From Melanie Israel <[email protected]>
Subject Abortion Gets Taken to Court
Date December 10, 2021 6:20 PM
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Dear Colleague, 


You may be interested in the latest commentary from the DeVos Center for Religion and Civil Society and its friends:


A Major Abortion Case Goes Before the Supreme Court. Here’s What You Need to Know. <[link removed]>
Daily Signal
Melanie Israel, Policy Analyst
Last week, the Supreme Court heard oral arguments in the major abortion case, Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization. Here’s what you need to know about the facts of the case, what’s at stake, and how to think about this consequential moment.


The Biden Administration Is Set To Make Dangerous Abortion Pills More Widely Available <[link removed]>
1945
Melanie Israel, Policy Analyst

With the Supreme Court recently hearing a case that could upend Roe v. Wade, it’s no surprise that abortion supporters are making a renewed push for mifepristone – the “abortion pill.” Right now, 61 types of drugs are subject to an FDA-imposed Risk Evaluation Mitigation Strategy (REMS). This program applies to certain drugs “with serious safety concerns to help ensure the benefits of the medication outweigh its risks.” One such drug is mifepristone. If the Biden Administration does the abortion industry’s bidding, this dangerous drug may soon no longer be subject to important safety restrictions.


Dispelling 3 Common Myths About Abortion <[link removed]>
Daily Signal
Melanie Israel, Policy Analyst
Levy Pait, Young Leaders Program
Too often, pro-abortion actors make claims that are simply not true, and those claims are repeated without challenge in the media. Therefore, it’s vital that the American public be made aware of facts that challenge the pro-abortion narrative.


Supreme Court Ponders Whether Parents May Use Tuition Aid for Religious Instruction <[link removed]>
Daily Signal
Sarah Parshall Perry, Legal Fellow, The Heritage Foundation
Does it violate the Constitution to prohibit students who participate in educational aid programs from using that aid to attend a religious school? That question formed the crux of oral arguments in Carson v. Makin, a lawsuit brought by Maine parents who were prevented from using available state tuition assistance to send their children to private Christian schools.


Tomorrow’s Heritage <[link removed]>
National Review Online
Kevin Roberts, President, The Heritage Foundation
As in 1973, the Heritage Foundation again has an indispensable role in helping to chart the conservative movement’s course.



Sincerely,
DeVos Center for Religion and Civil Society
Institute for Family, Community and Opportunity
The Heritage Foundation

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