The Uproar Over a Texas Pathologist Is the Anti-Abortion Movement in a Nutshell
Texas lawmakers essentially forced a state employee to resign because he also worked for Planned Parenthood. It's a microcosm of other attacks we're seeing.
Susan Rinkunas is a reporter covering abortion, reproductive health, and politics. Her work has appeared in Jezebel, The Guardian, Slate, NBC News, Elle, and more. Follow her online: @SusanRinkunas
Texas lawmakers essentially forced a state employee to resign because he also worked for Planned Parenthood. It's a microcosm of other attacks we're seeing.
The New York Times' top Supreme Court reporter shared some galaxy brain analysis.
It may not have been a Friday news dump, but the subtext was clear.
Stephen Miller will be Trump's deputy chief of staff for policy starting in January.
Repeating lies doesn't make them true.
A debate 13 days before Election Day is "too late." But confirming a Supreme Court Justice eight days out? That's just fine.
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Abortion is back at the Supreme Court this week and it's going to remain a state issue right? [laughs nervously]
This horrifying Alabama news is a few days old now, but I can't stop thinking about the language used in the ruling.
Welcome to anti-abortion logic, a recurring series where I explain the lie-filled arguments that activists and politicians make to try defend their repugnant, forced birth positions.
A collection of my freelance work in one place, as a treat.