Bill to Allow Women to sue for unwanted Pregnancy

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This is utter bullshit

Democratic state Rep. Kelly Cassidy filed “The EXpanding Abortion Services Act" Sept. 14. The acronym of the bill spells out "TEXAS."

The bill was in direct response to the Texas legislature restricting access to abortions. Cassidy says the bill would outline new civil penalties for rapists and abusers.

What would the implication for Illinois be if we adopted a similar approach? What is the impact on our civil court system? What is the impact of deputizing neighbors to turn each other in for money?


WEATHER

WATCH
Illinois bill would allow women to sue men over unwanted pregnancies
by JAKOB EMERSON and WICS Staff
Tuesday, September 28th 2021



6
VIEW ALL PHOTOS

FILE - In this May 7, 2020 file photo, a pregnant woman wearing a face mask and gloves holds her belly as she waits in line for groceries at St. Mary's Church in Waltham, Mass. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention urged all pregnant women Wednesday, Aug. 11, 2021 to get the COVID-19 vaccine as hospitals in hot spots around the U.S. see disturbingly high numbers of unvaccinated mothers-to-be seriously ill with the virus. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa, file)
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (WICS) — A proposed bill in Illinois would change possible repercussions for domestic violence, sexual assault, and unwanted pregnancies.

ADVERTISEMENT

WICS

Democratic state Rep. Kelly Cassidy filed “The EXpanding Abortion Services Act" Sept. 14. The acronym of the bill spells out "TEXAS."

The bill was in direct response to the Texas legislature restricting access to abortions. Cassidy says the bill would outline new civil penalties for rapists and abusers.

What would the implication for Illinois be if we adopted a similar approach? What is the impact on our civil court system? What is the impact of deputizing neighbors to turn each other in for money?

FILE — Illinois state Rep. Kelly Cassidy, D-Chicago. (WICS file photo)
Those are the questions Illinois State Rep. Kelly Cassidy, D-Chicago, asked before she introduced the "TEXAS Act" in Springfield earlier this month.

Otherwise known as The Expanding Abortion Services (TEXAS) Act, the newly introduced legislation (HB4146) would allow a person to sue anyone that causes an unintended pregnancy, and create a public abortion fund for non-Illinoisans.

The TEXAS Act was introduced just weeks after the most restrictive abortion law in the nation went into effect in Texas on Sept. 1, 2021. Cassidy says her bill will examine just how extreme the new Texas abortion law is, which allows private citizens to sue those that perform or aid an abortion, and receive up to $10,000 as a reward for turning those individuals in. The Texas law effectively bans all abortions, regardless of rape or incest, after six weeks -- a timeframe where many women do not know they're pregnant.


FILE - In this Oct. 22, 2011, file photo, a doctor examines a pregnant woman at the district women's hospital, in Allahabad, in India's most populous state of Uttar Pradesh. The World Health Organization, UNICEF and partners said there are about 2 million stillbirths every year, according to its first-ever global estimates published on Thursday, Oct. 8, 2020. The U.N. health agency said that last year, three in four stillbirths occurred in sub-Saharan Africa or Southern Asia; it defined a stillbirth as a baby born with no signs of life at 28 weeks of pregnancy or later. (AP Photo/Rajesh Kumar Singh, File)
The Illinois bill would do just the opposite. If passed, it would allow anyone to sue another person for unintended pregnancy, regardless of circumstance or consent. A person could also sue anyone who commits sexual assault, domestic violence, or abuse. The civil action damages would start at $10,000.

If the case is won, half of the money would go to a public state fund to pay for abortions for residents of states like Texas.

While Planned Parenthood Illinois Action hasn't taken an official stance on the bill, they say Texans seeking abortion are already flowing into Illinois.

The Texas law went into effect on a Wednesday. And just two days later, we had patients at multiple health centers here in Chicagoland," President and CEO of Planned Parenthood Illinois Action, Jennifer Welch, said.

In this undated photo provided by Hawaii Pacific Health, Lavinia "Lavi" Mounga holds her son Raymond Mounga at Kapiolani Medical Center for Women & Children in Honolulu. Mounga had no idea the baby was coming when she went into labor on a flight from her home in Utah to Honolulu the week before. "I just didn't know I was pregnant, and then this guy just came out of nowhere," Mounga said during a video interview with Hawaii Pacific Health. The baby boy arrived early at just 29 weeks while mom was traveling to Hawaii for vacation with her family. (Taylor Ursulum/Hawaii Pacific Health via AP)
But for those at Illinois Right to Life Action, a pro-life lobbying group, believe the proposed law is unconstitutional.

"This allows women to seek damages if they become pregnant after consensual sex," Executive Director Amy Gehrke said. "The fact that they will be taking money from people to fund abortion. There are so many aspects of this bill that make it completely unserious."

Gehrke added that Illinois Right to Life is in full support of prosecuting those that perpetuate domestic violence and sexual assault.


In this March 30, 2020 photo, Dr. Leana Wen poses for a photo in her Baltimore home. Wen, a George Washington University public health specialist, who is pregnant and due to give birth soon, says she wants answers as a physician and as a patient to her concerns over the coronavirus. Her greatest fear is developing a COVID-19 infection or symptoms that would force her to be separated from her newborn for days or weeks. “I would only be able to see my baby through a glass window. ... That’s the one that gives me nightmares.” (Courtesy Dr. Leana Wen via AP)
For Cassidy, she says that the 'unconstitutionality' mentioned by Gehrke is exactly what she's trying to point out about the Texas abortion law.

It is built exactly off of the Texas law," Cassidy said. "People like her [Gehrke] all over this country are making people flee their home states for healthcare and creating incredibly unsafe situations for people all over the country.
Cassidy explains that abortion access in Illinois is very protected, and would be untouchable even if Roe v. Wade was ever overturned. Both Cassidy and Welch say they are in support of eliminating a parental notice of abortion requirement in Illinois, allowing anyone under 18 to receive the service without notifying a guardian.

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The TEXAS Act has only been introduced in the Illinois House of Representatives. It would need to pass in the House, in the Senate, and receive Gov. JB Pritzker’s signature to become law.
 
If we're going to do that then lets do giving fathers a choice on getting a paternity test at child birth paid for by the state...once the kid hits air afterward a hospital counselor talks to the "father" IN PRIVATE cuz its HIS decision (the mother does NOT have to be included or even aware of it)...and asks him if he wants a paternity test done on the child. and the results sent to him privately and he be advised to not sign or allow his name added to the birth certificate until after the results.

how about we do that too..
 
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This is utter bullshit

Democratic state Rep. Kelly Cassidy filed “The EXpanding Abortion Services Act" Sept. 14. The acronym of the bill spells out "TEXAS."

The bill was in direct response to the Texas legislature restricting access to abortions. Cassidy says the bill would outline new civil penalties for rapists and abusers.




WEATHER

WATCH
Illinois bill would allow women to sue men over unwanted pregnancies
by JAKOB EMERSON and WICS Staff
Tuesday, September 28th 2021



6
VIEW ALL PHOTOS

FILE - In this May 7, 2020 file photo, a pregnant woman wearing a face mask and gloves holds her belly as she waits in line for groceries at St. Mary's Church in Waltham, Mass. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention urged all pregnant women Wednesday, Aug. 11, 2021 to get the COVID-19 vaccine as hospitals in hot spots around the U.S. see disturbingly high numbers of unvaccinated mothers-to-be seriously ill with the virus. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa, file)
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (WICS) — A proposed bill in Illinois would change possible repercussions for domestic violence, sexual assault, and unwanted pregnancies.

ADVERTISEMENT

WICS

Democratic state Rep. Kelly Cassidy filed “The EXpanding Abortion Services Act" Sept. 14. The acronym of the bill spells out "TEXAS."

The bill was in direct response to the Texas legislature restricting access to abortions. Cassidy says the bill would outline new civil penalties for rapists and abusers.

What would the implication for Illinois be if we adopted a similar approach? What is the impact on our civil court system? What is the impact of deputizing neighbors to turn each other in for money?

FILE — Illinois state Rep. Kelly Cassidy, D-Chicago. (WICS file photo)
Those are the questions Illinois State Rep. Kelly Cassidy, D-Chicago, asked before she introduced the "TEXAS Act" in Springfield earlier this month.

Otherwise known as The Expanding Abortion Services (TEXAS) Act, the newly introduced legislation (HB4146) would allow a person to sue anyone that causes an unintended pregnancy, and create a public abortion fund for non-Illinoisans.

The TEXAS Act was introduced just weeks after the most restrictive abortion law in the nation went into effect in Texas on Sept. 1, 2021. Cassidy says her bill will examine just how extreme the new Texas abortion law is, which allows private citizens to sue those that perform or aid an abortion, and receive up to $10,000 as a reward for turning those individuals in. The Texas law effectively bans all abortions, regardless of rape or incest, after six weeks -- a timeframe where many women do not know they're pregnant.


FILE - In this Oct. 22, 2011, file photo, a doctor examines a pregnant woman at the district women's hospital, in Allahabad, in India's most populous state of Uttar Pradesh. The World Health Organization, UNICEF and partners said there are about 2 million stillbirths every year, according to its first-ever global estimates published on Thursday, Oct. 8, 2020. The U.N. health agency said that last year, three in four stillbirths occurred in sub-Saharan Africa or Southern Asia; it defined a stillbirth as a baby born with no signs of life at 28 weeks of pregnancy or later. (AP Photo/Rajesh Kumar Singh, File)
The Illinois bill would do just the opposite. If passed, it would allow anyone to sue another person for unintended pregnancy, regardless of circumstance or consent. A person could also sue anyone who commits sexual assault, domestic violence, or abuse. The civil action damages would start at $10,000.

If the case is won, half of the money would go to a public state fund to pay for abortions for residents of states like Texas.

While Planned Parenthood Illinois Action hasn't taken an official stance on the bill, they say Texans seeking abortion are already flowing into Illinois.

The Texas law went into effect on a Wednesday. And just two days later, we had patients at multiple health centers here in Chicagoland," President and CEO of Planned Parenthood Illinois Action, Jennifer Welch, said.

In this undated photo provided by Hawaii Pacific Health, Lavinia "Lavi" Mounga holds her son Raymond Mounga at Kapiolani Medical Center for Women & Children in Honolulu. Mounga had no idea the baby was coming when she went into labor on a flight from her home in Utah to Honolulu the week before. "I just didn't know I was pregnant, and then this guy just came out of nowhere," Mounga said during a video interview with Hawaii Pacific Health. The baby boy arrived early at just 29 weeks while mom was traveling to Hawaii for vacation with her family. (Taylor Ursulum/Hawaii Pacific Health via AP)
But for those at Illinois Right to Life Action, a pro-life lobbying group, believe the proposed law is unconstitutional.

"This allows women to seek damages if they become pregnant after consensual sex," Executive Director Amy Gehrke said. "The fact that they will be taking money from people to fund abortion. There are so many aspects of this bill that make it completely unserious."

Gehrke added that Illinois Right to Life is in full support of prosecuting those that perpetuate domestic violence and sexual assault.


In this March 30, 2020 photo, Dr. Leana Wen poses for a photo in her Baltimore home. Wen, a George Washington University public health specialist, who is pregnant and due to give birth soon, says she wants answers as a physician and as a patient to her concerns over the coronavirus. Her greatest fear is developing a COVID-19 infection or symptoms that would force her to be separated from her newborn for days or weeks. “I would only be able to see my baby through a glass window. ... That’s the one that gives me nightmares.” (Courtesy Dr. Leana Wen via AP)
For Cassidy, she says that the 'unconstitutionality' mentioned by Gehrke is exactly what she's trying to point out about the Texas abortion law.

It is built exactly off of the Texas law," Cassidy said. "People like her [Gehrke] all over this country are making people flee their home states for healthcare and creating incredibly unsafe situations for people all over the country.
Cassidy explains that abortion access in Illinois is very protected, and would be untouchable even if Roe v. Wade was ever overturned. Both Cassidy and Welch say they are in support of eliminating a parental notice of abortion requirement in Illinois, allowing anyone under 18 to receive the service without notifying a guardian.

ADVERTISEMENT
The TEXAS Act has only been introduced in the Illinois House of Representatives. It would need to pass in the House, in the Senate, and receive Gov. JB Pritzker’s signature to become law.
So let me get this straight here.... @Soul On Ice will now be able to punish the trannies that rape him.... over and over again?

What about unwanted mediocre blow jobs? That they give?
@Soul On Ice is gonna have to step up and start giving better ones to his boifriends now...his jaws will fall off from all that work


:lol:

.
 
Texas got a new law making it a felony for buying pussy that was written by a woman Democrat. I will say that the republicans women crazy as they are ride harder for men
 
You really woke up with my dick on your mind huh


#fagfail

Naw homo..... I was up trying to get my modem straight with Comcast..... and they asked me to log on to a site to see if it was working.... lo and behold.... 3:48 am..... you were going to sleep with my dick on yours.... remember to ice those jaws on you

lil-moco-cut-throat.gif
 
Naw homo..... I was up trying to get my modem straight with Comcast..... and they asked me to log on to a site to see if it was working.... lo and behold.... 3:48 am..... you were going to sleep with my dick on yours.... remember to ice those jaws on you

lil-moco-cut-throat.gif
Get all the way the fuck gone

tumblr_nipntzJxKi1u4gszco1_400.gifv
 
Naw homo..... I was up trying to get my modem straight with Comcast..... and they asked me to log on to a site to see if it was working.... lo and behold.... 3:48 am..... you were going to sleep with my dick on yours.... remember to ice those jaws on you

lil-moco-cut-throat.gif
Comcast=
Constantly
On
Men
Cock
And
Sucking
Trannys

Welp. Thought you were slick there huh.
:itsawrap:
 
this country is going to crap man with all these silly laws.....so where's the law saying if a guy gets a female pregnant and he don't want the child and she have it anyways why we don't get a law about that..i mean condoms do break so accidents do happen plus females do put holes in the condoms too to get pregnant I'm just saying why we don't have nothing protecting us...
 
I hope this bill gets passed. Women should have access to whatever healthcare they think they need.
 
Men should be allowed to sue hoes for letting us go raw.

"That hoe let me shoot up the club on many occasions ya honor........she wanted that baby"
 
dude, please stop with the faggotry talk
I'd like to see at least one of you address the fag that keeps doing it a least two to three times a day...up at like three am with it. are you on his payroll? You scared of him? :hmm:


.
 
The one that I tagged...... I swear you mods are as tunnel visioned as I've ever seen.... the faggot tags me daily..... early in the morning..... middle of the fucking night..... and you see nothing.... but when I hit back.... all the sudden you have binoculars for eyes.... :hmm:


.
 
The one that I tagged...... I swear you mods are as tunnel visioned as I've ever seen.... the faggot tags me daily..... early in the morning..... middle of the fucking night..... and you see nothing.... but when I hit back.... all the sudden you have binoculars for eyes.... :hmm:


.
:smh: wow, ..you got issues brah
 
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