Plus, an unprecedented heatwave scorches Japan.
Retailers limit the sale of emergency contraception; Japan swelters in a historic heatwave. Tonight's Sentences was written by Jariel Arvin. |
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The end of Roe sees soaring demand for Plan B |
Lindsey Nicholson/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images |
- Some drugstores and online retailers are limiting sales of emergency contraceptive pills amid surging demand following the Supreme Court's decision to overturn Roe v. Wade. [Yahoo / Amrita Khalid]
- Amazon and Rite Aid limited purchases to three pills per customer. Tuesday, CVS removed a temporary limit it put in place to ensure equitable access once sales stabilized. [CNN / Virginia Langmaid and Naomi Thomas]
- Several states have moved to ban abortion post-Roe. In a concurring opinion, Justice Clarence Thomas suggested that the Court should revisit the right to contraception, though no other justice appeared to agree. [Washington Post / Christopher Rowland, Yiwen Lu, and Aaron Gregg]
- If taken within three days of intercourse, emergency contraceptive pills like Plan B can reduce the chance of pregnancy by stopping a fertilized egg from attaching to the uterus and temporarily blocking ovulation. [BBC / Holly Honderich]
- Although time-sensitive emergency contraceptive pills are legal nationwide, they're not always readily available in stores, raising the risk of pregnancy. [NPR / Maria Godoy]
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Japan buckles under an unprecedented heatwave |
- Japan's residents and power grid are suffering under the country's worst June heatwave since 1875, when records began. [AccuWeather / Renee Duff]
- For the fifth day in a row, temperatures in Tokyo were above 95°F on Wednesday. To the northwest, the city Isesaki hit 104°F — the hottest June temperature ever recorded in Japan. [BBC]
- On Monday, the Japanese government urged residents to save power to avoid outages and also to use air conditioning appropriately to prevent heatstroke among the elderly. [CNN / Heather Chen, Junko Ogura and Mayumi Maruyama]
- Prime Minister Fumio Kishida ordered companies to increase nuclear power output to meet energy demand. Temperatures in Tokyo won't drop below 86°F until next week. [Reuters]
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- Los Angeles officials voted on Tuesday to return oceanside property Bruce's Beach to descendants of its Black owners nearly 100 years after it was seized. [BBC / David Molloy]
- US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi received communion at the Vatican on Wednesday. [Associated Press / Nicole Winfield]
- After 28 years, Justice Stephen Breyer will retire from the Supreme Court Thursday at noon. Federal Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson will replace him. [NBC News / Pete Williams]
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"People are scrambling to feel like they can exercise control where things feel chaotic, and it is a way to try to plan where otherwise something that normally feels stable, like the rule of law, does not feel stable." | |
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Venus is the hottest, scariest planet in the solar system, but billions of years ago it may have been a lot like Earth, complete with an ocean of water. So, how did Venus go to hell? And could Earth be next? |
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