It’s been two years since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade. Here’s a Perspective from Clara Chiu.
Our country was born from contradiction. A land that extolled values like liberty and happiness and withheld them from millions. A land that professes the right to life, except when that life belongs to a pregnant person.
In a mere 213 pages – the length of a short novel – rights I had known my entire life were abolished. Yet the Dobbs ruling wasn’t “novel” in any sense. After the draft decision was leaked, I wasn’t surprised when Roe v. Wade was overturned. But the warning of its downfall didn’t make the loss any easier. Abortions aren’t going to stop; the new laws will only disproportionately affect low-income women and women of color.
Here in California, abortion laws haven’t changed much. But as I start applying to colleges, I have a new element to consider while researching out-of-state schools: will my rights and freedoms as a woman be guaranteed?
In Dobbs, Justice Samuel Alito argued that abortion rights were not outlined in the Constitution. He is correct. The Constitution is a document written by men, signed into law by men; a document that mentions the word “he” more than 25 times and the word “she” exactly zero times.