(The Seattle Post-Intelligencer is running a shorter version of this essay for Father’s Day. Here’s the linked, full-length original.)
In early 1973, when my sister was twelve years old and I was eight, the US Supreme Court ruled in Roe v. Wade that early abortions are private decisions protected from state intrusion by the US Constitution.
Now, my own daughter is 12, and the odds are greater than ever that the court will overturn Roe, permitting state governments to ban or restrict access to abortion as they see fit.
What would overturning Roe mean for my daughter?
It would mean different things than you might first expect: fewer changes for her personal choices and more changes in the fabric—the unity—of her society.
Let me put this issue in a personal context: Recently, I took my daughter and five of her classmates to a movie. (Yes, we went by bus.) These girls are, in most respects, still children. In one way, however, they’re at the early edge of womanhood. Odds are that in the next year or two, they’ll all have their first periods. A few probably already have. (Twelve-and-a-half is the median age for first periods, as the population research center Guttmacher Institute notes in its comprehensive new report Abortion in Women’s Lives (pdf).)
Dad that I am, I find it hard to think of these six youngsters—my baby girl and her friends whom I’ve known, in some cases, since preschool—as budding women. But my discomfort doesn’t stop the clock. If these girls are typical of US women, they’ll choose to have sex for the first time in about five years, a few months before their eighteenth birthdays. That’s the norm. And they’ll remain both sexually active and fertile for 35 years, until menopause in their early fifties. (Again, Guttmacher.)
For five of those 35 years—again, assuming my movie-night wards are average—they will be pregnant, trying to get pregnant, or postpartum. The other 30 years they’ll spend trying not to get pregnant.
If they’re typical, four of the six will succeed. They’ll enjoy the birthright of their sexuality and still have only the pregnancies they plan and desire.
Unfortunately, two of these young women will likely fail: they will, at some time in their lives, have pregnancies so unwelcome that they choose to seek abortions. The abortions won’t be undertaken gladly or lightly. If these young women are typical, they’ll be certain that abortion is the lesser of evils. They will also feel that abortion is a harsh intrusion into the miracle of reproduction—a choice that is not immoral but is still terribly sad. (Guttmacher.) For that reason, and for their own safety, they’ll want to terminate their unwanted pregnancies as early after conception as possible.
Overturning Roe would not actually prevent these abortions from happening. Just as prohibition didn’t stop drinking, banning abortion doesn’t stop abortion—or it doesn’t stop many abortions. Abortion is commonplace worldwide, whatever its legal status, as Susan Cohen writes. It was commonplace in the United States before Roe v. Wade, as Rachel Benson Gold writes. What banning abortions does is delay them and send them underground or across borders—making them more dangerous for women, as David Garrow documents in his masterful history Liberty and Sexuality.
Admittedly, my daughter and her friends probably face less risk than typical American girls. They come from fortunate families. In a post-Roe America, college-bound, middle-class girls—and the educated, middle-class women they tend to become—probably would not have to resort to back-alley abortions. For one thing, these girls live in a state (Washington) where reproductive rights likely won’t change even without Roe. For another, they live close to a country (Canada) where abortion rights remain unthreatened. And for a third, even if they moved to a state that had outlawed abortion, they’d probably have the means to travel to a prochoice state, as did tens of thousands of women in the years before Roe.
Having to travel to get safe abortions would be inconvenient. It would also infringe on these girls’ autonomy—their control over their own bodies. And it would delay those abortions until somewhat later in pregnancy, increasingly the minuscule health risks of legal abortion. But even when delayed, legal abortion remains many times safer than childbirth.
So the personal impacts of overturning Roe would be real for my daughter and her friends. But they might be smaller than you would have supposed, given the intensity of the culture war over abortion.
Still, overturning Roe would have other effects, and these effects concern me just as much. It would shape profoundly the nation in which the girls will live their lives, just as Roe has shaped the nation in which my sister and I have grown.
Reversing Roe would create in many red states a two-tier system of reproductive rights. The day after Roe, the red-blue map of US presidential elections would begin turning into a hazard map for low-income women. (USA Today recently drew such a map.) Daughters of fortunate families would travel to blue states to get abortions. Daughters of unfortunate families would risk abortions from clandestine providers close to home, endangering their lives. Or they’d order the abortion pill from shady Internet operators. Or they’d attempt to induce abortions themselves, as did thousands before Roe. Or they’d board Greyhound buses or beg rides across state lines in search of legal abortions.
Or—and this outcome might be just as tragic—they’d bear children they resented and never wanted in the first place. Unwanted births bring a chain of disheartening consequences: more infant deaths, more child abuse and neglect, more school failure, more children in foster care and juvenile courts. And more women who blame themselves for all of these ills.
The long-term implications of this reproductive schism would be grave for unfortunate and fortunate alike. My sister and I have lived in a country that guaranteed women—as a fundamental, American right—that they alone would choose whether to carry early pregnancies to term. This inalienable guarantee has been part of the broad foundation of legal and political equality that all Americans knew they stood upon: the equal entitlement to freedom that has always defined Americans’ understanding of themselves as a people.
Overturning Roe would degrade women’s sovereignty over their own bodies. It would demote reproductive choice from a right to a privilege—a privilege distributed, like others, on the basis of money. Downgrading reproductive choices in this way—lumping them in with other class-based commodities of American life such as higher education, medical care, and housing—would substantially erode Americans’ sense of equality.
And thus, even if my daughter and her friends suffer little loss of choice themsel
ves, overturning Roe would nonetheless cost them something of surpassing value. It would deny them the sense that they live in a country that stands up for all women. It would rob them of another reason to believe that as Americans, we’re not just a collection of workers and consumers who happen to share a currency, we’re a nation—we’re all in this life together.
One final note of political prognosis: If overturning Roe triggers a 50-state brawl—the mother of all abortion battles—watch for fathers of daughters to play a surprising role. Fathers today are champions not so much of their daughters’ virtue as of their daughters’ rights. One recent study conducted by Yale University’s Ebonya Washington and published by the National Bureau of Economic Research showed, for example, that members of the US Congress who have more daughters are much more likely to vote for abortion rights than are those male representatives who have fewer daughters. Among members of Congress with two or three children, having all girls—versus all boys—causes a substantial pro-choice shift in voting.
Speaking only for myself, I can say that I’m vehement about my daughter having access to all reproductive choices. It’s not because I don’t trust her. It’s that I do. She and her friends are smart, confident girls and they’ll almost always make wise decisions. They’ll choose good partners, love them and be loved in return. They’ll make choices that are right for them about when to have sex and when not to. When they do express their sexuality, they’ll use effective contraceptives to avoid disease and pregnancy. They’ll make use of emergency contraceptives as a first recourse when normal contraceptives fail. When it’s time, they’ll marry and have children and raise them well. I have no doubts about any of these things.
But I also have no doubts that they will make a few mistakes over their lives, a few lapses of judgment. And I know that no contraceptive is perfectly effective. And I know that sexual violence and coercion are all too common.
And when those unlucky two of my six movie companions end up with an unwanted pregnancy, I don’t trust Justice Antonin Scalia or Samuel Alito—or even the members of the Washington State legislature—to decide what’s best. I trust my daughter Kathryn and her friends Alison, Jade, Lily, Nicole, and Nikki.
Alan Durning
At 5 pm Saturday—12 hours before the printed Sunday paper that contains this article is on doorsteps—there’s already a string of comments accumulating on the PI website.
eldan
The hatefulness of reader comments on PI articles never ceases to amaze me.
lehmann2
Your confidence that Canada will always be a safe haven for abortion may be misplaced. The new Conservative government may (and likely may) proceed with the same kinds of biases that G.W.Bush’s government has (Prime Minister Harper is a big fan of neoconservative values). The criminal code in Canada is Federal rather than a matter of provincial (states’) rights. We wait with nervous anticipation the direction that Harper will move on this and other issues if and when he achieves a majority government.
globalhammock
Alan, I enjoyed reading your perspective as a dad and appreciate you foregrounding this crucial topic but I want to caution against a very specific line of western, biomedical thinking that dominates your discussion around reproductive health, rights and choice (all debatable terms). The problem I refer to is the assumption that people are rational decision-makers. This model of human behaviour is similarly applied to defend the liberalizing of economic systems where consumers are cast as free thinkers in an open market… and hence have free ‘choice.’ In fact, we only get to decide between the options produced for us, whether this is chewing gum or contraception.Referring to your daughter and her friend, you write “[t]hey’ll make choices that are right for them about when to have sex and when not to. When they do, they’ll use effective contraceptives to avoid disease and pregnancy.” And subsequently, you quickly and quietly concede that they just might make mistakes along the way.I have to disagree with your assumption that these people will use the ‘right’ contraceptive (what are those anyway? Hormonal interventions?). I think that people make the poor choices all the time and even though they think they should use a condom or wear a seat belt or not eat that crap food, they often don’t (or do, as the case may be) despite being ‘educated’ on the risks involved. People are irrational. People behave irrationally and the assumption that they can and should be educated to behave in some logical, rational, objective way is highly problematic in my mind. Please don’t get me wrong, I understand concerns around STIs, HIV/AIDs, and unwanted pregnancies, and am not suggesting that men and women reject condom use and not ever consider family planning strategies. I just want to tease out the idea the way that we’ve constructed reproductive choices—as bad behaviour vs. good behaviour. I contest the idea that women (and men) need to be making rational choices to control their sexuality and reproduction—not that this is ‘bad’ behaviour, but that this is the only path that is acceptable in society.This way of thinking becomes seriously harmful when forced on others, with different knowledge systems, especially where post-colonial inequalities exist. We impose this ‘educate her so she can rationally chose to just have two’ thinking on women the world round without considering the implications. ‘We’ are still telling women what to do with their bodies and we do it in the name of health, rights and choice. Sound familiar?If we agree that people are irrational and do things that harm them, then we may need to rethink health and wellbeing models and the provision of said services.Thank you for this opportunity to rant and rave! I really appreciate the space to voice my opinions. Cheers!!
Alan Durning
lehmann2,Point taken, but I still think that Canada is much, much more dedicated than America to the principle that early abortion choices should be made by women themselves.globalhammock,Your argument is a puzzle to me. I think I understand the critique you’re voicing, but I don’t see how it actually makes a difference in the field of abortion and other reproductive decisions.Even if we’re not rational beings in an ideal sense, public policy should still lean toward respecting individual conscience on matters that are deeply controversial in a society. Right?Is your argument with my conclusion or with my rhetoric?