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TCU 360

TCU 360

All TCU. All the time.

TCU 360

A TCU student reaches for a Celsius from a vending machine- a refreshing boost amidst a hectic day of lectures and exams. (Kelsey Finley/Staff Writer)
The caffeine buzz is a college student's drug
By Kelsey Finley, Staff Writer
Published Apr 18, 2024
College students seem to have a reliance on caffeine to get them through lectures and late night study sessions, but there are healthier alternatives to power through the day.

Con: Required sonograms before abortion

The never-ending cycle of the age-old abortion debate was pushed into one more circle of argumentation last Thursday when the Texas Senate passed a bill requiring women undergoing an abortion to get an ultrasound.

The measure, if passed, will force women to submit to an ultrasound and then “…to listen to an explanation of the images, except in cases of rape or incest or if there are fetal abnormalities,” according to a Reuters article last Thursday.

I do believe that the designation of pro-choice is an apt one. My argument is not about condoning the killing of anyone or anything 8212; it is about the choice a woman has to do what she wants with her own body. The government should never, ever have the explicit power to tell people what they can and cannot do concerning their own bodies.

As a state already in the red, Texas faces a hefty shortage on the state budget to fund non-negotiable programs like education, and it may have to slash pre-kindergarten programs, vaccines and health insurance.

According to Parenting Magazine, the average cost of an ultrasound is $200. In 2007, a total of 81,079 abortions were reported to the Texas Department of State Health Services. This number includes all induced abortions performed in Texas plus those obtained in other states by Texas residents. Two hundred dollars multiplied by 81,079 ultrasounds for those abortions would be $16,215,800.

Gov. Rick Perry says the bill is to ensure “that women are fully, medically informed before they make the life-changing decision to terminate a pregnancy.”

What about treating the problem at its source and not its effects? That $16,215,800 could be put toward sex education and awareness programs in high schools. Use those funds to incorporate safe sex seminars and similar-minded events and programs.

Approaching the problem from its root will have a much greater effect than dealing with its consequences. People are going to have sex no matter what 8212; make sure they’re informed of the ramifications and are making the best decisions they can rather than attempting to control their free will.

More recently, the Republican-controlled House voted to cut all funding for any purpose to Planned Parenthood. “Women and Planned Parenthood are under attack by Republicans who want to make government smaller by making government “just small enough to fit inside our bedrooms and our medicine cabinets,'” NARAL Pro-Choice America President Nancy Keenan said in a Monday article in the Huffington Post.

Chances are that women having an abortion have thought about the choice they are making. Chances are they know the term abortion means they are aborting a life. Trying to guilt trip women undergoing an already psychologically damaging and exponentially difficult, life-altering procedure isn’t helping anyone. It’s insulting and degrading.

The endgame is to make the woman have the child and give it a chance at life, but the government has no business deigning to tell her what is and isn’t acceptable concerning her own body. “It’s the most serious decision they’ll ever make in their lives, and now you’re trying to put government in the middle of that decision,” state Sen. John Whitmire, D-Houston, said.

The designation of pro-choice is an apt one 8212; it’s about the choice to choose what decision is right for what woman in what situation. The government should never be able to say what choice that is.

Andrea Bolt is a senior news-editorial journalism major from The Woodlands.

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