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Abortion: Every Woman's Right

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Pro-Choice In 1841, Margaret Fuller asserted “No woman can call herself free, who is not in charge of her body (Johnson).” Over 130 years later, Roe v. Wade ruled abortion a “fundamental right for women” and established a basic freedom to personal liberty and privacy. Most of the women that seek them do so because of a pregnancy that puts their live at stake, contraceptive failure, severe birth deformities, teenage pregnancies or rape. Every woman should have the ability to choose if she wants to terminate her pregnancy or not, without any interference from the the government.
Louisiana, Utah, and the territory of Guam have all passed laws unconditionally prohibiting abortion, even for circumstances that put the mothers’ life in danger (“Abortion: Every Woman’s Right”). These are the first laws the United States that ban a safe medical procedure. Only five in every 100 thousand patients are at risk for complications during or after the surgery (Pearson). Most of which can be …show more content…

During which the fetus cannot feel pain or any other emotions. The developing infant is not able to see or hear. Its brain is not functioning, and it has not developed a nervous system either. The fetus still cannot survive outside of the woman. It is a part of her body, she can do what she wants with it. The fetus has the potential of becoming a human being, but it certainly is not one yet.
Repeated studies in the 1980s debunk myths that abortion raises the chance of health and psychological problems in a woman such as infertility, breast cancer, and an increased chance of miscarriages in the future are false. More recently, studies by the The American Psychological Association states that abortion has no lasting or significant effects (“Abortion Coverage Bans”).
Every woman should have the ability to choose if she wants to terminate her pregnancy or not, without any interference from the the

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