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ABORTION
Roe V. Wade: Do you know what it really says?
All persons, not just Catholics, can know from the scientific and
medical evidence that what grows in a mother's womb is a new,
distinct human being. All persons can understand that each human
being -- without discrimination -- merits respect. At the very
least, respecting human life excludes the deliberate and direct
destruction of life -- and that is exactly what abortion is.
Catholics are also pro-life because our Christian tradition is
pro-life. As Pope John Paul II says, Christians believe that "all
human life is sacred, for it is created in the image and likeness of
God." Aborting an unborn child destroys a unique creation which God
has called specially into existence. The following are facts
regarding Roe v. Wade.
Myth #1: High Court Rules Abortions Legal the First 3 Months.
Fact: Abortion is legal through all 9 months of pregnancy.
In Roe v. Wade the Supreme Court ruled that abortion may not be
restricted at all in the first trimester. In the second trimester
abortion may be regulated only for the mother's health. After
viability, abortion may be prohibited except where necessary to
preserve the mother's health. Roe's companion case, Doe v. Bolton,
defined maternal health as: all factors - physical, emotional,
psychological, familial, and the woman's age - relevant to the
well-being of the patient. Thus, abortion is legal -- and cannot be
prohibited -- in the 7th, 8th, or 9th months of pregnancy if any of
these reasons is invoked. No significant legal barriers of any
kind whatsoever exist today in the United States for a woman to
obtain an abortion for any reason during any stage of her
pregnancy.
Myth #2: Most abortions are done because of maternal or fetal health
problems, or in cases of rape or incest.
Fact: Abortions are rarely done for these reasons.
According to an Alan Guttmacher Institute survey, women cite these
as the main reason for an abortion in a very small percentage of
cases each year:
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1% "rape or incest"
- 3% "woman has health problem" (physical or mental)
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3% "fetus has possible health problem"
For all other abortions, the main reason cited is:
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21% "unready for responsibility"
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21% "can't afford baby now"
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16% "concerned about how having a baby could change her life"
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12% "has problems with relationship or wants to avoid single
parenthood"
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11% "is not mature enough, or is too young to have a child"
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8% "has all the children she wanted, or has all grown-up children"
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1% "husband or partner wants woman to have abortion"
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1% "doesn't want others to know she has had sex or is pregnant"
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<0.5% "woman's parents want her to have abortion"
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3% "other"
Under Roe v. Wade, abortions for these reasons or any other reason
must be legally permitted.
Myth #3: Most Americans favor U.S. abortion law.
Fact: Most Americans actually oppose it.
A recent Harris Interactive poll claims 52% of Americans favor Roe
v. Wade and 47% oppose it. But the poll describes Roe as "the U.S.
Supreme Court decision making abortions up to three months of
pregnancy legal." That's wrong. The fact is, Roe made abortion legal
through all 9 months of pregnancy. In the same poll, 72% of
Americans said abortion should be illegal in the second three months
of pregnancy, and 86% said abortion should be illegal in the last
three months of pregnancy. Even support for abortion in the first
three months is open to question. In a 2004 Zogby International
poll, 61% of Americans said abortion should not be permitted after
the fetal heartbeat has begun. This occurs in the first month. So
why do 52% of Americans say they favor Roe v. Wade Because they
don't really know what Roe did.
Myth #4: Roe v. Wade said the Constitution includes a right to
abortion.
Fact: Yet even legal commentators who support legal abortion have
said Roe is not good constitutional law.
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Roe v. Wade is "a very bad decision, because it is not constitutional law and gives almost no sense of an obligation to try to be." - John Hart Ely, Yale law professor
"As a matter of constitutional interpretation and judicial method,
Roe borders on the indefensible. [It is] one of the most
intellectually suspect constitutional decisions of the modern era."
- Edward Lazarus, former clerk to Justice Blackmun (who authored
Roe)
"Since its inception Roe has had a deep legitimacy problem,
stemming from its weakness as a legal opinion." - Benjamin Wittes,
Washington Post legal affairs editorial writer
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"One of the most curious things about Roe is that, behind its own
verbal smokescreen, the substantive judgment on which it rests is
nowhere to be found." - Laurence Tribe, Harvard law professor
Supreme Court justices have criticized Roe v. Wade
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"I find nothing in the language or history of the Constitution to
support the Court's judgment" in Roe v. Wade. - Justice Byron White
"This Court's abortion decisions have already worked a major
distortion in the Court's constitutional jurisprudence.no legal
rule or doctrine is safe from ad hoc nullification by this Court
in a case involving state regulation of abortion." - Justice Sandra
Day O'Connor
Roe v. Wade "destroyed the compromises of the past, [and] rendered
compromise impossible for the future. To portray Roe as the
statesmanlike 'settlement' of a divisive issue is nothing less than
Orwellian." - Justice Antonin Scalia
Roe v. Wade "was grievously wrong." - Justice Clarence Thomas
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"Roe v. Wade ventured too far in the change it ordered and
presented an incomplete justification for its action." - Justice
Ruth Bader Ginsburg
Myth #5: The U.S. abortion rate is relatively low.
Fact: It is among the highest of all developed countries in the
world.
In 1973 the Supreme Court in Roe v. Wade deemed "every [abortion]
law - even the most liberal - as unconstitutional. Today the U.S.
has the highest abortion rate in the western world, and the
third-highest of all developed nations worldwide. There are 1.31
million induced abortions annually in the U.S., or 3,500 every day.
24.5% of all U.S. pregnancies end in abortion.
Myth #6: Most American women support Roe v. Wade.
Fact: Most do not.
Roe v. Wade legalized abortion throughout pregnancy, for virtually
any reason. Yet according to a national survey of women published by
the Center for Gender Equality, "only 30% think abortion should be
generally available." In fact, most women say abortion should be
substantially limited or never permitted:
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17% said abortion should never be permitted
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34% said abortion should be permitted only in cases of rape,
incest, and to save the woman's life.
And when asked to rank 12 issues in order of importance for the
women's movement, women ranked "Keeping abortion legal" next to
last.
Myth #7: Most abortions are done before fetal organs are functioning.
Fact: Actually, the vast majority are done after the fetal heart has
begun beating. A fetal heart begins to beat at about 21 or 22 days
after fertilization. That's at about 3 weeks of development. 77% of
abortions in the United States are done well after this point.
Myth #8: U.S. abortion law has not encouraged the use of abortion as a
method of birth control.
Fact: Nearly half of all abortions are performed on women who have
already had at least one.
In 1973 Roe v. Wade legalized abortion throughout pregnancy, for
virtually any reason. Today, 48% of women having an abortion in the
United States have had at least one previous abortion. In some
states the rate of repeat abortions is much higher. In Maryland, for
example, 71.4% of those having an abortion have already had at least
one. And 16.4% have had at least three prior abortions.
Myth #9: Abortion is legal only when the fetus is in the womb.
Fact: Even a child who is partially-born can be legally aborted.
Partial-birth abortion kills a fetus during the process of delivery.
At first, abortion providers said it was rare, and used only on
women whose lives were in danger or whose fetuses were damaged. But
Ron Fitzsimmons, then the Executive Director of the National
Coalition of Abortion Providers, admitted he had "lied through my
teeth." He admitted that most partial-birth abortions are not done
for "extreme circumstances" but are "primarily done on healthy women
and healthy fetuses." In 2000 the Supreme Court said states cannot
ban partial-birth abortion even with an exception to save the
mother's life. The Court said such a ban violates "the woman's right
to choose" established by Roe v. Wade.
Myth #10: If Roe v. Wade is overturned, abortion will automatically be
illegal in the U.S.
Fact: If Roe is overturned, abortion policy will be decided through
the democratic process in each state.
Before Roe v. Wade, all states permitted abortion if necessary to
save the mother's life, and some permitted abortion in additional
circumstances. But Roe deemed "every [abortion] law - even the most
liberal - as unconstitutional." As a result, no state can prohibit
any abortion at any time during pregnancy. If Roe is overturned,
policy decisions about abortion will be made by the citizens of each
state through the democratic process, rather than by courts. Some
states will place limits on abortion, in others there will likely be
few limits.
Not until Roe v. Wade is reversed will the people be able to govern themselves again on the important public policy issue of abortion.
Myth #11: Roe v. Wade is only about a woman's right to abortion, not
about a right to take life in general.
Fact: Roe has often been cited by state and federal judges to
endanger human beings already born.
In 1986, relying on Roe, the Supreme Court invalidated a law
intended to ensure care for children born alive during attempted
abortions. In 1983, a U.S. district court invalidated a federal
regulation to prevent medical neglect of handicapped newborns in
hospitals receiving federal funds. The court said the regulation may
"infringe upon the interests outlined in cases such as Roe v.
Wade." In 1980, a New York court cited Roe in a "right to die" case,
arguing that the "claim to personhood" of a terminally ill comatose
patient "is certainly no greater than that of the fetus." In 1993, a
Michigan judge cited Roe in dismissing criminal charges against Jack
Kevorkian and declaring that the state law against assisted suicide
was unconstitutional. And in 1996, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
Ninth Circuit relied heavily on Roe and its successor, Planned
Parenthood v. Casey, in finding a constitutional "right" to assisted
suicide. While some of these rulings were later modified or
reversed, they all underscore how Roe v. Wade has been used to argue
that ideas of privacy and liberty can trump life itself - after as
well as before birth.
Myth #12: Abortion is standard medical practice; only religious
hospitals and some physicians refuse to provide it.
Fact: Even abortion advocates acknowledge that abortion is outside
mainstream medicine.
The vast majority (86%) of all U.S. hospitals whether religious or
secular, public or private, do not participate in abortions. 71% of
abortions in the United States are performed in free-standing
abortion-dedicated clinics. Only 5% are performed in hospitals, 2%
in physicians offices and 22% in other kinds of clinics. A New York
Times Magazine article reports, The overwhelming majority of
abortions are performed by a small group of doctors. (Some 2 percent
of OB-GYN's carry the burden, performing more than 25 per month).
The medical community's stigmatization of abortion is acknowledged
by Physicians for Reproductive Choice and Health, which says one of
its primary strategic goals is to eradicate the stigma that has
become attached to abortion and abortion providers within mainstream
healthcare.
Myth #14: Roe v. Wade empowers women to choose freely whether abortion
is their best option.
Fact: Legalized abortion has made it easy for others to pressure
women into having abortions.
Not freedom, but "lack of control over one's life" is associated
with high abortion rates, as is "lack of financial and social
resources." An on-line survey of women who had abortions showed that
many women feel pressured by the baby's father: 85% of fathers
offered no encouragement to continue the pregnancy. When women said
they wanted to continue the pregnancy, the fathers' dominant
reactions were; "Slightly Upset 60%, Mad 38%, Very Angry 43%",
compared to "Happy .7%." 73% of fathers suggested an abortion. 80%
of the women surveyed experienced guilt, 83% regret, 79% loss, 62%
anger, and 70% depression. Even a website which encourages women to
consider abortion "so they can freely decide if it is their choice"
elsewhere posts personal stories describing pressure, coercion or
abandonment by the baby's father.
Legislation regarding Abortion in Tennessee:
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