What A Day - Providing Abortions In Uncertain Times
Episode Date: May 6, 2022Abortion providers and advocates in several states have been scrambling to figure out how to process the fall out of the Supreme Court leak, what to tell patients, and how to still help them if the pr...ocedure is restricted where they are. Susan Braselton, who manages the clinic escort program for the Roe Fund in Oklahoma, joins us to discuss how her work has been affected by anti-abortion laws both in her state and others.And in headlines: Russian forces continued their assault on a steel plant in Mariupol, Amazon Labor Union's leader Chris Smalls testified in D.C., and Karine Jean-Pierre will be the first Black woman and the first out LGBTQ+ person to be a White House press secretary.Show Notes:Roe Fund of OKRCRC – https://www.roefund.org/Donate to abortion funds, take action and more via Vote Save America – votesaveamerica.com/roeFollow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/whataday/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It is Friday, May 6th. I'm Gideon Resnick.
And I'm Travelle Anderson, and this is What A Day,
the only podcast that is exactly the same in every Doctor Strange multiverse.
Yes, a little consistency is good. And for Doctor Strange, that consistency is what?
That is exactly right. You can ask Marvel yourselves.
By default, I guess we're part of the MCU right. You can ask Marvel yourselves. By default,
I guess we're part of the MCU now. I don't know, act accordingly.
On today's show, Ukrainians in the city of Mariupol continue to resist Russian forces.
Plus, President Biden's newest press secretary will be Karine Jean-Pierre,
the first Black woman and first out LGBTQ plus person to ever be in that role.
But first, let's do a roundup on the continuing fallout from this week's big news,
the leak of a draft decision by the Supreme Court saying it would overturn Roe v. Wade as early as
next month. In response to the news, Democratic Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer announced
yesterday that they'll vote next Wednesday on a law to codify abortion rights into federal law.
Next week's vote will be one of the most important we take, not only this session,
but in this century. This is not an abstract exercise. It's as real, it's as urgent as it gets.
Like my friend Patty Murray said, this is a five alarm fire,
and Republicans will not be able to hide from the horror they've unleashed on America. But Gideon, the bill itself, of course, is not expected to go far. Please tell the people why.
We were talking about Congress. Okay, so in all seriousness, it's called the Women's Health Protection Act of
2022. It would supersede any individual state's ban or severe restrictions on abortion. So in the
event that the Supreme Court does overturn Roe as the leak of that draft decision suggests it will,
then this law would preserve the right to access an abortion. But Democrats do not have the 60 votes
needed in the Senate to pass
it and break a filibuster, which remains because they're unwilling to also get rid of that. In fact,
the chamber held a procedural vote on an earlier version of the bill last February. That failed to
pass with just 46 senators voting for it, 48 against, and six not voting at all. Now, at the
same time, there is a different bill being discussed that could conceivably
get the support of additional senators, including Republicans Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski.
But it doesn't seem like there is a plan for that yet because, again, it does not seem
like it would hit the requisite votes they need.
Right.
So now why vote on that Women's Health Protection Act that also helps protect other people who aren't women who might also need this type of health protection?
Why are they looking to vote on it this coming Wednesday?
I mean, I think in truth, it's the only thing they can really do at this point.
You know, it is also to put pressure on Republicans who reportedly are just avoiding this issue, instead focusing on how that draft decision got leaked in the first place.
Obviously, the most important element of the story.
You know, for what it's worth, also overturning Roe has historically polled very poorly.
So I don't know if that is also playing into the thinking here.
But here is Schumer again speaking last Tuesday.
We will vote to protect a woman's right to choose,
and every American is going to see which side every senator stands.
You know, I kind of feel like we probably know just a little bit, you know, if the last few
weeks and months tell us anything. But meanwhile, the news of the Supreme Court leak has prompted
some state Republicans to draft new anti-abortion laws. Can you tell us a bit about a particularly
horrifying one that started
to make its way through Louisiana? Yeah, so on Wednesday, Republicans in the statehouse there
made progress on passing a bill to classify an abortion as homicide. Yikes. It would also let
prosecutors file criminal charges against patients. Abortion rights advocates were obviously quick to
sound the alarm here, with a representative from the state's ACLU saying that the proposed law would also define a fertilized egg before implantation as a person.
So that would mean even people who use in vitro fertilization and various kinds of birth control could be criminalized under these circumstances.
The bill, we should say, is not very far yet, Travell.
It only passed a committee vote and now heads to the state's full house for consideration.
And it should not be considered at all, but we will address that at a later point.
There are also a lot more ways that this week's news is trickling down to the local level.
Abortion providers and advocates in several states have been scrambling to figure out how to process this news, what to tell their patients, and how to still help them if the procedure is restricted where they are.
So today, we welcome one advocate, Susan Braselton.
She's a board member with the Roe Fund in Oklahoma, an organization that provides financial assistance to those seeking abortions in the state. She also manages the
clinic escort program where volunteers accompany patients to abortion clinics, often walking people
from their cars to the doors while protecting and shielding them from anti-abortion protesters
outside the building. And ever since Texas passed its own restrictive anti-abortion bill,
SB8, she's seen a dramatic uptick in the number
of patients coming from that state that her volunteers help. Susan, welcome to What A Day.
Thank you for having me. There are some people that are forward-thinking in Oklahoma,
and people of the world need to know that. There are some of us that are fighting for this.
So a lot of the discourse in this last week, at least, has been around the leaked opinion
from the Supreme Court. I'd love to know from you, what was your initial reaction
to the leaked draft opinion? It's appalling that one of our justices has that kind of a vision
of women, that he does not have the empathy or the compassion for women that need this kind of
freedom of their body. I mean,
imagine a rape victim whose freedom of their body has been taken away once.
And now you're telling me the government is going to take it away again? I can't even understand it.
And what have you been hearing from patients in the days following the leak about all of this?
Once the SB-8 went into effect, we had a jump and we went used to be about 20 patients a
day to 40 to 60 patients a day. And a lot of those were Texas plate. There are so many patients that
are so amazed that we have these mostly white men standing on the curb, yelling at patients,
bringing their wives or supplicant wives and their children with them to protest outside of an
abortion clinic.
They're like, why don't these people do some good? Why is it standing out on a street corner what they spend their lives doing? And so even the patients that are going through this are
really appalled at the people out on the curb. Yeah. And you're talking about sort of the scene
there. Has that gotten more intense or has the job gotten harder as a lot of these bills you're
talking about have been passed across the country? Ever since Trump got elected, it's gotten more
intense and more intense and more intense. I mean, we had a guy the other day, the woman was in tears
and he yells at her probably 30, 40 feet from the easement to the front of the clinic. He says,
you're just a murderer. And this woman's in tears already.
She didn't want to do it.
And he's yelling these awful things at her to try and make her feel even worse.
I mean, they bring up my dead husband and say that God took him early because God wants
to send me a message.
Wow.
It's cruel.
Oklahoma has passed its own couple anti-abortion bills in recent weeks.
One of them is similar to Texas's SB8 and bans abortions after six weeks.
Another makes performing the procedure a felony.
And we know that prior to the passage of those, Texans were coming to Oklahoma for abortions because of their state laws.
Can you talk a little bit more about kind of the cascading effect that these
state by state laws can have? It's going to make it harder and harder and harder for poor women to
access that kind of services because rich women are going to be able to go to different states.
You know, California is codified it. Colorado has. It's going to be a problem for those that
don't have the money to take off from work,
to get childcare, to afford gas, to drive 10 hours. I mean, we had one of our patients a
couple of weeks ago had gotten off her shift at one in the morning, got in her car, drove to
Oklahoma from Dallas, a five-hour drive to be there in time for her 8 a.m. appointment.
And then the process was, it goes from like eight to two o a.m. appointment. And then the process goes from
like 8 to 2 o'clock in the afternoon. And then she got in the car and drove back to Texas.
And she's doing this and still didn't have all of the money to be able to afford that abortion
in Oklahoma. We have people that are out on the curb in the parking lot pooling our money to make
up the difference from what these women don't have. We've had representatives, our clinic escorts drive women home that have taken a taxi
in from some small town, Oklahoma. We have taken families to and purchased day rooms at hotels
so the families don't have to sit in the parking lot at the abortion clinic. So we have different
people doing different things that are trying to make
it easier for the patient because it's not just the patient that's affected, but they're affected
the most. But then if they don't have anybody to drive them or if they don't have a car or they
don't have money for gas, I mean, you know, a lot of them will have like a flat tire on the way to
the clinic or, you know, there's all kinds of hoops that they have to jump through,
not only because the legislature made it that way, but also because poverty and not having
the means to do these things because they're stuck in this poverty and having another child
is not going to get them out of that poverty either. Yeah. So given this very real possibility,
right, that Roe is going to be overturned. We like to ask folks who
are engaged in the type of work that you are, like, where do you find hope as all of this stuff
is going on? What keeps you going doing the work that you're doing? I know what I'm doing is right.
I know that I get stopped on the street corner and saying, I remember you from Tulsa Women's Clinic. And I
remember that you smiled at me when I pulled into the parking lot and you were doing a little dance
and that made everything okay. I mean, my daughter gets upset because if we're out at the mall or
whatever, people will stop me and say, I really appreciated what you did. I will go into the
clinic at the end of my shift and I will say to the patients
that are still sitting in the waiting room, I'll say, you don't have to stop for the people that
are on the curb. And then by that time they know that because they've been in. But I also say,
you know, everybody, y'all have a great day. Some people need the reinforcement that the decision
they're making is right for them. If they're really upset, I'll tell them, I'll say, they
don't have anything to offer you. The guys that are screaming from the curb,
you are making the right decision for your life and just remember that. And so I know that I mean
something to those people. And I might not remember all of them, but they all remember me.
Susan Brazelton is a board member of the Row Fund in Oklahoma. Susan,
thank you so much for your generous time. We really appreciate it.
Thank you. I'm glad I could help. We've got to be hopeful.
There's a lot of people out here fighting this fight, and we're going to continue to fight the fight.
So thank you very much for adding to that.
Thank you.
Thank you.
I appreciate it.
We'll have links to her organization and her work in our show notes so you can support
them directly.
In the meantime, we've been asking listeners to share their own stories about how Roe has
helped them and what it would mean if
it were overturned. We've had over 100 responses so far, and they truly illustrate why abortion
access is so important and how these bills and the potential Supreme Court ruling are already
impacting people. One person wrote to us, I just accepted a job in Georgia, but I am considering turning down the offer to ensure
my health care. Greatest country in the world. The best one they told us, okay? And then another
person shared with us this story about their pregnancy. At my 12-week appointment, the tech
grew somber and got the doctor. Worst feeling I've ever had. They couldn't find a
heartbeat and I was broken. I was given the option to wait for my body to eventually expel it or have
a DNC, which is a type of abortion procedure. I chose the DNC for my mental health. It was the
hands down worst moments and days of my life. If I lived in any of the states who will ban abortion, I wouldn't have
been given the choice. My heart hurts for the trauma women will be forced to endure.
Yeah, trauma is a good word for that story and for what we're talking about here in general. So I
think it's very important to hear that. So thank everybody for sharing your stories. We do want to
keep hearing from you. You can DM us on Instagram. We have been reading every single one.
So thank you so much again
for all of that forthrightness
and bravery in there.
And in our show notes,
we'll have links to organizations
that you can help support
as they work to keep abortion accessible.
More on all of this very soon,
but that is the latest for now. Let's get to some headlines. In Ukraine, Russian forces continued their
nonstop assault on a steel plant in the southern city of Mariupol. Several thousand Ukrainian
fighters as well as hundreds of civilians have taken refuge
in the complex as a last stand against the invaders. Russia is reportedly using tens of
thousands of soldiers there in order to take the city by Monday, May 9th. That is Victory Day,
a symbolic holiday for Russia because it marked the Nazis' defeat in World War II. But hitting
that due date might be easier said than done. In a recent interview
with the Associated Press, Belarus's President Alexander Lukashenko, who is a staunch ally of
Putin, said he didn't expect the 10-week invasion to, quote, drag on this way. Meanwhile, the New
York Times reports that the U.S. may have been lending a hand to the resistance as well. A story
published yesterday said that the U.S. has been sharing intel with Ukraine so that Ukrainians can
target and kill Russian generals.
About a dozen generals have died so far, a number which the Times says has, quote, astonished military analysts.
But when Pentagon officials were asked about it, they didn't confirm or deny that intel had been shared.
I feel like that's the response to everything.
They're just doing their job, Gideon. Amazon labor unions leader Chris Smalls testified in D.C. yesterday,
leading to what was almost definitely the first appearance of a jacket reading
Eat the Rich on the floor of the U.S. Senate.
Smalls spoke about Amazon's treatment of workers in a hearing called by Senate Budget Committee Chair Bernie Sanders
as part of his push to end federal contracts with companies who have been accused of unfair labor practices.
Here's part of what Smalls said to Senator Lindsey Graham.
You forgot that the people are the ones who make these companies operate.
And if we're not protected, and if the process for when we hold these companies accountable is not working for us,
then that's the reason why we're here today.
That's the reason why I'm here to represent the workers who make these companies go.
Shout out to the workers.
As we've mentioned on the show before, Smalls helped to successfully organize the first
U.S. union in Amazon company history on Staten Island.
The recent vote at a second facility did not go in the union's favor.
Later on, Smalls and a number of other labor organizers met with President Biden,
Vice President Harris, and Secretary of Labor Marty Walsh, which we can take as an implicit
promise that they'll send coffee and donuts to you if your workplace decides to strike.
According to the New York Times, Smalls asked Biden to press Amazon to recognize the union and begin the process of collective bargaining.
Yeah, to be clear, the eat the rich jacket is real.
I wish that we could show it to you, but I encourage people to look it up.
And Chris, if you were listening, I asked if you would tell us if the president commented on your outfit.
We will take answers at any point over the next few days to weeks. I must know.
We now know who will
accept the highest profile job that
involves being tormented by Steve Doocy.
Green Jean-Pierre
was selected as President Biden's next
press secretary yesterday, setting her up
to be the first black woman and the first
out LGBTQ plus person
to hold that position.
Jean-Pierre currently serves as the White House's
principal deputy press secretary, but she's going to take over for current press secretary Jen Psaki
next week. Psaki said of her successor yesterday, quote, she is passionate, she is smart,
and she has a moral core that makes her not just a great colleague, but an amazing mom and human.
Jean-Pierre has been a part of Biden's administration since the start, and before
that served as the chief of staff on Vice President Kamala Harris's presidential
campaign, and also worked in the Obama White House and on his presidential campaigns as well.
Here she is speaking about her appointment yesterday and its significance.
I'm still processing it because, as Jen said at the top, this is a historic moment and it's not lost on me. I
understand how important it is for so many people out there, so many different communities that I
stand on their shoulders and I have been throughout my career. And so it is an honor and a privilege
to be behind this podium. Giving us an answer to the question,
what if the newspaper was spiteful? Facebook responded to threats to its information dominance
by taking away all the information in Australia. That's according to a new whistleblower report
in the Wall Street Journal. The report says that in early 2021, when Australia was set to approve
a law forcing platforms like Facebook to pay for news content,
the site purposefully pulled down important pages that were not news content,
including ones that belong to hospitals, emergency services, charities, and even the Australian national government.
Oh, my God.
This was reportedly part of a hardball negotiating tactic, which we can call the
you're gonna miss me when I'm gone strategy, all right?
When it succeeded and Australia settled
on a watered down version of the law,
the scheme was celebrated internally
with Facebook's head of partnerships
writing in an email, quote,
we landed exactly where we wanted to
and that was only possible
because this team was genius enough
to pull it
off in zero time why would you write that why would you ever facebook chiefs mark zuckerberg
and cheryl sandberg apparently sent kind words to meanwhile everyday australians had seen an
important site connecting them to information and services become non-functional overnight
hopefully at the very least they were still able to log on and be confronted by, quote,
Facebook memories in the form of photos from nine years ago that they hoped to never see
again.
In response to the Wall Street Journal's report, a spokesperson for Meta, which owns
Facebook, described the restriction of Australian government pages as the result of a
technical error that was quickly fixed. Definitely quickly fixed. Definitely no
conversation about what had happened either. I feel like if you're running a company and there
have been multiple whistleblower reports in the last year and change or so. It doesn't speak so highly to what you're doing.
But aren't these like tech people?
Aren't you like supposed to go on like Signal or, you know, one of the other encrypted apps,
right?
Like what's happening here?
Use ProtonMail, you know, go talk in person.
I don't understand it.
There's always tons and tons of records of people being like, yeah, we did the thing.
Anyway, that's truly crazy.
Those are the headlines.
We'll be back after some ads with our expert analysis of this year's inductees into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
It's Friday, WOD Squad.
And for today's Temp Check, we are discussing what many 50-something men who have a room in their house called a den consider to be the world's highest honor, induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
Earlier this week, the 2022 class was announced.
Here are the seven acts that will make it in. Pat Benatar,
Duran Duran, Eminem,
Eurythmics, Lionel Richie, Carly
Simon, and controversially, Dolly Parton,
who, you may remember, initially
opposed her own nomination
on the grounds that she felt she was not
rock and roll enough.
Mrs. Parton, I hope that this isn't rude,
that I am not speaking out of turn,
but you may have no idea how rock and roll you truly are. Some of the bands that this isn't rude, that I am not speaking out of turn, but you may have no idea
how rock and roll you truly are. Some of the bands that were nominated this year but not inducted
include Dionne Warwick, a tribe called Quest and Rage Against the Machine. They'll have plenty more
chances to make their way into the hall. So Travelle, how are you reacting to this year's
honorees? I really just love the fact that Doy parton doesn't think she's rock and roll enough when we're all looking on like hey girl you helped pay for covet vaccine research that feels badass
to me i don't know right right meanwhile like eminem presumably is just like yeah okay cool
thank you you know like there's there's no other commentary i will say there's always i love the
the reading of the names always
because you always get like three in
and you're like, make sense, make sense, make sense.
And you're like, Eminem.
It's like a real like, oh, okay.
Shout out to Lionel Richie though.
He deserves icon status.
That's fun.
I like that a lot.
Yeah, the Dolly thing is fun.
Have you ever had even a nomination
for an award that you said, you know, from the jump, hey, this is great, but it's not for me? Give me my things. But I do understand if you feel like you don't qualify.
I understand being like, you know what?
No, thank you.
Give it to somebody else who does qualify.
Okay.
And you?
What about you?
No, I've never been offered an award, nor been in contention for an award.
I would accept it as well.
What we've learned from this is that
Travelle deserves to be in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
Period.
Yes.
Either way.
Me, you know, we'll discuss at a later date.
You can present the award to me, Gideon.
I can present the award.
We solved it.
That's how it's going to work.
I actually think that fits perfectly.
Just like that, we have checked our temps. They
are rocking and rolling. Period.
Because we're in the Hall of Fame. And that's it.
That is all for today. If you liked the show, make sure you subscribe,
leave a review, write Eat the Rich on your own
jacket, and tell your friends to listen.
And if you are into reading and not just unblocked status updates from australian hospitals like me what a day is also a
nightly newsletter check it out and subscribe at cricket.com slash subscribe i'm trevelle anderson
i'm gideon resnick and thanks for tuning in dr strange yes as you fight across many universes
and times or whatever yeah you're busy. You got a lot going on.
I'm just glad that we are able to provide you
the news every single morning.
That's the least we can do
to contribute to you saving
the world. Thank you so much.
Yeah. Thank you. What a Day is a production of Crooked Media.
It's recorded and mixed by Bill Lance.
Jazzy Marine and Raven Yamamoto are our associate producers.
Our head writer is John Milstein,
and our executive producers are Leo Duran and me, Gideon Resnick.
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