Georgia state Rep. Dar'shun Kendrick (D-Lithonia) announced on Monday that she would be introducing a "testicular bill of rights" in response to the anti-abortion bill that was passed by the Georgia House last week.

The legislation approved last Wednesday would outlaw abortion after a fetus’ heartbeat can be detected, which is before many women know they are pregnant. Women in Georgia can currently seek an abortion up to 20 weeks of a pregnancy. A heartbeat is generally detectable by medical professionals at around 6 weeks. The bill makes exceptions in the case of rape and incest, but only if the woman files a police report. It also would allow exceptions if the pregnancy places a mother’s life at risk.

Kendrick tweeted an image of the proposed legislation on Monday, which would "require men to obtain permission from their sex partner before obtaining erectile dysfunction medication," "ban vasectomy procedures," "require DNA testing when a woman is six weeks and one day to determine the father of the child" and would require a "24-hour 'waiting period' for men wanting to purchase pornographic material."

“I’m dead serious,” Kendrick told Rolling Stone on Monday. “(The point is to) bring awareness to the fact that if you’re going to legislate our bodies, then we have every right to propose legislation to regulate yours.”

Ggggooooodddd morning! Introducing my "testicular bill of rights" legislative package. You want some regulation of bodies and choice? Done! pic.twitter.com/5E8HBRSc9l

— Dar'shun Kendrick (@DarshunKendrick) March 11, 2019

She added in the interview, “It’s unconstitutional on purpose: this is a test case. It is a case to test Roe v. Wade. They’re hoping that it gets up to the Court of Appeals — the Eleventh Circuit is one of the most conservative court circuits that we have, and they’re hopeful that they will uphold part of it, and then they’ll take it all the way to the Supreme Court. They know exactly what they are doing. This is intentional.”

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution added that Rep. Park Cannon (D-Atlanta) was seeking signatures on a proposal that would "require men who are age 55 and older to immediately report to the county sheriff or local law enforcement agency when he releases sperm from his testicles." Cannon "pointed to a 2010 U.S. Centers for Disease Control report that examined men’s reproductive health." In the report, "doctors argued that improving the sexual reproductive health of men and increasing their involvement in family planning could help improve women’s health."

“This bill helps men who are well past reproductive age to self report when they willfully engage in conception,” Cannon told the AJC.

Kendrick told Rolling Stone that the approved anti-abortion bill was "indicative of the people in power being scared that the tides are turning and we are going blue." “Georgia is going blue: we picked up 17 seats this past legislative session," she told the publication. "So, as with most things, they are trying to rush it through because they know that it’s on the horizon. But if I am still here when Democrats take over, [the heartbeat bill] will be the first bill that I overturn if it’s not overturned already."