The state has one of the country’s highest maternal mortality rates. Now, three hospitals plan to stop delivering babies, putting some pregnant women at even higher risk.

  • @teejay
    link
    31 year ago

    Did you read the article? This won’t affect the rich, white, affluent people in Alabama. It’s going to affect predominantly poor, black communities in Shelby and Monroe counties. These communities already lacked sufficient access to prenatal and postnatal care, and now it’s getting much worse. Nearly 40% of Alabaman voters (roughly 1,000,000 people) vote democrat, skewing heavily towards poor and minority communities which these policies disproportionately (and some might argue intentionally) harm.

    But sure, take the easy cheap shot and vilify an entire state of people as if it’s one giant big bad guy, then joke that it’s better to be dead than from there. You say you spent years living near the border, so I’m tempted to follow your lead and make a cheap joke about the education you must have received to think it’s better to be dead than from a specific area of the USA. But I was born and raised on that border between AL and FL, and I’m capable of wrapping my head around the wild, liberal idea that states are not monolithic entities that take the shape of big bad guys to make easy jokes for you. Alabama, like all states, is full of all kinds of different people trying to live their lives, and they deserve our compassion and our energy to try to make things better, not jokes that they’re better off dead because they were born there.

    I’m ashamed that you and I spent time in the same area of the country. I’m hoping you don’t consider yourself liberal or a democrat, because your simple way of thinking is anything but those things.