Alabama IVF Ruling: How to Stop the Attacks on Infertility Treatments & Reproductive Health with Jessica Yellin
March 7, 2024
Glennon Doyle:
Welcome to, We Can Do Hard Things. We will be doing hard, important things today. Today we are so lucky to have Jessica Yellin here. I know for me and a lot of people, we have been so correctly focused on what’s going on in Gaza that some of us may have lost track of what’s going on here. We have some really important things that we need to pay attention to that are happening politically and legally in our country. And today Jessica Yellin, who always helps us stay clear and grounded and explains things so beautifully, is here to help us wade through that and tell us exactly what we need to know on reproductive justice and many other things in this country, so let’s jump in.
Amanda Doyle:
Jessica Yellin is the founder of News Not Noise, a pioneering Webby award-winning independent news brand. Over one million subscribers and followers across Instagram and other digital media rely on Jessica and News Not Noise to understand what matters, which experts to trust, and to manage their information overload. She’s the former Chief White House correspondent for CNN and an Emmy and Gracie Award-winning political correspondent for ABC, MSNBC and CNN. Please follow her on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook @jessicayellin. You can also find the invaluable News Not Noise newsletter on Substack. Yes.
Jessica Yellin:
Hi.
Glennon Doyle:
It’s so good to see your face.
Jessica Yellin:
How is everyone? I haven’t seen you all for so long.
Glennon Doyle:
Jessica, so someone on my team was trying to make sure they got your name pronounced right. I told them that before we were friends, which we’re friends now, the way I remembered your name was that I used to always say, “It’s Jessica, the only one who’s not Yellin.”
Jessica Yellin:
Yelling. That’s funny. Thank you.
Glennon Doyle:
So, here she is. Jessica, not Yellin.
Jessica Yellin:
I know. I tried to figure out a way to play up Yellin, but it’s literally the inverse of what I do. My whole brand is not noise. So how is my last name noisy? I don’t know.
Glennon Doyle:
Isn’t that funny? It’s so funny.
Jessica Yellin:
Yeah, right.
Glennon Doyle:
Okay, get started. I know, sister, you’re ready to pounce in here.
Amanda Doyle:
What we’re talking about is the recent Alabama Supreme Court decision, which Jessica is going to walk us through that effectively, if not directly stopped IVF, in vitro fertilization in Alabama and all of the implications of the snowball that will bring to us. Thank you, Jessica, because we reached out to you a few days ago and you just were so willing to jump on with all of your research and analysis. And it’s so helpful because this is overwhelming. It’s such a deeply, deeply personal thing and also such a patently political public thing that we just need to understand what it is. Could you walk us through, first of all just what the Alabama ruling was?
Jessica Yellin:
Yes. Okay, I want to say one thing before we start, which is, a lot of times when freedoms have been rolled back recently, I will hear from audience members shocked and horrified that this has happened and saying they had no idea this was even possible and why has no one stepped in to stop this. And so before we get into this conversation, I think it’s kind of helpful to say to everyone listening, this is your alert, your warning. You are being made aware now that these rights are on the line. And if you care, this is the time to learn and get engaged. What happened is the Alabama Supreme Court heard a case that related to a situation in an IVF clinic where a patient walked into where the frozen embryos were and it was vandalism basically, picked up some frozen embryo tubes or whatever and dropped it on the floor. And those frozen embryos were destroyed. The patients whose embryos were destroyed sued claiming this was wrongful death of embryos.
And the state Supreme Court agreed. And in the decision held that frozen embryos, unimplanted, have the same rights as living children under state law. The people who dropped the embryos can be found guilty of wrongful death. Now, he also said in the ruling, I’m going to quote, “All human beings bear the image of God and their lives cannot be destroyed without effacing his glory.”
Amanda Doyle:
Oh my God.
Jessica Yellin:
And he called the embryos extrauterine children. Now, I want to say one thing before we go into a whole conversation we can have about other implications and fetal personhood, this movement. The ruling is a little bit vague. It doesn’t actually say … This isn’t a criminal case. It doesn’t firmly assert that unborn children can’t be destroyed, but it creates a lot of chaos, confusion and is a first step to asserting fetal personhood.
Amanda Doyle:
Yes. And this was based on, and this hearkens back to Comstock, which I’m sure we’re talking about, but a 100-year-old law that basically said that parents, if their kids were hurt or killed by others, they had the ability to sue those people. They’re saying embryos count as people, parents can count these as people under that law.
Jessica Yellin:
For civil damages. In other words, the parents can sue them for money, but the state won’t sue the person who dropped the embryos for murder-
Amanda Doyle:
Yet.
Jessica Yellin:
Won’t charge them with murder.
Amanda Doyle:
Yet.
Jessica Yellin:
Yet. Right, exactly.
Amanda Doyle:
There’s obviously so many implications of this that are a week, a month, a year, five years down the road. But the immediate impact as of that week and the next week on people who were desperately trying to conceive, what was the immediate impact in Alabama on those clinics?
Jessica Yellin:
Three fertility clinics in Alabama announced that they are halting all IVF services. If you’re in the middle of doing your shots or you have your frozen embryo and it’s ready to be implanted, total pause, shut down. And for people who are in the middle of this, they’re getting injections, there’s all sorts of problems. I happened to interview, it’s in my most recent newsletter, a woman, Elizabeth Goldman, who moved to Alabama to have a uterine transplant and conceive in her uterine transplant via IVF. She was born without a uterus and they gave her one. She’s in the middle of this and it’s now on pause for her too. That’s both a health concern because she’s on immunosuppressant drugs to make sure that she doesn’t reject that uterus, can’t do that indefinitely. And she’s also upended her whole life for this and desperate to have a child this way, another child, and doesn’t know what the future holds.
Glennon Doyle:
Jessica, why does this ruling saying they can sue stop IVF for everyone else?
Jessica Yellin:
Good question. Okay, here’s what … I’m going to first read to you what the University of Alabama at Birmingham, that’s where this woman’s IVF was frozen. They said, “We have to evaluate the potential that our patients and our physicians could be prosecuted criminally or face punitive damages.” Because the court already said that you can be sued for punitive damages, and we don’t know how much. Destroying a life could be millions. And then maybe some enterprising prosecutor will try to sue criminally because there’s a whole movement trying to advance this stuff. It just pushes us into this realm of the total unknown where really anybody can experiment here and the medical system is frozen in fear.
Amanda Doyle:
Because you can’t run a business, you can’t run a medical facility if you face unlimited perpetual liability. Are you going to sign up to work at that facility when you know if there’s some kind of accident, or if the power goes out and the embryos are unfrozen that you will be sued? You can’t get insurance for that. It’s not saying IVF clinics have to close, but it is defacto saying they do because there’s no way to continue in that limitless liability place.
Jessica Yellin:
Well, here’s one of the many bizarre ridiculous things, which is after this happened all the very conservative lawmakers who were cheering this started hearing that this is going to pause IVF, and they’re like, “Oh wait, no, we want more kids.” Even Senator Tuberville was like, “This is a great ruling and more children.” And the reporter’s like, “No, it means less children for IVF patients.” He’s like, “Oh?” Now they’re trying to introduce a bill that will protect IVF but allow for fetal personhood, which makes no sense. Now everybody’s tied in knots. It’s just a situation of total uncertainty, right? Anti-abortion rights people don’t even know what to do next on this.
Amanda Doyle:
Yes, that’s such a good point, because 78% of pro-life people, people who are, I am pro-life, 78% of them support IVF. I mean, they are really running up against that. And I love Senator Tuberville’s quote, which was like when he said, “Oh no more kids, we want more kids. I’m glad that this ruling came down.” And then they were like, “What about the fact that this will mean less kids?” And he said, “No, no, no, no. That’s a separate question. This is about abortion.”
Jessica Yellin:
He doesn’t understand how it works.
Amanda Doyle:
But I think he does understand. He knows that the Personhood Movement is all about abortion and has nothing to do with IVF. And IVF is just an unfortunate casualty in the Personhood Movement, which is intent on taking away any right to abortion.
Jessica Yellin:
And it has so many other implications. If they decide that this is a life, the fetal Personhood Movement can go in a lot more directions. I interviewed Mary Ziegler, she’s an amazing legal historian, and she writes about fetal personhood. She’s like, “They could criminalize ill-advised, but not illegal behavior like drinking while pregnant if you have a miscarriage.” This could also lead to limits on banning IUDs, birth control, the morning after pill. Taking it further you could even criminalize the birth control pill because if denying implantation is murder, then taking the pill is murder in that conception and one could in theory be prosecuted for the pill. The list goes on. We could get into it, but it’s very hard to defend all that and then say, “But on the other hand, IVF is protected,” which is what a lot of Republican lawmakers are trying to do now, because politically so many people are upset about the threat to IVF. I mean, it’s created a political box for the far right.
Amanda Doyle:
Yes.
Glennon Doyle:
It sure has because they’re saying, “Women who do not want to be pregnant have to be pregnant, and women who want to be pregnant have to not be pregnant.”
Jessica Yellin:
You have a way of saying things. Yes, correct.
Amanda Doyle:
It’s ridiculous.
Glennon Doyle:
Yeah, “We love life so much that we are going to prevent it from occurring. We want to protect it so bad that we’ll make sure it doesn’t happen,” is what they’re doing with the IVF thing. Okay. Can you explain Personhood as a movement? Because I think we’ve been talking about a bunch, but explain why anti-choice activists have focused so much on this way of thinking, this legal structure, to establish personhood as early as possible. And this is as early as I’ve ever heard of it.
Jessica Yellin:
Yeah, so the concept of legal personhood is that a fetus has the same rights and protections as a person. This could criminalize miscarriage, it could criminalize anything that even prevents implantation. Some go as far as saying, “A fertilized egg has rights and that blocking implantation itself is criminal,” which is why some in the movement oppose IUDs and other forms of birth control, the morning after pill. On the restrictive end, as I said, it could end access to IUDs, birth control, morning after. More restrictive would prosecute people for those things. And then the most restrictive version has some advocating prosecuting someone for possible murder if they miscarry, even requiring investigations of miscarriages.
That sort of the practical implications, you asked what this comes from? And there’s this larger movement, a Christian conservative movement, that believes that the Bible should inform how policy is made in the country. They say, here’s some of the language, “We need to address major policy concerns from a biblical worldview.” You’ve heard about the Federalist Society, which is a more intellectual, not religiously extreme in this way. This is a much more religious version of that. And both the speaker of the house, Mike Johnson, has ties to this movement and Justice Amy Coney Barrett.
Glennon Doyle:
Of course she does.
Amanda Doyle:
Who in her… It’s eerie going back to her confirmation hearings where they asked specifically about IVF and she refused to answer that question. I mean that’s-
Glennon Doyle:
How could we have known? How could we have known?
Amanda Doyle:
… being crazy and irrational and it will never come to that. And of course it did. And this is not even theoretical. In Alabama in 2013, the Supreme Court said that pregnant people could be prosecuted for child abuse if things happen during their pregnancy.
Jessica Yellin:
Alabama is the state that more than any other state prosecutes pregnant people for drug use. They’re already, I don’t want to say leading on this, but that is correct.
Glennon Doyle:
And if you’re a person who’s like, well, they’re doing drugs, it’ll extend past that. It’ll be like you were riding a bike and you were pregnant and you shouldn’t have been riding a bike. It could go a lot further than just drug and alcohol.
Jessica Yellin:
Out dancing. I mean, think of just anything they could investigate anyone who miscarries.
Amanda Doyle:
Right? Yeah. It’s really important to take it all the way down to follow the rationale. Follow us. No one is pregnant, but there is human life.
Jessica Yellin:
In their conception.
Amanda Doyle:
In their conception. No one is pregnant human life, which means a frozen embryo is a person that has rights that need to be protected. What a lot of people’s bodies do, including mine on a monthly basis, which is if there is a fertilized egg that is not implanted because my body does that as a natural course of things and sheds its lining, then how is it true that it is a life outside of my body but not a life inside my body?
And if you take that to the next extreme, it’s if I am a person who is desperate to have a child, but I’ve had many miscarriages, and I decide to keep trying, keep trying to conceive and I keep failing to deliver a baby, how is that any different than dropping a Petri dish? You have because of your actions destroyed all of this human life, because you knowingly went in knowing the high risk to all of those lives inside of you. That’s not a stretch.
Jessica Yellin:
And in the case of IVF, it’s a very real problem right now. Because for folks who aren’t familiar, when one does IVF, you might get six embryos and you only implant one or two, and then let’s say you implant two, but one’s not quite right, they do what is called selective reduction, which is abortion, and then you have these other four sitting out there and you have to make a decision. Do you pour those down the drain? And then is that murder? I mean, the complexity of what they’re opening up here is it’s just hard to imagine a future where all of this is criminalized, but the threat is there.
Glennon Doyle:
The reason why there’s no science, so they use God language, right?
Jessica Yellin:
Yeah.
Glennon Doyle:
Talk to us a little bit, Jessica, about the make believe separation of church and state. In our country.
Amanda Doyle:
We call that the establishment clause. It used to be a thing.
Glennon Doyle:
What happened? Why don’t we even pretend anymore?
Jessica Yellin:
It’s very strange. In Alabama there seems to be a pattern of thinking that all applies to other states, but not to us. And so this movement we talked about a little bit, Christian conservative policymaking is arguing that that sort of whole notion of the establishment clause of separation needs to be ignored. I want to read to you some of what they basically say, which is, “That they are dedicated to the belief that America would be better off if more Christians would run for elective office at all levels. Because they believe that God has to be part of the decision-making process and we have to deliberate based on clear biblical principles.” I’ll add that Speaker Johnson of the House who’s now Speaker of the House spoke at a recent convention of one of these groups, the National Association of Christian Lawmakers, and he said, “What we’re engaged in right now is a battle between worldviews. It’s a great struggle for the future of the republic.” To be plain about it, this group of activists believes that that whole piece church and state was flawed and needs to gotten rid of basically.
Glennon Doyle:
Okay, so let me guess. None of these Christian biblical values are going to be based in ending poverty or war or feeding hungry people? Let me just take a wild guess.
Jessica Yellin:
It’s definitely not in their list of stated priorities.
Glennon Doyle:
Okay, so it’s just not-
Amanda Doyle:
On the current platform.
Glennon Doyle:
It’s just the abortion part and the controlling women, neither of which were ever mentioned. It’s the label they’re putting on their controlling women, as my sister said recently, “Is this all just an attempt to reclaim any sort of relevancy? Are men just afraid that they’re becoming irrelevant? Are the men having a hard time?”
Amanda Doyle:
It’s so hard. Are the men okay, this is what we need to ask.
Jessica Yellin:
It’s rough, it’s certain men, I will add that part of their platform is re-criminalizing gay marriage and in particular gay sex acts. They’re also very anti-trans and anti-LGBTQ generally. Also, anti-birth control.
Glennon Doyle:
I am stunned. I’m stunned by that.
Amanda Doyle:
Is anyone going to tell them that frozen embryos are literally non-binary?
Jessica Yellin:
Explain why?
Amanda Doyle:
Because they haven’t yet gone through the process. They haven’t had a gender reveal party.
Jessica Yellin:
Exactly.
Amanda Doyle:
But this is, of course it’s a logical thing. This is why they were like, sorry, IVF has to take the fall. It’s very easy to take the leap between you can only have a sperm and an egg come together and make life, and that is life. Then to extend and say, “A sperm may not go anywhere, other than for the purpose of making life.” When you make it all about that, of course gay sex is the next thing. Because that’s a perversion of the intention of making life. It’s all connected. That’s what they’re going for.
Jessica Yellin:
I’m just keep thinking of L. Woods.
Amanda Doyle:
Then under that circumstance, could every ejaculation that is not intended for conception be considered reckless abandonment?
Jessica Yellin:
Go L.
Amanda Doyle:
That’s the case. I mean, they’re talking about child abuse. What’s going to happen, Jessica, and how do we stop it?
Jessica Yellin:
Well, okay, so the positive version is this is an argument against complacency. If you care about this stuff, got to decide, is this a priority issue for you, and what other issues are you willing to put on the back burner in order to make sure that this doesn’t happen? The next election could decide whether or not this becomes widespread practice in the U.S. The presidential level election, and we can talk about what Trump is proposing. Let me bookmark that and remind me to get back to it, because I want to be sure to say it’s also the case that this decision is being made at the state level by a state Supreme Court and the U.S. Supreme Court can’t even weigh in on it, because a state supreme Court has the final word on state law. This is a settled matter in Alabama now until the legislature introduces something else.
There are elections, those are elected positions and there are state Supreme Court elections across the country this year. And if this is an issue you care about, it’s important to find out if there’s an election in your state and who to vote for. Those people have enormous power and voters in many places do have a say. That’s something you can do right now, and the local level is really an effective place to act. That’s one.
Amanda Doyle:
And it isn’t just Alabama, right?
Jessica Yellin:
Oh, no. There’s at least I think more than a dozen places where the State Supreme Court is up for election this year. And what I was told is we could see similar actions in states wherever you have a very conservative State supreme Court, and some kind of thing in your constitution that has language that could allow someone to interpret into it fetal personhood. It doesn’t have to be explicit, just has to be something about valuing life. And Florida is a state that has both those things where we could see some movement into fetal personhood in the near, future because their State Supreme Court Chief Justice has hinted at it a bit.
Amanda Doyle:
And in your newsletter, didn’t you say there were 14 states that had either pending or already existing personhood language where that could be-
Jessica Yellin:
Yes.
Amanda Doyle:
If you’re sitting there being like, Bama, it’s 14 different states have that, that could be acted upon in the same manner if they decided to.
Jessica Yellin:
Yes, there’s the State Supreme Courts who are powerful, and one can vote on those to look at. There’s what you just brought up, which is 14 states are now considering bills to introduce fetal personhood language that would allow for criminalizing all the things we just talked about. There are also another dozen or so states that are looking at the opposite, protections for reproductive access, right? The other version. And then 19 states have laws or language in their constitution that could be interpreted to suggest fetal personhood already. Plus 14, that’s half the nation.
Glennon Doyle:
Can you talk to us a little bit about what the Trump proposals are from the other side? Every time something horrific happens, we’re all like, “How could this happen? How could this have happen?” But we’re telling you what.
Jessica Yellin:
It’s going to happen.
Glennon Doyle:
It’s going to happen. They’re not hiding the ball. No one’s hiding the ball. We cannot act surprised, tell us what they’re saying they’re going to do?
Jessica Yellin:
Okay, so moment of zen, deep inhale first. That’s my new pause on the news. I’ve learned that sometimes one just needs to pause on the news and recenter.
Glennon Doyle:
That’s good.
Jessica Yellin:
Okay. The New York Times has reported that, they’re not saying publicly this stuff, it’s all reporting through his allies and what they’re saying privately. Trump has said privately he supports a federal ban on abortion at 16 weeks. But beyond that there are a number of people around Trump who have been leaders in the Fetal Personhood Movement. Have helped define some of the law and some of the novel court cases that we’re talking about. What they have said they want to do is use an old set of laws that are collectively known as the Comstock Act to bar the use of shipping of mifepristone, which is the abortion pill. And possibly, and this is very out there. But possibly even through unilateral action without taking it to Congress or the courts bar abortion based on this Comstock Act.
Now, the Comstock Act is a very old set of laws that were around pornography. They banned the sending of obscene, indecent, or lewd materials in the mail. It was just back in the days when we tried to legislate morality and limit use of pornographic material. It has been used in the past, back in the day, to prosecute people who sent birth control or even pamphlets about birth control, flashback to Emma Goldman and Margaret Sanger. They founded what became Planned Parenthood. This still exists and novel conservative legal minds are thinking that what they could do is use this to argue that it’s illegal to male birth control. I should also add sex toys or porn. And on its most extreme end, you can argue that any implement one would use to conduct an abortion, to do a D&C, the medical devices are shipped or mailed, right?
And so in theory one could use this act to stop that as well, and then effectively bar abortion unilaterally by executive order. Before everybody gets very panicked, I’ve talked to one of the most serious constitutional lawyers in the country and he said he doesn’t think that would stand up to scrutiny barring abortion based on this. But as we’ve just said at the beginning of this conversation, merely having one decision rose the entire thing into chaos, and then imagine how long it will take for this to work its way out in courts, et cetera. In the meantime doctors just stop acting. Because they don’t want to be sued for millions of dollars. They don’t want to be sued for murder.
Amanda Doyle:
You don’t have to ban IVF to ban IVF and you don’t have to ban abortion to ban abortion.
Jessica Yellin:
No, there you go.
Amanda Doyle:
All you have to do is make it impossible to safely do the procedures, to have it effectively banned.
Jessica Yellin:
To know that it’s confidently legal and you won’t be sued for it. Right.
Abby Wambach:
Can I just ask you a layman’s question?
Jessica Yellin:
Please?
Abby Wambach:
Why are they doing this? What is the truthiest truth as to what is this all for? Why are these Christian conservative folks choosing to go after this, or gay rights or whatever? What is their agenda, their overall plan?
Jessica Yellin:
I mean, there’s two answers to that. One is, for the people who are true believers, I think there is a mission to return, not even return, to create, that this nation was meant to be a Christian nation formed based on these traditional values they imagine of heterosexual couples living a certain way and they want to create that sort of hyper heterosexual, traditional utopian, their version in their conception. I think Glennon would probably have better language for how to describe that, but it’s some idealized thing that they have in their minds.
Glennon Doyle:
And I would say the heterosexuality isn’t even the important part of that. The important part of that is what they’re calling traditional is the man at the top.
Jessica Yellin:
Yeah, patriarchy.
Glennon Doyle:
That is what we’re talking about, the traditional heterosexual marriage and what this version of Christianity is insisting upon is that the man is the head of the house. The man is the head of the government, the man is the head of the woman’s body. The man is in charge. That is what this is about. It’s about male power, and Jesus is just a sticker they’re putting onto it. And by the way, not everybody who buys that is a bad person. This is the problem. It’s that the people at the top sell this idea to everybody. I’ve been in those pews, I’ve been there. They teach that this is what God wants.
And so there are a lot of true believers who believe that what these men in the pulpits are telling them is what God wants. The men in the pulpits, the politicians who are in bed with these men in the pulpits, they are not true believers. They don’t believe the shit they’re selling. They know it’s all to gain power, but there are masses of people who are sitting in those pews, who are their soldiers, who go out into the world to support these laws, and they do think they’re doing God’s work.
Jessica Yellin:
That brought to mind something, which is one of the legal leaders in this movement pushed forward this case in Texas where a husband sued his wife for aborting the fetus and under a wrongful death claim, which is fundamentally, and as we said throughout this conversation, in some cases you’re allowed to have kids, right? But in other cases they don’t want to have kids, and what’s the through line is that the dude decides?
Amanda Doyle:
Yes.
Glennon Doyle:
Right. So there you go.
Jessica Yellin:
As you’re saying, right?
Amanda Doyle:
Justice Ginsburg, when she was the founder of the Women’s Rights Project, so fucking brilliant and never not the incredible strategist, she didn’t want Roe to be the case that decided abortion rights. The case that she wanted to be the one that went to the Supreme Court was a one in which a woman, she was a captain in the Air Force, she was in the military, and at that time, if you became pregnant in the military, you had to get an abortion or you would be discharged. And she took that case and that was the case that she was bringing up to the Supreme Court. Roe got there first because her case became moot, but she wanted to bring that case to say this is about government staying out of it. It’s just as much about you government saying you have to have an abortion, as it is you cannot have an abortion. It’s about stay the fuck out.
It’s equal protection of the law. You don’t treat men in what is a short-term disability. They don’t have to be discharged, but this one, you make them discharged. I think about that so much. If that had been the case before the Supreme Court, where we would be now would be so different.
Glennon Doyle:
And do you know anything about what this is going to mean soon, I mean my heart, I’m thinking about all of these people in the midst of their IVF journeys right now. And many of them are queer couples, right? Of course, many of them aren’t, but many of them are. Do you have ideas about what’s going to happen with same-sex marriage?
Jessica Yellin:
Oh, I’ll say first on the people who are in this. A lot of people say they’ll move states to be able to do IVF. Usually if you’re doing an IVF, you have some privilege. It’s an expensive procedure. And so they are, many people are privileged enough to be able to move states, not everyone. And so that’s one thing. In terms of the implications for same-sex marriage, I mean, thinking that the language used in Dobbs in particular opened the door to overturning Obergefell and making same-sex marriage no longer legal. The court has indicated and publicly suggested indecisions that they’ve allowed enough ambiguity to try to say that’s not on their agenda, but should Trump be reelected, I think a challenge to Obergefell and same-sex marriage is quite feasible, maybe even likely. I mean, there are all sorts of freedoms and protections that exist now that could be under threat with this court and these decisions going forward.
Glennon Doyle:
Jessica, I’ve been in many living rooms with you, hot squad. What you need to know about Jessica is like, poor Jessica, okay? She’s the friend. No, really poor Jessica. She’s the friend who when she shows up, everybody’s like, “Okay, just tell us everything.”
Jessica Yellin:
Explain everything. I’ve been keeping my 20 notes on a running list just until I saw you.
Glennon Doyle:
She doesn’t get to relax ever. So, you are always very calm, even in those conversations, even with our friends, when we’re peppering you with questions, when we’re freaking the fuck out, you are very, I don’t know, you’re just calming.
Abby Wambach:
Measured, measured is the word.
Glennon Doyle:
Measured, careful about what are you feeling and thinking about the possibilities for our country if Trump were to get elected again?
Jessica Yellin:
I don’t know what the future holds. What we know now will likely not be our same reality then. I can’t imagine, how quickly things change he says that he’s prepared to be a dictator on day one, his list of policy actions he wants to undertake depart from what we’ve typically considered democratic. Sometimes we’re surprised, so who knows? But I also think it’s important to take him at his word. Because in the past he’s implemented … The things that he promised and that everybody said he won’t do, he did try to do. And in a second term he’s going to have much more knowledge about how government works and how to pull the levers of government to get his things done. A lot of the stuff he tried first term was in that category of what I described, but he didn’t know how to do it. That’ll be different. He knows how to push out people who are not loyal to his vision. And so, I think we should expect him to pursue his extremist agenda in a more effective way than he was able to in his first term.
Amanda Doyle:
If this country elects him, we will get what we deserve. There is no hiding the ball. I mean, he committed treason and tried not to leave the office. If he gets elected, he is never leaving that office. And so there are no checks and balances ever again. Because he’s not going to leave. In what world does … I mean, am I wrong about that? He said, “I’m going to be a dictator on day one.” I don’t know how much more clear anyone can be.
Jessica Yellin:
The one thing I’ll say when people ask me this is, what I predict is something unpredictable will happen. We don’t know. Our world is so bizarre right now, I just think some black swan event is going to happen between now and the election that something none of us could have imagined has never happened before. That’ll sort of scramble the discussion. Because that seems to be our trend. And right now everybody’s exhausted and in a little bit of trauma fatigue and a little bit numb. And whenever I post on politics and the campaign, I get a lot of, “I don’t want to hear it. People aren’t ready.” I think we’re coming to the point where we should all open our aperture a little bit more to take in more of this stuff. I still say, don’t go wall to wall, not time to be wall-to-wall on TV because it’s a marathon, not a sprint. But we need to be paying attention because it’s important that whoever is engaged can educate their friends and social circles around the stakes and what we’re facing.
Abby Wambach:
It’s like we have to get fortified. This is the time for human beings that live in this country that will be voting in November. It’s time to get rid of all the bullshit in your life. Go for that walk every day to give yourself the hour, whatever you need to do to get prepared. Because I do think it’s going to be a pretty wild ride. And so many of us want to just not even get into it. So many of us are not only just fatigued, but I feel scared about putting my foot inside of that world, because it feels so gross. And we all still have to just go for it. We all still have to be a part of it and do our civic duty and learn as much as we can. But I understand, I think about November and I get a pit in my stomach. Because I don’t know if I’m going to be strong enough to maintain and to show up and to fight for what I believe in.
Because the way that they’ve made it all feel over the last, I don’t know, even the last 12 months is like I don’t have a fucking say in this shit anyway. Why am I going to hurt my own spiritual self to participate in this crazy world that they’re trying to control? I don’t know. It’s frustrating.
Glennon Doyle:
Can you speak to the fact that all this shit is happening under a democratic president? A lot of people bring this up. Just what is your response to how all this goes down?
Jessica Yellin:
This happened at the state level by a State Supreme Court around state laws. The federal government and who’s the president has zero input in that. About 14 years ago there was an effort by someone in the Republican Party to raise a lot of money and focus on winning state legislative races and flipping state houses to become Republican run. And Mitch McConnell, who announced that he’s going to be stepping down from leadership soon.
Glennon Doyle:
To be clear, he stepped down from leadership a long time ago. He’s just making it official now. Go ahead.
Jessica Yellin:
There’s that. He made his sort of legacy and his life’s mission was to bring Conservatives onto the courts across the country in big numbers, to make the Supreme Court conservative was the end goal. But along the way, he helped usher into the state court at lower levels conservative judges as well. That’s the federal judiciary, and then there’s the state judiciary, and then there’s state legislatures. All those people are the ones really driving this train right now. And it only gets up to the federal level when you reach the Supreme Court or you go to Congress, and that doesn’t happen that often. The White House has very little say in all this under either party. It’s really what’s going on in your local elections, and that’s why it is so important to vote in your local elections for local offices, state offices, and those Supreme Court offices in your state.
Can I say one more thing, which is, we’ve painted this very stark picture and I just am compelled to always show the nuance and this vision of the Fetal Personhood Movement we’ve talked about is the most extreme edge of the conservative movement right now. The majority of Republicans are not there, and I know many Republicans who are not supportive of reproductive rights, but believe that where we are now is where it should stand, right? It’s up to each state, what their laws are, and many believe that that’s where it should end, and that what we’re describing is also an affront to them. This is an extreme, it’s just that these extremists are being very effective and they have an ally in Donald Trump.
Glennon Doyle:
How do the extremists maintain so much control? Because when you’re saying that, that sounds exactly like what we learn about gun control. That actually most of gun owners support common sense gun reform, and yet that doesn’t matter. That doesn’t seem to matter. It doesn’t seem to matter how many Republicans support gun control, we still can’t have it. It doesn’t matter how many Republicans feel great about IVF. Do you know what I’m saying? The extremists still seem to be able to legislate, so why does that matter?
Jessica Yellin:
Well, so it matters because I think there are a lot of, it’s not I think, I see the numbers. There are a lot of Nikki Haley voters, for example, who say they won’t vote for Trump because of this issue in part. Because of reproductive rights and women’s rights. And for Donald Trump to win, if you look at the math, he needs every Republican who voted last time and he needs to suppress the Democratic vote even more, substantially, so it’s a lower turnout than last time. The math for him is hard. He needs those Nikki Haley people. If they’re not voting for him because of this, that’s a meaningful consequence in politics. You asked how they’re so influential? When the Dobbs ruling overturned Roe, everybody was having a lot of conversations about how this was a 50-year project, finally realized. Anti-abortion activists have been focused, determined, and patient, and consistent for 50 years.
And so they are now finally having some success with their agenda, but they were not successful for years, and that led to a lot of complacency on the other side. And all the while McConnell was putting conservative justices in, these movements were building power, and they were building legal doctrines and precedents to use and push forward. And finally, it all is coming together.
Glennon Doyle:
Yeah.
Amanda Doyle:
Everything you’ve just said, Jessica, with everything that Abby said, which is about how from the first days of the Trump administration, it has been grueling and chaotic to our nervous systems. And deeply unsettling, and we conjured up the fight within us to get through those times, to speak out and at great cost to ourselves. I mean, when you’re looking and you’re seeing assaults on your rights at every turn, it’s very costly emotionally, physiologically, everything. And so I feel like a lot of people have started to protect themselves from all of this. Have really started to be like, “For my mental health, I can’t look at that.” And I get that so much, but it’s also like when we are saving ourselves individually, we are fucking ourselves collectively.
Abby Wambach:
That’s good.
Glennon Doyle:
Our self-protection will not protect us.
Abby Wambach:
It’s good.
Amanda Doyle:
Yes, it’s right. It’s right. It’s like I get the instinct. I get that, it sucks, but also either way, it’s going to suck. It’s going to suck to look at it, and it’s really going to suck to look at it when it’s too late.
Abby Wambach:
Yeah.
Jessica Yellin:
My approach to this is, I don’t think everybody needs to pay attention to all this all the time. Sort of manage your intake. And maybe even pick your issues. Maybe this is the issue you care about and this is what you monitor for the next few months, and then you can get more engaged as the conventions happen. We’re not even in the general election yet. Whatever it is that works for you, because there is this balance between you do need to stay grounded and centered and calm so that you can engage effectively. And that’s different for each of us. What I think is unhealthy is either extreme, like constant, nonstop barrage of the traumatic information or earmuffs not listening to any of this. And I feel like Abby’s hinted at this, but it’s sort of Abby training for some big event that is out there. I imagine you’re not at your Olympic peak performance a year out.
Abby Wambach:
That’s good.
Glennon Doyle:
Right.
Abby Wambach:
That’s good. I can understand that. That makes sense.
Amanda Doyle:
Well, and that’s why a plug for what you do is so good. I mean, you really do just, you present the most important things. You don’t have an agenda of getting people super fired up in either direction, which is I feel like what our nervous systems are prepared for is like, “Oh God, here it comes.”
And you’re so good at that. I have a last question about this whole personhood and individual rights of embryos. Are there any cases coming, or at what point are we going to have an analysis of where the rights of the “embryo person” meet the rights of the person who is carrying it? Because when I look at it, it seems to me that it’s already been decided that the rights of the embryo supersede the rights of the person carrying it. Because that person has to go to court and file a court case and say in cases like Texas, where who was the one who she had to go to court and say, “This pregnancy is threatening my life.”
Jessica Yellin:
Kate Cox.
Amanda Doyle:
Yes, Kate Cox, “Threatening my life, and so I need to have an abortion.” And they said, no.
Glennon Doyle:
They care about protecting the personhood of the embryo, but not the personhood of the adult woman.
Amanda Doyle:
This is what I’m saying. If a person has rights to life, okay, let’s all just agree for purposes of the arguments, people have rights to life. But then you’ve got Katie Cox going into court and saying, “Hi, it’s me. I’m a person, therefore I have the right to my life, which is threatened by this pregnancy.” And they’re like, “Oh, not right now.” I honestly don’t understand, intellectually I’m trying to understand.
Jessica Yellin:
There is a case before the Supreme Court right now that doesn’t go directly to the fetal aspect, but it does touch on when does the pregnant person’s life becomes paramount. And it’s called, I’m not going to say it right, [inaudible 00:47:57], which is this case that is about this emergency medical care for if a pregnant person presents in the emergency room having some, like a rupture or some medical crisis, the federal government gives Medicare dollars to these hospitals and says, under Medicare law, participating hospitals have to give emergency treatment to anyone who needs it if they can’t pay in a medical emergency, including pregnant people. And Idaho has a restrictive abortion ban that only allows abortion to save the life of the mother. And so what’s happened is you’ll see that doctors will say, “We have to wait for this presenting patient to get to a much worse place where her life is literally at risk now. Let’s watch her bleed. More bleeding. More bleeding, more bleeding. Okay, now she might die, so we’re going to now intervene.”
And the federal government has said, “No, you have to intervene for stabilizing treatment as well.” And that is what the court is hearing. They’re going to hear it, I think in April, they’ll decide at this term. That’s one case that’ll sort of start to shape the outlines of this. A lot of those other cases are going to be on the state level. While we’re talking about the Supreme Court will mention, remember, they’re also hearing mifepristone this term, which is the abortion kill and how that can be used. We’ll note more, and both those decisions will come down before November before the election. We’re going to know this year.
Abby Wambach:
And I just saw on the news that CVS and Walgreens are actually now shipping the abortion pill, which is I think a big important thing for people to know.
Jessica Yellin:
To states where it’s legal.
Abby Wambach:
Got it.
Jessica Yellin:
So, it’s not everywhere. It’s in some states, but that is a big change. Yeah.
Glennon Doyle:
Okay. Jessica, everyone’s going to follow you.
Jessica Yellin:
Okay, good. Thank you.
Glennon Doyle:
And then as we get closer we’re going to be training. We’re going to be training and getting our rest, and then you’re going to come back and help us stay focused, know what we need to know, and stay organized and stay awake as we approach the worst time of the year, which is-
Jessica Yellin:
Well, you can sing.
Glennon Doyle:
Yeah, I know. I’m really good.
Jessica Yellin:
I guess that’s not surprising. Your daughter can sing.
Glennon Doyle:
Yeah, she can. I just want the pod squad to know that while this is alarming and horrific and all the things, we are going to walk through it together. We are not going to go to sleep. We’re not going to sleep. We are not. It’s the right kind of heart. We’re going to keep showing up. So thank you, Jessica, for the work. I seriously don’t know what we would do without you. You’re so sweet.
Jessica Yellin:
Thank you. I cover the news every day on Instagram and in my newsletter. I try to keep it calm and I’m going to focus a lot on these issues. But I’m also going to do what we talked about, which is sort of pick a basket of topics to keep everyone informed on and not cover everything all the time, because it can get overwhelming.
Amanda Doyle:
That’s smart.
Glennon Doyle:
Wonderful. We appreciate you very much.
Amanda Doyle:
We can only hold so many buckets, Jessica.
Jessica Yellin:
Right? We can.
Amanda Doyle:
Give me so many buckets. Give me four buckets, girl.
Jessica Yellin:
That’s the good thing is news that doesn’t suck. I’m adding in news that doesn’t suck, like positive news, news of breakthroughs, progress. I sort of need that for my soul. I think it helps all of us.
Glennon Doyle:
Things that doesn’t suck.
Jessica Yellin:
Right? It exists.
Amanda Doyle:
Can you make that one of my four buckets?
Abby Wambach:
Then you could do a sandwich where you’re like, “A couple of things in news that doesn’t suck. A few things that does suck. And then a few more things that don’t suck.” A positive sandwich.
Glennon Doyle:
All right pod squad, we can do hard things. We’re going to do this one. We love you. Bye. If this podcast means something to you, it would mean so much to us if you’d be willing to take 30 seconds to do these three things first, can you please follow or subscribe to We Can Do Hard Things? Following the pod helps you because you’ll never miss an episode, and it helps us because you’ll never miss an episode. To do this, just go to the We Can Do Hard Things show page on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Odyssey, or wherever you listen to podcasts. And then just tap the plus sign in the upper right-hand corner or click on follow. This is the most important thing for the pod. While you’re there, if you’d be willing to give us a five-star rating and review and share an episode you loved with a friend, we would be so grateful. We appreciate you very much. We Can Do Hard Things is produced in partnership with Cadence 13 Studios.