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Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez bashed a prominent OB-GYN on Thursday during a U.S. Congressional hearing, asserting that she, a former bartender, knows more about pregnancy and abortion than a doctor with three decades of medical experience.
The Democrat congresswoman criticized Dr. Ingrid Skop, a Texas OB-GYN and witness at the hearing, for defending a Texas law that protects unborn babies from abortion once their heartbeats are detectable, about six weeks of pregnancy, according to a video of the hearing posted on Yahoo News.
Ocasio-Cortez called Skop’s testimony “unbelievable,” “irresponsible” and “hurtful,” and demanded an apology from the Republican lawmakers who invited her to testify. She did this even while claiming that pregnancy and abortion should be matters between doctors like Skop and their patients, not legislators like herself.
During her testimony, Skop said the Texas heartbeat law is reminding society of an “inconvenient fact” about abortion: It kills a “living, genetically distinct human being.”
“Nearly 50 years ago, the Supreme Court pretended it did not know this was a life. Today, we cannot plead ignorance,” Skop told lawmakers. “We have all seen ultrasounds, pictures of the unborn, demonstrating he is just like us, only smaller and more dependent on our care.”
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Afterward, Ocasio-Cortez attacked the pro-life doctor for defending the fact that the Texas law does not allow unborn babies with heartbeats to be aborted in cases of rape. Skop pointed out that women who are victims of rape still have about six weeks to get an abortion under the law.
Ocasio-Cortez, who used to be a bar tender and does not have any medical background, slammed Skop’s comments as “unbelievable” and then claimed that she herself may not know she is pregnant that early.
“I’m 115 pounds. You look at me funny, I’m two weeks late for my period,” she said. “And you’re supposed to expect me to know I’m pregnant? Or the stress of a sexual assault? That makes you two weeks late for your period, whether you’re pregnant or not.”
The New York Democrat said she wanted to “correct and address … the myth that this law provides ample time for a victim of abuse to seek abortion care because once again we’re in a room of legislators who are attempting to legislate reproductive systems that they know nothing about.”
“Six weeks pregnant and it’s shameful that this education needs to even happen because this conversation should not even be held in a legislative body,” she continued. “… Unbelievable, unbelievable that the Republican side would call a witness so irresponsible and hurtful to survivors across this country. Honestly, you deserve your constituents an apology.”
But Skop and pro-life lawmakers, several of whom also are medical doctors, understand that an abortion involves two lives, not just one, and both are valuable.
Skop told Congress that she has delivered more than 5,000 babies in 29 years and cared for women who suffered from botched abortions that they were forced into by members of their own family. Skop also is the medical director for a group of Texas pregnancy centers that provide resources to help pregnant and parenting mothers and babies.
Pro-life groups quickly slammed Ocasio-Cortez for her arrogance and praised Skop for helping expose the truth about abortion.
“Oh my, @AOC just told an OBGYN with decades of experienced that when it comes to abortion, the doctor doesn’t know what she’s talking about,” National Right to Life wrote on Twitter.
The Susan B. Anthony List thanked Skop for sharing how abortions hurt women as well as unborn babies.
“From her testimony: ‘I remember holding the hand of a woman who was dying as a result of abortion complications,’” SBA List shared on Twitter. “’A black woman who was my patient recalled tearfully how her mother forced her to undergo an abortion; then her current boyfriend wanted her to abort this, her second child. She strongly desired both of her children. How is this a woman’s choice?’”
Democrat House leaders called the hearing to attack the Texas heartbeat law, which has saved as many as 2,800 babies’ lives so far, and demand that the U.S. Senate pass a radical pro-abortion bill that would legalize abortions for basically any reason up to birth nation-wide.

Roe v. Wade was born in Texas, and the state’s new Heartbeat Law could effectively mean the Lone Star State is where Roe dies.
The first-of-its-kind law is designed to be enforced by private citizens instead of the state, leaving the abortion industry in a conundrum: There’s no one easily identified to sue to block the law.
Out of more than a dozen states that have passed a “heartbeat law,” Texas is the only one where the law is now in effect. More than 53,000 abortions were reported in the state last year, and it’s estimated that the law will curtail that figure by at least 85%.
Needless to say, pro-life advocates are celebrating the decimating effect this will have on the abortion industry as well as the thousands of children it will save.
About six weeks into a pregnancy, a preborn child’s heart begins to beat. And protecting that heartbeat is by no means a fringe position.
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Half the country, according to polling by the Kaiser Family Foundation, believes abortion should not be legal once this profound and undeniable sign of human life is detected.
Polling from Students for Life of America’s Institute for Pro-Life Advancement this year found that 6 in 10 people in the millennial and Gen Z generations believe “doctors should check for a heartbeat before performing or offering an abortion.”
This discomfort with aborting children with heartbeats casts the purported widespread support for Roe v. Wade and its companion case, Doe v. Bolton, into serious question. With those 1973 cases, a seven-man majority on the Supreme Court legalized abortion through all nine months of pregnancy. Today, only 19% of Americans support abortion as late as the third trimester.
The Supreme Court will revisit that outdated and out-of-touch decision later this year as it considers Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health, centering on a Mississippi law that bans abortions at 15 weeks of pregnancy.
One possible outcome is that the court could relinquish its 1973 usurpation of the abortion question and once again allow states to protect preborn children. Ahead of that decision, Texas has sent a strong signal to the courts that many Americans intend to protect our children from abortion violence.
Earlier this year, an extraordinary event in Lubbock, Texas, revealed an enthusiasm for abolishing abortion that foreshadowed what was coming in the statewide heartbeat measure. The northwest Texas city put life on the ballot with a Sanctuary City for the Unborn ordinance that outlaws all abortions within city limits.
After Students for Life Action (SFLAction) and pro-life allies mobilized to educate and activate voters, the ordinance passed by a sweeping margin of 62% to 38%.
Texas was the first state to give the nation Sanctuary Cities for the Unborn, and Lubbock was the first Sanctuary City that outlawed abortion while an abortion clinic was active. Planned Parenthood sued for the right to continue committing abortions in the city and was dealt defeat when a judge dismissed the case. Today, Lubbock is abortion-free.
And the Lubbock victory came after another hard-fought battle that culminated in Planned Parenthood being kicked out of the Texas Medicaid program. The group disqualified itself from the program when it was caught on undercover video appearing to violate its provider agreement.
State officials initiated Planned Parenthood’s removal from Medicaid in 2015, but Planned Parenthood stalled the final decision with lawsuits that ultimately culminated in defeat for the abortion behemoth. Texas invested $100 million in the Alternatives to Abortion program to provide assistance to women and families.
Texas also is setting a model for federal protection of the preborn child. In July, SFLAction worked with Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas, to spearhead the Protecting Life on College Campus Act of 2021, aimed at penalizing any taxpayer-funded university that dispenses abortion drugs on campus.
Ingested in the first trimester of pregnancy, medical abortions account for about 40% of all abortions – often after a heartbeat has already begun.
With an estimated 62 million American children dead since Roe v. Wade and an untold number of mothers and families wounded by abortion, it is impossible to overstate the urgency and importance of laws like Texas’ Heartbeat Law. Texas’ proud history is stained by its role in the devastating legacy of Roe v. Wade, but the future is anti-abortion.
Americans who oppose abortion should take heart – and take notes – from Texas today.