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Texan Valedictorian Addresses The State’s Anti-Abortion Bill After Dropping Her Approved Speech At The Last Minute

Texan Valedictorian Addresses The State’s Anti-Abortion Bill After Dropping Her Approved Speech At The Last Minute

Texas Valedictorian Changes Her Speech At The Last Minute To Shame The State’s Anti-Abortion BillPeople Are Applauding This Texas Valedictorian For Shaming The State's Anti-Abortion Bill In Her SpeechTexas Valedictorian Drops Her Approved Speech To Get Real About The State's New Anti-Abortion BillTeen Delivers A Powerful, Off-Script Speech About Abortion At Her Graduation, And It Goes ViralTexas Valedictorian Switches Her Approved Speech To Talk About The Anti-Abortion BillTexas Valedictorian Ditches Her Approved Speech Last Minute To Talk About Abortion RightsTexas Valedictorian Switches Her Speech To Talk About Abortion Rights And People Are Applauding Her CourageTexas Valedictorian Ditches Her Approved Speech To Talk About Abortion Rights And The Crowd CheersTexas Valedictorian Ditches Her Written, Approved Speech To Talk About Abortion Rights
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Texas Governor Greg Abbott has signed a law banning abortion from as early as 6 weeks. And Paxton Smith has a problem with it.

The valedictorian of Lake Highlands High School’s Class of 2021 decided to abandon her original, approved speech and pulled a last-second switcheroo to talk about what’s most important to her: women’s rights.

When Smith came up to the microphone, she took out a piece of paper secretly tucked into her shirt and addressed the school with confidence. But her powerful words have spread way beyond Lake Highlands. Clips of her remarks have quickly gone viral on social media and are now making headlines around the world.

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    Paxton told BBC she was stunned that the speech was received so well by the audience and school officials, saying: “With every sentence that I made I was shocked that the microphone was not cut off.”

    The only people who knew that she was going to change her words were her parents, who have been “extremely supportive” after earlier expressing concerns that the controversial topic “would come back to haunt me in my future”.

    The Richardson Independent School District, which Lake Highlands School is a part of, has reportedly said it will review student speech protocols before future graduation ceremonies.

    “The content of each student speaker’s message is the private, voluntary expression of the individual student and does not reflect the endorsement, sponsorship, position or expression of the district or its employees,” it explained in a statement to CBS.

    Here’s a video of Paxton’s speech

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    Initially, she had planned to talk about TV and the media

    Image credits: Juan Figueroa/ Dallas News

    To learn more about pregnancy and abortion, Bored Panda contacted general practitioner, medical researcher, and founder of PrimeHealth Clinical Research, Iris Gorfinkel, M.D.

    After we asked her when do most women learn they’re pregnant, Gorfinkel said, “I actually looked that up and found that it is, in fact, consistent with my own experience—about three-quarters of the time, women learn at five and a half weeks.”

    The time varies because, as Gorfinkel pointed out, most women don’t go exactly 28 days between periods; a lot of them experience periods anywhere between 26 and 35 days. “When the period is late, a lot of women figure ‘Oh, I’ll just wait a few days, and it’ll come up.’ And then when it doesn’t begin, that’s when they get clued in, and that can be five weeks to six weeks,” the doctor explained.

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    Why is that? “The convention of counting pregnancy starts from the first day of the last period,” Gorfinkel said. “What’s weird about this convention is that women are two weeks pregnant before they realize they’re pregnant (ovulation takes place midway in the cycle). So in an average cycle of 28 days, ovulation — the time a woman is most likely to conceive — is at 14 days after the period starts, and a woman conceives on that day and doesn’t realize she’s pregnant until her period is late, that might be 35 days. She’s by definition, five weeks pregnant. Already, that throws a lot of women off.”

    Image credits: Paxton Smith

    So that’s three-quarters of women. But what about that one-quarter? After all, that’s still a lot of cases. Well, they don’t realize they’re pregnant until much later. Generally speaking, they’re younger women, they’re more likely to be black or hispanic, and they’re more likely to have low education and low socioeconomic status. “What’s more concerning is that these women also are more likely to not have wanted to become pregnant and to engage in higher-risk behaviors,” Gorfinkel said.

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    “The downstream effect is that these women are more likely to have a baby with birth defects, they are more likely to give preterm birth, their babies are more likely to have low birth weights as well as wind up in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU). Furthermore, these women are also more likely to have a natural pregnancy loss [Gorfinkel doesn’t like the term ‘miscarriage’, and has actually written a wonderful piece on why we should replace it].”

    “That said, these are the very women who need to have abortion as an available option the most.”

    Doctor Gorfinkel thinks that six weeks (or the presence of the fetal heartbeat) is not a good way to mark the limit after which a person can no longer have an abortion. “My own personal belief has always been that this fall squarely into the realm of a woman’s own choice of what she wants to do with her body,” she said. “[We have to acknowledge that] a woman has to undergo all of the risks of the pregnancy, and this includes financial risk, socioeconomic risk, risk to her relationship — which is a tremendous challenge — and risk to her own physicality. Everything from massive changes in her body to hypertension to diabetes, to blood clots that happen more frequently during pregnancy, to the potential for hemorrhage, infection, all the kind of the consequences and the long-lasting consequences of giving birth to a child and, of course, raising that child.”

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    To conclude, Iris Gorginkel said that she thinks women should be able to choose what they want to do with their bodies. But that choice should be enlightened. “It should not be a choice guided by her doctor, the father of the baby, her family, or even directed necessarily by finances but rather directed by inner peace. Because this is a potentially devastating decision that women face.”

    “I think that there is a certain emotional cost that goes along with pregnancy, no matter what the decision is. But the question is, where’s the greater inner peace with that decision?”

    Image credits: lakehighlands

    The law bans abortions after the detection of what anti-abortion campaigners call a fetal heartbeat. It is also unique in giving any individual the right to sue anyone who knowingly “aids and abets” an abortion, meaning that people could sue, say, friends and family who help someone obtain an abortion. Or an Uber driver who simply drove the woman.

    Healthcare workers and women’s rights groups have heavily criticized the law, which will take effect in September if it is not stopped by a court.

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    In May, Texas became the latest and largest US state to pass abortion restrictions. The news came just days after the US Supreme Court agreed to hear a case that could upend the nationwide legal right to abortion, laid out in the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling.

    Here’s what people said after listening to Paxton’s thoughts on abortion

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    Rokas Laurinavičius

    Rokas Laurinavičius

    Writer, BoredPanda staff

    Read more »

    Rokas is a writer at Bored Panda with a BA in Communication. After working for a sculptor, he fell in love with visual storytelling and enjoys covering everything from TV shows (any Sopranos fans out there?) to photography. Throughout his years in Bored Panda, over 300 million people have read the posts he's written, which is probably more than he could count to.

    Read less »
    Rokas Laurinavičius

    Rokas Laurinavičius

    Writer, BoredPanda staff

    Rokas is a writer at Bored Panda with a BA in Communication. After working for a sculptor, he fell in love with visual storytelling and enjoys covering everything from TV shows (any Sopranos fans out there?) to photography. Throughout his years in Bored Panda, over 300 million people have read the posts he's written, which is probably more than he could count to.

    Ilona Baliūnaitė

    Ilona Baliūnaitė

    Author, BoredPanda staff

    Read more »

    I'm a Visual Editor at Bored Panda since 2017. I've searched through a multitude of images to create over 2000 diverse posts on a wide range of topics. I love memes, funny, and cute stuff, but I'm also into social issues topics. Despite my background in communication, my heart belongs to visual media, especially photography. When I'm not at my desk, you're likely to find me in the streets with my camera, checking out cool exhibitions, watching a movie at the cinema or just chilling with a coffee in a cozy place

    Read less »

    Ilona Baliūnaitė

    Ilona Baliūnaitė

    Author, BoredPanda staff

    I'm a Visual Editor at Bored Panda since 2017. I've searched through a multitude of images to create over 2000 diverse posts on a wide range of topics. I love memes, funny, and cute stuff, but I'm also into social issues topics. Despite my background in communication, my heart belongs to visual media, especially photography. When I'm not at my desk, you're likely to find me in the streets with my camera, checking out cool exhibitions, watching a movie at the cinema or just chilling with a coffee in a cozy place

    What do you think ?
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    Raena Celis
    Community Member
    3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I commend her for standing up for all women. She's a window to our future!

    K Witmer
    Community Member
    3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    It's time men are forced to have a vasectomy. They can reverse it when the women consents to getting pregnant. I can guarantee men would cry about how it's their body and no one else's

    WillemPenn
    Community Member
    3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I have some mixed feelings about this, mainly bc some men might use it as an excuse to be less responsible and/or less concerned about confirming consent, and because not all vasectomies take. But generally I'm with you.

    Load More Replies...
    ZeroHargreeves057
    Community Member
    3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    That video/this post is really inspiring. It takes a lot of gut and confidence to speak to that many people about a topic like this. GO PAXTON!

    Load More Comments
    Raena Celis
    Community Member
    3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I commend her for standing up for all women. She's a window to our future!

    K Witmer
    Community Member
    3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    It's time men are forced to have a vasectomy. They can reverse it when the women consents to getting pregnant. I can guarantee men would cry about how it's their body and no one else's

    WillemPenn
    Community Member
    3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I have some mixed feelings about this, mainly bc some men might use it as an excuse to be less responsible and/or less concerned about confirming consent, and because not all vasectomies take. But generally I'm with you.

    Load More Replies...
    ZeroHargreeves057
    Community Member
    3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    That video/this post is really inspiring. It takes a lot of gut and confidence to speak to that many people about a topic like this. GO PAXTON!

    Load More Comments
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