Florida legislators have introduced more than 50 anti-choice measures over the past six years. Changes to the state's supreme court mean some of those bills could survive legal challenges.
Kathleen Eaton Bravo's remarks are straight from a fascist doctrine known as “replacement theory” or “white genocide,” favored by white nationalists the world over.
The pre-filed bill would force a conversation in South Carolina—and hopefully nationwide—about whether anti-choice lawmakers who fancy themselves “pro-life” are actually that.
A Florida Republican backing forced parental consent legislation has referenced the white supremacist "replacement theory" in advocating for restrictive abortion laws.
This week, the U.S. Supreme Court let stand a court decision that dismissed as immaterial doctors' ethical concerns and equated an embryo with a person.