one year in response to the legislation. congresswoman ilhan omar is weighing in on a new heartbeat bills in places like georgia and alabama and she is facing heavy criticism for targeting religious conservatives on the house floor. listen to this. i am frustrated every single time i hear people speaking about their faith and pushing that onto other people. we know the so-called religious politicians, and it comes to their life, their choices they want to talk about freedom but when it comes to other people s lives and other people s choices, they want to talk about religion. dan: joining us now with reaction. i will go to you first. what is with this streak on the left of constantly questioning the morals of people who
trace: demonstrations happening today outside of the supreme court and in several u.s. cities. protesters calling on states to stop the ban on abortions. this as a judge is hearing a case about the banned abortion law. it begins when doctors can detect a fetal heartbeat at six weeks when women might not know they re pregnant. the same judge struck down a bill that banned abortions at the 15-week mark. mississippi one of a handful of states to pass strict abortion laws and several others are considering similar heartbeat bills so they re called potentially putting the issue on a collision course with the supreme court. katie is here, a former federal prosecutor and now a criminal defense attorney. it s interesting. in recent years, katie, the states have tried to whittle away at abortion rights. not going after and changing laws but going after abortion clinics and doctors are regulations and they ve been successful in some cases.
that popular. the fetal heartbeat bills that i just described, the hill and harris poll did a survey on that, those are supported by most of the population, like 55-45% favor restrictions after a fetal heartbeat. and younger people, it s even stronger in favor of restrictions. paul: but that argues for the incremental strategy. that s right. paul: change hearts and minds slowly the hearts and minds are changing on this issue. paul: all right, interesting. when we come back, high schoolers taking the s.a.t. test now have one more number to worry about. what you should know about the college board s new adversity score and how it could influence if you have moderate to severe psoriasis, little things can be a big deal. that s why there s otezla. otezla is not a cream. it s a pill that treats plaque psoriasis differently. with otezla, 75% clearer skin is achievable. don t use if you re allergic to otezla.
of bills. other are heartbeat bills. and if you believe that life stops when your heart stops beating why can t you believe that life starts when your heart start beating. you ve got challenges in the states, one or two which could be fertile grown for challenging roe v. wade. so if you want that to happen, make this issue an top tier 2020 sle20202020issue. the left has gone so far left. abortion on demand at any point. cry disi. the american peoplcrazy. io your point about him bringing up rape, incest and life of the mother. he s distinguishing himself because there s such extremist language on the left that he wants to appeal to voters who are pro-life but have a
this is an issue for sure, especially if the laws keep pushing the envelope, even if they don t make it to the supreme court because so many are so similar. democrats are going to be running using pat robertson in their adds saying it s extreme. yes. any law for emotional and purity reform has to strike a balance. i think the heartbeat bills in georgia and other states drive home how early a heartbeat is detectable. so the movement, since it s basically shutdown democratic issue, has to be about public persuasi persuasion. those bills help, alabama doesn t. rich, i agree with you. i think the alabama bill is obviously extreme, it was designed to get to the supreme court and get there rapidly.