From Gemma Simoes Decarvalho <[email protected]>
Subject Meet my future husband!
Date January 25, 2024 5:03 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
Hi John,

Last weekend was the March for Life—where, according to my grandmother, I could have met my future husband!
What a rom-com moment that could have been: Locking eyes in the bustling, bigoted crowd. My heart skipping a beat, before promptly sinking when I read his sign:

We are praying to end abortion.
#TEAMLIFE

From the March for Life and beyond, January has been filled with unhinged and unrelenting anti-abortion nonsense. #WHEREDOTHEYGETTHEAUDACITY?
Boldfaced Liars!

Person holding sign &quot;Students Can't wait&quot; [[link removed]]
I’ve got to give it to conservatives—they're almost as good at spinning lies as short men on dating apps! *
*Brad, I know you’re not six feet tall, and that’s okay. Practice self-love.

Last week, House lawmakers approved [[link removed]] the so-called “Pregnant Students’ Rights Act.”

To be clear, this bill would do nothing [[link removed]] to address the barriers that pregnant students face while pursuing their degrees. Instead, it would further perpetuate shame and stigma for pregnant and parenting students, as well as those who decide to have an abortion rather than carry a pregnancy to term.

We see through this phony legislation—these lies—and we are calling on legislators to focus instead on actions that would meaningfully protect pregnant or parenting students, such as expanding affordable child care and addressing basic needs like food and housing.
Seriously, Idaho???

Welcome to Idaho sign and landscape
[[link removed]]
Thank God we don’t just have anti-abortion nonsense in our federal government—but stateside, too!

On January 5, the U.S. Supreme Court announced [[link removed]] it will allow Idaho to enforce its near-total abortion ban, even in medical emergencies. The Court has also agreed to hear oral arguments on the case in April, with a ruling expected by the end of June.

In the meantime, this decision will put the health and lives of people experiencing emergency pregnancy complications in danger, forcing many people to wait until they are on the brink of death before hospitals will let their doctors intervene.
Must-Dos:
*
Donate
[[link removed]]
[[link removed]]

[[link removed]]

Must Reads:
* [[link removed]]
.
* [[link removed]]

* [[[link removed]]

Feminist Moment of Picking Yourself Back Up

Aside from sending out this newsletter, part of my job at the Law Center is to help folks write and edit blogs. Our Director of National Abortion Strategy, Leila Abolfazli, wanted to write something for January 22—what would have been the 51st anniversary of Roe v. Wade .

But we almost didn’t publish it. Because Leila was worried that it sounded “too negative.” That it might be “too demoralizing.”

Here’s what I believe: That our audience (folks like you) appreciate honesty. That ignoring the terrifying aspects of our reality won’t change it. That, actually, the only way to figure out how to keep fighting is to admit that fighting is hard in the first place. And really, the piece [[link removed]] is actually quite optimistic, just like Leila is.

I am less optimistic about finding my future husband at the March for Life. So, I’ll be taking on 2024 single—but sound in my beliefs!

So sorry grandma,

Gemma Simoes Decarvalho
she/her/hers
Writer and Editor
National Women’s Law Center
unsubscribe: [link removed]
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis