Wednesday, February 20, 2013

New York Times Editorial Praises
N.Y. Gov. Cuomo's Reproductive
Rights Proposal

February 20, 2013—"New York State once led the nation in advancing women's rights," a New York Times editorial states, adding that now, "Gov. Andrew Cuomo wants to re-establish that pre-eminence with an omnibus agenda on women's equality," including reproductive rights.

"The most important piece of Cuomo's agenda would essentially enshrine in state law existing federal protections for abortion rights," including when a woman's health is at risk later in a pregnancy, the editorial continues, noting that New York law currently bans abortion after 24 weeks unless a woman's
life is at risk.

Although New York does not enforce the ban, some physicians in the state "fear prosecution and, as a result, some women are forced to leave the state to get the care they need," the editorial explains.

The proposal includes other "worthy changes," such as allowing licensed health care providers who are not physicians to perform abortions, as well as "new protections for pregnant workers and victims of domestic violence," according to the editorial.

"Cuomo's proposal is a crucial move at a crucial time," especially because lawmakers in Arkansas, Mississippi, North Dakota, South Dakota and Wyoming have passed "laws so restrictive that each of these states has a single abortion provider," the editorial notes.

"A strong law"--similar to protections in California, Connecticut, Hawaii, Maine, Maryland, Nevada and Washington--would help inoculate New York's abortion laws against future watering down of reproductive rights at the federal level," it adds.

"I don't need a constitutional amendment to overturn Roe. Clinic regulations do actually challenge Roe."

Charmaine Yoest--president of Americans United for Life, a group that helps draft state anti-abortion legislation--on the strategy of trying to drive abortion clinics out of business by enacting burdensome regulations.

WHAT??
7 Year-Old Boy Handcuffed for $5 'Robbery'

By Alison Silveira
     Paralegal, Racial Justice Program, ACLU
   
Five dollars is apparently all it takes to land a 7-year-old in handcuffs in a New York City public school these days.

Parents across New York City awoke Wednesday morning to the news that Bronx third-grader Wilson Reyes was pulled out of class, handcuffed and interrogated over the course of 10 hours at his elementary school, and later, at a local precinct.

Is Reyes gonna have a record?  

Will he be taught how to deal drugs with his new class mates?

Have we lost our friggen common sense? 

All manner of sense?

Reyes was charged with robbery after someone said he grabbed $5 that a classmate had dropped on the floor, causing a scuffle among several boys.

That’s hearsay! Interrogate the witnesses!

What happened to detention??

Whatever happened to sitting in a corner facing the wall, with a dunce cap on your head?? 

Remember?

And a loaded gun sticking out of a back pocket.
(Okay, I made that up.)

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"Maybe this is crazy,
 but I think the right to own a gun is trumped
by not to be shot by one."
                                                            --Andy Borowitz
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