A.G. Rutledge Asks Supreme Court to Uphold Arkansas Pro-Life Law

Today Attorney General Leslie Rutledge petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court to uphold the constitutionality of the Arkansas Human Heartbeat Protection Act, a 2013 law that prevents most abortions after the twelfth week of pregnancy if a fetal heartbeat is detected.

“As the State argues in its petition to the Court, I believe that certiorari should be granted to allow the Court to revisit and overturn the arbitrary viability rule,” said Attorney General Rutledge. “Arkansas and other States should be allowed to advance their profound interests in defending the life of the unborn, which is exactly what the Arkansas Human Heartbeat Protection Act accomplishes.”

The “viability rule” to which A.G. Rutledge refers is the result of U.S. Supreme Court rulings such as Roe v. Wade and  Planned Parenthood v. Casey; it’s a principle in case-law that makes it harder to regulate abortion practices before the unborn baby reaches the point of “viability,” when the baby can survive outside the womb. And Attorney General Rutledge is correct: The rule is completely arbitrary.

“Viability” is a vague concept, as medical science makes it increasingly more likely babies born prematurely will go on to live normal, healthy lives; ambiguity over when a baby reaches the point of “viability” makes utilization of the “viability rule” difficult.

What’s more, there’s no logical reason to give an unborn baby more or less protection based on how long it would survive outside the womb.

You can read the A.G.’s full petition to the U.S. Supreme Court here.

Boozman, Cotton Urge Investigation into Planned Parenthood

CottonTom220px-John_Boozman,_official_portrait,_112th_CongressThis week U.S. Senators John Boozman and Tom Cotton called for a full audit of all fetal tissue research supported by the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to determine whether there have been violations of the law and how the agency verifies compliance following the release of videos indicating Planned Parenthood’s involvement in the harvesting and sale of the organs of aborted babies.

The Arkansas senators joined more than 30 of their colleagues in signing a letter written by Senator Rand Paul (R-KY) to HHS Inspector General Daniel R. Levinson urging an audit of third party practices.

The letter reads in part: (more…)

Atheist Group Continues Saber-Rattling in Arkansas

The Wisconsin-based Freedom From Religion Foundation is at it again in Arkansas–this time threatening legal action over prayer at a public high school football game in Ashdown.

KTBS writes,

The “Freedom from Religion Foundation” of Madison, Wisconsin, wrote to Ashdown School District Superintendent Jason Sanders recently, with complaints about the high school band director leading students in prayer, as well as, school-sponsored prayer at the football games.

Sanders consulted the “Alliance for Defending Freedom” for advice on the situation.

He says they haven’t broken any laws.

“We feel like that the freedom of our students to express themselves will hold up in a court of law,” said Sanders.

This isn’t the first time atheist groups have tried to use the threat of legal action to intimidate public officials and others.

It’s worth noting that across the board, groups like the Freedom From Religion Foundation tend to threaten lawsuits; oftentimes, if people stand their ground, no lawsuit is ever actually filed.

Photo Credit: “Gameday2” by Rmcclen at en.wikipedia – Transferred from en.wikipedia by Ronhjones. Licensed under Public domain via Wikimedia Commons.