Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Mad scientists running our states

- Dana Milbank

Louis Brandeis imagined that states could serve as laboratori­es of democracy. At the moment, they are serving as a bunch of mad scientists.

The late Supreme Court justice envisioned states trying “novel social and economic experiment­s.” But he could not have anticipate­d just how novel the thinking would be of Republican Alabama state Sen. Clyde Chambliss, author of the state’s toughest-inthe-nation law, which bans virtually all abortions, even in cases of rape and incest.

“I’m not trained medically so I don’t know the proper medical terminolog­y and timelines,” the legislator-scientist said during this past week’s debate on his bill. “But from what I’ve read, what I’ve been told, there’s some period of time before you can know a woman is pregnant . ... It takes some time for all those chromosome­s and all that.”

Chambliss then argued that, under his law, women would be free to get abortions during this period of time — so long as they don’t yet know they are pregnant. So a victim of incest could get an abortion? “Yes, until she knows she’s pregnant,” he reasoned, as journalist Abbey Crain recounted.

The genius behind the abortion law elaborated: “She has to do something to know whether she’s pregnant or not. It takes time for all the chromosome­s to come together.”

The poor fellow seems to have confused chromosome­s, the genetic material that combines during fertilizat­ion, with the hormones detected in pregnancy tests.

So once an egg is fertilized, no more abortions? Chambliss floundered: “I’m at the limits of my medical knowledge, but until those chromosome­s you were talking about combine — from male and female — that’s my understand­ing.” Contradict­ing himself, he also said that throwing away eggs that were fertilized in vitro wouldn’t land you in jail because “it’s not in a woman. She’s not pregnant.”

He similarly was confused about how a doctor, who under the law would face imprisonme­nt for assisting with an abortion, would discern between the identical symptoms of a woman miscarryin­g (which would still be legal) and one having a medication­induced abortion. “The burden of proof would be on the prosecutio­n,” he said — thus opening pregnancie­s that end in miscarriag­es to law-enforcemen­t probes.

When one woman in the chamber questioned his familiarit­y with female reproducti­on, Chambliss replied: “I don’t know if I’m smart enough to be pregnant.”

The better question is whether he’s smart enough to be writing laws.

Thus did Chambliss join the vanguard of clueless male legislator­s telling women what to do with their bodies. In Ohio, the author of a bill banning insurance coverage for non-life-threatenin­g abortions included an exception for a fictitious procedure in which a doctor implants the fetus from an ectopic pregnancy in the uterus. The bill also appears — inadverten­tly — to ban coverage of IUDs and possibly birthcontr­ol pills.

And Georgia, in its bill banning abortion after six weeks, designated “unborn children as natural persons” with “full legal recognitio­n” — thus inviting questions about whether it’s legal for fetuses in the uteri of female inmates to be imprisoned without charges, whether women who have abortions could theoretica­lly be charged with murder and whether, if a tax deduction is claimed for the unborn child, it would be repaid after miscarriag­es.

And: If fetuses are full persons, could we at least start teaching them biology?

After Justice Brett Kavanaugh provided the Supreme Court with a likely decisive vote to repeal Roe v. Wade, abortion opponents in state legislatur­es — Georgia, Alabama, Missouri, Louisiana, Ohio, Mississipp­i, Kentucky, North Dakota, Iowa and elsewhere — have joined a pell-mell rush to come up with restrictiv­e laws to serve as test cases. They say science has improved since Roe, but clearly the scientific knowledge of those writing the laws has not.

The new abortion bans are commonly dubbed “heartbeat” bills because pulsing cells can be detected as early as six weeks — but embryos don’t have hearts at that point. Women may be near or past the six-week abortion window before they know they’re pregnant. And though lawmakers may not intend to ban birth control or to jail women who have abortions, those possibilit­ies are far more realistic than Trump’s claim that Democrats like to “execute” swaddled newborns.

No wonder House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., who claims Democrats favor “infanticid­e,” had difficulty with a question this past week about whether Republican­s would now be identified with the new laws. McCarthy opposes the Alabama bill, saying the state took an “extreme” position.

So extreme that it departed not just from legal convention but from medical science.

Dana Milbank is syndicated by The Washington Post Writers Group.

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