"ACLU Effect" = Rise in Abortions and Street Murders (Hake News, Weds. 7/15/20)
Hake News, Wednesday, July 15, 2020
End of Hour 1: Telemedicine abortion gets green light from Obama judge. “Heartbeat law” ruled “unconstitutional.”
End of Hour 2: No charges for criminal headlock on officer! Stops and searches plummet in Minneapolis, as murders rise.
After JLP, catch The Hake Report.
End of Hour 1, Weds, Jul 15, 2020
Stay tuned for Hour 2.
Women’s Forum TOMORROW?? That’s the plan!
Telemedicine Abortion Gets Green Light From Court…
Plus: the "Heartbeat law" was ruled unconstitutional
(Drudge / Reason) A federal court ruled Monday that women seeking abortion pills during the COVID-19 pandemic should not have to visit a doctor in order to obtain them.
Under current rules set by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), non-surgical abortion— i.e., the kind that's induced by pharmaceuticals, not physicians—still requires patients to visit a hospital, doctor's office, or medical clinic to be prescribed the abortion drugs, even though a patient will go through the process at home.
Scientific Mumbo-Jumbo
"A medical or medication abortion uses two drugs to terminate a pregnancy," (WHICH IS A EUPHEMISM FOR KILLING THE CHILD AND REMOVING THE BOY OR GIRL FROM THE BODY). The dishonest euphemism and explanation is in a new report, "Prescription Denied: Accessing the Abortion Pill," from the apparently far-left outlet Newsy.
The first of these pills, mifepristone, "blocks a hormone to induce the abortion [i.e. kill the baby]. The second drug, misoprostol, completes it by expelling the pregnancy [i.e. removing the dead body]. But mifepristone, which for medication abortion goes by the brand name Mifeprex, is among the most restricted drugs in the U.S. which makes it challenging to get. … the Food and Drug Administration imposes tighter restrictions on Mifeprex than on opioids such as fentanyl." RIGHTLY SO, IT’S MORE DEADLY THAN FENTANYL! IT’S MEANT TO KILL THE BABY EVERY TIME!
Far-left liberal activists
An organization called the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG), [Gynecology deals with the female reproductive organs, and Obstetrics deals with childbirth...or child-killing, I guess?], another organization misnomered the National Women's Health Network (NWHN), and other groups have been pushing the FDA to revise its rules so that abortion “patients” can see “doctors” via telemedical appointments and then receive their pills in the mail.
"If the laws and regulations that determine the terms of abortion access in the United States were based on science—not politics—medication abortion would be widely available in the United States without medically unnecessary restrictions on distribution," states an open letter signed by a range of so-called physicians and health and advocacy groups. THAT’S RICH. SCIENCE SAYS YOU’RE KILLING A BABY.
Obama judge
On Monday, U.S. District Judge Theodore Chuang (Obama judge, born to Taiwanese immigrants) seemed to be in agreement with these advocates and doctors, writing in his decision that "in-person requirements" for abortion pills present a "substantial obstacle" to patients and are likely unconstitutional. LOL, THAT IS EVIL.
(BTW: This same “judge” Theodore Chuang in March 2017, in Greenbelt, MD, was one of the judges who blocked President Trump’s travel ban Executive Order 13780, reasoning like other far-left liberal judges that the executive order was likely motivated by anti-Muslim sentiment and thus breached the Establishment Clause of the United States Constitution.)
The judge issued a preliminary injunction blocking enforcement of the FDA's rules on mifepristone for abortions until at least 30 days after the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services declares an end to our current public health emergency.
Un-American ACLU (and “doctors”)
"We look forward to a day when federal reproductive health care policy is grounded in science, not animus, and this medically baseless requirement is lifted once and for all," said Julia Kaye, a staff attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union's (ACLU — TOLD YOU THEY WERE COMMIES!) Reproductive Freedom Project, in a statement.
The lawsuit challenging the FDA's rules on abortion drugs was filed by the ACLU on behalf of the AGOC ( and other groups.
ACOG President Eva Chalas (a so-called doctor woman) was happy that they can kill babies more conveniently, without worrying about Covid.
Heartbeat law “unconstitutional”
In other abortion-related rulings released yesterday, a federal court has declared Georgia's "heartbeat law" unconstitutional. The law, passed last year, banned abortion at the point that any fetal cardiac activity could be detected, which occurs just a few weeks into pregnancy.
End of Hour 2, Weds, Jul 15, 2020
Stay tuned for Hour 3. After JLP, catch The Hake Report.
Women’s Forum tomorrow night!?
Punish cops not criminals!
UPDATE: No Charges Against Man Who Put NYPD Officer In Headlock…
(Drudge / CBSNewYork, July 12) — JLP’s shown Cellphone video showing an NYPD officer being put in a headlock by a male he was attempting to arrest in the Bronx.
The suspect in that video has not yet been charged by the Bronx District Attorney’s Office, reportedly, as of Sunday.
It all started over a car being illegally parked in front of a fire hydrant on Morris Avenue back on July 1.
The NYPD said officers asked 31-year-old Franklin Adrian to move his car multiple times. When he refused, two officers placed him under arrest, but he resisted.
There were many onlookers and the NYPD said one of them, 29-year-old Wisnel Manzueta (a known gang member), refused to step back.
When police tried to take him into custody, as a video on social media purports to show, Manzueta punches the officer and puts him in a headlock. The crowd cheered.
The NYPD said the officer suffered abrasions and lacerations to the face and head.
A spokesperson for the Bronx district attorney said Manzueta turned himself in Wednesday and gave detectives video of the incident.
Manzueta also complained of injuries from the incident and was taken to a hospital.
Bill de Blasio tweeted lip service about violence against cops.
Police had recommended he be charged with second-degree assault, but a spokesperson for the Bronx district attorney said right now the case has been deferred for more investigation.
Meanwhile, officers in New York state can now be arrested under a new law for placing a suspect in a chokehold, and legislation awaits Mayor Bill de Blasio’s signature that will criminalize other restraint methods.
The NYPD said it is also disappointed that Manzueta hasn’t been charged and is having conversations with the Bronx DA about the case.
Stops and Searches by Minneapolis Cops Plummet…
(Drudge / Wash. Free Beacon) The decline in searches mirrors, and might contribute to, an explosion of so-called gun violence. (In Chicago this was called the ACLU Effect!)
Charles Fain Lehman writes: The embattled Minneapolis Police Department has mostly ceased stopping and searching residents of the city, as resources are stretched thin by anti-cop protests and surging gun violence.
Official data released by the MPD show that cumulative stops fell 36 percent in the week after George Floyd's death at the hands of three officers, sparking nationwide protests. That trend has persisted—over the week between July 6 and July 12, MPD officers made just 193 stops, down 77 percent from the same week in 2019.
Stops involving searches of people or their vehicles have also plummeted. MPD conducted just 20 over the week of July 12, and 11 the week before—87 and 90 percent declines, respectively, from the preceding year.
Such stops and searches are thought to play a critical, albeit controversial, role in keeping criminals and deadly firearms off the street—an analogous decline drove up homicide in Chicago. As such, the drop-off in searches may be fueling the ongoing violence.
There’s been an unprecedented spate of shootings in the weeks since Floyd's death.
In the lead-up to Floyd's death on May 25, Minneapolis police regularly stopped and searched residents and their vehicles. In the preceding two full weeks, for example, there were 263 stops involving searches, compared to 196 the preceding year. BUT NOT AFTERWARD!
The MPD, a department with some 800 officers, conducted fewer than three searches per day in the most recent week available.
That decline occurred across the three major categories of stops—suspicious person, suspicious vehicle, and traffic law enforcement
"Officers are busy responding to an increase in violence and 911 calls," MPD public information director John Elder said by email. A VICIOUS CIRCLE!
The ACLU Effect
An analysis by University of Utah professors Paul Cassell and Richard Fowles found an “ACLU Effect” — in Chicago in 2016, a murder wave coincided with a significant reduction in stops by the Chicago P.D., caused by a settlement with the ACLU.
Cassel has speculated that Minnepolis has a similar “ACLU Effect” — evil liberals complain stop-and-frisk is racially biased — because so is crime.
After JLP, catch The Hake Report.