Among other provisions, Tennessee requires parental consent for minors seeking abortion and a mandatory 48-hour waiting period before women can receive an abortion. This measure was ruled legal by a U.S. Appeals court last month.

Most recently, the state passed a law requiring medical providers who provide abortions to bury or cremate the fetal remains. Coffield calls this a “hateful and intrusive measure.”

“These mandates were written by politicians and not doctors in an effort to shame people who need an abortion and make abortion providers jumo through more costly and unnecessary hoops to provide healthcare,” Coffield said. “These mandates just tell us that the legislature and Gov. Lee will stop at nothing to take our rights away.”

The U.S. Supreme Court is set to hear a case on Mississippi’s 15-week abortion ban later this year, which could overturn Roe v. Wade, Coffield said. 

“Unfortunately, we’re starting to think about what it will take to help our patients find care outside of Tennessee if the worst happens,” Coffield said. “Without Roe, there is no protection for abortions in Tennessee. No one should have to prepare for losing access to essential healthcare or have the added burden of figuring out how to find an out-of-state healthcare provider because of politicians.” 

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Letter From The Editor Opinion

Evil or Stupid?

“We handled it really well for many weeks, even through Phase 1. Then it’s almost like a light switch went off and we stopped taking it seriously.” That was Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland earlier this week, talking about the recent rise in local COVID-19 cases during Phase 2.

Similarly, Shelby County Mayor Lee Harris expressed concern that a move back to Phase 1 could happen if infection rates continued to rise. Harris added that he thought it could be avoided “if everyone will do their part.” That would include abiding by the city’s reinvigorated “Mask Up” program and rigorously maintaining Phase 2 regulations.

Memphis and Shelby County aren’t doing badly in the grand scheme of things, but things could get out of hand quickly. We need to wear our masks in public spaces, no exceptions, even in our red suburbs. And it’s worth noting that the average age of those testing positive in Shelby County is skewing younger: A sample of one week in April, May, and June revealed an average age of COVID-infected persons at 58, 43, and 40 respectively, according to information released earlier this week.

The examples set by other states and cities that have dealt with this health crisis on a much more devastating scale have made clear that there are no shortcuts to beating this disease. So why do so many Americans still not believe in medical science? Why are so many Americans still ignoring precautions, refusing to wear a mask, refusing to pay attention to social distancing?

The answer is pretty obvious. They believe the president of the United States, who has downplayed this health crisis from its inception. He’s said it would just … go away. He refuses to wear a mask or encourage others to do so. He’s said we’re testing more than any country on Earth. (Per capita? Not even close.) In fact, under Trump’s failed “leadership,” the United States is now the world’s epicenter for the disease. His oft-stated plan for reducing the infection level is to not to test so many people: “If we didn’t test so much, we wouldn’t have so many cases.” Genius. Does that work with pregnancy tests, as well?

What kind of idiot thinks this way? During the greatest global health crisis of our lives, the only real question is whether the American president is evil or stupid.

Even worse, leaders of the Republican Party have tied themselves to Trump’s moronic policies, apparently believing that he retains some sort of political magic that may possibly even extend to the curing of a disease? Why else would they still fear him and follow his lead, rather than heed the advice of countless infectious disease experts here and around the globe? Trump’s magical thinking has infected almost the entire Republican Party. Even local Trump sycophant, Congressman David Kustoff, was tweeting gushing praise of the Fearless Leader at Trump’s flaccid Tulsa rally. What do these people use for backbones? Or brains?

Blind faith in Trump — or fear of him — is why the rate of COVID-19 infections in the red states of Florida, Alabama, Texas, Arizona, and South Carolina is skyrocketing. The GOP governors of those states have dutifully followed the president’s lead: Masks are for sissies; virus fears are overblown; open the economy as fast as possible.

How has this strategy worked? Not so great. In a press conference on Monday, Texas Governor Greg Abbott said that recent spikes in COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations were “unacceptable … and must be corralled.” Yeehaw. Texas is now averaging 3,500 new cases a day, more than double the average from a month ago.

Unfortunately, Governor Abbott doesn’t intend to actually do anything other than “encourage” better behavior. He offered no plans to scale back business activities or reduce public gatherings. And, of course, he wasn’t wearing a mask during the press conference.

Meanwhile in Florida, Governor Ron DeSantis was saying, “Hold my beer!”

Not really. But in the face of rapidly rising hospitalizations, DeSantis did ask that only patients in ICU who were getting “intensive care” be counted as actual COVID patients. He is apparently unclear on the meaning of “IC.”

Like Abbott, DeSantis shows no sign of retreating from his “keep the state open for business” position, even though, as in Texas, Florida’s cases are rising to new highs almost every day — and even though Florida is home to millions of senior citizens. (Not that being young is much of a protection: In Orlando, 152 cases were just linked to a bar near the campus of Central Florida University.) Hint: That’s gonna hurt business, Ron.

Trump’s magical thinking and his clownish routines about ramp-walking and water-drinking have become the subject of much well-deserved ridicule. But the truth is, none of this is funny anymore.

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Got To Be Free

Fourteen years ago, Glynn Reed started Memphis’ Juneteenth celebration — an event that commemorates June 19th, 1865, the day slaves in Texas learned that the Civil War was over and they were free. This year’s Crossroads Ford Juneteenth Freedom and Heritage Festival salutes African Americans in the military.

The festival will take place June 15th to the 17th in Douglass Park. Activities include horseback riding, picnicking, kiddie rides, moon walks, face-painting, storytelling, Little League softball, Afro-centric jewelry sales, health-testing opportunities, and more.

R&B artist J. Blackfoot (pictured) will be the music headliner, performing at 7 p.m. on Saturday, and the gospel group Kevin Davidson & the Voices will perform at 6:15 p.m. on Sunday. In addition, Juneteenth will feature lots of local musicians, including African drummer Ekpe, “because we’ve got so much talent right here,” Reed explains. And, as always, an abundance of food will be available, though families are welcome to bring their own.

Reed says that in just 14 years, Memphis’ Juneteenth has experienced extraordinary growth. “At first, there were less than 300 people, and now, there’s no way to tell how many people there are,” she says.

As for the reason behind the festival’s increased popularity: “We’ve been cooped up inside all winter,” Reed says, laughing. But, more importantly, “It’s a cultural event, and there are not a lot of opportunities for children and adults together to get history about their culture,” she says. “It’s a celebration of freedom.”

Juneteenth, Douglass Park, June 15th-17th, free. For more information, go to www.juneteenthmemphis.com.