Reason First: Bill Introduced To Combat Hospitals Turning Away Black Women In Labor
Rep. Robin Kelly introduced the bill after Mercedes Wells, a Black woman from Indiana, was discharged from a hospital while in labor.

In a fully free society, black women will get the same care from hospitals as any other race. If she is in labor, women of color will be attended to with serious regard.
Under the system of capitalism, women will be able to be seen if they are in labor. Because of the ethics of emergencies, there would be provisions for these women to get the care they deserve.
Privatized medicine will be able to cover her bills. If she can afford it, she will pick up the tab. If not, private charities will be able to cover the costs.
There doesn’t need to be bills passed to help needy women in their most dire times. Before birth, if a woman is in pain she should be able to select whether she wants to use pharmaceutical drugs or otherwise have a “natural” birth.
In the case of Mercedes Wells, who was turned away while in labor, these occurrences happen and have happened and will happen in the future if the current state of fascist medicine continues.
The government allows hospitals and insurance companies to do business but at the same time they institute heavy regulations and controls.
What can combat all of this is the initiation of liberty in medical circles. Doctors, nurses, administrators, down to janitors ought to be free to do their work unburdened by the weight of the State.
Organizations like the Food and Drug Administration throttle the progress of hospitals and disallow patients like mothers in labor to receive drugs that would aid them in their time of distress.
All of the various forms of medical treatment are looked at with an askew glance from blacks in America, particularly women.
The racist attitudes and actions of the people involved in the field of medicine have existed for decades. These prejudices and indignities keep going because only slivers of capitalism have been able to be used.
With a free market solution, there would be little to no issues with women, blacks to be exact, going into labor and then shown the door.
Capitalism is a system of protecting property rights and especially individual rights. As this way of life permits the individual to be treated like a human being rather than a number at the DMV, medicine would experience a revolution in quality care.
In relation to their roles as medical professionals, there would not be a single woman discharged while in labor. In fact, a free market would show she would receive optimum health benefits.
In the WELLS Act (Women Expansion for Learning and Labor Safety) it tramples over rights. Petitioned by Rep. Robin Kelly (D-Ill), she wants medical professionals to go through racial bias training. This is absurd. Instead of advocating for freer markets in medicine, she seeks to force health professionals to take tests based on racial biases.
This is what happens when regressivism permeates through the culture and infects the people that it is meant to protect. The people who make up the medical community should be liberated to do as they wish with their training and technical skills.
Every black woman who experiences the viciousness of being sent off while in labor should understand that they’re to be accepted by private hospitals. If an all-white facility rejects them, that should be their prerogative and the woman should choose the more rational hospital.
It’s quite simple. If black women want to be taken care of in labor, they should not encourage hospitals to force them to care. What they can do is fight for a capitalist society which shuns stupidity and rewards benevolence.
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Skyler Saunders
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