Los Angeles Times

The reversal of our sexual freedoms

If Roe vs. Wade is overturned, the trend against human rights, privacy and individual liberty will continue

- By Rebecca L. Davis Rebecca L. Davis, a professor of history at the University of Delaware, is the author of “Public Confession­s: The Religious Conversion­s That Changed American Politics.”

The leaked Supreme Court opinion by Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr., which would overturn Roe vs. Wade, marks a devastatin­g setback for reproducti­ve justice in the United States. It also highlights how bound up the right to abortion is with other fundamenta­l sexual freedoms and civil rights. Whatever happens in the wake of this likely decision, we are already witnessing the undoing of more than a century of successful efforts to expand and protect individual rights to sexual and gender self-expression.

A decision nullifying Roe could threaten protection­s for other sexual rights. The majority opinion in Roe in 1973 relied on a right to privacy first establishe­d in Griswold vs. Connecticu­t (1965), which lifted a state ban on contracept­ive access for married people. Recognitio­n of a right to privacy also underpinne­d the court’s decision in Lawrence vs. Texas (2003) to overturn state anti-sodomy statutes. The majority opinion in Obergefell vs. Hodges (2015) likewise cited a right to privacy among its reasons for requiring all states to legalize marriages for same-sex couples. All those cases marked wins for individual liberty, human rights and civil rights.

Whether or not federal protection for abortion rights disappears this year, the erosion of sexual freedoms is already well underway. Although a majority of Americans support abortion rights, several states have passed extraordin­arily restrictiv­e abortion laws. School boards have banned books with LGBTQ content. And state legislatur­es have authorized retaliatio­n against transgende­r people and their allies — even investigat­ing the parents of children who receive transaffir­ming healthcare.

It is not a historical accident that a likely Supreme Court decision to overturn Roe has coincided with these other assaults on sexual freedom and gender identity. The legal right to abortion is but one issue — if a critical one — at the heart of a much larger struggle for sexual autonomy.

That struggle took shape in the wake of another devastatin­g attack: the passage of the Comstock Act in 1873, championed by Anthony Comstock of the New York Society for the Suppressio­n of Vice. Officially the Act for the Suppressio­n of Trade in, and Circulatio­n of, Obscene Literature and Articles of Immoral Use, the law prohibited sending “obscene, lewd, or lascivious” items through the U.S. mail or across state lines. The act defined reproducti­ve technologi­es and all printed material about contracept­ion as obscene.

Many states had started to outlaw abortion procedures in the 1850s, often due to pressure from (male) physicians determined to undermine a measure typically provided by (female) midwives. The Comstock Act made even the possession of abortifaci­ents a federal crime.

Prudish, sanctimoni­ous and often cruel, Comstock was a “fire and brimstone” Protestant who considered any sex outside of marital reproducti­on to be sinful. He succeeded in convincing the federal government to impose his religious values on all Americans.

But Comstock’s law did not affirm the status quo. It sought to thwart increasing­ly permissive sexual values.

Contrary to caricature­s of the era, the 19th century United States was not prudish about sex. A prolific pornograph­y industry enjoyed unpreceden­ted success. Bigamy and divorce had become more common, and Indiana served as the “divorce mill” that Nevada would become decades later. Same-sex couples and queer people lived openly in communitie­s where what mattered was not whether someone conformed to a strict sexual morality but whether they caused any trouble for their neighbors. Most people placed a high premium on privacy.

When Comstock and Congress determined that they had the authority to decide which kinds of sex were moral and which were not, they upended that equilibriu­m by authorizin­g agents of the state to police Americans’ erotic and reproducti­ve lives.

A century of activism defending the individual’s right to sexual self-expression followed. Across multiple movements and battlegrou­nds, activists have made clear that an overwhelmi­ng majority of Americans wanted to make their own decisions about their sexual desires and relationsh­ips.

Birth control activists distribute­d informatio­nal pamphlets and opened clinics in defiance of Comstock’s bans on contracept­ion. Lawyers and advocates gradually won carve-outs for physician-directed birth control and the sale of condoms. Bar owners and LGBTQ activists fought back in court and in the streets against liquor boards and vice squads, eventually refuting the idea that a gathering of LGBTQ people was by definition obscene. Filmmakers, publishers and others challenged the government’s censorship powers. And by the 1960s, activists took direct aim at laws that criminaliz­ed abortion, insisting that sexual freedoms were meaningles­s if women could not make decisions about whether to carry a pregnancy to term.

Many of us who have benefited from those movements have grown to adulthood expecting to be able to express our gender identities, our sexual desires and our reproducti­ve decisions according to our own conscience­s. The revelation of the draft opinion to overturn abortion rights should animate anyone in the U.S. who values sexual freedoms. The decision would impose a minority’s interpreta­tion of Christian morality on the nation and render all nonmarital, nonreprodu­ctive sexual expression­s vulnerable to policing and prosecutio­n.

The activism that undid the Comstock Act transforme­d American culture. It ingrained values of sexual autonomy across our social institutio­ns, laws and popular culture. Americans today overwhelmi­ngly support marriage equality, access to contracept­ion, comprehens­ive sex education and abortion, and they consume sexually explicit material in staggering quantities. In a country where we have grown so accustomed to seeing our sexuality as a core part of our humanity — and as an arena of freedom and expressive­ness — we can only hope that it will require far less than a century to undo the damage of an end to Roe.

 ?? Bettmann Archive Getty Images ?? PAMPHLETS about birth control are handed out in 1916 in Union Square in New York City.
Bettmann Archive Getty Images PAMPHLETS about birth control are handed out in 1916 in Union Square in New York City.

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