The U.S. medical system is far from perfect, especially when it comes to pregnancy and maternal health care. The U.S. has the highest maternal mortality rate in the developed world. Black women are three times more likely to die from pregnancy-related causes than white women. Indigenous women face twice the risk. These statistics are an indictment of how this country values women’s lives.

But as bad as maternal healthcare is for most American women, the conditions are exponentially worse for women giving birth while detained by the U.S. government.

For a movement so concerned with “life,” I’d expect absolute outrage from anti-abortion groups at how pregnant women are treated in ICE detention centers. And yet they are silent. If you claim to be “pro-life,” you cannot support ICE. The two positions are fundamentally incompatible. Let’s dive in.

Before Detention

Your first hint that ICE and its supporters do not give a fuck about “life” is evident before they even detain women.

In Minneapolis last month, An ICE agent was filmed kneeling on a pregnant woman’s back and then dragging her through the snow by one arm. Then just a few days ago, a pregnant women was shot in the stomach with a rubber bullet/pepper ball at an anti-ICE protest in Los Angeles.

This is how ICE treats pregnant women in public, on camera. Imagine what happens behind closed doors.

Inside Detention

Let me tell you the story of one woman who gave birth in an ICE detention facility.

Guards separated her from her breastfeeding infant for months. When she was finally released, her milk had dried up. Her baby didn’t recognize her. The bond every medical organization says is critical (the same bond “pro-life” activists claim is sacred) had been deliberately severed by her own government.

Another woman, three days postpartum, was denied access to a shower. Guards told her she had to hold her baby at all times. She couldn’t put her newborn down to properly clean herself, to recover from childbirth, to tend to her bleeding and pain.

These are documented cases from Senator Jon Ossoff’s January 2026 investigation into U.S. immigration detention facilities. The investigation uncovered over 1,000 credible reports of human rights abuses since Trump’s second inauguration.

Image from 2026 Ossoff investigation

If this happened to your sister, you’d be calling every lawyer you know, demanding an investigations. You’d also expect every politician who runs on “family values” to be screaming about this from the rooftops.

And yet the politicians who campaign on “protecting babies” are also the loudest ICE supporters. The voters who claim “all life is sacred” celebrate more law enforcement, more detention, more of exactly what’s harming women and children. Here is the cognitive dissonance: you cannot hold both positions. You cannot claim every life matters while supporting a system that treats pregnant women and newborns this way. That tells you everything about what “pro-life” really means.

Continue reading over at the Women in America Substack.

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Pari and Eve are public health professionals who have dedicated their 15-year careers to fighting for global reproductive rights. When Roe v. Wade was overturned, they felt compelled to turn their attention to domestic activism; growing their decade-long friendship into an advocacy partnership committed to educating the American public on the importance of gender equality, and specifically women’s healthcare. Seeing a major gap in the presence of qualified public health voices on social media, Pari and Eve established a trusted digital presence that elevates women’s voices and combats misinformation on health issues. Their Instagram and TikTok accounts facilitate evidence-based learning on a range of sexual and reproductive health topics, highlighting the intersectionality of health with human rights and social justice. Pari and Eve went viral after launching a “Women in America” series focused on the daily inequities that women in the U.S. experience economically, environmentally, in health care, at work, and more - garnering over 25M views across both platforms. Pari and Eve are a go-to amplifier for health and justice. Some of their previous social media clients include: Reproductive Freedom For All, Plan C, Jen Psaki, and ACLU. In their professional careers, Pari and Eve have worked for the United Nations, U.S. Centers for Disease Control, Planned Parenthood, Population Reference Bureau, CARE and more. They have served consulting clients such as the DC Abortion Fund and Emory University. For more on Pari and Eve, visit their website at www.pariandeve.com.

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