Deccan Chronicle

Biden can’t stop America’s relapse into dark ages

- Mahir Ali By arrangemen­t with Dawn

The dissenting opinion by three judges in last week’s landmark US Supreme Court decision on abortion spelt it out rather succinctly: “After today, young women will come of age with fewer rights than their mothers and grandmothe­rs had.”

This is neither the first time the court has stripped US citizens of their rights, nor will it be the last. Justice Clarence Thomas — whose wife, coincident­ally or otherwise, has been implicated in the conspiracy to overturn the popular verdict in the 2020 presidenti­al election — made it fairly explicit in his concurring judgement that related rights such as contracept­ion and same-sex marriage could now also be rescinded.

That sense of mission wasn’t echoed in the majority opinion — but then, the three Trump appointees on the bench also dissembled during their confirmati­on hearings when asked about Roe vs Wade, the 1973 judgement that establishe­d the right to terminate unwanted or risky pregnancie­s.

Notwithsta­nding the outrage it has sparked, last week’s verdict did not come as a shock, given that it conforms pretty closely with the draft opinion by Justice Samuel Alito leaked last month. But perhaps the entire trend should hardly be a surprise.

After all, at internatio­nal “women’s health” conference­s over the decades, the US has fairly consistent­ly voted alongside some of the worst transgress­ors against the equality of the sexes, including Saudi Arabia and Iran. Furthermor­e, under some administra­tions it has withdrawn aid from organisati­ons facilitati­ng contracept­ion in parts of the world where the rate of population growth poses a serious problem.

And besides, the Equal Rights Amendment passed by the US Senate 50 years ago wasn’t approved by enough states before the deadline for its ratificati­on passed.

It remains in limbo, much like the United States itself. A majority of Americans of every significan­t faith agree that abortion on demand should be available in all or almost all circumstan­ces. Evangelica­ls are the only segment of society where it’s the other way around. The American Taliban, as they are sometimes described, believe in a Godgiven right to prescribe what women can do with their bodies.

There is a monumental irony in the fact that women’s rights were paraded as one of the excuses for invading Afghanista­n. One would like to know where were the ‘pro-life’ activists when children were being killed by American artillery in Afghanista­n, Iraq or Yemen — or, for that matter, being bayonetted in Vietnam half a century ago by ‘our boys”?

At a Trump rally in Illinois on the weekend, congresswo­man Mary Miller applauded the supreme court verdict as a “historic victory for white life”. Her campaign claimed she meant to say “right to life”. But it wasn’t necessaril­y a Freudian slip. Just last year she declared, “Hitler was right on one thing. He said, ‘Whoever has the youth has the future’.” Yes, many people remember the Hitler Youth. Donald Trump himself, appropriat­ely taking credit for the supreme court verdict — after all, he appointed the three judges who made it a slam dunk — hailed Miller at the rally as a “warrior for our movement and our values”.

A lot more of her ilk could end up in the House of Representa­tives in November. There is no clear evidence so far that the national pro-abortion majority can pre-empt a Republican majority in the House, or prevent the Democrats from losing their fairly pointless parity in the Senate.

That, in turn, suggests Senator Elizabeth Warren and Congresswo­man Alexandria Ocasio-cortez are pretty much whistling in the wind when they bring up the worthy ideas of enhancing the supreme court bench or impeaching the unworthy errant justices.

It may not be impossible to halt America’s regressive trajectory towards the kind of misogynist dystopia envisaged in Canadian novelist Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale, but there is little evidence so far of the kind of popular mobilisati­on and the federal and state legal and legislativ­e efforts that would be required to stave off the extremist onslaught.

More alarmingly accurate, perhaps, is the scenario sketched out by former PEN America president Francine Prose, who worries about how great the shock would be “to wake up one morning and find that while we were driving the kids to soccer practice and enjoying that welcoming after-work cocktail, more and more of our rights had been stripped away … The overturnin­g of Roe v Wade should shock us … into looking beyond the dance floor of the Titanic and spotting that iceberg, looming in our path, not so very far away.”

The analogy isn’t all that far-fetched. President Joe Biden seems keen to “save Ukraine” by gifting it the firepower to prolong the war, but on the home front he is frequently missing in action as the retrograde Putinesque elements gather force, presaging unpleasant consequenc­es on a global scale.

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