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Chris J. Karr's avatar

"As I wrote last week, I think the Dobbs decision was a good one, but I’m not sure that Republicans will like where it leads. Ultimately, I don’t think it will change things very much, especially when the prevalence of pharmaceutical abortions is taken into account. Dobbs may be a decision that, even though it was five decades in the making, came too late to keep up with advances in technology."

The thing I'm keeping my eyes on is how this accelerates The Big Sort[1], where we see outcomes such as SpaceX in Boca Chica TX or Austin's video game development industry finding it difficult to hire and recruit educated staff that are generally pretty pro-choice, especially women engineers. A lot of hay has been made about enterprises relocating to Texas for the freer economic and political climate - I wonder how many HR folks are evaluating how to unwind those plans. Red States may be wise to not go zealously after local citizens engaging abortion tourism in Blue States or employers offering abortion-related benefits, as that may be the last thread keeping any number of enterprises within its borders and paying its taxes.

Interesting days ahead!

I'm also keeping an eye on the contraceptive "rights" that will be brought up in a future term. For all the impact that Roe had, it wasn't a particularly novel case when it came to Constitutional innovations. The vast bulk of Row was built on Griswold, and for everyone whose last name doesn't rhyme with Scalito, Roe inherited the weak legal justification from Griswold, which is certainly in danger of being sent back to the States as well. (CTRL-F: "Griswold" in Constitution.txt. 0 matches found.)

[1] https://centerforpolitics.org/crystalball/articles/the-big-sort-continues-with-trump-as-a-driving-force/

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linda's avatar

Back in the day we had homes for unwed mothers. One was located close to my high school and my school class basically adopted them. It was laid out like a nursing home where the kids (and they were all most all fellow teens), got their own room and were fed and talked to and taken care of. The security was brutal because sometime some mad boyfriend would show up demanding to see his girlfriend and Bruno would make short work of him. This was at a time that assault wasn't such a big deal.

It was funded by some sect of the Lutheran Church. We provided Christmas, Birthdays, sometime food from the local stores who donated, and company. In some regards it was like a college dorm at the time. Some girls kept their babies and some didn't. They put them up for adoption. Hopefully they all found good homes. The girls that kept the babes either had supportive parents or didn't. For the didn't we (my class) brought baby stuff for them which was a pretty small amount of help. This was before you got welfare for children. These girls were mostly not high school grads and their futures grim.

I do think a return to Unwed Homes is something to consider. It would be somewhat a different clientele now because society has gone diving down the tubes but some kind of shelter on a long term basis for non drug addicted is something to think about. You would really need to separate the druggies from the nons.

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