22 January 1973 A.D. America’s Pivot--From WWII
Liberators to Mass Genocidalists: Roe v. Wade Celebrated by Reprobates
Editors. “Roe v. Wade.”
History.com. N.d. http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/roe-v-wade. Accessed 21 Jan 2015.
Roe v. Wade
The Supreme Court
decriminalizes abortion by handing down their decision in the case of Roe v.
Wade. Despite opponents' characterization of the decision, it was not the
first time that abortion became a legal procedure in the United States. In fact, for most of the country's first 100 years, abortion as we
know it today was not only not a criminal offense, it was also not considered
immoral.
In the 1700s and early
1800s, the word "abortion" referred only to the termination of a
pregnancy after "quickening," the time when the fetus first began to
make noticeable movements. The induced ending of a pregnancy before this point
did not even have a name--but not because it was uncommon. Women in the 1700s
often took drugs to end their unwanted pregnancies.
In 1827, though, Illinois
passed a law that made the use of abortion drugs punishable by up to three years'
imprisonment. Although other states followed the Illinois example,
advertising for "Female Monthly Pills," as they were known, was still
common through the middle of the 19th century.
Abortion itself only became
a serious criminal offense in the period between 1860 and 1880. And the
criminalization of abortion did not result from moral outrage. The roots of the
new law came from the newly established physicians' trade organization, the
American Medical Association. Doctors decided that abortion practitioners were
unwanted competition and went about eliminating that competition. The Catholic
Church, which had long accepted terminating pregnancies before quickening,
joined the doctors in condemning the practice.
By the turn of the century,
all states had laws against abortion, but for the most part they were rarely
enforced and women with money had no problem terminating pregnancies if they
wished. It wasn't until the late 1930s
that abortion laws were enforced. Subsequent crackdowns led to a
reform movement that succeeded in lifting abortion restrictions in California and New York even before the Supreme Court decision in Roe
v. Wade.
The fight over whether to
criminalize abortion has grown increasingly fierce in recent years, but opinion
polls suggest that most Americans prefer that women be able to have abortions
in the early stages of pregnancy, free of any government interference.
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