A horrible truth behind today’s big abortion case – WORLD News Group

Posted: December 7, 2021 at 5:42 am

The Supreme Court is set to hear arguments in Dobbs v. Jackson Womens Health Organization today. Its a landmark Supreme Court case, one that challenges and could potentially result in the overturning of Roe v. Wade, thus restoring the ability of states to regulate abortion as they see fit.

However, Dobbs is not only about protecting unborn babies in the womb or empowering states to make their own laws on abortion; it also presents an opportunity to challenge the unchecked racism of the abortion industry.

That industrys history of racism should be well-known to the Supreme Court. Justice Clarence Thomas, the Supreme Courts only black justice, has repeatedly pointed out abortions deadly impact on black lives. In his concurring opinion in Box v. Planned Parenthood of Indiana and Kentucky, Inc., Thomas stated the dark truth behind the abortion industry quite clearly: Margaret Sanger started Planned Parenthood to eliminate black lives.

Thomas was right. In a letter to Dr. Clarence Gamble, Sanger outright admitted that we do not want word to go out that we want to exterminate the Negro population. For Sanger, abortion was a tool, a means to an end; Planned Parenthood was created to stop black families from reproducingeven if that meant killing black lives in the womb.

But Planned Parenthood didnt emerge in a vacuum; it was part of a broader culture of racism and eugenics in America. Around the turn of the 20th century, states across the country started passing laws encouraging those believed to possess superior genes to reproduce and those with inferior genes not to reproduce, sometimes by coercion. It was clearly racist, but several states developed targeted eugenics programs. These included such practices as forced sterilization of the disabled and of people of certain ethnicities. When the Supreme Court infamously ruled these programs were constitutional in Buck v. Bell, they began to proliferateespecially in the South.

Eugenics programs became so common that they acquired folk names. Mississippi, in particular, is infamous for the Mississippi Appendectomy, a form of routine, forced sterilization performed on black women without their consent, and often without their knowledge. Given Americas struggles with racism and segregation, it should come as no surprise that Americas eugenics programs disproportionately targeted and impacted black men and women.

The abortion industry continues that legacy today. Abortion is the leading cause of death for black Americans. And that is by design; nearly 80 percent of Planned Parenthoods clinics are within walking distance of poor black and minority communities. Despite making up just 13 percent of the population, black women undergo around 40 percent of the nations abortions.

This is what makes the Dobbs case so important. Challenging Roe v. Wade, and the pro-abortion judicial regime it created, this case is our opportunity to reckon with the racism built into the abortion industry. By asking the Supreme Court to reconsider the judicial precedent set by Roe v. Wade, Mississippis Attorney General Lynn Fitch is giving us an opportunity to fix the wrong of eugenics and combat the systemic racism still prevalent in the abortion industry today.

We cant afford to wait. The judicial regime established by Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey gives legal cover to the abortion industrys systematic campaign to eliminate black lives. Millions of black babies have died from abortion. And unless Dobbs is successful in challenging the Roe/Casey regime, millions more will die in the years to come.

The stakes couldnt be higher. Thats why nearly 80 amicus briefs have been filed in support of Mississippi in Dobbs v. Jackson. And thats also why I was immensely proud to lend the voice of the Frederick Douglass Foundation, my own organization, to the dozens of other organizations submitting briefs in defense of a pro-life ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson.

So much of the contemporary conversation around abortion focuses on unhelpful euphemisms like reproductive autonomy or reproductive rights. We need to be more direct than that; we have to call the abortion industry for what it is: a racist institution that targets and harms black lives and black communities. Ending the ability of that industry to operate largely unchecked is one of the most important civil rights issues of today.

Original post:

A horrible truth behind today's big abortion case - WORLD News Group

Related Posts