Side effects of legal abortion

Besides all the other tales of the impact of abortion…..there’s this commentary in today’s WSJ.

One often misunderstood fact: Legal abortions just didn’t start with Roe, or even with the five states that liberalized abortion laws in 1969 and 1970. Prior to Roe, women could have abortions when their lives or health were endangered. Doctors in some states, such as Kansas, had very liberal interpretations of what constituted danger to health. Nevertheless, Roe did substantially increase abortions, more than doubling the rate per live birth in the five years from 1972 to 1977. But many other changes occurred at the same time:

• A sharp increase in pre-marital sex.

• A sharp rise in out-of-wedlock births.

• A drop in the number of children placed for adoption.

• A decline in marriages that occur after the woman is pregnant.

Some of this might seem contradictory. Why would both the number of abortions and of out-of-wedlock births go up? If there were more illegitimate births, why were fewer children available for adoption?

The article gets into some interesting analysis of the cost to women, and particularly black women, of the abortion culture. This is a dialogue we need to be able to have nationally, especially during the presidential campaigns. Abortion is popping up as one of the hot topics in every debate. Let’s have less heat and more light on it.

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