New abortion ad from Lincoln Project hits different. Grab some Kleenex.

This new ad from Lincoln Project comes after ProPublica reported on the 2 women who died in Georgia after delayed emergency medical treatment.

Serena Zehlius member of the Zany Progressive team
Serena Zehlius
Serena Zehlius member of the Zany Progressive team
Senior Editor
Serena Zehlius is a passionate writer and Certified Human Rights Consultant with a knack for blending humor and satire into her insights on news, politics, and...
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Updated 10/14/2024 to add a relevant personal experience and additional information/content.

Lincoln Project is known for its attack ads against Donald Trump. Some of them going too far in the minds of some critics. The Fred Trump ad is one that comes to mind as being criticized for going a little too far in attacking Trump. Their new abortion ban ad is heartbreaking. I cried when I first watched it and again when I played it to test that the video was properly embedded.

Daisy

Georgia abortion ban deaths

Amber Thurman found out she was pregnant at 6 weeks—on the same day that Georgia’s 6-week abortion ban went into effect. She was forced to travel out of state for medical care.

Already a single mother to a 6-year-old son, Amber was about to start nursing school. Being a nurse was a dream of hers.

Because Amber had to travel out of state to North Carolina, for medical care, the long journey resulted in her arriving late and missing the appointment.

The doctor prescribed the abortion pill, which is safe in the majority of cases. In fact, it’s safer than drugs like Tylenol, Viagra, and penicillin. Serious problems are extremely rare.

Amber started bleeding heavily at home the following day. A tiny piece of tissue had remained in her uterus. If it wasn’t removed, she would continue to bleed and infection would set in. The doctor who prescribed the pill knew she needed a D&C procedure to remove the tissue and stop the bleeding and he said that he would perform it for free in his office…in North Carolina.

Before she could make arrangements to travel to North Carolina again, the loss of so much blood caused Amber to black out in the hallway of her home. She was taken by ambulance to a hospital in Georgia—where having an abortion or an “abortion-adjacent” medical procedure is illegal. It’s also a crime for doctors to perform an abortion or “abortion-adjacent” procedure.
It’s illegal, that is, unless the woman is “about to die.”

Because the D&C procedure Amber needed can also be used to perform abortions, the doctors were too scared to treat her until she was “dying” so as not to risk losing their license to practice medicine—or worse—spend the rest of their lives in prison.

As she lay in the hospital bed, for days, suffering, Amber’s infection worsened and she became septic.

Sepsis is a condition that occurs when an infection has spread into the bloodstream and bacteria travels throughout the body, and infects internal organs. Septic shock is a life-threatening condition that occurs when organs start shutting down and delirium sets in from an extended period of high body temps, inflammation in the brain, and changes to the blood/brain barrier.

When Amber’s organs began shutting down, the doctors had no choice but to rush her into emergency surgery—it was so urgent that they went in through her abdomen vs through her vulva in the case of the D&C procedure. But her organs were shutting down and her heart wasn’t strong enough to handle surgery. Amber died on the table.


The second woman who lost her life in Georgia, Candi Miller, started bleeding and was afraid of being accused of attempting an abortion when she thought she was experiencing a miscarriage. Instead of seeking help, she lay in bed with her toddler and ended up dying there.

These abortion bans have caused many women to “bleed out” in cars and bathrooms because doctors are too afraid to treat them if they aren’t “near death.” How do you allow a woman to get to that point without waiting too long? That’s the problem with rules like that one. Provide care too soon and the doctor risks legal repercussions. Wait a minute too long and it’s too late to save her life.


Recently, a woman experiencing a miscarriage in California, where abortion is legal, ended up at a Catholic Hospital where a doctor informed her that she needed an emergency abortion. None of the doctors would perform the procedure for religious reasons. Instead, she was sent away with a bucket and some towels.

Whether it’s an abortion ban or a religious conviction preventing care for women experiencing reproductive health emergencies, they end up suffering permanent medical complications or don’t survive.

President Biden’s Executive Order stating that doctors and hospitals must treat pregnant women in crisis is a game-changer when it comes to situations like those mentioned here. The HHS came out afterwards to clarify that emergency medical treatment also includes abortion services.

Until we have seen it in practice for some time, we don’t know if every state’s laws and their physicians will change to honor the executive order. If a state refuses to change its law sentencing doctors to prison, doctors in that state aren’t going to comply.

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Serena Zehlius member of the Zany Progressive team
Senior Editor
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Serena Zehlius is a passionate writer and Certified Human Rights Consultant with a knack for blending humor and satire into her insights on news, politics, and social issues. Her love for animals is matched only by her commitment to human rights and progressive values. When she’s not writing about politics, you’ll find her outside enjoying nature.