The Democratic candidate for Georgia governor claims that fetal heartbeats are designed to help men control women's bodies.
During an event at the Ray Charles Performing Arts Center in Atlanta, Abrams claimed that there was no heartbeat at six weeks. Men have the right to take control of a woman's body according to a manufactured sound.
Georgia Democrat Stacey Abrams: "There is no such thing as a heartbeat at six weeks. It is a manufactured sound designed to convince people that men have the right to take control of a woman's body."
REMINDER: Abrams supports NO LIMITS on abortion. pic.twitter.com/f7XxeqzfF6
— RNC Research (@RNCResearch) September 22, 2022
During the fifth to sixth week of a pregnant woman's life, a very basic beating heart and circulatory system develops.
The pro- abortion messaging on the website was changed to reflect the heartbeat laws. According to the site, a part of the embryo starts to show cardiac activity.
The pro-life messaging on fetal heartbeats has been aided by mainstream media. The term "fetal heartbeat" is "misleading and medically inaccurate" according to experts.
At this point the heart as we know it does not yet exist, the article quotes a doctor who says the heart develops at around six weeks.
Georgia's heartbeat law shouldn't be referred to as the "Fetal Heartbeat Bill" because it's medically false, biologically a lie according to Georgia's governor.
She supports abortion until the time of birth and criticized Georgia's heartbeat law as "poorly written."
The View co- host asked if there should be any legal limits on abortion.
She said that she believed that abortion was a medical decision. Arbitrary timelines are problematic because they ignore reality.
She said that the limit should not be made by politicians who don't understand basic biology.
Georgia's governor is up for re- election against Brian Kemp. Kemp won the election to become governor by a large margin. The election was "stolen from Georgians" according toAbrams.
Kemp is up more than 6 points in the polls.
As November approaches, she hopes to keep abortion front and center in the conversation.
Only 16 percent of Georgia voters think abortion is the most important issue in the election. Inflation is the most important issue according to 40 percent of people.