The Fight For A Choice: The Roe V. Wade Case

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The Fight for a Choice
In 1973, the Roe v. Wade case was resolved. Norma McCorvey, also known as Jane Roe, went against Henry Wade, the district attorney of Dallas County. The Supreme Court eventually affirmed that abortions were legal in the United States. Although it was a game changer for the pro-life and pro-choice debate, abortion is still banned in several states. Because a woman should be able to make her own decisions about her body, abortion should be kept legal in the United States. Women often choose abortion because they can’t afford the price of pregnancy. In fact, a study by the Guttmacher Institute found that 73% of women who had abortions in the United States could not handle the financial cost of delivering. Giving birth
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More than half of abortions occur in pregnant teenagers, who are likely to get worried about pregnancy. The young women often stress about what their friends and family may say. Others simply do not believe in themselves to raise a child properly. Every child deserves a good life, and young women sometimes cannot fulfill that requirement. If forced to deliver a baby, a woman might raise the child in a manner that is not safe. One young woman, who chose to stay anonymous, submitted a post to Buzzfeed about her abortion story, and concluded with a powerful line; “I wish everyone had that ability—to be in charge of their own life and destiny. To me there is no greater freedom than being able to choose your own future” (Buzzfeed). The woman points out the importance of choice. The U.S is a diverse, free, and welcoming country, and one of its values is freedom of …show more content…
The woman should not be blamed for killing an innocent life, especially because some women would not like to give up their baby. It is a path they choose to take because of their own personal issues. What a woman does with her body is her own business. Also, mothers who are not fit to deliver may die during childbirth. Abortions have less than a 0.5% risk of injuring or killing a mother, while childbirth in the U.S is known to be dangerous and unsafe. Half of all deaths caused by delivery can be prevented, according to TIME magazine. Women who are victims of sexual assault often have emotional and sometimes physical scars, and having the child they are forced to bear only reminds them of the horrible wrongdoings done to them. Nancy Stanwood, the associate professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Yale School of Medicine, and Leah Torres, also a professor practicing obstetrics and gynecology, stated in an