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Dianne Marie Leonard's avatar

In 1973, I was working as a clerical staffer for a doc who had been doing "California-legal" abortions for a few years. I still remember Roe Day, when he came into the office with tears in his eyes. Anyway, a couple of months later a mom brought her 13-year-old daughter into the office. I will never, ever forget that child. She was chubby, like a little kid, and the fear in her eyes--there are no words. After they saw the doc, I was the one who called up to the hospital to schedule the abortion. I can still remember the anger in the hospital scheduler's voice when she asked, "She's *13*??" When the mom and daughter left that day, the doc came out to the front desk. He was usually a very calm person (he'd been a flight surgeon, had been one of the prime movers behind the establishment of the local ER, had been one of very few local docs to care for women on the "abortion ward", among other things), but that day he was clearly in a rage. He looked like he wanted to hit something. He told us shortly to cancel all his afternoon appointments and stomped out of the office. One of my co-workers said, "He's gonna go climb something." (The doc was a mountain-climber. My guess is that was how he got rid of the rage he felt.) The story about the 13-year-old in Mississippi who was raped and forced to carry that pregnancy--starting seventh grade as a mother--and the refusal of the local cops to do jack shit, reminded me of that bad old day. The kid in California in 1973 at least had options. The child in Mississippi in 2023 didn't.

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Laura Terrell's avatar

That Heritage article made me want to 🤮

"Pro-marriage welfare reform policies and abortion reduction policies are synergistic because increased marriage inherently reduces abortion."

These people are delusional. There were more abortions before Roe v Wade than there are now and most women were married when they got them.

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