Los Angeles Times

More poverty, more deaths

Re “Leaked opinion signals end of Roe,” May 3

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It appears that within the next couple of months, women will be punished for unwanted pregnancie­s. The result will be barbaric coathanger abortions, expensive trips for out-of-state procedures, and the prospect of carrying the tragic results of rapes to term.

For many, this will mean the end of a promising future for themselves and their children. In some cases, families that are already struggling economical­ly will face the burden of another child they cannot provide for. And sadly, in a country where childbirth is already a risky propositio­n, many more mothers will die. All this pain in the name of “right to life.”

So perhaps we should even the playing field. Why should men live without consequenc­es?

First, provide women of childbeari­ng age with electronic chastity belts. Why not? It shouldn’t be that hard to create a device that alerts the “sex police” if a woman is being raped.

Second, for repeat sex offenders, we might want to go a little further. Castration and the garnishing of wages for life to pay for the upbringing of their children are in order.

Do I want to see my ideas played out? Of course not. But I do not propose them simply in jest. We are headed down a dangerous road.

Women deserve the right to control their own bodies. Don’t let the Supreme Court trample on our rights. Force Congress to protect women’s health.

Right now the issue is abortion. What will be next? Catherine Bell

Los Angeles

For those of us old enough to remember some of the pre-Roe horror stories, it’s not difficult to imagine what setbacks are coming at us next.

Books are being banned with the rapidity of bullets from an assault rifle. Gay marriage? School segregatio­n? Loving vs. Virginia? If you think these laws have any standing with this Supreme Court, good luck.

As if these last few years weren’t horrific enough, we now need to worry about setting our sundials before the next witch trials begin. Marley Sims

Valley Village

The right to an abortion is different from other liberties that follow from the due process clause, those that protect fundamenta­l aspects of privacy and autonomy. The biggest difference is that abortion ends a life, and all other decisions relating to autonomy and privacy do not.

In Roe vs. Wade, the majority in favor of recognizin­g a right to an abortion decided by fiat that human life begins when the fetus is viable, but that is not the definition that pro-lifers believe. Every one of us was once a single-cell human, and our full developmen­t within the womb was an uninterrup­ted continuum.

Thus, the fundamenta­l question is whether aborting a healthy intrauteri­ne life is a matter of parental convenienc­e or an illegal terminatio­n of life. The issues of rape, incest and fetal abnormalit­ies are a separate matter. Paul Bloustein

Cincinnati

Neither the Supreme Court nor any other government entity will ever stop abortions. Making abortion illegal will simply drive it back undergroun­d, and the women who cannot afford to travel will be butchered by amateurs. Many will die.

It is barbaric to discrimina­te against women this way. I am old enough to remember these atrocities. No life is protected unless all lives are protected. Phyllis Higgins Los Angeles

The Supreme Court is going to make a big decision by overturnin­g Roe vs. Wade. I see this as a good thing, as the rights of a fetus will be recognized in this country.

What will that look like? The fetus will be viewed as a child and therefore worthy of an income tax deduction for all pregnant women. This recognitio­n will include food stamps if the host parents cannot afford food for themselves.

In the case of pregnancie­s from rape, DNA tests will be performed to determine who the father is.

This is going to be quite an awakening for all of us. Are we truly ready to honor the fetus?

Lillian Jenkins Culver City

The Constituti­on was written by white men more than 200 years ago. It did not result in extending rights to women, who at the time were considered subservien­t to the men who ruled families, churches and government. Women who strayed from male dominance were often punished.

Women had to fight for every right they have. Now a minority thinks it’s OK to take away the right to privacy and the right to choose our medical care.

These extremist justices do not represent the majority. They represent a zealous minority that wants to reverse equal rights and opportunit­ies for women, minorities and LGBTQ people.

Jann Shaw Porter Ranch

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