Lubbock County, Texas, joins a group of other rural Texas counties that have voted to ban women from using their roads to seek abortions.

This comes after six cities and counties in Texas have passed abortion-related bans, out of nine that have considered them. However, this ordinance makes Lubbock the biggest jurisdiction yet to pass restrictions on abortion-related transportation.

During Monday’s meeting, the Lubbock County Commissioners Court passed an ordinance banning abortion, abortion-inducing drugs and travel for abortion in the unincorporated areas of Lubbock County, declaring Lubbock County a “Sanctuary County for the Unborn.”

The ordinance is part of a continued strategy by conservative activists to further restrict abortion since the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade as the ordinances are meant to bolster Texas’ existing abortion ban, which allows private citizens to sue anyone who provides or “aids or abets” an abortion after six weeks of pregnancy.

The ordinance, which was introduced to the court last Wednesday, was passed by a vote of 3-0 with commissioners Terence Kovar, Jason Corley and Jordan Rackler, all Republicans, voting to pass the legislation while County Judge Curtis Parrish, Republican, and Commissioner Gilbert Flores, Democrat, abstained from the vote.

  • @Coffeemonkepants
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    2811 year ago

    This is incredibly fucked up. Handmaid’s tale was a documentary.

    • worldwidewave
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      1471 year ago

      Get ready for highway checkpoints for pregnant women, coming to a red state near you.

      • partial_accumen
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        761 year ago

        “I noticed your had a license plate light out, Ma’am. Please get out of the car and pee on this test strip.”

        • @[email protected]
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          281 year ago

          “No, ma’am, right here in public while I watch. We need to make sure, that the liquid on the strip is in fact your pee…”

      • @agent_flounder
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        351 year ago

        Complete with fences, barbed wire and “papers, please”

    • @Astrealix
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      601 year ago

      Atwood specifically called it speculative fiction, because everything written in there had happened already in some other form.