It doesn’t have to be this way
Paxton Smith, valedictorian of Lake Highlands High School in Dallas, went off script to oppose Texas’s new abortion restrictions.
Voices

It doesn’t have to be this way

Restrictions aimed at reducing abortions are designed to challenge Roe v. Wade in the hope it will be reversed. Never have we seen abortion restrictions like those that now exist in 45 states.

SAXTONS RIVER — She is 16 years old and pregnant. Still in school and devoid of job skills, she would not qualify to adopt a child, yet she could be forced to carry the fetus to term.

She is a mother who wants another child, but in the third term of her pregnancy she learns her fetus has severe organ anomalies and will die soon after birth. Yet she is denied a late-term abortion.

She is a victim of rape who suffers post-traumatic stress that renders her unable to work, but she will be forced to give birth.

She has been sexually abused by her uncle for years and is now pregnant by him, but she cannot have an abortion.

Each of these women represent many others. They are the elephant in the room which no one wants to talk about as the United States moves ever-closer to draconian restrictions on abortion, and ultimately the death of Roe v. Wade, the landmark 1973 decision in which the Supreme Court ruled that the Constitution protects a woman's liberty to choose to have an abortion without excessive government restriction.

Ever since the Supreme Court's decision, a growing number of states have worked hard to promulgate laws and regulations that limit whether and when a woman can obtain an abortion.

Restrictions aimed at reducing abortions are designed to challenge Roe v. Wade in the hope it will be reversed. They include such measures as mandating unnecessary physician and hospital requirements, setting gestational limits, preventing so-called “partial birth” (late-term) abortion, promulgating funding restrictions, and insisting on state-mandated counseling, waiting periods, and parental involvement.

But never have we seen abortion restrictions like those that now exist in 45 states, making 2021 a year that is on track to become the most devastating antiabortion state legislative session in decades,” as the Guttmacher Institute notes.

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Various state laws from Arizona to Arkansas are a Handmaid's Tale nightmare, but none are as staggering as the laws in Texas.

Since January, patients have been required to receive state-directed counseling, including information designed to discourage abortion, coupled with mandated wait times.

There are also constraints on various insurance policies, including those included in the Affordable Care Act. Parental consent is required, and patients must undergo an ultrasound at least 24 hours before obtaining an abortion while the provider shows and describes the fetal image to the patient.

Further, in May, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott signed a fetal heartbeat abortion bill that bans the procedure as early as six weeks, well before most women know they're pregnant. That law is scheduled to go into effect in September, although it and many other proposed laws are being challenged in the courts.

No wonder Texan Paxton Smith, valedictorian of her high school class, found her graduation speech going viral. With enormous courage, she “aborted” her approved speech and spoke eloquently, noting at the start that the six-week “heartbeat ban” bill had just been introduced.

“I cannot give up this platform to promote complacency and peace when there is a war on my body and on my rights,” she said. “A war on the rights of your mothers, a war on the rights of your sisters, a war on the rights of your daughters. We cannot stay silent,” she told the crowd, noting that medical authorities have said the fetal heartbeat argument is misleading.

Shortly after Smith gave her speech, a Spokane, Wash. newspaper revealed that several months earlier a woman who suffered a miscarriage in a hotel there had been investigated by police.

They found it suspicious that she did not meet them at the hospital as they had instructed.A search warrant followed because the cops thought the woman might be guilty of criminal mistreatment of a child.

Ultimately, the investigation was closed. But women are actually in jail here and in other countries, charged with feticide following a miscarriage.

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It doesn't have to be this way.

There are many models we can look to in which women's right to exercise control over their bodies is not in the hands of the state.

The Netherlands is one such country. Abortion is free on demand there, and yet they have the lowest abortion rate in the world, while complications and deaths from the procedure are rare.

Contraception is widely available and free, and abortion is covered by the national health insurance plan. Sex education starts early, and Dutch teenagers have less-frequent sex starting at an older age than U.S. teens. The pregnancy rate in the Netherlands is six times lower than ours.

Why, then, but for Paxton Smith, do we never hear media reports about the critical issue of abortion, which male power brokers embrace with the force of institutionalized misogyny?

Why does the current administration remain silent on an issue of this import when three quarters of Americans want Roe v. Wade to remain in place, citing it as a key issue affecting who will get their vote?

Why is the American public so ready to give up on a fundamental human right that can touch all of us?

Why, Ms. Smith might well ask, do we stay silent?

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