“Senate
Bill 8, the Texas law that effectively bans abortions
in the state by criminalizing any procedures after six weeks, is a bad law, not
just in the sense that it accomplishes a bad thing—by effectively depriving
women of their formerly constitutionally protected rights—but in the sense that
it was written with all the legal authority of a ransom note. The law, in
addition to the ban itself, proposes to enforce this prohibition by creating
what Justice Sonia Sotomayor describes as
‘citizen bounty hunters.’
“Private
citizens can earn $10,000 by
filing a lawsuit against anyone who has so much as offered a ride to
someone else to get to an abortion clinic in Texas. Unlike
traditional litigation, a plaintiff in one of these cases would not need to
demonstrate that they have been harmed to receive this fee. It’s simply a
harassment stipend; if you see something, we’ll pay you something. When the law
passed the legislature this spring, even some of its own supporters thought it
might be unconstitutional.
“But
SB 8 was not the only major piece of legislation that came out of the Texas
legislature this year. On Wednesday, the Houston Chronicle helpfully rounded
up other bills that have gone into effect or will soon. It is
not pretty:
- Anyone over
21 in the state without a criminal record can now open-carry a firearm—no
need for a permit or any sort of training.
- Protesters
who block freeways will now face felony charges.
- Homeless
encampments are now illegal.
- Voting
access was significantly curtailed while the
powers of poll watchers were significantly expanded.
- Teachers are
prohibited from teaching whatever angry parents or school boards decide is
“critical race theory.”
- Professional
sports teams are required to play the national anthem before games, under
threat of losing tax subsidies if they don’t. (They should not have those
subsidies in the first place, but that’s another story.)
- And any
business that requires proof of vaccination from customers could lose its
operating license.
“It could be worse, I suppose: They could have put a $10,000
bounty on the restaurant owners and history teachers, too. This is a strange
list, but as a mission statement of what the conservative movement is and isn’t
for in 2021, it is quite coherent. The sum of these measures is an endorsement
of governance as a display of cultural dominance, rather than governance as a
means to make anything work better for anyone. And there is so much that
doesn’t work.
“Earlier this year, I wrote about how the animating ethos for much
of today’s Republican Party was shit posting. The movement’s most ambitious
figures, interpreting the wishes of their voters, seem more interested in the
appearance of governing than in the real thing. They do loud, visible things,
and spend way too much time on social media. They want what their base wants,
which is to put other people in place, and they seem little interested in
anything else.
“They pass blatantly unconstitutional laws to score a point
or lodge ridiculous constitutional challenges of their own just
to be seen. And then sometimes the Supreme Court just decides to let them have
their way anyway, because the justices came out of this same movement
too—that’s why they’re there, after all.
“While the Texas legislature was doing all of those things, it was
also not doing other things. It did pass a set of reforms designed to
correct some of what ails the Texas power grid—such as requiring power
companies to weatherize their plants—but declined, for instance, to authorize
any money to pay for it or apply the same mandates to the
natural-gas industry. And any improvements are not expected to be in place
before 2022. The state government’s major response to the fourth wave of the
coronavirus has been to strip local authorities and private businesses of their
ability to do anything about it, in order to score nihilistic culture-war
victories over masking and vaccines. Texas is, statistically speaking, one of the worst places
in the United States to give birth, but the state’s leaders would still
rather turn away free money from Washington than
spend it on health care for poor people.
“When the Atlantic’s Emma Green asked Texas Right to
Life’s legislative director, John Seago, whether the group would advocate for
Medicaid expansion to ensure that women have access to health care during and
after pregnancy—supporting Medicaid expansion while limiting abortion access is
the position of the governor of neighboring Louisiana—he demurred.”
-Tim
Murphy for Mother Jones
Q. What ancient coinage equals $10,000 in today's money?
ReplyDeleteA. Thirty pieces of silver.