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Supreme Court to Women of America: You Own It

Amanda Marcotte on January 15, 2008 - 9:56am
Amanda Marcotte's picture

Next week is the 35th anniversary of Roe v. Wade, and instead of doing the same old thing and focusing on the right to abortion, I'd like to examine some of the political fallout that occurred after this momentous event that signaled to the women of America that we own our bodies. We do. Not your husband, not your boyfriend, not your parents, not your church. In deciding Roe v. Wade, the Supreme Court did more than simply legalize abortion. It sent the signal to women of the country that we do in fact have the right to control our own bodies and sexuality.

It's well understood that one of the primary motivations of the anti-abortion movement is generating a steady supply of white babies into the adoption market, a supply that has dried up since Roe was decided 35 years ago. Most people assume that the reason that the supply of white babies dried up was the prevalence of abortion after 1973. Certainly, anti-choice activists give every indication of believing this, pleading with women to consider adoption instead of abortion, setting up maternity homes and crisis pregnancy centers to pressure women into giving up babies for adoption and even going so far as to require that anyone applying for "don't get an abortion" funds gives the baby up for adoption. The intense interest in adoption makes the anti-choice movement ten times creepier of course, because they can't even hide that they see women less as human beings and more as baby factories producing for "worthier" couples. Take into consideration how anti-choice organizations also oppose all forms of pregnancy prevention, including contraception and sex education, and you have a pretty damning stack of evidence that all this sturm und drang about abortion is about making sure that every infertile white couple who wants a baby that looks like them gets one.

But the statistics indicate that it's not so much abortion that's changed the game as single motherhood. Before 1973, 19% of unmarried white women who had babies gave them up for adoption. Between 1973 and 1981, the rate plummeted to 8%. By 1988, it was 3%. Nowadays, less than 1% of teenage mothers of all races give up the baby for adoption. The statistics speak a truth rarely mentioned: ‘Twasn't the legalization of abortion that made it impossible to adopt a healthy white baby. After all, we already know that women had plenty of abortions when it was illegal. It was the legitimization of single motherhood for middle class white women that made the difference.

So why do the adoption-obsessed anti-choicers hate Roe so damn much? Well, they're not entirely incorrect in thinking that Roe dried up the adoption market, even if they're wrong to think that abortion did. 1973 does seem to be the breaking point, the end of the stream of white, middle class girls giving up babies for adoption. It seems women across the nation realized that if they had a right to abort a pregnancy, they also had a right to keep a baby, and didn't have to give it up just because their parents, church, and community said so. People treat "choice" like a code word for "abortion", but it really does mean "choice"--the choice to have an abortion, sure, but also the choice to be a single mother, to be childless, to delay marriage, never to marry at all, or to be a lesbian.

SCOTUS said to the women of America, "Your body belongs to you," and the nation listened. After 1973, anti-rape and anti-domestic violence activism erupted. Wife-beating stopped being a dirty little secret and became a major political issue. A woman who owns her own body not only has the right to terminate pregnancies and use birth control, she gets to say when she has sex and when she does not. The rape rate has plummeted since the 1970s; how much of that was due to the fact that people really started to believe in a woman's right to own herself?

Roe the court case was about abortion, but Roe the cultural landmark was about a multitude of women's rights. So when you hear politicians or activists talking about overturning Roe v. Wade, can you really believe that it's just about abortion? Or do they hate all of it--women's right to work, women's equality in marriage, women's right not to be raped, women's right to single motherhood, women's right to file for divorce?

I was born in 1977, years after what might be the most famous 20th century Supreme Court decision, at least next to Brown v. the Board of Education. My generation has a reputation, to say the least, of being a bit ungrateful, a tad full of ourselves, unaware of how hard our feminist foremothers struggled. Sometimes the third-wavers deserve the ugly stereotypes about being ignorant and arrogant, and sometimes we deserve the positive ones about being sexy and fun-loving. The one thread that runs through it all is that we grew up never really knowing what it's like not to live in a society where the fundamental concept "I own myself," isn't true for us.

Things are far from perfect for women of my generation and the one after it, of course, but at least we know this much that our foremothers had to fight to know, that our bodies are ours. It's such a conceptual shift that it's hard to know how that translates into everyday life. Do I feel a little more comfortable taking up the armrest in the movie theater than my mother did? Do I feel a little less obligated to wear socially mandated uncomfortable clothing? I know this one is true. Am I a little more surprised when a man gooses me in public? I think so. It's hard to put a measure on the individual, small details, but in accumulation, it's been a big change.


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12 comments

Great article, Amanda. Well said.

Submitted by Lilith on January 15, 2008 - 11:43am.

I'm speechless

you are right-your body is yours to do with as you see fit. Let me repeat that: YOUR BODY IS YOURS. Just your body. If their is a baby growing in your uterus, it's not about your body anymore. As women, we should embrace what makes us different form men-we shouldn't feel that we have to deny our ability to reproduce to be equal. We should be responsible for our actions-and if our actions lead to pregnancy, we should be strong and courageous and embrace that, not take the craven wimpy way out and kill our offspring. Did you know the original feminists were dead set against abortion? They saw it as another way for men to control women. Which, if you work with single mothers, like I do, (as a volunteer labor and postpartum doula) or at one of those "evil" crisis pregnancy centers, as a counselor and friend to struggling single mothers or heartbroken post-abortive women, as I do, you would see an alarming trend-most women feel like they have no choice-and most of the time it's the men in their lives forcing them to kill their child. Urging adoption is a last-ditch effort in the pro-life movement to try to get a women to not kill her child. We would much rather she parent-as God, in His infinite wisdom, has chosen her as the parent. Your article was absolutely ridiculous, and I would be laughing if it wasn't such a serious subject. Life and death issues shouldn't be treated with such flippancy.

Submitted by sara crompton on January 15, 2008 - 7:48pm.

If a man can take your body away from you just by ejaculating into you, then it's not really your body, is it? I'm glad you feel that your body belongs to others, but that doesn't mean you have to take my rights away. You can give your body to whomever; I don't care. But what we're arguing about is whether you should force me to give up my autonomy at gunpoint.

Submitted by Amanda Marcotte, RH Reality Check on January 15, 2008 - 8:06pm.

to other's decisions simply because you work with women and single mothers who struggle over their own decisions. Many of us have worked with women of all ages in various capacities in women's health centers, around reproductive and sexual health issues. And we have completely antithetical experiences - we have experienced women of all ages, backgrounds, women who are mothers, religious women who are unerringly grateful for the option to end their pregnancy - to say goodbye to the potential life inside of them because they are already mothers and do not or cannot parent another (majority of women who access abortion are already mothers) or because they are not prepared to mother at that time in their lives but look forward to a time when they will (women who have abortions and women who have children are the same women at different points in their lives).

Your last couple of sentences are quite telling. You have every right to experience your religion in the ways you see fit - if your belief system holds such that you do not chose abortion, that's fine. But there are many religious, spiritual (and non-spiritual!) people out there who hold a different belief system than you do. It is not within your right to practice your religion in a way that infringes upon my life and my body - or my families' lives.

You believe abortion is murder - so it follows that you believe that women should be punished for accessing abortion. I do not subscribe to this belief in many ways because of my years of working at a health center and abortion clinic and seeing the hundreds of women come through our doors fully capable, clear and empowered that they were doing what they needed to be doing at that time.

You don't even recognize the hypocrisy of your position when you say you see "heartbroken post-abortive women" and in the next sentence tell us that "the pro-life movement" tries to "get a woman not to kill her child." Well, it's no wonder that anti-choice centers and those like yourself see women after an abortion who seem heartbroken - they are being called murderers by people like you! What do you think that would do to a woman?

Most women who have abortions are, in fact, physically and emotionally healthy afterwards unless they are plagued by other traumas in their lives - depression, a bad marriage, a poor economic situation, etc. Millions of women have an abortion each year - by the anti-choice movement's yard stick we should have millions of "broken" women and yet somehow we don't.

Please feel free to live the values you embody. But don't force your religious value system on others - I promise you that kind of zealotry will never work.

Submitted by Amie Newman, RH Reality Check on January 15, 2008 - 8:42pm.

It's well understood that one of the primary motivations of the anti-abortion movement is generating a steady supply of white babies into the adoption market

Ummm... what?

Any evidence to back up such an absurd statement?

Submitted by mindful mission on January 15, 2008 - 8:20pm.

The money tied towards giving up babies for adoption, the crisis pregnancy centers, and the endless bleating about how you can just give it up for adoption....if you don't see it, I suspect your blindness is willful.

Submitted by Amanda Marcotte, RH Reality Check on January 16, 2008 - 1:52pm.

Amanda...

I just wanted to say a huge THANK YOU! for a most well-thought out and insighful article on abortion, adoption and choices. As a former unwed mother who lost her newly-born firstborn to adoption in 1964, because of no 'Choices', no 'options', other than the option of adoption.. I cannot thank you enough for shedding light on a most important/tragic time in American Women's History pre Roe v Wade. What was done to millions of white middle-class young unmarried women and their newborns during that time was a complete tragedy, discriminatory and utter injustice, that has been swept under the carpet for decades. Thanks to articles like yours...hopefully the generations of women behind us (/women/mothers like me)will pay heed to the past and if one does not heed that past ...will be doomed to repeat itself, should Roe V Wade be allowed to be reversed. Pay attention Young Sisters... your reproductive rights, ownership rights of your own bodies, are being chipped away as we speak. Stand Tall, Stay Strong!!

I have this quote written down..but forgot to cite the author..but I keep it on a little piece of paper with me.. it says this..
""I stand in front of you today, not for acclaim, neither for approval. Rather I am here to demand acknowledgment for who I am today and have been, A Woman and a Mother!"

Submitted by Christine on January 17, 2008 - 10:14pm.

Great article.

My parents forced me to wear dresses and skirts a lot growing up - and didn't care when it became "I See Paris, I See France..."

Submitted by Anonymous on January 15, 2008 - 11:04pm.

Mindful Mission:

RE: the supply of white babies

Before admitting I was an atheist back when I went to church, our pastor regularly preached on the responsibility of caucasions to breed to upkeep the race. In fact, many evangelical churches preach it and has been a topic many times with that nutter O'Reilly, demographers and economists. You can google it and all kinds of blogs and studies will show up on it not to mention nutbag wacko doomsday sites.

Submitted by Anonymous on January 16, 2008 - 11:35am.

"If their is a baby growing in your uterus, it's not about your body anymore."

Technically a tapeworm is a separate entity too. Few anti-choicers find it necessary defend a tapeworm's right to life, but scream and wail over a creature developed to similar or lesser complexity and intellect which happens to have human DNA.

"Did you know the original feminists were dead set against abortion?"

They also bought into the idea that women are innately morally superior. Movements change as they impact the culture, often for the better.

Submitted by Harq al-Ada on January 16, 2008 - 3:36pm.

The original feminists also lived in a world in which abortion was often very dangerous for women.

Great post - and great to see the rise in single motherhood considered from an angle other than the coming downfall of our civilization.

Submitted by Anonymous on January 16, 2008 - 7:54pm.

For first person documentation of how pregnant single women were treated by the adoption industry pre Roe v Wade there is a 48 minute .wmv titled "Love, War, Adoption" here: http://www.suziekidnap.com/law

For documentation regarding social work attitudes towards, outcomes for, research on and writing by Baby Scoop Era Mothers ( single moms who lost children to forced adoptions between 1945- 1972) please visit http://www.babyscoopera.com

Submitted by Suzie Kidnap on January 17, 2008 - 6:57pm.