Roe v. Wade Anniversary Day

4 thoughts on “Roe v. Wade Anniversary Day”

  1. I, too, live in a state where the voters overwhelmingly voted to keep abortion legal by adding it to our state’s constitution. Despite this, the day after the election, our governor said, “They didn’t know what they were voting for.” I knew what I was voting for when I voted to the keep the option for women to obtain a safe abortion and protecting other people from being criminalized. Despite this, the state’s elected officials are constantly trying to dial it back and even pretend that the voters didn’t vote to codify abortion rights in the state’s constitution.

    Of course, these are some of the same politicians who have ignored the two mandates, that passed overwhelmingly with 75 and 80 percent respectively, about anti-gerrymandering of the state, even changing the language of the third one on the ballot to make “YES” seem like “NO” and vice versa. (It failed and the state is still gerrymandered in both its state and congressional districts). So much for “we the people…”

    Congrats to the people of Colorado for having politicians who actually listen to the constituency!

    1. And to the people in your state, as well. I moved here from OK about 20 years ago, and they (OK) did the same thing with tricky wording on state questions. Your yes vote was likely to mean no, and vice versa. Sadly, that state is so red that only another federal law will change it.

    1. Yes, seriously. It’s outrageous that rights — RIGHTS! — that I had to manage my own health care in private are now denied to more than 25 million American women.

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