The Anti-Abortion Endgame That Erin Hawley Admitted to the Supreme Court

bnew

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JURISPRUDENCE

The Anti-Abortion Endgame That Erin Hawley Admitted to the Supreme Court​

BY DAHLIA LITHWICK AND MARK JOSEPH STERN

MARCH 27, 20244:48 PM

Hawley reads from a piece of paper at a lectern with doctors in lab coats behind her.

Erin Hawley speaks to the media after oral arguments in FDA v. Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine on Tuesday in Washington. Anna Rose Layden/Getty Images

Somewhat lost in the debate around abortion pills and oral arguments that took place at the Supreme Court in FDA v. Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine on Tuesday was one deeply uncomfortable truth: The very notion of what it means to practice emergency medicine is in dispute, with anti-abortion doctors insisting upon a right to refuse treatment for any patient who doesn’t meet their test of moral purity. Indeed, the right asserted is that in the absence of certainty about which patients are morally pure, the doctors want to deny medication to all patients, nationwide.

In public, the plaintiffs in this case—a group of doctors and dentists seeking to ban medication abortion—have long claimed they object to ending “unborn life” by finishing an “incomplete or failed” abortion at the hospital. But in court, they went much further. Their lawyer, Erin Hawley, admitted at oral argument that her clients don’t merely oppose terminating a pregnancy—they are pursuing the right to turn away a patient whose pregnancy has already been terminated. Indeed, they appear to want to deny even emergency care to patients whose fetus is no longer “alive,” on the grounds that the patient used an abortion drug earlier in the process. And they aim to deploy this broad fear of “complicity” against the FDA, to demand a nationwide prohibition on the abortion pill to ensure that they need never again see (and be forced to turn away) patients who’ve previously taken it. This is not a theory of being “complicit” in ending life. It is a theory that doctors can pick and choose their patients based on the “moral distress” they might feel in helping them.

It should come as no surprise that the same judge who tried to ban mifepristone in this case, Matthew Kacsmaryk, has also attempted to legalize anti-LGBTQ+ discrimination in health care nationwide. This is the ballgame: weaponize subjective religious beliefs against secular society to degrade the quality of care for everyone. If you can’t persuade Americans to adopt hardcore evangelical views, exploit the legal system to coerce them into it anyway.

Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine is at once embarrassingly frivolous and existentially important. Don’t let the jokes about how silly the Comstock Act seems, or how speculative the theory of standing is, get in the way of taking a serious look at the claims on offer. The plaintiffs say they are terrified that one day, a patient may walk into their emergency room suffering complications from a medication abortion prescribed by some other doctor. This patient may need their assistance completing the abortion or simply recovering from the complete abortion, which these plaintiffs deem “complicity” in sin. And they say the solution is either a total, nationwide ban on mifepristone, the first drug in the medication abortion sequence, or a draconian (and medically unnecessary) set of restrictions that would place mifepristone out of reach for many patients. (The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit ruled to reinstate those restrictions at their behest.)

It is a twisted line of logic, one that should never have reached the Supreme Court in the first place. But it is also a product of the court’s past indulgence of outlandish claims about moral “complicity.” As was made plain in the oral arguments and briefing, activist doctors are no longer satisfied with personal conscience exemptions already granted under state and federal law; they now insist that nobody, anywhere, should have access to the abortion pill, in order to ensure that they themselves won’t have to treat patients who took one. At a minimum, they say, they should be able to radically roll back access to the pill in all 50 states to reduce the odds that one of these handful of objectors might someday encounter a patient who took it. This extremist argument lays bare the transformation of the idea of “complicity” from a shield for religious dissenters to a sword for ideologues desperate to seize control over other people’s lives and bodies.

At oral arguments, several justices pressed Hawley, who argued on behalf of Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine, with an obvious retort: Why can’t her clients simply refuse to treat these hypothetical someday patients on the grounds that they cannot help end the “life” of a fetus or embryo? After all, federal law guarantees doctors the right not to have to provide an abortion if doing so is “contrary to his religious beliefs or moral convictions.” Justices Amy Coney Barrett and Brett Kavanaugh secured assurances from Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar, early in the arguments, that under no circumstances could the government force any health care provider to ever participate in an abortion in violation of their conscience. Justice Elena Kagan asked Prelogar: “Suppose somebody has bled significantly, needs a transfusion, or, you know, any of a number of other things that might happen.” Would the plaintiffs object to treating them? Prelogar said the record was unclear.

Hawley, who is married to far-right Republican Sen. Josh Hawley, then approached the lectern and cleared up any confusion: Yes, she insisted, treating a patient who has undergone a medication abortion violates the conscience of the plaintiff physicians even if there is no “live” fetus or embryo to terminate anymore. “Completing an elective abortion means removing an embryo fetus, whether or not they’re alive, as well as placental tissue,” Hawley told Kagan. So the plaintiffs don’t object just to taking a “life.” They also object to the mere act of removing leftover tissue, even from the placenta.

Of course, these doctors must remove “dead” fetal tissue and placentas all the time—from patients who experienced a spontaneous miscarriage. By their own admission, the plaintiffs regularly help women complete miscarriages through surgery or medication. Those women they will gladly treat. Other women, though—the ones who induced their own miscarriage via medication—are too sinful to touch. Before the plaintiffs can administer even lifesaving emergency treatment, they need to know the circumstances of this pregnancy loss: Spontaneous miscarriages are OK; medication abortions are not.

Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, too, zeroed in on this admission. She told Hawley that she had thought the objection was to “participating in a procedure that is ending the life [of the fetus].” Hawley told her no: Any participation in an abortion, even through the indirect treatment of a patient without a “live” fetus, violated the doctors’ conscience. So, wait. What about “handing them a water bottle?” Jackson asked. Hawley dodged the question, declining to say whether helping a patient hydrate would constitute impermissible complicity in sin.

All this is reminiscent of Little Sisters of the Poor, a case about a Catholic charitable group that was afforded an exemption from the Affordable Care Act’s contraception mandate. The Little Sisters were asked to check a box signaling to the government that they could not comply with the mandate, at which point the government would step in to cover their employees. But the Little Sisters refused, viewing this action—the checking of a box to opt out of coverage—as “complicity” in abortion because it would in turn trigger government payment for contraception (which they viewed as abortifacients). The Supreme Court and the Trump administration ultimately indulged the Little Sisters’ claim.

Here, we have emergency room physicians asserting that they will not participate in lifesaving medical intervention unless they approve of the reason for the pregnancy loss. Presumably, if the pregnant patient is an unwed mother, or a gay or transgender person, the doctor would be similarly complicit in sin and decline service. Seen through this lens, since one can never know which sins one is enabling in the ER, each and every day, a narrow conscience exemption becomes a sweeping guarantee that absolutely nobody in the country can ever have access to basic health care, let alone miscarriage management. (Of course, these plaintiffs might focus only on one set of “sins” they see as relevant.) In a country effectively governed by Kacsmaryk and his plaintiff friends, a gay person suffering a stroke could be turned away from any hospital because of his sexual orientation, all to spare a doctor from a glancing encounter with prior sin. As Tobias Barrington Wolff, a professor of law at the University of Pennsylvania Law School, put it to us in an email, this unbounded view of complicity “is part of enacting the social death of people and practices you abhor, which in turn can contribute to the material death of people and practices you abhor.”

One of the most exhausting lessons of post-Roe America is that being “pro-life” definitively means privileging the life of the presumptively sin-free unborn—or even their “dead” remains—over the life of the sin-racked adults who carry them. This is why women are left to go septic or to hemorrhage in hospital parking lots; it is why C-sections are performed in nonviable pregnancies, at high risk to mothers; it’s why the women who sued in Texas to secure exceptions to that state’s abortion ban are condemned by the state as sinners and whores. And it’s why—in the eyes of the Alliance for Hippocratic Medicineit is a greater hardship for a physician to “waste precious moments scrubbing in, scrubbing out” of emergency surgery, as Hawley put it, so long as they don’t believe that the emergency warrants their professional services, than it is for a pregnant person, anywhere in the country, including in states that permit abortion, to be forced to give birth.

At oral argument, Hawley explained that her clients have “structured [their] medical practice to bring life into the world. When they are called from their labor and delivery floor down to the operating room to treat a woman suffering from abortion drug harm, that is diametrically opposed to why they entered the medical profession. It comes along with emotional harm.” The emotional harm alleged here is that unless these doctors approve of the specific circumstances of the ER visit, they violate not only their own medical preference but also their religious convictions. But they will never truly know enough about the sins of their patients to be able to shield themselves against being a link in a chain of subjective lifelong sin. And to be a doctor, especially an emergency physician, should be to understand that your patients’ private choices and spiritual life are not really open to your pervasive and vigilant medical veto. This deep-rooted suspicion of patients deemed insufficiently pure for lifesaving treatment didn’t begin with the availability of medication abortion. It will assuredly not end there.
 

bnew

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A.I summary:

The article discusses the anti-abortion endgame that Erin Hawley, the lawyer for the Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine, admitted to the Supreme Court. The plaintiffs, a group of doctors and dentists, are seeking to ban medication abortion and assert the right to turn away patients whose pregnancy has already been terminated. They argue that treating a patient who has undergone a medication abortion violates their conscience, even if there is no "live" fetus or embryo to terminate. This extremist argument lays bare the transformation of the idea of "complicity" from a shield for religious dissenters to a sword for ideologues desperate to seize control over other people's lives and bodies.


The article highlights how this twisted line of logic should never have reached the Supreme Court in the first place. It is a product of the court's past indulgence of outlandish claims about moral "complicity." The plaintiffs are no longer satisfied with personal conscience exemptions already granted under state and federal law; they now insist that nobody, anywhere, should have access to the abortion pill, in order to ensure that they themselves won't have to treat patients who took one. This unbounded view of complicity is part of enacting the social death of people and practices they abhor, which in turn can contribute to the material death of people and practices they abhor. The article concludes by emphasizing that this deep-rooted suspicion of patients deemed insufficiently pure for lifesaving treatment didn't begin with the availability of medication abortion and will assuredly not end there.


2nd:

The article discusses a case before the Supreme Court, FDA v. Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine, where a group of doctors and dentists are seeking to ban medication abortion. The plaintiffs have gone beyond just opposing the termination of a pregnancy, and are now asserting the right to turn away patients whose pregnancy has already been terminated, even if there is no longer a "live" fetus. They argue that treating such patients would violate their conscience, as they view the mere act of removing leftover tissue as complicity in sin.

This extreme position reveals a troubling trend where some doctors are no longer satisfied with personal conscience exemptions, and are instead seeking to deny access to abortion medication nationwide to ensure they never have to encounter patients who have taken it. The article argues that this represents a transformation of the idea of "complicity" from a shield for religious dissenters to a sword for ideologues desperate to control other people's lives and bodies. The article warns that this could lead to a situation where doctors could potentially turn away patients for any reason they deem morally objectionable, effectively denying basic healthcare to large segments of the population.
 

tuckgod

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ChatGPT be spittin :ahh:

Verse 1:
In the halls of justice, where truth’s supposed to reign,
A battle unfolds, it’s both cruel and insane.
Docs and dentists claim, with a moralistic tone,
That they’ll turn away lives, leaving many alone.

Chorus:
It’s a twisted game, with lives on the line,
Seeking purity tests, in a world so divine.
But what’s pure, what’s not, who’s to say, who’s to call?
When medicine’s oath, is to care for us all.

Verse 2:
They say it’s about life, from the very start,
But in court, they confess, it’s about playing a part.
Denying care, even when life’s no more,
Claiming moral distress, closing compassion’s door.

Bridge:
And the judge, oh the judge, with a pen in his hand,
Tries to push his beliefs, across this vast land.
From the rights to the pills, to the care we implore,
It’s a fight not just for life, but for so much more.

Verse 3:
Imagine the fear, of needing help in distress,
But being turned away, because of someone else’s guess.
On moral purity, on what’s sin or not,
In the ER’s cold light, it’s a chilling thought.

Outro:
So here’s the story, in a world gone astray,
Where the oath to do no harm, gets lost along the way.
For the sake of all, let’s hope reason prevails,
In this tale of twisted logic, where justice tips the scales.
 

Amestafuu (Emeritus)

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atheists cant even answer what a woman is :dead:
you talking bout lbgtqi and their allies.... that's not atheism breh :skip:

when people call out religion it doesn't mean that they automatically have no spirituality... there's life outside the church brehs. religion is just training wheels for spirituality. you suppose to take them shyts off at a point...
 

Diyhai

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do you think there is an issue with doctors being able to avoid medical work they deem immoral?
thats like if someone wants a sex change, should a doctor be forced to do it?
I don't think its crazy
imo a doctor should legally be able to not deal with things that involve abortion
 

bnew

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Arizona Supreme Court rules that a near-total abortion ban from 1864 is enforceable​

The bombshell decision adds the state to the growing lists of places where abortion care is effectively banned.

protest demonstration abortion rights

Abortion rights protesters chant during a Pro Choice rally at the Tucson Federal Courthouse in Tucson, Ariz., in 2022.Sandy Huffaker / AFP via Getty Images file

April 9, 2024, 1:07 PM EDT / Updated April 9, 2024, 1:16 PM EDT

By Adam Edelman and Alex Tabet

PHOENIX — The Arizona Supreme Court ruled Tuesday that a 160-year-old near-total abortion ban still on the books in the state is enforceable, a bombshell decision that adds the state to the growing lists of places where abortion care is effectively banned.

The ruling allows an 1864 law in Arizona to stand that criminalized abortion by making it a felony punishable by two to five years in prison for anyone who performs or helps a woman obtain one.

The law — which was codified again in 1901, and once again in 1913, after Arizona became a state — included an exception to save the woman’s life.

That Civil War-era law — enacted a half-century before Arizona even gained statehood — was never repealed and an appellate court ruled last year that it could remain on the books as long as it was “harmonized” with the 2022 law, leading to substantial confusion in Arizona regarding exactly when during a pregnancy abortion was outlawed.

The decision — which could shutter abortion clinics in the state — effectively undoes a lower court’s ruling that stated that a more recent 15-week ban from March 2022 superseded the 1864 law.

In a 4-2 ruling, the court’s majority concluded that the 15-week ban “does not create a right to, or otherwise provide independent statutory authority for, an abortion that repeals or restricts” the Civil War-era ban “but rather is predicated entirely on the existence of a federal constitutional right to an abortion since disclaimed” by the 2022 Dobbs decision that overturned Roe v. Wade.

“Absent the federal constitutional abortion right, and because” the 2022 law does not independently authorize abortion, there is no provision in federal or state law prohibiting” the 1864 ban.

They added, that the ban “is now enforceable.”
 
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