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David Souers's avatar

My wife and I attended Syracuse University in the late 1960s during the Vietnam War. I was draft age, making the war a constant cloud over me and all of my male classmates. It was also a time when social issues were coming to our attention daily. We were all ready to deal with them, as well as attend and work at our classes for our education and grades. The first Earth Day was a campus wide event filling our quad with displays of respect and solutions for our planet. Hendrix Chapel was both my nondenominational church and our near weekly national speakers forum. It was there that the student body turned out to hear a relatively unknown Bill Baird talk about women across the nation dying from coat hanger abortions. We already knew a some female students who had "back ally" abortions. One of my highschool classmates at SU had dropped out as a freshman when she got pregnant. Bill Baird made a tremendous impression on all of us on how brutal anti abortion laws were to women and families who for so many economic, health, age and family reasons could not carry a pregnancy to term and were seeking deadly and debilitating alternatives.

https://www.veteranfeministsofamerica.org/legacy/Bill_Baird.htm

Planned Parenthood became my wife's first healthcare provider when we got married. Their family planning and birth control assistance were attractive as primary and preventive care services. We have supported Planned Parenthood ever since.

When I was less than 9 years old, my mother who was pregnant gave me instructions not to let anyone take her to the Catholic hospital in our community because she feared they would save the baby over her life if there were a problem. She explained that she had three children at home who needed a mother.

New York State legalized first trimester abortions in 1970, a few years after Bill Baird's talk at Hendrix Chapel, and three years before Roe v. Wade.

My wife bought a first edition of "Our Bodies Ourselves" a women's paper back health guide and referred to it frequently. Women's health had been a mystery even to many women until the abortion rights movement that focused as much on women's health as "pro choice" with the idea that knowing your body and your health choices make you a more healthy, productive and happier person for a better society. Certainly the cruelty of most "Pro Life" measures and many of their advocates are not pro life.

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Ian Mark Sirota's avatar

It will not end with Texas—other “red states” are set to follow suit, including South Dakota and Florida. Abortion is about to be criminalized in a huge section of the country. Of course, this will have little impact on wealthier, white residents of Texas (or the other states which enact similar laws)—they’ll still be able to fly/drive to states where the procedure remains legal. That option will not be available to poorer residents of those same states.

One other thing: Rush Limbaugh’s despicable use of the term “Feminazi”‘always used to infuriate me. My mother’s entire family was wiped out by the Nazis in the Holocaust. To trivialize how truly evil that regime was by comparing Feminists to it demonstrated both historical ignorance and how deceitful and evil Limbaugh actually was. I hated him when he was alive, shed not a single tear when he died, and continue to curse his malign impact on the country.

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