jueves, 2 de mayo de 2024

The Morning: Abortion by mail

Plus, campus protests, student debt and a portrait of King Charles.
The Morning

May 2, 2024

Good morning. We're covering the effect of new abortion bans — as well as campus protests, student debt and a portrait of King Charles.

A prescription machine with alphabetized slots, some filled with pill bottles. A hand reaches out to press a touch screen in the middle.
A prescription machine. Tracy Nguyen for The New York Times

The speed of tech

After the Supreme Court struck down Roe v. Wade, red states raced to restrict abortion, as Florida did yesterday with a new ban after six weeks of pregnancy. It was reasonable to expect the number of abortions in the U.S. to decline. Instead, it appears to have risen slightly. Why? One factor is pills prescribed online, which now make up one in six abortions.

The dynamic encapsulates a broader trend: The combination of a relatively new technology (the web) and an old one (the mail) has made it easier for Americans to bypass laws that they don't like.

It's true about abortion but also other issues, some of which liberals and conservatives see very differently. Drugmakers in China and India often ship the narcotic fentanyl and its ingredients to the U.S. Gun owners assemble untraceable firearms, known as ghost guns, from parts ordered online or made with 3-D printers, another relatively new technology.

Today's newsletter will cover some of the ways that technology has outpaced the law.

Broader trend

People have embraced these new workarounds. Nearly two-thirds of abortions are carried out with pills (most still from in-person clinics), up from a little more than half in 2020. Fentanyl's spread has caused overdose deaths to more than double in the U.S. since 2014. The number of ghost guns seized at crime scenes increased more than tenfold from 2016 to 2021.

Officials have enacted measures to stop shipments of abortion pills, fentanyl and ghost gun parts. They have a few tools to inspect the mail, like drug-sniffing dogs and X-ray machines. But they simply don't have the time or resources to sift through the hundreds of millions of letters, packages and other mail delivered each day.

With abortion pills, states face another hurdle: The federal government runs the U.S. Postal Service and regulates the mail, so states can't intercept letters or packages on their own. And while the Biden administration wants to control the supply of fentanyl and ghost guns, it has supported access to abortion pills through the mail. (A future administration could take a different approach.)

States with abortion bans could try to get around federal oversight by going after the people sending the mail. But other states have made that difficult by enacting legal protections for abortion providers who ship pills to other states.

An examination room with a bed and screens with wires.
Jacksonville, Florida. Joe Raedle/Getty Images

Uneven access

New technologies can help Americans get around a restriction, but that doesn't make the law toothless. Some can't evade it. Women without much access to the internet or other resources might struggle to get an abortion pill and carry more births to term. Those who can easily get pills online might find abortion more accessible than ever.

Florida's six-week abortion ban could offer an example of the unequal effects. Until yesterday, the state was among the least restrictive in the Southeast. So women from across the region traveled there, as my colleague Margot Sanger-Katz, who covers health care policy, told me. Now, women in Florida and across the South will have to travel much farther (as these maps show).

Some of those women won't be able to take time off work or pay for a trip hundreds of miles away to get an abortion in person. And they might not have internet access, a reliable home address or the knowledge to order pills online.

Yet for others, an abortion is now just a few clicks away. And as more groups work to offer the pills at lower prices, more women may gain access. In that scenario, the total number of abortions could continue to increase.

For more

THE LATEST NEWS

Campus Protests

Demonstrators behind makeshift barricades of wood and metal barriers hold a Palestinian flag aloft. Two security officers are on guard.
At U.C.L.A. Aude Guerrucci/Reuters
  • The police briefly entered a pro-Palestinian encampment at U.C.L.A, hours after they ordered protesters to leave or face arrest. Follow live updates.
  • Student protesters have linked the Palestinian cause to broader struggles involving policing, discrimination and global warming.
  • Many of the protesters mask their faces with scarves. University leaders worry that could make it easier for outsiders to infiltrate campuses.
  • Columbia and Brown chose different paths to end the student protests, but neither seems likely to agree to demands to divest from Israel.
  • President Biden will speak about antisemitism at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum next week.

War in Gaza

Congress

Marjorie Taylor Green gives a speech behind a bank of microphones outside the Capitol. Beneath the microphones is a sign that says,
Marjorie Taylor Greene Valerie Plesch for The New York Times
  • Marjorie Taylor Greene said she would demand a vote next week to unseat Speaker Mike Johnson. Democrats have pledged to protect him.
  • Senate Democrats reintroduced legislation that would legalize marijuana. It is unlikely to pass with Republicans in control of the House.

More on Politics

International

Farmers handling seedlings in a brown field.
In Brazil.  Victor Moriyama for The New York Times

Other Big Stories

Opinions

Universities must protect student activism — but only until it infringes on other students' rights, David French says in The Opinions.

Antiwar protesters' vandalism is a bad way to support a good cause, Nicholas Kristof argues.

Gardens can be evil or good: We need gardens that cool cities and provide a corridor for wildlife, Olivia Laing writes.

Here is a column by Charles Blow on a microaggression toward Kamala Harris.

A subscription to match the variety of your interests.

News. Games. Recipes. Product reviews. Sports reporting. A New York Times All Access subscription covers all of it and more. Subscribe today.

MORNING READS

Roller skaters in a rink pose for a photo.
In Atlanta.  Gem Hale for The New York Times

Roll up: Black roller skaters from around America are bringing their regional styles to Atlanta's rinks.

New Jersey: The most decorated battleship in U.S. history gets an overdue face-lift.

Third Wheel: A Times dating columnist explores whether pictures of an ex should be removed from your Instagram account.

Next trip: Spend 36 hours in Minneapolis.

Lives Lived: Olga Fikotova Connolly won a gold medal in track and field for Czechoslovakia in the 1956 Olympics and watched Harold Connolly of the U.S. win one the next day. They married in 1957 in a Cold War romance that breached the iron curtain. She died at 91.

SPORTS

A portrait of Brittney Griner in a dark suit and sneakers sitting on a stool.
Brittney Griner Mickalene Thomas for The New York Times

Basketball: In an interview with The Times Magazine, Brittney Griner discussed her time in Russian prison and her path to recovery.

N.B.A.: Both the Dallas Mavericks and Boston Celtics routed playoff opponents. The Mavericks took a 3-2 series lead over the Los Angeles Clippers, while the Celtics eliminated the Miami Heat.

M.L.B.: The league suspended four players involved in a brawl between the Milwaukee Brewers and Tampa Bay Rays.

ARTS AND IDEAS

Gustavo Dudamel shakes hands with a young violinist as other young musicians in the orchestra look on. Everyone is wearing a green T-shirt.
In New York.  James Estrin/The New York Times

Gustavo Dudamel, the maestro and next music director of the New York Philharmonic, has vowed to expand the orchestra's presence in schools, as he did during his time with the Los Angeles Philharmonic. He recently led 95 high school musicians for a week of rehearsals, which culminated with a concert. "It's crazy to think that I'm up here playing with him," Olivia Okin, a percussion player from Staten Island, said.

More on culture

Jonathan Yeo sits on a tall stool in a workshop with pictures on the whitewashed walls and brushes and other painting paraphernalia scattered around.
Jonathan Yeo Mary Turner for The New York Times

THE MORNING RECOMMENDS …

A blue platter holds oven-roasted chicken shawarma with a small dish of olives. Dishes of pita bread, tomatoes and cucumbers and feta cheese are nearby.
Linda Xiao for The New York Times. Food Stylist; Hadas Smirnoff. Prop Stylist: Megan Hedgepeth.

Serve oven-roasted chicken shawarma with pita and tahini.

Find relief during allergy season.

Bring a hammock to the park.

Pick a good online flower delivery service.

GAMES

Here is today's Spelling Bee. Yesterday's pangram was conclude and concluded.

And here are today's Mini Crossword, Wordle, Sudoku, Connections and Strands.

Thanks for spending part of your morning with The Times. See you tomorrow. — German

Sign up here to get this newsletter in your inbox. Reach our team at themorning@nytimes.com.

The Morning Newsletter Logo

Editor: David Leonhardt

Deputy Editor: Adam B. Kushner

News Editor: Tom Wright-Piersanti

Associate Editor: Lauren Jackson

News Staff: Desiree Ibekwe, Sean Kawasaki-Culligan, Brent Lewis, German Lopez, Ian Prasad Philbrick, Ashley Wu

News Assistant: Lyna Bentahar

Saturday Writer: Melissa Kirsch

Need help? Review our newsletter help page or contact us for assistance.

You received this email because you signed up for the Morning newsletter from The New York Times, or as part of your New York Times account.

To stop receiving The Morning, unsubscribe. To opt out of other promotional emails from The Times, including those regarding The Athletic, manage your email settings. To opt out of updates and offers sent from The Athletic, submit a request.

Subscribe to The Times

Connect with us on:

facebooktwitterinstagram

Change Your EmailPrivacy PolicyContact UsCalifornia Notices

LiveIntent LogoAdChoices Logo

The New York Times Company. 620 Eighth Avenue New York, NY 10018

No hay comentarios:

Publicar un comentario

ARTÍCULOS

¿Tienes información sobre alguna noticia interesante? aliazon.comercialyventas@gmail.com

Estrella Digital :: Últimas noticias

OPINIÓN

Opinión y análisis // Diariocrítico.com

Nuevatribuna :: Últimas opiniones

Artículos de Opinión | El Independiente

RSS de noticias de opinion

Estrella Digital :: Últimas opiniones

OPINIÓN-KHAMENEI

ÚLTIMAS NOTICIAS

Últimas noticias // Diariocrítico.com

Comentarios en: Últimas noticias

RSS de noticias de ultima-hora

PORTADAS

RSS de noticias de portada

NOTICIAS NACIONALES ESPAÑA

Noticias nacionales | Diariocritico // Diariocrítico.com

MUNDO-KHAMENEI

CULTURA

ARTE

Arte y Cultura // Diariocrítico.com

TEATRO

Salud y vida saludable // Diariocrítico.com

SEXUALIDAD

Sexualidad y salud sexual y para disfrutar de las relaciones en pareja // Diariocrítico.com

SALUD

HISTORIA

Canal Historia // Diariocrítico.com

TURISMO

SOCIEDAD

LIFESTYLE

MODA

CRÓNICA ROSA

Noticias del Corazón // Diariocrítico.com

LO MÁS LEÍDO

Lo más leido de la semana // Diariocrítico.com

CIENCIA

LIBROS

Noticias de libros, editoriales, autores y premios literarios // Diariocrítico.com

ECONOMÍA

La actualidad económica en vivo - France 24

RSS de noticias de economia

COMENTARIOS DE ECONOMÍA

Comentarios de la Economía // Diariocrítico.com

Noticias economicas | Diariocritico // Diariocrítico.com

EMPRESAS

ACTUALIDAD FINANCIERA

Actualidad financiera // Diariocrítico.com

BOLSAS

CRIPTOMONEDAS

TOROS

Toros, toda la información taurina // Diariocrítico.com

SEGUROS

VIDEOJUEGOS

Videojuegos // Diariocrítico.com

EDUCACIÓN

Educación // Diariocrítico.com

MEDIO AMBIENTE

Comentarios en: Localiza el tiempo en tu ciudad

Medio Ambiente : noticias económicas y políticas en vivo - France 24

DEPORTES

Deportes : toda la actualidad y los resultados - France 24

Estrella Digital :: Últimas noticias - Deportes

Últimas noticias sobre Deportes | El Independiente

Últimas Noticias Fórmula 1 ▷ Actualidad F1 // Diariocrítico.com

MOTOCICLISMO

MOTOR

Últimas noticias de motociclismo // Diariocrítico.com

Noticias deportivas | Diariocritico // Diariocrítico.com

BALONCESTO

CICLISMO

FÚTBOL

Noticias de fútbol // Diariocrítico.com

Noticias Fútbol | El Independiente

GOLF

Últimas noticias de golf // Diariocrítico.com

TENIS

FÓRMULA 1

OTROS DEPORTES

MÚSICA

▷ La mejor de la música internacional y nacional, conciertos, cantantes, // Diariocrítico.com

OCIO

Noticias De Tiendas | El Independiente

Noticias ocio | Diariocritico // Diariocrítico.com

MASCOTAS

HORÓSCOPO

CINE

Noticias de cine // Diariocrítico.com

EMPRENDEDORES

emprendedores, autonomos emprendimiento empresas empresarios // Diariocrítico.com

Pymes, emprendedores autónomos, Startups | Diariocritico // Diariocrítico.com

COCINA Y GASTRONOMÍA

TECNOLOGÍA

Noticias recopiladas // Diariocrítico.com

TELEVISIÓN

Televisión // Diariocrítico.com

VÍDEOS

Estrella Digital :: Últimos vídeos

HEMEROTECAS