A little more than one week ago, hundreds of Catholics rallied in Phoenix, Arizona to protest the Affordable Care Act. The Catholic Sun has a nice gallery of photos on Flickr, in which several placards are plainly visible in the sunshine, reading anything from “Pray to End Abortion” to “God’s Will Not Obama’s Will,” and “Religious Freedom for All.” All this about the “Obamacare” mandate (or was it Mitt Romney?) that got Republicans like Newt Gingrich all to gin up a non-existent “war on the Catholic Church,” the same hubbub that consequently made Sandra Fluke famous, and lost Rush Limbaugh dozens of advertisers.
But less than a week after that protest, the Legislature in that same state passed arguably the most restrictive anti-abortion legislation we’ve seen since the Great Republican Takeover of 2010™. Of course, The Great Republican Overreach of 2011™ is what followed that — and in Arizona, they’re going beyond so-called “fetal pain” bills like Nebraska’s, which outlaw abortions not 20 weeks into the actual pregnancy.
It seems that’s soft by Arizona standards.
Last Thursday, their state House passed HB 2036, which would make abortions illegal after those 20 weeks — but what matters most is when those 20 weeks begin. Confused, fellas? Kate Sheppard of Mother Jones breaks it down:
…reproductive rights advocates point out that Arizona’s law would actually be more restrictive than others, as the bill states that the gestational age of the fetus should be “calculated from the first day of the last menstrual period of the pregnant woman…”









