Court Rules Abortion Pills by Mail Illegal
Immediately after the Friday ruling in Louisianna abortion drug providers filed a challenge to the ruling. Drug companies say they want the Supreme Court to overrule the lower court's decision.
As I understand it, the lower ruling was handed down because of safety questions over the use of the drug mifepristone. The challenge will present evidence about the safety of the drug. We are all wondering, of course, whether safety was ever the reason for preventing use of the U.S. mail to distribute the medicine or if it was really religious opposition to abortion.
The drug mifepristone is also used to control high blood sugar. Its use is so common there should be a good record of its safety or lack thereof.
One can be sure health problems from use of mifepristone to prevent a birth will not be compared to the risk of giving birth. Giving birth has a long record of being dangerous to women. This fact is seldom brought up in abortion politics. Yet, what could be more important than the lives of women? Millions of women around the world every year give birth. It would be a service to all of them to know the level of risk they will encounter.
If delivery of mifepristone by mail for in-home use is outlawed, I predict a widespread system of delivering it through channels other than the U.S. Post Office. Women have been finding a way to have surgical abortions even when abortions are illegal. We have to remember the U.S. if bordered by two large countries that might be the source of this drug.
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