A Year After Dobbs: Rights Have Been Lost, Lives Have Been Threatened--But Feminists Persist
A Year After Dobbs: Rights Have Been Lost, Lives Have Been ThreatenedBut Feminists Persist
6/23/2023 by Kathy Spillar
People gather to protest against the the Supreme Courts decision in the Dobbs v. Jackson Womens Health Organization case on June 24, 2022, in Raleigh, N.C. (Allison Joyce / Getty Images)
Exactly one year ago, the Supreme Court ruled to overturn Roe v. Wade in Dobbs v. Jackson Womens Health Organization.
Its a sobering anniversarynot only did the Court take away rights U.S. women had relied on for 50 years, but the countless suffering weve seen in the past year that resulted from the ruling has been heartbreaking. Weve seen clinics forced to close their doors in states across the U.S., leaving vast abortion deserts in their wake, and forcing patients to spend hundreds, even thousands, of dollars and travel thousands of miles to obtain abortions. Weve seen women arrested, charged, and sued for using abortion pills. Weve seen women denied abortions during medical emergencies, forcing them into life-threatening situations. And so much more.
At the same time, support for abortion among Americans has increased and remains at an all-time high. Nearly 70 percent of Americans believe first-trimester abortions should be legal, per new polling from Gallupthe highest that number has been since Gallup began polling the issue in 1996. And yet, elected officials in Republican-dominated state legislatures continue to propose and pass bans that are clearly against the will of their constituents. Fortunately, advocates and voters arent standing byin states like Kansas, Michigan and more, voters came out in full force to support abortion rights in last years election, striking down anti-abortion ballot measures and passing pro-abortion rights ones.
And at the national level, Senate Democrats are putting forth legislation to protect womens fundamental rightsincluding the Right to Contraception Act, the Freedom to Travel for Health Care Act, the Let Doctors Provide Reproductive Health Care Act, and the Upholding Protections for Health and Online Location Data (UPHOLD) Privacy Act. These acts would go a long way to help preserve the rights of abortion seekers and their care providers.
A year after Dobbs, it would be easy to say that things have gotten worse, that the future looks bleak. But it doesnt have to be. As NOW President Christian Nunes writes in the Summer issue of Ms., While the disbelief at witnessing the rights of women being debated and rejected by the Court will always remain, I feel a sense of pride and empowerment in being part of a movement that refuses to back down in the face of injustice. Who knows where we will be a year from now in 2024an election year. We will not grow complacent, and we will not stop pushing for our rights. That is a promise. We, too, can promise that well keep reporting from the front lines of the battle to restore abortion rights and keep it accessible for all.
https://msmagazine.com/2023/06/23/dobbs-anniversary-feminists-persist/