Cosmopolitan magazine shared details about a ritualized abortion service provided by a facility named after Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito’s mother.
Describing a Satanic-themed abortion ceremony, the magazine outlined a woman’s experience and the prescribed steps, including incorporating ceremonial elements and declaring one’s body as inviolable.
The magazine also speculated on an alternate timeline where Alito’s mother had chosen abortion and discussed the premise of the clinic using religion to protect abortion rights. (Trending: Olympic Gold Medalist Sentenced For Jan 6)
“What’s it like to have a Satanic abortion? For Jessica* [a fake name to keep the woman anonymous], a 37-year-old mother of three who received abortion medication via Samuel Alito’s Mom’s Satanic Clinic, ‘the experience was just very supportive,’” posted Cosmopolitan on Instagram.
“While she’s not a Satanist, Jessica decided to incorporate a few ceremonial elements into her solo abortion experience. ‘Why not?’ she thought. The overall messaging just clicked with her,” continued the caption.
The slide show included captions that read, “One’s body is inviolable, subject to one’s own will alone,” and “By my body, my blood; by my will, it is done.”
“But what if her circumstances had been different — if her own life had been endangered by the pregnancy or if the fetus had a fatal anomaly or if Rose simply hadn’t been ready for a child? What if she’d had a choice and access to safe, legal abortion care?”, asked the outlet.
“Nearly 75 years later, in a reproductive rights landscape that feels like it’s sliding back in time, one group decided to channel this policy fantasy into a new health care enterprise named in her honor,” wrote Cosmo.
The facility, operated by The Satanic Temple, aims to leverage its religious status to expand its clinic model beyond New Mexico.
“By TST’s accounting, no other faith-based group in the U.S. has ever launched an abortion clinic,” claimed the magazine.
“And that’s the game-changing twist here: Unlike other abortion-pill-by-mail providers like Hey Jane or Abuzz, TST is a religion. Meaning its patients, who don’t have to be Satanists themselves, are participating in a religious ritual.”
Adding, “That’s a key legal distinction TST hopes to leverage in its historic push to expand its clinic model beyond New Mexico — into states where abortion is otherwise banned.”
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