Văd că s-a propus o lege asemănătoare în New York:
New York abortion law: Why are so many people talking about it?
The act removes the need for a doctor to perform some abortions and takes abortion out of the criminal code, making it a public health issue.
However, the most controversial aspect of the RHA is the provision allowing abortions after 24 weeks in cases where there is an "absence of foetal viability, or the abortion is necessary to protect the patient's life or health".
In 2016, Erika Christensen was pregnant and living in New York with her husband. The couple were thrilled.
However, at 31 weeks, she found out that her pregnancy was "nonviable", meaning that the baby would not survive outside the womb.
Ms Christensen told the BBC that she "didn't know about the law" banning abortion in New York beyond 24 weeks.
"We wanted to end the suffering of this child. It was a simple choice."
After doing some research she realised she would have to leave the state to terminate her pregnancy.
She borrowed $10,000 (£7,600) from her mum, and flew halfway across the country to have an abortion in Colorado.
Acesta mi s-a părut cel mai bun argument din tot articolul. La asta ajută și faptul că partea anti pare să fie foarte inflamată și cam atât. N-am văzut argumente, doar limbaj incendiar:
Speaking to Fox News, Cardinal Dolan said the new law was "ghoulish, grisly and gruesome", and "not good for our country".
I have got a fire in my belly and it's time to double down on fighting this," she said.
Ms Fadden is also concerned that the RHA makes abortion a "fundamental right" for women in New York, and will lead to "pro-life viewpoint suppression".
Tare ce să zic. Ce surpriză că unii oameni religioși ar prefera ca alți să facă precum ei fără discuții
Aici nu mă refer neapărat la ce-au spus oamenii de mai sus dar la faptul că mulți sunt anti-avort doar pe baza faptului că le spune religia că așa trebuie să fie. Dovadă faptul că opinia unui Cardinal e relevantă pentru unii.
Ar fi o critică bună totuși:
While much of the discussion surrounding the RHA focuses on the 24-week provision, the removal of abortion from the criminal code is also controversial. Pro-choice campaigners maintain that abortion is a healthcare issue, while opponents to the RHA say that it removes protection for pregnant victims of domestic abuse.
Livia Abreu was violently attacked by her boyfriend when she was 26 weeks pregnant. She was stabbed multiple times and lost her unborn baby. Ms Abreu released a statement saying the RHA would decriminalise "abortion as a product of an assault on a pregnant female". Her former partner is facing charges of abortion in the first and second degree, as well as attempted murder and assault.
"The passing of RHA will likely exonerate him from those charges," she wrote. "Which will in turn lessen his sentence now that a judge has decided the case is going to trial and the new law will take effect prior to that date.
"Let that sink in. He will likely be convicted of the crimes he committed against me, but the loss of my daughter will be a non-factor to the law because she wasn't 'born and alive'.
Also să luăm și asta în considerare:
In many states, the end of Roe v. Wade is already here
If Roe v. Wade is overturned, states can individually decide whether abortion will remain legal and how accessible it will be. While services in blue states like California and New York will probably remain intact, they most likely will not in states like Mississippi where abortion is already restricted. (In Mississippi, abortion is illegal after 15 weeks of a pregnancy, and only one remaining clinic offers the procedure.)
And it’s not just Mississippi. Twenty-one states, including North Dakota, Georgia, and Oklahoma, adhere to a 20-week ban. In some states, burdensome requirements for abortions mean extended wait periods for women seeking the procedure. Legal limitations like extended waiting periods have been placed on medication-based abortions. Certain states restrict private insurers from covering abortion, while other states require women to undergo counseling before having an abortion.