The Daily Show: Ears Edition - What Does a Post-Roe v. Wade America Look Like? - Beyond the Scenes
Episode Date: June 26, 2022Over the past year, near-total abortion bans have been instituted across America, including in Texas and Oklahoma. In December 2021, Beyond the Scenes host Roy Wood Jr. sat down with Texas-based OB/GY...N and abortion provider, Dr. Ghazaleh Moayedi, to discuss Texas’s new policies. In light of the Supreme Court leak that threatens Roe v. Wade, Dr. Moayedi rejoins Roy and executive director and founder of We Testify, Renee Bracey Sherman, to discuss where abortion rights are headed, how Texans and Oklahomans are already living without the protections of Roe v. Wade, and why voting isn’t the most effective solution for supporting abortion rights. To support Renee Bracey Sherman’s work with We Testify, consider donating: https://secure.actblue.com/donate/wetestifySee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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The smartest way to hire hey it's Roywood, Jr.. Up next a special episode of beyond the scenes where I sit down with Texas based abortion provider?
Dr. Goslo Moyetti and abortion advocate Renee Bracey Sherman to discuss the Scenes where I sit down with Texas-based abortion provider,
Dr. Goslo Moyetti, and abortion advocate Renee Bracey Sherman to discuss the recent wave
of anti-abortion legislation.
Have a listen.
Quick note, this podcast was recorded before the Supreme Court struck down Roe v. Wade, and
by the time you listen, things may have changed. Hey, welcome to Beyond the Scenes, the Daily Show podcast that goes a little deeper
into segments and topics that originally aired on the show.
Today, we're doing something a little different.
Now, back in December, I sat down with OBGYN and an abortion provider, Dr. Gosla
Moyetti to discuss abortion
bans in Texas right after SB 8 was introduced.
We talked about misconceptions about abortion, the anti-abortion movement, roots of it
in white supremacy, and how abortion has become more about politics than science in
America.
Now we know the buzz has happening around the nation this year, so we wanted to follow up on that conversation and invite Dr. Moyeti back on the show.. th. th. th. th. th. th. th. th. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. th. th. th. th. th. th. th. th. S. S. S. I. I. I was. I was. I ta. ta. t. t, ta. t, ta. ta. to. to. to. to. to. to. to. to. to. to. to. to. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. S. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. t. I. I. I. I. I. t. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. t buzz has happening around the nation this year. So we wanted to follow up on that conversation
and invite Dr. Moiety back on the show.
Dr. Moyetti, thank you for being here again.
I promise the third time bringing back
it's gonna be about some happy.
All right, promise, please.
A problem. It's gonna be puppies.
We'll bring you back for the puppy episode. Love puppies. A box of the s s s s s sa. the the the the the the the tha. tha. tha. tha. tha. tha. thi. thi. thi. thi. thi. I thi. I thi. I thi. I tho. I tho. I tho. I thi. thi. I'm tho. I'm tho. I'm tho. tho. tho. tho. tho. tho. tho. tho. tho. tho. th. th. th. th. th. th. th. th. th. th. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I'm. I's. thi. thi. thi. the. the. the. the. the. thea. thea. thea. the. the. thi. the. thi. th. thi. th. th. th. them. Also joining us as the founder and executive director of We Testify, an organization dedicated
to the leadership and representation of people who have abortions.
Renee Bracey Sherman, welcome to be on the scenes.
Thank you so much for having me.
Let's dig in here, because we all have a lot time peck here. Dr. Moyetti, last we talked, you were based in Texas, but traveling to Oklahoma to give care. the, but, their, their, their, their, their, their, their, their, their, their, their, their, to to their, to to to to to to to to to to to to their, to to to to their, to to to to to be to to be to be to be to be to be to be to be to bea, to bea, to bea, to bea, to bea, to bea, to be to be to be to be to be to be to be tooom. Wea, tooom. Wea, their, their, their, their.a, the the the the the the the the the the th.ea, thea, wea, wea, tea, wea, tea, wea, tea, wea, tea, tea, tea, te.e.e.e. here. Dr. Moyetti, last we talked, you were based in Texas,
but traveling to Oklahoma to give care,
but now Oklahoma has passed and enacted some of the most
restrictive abortion bans in the country.
Can you run us through how your work has shifted
over the past few months based on how these laws start popping up like whack-o-mo. Yeah, so you know up until September of last year I was providing
abortion care both in Texas and Oklahoma. Once SB-8 hit I transitioned to
traveling to Oklahoma pretty consistently to take care of people there and
for the past you know nine plus months well six, seven plus months I have been going to Oklahoma and taking care of Texans, six, seven plus months.
I have been going to Oklahoma and taking care of Texans,
Oklahomans, Arkanzans, Kansans, Louisiana's.
Like, everyone from our region has been flooding Oklahoma.
And that was really up until April for me.
So I had been planning on continuing to go and work there really
until the decision came down and Oklahoma decided to yehaw one more step
past Texas and of course yeah I haven't been able to go and so what's on the
horizon for me I mean Roy do you have a Like, do you need a daily show abortion provider?
Does Comedy Central need someone?
Because it's grim, it's grim, what our future holds.
With regards to that grim future, Madam Sherman,
let's talk a little bit about the Supreme Court for a second now.
Now, there was a leak document, you know, a draft of a Supreme Court ruling that would ultimately
yes, shitty draft that would lead to the overturn of Roe v. Wade now as is that
second that hasn't happened yet but it seems very likely if the ro v. Wade is
overturned what's the risk of if and when that happens? Everything is at risk
when that happens. I think we need to take that draft
very seriously. We've always been operating that they would and could overturn Roe v. Wade.
That was the goal of installing the justices on the Supreme Court that they did. And that's honestly
been the goal that they've been working on for the last decade. They have never lied about what they were trying to do.
They always wanted to overturn Roe v. Wade because they saw Roe v. Wade as a way to install white
nationalist Christian control over people, right? If they could get that, they could control us on a lot of
different things. And so they exploited abortion as an issue, particularly to
impact black and brown people, low-income folks, right? And so when they get
that, that is kind of this last piece that is holding our ability to decide if
when and how to grow our families, how to raise our families,
to be able to live free of state sanction violence and coercion.
So when the overturn happens, and I'm happy to be wrong, but when it does happen,
what we are going to see is large-scale mass incarceration of people who are being surveilled simply because they're pregnant and their pregnancies don't end in a healthy labor and delivery.
Right. So this isn't just about people who are seeking abortions facing criminalization and harassment,
denial of care, all of these human rights violations, but also we're already seeing it for
people who have still births, people who have miscarriages, people who use IVF.
People who maybe use substances or do things that are deemed questionable during
their pregnancies, right? It really is going to impact all of us who are pregnant,
could be pregnant and and put us under this mass surveillance
under the guise of banning abortion. So this is really, really impacting all of us.
On top of the fact that Roe v. Wade is the bedrock for so many of our freedoms and right
to privacy. And so losing that is going to undermine so many
freedoms in the next decade or two to come. Dr. Moyetti, talk to us a little bit about that criminalization
side of it, because I know right now, you know, Texas and Oklahoma already, you know, kind of
post Rovy Wade, the nine states have bands that are approaching,
they're round and third and headed for home as the song would go in center.
Feel, talk to us a little bit about those criminal liabilities that could start.
The criminalistic ripple effects. Yeah, I mean, they've already started just a few months ago.
We had a national case, a case that got national attention here in Texas.
Liz El Herrera, a woman on the US-Mexico border, arrested, held on $500,000
bail for having a miscarriage, right? It's not even something illegal yet, but the
guise of criminality creates vigilantes.
Vigilantees among physicians, among nurses, among hospitals, community workers, social workers,
we already see this happening, and they're, again, they're telling on themselves this is their plan, right?
In Texas, last session, and I believe their plan, right? In Texas, last session and I believe
the session before, bills were introduced that would require women, people
that are pregnant, to go talk to crisis pregnancy centers, register with them, if
you will, with their pregnancies before they were allowed to make an abortion
decision. Other states are passing laws where people have to get fake counseling
from religious groups, entering them into pregnancy surveillance, right? This happens in other
families. Who's surveying the religious group? How do we know the religious group is qualified?
They aren't. They aren't qualified, right? It's bananas.
One thing I want to add is that, again, this issue has been posed as like something that's
happening to people who want and have abortions. And so a lot of people kind of look at it as, oh, well, I'm never having abortion, so this won't impact me.
But the reality is that pregnancies can go wrong at any moment. At any moment,
anyone could need some type of medical care that would be close to an abortion or could be
deemed by some religious institution that we don't do that, right? And what's really scary about
this moment is that they get to dictate the medical care based on religious doctrine and not the health and safety of the patient and what the medical provider, the nurse, the doctor, the dula, whoever, whatever they see in that patient is best. And I think what's also scary about it, I'm going to pull out one of my favorite books. Professor Michelle Goodwin wrote Policing the Womb.
And in it, she talks about how there have been
pregnant people who have refused certain types of care
in their pregnancies because they didn't feel like
that's the way that what they wanted to do.
And it wasn't necessary. And doctors have gone to courts, to judges, to compel them
to go through with a certain type of medical care.
And I think what's scary is that we trust our medical providers
to show up for us, not turn us into the cops,
or turn us into the courts, or turn us into Christian zealots.
And that is not only what some have done for years,
because again, people have been arrested
for the outcomes of their pregnancies for decades,
but what the state in these laws is now compelling them to do.
And that is what is so scary about this criminalization of abortion and criminalization of pregnancy.
Okay, so then to that point, Madam Sherman, now you've been on the front lines of this issue
for years, abortion advocacy, right? And so when we start criminalizing the outcomes of a pregnancy,
and the people, let's just say I'm the person who drives my friend to go get the abortion.
Then I'm in the crosshairs too, right?
Does this pressure on pregnant women also extend criminalistically speaking to the people who assist them in getting the abortion
and the medical providers who may or may not take action? Is it possible that medical providers feel the need to report people to the police for
fear that they themselves could be arrested if they didn't do everything they were supposed
to do by whatever weird health surgeon general bullshit that that state has on the books for pregnancy?
So as Dr. Moyetti can speak about as well, like, there's no medical reason
for, there's no ethics reasons that a medical provider would need to to to report to report to to to to report to to need to need to to need to to to to to to to to to report to report to report to report to report to report to report to report to report to report to report to report to report to report to report to report to report to report to report to report to report to report to report to report to report to report to report to report to report to report to report to to to to to to to to to to to report to report to report to report to report to report to report to report to report to report to report to report to report to report to report to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the's no medical reason for, there's no ethics
reasons that a medical provider would need to turn in a patient to the police
because they might have self-managed their abortion or because something's
going wrong in their pregnancy. What all of these laws are designed to do is to
isolate the person who's having an abortion so they have no one to turn to,
so they can't tell the truth to their doctor
because they're afraid their doctor might turn them in.
They can't go to their friend or loved one
because they are afraid their friend or loved one
might be sued or also face some sort of criminal charges
for an abortion. So what they're doing is isolating us,
so we have nobody to turn to for support,
and the state is telling everyone
that if someone comes to you needs an abortion,
your duty, your role is to turn them into the police,
not offer them any sort of love, support, and care,
which that is not how we build communities.
That is not how we build families, right?
They're taking what we've seen in the immigration movement where people can't talk about the fact
that they are undocumented because they're afraid someone might turn them in.
That is really, really scary, and we're creating this mass surveillance in our communities
where the government is telling everyday people that it is your duty to if you see something,
say something. Well, we already know that that bullshit program does nothing, right?
We don't need to be exporting it to our communities and to health care and to how we show up
with love and support for one another. After the break, Dr. Moyetti, I want to get into the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the to the to get the the the the the the the to get the to get the to get the the the the the the the the the the the the the the their their, their, their, where their their, where the government is the government is the government is the government is the government is the government. the government, the government, the government, the government, the government, the government, the government, the the the the the the the the their, their, their, their, their, their, their, their, their, their, to the th. to tho, tho. tho tho tho tho tho tho tho tho tho tho tho tho tho tho the the. the the the the to how we show up with love and support for one another. After the break, Dr. Moyetti, I want to get into the rock and the heart place that, well,
you know it, it ain't a rock and a hard place. It's a rock and the rock in the right thing. Yeah, it's not hard. That a lot of our health care professionals are in and the role that religion plays into how hospitals have decided to treat. treat treat treat treat treat treat treat treat treat to to treat to to to to to to to to to to the the to to the to the to to the to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to be to be to be to be to be to be to be to be to be to be to be to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to the the the the communities. the the communities. the the the the the communities the communities the the the the the the the professionals are in and the role that religion plays into
how hospitals have decided to treat this whole abortion issue as a whole. We'll be right back.
This is beyond the scenes. Finding great candidates to hire can be like trying to find a needle in a haystack.
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Now let's talk a little bit about the health care system in this country and you know
we talked a little bit first about the potential people who are affected by this.
But let's talk a little bit about the role that the hospitals play in the health of, not just pregnant women, but also women
who aren't pregnant because these laws, let's just start there. Dr. Moyetti, talk about how
these laws also affect women who aren't even pregnant because the doctors are too scared to prescribe
medicine. Yeah, well, right right now in Texas we had a bill
that was enacted. It was passed last year, enacted in December that made the
distribution of medication, abortion, pills or any pills that could cause an
abortion criminal past seven weeks. So that is not only impacting, I mean we already
have this other abortion ban that's preventing abortions at seven weeks, but
what we're seeing is that pharmacists aren't dispensing medications that yes
can be used for an abortion but are also used to treat other conditions to people that they perceive as
women and capable of being pregnant. So that includes chemotherapy medications,
remittology medications for people that have like rheumatoid arthritis. It includes
medications that help someone open their cervix prior to a uterine procedure, not in
the setting of pregnancy. All of
that, right? And just because the pharmacist thinks you might be a woman who
can potentially get pregnant, they're going to question you about getting your
chemotherapy medications. They're refusing to dispense to people because it
could potentially be for an abortion and then the pharmacist could be
criminally liable. So it creates this whole system of fear, suspicion, profiling, right?
Gender-based profiling. Renee, if you could talk a little bit about like how do the
hospitals themselves? Because if it's one thing I know about health care
in America, it's not uniform.
It ain't McDonald's a long.
It's uniform in that it sucks.
Well, of course, yes.
Each hospital got a different rule.
Each hospital got a different policy.
It comes down to the preferences of that particular practitioner.
How do the hospitals themselves help determine the kind of care anyone receives, especially
when so many of them are run by religious institutions.
Right, so I think what a lot of people don't realize is how many hospitals operate under
a religious doctrine, in particular a Catholic doctrine.
The Catholic Church and religiously affiliated hospitals have sort of been buying up hospitals
all across the country.
And so people don't know that the hospital that they used to go to may have changed hands.
And so in an emergency, you might be having a miscarriage or you might want an abortion,
whatever it is.
And all of a sudden, they say, we don't do that here.
And then the care that you need is being held up
because you're trying to figure out,
why don't you do it here?
Okay, well, where do I go?
And this is, again, not just about abortion,
and not just impacting women.
People, non-binary people and trans people have abortions,
but this also shows up when non-binary and trans people
are looking for gender-affirming care.
They go to a hospital and they may say,
the insurance company says yes, we'll do the hysterectomy.
Everyone says yes.
And then they realize that it is because someone wants to transition to the gender identity that fits for them. them them them them them them them them them them them them them them them them them them them them them them them them And then they realize that it is because someone
wants to transition to the gender identity that fits for them, right? It's a
trans man. And then they say, oh actually we don't want to do that. They'll
hand out hormone replacement therapies. They'll hand out all sorts of
estrogen shots and whatever until they realize that you're a trans woman. And then they say, oh actually we won't, we want we want we want we want we want we want we want we want we their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their to their to to their to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their th. the. ge. ge. ge. their ge. ge. ge. their ge. their the. the. their the. their the. their their until they realize that you're a trans woman.
And then they say, oh, actually, we won't give that.
So what it's really doing is this gender-based care so long as you adhere to extremely outdated
ideas of gender identity, sex segregation, and the ways in which you're supposed to perform
feminineness, womanhood, manhood, all of those things.
And if you don't adhere to that,
because you do not want to continue your pregnancy,
because you'd like to save your life,
because I don't know, you'd like to save your life,
because you'd like to transition your gender, they will say no we've decided that this religious, and let's be clear, this Christian,
often Catholic, but Christian doctrine says this. And it's bullshit because Catholic
doctrine didn't say this until the 1860s. I've been reading a lot of books
on the history of abortion. People have been
doing abortions for 4,000 years. Abortion is older than y'all's Bible, okay? Abortion is
older than every single one of y'all's hospitals. So it's simply this preference of forcing
us into a white Christian nationalist belief and adherence to the gender binary and whiteness,
not based on any sort of actual medical care.
So to that point, Dr. Moyetti, it seems that, well, here's a moralistic question.
Yeah. How do health care providers, because you all went to medical school for eight, nine
years and then you took out all of them loans for medical school and four hundred
thousand dollars you got a paper in the spirit of wanting to help people and
be a conduit to help people live a better life but then your place within a
health care system and within a government that tells you to withhold care
from a patient how do health care professionals how are they able to work within that system, how are
they able to reconcile that?
It really depends on how you come into medicine.
And sadly, we aren't really taught in medical schools the social justice aspect
of medical care.
But for example, me and other of my colleagues, like we went
into medicine as an instrument of social justice. I became a physician because
I saw that as an avenue to improve justice in my own community. And that is not
the framework that we get a lot of times, right? We're just taught that
there are these social determinants of health that maybe some social
things could impact you and not that like literally racism and white supremacy cause
poor outcomes, right?
That it's placed on the person, that your individual identity is what's causing you problems
and not these systems of oppression that we have to work through.
And so it's really on us as physicians who are already kind of in that we have to work through. And so it's really on us as physicians
who are already kind of in the work
to be teaching in that way to up and coming physicians.
That it is your duty to stand up for your community,
that health is not just in the exam room,
but outside of the exam room,
and that it is our duty to speak up.
It's our duty to leverage our power for the good of our community.
And so really it is on physician educators to be teaching through a social justice lens.
And if you don't know what that means, it's your job to learn.
Also, how are you treating people if you don't actually understand the things that are happening
in their lives and what they're living around?
How can you blame somebody for having asthma and not the incinerator that was placed right
next to their school?
You can't treat people without looking at what is happening in their lives and what's going
on.
Our health care is just not separate from these things. what is happening in their lives and what's going on. And it's, our lives are not in a vacuum.
Our health care is just, is not separate from these things.
And any medical provider that is ignoring that,
I fear doesn't really want to take care of their patients as a whole person.
They want to treat the tiny issue and move on and not take care of a whole person.
Here's a broader question for the tiny issue and move on and not take care of a whole person. Here's a broader question for the both of you. Where does the insurance, where does the
health insurance industry stand on this?
Trash? Abolished insurance. Really? Because they're the ones getting money. You would think the health
insurance would be like, yes, go get everything and we'll charge a $90,000 for. So even they're siding with the government. th. th. C. C. the government. C. the government. C. A their, their, their, their, their, their, th. their, th. their, thi. thi. thi, thi, thi, their, to be, to be, to be, thi, to be, to be, to be, where, where, where, where, where, where, where, where, where, where, where, where, where, where, where, where, where, where, where, where, where, where, where, where, where. their, their. their. their. their, their. their. their. their, their. their. their. their. their. their. their, ti. ti. ti. the. total. total. total. their. together. te. te. te. te. te. te.a. te. te. te. te. te. te. tand dollars for. So even they are siding with the government
more often than not on this issue. So not wanting to cover the procedures.
It's complicated right. Insurance companies, honestly I don't think they care.
They don't they don't give a shit to be really clear. Like they're there in the
business of denying coverage for services anyway.
Because if they have to pay out of it,
that actually cuts into their profits.
So the way, even if insurance does cover abortion now,
which in the state of Texas, for example,
private insurance is, by law, cannot cover it.
Even if a state does allow for abortion to be covered,
they put it under like a little line that'll say like outpatient surgery.
So a lot of people don't even know that their health insurance does cover an abortion if it does.
And then what's happened with me, I go to the doctor and get a blood panel done,
and then the insurance company's like, yeah, we'll kick it back, we're not going to cover it. And then you have to fight with them to get them to cover it over and over
and over again. So the more that they can have you pay for insurance and not have to even do the
claim or like the denial of the claim, that's better for them because they get to pocket that money and you still have to pay for to th to th th th to th th th th to th to th th th to th to th th th to th to th out the abortion to tho the the abortion the the to the the abortion to the the abortion the the their their the. the. the. the. the. to get the. the. the. their their their their. their. their. their. their. their. their. their. their. their. their. their. their. their. their. their. their. their. their. their their their the. the. the. the. And to to to to to to toea. I toea. I toea. I toea. I toea. I'm toe. I'm the. I'm the. And, their the. And, that's better for them because they get to pocket that money and you still have
to pay for that abortion out of pocket.
Most people who have abortions, even if they have insurance, still pay for it out of pocket.
I just went to the doctor the other day and my doctor and I were both complaining
about insurance companies because it feels like when you're in the exam room, yes, you both have the government in there, in an invisible chair, and then you
also have this invisible chair of the insurance company because she wrote me a
prescription, a cream, and the pharmacist, while I was still in the room,
called and said, oh your insurance isn't going to cover this.
And it's wild because I'm sitting there with my doctor telling me, she's like,
this is what you need for this ear infection. And the insurance company is like, no, you don't.
Asper. Get a aspirin. Yeah.
Yo. It's wild. And so what we're seeing then with abortion too is not only is the invisible
government being like, you don't need that. The insurance companies are like, yeah, you don't
need that and even if you think you do, that's cool, you pay for it. We're not going to pay for it.
They're not stepping up because they fundamentally don't want to change health care
in this country. That is why they oppose a national health system. That is why the the the they they they're they're they're they're they're they're they're they're they're they're they're they're not they're not they're not they're not they're not they're not they're not their their their their their their their their their their their their their the invisible the invisible the invisible the invisible the invisible the invisible the invisible the invisible the invisible the invisible the invisible the invisible the invisible the invisible the invisible the invisible their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their they're not they're not their they're not their their their their their thi the visible the visible the visible the visible the visible thei invisible the visible their thei invisible their their their their their their their to change health care in this country.
That is why they oppose a national health system.
That is why they're not actually doing anything to make health care more accessible.
It's really, really frustrating that we have to figure out how to unfuck this system,
but we can't with corporations doing it.
I'll also say one last thing.
I hope your listeners don't fall
for the bullshit PR from all of the corporations that are like, we'll help pay for our employees to fly out of state to get, you know, an abortion if they need it.
Here's the thing. Notice that A, those companies are all union-busting right now, so they're
not supporting their workers in the way their workers are asking for. But also, they installed
the very politicians that passed these laws. Wow. You can't make this promise to your employees
without getting to the root cause of that you are giving money
to make these laws happen and keep them this way.
You can keep your abortion funding money, well maybe you shouldn't keep it, you still use
it. But what would be more impactful on a systemic level would be for them to promise
that they will not fund any anti-abortion or
any anti-LGBT politicians, but they won't do it because they know at the end
of the day those politicians are doing their bidding and so they're fine with
the status quo. Dr. Moyetti, to that point of unfucking this system,
to undoing this system, right? Are doctors talking to other doctors?
What are the options that a doctor has
to try and circumvent some of these bands
that are going on that you all are talking about?
Now, this is a terrible analogy,
but you have to understand, I'm a man,
I have no experience with women's health care. I remember trying to go the best the best the best the best the best the best to go the best the best to go the best the best the best the best the best the best the best therying to go to Best Buy to get a TV and they didn't have
the TV and then the employee like when you're buying something in retail the
employee pulls you to the side. I'm not supposed to tell you this but uh
Circuit City got that same TV from my friend they got him in stock at Circuit City go to
Circuit City wink wink does that type of world exist? Or is that also criminal?
Because you may be a doctor that works in Texas
and you can't do what this patient needs legally.
Can you pull that patient to decide and go,
hey, I know someone over here,
or here's some things you can do.
Here's a phone number, wink, wink, I can slip you.
What are the options for medical professionals to circumvent these bands tham I mean for years we have been working in this circuit city best buy scenario, honestly.
That like I work at a hospital that maybe doesn't allow this, but I know my buddy at Circuit City down the street,
their hospital has said yes for this condition.
And so we all in our individual states have these little text
networks of like, how the fuck do we help people? How do I help this person right here? So
that has already existed among our community of providers, many of us. And also, don't send
them to that hospital. They have a crazy doctor there that refuses blood transfusions and
shames people and doesn't give them care. So that has existed to some extent.
What the future is gonna hold is really,
we're gonna see what these extremists are gonna try and push.
I mean, we have laws from the 1800s in Texas that
Briscoe Kane, that guy that looks like three children sitting on
top of each other in a trench coat, he is saying that those laws still exist,
right? That they are still valid. Laws from the 1800s. One of them says that if
you provide an abortion to someone and they die, that it's murder. Now, layer that that on to, we're not allowed to provide care until you're at the brink of death of of of of of of of of of of of of of of of of of of of of of of of of of of of of of the the the the of of of of the of of the of of of of the of of the the of of the of of of of of of of of of of of. of. of. th. the. the. the. th. their th. their th. their their th. their their their. their. their. their. their. their. their. their. the the the the the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the the th. th. te. te. te. te. te. te. te. te. te. tea. tea. tea. treaughe. te. te. te. te. te. te. te. the. the. te. t die, that it's murder. Now, layer that on to, we're not allowed to provide care
until you're at the brink of death.
So you're about to die, but if you do die,
and we help you, then it's murder for the physician.
Right? What's gonna happen to folks?
Even though you should have never carried that fetus to term,
because we knew at week seven that it was gonna be a be a bad situation. So they're putting us in the crosshairs directly.
There are laws in Texas from before row, from the 1800s that said if you help someone
get an abortion, help them in any way that you could be in prison in a state that has
the death penalty, right?
So they're trying to say these things still exist. They're trying to to to to stop to stop to stop to stop to stop to stop to stop to stop to stop to stop to stop to stop to stop to stop to stop to stop to stop to stop to stop to stop to stop to stop to stop to stop to stop to to stop their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their te.c.c. texxxxxa. texxa. texxa. texxa. texa. texxxa. texxxxa. te. the. ththey're trying to say these things still exist. They're trying to gag us from speaking. They're trying to stop us not only from doing
abortions, but from even giving evidence-based medical advice. And so people
need to be really cognizant of that. We need to be pushing our local
hospitals. They get your tax dollars. Those county hospitals get your money. They're beholden to you. What are they doing th th to th to th to th th th th th thi thi thi thi thi thi thi. thi. thi. thi. thi. thoing thoing thoing thoing thoing thoing thoing thoing thi. thi. thoing thoing thi. They're thi. They're thi. They're thi. They're thi. They're thi. They're thi. They're thi. They're thi. They're th. They're th. They're th. They're th. They're th. They're th. th. th. th. th. th. thi. thi. thi. thi. thi. thi. thi. thi. thi. thi. theea. thea. thea. thea. thea. theauuuiiiii. They're thea. thea. They're thea. They're thea. They're tax dollars. Those county hospitals get your money.
They're beholden to you.
What are they doing?
How are you showing up at those meetings and demanding that they care for
your community in a liberatory way, right?
Let's take a break right here, because I want to talk about solutions and if there is any way to get through to some of those people that you're talking about who are taking thi....... this thi th, thin th, thin th, thin thin th, thin th, thin thin thi thi thi thi thi thi thi, thi, thi, their, their, their, their, their, their, their, what their, what their, what their, what their, what their, what their, what their, what their, what their, what their, what their, what their, what their, their, their, their, their, their, their, their, their, their, their, their, their, their, their, their, their, their, their, their, their, way to get through to some of those people that
you're talking about who are taking this message and spending it in a number
of different ways. This is beyond the scenes. We'll be right back.
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Beyond the scenes, we are back, bringing it home a great, great discussion about something
that is very terrible and that we hope can get put back on track.
That's a very interesting point, Dr. Mogher, that these are laws.
We're still trying to live by laws from the 1800.
You got to update your iPhone every full months.
Right.
You got to update all types of stuff.
They update, but we don't touch the laws.
Let the laws stay the same and be archaic forever. All hail, the holy document, right?
Now Renee, and we touched on this with you last time you were here, Dr. Moyetti, feel
free to jump in on this, but I want to get Renee's point of view on this.
First, anti-abortion activists.
How do we get through to them?
They are the most vocal? They are the most vocal. They are the most demonstrative.
They present themselves in this very scary sounding words or
straw or to use straight-up lies 100% is there any reasoning with those people. I mean, there's no reasoning with white supremacists.
Like, that's it. The anti-abortion movement is the political organizing arm of the white supremacist, white
nationalist movement.
I mean, they've literally had Patriot Front, Proud Boys, and other white supremacists,
white nationalists, at their marches.
So you can't reason with white supremacists.
That's just not possible. Not to mention, like, they're just, like, they're, the, like, like, like, like, like, like, like, like, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the white, the white, the white, their, the white, the white, the white, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the white, the white, the white, the, the, the, the, the, of the, of the, of the, of the, of the white, the white, the white, the white, the white, the white, the white, the white, the white, the white, the white, the white, the white, the white, the white, the white, the white, their, their, their, their, their, their, their, their, their, their, their, their, their white, white, white, white, white, white, the white, white, the white, white, the white, white, the white, white, the white, not possible. Not to mention, like, they're
just completely unhinged and like have their own sense of reality. Like, you can't reason
with some of the like MAGA people and the Q&ON people. That's who they are.
They went straight from protesting at clinics to the insurrection,
some of them, right?
And I want to be clear that this is not just some random fringe group.
They're not just some, like, folks on Twitter, like, they're real people.
And they're being given space to air their ridiculous conspiracy theories in the halls
of our government.
We did a hearing in mid-May, one of our, we testified, storytellers, testified about her abortions.
And when I was sitting in the gallery of it, and when the anti-is testified, because they say a lot of really horrible things,
I'm scrolling Twitter, I'm kind of answering emails, you know, all of a sudden my ears perk up because
this woman who runs one of the largest anti-abortion organizations, the one that writes all of our laws,
all the anti-abortion laws,
she testified twice that she believes that the
aborted fetuses are being incinerated and it is powering the street lamps in Washington, D.C.
I wish I could tell you I was making that up. Yes,
lamp posts. Hang on. We just got a marinade on not for a second. Let's just all have a
moment of what the hell for what you just said. Okay continue.
Lamp posts in Washington, D.C. are powered by abortion.
Now, it is extremely ridiculous, and as a voter in D.C., let me tell you, my bill doesn't reflect that.
This is what they are testifying under oath at a hearing about a health care crisis in this country and nobody
batted an eye.
No one said, I'm sorry, what?
Fetus lights?
That is, that is nuts.
There was no follow-up.
She said it twice.
Roll the tape back.
It's real. I'm not being hyperbolic at all.
It's interesting.
This hearing called by your colleagues on the other side,
it's about grandstanding, fear-mongering, misinformation,
falsehoods, intimidation.
We shine a light on exactly what Planned Parenthood is doing with the bodies of these children
that it aborts and other abortion industry players.
All too frequently they are selling these body parts for research, for examination.
We have heard even that it's been exposed that they are often even burned, incinerated in order to power
our street lamps.
That is simply inhumane.
That's what's really nuts because in the decade that I've been in the movement, I'm
constantly asked, well, can't you find common ground with the anti-abortion movement? Can't you find ground on like, you
know, adoption or, you know, carrot for babies? Yeah, I care about all of those things, but
their side, they're not interested in that, right? They vote against making sure people
have access to food and they literally, after that hearing, all the Republicans went and
voted against increasing access to baby formula. There is no actual, their, after that hearing, all the Republicans went and voted against increasing
access to baby formula.
There is no actual middle ground with them and compromising with them because the things
they believe don't make sense.
They're not based in reality.
And they're not supporting politicians who at the end of the day actually care about
black and brown families, actually care about people living in poverty, actually care about
what it looks like when people place for adoption, which for most people who are placing
is a lot of pain and they would rather parent.
If you actually look at the studies, they aren't interested in adoption or in abortion.
The reason they place for adoption is because they cannot afford to parent, which is what
they would want.
But that doesn't fit their narrative, right?
Because they'd actually have to do something about systemic inequality in this country,
and they don't want to. Dr. Moyeri, how do you, or have you given up on trying to reason
with baby fetus electricity people?
Baby fetus electricity.
Yeah, it turns out that they don't care about science.
They don't care about evidence.
And yeah, I don't take, I don't take interviews where anti-abortion extremists will be a counter to my professional
views and my expertise because they're literally talking about fetus lights and I'm talking about
public health, facts, research, data, right?
And exactly like Renee said, like, I'm talking about human rights. There's not a compromise
on is white supremacy okay? Where's the middle ground? How much supreme can we be? Like,
there's, it's, many things are not black and white, but like, white supremacy is bad,
that is, I mean, very clearly, black and white. Very clearly. Yes. Very clear.
Quite literally. Very clearly. Very clear.
Quite literally.
Quite literally.
Renee, you run We Testify.
Now, this is an organization that allows people who have had abortions to share their stories,
to tell their stories.
Why is it important for people to hear those stories, especially now?
Like you said, we testify as an organization that's dedicated to the leadership
and representation of people who have abortions.
I operate under a really simple belief
that people who have abortions are our future,
and we deserve to be in leadership in this movement,
and this moment.
And throughout history,
people have been having abortions for
thousands of years and usually it was just kind of we talked about it with
each other, hey girl drink this tea, yep the witch down the street she's got it,
mm-hmm, and it was just it was just normal, right? It was part of all of our
reproductive decision-making, but when it was criminalized in the 1800s, it was forced as a secret.
And then in the 1920s, 30s, 40s, 50s, a lot of times, the only times you heard abortion stories
were after people were trying to criminalize a provider. So police were compelling people
to share their abortion stories.
So we weren't sharing our stories on our own terms, and we were afraid that our stories could incriminate us or the people who provided our care.
In the last like 15 years, we've really pushed back on the stigma that has told us that we should just shut up our abortions, go get it and don't talk about it, don't tell anyone about it. And so that ended up
with people like me when I had my abortion at 19, I didn't know anyone who'd had
an abortion, I knew one cousin, and that's, oh and the rapper Lil' Kim.
Yeah, bad bitch. But like I knew that and so I, but I still felt really isolated.
I started sharing my story so that other people would feel like they weren't alone.
And to get everyone to realize that everyone loves someone who's had an abortion.
And I would have people come up to me and tell me, yeah, I had an abortion too.
I didn't know anyone else who had an abortion.
And it started to be this groundswell of us talking
about it. Then I started to realize how much I still even as doing this work didn't talk
about it in my own family to the point that I have been doing this work for four years and my
mother had not even told me that she'd had an abortion before she had me. And so I am here
because my mother was able to decide if one
and how to grow her family because she had an abortion. And so it really has
gotten me thinking what does it look like for us to create a space where
people who have abortions feel supported to be able to talk about it over the
dinner table with our loved ones as we're going through it.
And of course, yes, at rallies and the halls of Congress. Let's talk about this and also talk
about all the things that are stigmatized that we don't talk about in our families,
whether it is mental health stigma or postpartum depression or menopause or anything else
that really infertility for
all of us no matter your gender identity, right? Like, let's talk about all of the things
that come with our reproductive health, our family building. Let's not make it a secret, and let's show
up with love and support. And so what really felt important to me also with we testifies work
is that the majority of our abortion storytellers, 90% of them, are people of color. That is intentional,
because the majority of people who have abortions are people of color, almost two-thirds.
So what we wanted to do was make sure that the stories that you hear are reflective of who actually
has abortions and that those folks who are having abortions today see someone who looks like
them, standing tall, talking about their experience and receiving nothing but love and support
knowing that even though this moment is really,
really scary and chaotic, that their voice deserves to be heard, that their
decision deserves to be loved and supported, and that there are people just
like them who've had abortions too.
Where do we go from, so at the end of the show, this is part of podcast, Renee, where I ask you, how do we solve this? And then, then, th th the their their th their their th their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their th. their th. th. their th. th. thi their voice their voice thi thi, thi, th. th. th. th. th. their their their their their voice their voice their their their their their, their their their their, their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their th. th. th. th. th. thi thi thi thi that, that, thi that, thi thi thooooooooooooooo. th. th. th. th. their voice, the end of the show, this is part of podcast, Renee, where I ask you,
how do we solve this?
And then, and then one of us says vote.
And we'll, yes, vote, and vote,
and that's just the end of the podcast.
But let's be real.
Is voting effective?
Is that going to be, does that have the efficacy needed to solve this problem?, or are, or are, or the the the the their, or, or, their, their, their, their, their, their, their, their, their, tho, their, tho, tho, tho, tho, tho, tho, thi. thi, thi, thi, thi, thi, thi, how, how, how, how, how, how, how, how, how, how, how, how, how, how, how, how, how, how, how, how, how, how, how, how, how, thi. thi. thi. thi. I... I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. I. thi. thi. thi. thi. thi. thi. thi. thi. thi. to, to, to, to, to, to, to, to, to, to, to, to, to, to, to, to, to, to, they. tho. thoes. thi to be, does that have the efficacy needed to solve
this problem or there other aspects? And Dr. Morietti, feel free to chime in on
this as well. Like where do we go from here on this? Who can we support? What do we do?
I've been voting. I voted. I voted last time and the time before. I vote harder. I vote, I pressed it really hard and I voted get a fake ID and get you on get on
seven different voting rolls they won't catch in seeing you to prison
I'm not suggest an Iranian abortion provider is fake voting in Texas please I'm
already in the crosshairs I'm from Chicago we vote early and often I I think this is really important, right?
Because I've been talking about this a lot where I've said that voting can't be the only
solution.
Okay, we've been voting.
In fact, the candidate who supported not only making abortion more accessible, but also overturning the racist discriminatory
Hyde Amendment, which bars Medicaid from covering abortion care, she won the presidential
election.
But because our system is gerrymandered and so fucked, she didn't.
And so this idea that voting is the only way out of this is not correct.
Voting is important and I think everyone should be out there to go vote.
I vote, I love it. It's actually really fun.
Working on my bell in DC right now. It is a harm reduction tool.
Because if the only solution to this crisis right now is to
go vote in November, what are you saying to every single person who needs an abortion before
that?
What are you saying to the clinics that are going to have to close between the time the decision
has come down to when the clinics that are going to have to close between the time the decision has come down
to when the election happens, but also it's actually a couple months after that because
you have to get the new Congress to warn in, but then also you have to actually negotiate a bill
and vote on it. So actually what you're asking people by saying, oh voting will just
solve this, you're saying cool, wait and take a chance that hopefully
in a year we will have the margins to be able to do this. Because I was told that if we
won the Senate, they would protect abortion. And that is not what's happening right
now because of Democrats who are anti-abortion like Joe Manchin or Kirsten Cinema who won't get rid of the filibuster right so it can't be the only solution we need actual real ideas
from the federal government from the president to show up and protect abortion
right here and right now and I'm seeing a bit of a lackluster on those
ideas I'm happy to meet with the president whatever he wants to to share all of my ideas of what he can
federalize. I mean I'd honestly say that I wish that the president Biden would
take a playbook out of Trump that pays out of Trump's playbook and just do
executive orders for whatever because we thought half the shit Trump was doing wouldn't actually stick and it did. and it did. and so, to. And to. And so. And so, and to. And so, and so, and so, and so, and so, and so, and so, and so, and so, and so, and so, and so, and so, and so, and so, and so, and so, and so, and so, and so, and so, and so, and so, and th, and th, and th. And, and th. And, thi thi thi thi thi thi thi thi thi thi thi thi thi thi thi the th th th th th th th th th th th th th th th. And, th. And, th. And, th. And, th. And, th. And th. And th. And so, th. And so, th. And so, thi. And so, thi. And so, thi. And so, thi, the the theeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee an thi thi thi thi thi th we thought half the shit Trump was doing
wouldn't actually stick and it did. And so why are we not just saying let's
try it all because this is an emergency, this is a public health emergency.
We cannot leave clinics to close because we're waiting on vote returns to come back.
I mean that's exactly what we have been asking for in Texas since September.
What can the president do? Write an executive order right now.
The last president put children in detention centers.
You stripped them from their parents through executive order.
We can't make health care available through
executive order and figure it out later. Why? Why can't we? I'm sorry, I cannot
believe that it's like the man who got called the most pro-life president in
history by the anti-abortion movement, put whole bunch of babies in in cages and like
was allowed to do that.
And yet we cannot figure out how to make health care more accessible
and we're being asked to use a system that is fundamentally broken.
They did not fix voting rights.
They promised us if they had the White House Senate and Congress that they would do that, right?
They didn't.
And so you're asking us to rely on a broken tool.
That is impossible.
We've been voting.
At some point, we need you to do your fucking jobs.
Yeah, I will vote in November.
And I swear to God, if anybody comes to me and says that I'm adding to voter suppression.
Bitch, I am not Brian Kemp, okay?
I am saying I want you to vote and I need you to do something else in the meantime.
Well, I don't know are we allowed to say bitch on this podcast. Oh, we've been talking shit this whole episode.
My bad. Can I say one thing before we go just to everyone who's listening?
We need you so bad right now. We need. We to. We need to. We need to. We need to. We need to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to their their their their their their their the the the the the the the the the the the the the the toooan.i.i. tooananananan. to vote. we go just to everyone who's listening? We need you so bad right now.
We need you donating to your local abortion funds.
We need you donating to keep our clinics.org.
We need you sharing your abortion stories.
We need you knowing what the self-managed abortion protocol is.
It's either one Mifapristone pill and four myzoprostal pills 24 hours later,
or a series of 12 myesoprost pills every three hours, four of them each, right?
It's real simple. Know this information. Know how to get an abortion where your nearest
clinic is, because even if you think it's not something you'll need, someone you love
will need it.
Be ready to show up with them with love and support
and be ready to listen to their abortion stories
because honestly, this is all we've got in this moment.
It's really scary and we need everyone to take this so seriously
and we need to get involved.
And yes, go vote.
Yeah, and I'll say physicians, you're not agents of the state. We are going to be called to be to be to be to be to be to be to be to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to the the the the to the the the the the the the the the their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their the their the the the the the the the the thooooananananfoanananfoananananfoanananfoanananfoananananfoanananfoanananfoanananfoanfoan, you're not agents of the state. We are going to be called on
to be law enforcement and that is not your duty. Your duty is to care for your community.
I think that's as good a place to end it so we can all three of us get our blood pressure down just a bit.
I will say that this has been a great discussion. It has been an enriching discussion.
I hope to never talk to either of to to to to to to to to you to you you to you you you to you to you you you to you you to you you you to you you to to you you to of to of the of of of of of of you of you their their of of of you of of their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their the been a great discussion. It has been an enriching discussion. I hope to never talk to either of you again on this issue.
That is my hope.
Puppies.
You promised me puppies.
Puppies.
When you come back on the show, Dr. Morieri, Renee,
Renee Bracey Sherman.
Thank you both for going beyond the scenes with me this week. And I want that night, that's a the, thine, thine, thine, thine, thine, thine, thine, thine, thine, thine, thine, thine, thi, thi, thi, thi, thi, thi, tho, tho, tho, tho, tho, that, tho, tho, to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to th. I, I th. I, I th. I th. I th. I th. I th. I th. I thi, I thi, I thi, I thi, tho, the. I the. thooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo. I to to to to to to to me this week. Thank you so much for having. And I want that night, that's a nice shirt also Renee. I want one of those extra large ones. I can get one.
We got them. That's a wrap on season one of beyond the scene. Stay tuned over the next few weeks.
I'll be recapping some of my favorite moments over the past year. We're going beyond the
scenes. We're going beyond the scenes and beyond the scene. We're going to be on double beyond.
New episodes start back up in August,
and they will always be available wherever you get your podcast.