Privacy rights? as good as gone; Free Speech rights? on the way out; Right to own firearms? under constant attack; freedom of the press? FAKE NEWS; Inalienable Rights from birth? Nope. Not until the Senate says so.
By a vote of 53-44, the Senate has failed to pass the Born-Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act, which would have required doctors to provide medical care to infants born alive after an attempted abortion procedure. The bill — sponsored by Senator Ben Sasse (R., Neb.) and cosponsored by 49 of his fellow Republican senators — needed 60 votes to overcome the legislative filibuster.
Just three Democratic senators crossed the aisle to vote with Republicans in favor of the legislation: Bob Casey Jr. (Pa.), Joe Manchin (W.Va.), and Doug Jones (Ala.).
All six of the Democratic senators currently running for the 2020 presidential nomination voted against the bill: Cory Booker (N.J.), Sherrod Brown (Ohio), Kirsten Gillibrand (N.Y.), Kamala Harris (Calif.), Amy Klobuchar (Minn.), and Elizabeth Warren (Mass.), along with Independent Bernie Sanders of Vermont.
Three Republican senators did not vote on the bill: Kevin Cramer (N.D.), Lisa Murkowski (Alaska), and Tim Scott (S.C.). According to their communications directors, both Cramer and Scott missed the vote due to flight delays.
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sinclair ago
We have an act that covers this. H.R.2175 - Born-Alive Infants Protection Act of 2002
""Born Alive" is defined as the complete expulsion of an infant at any stage of development that has a heartbeat, pulsation of the umbilical cord, breath, or voluntary muscle movement, no matter if the umbilical cord has been cut or if the expulsion of the infant was natural, induced labor, cesarean section, or induced abortion."
I feel like this covers the spirit of the law in question. Did we miss something we needed to propose more legislation? How about enforcing the laws on the books? Or do we need more laws?
Pray tell, what's special about this new law they voted on, that failed?
kestrel9 ago
Born-Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act
Based on H.R. 2175 - passed March 12, 2002
H.R. 2175 Passed Senate by unanimous consent July 18, 2002. Defines a "Born alive infant" as "Person, human being, Child, Individual".
There's no way Democrats will ever agree to a law requiring a baby born alive after an abortion be sent to a hospital for medical care as a protected individual. It will NEVER happen. Too much money to lose in the baby parts chop shop industry. This is how evil our society has become.
sinclair ago
I think they're worried about the listed consequences. Maybe they are too high risk for them.
kestrel9 ago
If requiring that a new born baby who has survived an abortion, be sent to a hospital to afford it the same treatment any other newborn baby would be expected to receive, is too 'risky' for Democrats to support, then screw it, push the "service" onto the black market again. The babies' body parts are already sold there, then everyone could stop pretending it's not a supply chain for not organ trafficking.
sinclair ago
That's not the risky part, it's the consequences for failure to comply. You have to remember, people are sketch to law enforcement because it gets used as a political tool. That's common on both sides. Make sure you're not approaching this emotionally, because it's already settled for them. There already exists a law that meets the spirit of what was asked for in the new bill, just the enforcement isn't as clearly defined.
If the intent was abortion, that means it could never be born alive. They could never keep it alive, because they would have to treat it as a patient. If they got caught, that's another can of worms. This one comes on too strong. So, they canned it.
kestrel9 ago
The failure of this bill to pass reflects the fecklessness of H.R. 2175 when it states it "Acknowledges human rights of any child born in the United States", precisely because, as it now stands, pro abortionist can never reconcile 'the right to a dead baby' vs 'the human rights of any/all babies born alive'
HR 2175 simply stated that babies are considered to be humans that have standing under the law (human rights), and that if the decision is made to not resuscitate, that decision can't be made based on the child not being considered a human with human rights. However, as we've witnessed and more will come out this year, a baby born alive may have rights, but no one is really required to protect those rights under HR 2175.
2000 Planned Parenthood of Central New Jersey v. Farmer
…
But that dignity afforded via HR 2175 has not translated to the reality of how babies born alive are treated or viewed by abortion supporters.
What has been happening in abortion clinics are vile repudiations of HR 2175, and I've yet to hear ANY abortion supporter publically use any language remotely acknowledging even the spirit of HR 2175, much less action. The new law provided a basis of accountability where there has been none. It protects whistleblowers, by requiring they report what's happening. Otherwise they'd be under the pressure from their employers to act contrary to what the law requires to afford human rights to babies born alive.
That is, for not protecting the human rights of born alive babies and sending them to the hospital. Clinics are now financially vested in selling babies' body parts. They are in no way interested in being accountable for sending their source of income to some hospital instead.
That is covered under HR 2175, but who could ever be charged for it because the private and unaccountable clinics where abortion is provided, do not send live babies to hospitals. Far and few in between are those kids who managed to get out alive AFTER surviving the abortion.