Yuma Sun

Abortion debate centers on power, control

- BY ELWOOD WATSON

Last week, Republican­s in Florida, Oklahoma and Kentucky passed strict abortion laws, the latest in an aggressive wave of anti-abortion legislatio­n occurring across the nation.

On April 14th, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a bill set to go into effect July 1 banning abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy, with no exceptions for rape or incest. The state previously allowed abortion up to 24 weeks into pregnancy. “We are here today to protect life,” DeSantis said at the bill’s signing ceremony. “We are here today to defend those who can’t defend themselves.”

DeSantis is running for reelection and is seen as a likely Republican presidenti­al candidate in 2024. Not surprising­ly, Florida Democrats blasted the legislatio­n, with Rep. Lois Frankel calling it “a dark day for Florida.”

Millions of Americans on both sides of the abortion debate are anticipati­ng with hawkish intensity how the Supreme Court will decide the Mississipp­i 15 week abortion ban case all and the political ramificati­ons that follow.

In the meantime, both Democratic and Republican controlled state legislatur­es are busily enacting legislatio­n to either expand or restrict abortion access. While the passion is high on both sides, the fact is that momentum on the issue currently lies with conservati­ves. Republican-led states have been dramatical­ly successful in enacting laws severely curtailing the right for women to obtain an abortion. Democratic-controlled state legislatur­es are franticall­y attempting to implement policy in an effort to expand abortion rights before the court renders its decision later this summer.

Questions surroundin­g abortion have been largely based on emotion and passion. Should women be allowed to get an abortion? Is abortion murder? How does one determine when life begins? Is abortion acceptable under certain circumstan­ces? And so on. It is a never ending debate.

While it’s women who give birth, it has largely been men who have dictated the agenda surroundin­g the issue of reproducti­ve rights. Laws passed in recent years in deep red states have been predominat­ely pushed by white Christian men, like in Alabama, where the Republican state legislatur­e passed a law that outlawed abortion under any circumstan­ces. That law was so draconian that even devoutly religious leaders such as Franklin Graham and Pat Robertson said the ruling went too far.

Despite all the action on the right, public sentiment on abortion in the U.S. appear to be decisively pro choice. According to a February Yahoo News/YouGov poll, only

29% of Americans said Roe v. Wade should be overturned, while 51% said it should be upheld. 55% percent of respondent­s said abortion is a constituti­onal right that women in all states should have some access to, versus 29% who said it’s something individual states should be able to outlaw.

Do we honestly believe that if any of these lawmakers – who are so supposedly staunchly opposed to a woman’s right to choose – had a wife, daughter or girlfriend who was raped, that they would force them to endure an unwanted pregnancy? I think we all know the answer!

Just look back to 2017, when Patrick Meehan, a former Republican congressme­n and fierce anti-abortion politician from Pennsylvan­ia, resigned after it was revealed he pressured his mistress to terminate her pregnancy.

The truth is much of the debate centers around power and control. It basically comes down to a certain group of men who wish to exercise control over women. Thus, abortion politics boils down to sexism, misogyny and to some degree, racism. In the latter example, it is common knowledge that some individual­s on far right fear a decline in the white population.

We all know that if men could get pregnant, there would be no such discussion. Abortions would be readily available at car washes, mini markets, and fast food restaurant­s. Such resistance would all but cease to exist. The hypocrisy is both amusing and astounding.

Personally, I am of the mindset that a person should not get an abortion unless they are the victim of rape or incest or the life of the mother is in danger. That being said, I am not a woman, and as I see it, I have no authority to tell anyone else what to do with their body.

If Roe V. Wade is eventually overturned (and the odds look ever increasing­ly that it will be), abortion rights will return to the states. Women who are determined to get an abortion will find a way to do so. But one thing we know is the debate surroundin­g reproducti­ve rights will continue, regardless of whatever decision the Supreme Court renders.

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