Don't fight, don't get mad, use thier law against them
by
morganb
07/03/2008, 12:25 PM
Since I couldn’t find the wording of the actual law I can’t
confirm this; but unless the law issued a written letter that had to be given
without change, in other words an absolute as opposed to a minimum ‘must
contain at least’, the solution is not to fight but to give them more than they
asked for. Consider the following additions so the minimum required statements.
From the article:
a written statement telling them that "the abortion
will terminate the life of a whole, separate, unique, living human being (as
defined by the legislature: "an individual living member of the species
Homo sapiens, including the unborn human being during the entire embryonic and
fetal ages from fertilization to full gestation." so an undivided egg and
sperm combination is included in this definition)," and that they have
"an existing relationship with that unborn human being" that is
constitutionally protected (as in’ no one can force you to have an abortion
this constitutional protection means that any decision is ultimately yours to
make’).
In addition, doctors are ordered to describe "all known
medical risks of the procedure and statistically significant risk
factors," including "depression and related psychological
distress" (which statistically are equal or less than the same risk
factors entailed in carrying to term) and "increased risk of suicide
ideation and suicide (which statistically are equal or less than the same
risk factors entailed in carrying to term)."
And I’m sure that with a little research one of the better
writers out there could include a truly devastating rebuttal to this stupid law,
as part of it’s required handout.
It would be difficult to argue, at the SCOTUS level especially,
that it is better to give less information as opposed to more. The idea should
be to turn the table. Show their stupidity and make them realize that when they
do something stupid they will lose in the end.