Los Angeles Times

The logic of abortion foes

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Re “As a pregnant law professor in Arizona, I fear the abortion ban,” Opinion, April 12

Regarding the abortion debate, I’d like to see personal choice foes follow their own logic.

They say that abortion access is a matter of states’ rights because the people of Texas or Arizona have different opinions than the people of California. However, it’s also true that within Texas, the people of Austin feel differentl­y than the people of another city, so shouldn’t abortion laws be governed by cities, not states?

Taking it further, some neighborho­ods in Austin feel differentl­y than others, so shouldn’t each neighborho­od make its own abortion rules?

The final step in the logic path is that each person in each neighborho­od has a different viewpoint, so shouldn’t we have — drum roll — personal choice?

Jay Lynch Pittsburgh

I know I am in the minority, but I consider abortion to be the murder of babies.

An embryo is the first stage of life. If the embryo survives, a human being is born. If there’s no embryo, there will be no human being.

The only acceptable reason for having an abortion is if it concerns the health of the mother or the future child. If people want to engage in sexual activity without becoming pregnant, there are safeguards available.

Michael Gesas Beverly Hills

Reading Caitlin Millat’s reaction to the Arizona Supreme Court’s ruling on a totally obsolete 1864 statute banning abortion caused more of a “lump in my throat” than anything I’ve heard in my life.

The totally abominable injustice of men making decisions on women’s reproducti­ve rights is way beyond stultifyin­g. Men have no idea what women go through; that also goes for Supreme Court Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr., who wrote the decision overturnin­g Roe vs. Wade in 2022. Richard Parr Santa Monica

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