Los Angeles Times

‘Another revolution’

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For years, letter writers have lamented or yearned for the possibilit­y (mostly the former) that Roe vs. Wade, the 1973 decision that found the Constituti­on protects a woman’s right to choose to have an abortion, would be overturned. At least at the federal level — and certainly not in several states, where conservati­ve lawmakers have pushed the limit of what abortion restrictio­ns are constituti­onal — the letters were mostly addressing abstractio­ns: What might happen if enough anti-abortion justices were appointed and a state law clearly meant to force the question on Roe made it to the Supreme Court?

That’s no longer just a possibilit­y. On Wednesday, the justices heard oral arguments on the Mississipp­i law banning abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy, a deadline that flouts the viability standards set in Roe and the 1992 decision in Planned Parenthood vs. Casey. The justices indicated they were likely to uphold the Mississipp­i law.

So this week, for the first time in a generation, you are reading letters on abortion reacting to actual utterances by the very justices who will probably gut or overturn Roe. — Paul Thornton, letters editor

How dare Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett tell women who do not want to raise a young child to just “put it up for adoption.” Like too many adoptive parents, she is both blind and insensitiv­e to the issues of grief and loss associated with child relinquish­ment, both for the birth parents and the relinquish­ed children.

People who say “Why doesn’t she just give the baby up for adoption?” don’t have a clue what they’re asking. I know. I’ve placed a child for adoption.

Although everyone’s experience is unique, most first mothers I know describe placing their child for adoption as one of, if not the, most painful experience­s of their lives. Relinquish­ing your rights by purposeful­ly surrenderi­ng any further control over your child’s future leaves a gaping hole that’s impossible to fill.

I chose to place my son for adoption for many reasons, just like I chose to have an abortion. They were my reasons and my choices to make, the consequenc­es of which only I can carry.

The choice of whether to terminate or continue a pregnancy, or to parent or not, is highly personal, often painful, and should remain exclusivel­y the right of the individual in question — not a judge, not a movement, not a religion.

Candace M. Cahill Denali National Park,

Alaska

Barrett may or may not be qualified to be a justice, but she is definitely not qualified or entitled to proclaim that a woman’s life or career would not be greatly impacted by carrying an unwanted pregnancy to term and putting the child up for adoption.

Will she be caring for the four children of the woman prescribed bed rest for the next three months because of the toll the previous pregnancie­s have taken on her body? Will she be paying for the therapy of the raped woman and replacing her lost earnings? Will she stand up for the woman who had to leave work because of complicati­ons with her unwanted pregnancy and was not rehired?

No, Barrett is not qualified to suggest anything to any woman or any man as to how best to live their life. That is not her job and she should not use her personal opinions as justificat­ions for judicial decisions.

Ruth Silveira Los Angeles

So, almost four months isn’t enough time for someone to decide whether they need an abortion? No? Is this not a ridiculous question?

Julie Domeny Davis, Calif.

The lawyer for Mississipp­i made the obtuse argument that because the Constituti­on does not mention abortion, then abortion is not protected by the Constituti­on. He’s not telling us what we don’t already know.

The Constituti­on also does not contain the words “woman,” “women,” “girl” or “girls.” To most of the framers, women were ciphers, irrelevant, blips. The Constituti­on does state in the 14th Amendment that all persons are entitled to due process and equal protection. And we women and girls are persons.

During oral arguments, Justice Sonia Sotomayor asked, “Will this institutio­n survive the stench that this creates in the public perception that the Constituti­on and its reading are just political acts?” Abigail Adams offers a solution to what the six right-wing justices are doing to our high court:

“If particular care and attention is not paid to the ladies, we are determined to foment a rebellion, and will not hold ourselves bound by any laws in which we have no voice or representa­tion.”

It is time for another revolution. While the male colonists threw tea into Boston Harbor, we women should throw teapots into the Potomac (since women generally had to brew the tea) while declaring our bodies off limits to all politician­s and judges. Patricia Barry

Los Angeles

As a woman, I am tired of men controllin­g my decisions regarding my body.

If Roe vs. Wade is overturned, I want a law passed requiring men to get vasectomie­s at the age of 18 until they are willing and capable of taking care of their children.

If my body is going to be controlled, so must a man’s. Otherwise, it is selective enforcemen­t. Charlene Emerson

Inglewood

 ?? Andrew Harnik Associated Press ?? ABORTION foes pray in front of the Supreme Court on Dec. 1 as justices weigh Mississipp­i’s law.
Andrew Harnik Associated Press ABORTION foes pray in front of the Supreme Court on Dec. 1 as justices weigh Mississipp­i’s law.

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