Jul 7, 2011
Not often does Ohio top the charts when it comes to something to be proud of. I would know. I’m from Ohio. We’ve got the Rust Belt, the Cleveland Browns, and the infamously incendiary Cuyahoga River.
But as of last Tuesday, Ohio also has a House-approved bill that would ban abortion after detection of a fetal heartbeat. And that’s nothing to scoff at.
While the bill — which is yet to be approved by the Republican-controlled Ohio Senate — is certain to face massive backlash in the courts, the reality is clear: Ohio’s lawmakers are posturing defiantly against the Supreme Court’s Roe v. Wade decision of 1973. And regardless of the final outcome, the bill represents the new tone many lawmakers are taking up regarding their legislative work. “We’re writing bills for courts,” said Ohio House Speaker William Batchelder.
Maybe most surprising is that the “heartbeat bill” does not contain exceptions for cases of rape and incest — two instances where lawmakers have historically offered a concession to pro-abortion factions. The sweeping language makes clear that Ohio’s legislature — and the citizens who voted for it — aren’t playing games when it comes to defending unborn human life. As Kevin McCullough rightly remarks, “The bottom line is always about the HUMANNESS of the child, which always seems to somehow go unnoticed.”