ohnonotgmail wrote: » and if it doesn't we enact the proposed legislation and start locking them up. Their right to protest does not supersede anybody else's right to medical treatment.
Loafing Oaf wrote: » Do you actually think Simon Harris should adopt a wait-and-see approach before introducing exclusion zones? Pro-choice journalist Justine McCarthy makes that argument in this article: https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/justine-mccarthy-pro-lifers-cant-claim-a-divine-right-to-protest-wk6cnfdv6?t=ie She says bringing them in pre-emptively would feed the pro-lifers' martyr complex and that any actual blocking of medical facilities could be dealt with using existing laws.
SusieBlue wrote: » I wonder what the reaction would be if Pro Choice protesters picketed the clinics of doctors not offering abortions services. I wonder would the right to protest be defended as vehemently as it currently is, or would there be a bit of hypocrisy and double standards in the responses.
uptherebels wrote: » You already know the answer to this.
Loafing Oaf wrote: » Then the woman seeking an abortion just nips off to the clinic a mile away where there are no protests. Trying to seriously disrupt the abortion service through these sorts of protests is like playing whack-a-mole with one flimsy hammer and thousands of moles popping up all over the place. I'm sure this will soon become apparent to the handful who have been protesting so far and they'll give up the ghost.
thee glitz wrote: » As far as I know, abortions are available after 12 weeks where required, but it's supposedly not possible to allow only those cases before that time?
facehugger99 wrote: » It's tough on the anti-abortion heads. Country's moved on without them. No amount of protesting will change it. We're just witnessing an ugly little tantrum from sad people who can't accept they no longer have the right to impose their religious dogma on others - like most tantrums, it won't last very long.
DubInMeath wrote: » Religious belief isn't a motive for some, especially some of the posters here. While posts on here might dry up, actual protesters at GPs and hospitals will most likely continue..
DubInMeath wrote: » Wondering what will happen when they annoy the wrong person who just got bad news from their doctor or suspects that their about to. Quite easy for someone in that situation to snap. It's not the protester being injured that I would be worried about but the patient getting into trouble with the law.
Loafing Oaf wrote: » This seems far from certain to me. After all, the protests so far have been pretty sporadic and half-hearted, with no sense of them gaining momentum. In that article, Justine McCarthy observes that the Drogheda protestors dispersed soon after their photos were taken by the media, and many at the hospital were not even aware of their presence. I just wonder if you introduced exclusion zones, would that give potential protestors something to butt against. There is apparently no appetite among Irish pro-lifers for the kind of loud, in your face protests we see at American abortion clinics. But if you introduced exclusion zones, you might get people testing their limits, goading the Gardai to arrest them and make them 'martyrs for the cause'...
DubInMeath wrote: » Hospitals and surgeries are already something to butt against.
LorelaiG wrote: » A woman who is 14 weeks pregnant has been denied an abortion on the grounds of an FFA (certified by two consultants) in the Coombe hospital by the board there. They want to wait and see if she miscarries first. This is not what we voted for.
Christy42 wrote: » Link? Was there a medical reason for it?
LorelaiG wrote: » Christy42 wrote: » Link? Was there a medical reason for it? The fetus has a fatal fetal abnormality and will not survive outside the womb.https://www.rte.ie/news/politics/2019/0117/1023832-dail-abortion/
nozzferrahhtoo wrote: » Yea I was wondering too what the reason for the deferral actually is. It is not clear from the news paper link above. It does appear from a first read that she is being denied the rights we all just voted to give her. But even the best law has to have exceptions and I think I will withhold judgement until it is reported what grounds they refused the abortion on. There MIGHT actually be a very good reason for it that I do not know of yet. Anyone with more info? Would be much appreciated!
gmisk wrote: » Genuinely what do you think the reason could possibly be for a board of hospital to deny an abortion? 2 consultants confirmed FFA. Forcing this woman to wait 4 weeks when it is likely she will miscarry is absolutely barbaric.
gmisk wrote: » Genuinely what do you think the reason could possibly be for a board of hospital to deny an abortion?
gmisk wrote: » The indication from Ruth Coppinger is that they believe she will naturally miscarry in the coming weeks
nozzferrahhtoo wrote: » As I said I have literally no idea! That is why they are paid medical professionals and I am not All I can do is withhold my judgement until such time as I know the full story. Perhaps she has been identified as a high risk example in relation to the required procedure or drugs, and hence the procedure is deemed high risk in her case (edit: amcalester beat me to essentially that idea). I am simply playing the ignorance card on this one until more details are in. Like the good skeptic waiting for the data But for sure 100 agree that.... .... if they are refusing it on the grounds it might happen by itself in time only.... so why bother doing it manually......... that is an absolutely awful reason for it. I see no argument at all for not removing something now that might die, go septic, or worse as time goes by and it dies by itself. And as we know the later any abortion is performed, the greater the proportional risks of complications. Even with medical abortion rather than surgical. And on top of that the emotional turmoil of having an unplanned abortion if likely to increase in proportion to the length of the pregnancy too. So I hope whatever the reason is, if any, it is a damn sight better than a lazy "wait and see". But I respect the medical community enough to at least give them a chance to lay out their justification BEFORE hanging them for it
gmisk wrote: » But you are right lets see what they have to say, but I am finding it hard to fathom a reason.