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ArdenB
Guest
Which states do you think would outlaw abortion, and do you think most women wanting one would just travel to states where it is legal?
I don’t follow this as closely as I used to but I think that there would be immediate or near immediate criminality in the following:Which states do you think would outlaw abortion, and do you think most women wanting one would just travel to states where it is legal?
I am almost 100% positive that Michigan should also be on your list, but I’m sure jenny granholm would disregard the law.I don’t follow this as closely as I used to but I think that there would be immediate or near immediate criminality in the following:
Alaska
Alabama
Arkansas
Florida
Louisiana
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Nebraska
Maryland
Ohio
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Texas
Utah
Wyoming
Only some of these seemed poised to have absolute bans, with the rest including exceptions. As far as travel, I think we’d see the most travel from the states without exceptions. In those states with exceptions, I’d expect to see a lot of rule skirting.
I would definately expect to see us follow Europe in trending towards a lot more in home use of chemical abortificants. I am not even sure how that, Fedex, and varying legality in different states would shake out in terms of law enforcement and prosecution.
Actually, it is illegal in Rhode Island now. The law is on the books, but superceded by Roe. If Roe rolls back, then the law would need to be replaced or overturned.You really think Rhode Island would criminalize it? That’s the only state on your list that really surprised me.
Just a few years ago I would have had it there. Michigan had pre-existing law. But there has been a flurry of abortion related legal activity there in '03 and '05 and I am not quite sure how some of the rulings, like the one from the Federal appeals court last year, effect the new laws, our some seeming changes the new laws made to the pre-existing one (ex. some definitions are changed).I am almost 100% positive that Michigan should also be on your list, but I’m sure jenny granholm would disregard the law.
Isn’t the late-term abortionist Tiller in Kansas?Just a hunch, but I suspect that my state, Kansas, would keep abortion legal, hoping to attract abortion tourists from those states where it was prohibited. It does some of that now.
Kansas also has some medical privacy laws, which I think are well intentioned and generally good, but which could actually make enforcement of an abortion prohibition difficult.Just a hunch, but I suspect that my state, Kansas, would keep abortion legal, hoping to attract abortion tourists from those states where it was prohibited. It does some of that now.
originally posted by JimG
Just a hunch, but I suspect that my state, Kansas, would keep abortion legal, hoping to attract abortion tourists from those states where it was prohibited. It does some of that now.
Although I agree wholeheartedly with the Church that attacks on inalienable rights of the human person (in particular attacks on human life) should not be permitted in secular law, I have reached the conclussion that secular law by itself is the least effective strategy in addressing the evil of abortion.
More home abortions and traveling to those states that allow them; it doesn’t seem like it’s solving it one bit but only making it more difficult to obtain and women will travel.
Agreed.If we really want fewer abortions we need to change the culture.
How about teaching them the importance of chastity according to their state in life?The bulk of procurred abortions are obtained in the US by women at or near the poverty level. Half of them are already mothers. Of course it is wrong for a single mother who is supporting other children to obtain an abortion, but if 27% of the women obtaining abortions really are Catholic, it is not just a matter of teaching them right and wrong.
Interestingly, if men would act like (real) men and lead their households and take responsibility rather than walking off…that would make a HUGE difference (along with a healthy dose of chastity education). Seems like a single-woman led household has a far higher likelihood of being in poverty than a “traditional” family.We need to look at issues like working two jobs and not being able to climb out of poverty, education to break cycles of poverty, and things we are doing as a society that attack the traditional family.
I agree. And I too would like to see Roe overturned, so that the states could act as they are supposed to (according to the 10th amendment). But I, too, am not so pollyanish as to think that this would be the solution to the problem. It would simply remove the tacit approval of the State.Again, I would like to see the law changed. But I think that we are kidding ourselves if we believe that the problem is going to be solved by ‘just overturning Roe’, etc.
originally posted by SoCalRC
If you think about it, abortion is not something that exists in isolation, but a symptom of a culture of death. Secular laws try to address the problem, after the fact, through prohibition, something that has not historically worked well with vices like drug abuse.
I am not buying this argument at all. If I wait until the culture has improved to the point where abortion will be outlawed, that day will never come. Before abortion was legal, the U.S. was imperfect but people were working on improving working conditions, upping men’s wages, inventing appliances to improve daily life and they will continue to do this after abortion is outlawed. When one has that kind of attitude, abortion stays legal.If we really want fewer abortions we need to change the culture.
I’m not sure why you feel so strongly that there is something objectionable to my point. The local Catechism in the US is the UNITED STATES CATHOLIC CATECHISM FOR ADULTS.I am not buying this argument at all. If I wait until the culture has improved to the point where abortion will be outlawed, that day will never come. Before abortion was legal, the U.S. was imperfect but people were working on improving working conditions, upping men’s wages, inventing appliances to improve daily life and they will continue to do this after abortion is outlawed. When one has that kind of attitude, abortion stays legal.
'm not sure why you feel so strongly that there is something objectionable to my point. The local Catechism in the US is the UNITED STATES CATHOLIC CATECHISM FOR ADULTS.
It calls upon Catholics to avoid promoting an overall culture of death and to work for positive societal change on that front. This is not an either/or situation. One can work for both societal change and changes in secular laws. My point is just that the former seems potentially more effective.
Consider, abortion rates have dropped dramatically over the last few decades. There appears to be no statistical relationship to the change and the status of secular law (ex. Oregon is considered the most abortion friendly state in the union in terms of secular law, but it also is a national leader in reducing abortion rates). There isn’t even a relationshop between reduction and national leadership’s position on abortion (abortion rates reduced more dramatically under Clinton than Bush).
So positive change is possible, even without legal changes. I see no problem in pursuing that. Legal changes can also be pursued, but the odds of significant progress any time soon are daunting. Overturning Roe, a major hurdle, would likely only open the door for prohibition in 15-18 states. And, as noted, prohibition, for things like alcohol and illegal drugs, has not been particularly successful in US history.
Daunting odds should not disuade a Christian, but I see no reason why we should not also answer our Christian obligation to transform our culture through faith as well as secular politics.
I know what the Catholic Catechism teaches but to use it to justify abortion on demand is shameful… Abortion may have gone down a little but much of that is due to laws put in place by pro-life groups by making it more difficult to obtain an abortion. Abortion is still taking the lives of 4000 children daily.Peace
I’m sorry, but it is completely wrong to assert that I support abortion in any way. My goal is no abortions. In that light, I consider a dropping abortion rate as positive change.I know what the Catholic Catechism teaches but to use it to justify abortion on demand is shameful… Abortion may have gone down a little but much of that is due to laws put in place by pro-life groups by making it more difficult to obtain an abortion. Abortion is still taking the lives of 4000 children daily.
Abortion should have never come into the U.S.,should be outlawed and that takes top priority over everything else.
Fifty million deaths and you are talking about positive change.
Abortion was not that available in the 19th century. There were few ads and if you read any book writren by Comstock, you will see that the abortionists were arrested. This is all documented by him as he was extremely conscious of recording every event in print and every court document.originally posted by SoCalRC
Abortion was here before it was outlawed (it was openly advertised until the mid 19th century), it was here while it was outlawed, and it is here now.
I agree that we must fight abortion on every possible front but it crucial that we change secular laws.To me, NOT fighting abortion on every possible front, leaving still more children to die while we wait decade after decade hoping for laws to change seems like a twisting of Catholic teaching.
Secular laws help to lower the rates. When there are no open clinics and the general opinion is that abortion is an evil, it plants a very different outlook in young people’s minds.My goal is to elliminate an infallibly vile evil, that means I want to attack the problem on every possible front. Secular law alone has shown itself not to be enough, and it is also too slow.