Texas questions rights of a fetus after a prison guard who had a stillborn baby sues

https://www.seattletimes.com/nation-world/nation/texas-questions-rights-of-a-fetus-after-a-prison-guard-who-had-a-stillborn-baby-sues/

Ali sent us the link and as she mentions the state is trying to have it both ways, the fetus is a person from conception for forcing the pregnant person to carry even dead or dying fetuses to term, pay the costs for all the medical care along with funeral / burial costs as added punishment.   But when it comes to hardship for the state, costing the state money, or putting requirements on republicans they claim that personhood from conception is stupid and not legally recognized.  Hugs


DALLAS (AP) — The state of Texas is questioning the legal rights of an “unborn child” in arguing against a lawsuit brought by a prison guard who says she had a stillborn baby because prison officials refused to let her leave work for more than two hours after she began feeling intense pains similar to contractions.

The argument from the Texas attorney general’s office appears to be in tension with positions it has previously taken in defending abortion restrictions, contending all the way up to the U.S. Supreme Court that “unborn children” should be recognized as people with legal rights.

It also contrasts with statements by Texas’ Republican leaders, including Gov. Greg Abbott, who has touted the state’s abortion ban as protecting “every unborn child with a heartbeat.”

The state attorney general’s office did not immediately respond to questions about its argument in a court filing that an “unborn child” may not have rights under the U.S. Constitution. In March, lawyers for the state argued that the guard’s suit “conflates” how a fetus is treated under state law and the Constitution.

“Just because several statutes define an individual to include an unborn child does not mean that the Fourteenth Amendment does the same,” they wrote in legal filing that noted that the guard lost her baby before the U.S. Supreme Court overturned the federal right to an abortion established under its landmark Roe v. Wade decision.

That claim came in response to a federal lawsuit brought last year by Salia Issa, who alleges that hospital staff told her they could have saved her baby had she arrived sooner. Issa was seven months’ pregnant in 2021, when she reported for work at a state prison in the West Texas city of Abilene and began having a pregnancy emergency.

Her attorney, Ross Brennan, did not immediately offer any comment. He wrote in a court filing that the state’s argument is “nothing more than an attempt to say — without explicitly saying — that an unborn child at seven months gestation is not a person.”

While working at the prison, Issa began feeling pains “similar to a contraction” but when she asked to be relived from her post to go to the hospital her supervisors refused and accused her of lying, according to the complaint she filed along with her husband. It says the Texas Department of Criminal Justice’s policy states that a corrections officer can be fired for leaving their post before being relived by another guard.

Issa was eventually relieved and drove herself to the hospital, where she underwent emergency surgery, the suit says.

Issa, whose suit was first reported by The Texas Tribune, is seeking monetary damages to cover her medical bills, pain and suffering, and other things, including the funeral expenses of the unborn child. The state attorney general’s office and prison system have asked a judge to dismiss the case.

Laura Hermer, a professor at the Mitchell Hamline School of Law in St. Paul, Minnesota, described Texas’ legal posture as “seeking to have their cake and eat it too.”

“This would not be the first time that the state has sought to claim to support the right to life of all fetuses, yet to act quite differently when it comes to protecting the health and safety of such fetuses other than in the very narrow area of prohibiting abortions,” Hermer said.

Last week, U.S. Magistrate Judge Susan Hightower recommended that the case be allowed to proceed, in part, without addressing the arguments over the rights of the fetus.

 

Biblical Perspectives on Homosexuality

00:00 Introduction
2:22 Sodom (Genesis 19)
7:48 (NEW) Sodom Additional Commentary
10:20 Romans1:26-27
16:00 Leviticus 18:22; 20:13
21:06 (NEW) Fourth theory on Leviticus
23:22 First Timothy 1:9-11 // First Corinthians 6:9-10
28:41 Adam and Eve, not Adam and Steve

During the Fall of 2020, my college course on the “Theologies of Gender and Identity” was forced to go virtual. This video is one of the pre-recorded lectures from that course that I would like to share with a larger audience. Feel free to respectfully comment and question and I will respond in kind.

This lecture explores the traditional “texts of terror” or “clobber passages” that have been used to justify the marginalization of the LGBTQ people — namely Genesis 19 (Sodom); Romans 1:26-27; Leviticus 18:22; 20:13; 1 Timothy 1:9-11 // 1 Corinthians 6:9-10; and Genesis 1-2 (Adam and Eve). For each passage, we’ll apply exegetical tools to determine whether or not this marginalization is justified.

The format of this lecture features a compilation of previous videos from this channel’s Queer Theology series. Most of these videos have been updated and include an additional commentary in between each topic.

Recommended Reading: “Misguided Love: Christians and the Rupture of LGBTQI2+ People” by Charles Fensham; Chapter 4.

The remarkable evolution of Latin America’s largest landfill

https://www.freetheocean.com/journal/rios-transformation-from-trash-dump-to-mangrove-marvel/

Thanks to Ali for link.  This is great news.   Hugs


Envision a place overwhelmed by 80 million tons of waste – this was the state of Latin America’s largest landfill in Rio de Janeiro. A decade later, this very site has evolved into an impressive mangrove forest. The incredible change has not just given a new home to native species like crabs, birds, and fish, but has also showcased the enduring strength of nature.

The landfill faced years of continuous pollution since its inception in 1968. Efforts to curb the pollution took a serious turn in 1996 until finally the landfill was closed for good in 2012.

Photo Credit: AP Photo/Bruna Prado

Mangroves: Nature’s Healing Touch

The mangroves play a central role in this ecological restoration saga. As efforts were made to cover the landfill with clay and introduce a drainage system, the planting of these resilient trees began. Mangroves possess a unique attribute, making them perfect candidates for environmental rehabilitation projects: they flourish even in harsh environments.

These trees are climate champions, adept at capturing and storing immense amounts of carbon dioxide. They are even more efficient than tropical rainforests, making them invaluable when it comes to climate change solutions.

Challenges on the Path to Recovery

However, reviving the mangroves wasn’t without challenges. To protect them from waste from nearby communities, a barrier of clay fences was constructed around them. These barriers, though effective, demand consistent upkeep due to occasional damage.

Even as the landfill remains sealed, leachate – a hazardous byproduct from decomposing trash – continues to seep out. Proactive measures are in place to collect and treat this leachate, ensuring the restored environment remains safeguarded.

Photo Credit: AP Photo/Bruna Prado

Looking Ahead with Optimism

This success story stands as a beacon of hope, sharing the potential of collective efforts in environmental restoration. It’s a wonderful reminder that with commitment, collaboration, and a touch of nature’s magic, even the bleakest landscapes can witness a rebirth.

Photo Credit: AP Photo/Bruna Prado

THE TEXAS TRIBUNE: Child dies while en route to Chicago as part of Gov. Greg Abbott’s migrant busing program

Child dies while en route to Chicago as part of Gov. Greg Abbott’s migrant busing program
After a 3-year-old began showing signs of distress, the bus of asylum-seekers traveling from Brownsville to Chicago pulled over and an ambulance was called. The child later died at a hospital in Illinois.

Read in The Texas Tribune: https://apple.news/ANxKtIxYcSUusH7xGKNsqaQ

Shared from Apple News

Best Wishes and Hugs,Scottie

POLITICO: For the first time, U.S. government lets hackers break into satellite in space

For the first time, U.S. government lets hackers break into satellite in space
Hacker groups are on a military-endorsed mission to infiltrate an orbiting U.S. satellite.

Read in POLITICO: https://apple.news/AB5Ojm44TTXCaEVsPvV2d3w

Shared from Apple News

Best Wishes and Hugs,Scottie

Antarctic sea ice: lowest in 7.5 million years??

My thanks to Ten Bears for posting this.  I think this is a very important subject that is not getting enough attention.   More people want to talk about their next meal more than the fact the health of the Antarctic sea ice is seriously going to effect not only us selfish humans but every living thing starting with the ocean life.  When I watch this I want to run screaming out into my neighborhood, grab people and scream do you understand not only will our homes be underwater but we won’t have anything to eat !!!! But then Ron gives me a cool drink and reminds me there are laws against that grabbing of neighbors enforced on the not republicans all the time.  

I am taking this from Ten Bears’ blog / website (I never do know what is the proper term now) without his permissions. 

https://homelessonthehighdesert.com/2023/08/10/thorsday-tankard/ 

I did not ask yet

And from what I have read on his site, he doesn’t respond well to anyone just thinking they can grab anything of his and run away, and I am not just talking on the webs.  I do hope he might just give me a little grace on this one.  

For those hearing impaired, do not worry.   The main speaker talks fast.  I used to talk that fast, but over thirty years in Florida I don’t even type fast anymore.  The Closed Caption is very good, they either do it themselves or pay for it.   Again well worth the 8+ minutes to understand the threat to our habitat and lives.  Hugs

Antarctic sea ice is behaving very, very weirdly right now. In the same year we saw a record minimum extent, we’re now seeing a record slow freeze-up, leaving a widening gap between observations and what we expect for the time of year.

A lot of people have tried to put a number on exactly how rare the event we’re witnessing is, and come up with some insane numbers. So what’s going on? Is this really the kind of event we should only see once in 7.5 million years??

Big thanks to Zack Labe for talking to me for this video, you can check out his fantastic visualisations on his website here: http://www.zacklabe.com and follow him on socials @ZLabe.

It happened again

Hello wonderful people.  I have to admit, it all got away from me again.  Due to doctor’s appointments, health issues, and other things I was unable to get to the comments at the beginning of the week.  Now the way I normally access both posts and comments is again blocked by WordPress.  This morning I could use the bell and go back only three days, yet this afternoon I can only go back a day and half.  I am trying to open and save every comment page, so I can reply to all the wonderful comments.   Here is what I need to ask of you wonderful people.  If you added your thoughts to a post and I did not reply in a reasonable amount of time, please, please alert me by adding a reminder on the post or linking to your comment on a newer post.   I do want to reply to you, I love it and think it is important.   But for a while I simply was not able due to my health.  They still think I had a tia or other brain hiccup along with the other breathing / heart issues. It was scary for a while, my head was so cloudy and I struggled so to function.   But I feel so much better now with the treatments from the heart doctor and the allergist.  Anyway please if you did not get a reply to your comment and you would like one try to let me know.   Thank you.  Hugs

TRUMP “ATTACKED!!” | Armageddon Update | Christopher Titus

First a snake fell from the sky. Then a Texas grandma found herself inside the chaos of a hawk after its prey

https://www.cnn.com/2023/08/09/us/texas-woman-snake-hawk-attack/index.html

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By Alisha Ebrahimji, CNN

Published 10:56 AM EDT, Wed August 9, 2023

Peggy Jones sits on one of two tractors used to groom her property.

Peggy Jones sits on one of two tractors used to groom her property.Courtesy Peggy JonesCNN — 

All Peggy and Wendell Jones wanted was to end their day of yard work in Texas’ triple-digit summer heat by getting cleaned up and going to the casino.

The couple – married 45 years next week – routinely splits up the three-hour job of mowing the lawn of an investment property in Silsbee, north of Beaumont, that’s been in the family since 1850, they told CNN.

The work is nothing out of the ordinary.

It’s what happened while they were at it last month – an encounter that left them at a hospital dressing blood-soaked wounds – that now has them pressing pause.

Peggy was riding a mower in the back of the property, far from the trees that line it, when “all of a sudden, out of the clear blue sky, a snake fell … and landed on my arm,” the 64-year-old recalled.

There was no mistaking it: The reptile was dark-colored and 4 1/2 feet long, she estimated.

It had fallen from nowhere and clutched her right arm.

And it wouldn’t let go.

“I immediately began thrusting my arm, trying to knock the snake off,” she said. “And as I was thrusting my arm, the snake just wrapped around my arm – and he started striking at my face.”

The more the grandmother of four tried to rip the snake off her, the tighter it would wrap and squeeze around her arm, she said.

She screamed and cried for help as the tractor kept crawling along beneath her.

Still, the snake wouldn’t let go.

Wendell, 66, was mowing the front of their property. The sound of his own tractor and the traffic on the nearby highway filled the space between them, and that’s how Peggy said she knew:

She was effectively alone.

Then, just when she thought the snake might bite her – injecting her with fatal venom and ushering in the end of her life – a brown and white hawk swooped down and tried to clench it.

But the serpent would not let go of Peggy’s arm.

Its grip was so tight that when the hawk grabbed it, Peggy’s entire arm jerked up in the air with the attempt.

The hawk tried again and again, its wings flapping in her face with each try, distorting her view of what was happening right in front of her.

All the while, the tractor kept mowing, zig-zagging Peggy – and the tug-of-war of nature unfolding upon her body – across the field in an ordeal she called “utter chaos.”

Many times in her life, Peggy had watched this exact same scenario play out in nature: Hawk sets its sights on its prey, swoops in to attack, drops it on a barbed-wire fence, then goes back to claim its prize.

But she never imagined she’d play the role of fence.

Four times, the hawk dove and bobbed at its prize – and at Peggy – before it finally scooped up the reptile and flew off, she said.

Right away, Peggy felt some relief at having been freed.

Then, she looked down.

‘Beyond anything I had ever experienced’

Her right arm was covered in blood. Claw marks. Lacerations. Cuts. Punctures.

“If you’ve ever cut yourself, think about 10 times that pain,” Peggy said. “It’s a pain you can’t describe. … It was beyond anything I had ever experienced.”

Bruises had already formed – and turned black, presumably from the snake’s squeeze.

Peggy, still processing what she had just experienced, kept screaming and yelling.

This time, Wendell heard her.

He ran over.

“She was in hysterics and shock,” he recalled.

“I just rushed her to the truck and headed to the ER,” said Wendell, who was at this point still uncertain of how such a horror had befallen his wife.

“It was probably three minutes before I actually understood what happened to her.”

Doctors in the hospital cleaned and bandaged Peggy’s wounds.

On the lens of her chipped glasses, they found some liquid the Joneses think may have been snake venom, though it was never tested, they told CNN.

The doctors gave her antibiotics and instructions to continue them at home.

Before midnight on July 25, Wendell posted online a short rundown of all his wife had endured that day, ending it: “Thank you for the prayers.”

The couple stayed up that whole night to monitor for any swelling and discoloration from a snake bite – signs Peggy knows well after a venomous snake bit her a few years ago, she said.

Thankfully, none appeared.

Peggy Jones stands at the 6-acre property where she was attacked July 25 by a hawk and snake.

Peggy Jones stands at the 6-acre property where she was attacked July 25 by a hawk and snake.Courtesy Peggy Jones

‘I consider myself to be pretty tough’

More than two weeks later, Peggy is left with the physical reminder of the chaos, her arm wrapped from elbow to wrist in bandages that have been refreshed from white to neon green to bright pink.

Meanwhile, the ordeal is still living rent-free in her mind as she contemplates how it could have had an entirely different – potentially fatal – ending.

“She’s not sleeping well at all,” Wendell said. “When she finally goes to sleep, I’m usually having to wake her up because she’s dreaming.”

The Joneses are taking extra precautions to ensure Peggy’s wounds stay clean: Any trace of infection could portend a life-threatening turn following a past double knee replacement.

“This is the toughest young lady I’ve ever met in my life,” Wendell said. “She doesn’t worry about pain. She thinks she can do everything, and she pretty much can do everything, so I have to try and keep her slowed down because she’s blow and go.”

“I consider myself to be pretty tough,” added Peggy, “and I’m a survivor.”

As for the casino trip, it will have to wait as the Joneses aren’t making any unnecessary outings until Peggy’s wounds fully heal.

How US Evangelicals and the Russian Orthodox Church have helped fuel anti-LGBTQ+ agenda in Europe

https://nordot.app/1056076669377380748?c=644607769890374753

Groups opposing the LGBT community hold rainbow flag with anti-LGBT stickers during the country’s first Gay Pride parade on Oct. 10, 2017, in Kosovo capital Pristina. ©AP Photo/Visar Kryeziu

A growing network of foreign organisations are pouring hundreds of millions of euros into “culture war” groups campaigning to roll back LGBTQ+ rights across Europe, European lawmakers have warned.

In a resolution published earlier this month, the European Parliament raised the alarm about foreign interference in all democratic processes in Europe, pointing out that most of the foreign funding originates from Russia and the US.

This foreign interference, coupled with disinformation and numerous attacks perpetrated by malicious foreign actors, is predicted to increase in the lead-up to the European Parliament elections in 2024, becoming more sophisticated in nature.

MEPs flagged that at least 50 organisations now fund anti-gender activities — opposing what they call gender ideology.

“Europe is seeing a growing number of anti-gender movements, specifically targeting sexual and reproductive health, women’s rights and LGBTIQ+ people,” the EU parliamentary report read.

“Such movements proliferate disinformation in order to reverse progress in women’s rights and gender equality. These movements have been reported to receive millions of euros in foreign funding, either public or private, including from Russia and the US.”

Funding and modus operandi

The strategies employed by these foreign actors have evolved over time, due to increasing funding and intensifying disinformation campaigns, human rights observers have warned.

Members of the US far-right and the Russian Orthodox Church, two major players of the anti-gender movement, have joined forces to ramp up funding to Europe-based ultra-traditionalist actors with a specific focus on targeting LGBTQ+ rights, according to sources who agreed to speak to Euronews on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisal.

Over the past decade, key Christian right organisations, usually funded by private individuals linked to far-right and libertarian causes in the US, and Russian oligarchs have established a network of agencies set up in human rights institutions across Europe to carry out anti-gender diplomacy and infiltrate positions of power in member states.

Other tactics include abusive lawsuits intended to suppress, intimidate and silence critics (SLAPPS), money and reputational laundering, physical harassment, sending paid fight squads to LGBTQ+ marches or drag stores, hacking journalists’ devices with the Pegasus software and using troll farms spreading disinformation against LGBTQ+ activists.

And the movement is gaining momentum with more organisations from other countries, including Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Vatican City, closing ranks in their anti-LGBTQ+ lobbying and funding.

Their usual targets include minorities in unstable countries where they can exploit polarisation to radicalise the political debate and fuel violence, sources said.

Undermining the case for EU membership

Georgia’s gay pride festival on 8 July is the latest LGBTQ+ event to have fallen victim to foreign interference.

A mob of up to 2,000 anti-LGBTQ+ protesters from the Russian-affiliated group Alt Info, stormed Tbilisi’s festival in an attack described by Pride’s director Mariam Kvaratskhelia as “pre-planned”.

“I definitely think this [disruption] was a pre-planned, coordinated action between the government and the radical groups … We think this operation was planned in order to sabotage the EU candidacy of Georgia,” she told Reuters.

Members of Alt-Info, an ultra-conservative TV broadcaster with close ties to the Georgian Orthodox Church, had already disrupted Tbilisi Pride in 2021. Since its foundation as a conservative media platform in 2019, the group has tried to expand its political influence by creating an alternative party to both the governing Georgian Dream and opposition United National Movement. Among its stated goals is pursuing closer relations with Russia.

Alt-Info’s attack comes as Georgia has struggled with its EU membership application in recent years, despite overwhelming public and political support for EU integration.

The former Soviet republic’s path to EU candidacy has been slowed by deeply polarised politics and the excessive influence of vested interests in economic, political and public life, alongside its territorial dispute with Russia in the Abkhazia and South Ossetia regions.

And the cancellation of its Pride festival could deal yet another blow to its EU aspiration.

Roberta Metsola, the President of the European Parliament, condemned the “violent disruptions”, saying “anti-LGBTIQ rhetoric, disinformation and violence have no place in these debates”. The counter-protests represented a violation to the EU’s freedom of expression and right to peaceful assembly, the EU Ambassador for Gender & Diversity tweeted.

Divide and conquer

The same tension has broken out across Western Balkan countries where leaders have struggled to walk a fine identity and political line between anti-LGBTQ+ religious nationalist movements and pro-LGBTQ+ Europeanising public opinion.

While these countries generally have high levels of political and public support for joining the EU, their progress towards membership has stagnated over the past decade.

Religious nationalism has posed a significant challenge, as leaders from the Serbian Orthodox church, the Catholic church, and Islamic authorities have rallied behind their targeting of LGBTQ+ rights and formed coalitions with conservative political parties.

In recent years, anti-LGBTQ+ actions have turned more violent, with physical assaults by ultranationalist protesters on attendees of the Bosnia and Herzegovina Pride in March of this year, the Belgrade Pride in 2022 and the Zagreb Pride in 2021.

The controversy surrounding a veto that would have recognised same-sex unions in Serbia in 2021 is just another example of the growing conservative backlash against LGBTQ+ rights taking hold in Western Balkan countries.

‘The tip of the iceberg’

Yet, this trend is not unique to Western Balkan countries.

In 2021, the European Parliamentary Forum for Sexual and Reproductive Rights (EPF) unearthed more than $707.2 million (€600 million) worth of anti-gender funding from the United States, the Russian Federation, and Europe, specifically targeting LGBTQ+ rights across Europe between 2009 and 2018.

The wide-ranging report, which examined 117 anti-gender funding actors active in Europe, insisted the findings were only the “tip of the iceberg” as half of them — 63 — had no existing financial data.

“Of course there are enormous data gaps that cannot be filled at the moment, so $700 million is really the tip of the iceberg of how big this anti-gender movement is,” said EPF’s secretary Neil Datta.

According to Evelyne Paradis, executive director of ILGA-Europe, the anti-gender movement’s efforts to further polarise public discourse is dragging pro-democracy governments into fuelling prejudice and hatred towards LGBTQ+ people.

“The practice of scapegoating LGBTQ+ people is starting to be instrumentalised by both the pro-democracy and the anti-democracy sides. If you make it a marker of how good you are, then you’re creating this divide,” she told Euronews.

“This [growing polarisation] is not helping what should be a healthier, calmer conversation. What’s happening at the moment is the complete opposite.”

Instead, Paradis said pro-democracy governments need to move forward with their progressive agenda and steer clear of the perverse effects of foreign-funded polarisation.

“We’re all in reaction mode and it’s very hard to resist and be in a pro-active mode. Governments need to pass through the anti-gender movement’s negative agenda and keep on pushing our positive agenda. That’s where the strategy of the opposition is working – it’s really pushing everybody in the reactive mode.”