#237: Free, Legal, On Demand

Published: July 1, 2022, 4:01 a.m.

Last week\u2019s Supreme Court ruling immediately prohibited abortion in seven states, with 23 more either moving to make it illegal or likely to. At the heart of Justice Samuel Alito\u2019s opinion in overturning Roe v. Wade is the notion that abortion is not \u201cdeeply rooted in this nation\u2019s history and tradition.\u201d Since Roe was based on the 14th Amendment, Alito contends that we must consider the context in which the 14th Amendment was ratified in 1868. This week, to provide the context that Alito misrepresented, we are rerunning our interview with Tamara Dean about abortion in the 19th century, when it was common, and largely unprohibited. In the leather-bound death records of the county where Dean lives, only two abortions are mentioned, which she writes about in her essay \u201cSafer than Childbirth.\u201d The more common cause of death, Dean found, was giving birth. At the time, abortion was widely accepted as a means of avoiding the risks of pregnancy and childbirth. Even the Catholic Church didn\u2019t oppose ending pregnancy before \u201cquickening,\u201d usually around the fourth month, because no one believed that human life existed before a woman could feel the fetus move. Tamara Dean joins the podcast to talk about what gets forgotten in the contemporary battle over abortion.


Go beyond the episode:


Resources for those seeking an abortion, now or in future:


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