
“Everybody Needs Love On A Saturday Night”– The Maines Brothers Band Here are some more songs that I liked and remember. The latter part of the decade, however, produced some truly excellent country music with the 1986 arrival of Randy Travis and company. The first flowering of the late 1980s “New Traditionalist” movement arrived in 1981 with the first hits of Ricky Skaggs and George Strait, but they remained outliers until 1986 as far as good new artists were concerned. Fortunately, there was still good country music being released.
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Because of insurance issues, Hoffman said, he couldn’t order a pathology report that would have given the woman from Texas a greater understanding of the medical risks of a future pregnancy.The 1980s got off to a poor start with the early 1980s producing some of the lamest country music ever recorded, as the Urban Cowboy movie wrecked havoc on the genre. Or into the eyes of a woman who wanted her child but faced the possibility of a nonviable pregnancy. To that, Hoffman says, try looking into the eyes of a rape victim or a pregnant child. Abortion opponents will, of course, say they want to stop the death and suffering of the unborn.

We are writing laws that are going to directly cause death and suffering,” he said. “What breaks my heart is that people are going to die. It’s inevitable that anyone who wants an abortion will cross state lines to get one, said Hoffman, the doctor who provided an abortion to the woman from Texas. I do believe we’ll be stepping up to the plate.” We are known for providing some of the best health care in the world to people who come from around the world. Asked if she expected any political pushback, even in liberal Massachusetts, Hart Holder said, “I don’t know the answer to that. Her mission, said Hart Holder, “is to make New England a place where, regardless of what happens in the Supreme Court, you can get access to abortion that’s not just legal, but accessible.” That means fighting for insurance coverage and against other barriers. But if Roe is history, advocates foresee a need to provide financial help to people in at least 26 states that are expected to ban or restrict abortions. Related: Both sides planning for new state-by-state abortion fightĪ nationwide system of abortion funding currently exists. That, in turn, raises equity issues, between those who have financial resources and other support and those who don’t.

“We know anecdotally that women are coming here, typically people who have family here,” Rebecca Hart Holder, executive director of Reproductive Equity Now (formerly NARAL Mass) told me. However, the demand has overwhelmed abortion providers in Texas border states, leading women to seek other destinations, like Massachusetts. After the law went into effect in September, legal abortions dropped by half, the Times reported, while some women sought care in neighboring states. The law there makes no exceptions for rape or incest, and exceptions for health reasons are narrowly drawn.


As The New York Times reported, turning the clock back to pre-Roe days will force women to remain pregnant, seek illegal abortions, or drive to states where it remains legal. If that happens, it will formalize the huge social, cultural, and legal gulf between states like Massachusetts that protect abortion rights and others that will choose to heavily restrict or ban abortion. Wade ruling of 1973, which legalized abortion across the country. Wade in trouble again, a different strategy may be requiredĪfter hearing arguments last week concerning a Mississippi abortion law, a conservative-leaning Supreme Court seems primed to reverse or gut the landmark Roe v.
