"From a nation slowly forgetting itself".
Once upon a time, in the heart of the United States, six Republican men, dressed in pressed jackets and wearing antiquated smiles, decided to play God. Not in the heavens, but in the House of Representatives of South Carolina. There, they introduced a bill demanding nothing less than this: death for those who seek an abortion.
They call it the “South Carolina Prenatal Equal Protection Act”—a clinically sterile name for a moralist manifesto. In this document, the end of a pregnancy is no longer viewed as a medical decision or a human tragedy, but as murder. And those who murder, they say, must die. That’s how the criminal code reads, and that’s precisely what these six Republican lawmakers want:
Rep. Rob Harris
Rep. Josiah Magnuson
Rep. David Vaughan
Rep. Jordan Pace
Rep. Thomas Beach
Rep. Bill Taylor
All six have placed their names beneath a law that allows no exceptions, not for rape, not for incest, not even for threats to the woman’s own life. It is the most radical expression of an idea not rooted in protection, but in control.
They claim they want to protect “unborn life.” But in truth, what they’re protecting is the system that grants them power, the patriarchal corset of religion, law, and fear. Their bill is not an act of justice. It is a weapon. And it is aimed not at criminals, but at those who dare to shape their own futures.
What began as a debate about the sanctity of life has become a sentence against female autonomy. A woman’s womb is transformed into state property; her choice, a criminal offense. The language may be technocratic, but the spirit is medieval. This is the return of the burning stake - now electric, clinical, and legal.
“The Party told you to reject the evidence of your eyes and ears. It was their final, most essential command.”
So, too, in South Carolina, a new truth is being constructed, one in which the embryo is a citizen and the woman a subject. A world where judges no longer temper justice with mercy, but carry out sentences like executioners in the service of the law.
And yet, while Harris, Magnuson, Vaughan, Pace, Beach, and Taylor sign their names beneath this charter of control, the whisper of resistance is rising elsewhere. Because the truth cannot be silenced - even with the threat of death.
What these six Republicans demand is not rule of law but religious authoritarianism. It is a vision of the United States where punishment outweighs compassion, where fear of women exceeds love for humanity.
And so the question is no longer what women are allowed to do in South Carolina, but what a democracy is allowed to do to itself before it ceases to be one.
For at the end of this road lies no defense of life, only its institutional destruction. And if history teaches us anything, it is this: those who try to preserve life through cruelty will lose both - life and liberty.
Gibt es hierzu schon Neuigkeiten?