Sawbones: A Marital Tour of Misguided Medicine - History of Abortion
Episode Date: May 24, 2022With the recent news about Roe v. Wade, it’s important to talk about the history of abortion in the United States. The right to autonomy over one’s own body in regard to medical care is one of the... basic tenets of medical ethics; but no matter what anyone personally believes, banning abortion doesn’t stop abortion. It just makes it unsafe.Music: "Medicines" by The Taxpayers https://taxpayers.bandcamp.com/
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Discussion (0)
Hi, this is Sydney.
I just wanted to let you know before we got started
with this episode that, as you can probably tell from the title,
this is one of our heavier episodes.
We do cover a lot of material that is more emotional, perhaps,
for some listeners, and certainly is for myself
as you will understand as you listen to the episode.
So if you are not currently in a headspace
where you want to engage episode. So if you are not currently in a headspace where you want to
engage with that kind of material, this may not be the episode for you right now. While I do believe it is incredibly important that we all be aware and tuned in to this issue, we're not always in
that space to think about it right away. So I wanted to make you aware of that before we get started.
And secondly, I wanted to make you aware of the fact
that this is by no means a complete history of abortion
that would take many, many episodes
and also would involve a lot of issues
in which I'm not an expert
and would be beyond the scope of what I can address
with expertise on this show.
So obviously there are many things that I am not able to cover or talk about,
many modern issues, medications and procedures that I do not go into in great detail,
so that I can focus on sort of the core theme,
which is what did we do prior to modern methods of abortion and what could a future without those modern methods
being safely and legally available to all look like.
So I hope that this show will provide something important,
something for you to think about
and that you are able to learn
and engage with this when you are in a space to do so.
So thank you all for listening and we'll get started with the show.
Saw bones is a show about medical history and nothing the hosts say should be taken as medical
advice or opinion.
It's for fun.
Can't you just have fun for an hour and not try to diagnose your mystery boil?
We think you've earned it.
Just sit back, relax, and enjoy a moment of distraction
from that weird growth.
You're worth it. TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP TAP One, two, one, two, three, four. One, two, one, two, three, four. One, two, one, two, three, four. One, two, one, two, three, four.
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From medicines, the medicines
That escalate my cop for the mouth.
Wow.
Hello, everybody, and welcome to
Saubone's, a Mayor of the Tour of Miscited Medicine.
I'm your co-host, Justin McRoy.
And I'm Sydney McRoy.
Well, it's been, uh, quite a few weeks, I would say.
Yes.
It's been, uh, yeah, been quite a few weeks.
Yeah.
Uh, I don't think there's a clever way to get into this topic.
Um, we have had a lot of listeners email and, um, I think requesting something that we
have never gone
into the history of before on the show,
but which is becoming extremely relevant
to, I was gonna say current history,
but that's not a thing.
History's in the past, you can't be current.
Just now times, current events,
the present, the present.
Yeah, that's the word,
that's the word for current history.
Current history, yes.
Whew, this was a tough one to put together.
Really?
Yeah.
Yeah, I can imagine next slide.
So we do want to talk about the history of abortion.
Specifically in the United States,
I will give a little bit of an overview
of like ancient history, some different practices
and things, for some context of how long
Some of these methods have been around and and like the the desire to seek some way to end a pregnancy
Has been around since I mean as far as I can tell pregnancy itself. Yeah
But when it comes to like the legal perspective and where we are today I'm really focusing a lot more on what's going on in the United States because that's where we live
and things are about to change.
I mean, we don't know for sure,
but it seems highly likely that things are about
to change dramatically in terms of access
to abortion care in this country.
So I just wanna start off by saying that
when we are taught medical ethics in medical school, we are taught like the four basic principles of medical ethics.
And in short, one of them is autonomy, meaning that at the end of the day, whatever I think
is like the doctor or whatever my opinion is, whatever I am offering my advice,
the best practice, whatever I think at the end of the day, the patient has the right,
the unit is my ethical duty to protect that right to them, you know, having autonomy
over their own body and making that decision for themselves.
And we also have dictated in this country a right to privacy
when it comes to those decisions,
specifically medical decisions.
I mean, there's a reason I can't tell you all about
every page in IC and what we did.
One, because I wouldn't do that, that would be, you know,
bad, that would violate my own personal ethics.
But it would also violate the law.
I'm not allowed to do that.
So I just wanna start off with,
that is the medical perspective on this issue.
And this is a medical history show.
And I'll start off with the Justin perspective.
I don't really think we need that.
I know on this episode.
I love you. Do you have a uterus?
No, just on this episode, listen y'all,
I'm gonna try my best to hang in there
in terms of normally I do try to like do the goof parts
and there's certain episodes where that doesn't feel
real appropriate.
So if you notice me being a little bit quiet
is because I'm a person without a uterus
who normally does jokes.
So I'm just, I'm just a long, happy to be here.
And I'm not going to, I mean, you can't talk about
the history of abortion and abortion law
and pretend that there aren't all these other like
religious and spiritual and all these other issues
that have come into play because people have them, these feelings
and these values and these beliefs,
they have impacted the course of history
when it comes to who can access abortion.
I'm not going to get, those are not my areas of expertise.
I'm not going to sit here and tell you what every single,
you know, religious system of beliefs on earth feels about abortion and where those
came from.
I couldn't, first of all, that how long would that show be?
I can't even tell you.
And secondly, that's not, again, that's not my area of expertise and that's not what
we're talking about.
We're talking about the medical history of abortion, but I just want to acknowledge that
obviously all of those things do come into play because they impact, again, the procedure itself and who gets it, who gets access to abortion.
And our laws, our laws are being impacted by those same belief structures.
So, again, as long as people have become pregnant, at least as long as recorded history, we have
some evidence that there were people who attempted to induce abortion, either on themselves
or on others, because they did not want to have a child presumably for whatever reason.
We cannot know the reasons. We can imagine that humans being human,
the reasons are probably similar to what a lot of people would say today.
And we find that a lot on this show, I think,
that we tend to think of people of the past as somewhat alien to us.
Yeah, it's all about...
It's just humans' human. That's what we do.
We do the human things and our reasons and things like, of course, they have to be set
in the context of where and when we live and who we are within that society.
But more or less, we tend to have the same motivations.
The first mention of the practice of abortion that I know of, the Ebers-Fit Pyrus from 1550 BCE.
And it generally just says, like, in terms of what it talks about, it's mentioning that
if the father is not involved in the decision-making, there would have been a penalty.
And a lot of this, and this was not true everywhere, I should say, because for a lot of this, and this was not true everywhere I should say, because for a lot of this,
when it came to whether or not someone could access abortion, a lot of it was tied up with
who would get property if the paternal figure died or concerns about infidelity.
Like a lot of it had to do with these sort of patriarchal structures of society.
Do you know what I'm saying?
Like it was practical from that standpoint,
as opposed to like some sort of moral objection,
if that makes sense.
It had to do with money and property and name
and inheritance and the whole, yeah.
Those sorts of things.
The, for many ancient people though, who would have desired to end a pregnancy, the
options were not necessarily safe or effective. Some would engage in some sort of strenuous
activity. This is something that is a common theme throughout history. Like, lift heavy
things, carry heavy things, run, jump.
The inverse of the things they tell you to avoid,
or at least have traditionally told you to avoid when you-
Well, yes, but even those pieces of advice
are somewhat outdated.
I said traditionally.
That's how I said traditionally.
You know that, yes, you did.
Because I mean, there are people who run marathon's pregnant.
I can't imagine doing that myself,
but I also can't imagine running a marathon.
So, yes.
Right, there we go.
That's not taking the much.
I am not a runner.
They have their Marathon's a Disney World, and I still would not do one of those.
No, I would not do that, but-
Imagine Mickey seeing me like that.
But again, like these methods would not have been necessarily effective for any reason.
I mean, you can run when you're pregnant.
Yeah. But we didn't know that you know, we didn't understand.
Babies like a tan and nitrous, you can just use the baby, the baby can give you a boost of energy at the right moment.
Having been pregnant twice, I would not say that it gave me a boost of energy.
My boost of energy, I mean, pee your pants.
Some turn to the common things of the day, fasting or bloodletting,
you know, the things we use for everything.
Because obviously we understood the fact
that the fetus was growing in the,
somewhere in the abdomen, because we could see that,
then some sort of binding or pressure on the abdomen
was sometimes used or tried or advised.
These are constrained.
Yes, exactly.
There's one text that describes, like,
you could sit over a pot of like steaming onions
or heat, in general heat, like putting heat on the abdomen
or hot water, that kind of thing, something hot, hot stones.
And again, a lot of this was just simply,
it's just kind of laid out plainly as like these
are things people do without much commentary.
Like here are some things that you could do.
And this was true throughout a lot of the writings of the ancient Greeks and Romans.
Again, the concerns they had about abortion were mainly either one if it deprived a man of an offspring in which he
may have had some interest. A son, I'm assuming. Someone to inherit property and
stuff so that it wouldn't get handed off to other people. An heir. An heir. Then
that would be a reason that you could be punished or that it could be seen as
bad. And even then, I'm not saying everyone was put to death, but these were reasons why
they made advice against it.
Or again, just like there was this constant concern about infidelity that it was being
used as a way to conceal that you had had an extra marital affair. Also there was this Seranus right, who was a Greek physician, wrote that you should not
have an abortion if it is either in the case of infidelity, mainly because then the dude
wouldn't get to know, like that's the, you know, or if it's just for concern over loss
of your youth and beauty, which just, I mean,
when we start to think about like the mind of the person with the uterus who may have been
seeking this abortion, it's hard to say what was going on because these are the kind
of writings we get.
They're from a perspective that is so other.
Someone who doesn't have a uterus who can't be pregnant or have an abortion.
So the idea that you would want one solely because of a concern about loss of beauty.
I mean, it's very expensive.
Exactly.
And again, this was like a constant fear that like people are going to do that.
I'm guessing that that wasn't true.
Now it's interesting because when you do look to the ancient Greeks, it actually is quite
relevant to today in terms of US abortion law because the Hippocratic oath was brought
up multiple times in Roe v. Wade.
Really?
Yes.
Justice Blackman specifically asked several questions related to the oath and its position
on abortion.
And I think from reading some of those conversations,
it's almost in the sense that,
we've done a whole episode on the oath.
So the oath is not legally binding.
No, it's an oath.
And it also isn't what we say today.
Like the original hypocritic oath is not what we repeat.
I mean, the majority of us.
There's a lot more stuff about Bitcoin these days.
Well, it's changed.
It's changed.
It's been modernized.
It reflects the modern practice of medicine.
And again, it is more just sort of a guide.
It's like an idea of what a doctor should be
as opposed to something binding.
But in the text of the original oath, there's the statement, a doctor should be as opposed to something binding.
But in the text of the original oath, there's the statement,
I will give no deadly medicine to anyone
if asked nor suggest any such counsel.
And in like manner, I will not give to a woman
and a board of passery.
And some people have argued like,
see, look, in the original Hippocratic oath,
they're against abortion.
But again, there are a couple things we should note.
The original Hippocratic oath also says, you shall not cut for the stone, which means don't do surgery.
Because at the time, surgeons were an entirely separate profession, and they were seen
by doctors as unsavory. Yes, somewhat barbaric. I mean, really, it was
seen that this was not something that we would do, but that was because surgery usually back then it was not
It was not great and so and so you wouldn't have so you know
You can't do surgery in the original hypocritical you also aren't supposed to charge medical students for teaching them medicine. How about it?
and
How about it?
I
Literally do we want to take this I incurred a six-figured debt that would say otherwise. Yeah.
So, we don't exactly follow the oath in a real way.
And again, it's changed over times.
And all that aside, the text itself is really referencing specifically the use of a
pessery.
And what this would have been would have been some sort of like herbal concoction,
like paste substance that would have actually been inserted into the vagina
in order to try and induce an abortion.
And the thing about that is it was a very dangerous practice at the time.
All the methods you could use, this was one of the most dangerous, because a lot of people
weren't doing surgical procedures.
This was one of the most dangerous you could do and could result in infection and death. And so, and this is like echoed throughout history that a lot of reasons that
physicians were advising against abortion had a lot more to do with because they didn't
have safe ways to do them at the time and a lot less to do with some sort of moral grounds.
Now this will change, but at the time it was very much like, no, don't do that because
you might kill someone. Right. Much like surgery, don't do that because you might kill someone.
Right.
Much like surgery.
Don't do surgery.
You might kill someone.
We certainly don't believe that today.
Right.
Yeah.
So, when you look at the writings of like Seranis, Discorities, Hippocrates, Plenty, the
Elder, all of them advise different ways that one may induce an abortion.
So there were all kinds of herbal methods like the oil of common root or birth ward or
hellbore. There was a plant called sylphium. All of these things were advised as potential
things you could take that might terminate a pregnancy. They also advise something that would eventually be known as the
Lusatimonian leap and
this is when you
jump and like touch your feet to your butt. Can you picture what I'm saying? Yeah, you jump in the air. I do it many times every single back and
this was thought to be a
method of
inducing an abortion. It is not.
And that is a reference to an area of Greece like where that kind of jumping is. I guess.
Plenty also. Is that maybe, I mean, it's history. So it could be where they invented that kind
of jumping. But one person could have done it. But did anybody see that? That was my whole
feet. That's my butt.. Everyone got me. I have
been in the new jump. Plenty also advised stepping over a viper, which is a wild sentence. I would
never advise stepping over a viper. Plenty? Yeah, I don't think that that's a good, that's
a good, that's one of your worst ones. Yeah, we know, we know all about Plenty and the other
people. Plenty and the other people shoot for the hip. It's always nice to see him, but that
doesn't seem particularly helpful.
And it's interesting because if you look into, like, again, like the morality of it when
all of these sort of ancient physicians are writing about abortion, they say that, like,
basically, it's kind of put in the same category as other things that you might do that were
considered, like, from, like, some sort of spiritual perspective, maybe unclean would be the word that they would use.
So like, it's in the same category as stuff like menstruation, loss of virginity, childbirth itself, death of a family member.
And the reason that we know that is, like, for instance, you couldn't enter the temple of Athena if you had had an abortion in the last 40 days.
So you had to wait 40 days before you could go into that temple.
Similarly, this is like actually one day less than you had to wait if you lost your
virginity or if somebody close you had died.
In those cases, you have to wait 41 days.
And there's a lot, that's not uncommon with religious tracks and I, uh, groups like tying, uh,
menstruation and all kinds of those things to like an uncleanliness,
like there's certain things that you should not do.
Exactly. So you can't enter the temple now because you have done these things,
or at least you have to wait for a while, and then you'll be clean enough that you can do it again.
If you eat cheese, you only had to wait one day.
Now can you, whoa, okay.
That would have been a game changer for me as a kid, like just in time for church, like, ah crap dang.
I did so want to go praise, praise Jesus, say,
but like, geez.
You just ate cheese.
I had pizza this morning called pizza dang.
Guess I got to stay here watching his formers, shoot.
And in addition, abortions were sort of accepted generally for most cultures.
And again, this is a generalization.
Everything is different, again, depending on like the culture, the religious tradition
in that part of the world, who you were within the structure of that society, what your
reasonings were.
But they were sort of accepted prior to what was called quickening,
which the quickening, this is not a highlander thing.
Wait a cut me off at the pass,
or cut me off at the knack, I guess, highlanding.
Yeah.
Basically around 20 weeks,
when you can first feel the movement of the fetus.
That was called the quickening.
And at the time, because we didn't,
before we had like, altarsounds
and could understand what was happening,
I mean, we've talked about this a lot
about pregnancy and childbirth on the show before.
We had some really wild ideas of what was going on in there,
going on in the uterus.
That actually trucks with a high-lander fiction,
whenever Duncan McLeod beheads another high-lander,
he does actually become pregnant.
That's actually in there.
I've never seen the show, but I don't think that's what I'm talking about.
Everybody heals the way he gets pregnant, so he has to take a little break.
But there was, there was some idea that that is when something becomes alive, the quickening.
Like this was because you could feel movement, this was indicative of like life.
Life. And so prior to that, this is fine.
After that, there could be penalties, or at least like nobody would do it, was kind of
the thought.
But again, there was still not a completely safe way to do it either at this point in
history.
We have a lot of things that may or may not work.
A lot of things that may have been harmless, some things that were very harmful,
but no sure way. Now, this is really going to change, as especially as we move into the 19th century, and specifically as The medicines, the medicines, the escalate macabre for the mouth.
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All right, so we're moving over state side,
or at least we're ahead of that way.
Yes.
So there were, like I said, there was no completely
safe way to ensure an abortion.
There were a variety of herbal preparations
that were sometimes effective, sometimes not.
Surgery was a huge risk.
There was no anesthesia at this point.
There were not sterilization methods.
So a surgical abortion, no matter who did it or where you did it, could result in death.
So a lot of doctors just didn't write because they didn't know how to do it safely.
So they just avoided it.
And at the time, again, this would have fallen in line with the idea that you wouldn't
have done any surgery unless it was absolutely necessary because you knew that the surgery
might well kill the person.
And it would have been considering that almost all physicians were male and that were all
and then almost all as we move into this time period.
It would have been highly unlikely that a cis male physician would have understood why.
A patient would have come to him and said this abortion is medically necessary for me you know what I mean they would not have seen those reasons anything that has to do with like mental health or.
Any sort of social pressures or running from domestic violence,
anything like that would not have fallen into what they're talking about.
They mean death is imminent.
Right, right.
So this would really inform this pushback against abortion in the 19th century,
because if doctors won't do it, who is doing it?
Well, midwives, we're still, not, I don't mean all, but like there were midwives who would do it. And then there were other usually lay providers
or female providers who were willing to train and learn
and do these procedures and help people with these processes
who were not doctors.
And doctors did not like that.
They didn't like the idea that there were people
who were practicing medicine who weren't physicians.
Yeah, that's why you got so upset about that gym store that just opened up and I think this is like how dare they they're cutting into your profit margins.
Right, that's always, you know me, I'm so big with my profit margins.
So, so there was, and this was again in line with this time of medicine, there was a lot of professionalization of medicine.
Like physicians were trying to clamp down
on who could call themselves a doctor
and who could practice medicine.
We're seeking out the FDA.
Yes.
Early 19, very early 1900s,
where a lot of this stuff starts to become codified
and you see a lot of push to legitimize doctors,
which legitimizing always,
in at least in terms of medicine,
I think legitimizing almost always
becomes othering certain groups
that you like don't fall in line with your standards.
There's people who are excluded, right?
Oh, yeah, absolutely.
And we've talked about that on the show
because it's a nuanced area.
Yeah, all of this is nuanced,
which is hard to communicate sometimes.
But there were people who were definitely doing harm, right?
Like, we've talked about this, how many times on the show, like snake oil sales people
who were doing harm, who were taking advantage of people and giving them things that could
harm them or the very least were ineffective.
But then there were just people with different perspectives or providing other
services who were excluded from the practice of medicine just because they didn't fit into what
the majority of doctors thought a doctor should be like. And so that would probably
exclude a lot of people based on race or gender or what religious beliefs, whatever, which is true for a lot of sectors of society.
So in 1821, Connecticut became the first state to restrict abortion.
After quickening, you could not have an abortion.
And again, a lot of this was because doctors were saying, we can't do this and the people
who are doing it in our mind are bad people,
they're criminals, so don't do them. Just ban them. Just don't do them. What would follow was a push
from the American Medical Association from the AMA. It was largely one figure within the AMA,
a gynecologist named Horatio Storer, who really lobbied strongly and created a whole organization of
physicians within the AMA to lobby against abortion.
First it was based on safety, again, but it grew into this moral argument that you shouldn't
do it, and also it harmed the person who was having the abortion performed, that it would make
the person deranged was the word used to have this performed.
Which I think is sort of like the underpinnings of the arguments that people will try to
use today, that everyone who has an abortion performed regrets it.
I think this is like the beginning of that, like some sort of like inherent emotional instability
that would prevent you from being able to have this procedure without suffering mental illness
type consequences.
The other thing that was part of this argument, and we're in the mid-1800s at this point,
a big part of it was that in the US there was a lot of immigration and some of
these doctors were arguing that if we start allowing specifically white
Americans to have abortions, if we are allowing this to happen, we will be replaced by immigrants who are coming to our country,
which yes, that is replacement theory. That is part of this push against abortion
was the idea that we cannot allow white people to access this care.
And I think it's really important to point to these aspects of the
movement that would eventually, you know, end abortion access for a while in this country,
was that, and the same thing that, sadly, you are hearing echoed even today in the year 2022
in the United States, which of course is a racist theory. I don't think I need to say that, but
in the United States, which of course is a racist theory. I don't think I need to say that, but there it is.
So, between this campaign and then some of the things, again, we've talked about on
the show before, there was the Comstock Act of 1873, which made it illegal to send something
that was, quote, obscene through the mail or across state lines, which would have anything
related to birth control, anything related to abortion care, anything like that would have been considered obscene. And so that greatly limited,
like the ability for people to access this stuff. And then the Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906,
which made it illegal to sell anything that would, the word was a deleterious effect on a person,
and this was seen to include inducing an abortion. So if you took a medicine and it caused you to,
in inducing an abortion. So if you took a medicine and it caused you to, you know, miscarry, then that would have
been a deleterious effect according to this law.
So that, you know, that, so by 1910, there were restrictions in pretty much every state.
By 1967, it would be a felony in every state.
So you can see the shift of that movement.
And there was never any abortions ever again.
But I think, well, no, you know that's not true.
And I think that's the important thing to note
is that we lived in a, we didn't live.
There was a time in this country where abortions were completely
illegal.
It did not stop abortions between some secret sort of kitchen table, surgical procedures, and very cleverly marketed
herbal preparations, abortions continued.
And I think that's one, we've talked a lot on this show about patent medicines and specifically
how many patent medicines were marketed for like, quote, female complaints.
We've even talked about something called
Lydia Pinkham's vegetable compound.
Do you remember that?
For sure.
Lydia Pinkham's vegetable compound was considered
one of the early secret abortifacient medications
because it contained something that would induce an abortion
because it contained some herbal ingredients
that were thought to do that.
So a lot of these medicines that were targeted.
I'm a single able use, I am assuming.
Well, the way that they would get around this
is that they would put things, warnings on the package
to not use this if you were pregnant
because it could induce a miscarriage.
And so these warnings were actually advertisements.
People knew what they were doing.
It was a warning, don't take this if you're pregnant, but that was exactly why.
And they would use words like it will restore regularity what they're talking about as
menstrual regularity.
It will return your periods,
meaning you will no longer be pregnant.
But again, a lot of them were just generally
female complaints is how the wording on the packaging
would have been.
If you were someone who was seeking something
to induce an abortion, you may, you would understand. That's what that was.
And a lot of them contain things like penny royal was very common. Penny royal tea has,
I mean, that has been like a mainstay of these sort of herbal attempts to induce miscarriage and
hellbore, ergoton, Spanish fly was a common ingredient. All of these things, if you saw them on the package,
this would have been assigned to you, the buyer.
Okay, I know what this is for.
But they were scurrying all of the FDA requirements
by putting it as warning.
In addition to these things,
a lot of desperate patients turned to all kinds
of very dangerous methods at home, attempts
to physically end the pregnancy with procedures at home, with candles, with curling irons,
with spoons, with catheters, injecting water into the uterus. People still tried things like exertion, like exercise,
like a controlled fall down a flight of stairs. Which you see, and I mean, you see these things
like in memes now, like, but this is where it comes from, because these were the things that weren't just tried
but were passed on from person to person
as like, here is something you can do
if you're in a bad situation
and you don't know what else to do.
It is hard to say, you know, like if you look back
statistically, because you don't hear this number, right?
Like I don't hear people saying, do you know how many people definitely died from attempting?
It's impossible.
It's impossible to say.
It's impossible.
But, but we know, um, we have estimates that tell us how many tens of thousands to hundreds
of thousands of people will not receive abortion
care who desire it should Roe v Wade be overturned. We know those numbers and so
from that we can extrapolate that there were a lot of people who were probably
seeking this care and we're trying these dangerous methods. There was one example that became sort of one of the
biggest motivating stories of the abortion rights movements that would happen in the U.S.
in the 60s and into the 70s. Sort of, I don't want to say ending with Roe v. Wade because
obviously they didn't end, but culminating perhaps in that case. There was an example that was, was well known about a young woman named Jerry Santoro,
who was 29.
She had left her husband, had to flee her husband for domestic violence.
She already had two children.
She had become pregnant with a new, like a coworker,
after leaving her husband and her husband and her husband was going to come to visit the children and she was afraid of him if he found out that she had
become pregnant, what he might do. So fearing for her life, she attempted with her significant other
attempted a self-induced surgical abortion in a hotel room and died from this procedure.
And this was sort of a, I would highly advise if you decide to look into this case further,
be very careful because the image that accompanies like any article you want to read about this case
was used a lot in the rallies for abortion rights.
And it was the police photo that was taken
when they found her.
And I would highly advise you not to seek that out
unless you know what you're about to encounter.
And personally, I don't think anybody wants to see that.
But it is evocative and heartbreaking.
It was important at the time to share these stories and to tell people the reality that
banning abortion doesn't end abortion.
It just ensures that people die while they're having abortions.
Sorry, it was not something I was prepared for.
This is why I'm warning you.
So, in 1973, a woman in Texas who would be known as Jane Rowe, that is not her actual name,
but that was the name used in the case, sought an abortion, couldn't have one because of
the laws in Texas.
The result of this is Roe v Wade.
Wade was the attorney general in Texas.
So they sued to get an abortion.
It was, Texas took it to the Supreme Court when they lost
and eventually the right for people in the US
to access an abortion was codified by the Supreme Court.
I think it's interesting.
The opinion was released to Time Magazine
and was actually published in Time Magazine
just before it was
released.
Oh, really?
It was not a leak.
I know there's a lot of talk about leaks, but this was not actually a leak.
It was intentionally sent to Time and they were supposed to release their decision before
Time went to publication.
So it would follow right after the decision was released.
But somebody got delayed.
So I think it's kind of interesting.
It ran on new stands before it was formally presented by the court. And that was the law until now. So
assuming that the leaked opinion isn't changed in some way before it is formally
released, which I don't I don't have any reason to think it would I'm not a legal
scholar. I don't know. But abortion will be up to the states. That is what this
means. It doesn't mean that abortion is immediately banned
in the United States.
It means that state-by-state laws will determine
whether or not a person can access abortion care.
And in many states, including West Virginia,
it will just immediately become illegal.
There will be, it will be a felony.
In some states, they're targeting the person
who accesses the care.
In some states, they target the doctor, who performs the abortion. There will be some states that
may have certain exceptions. This was true back when these laws were first enacted for rape or
for incest or for life of the pregnant person. Others won't have any exceptions. And in some cases, people who don't want to have children
will be forced to give birth.
And in some cases, people will just drive or fly
to wherever they can access that care
because they have the means, the privilege,
the ability to do so.
And in other cases, people will do exactly what we just recounted.
They will do exactly what they've always done, which is seek possibly unsafe,
possibly deadly method to induce an abortion because it is the only means they have for survival.
And I think it's important to note that as I already said, this will largely affect
people who are living in poverty, or not even people living in poverty, people who just
don't have the money, the means to not go to work and drive somewhere else, or to get
a plane ticket and fly somewhere else to pay on where you are.
I mean, you don't have to be living below the poverty line to be in a position where like
an unexpected plane ticket and hotel stay is a huge expense.
And then of course, like all of these injustices, it will disproportionately affect
black people, indigenous people, people of color, who are always affected more strongly
by these sorts of restrictions on our rights and autonomy.
I think that this is about a right to autonomy.
It's about a right to privacy.
And there's been a lot of talk about that too.
And I think we could have many conversations about
if we sort of decide in the United States
that we don't have a right to privacy
when it comes to these decisions,
that the government is allowed to enter into our homes and into our exam rooms and enter into
our surgical suites and tell us what we can do with our bodies, that the ramifications
of that for other areas of life, there's a lot to say about that.
I mean, you know, whether we're talking about birth
control or we're talking about who were allowed to marry or, you know, who knows what else
that could have an effect on. There are all kinds of medical procedures that the government
could decide you can access or treatments that the government decide you can access or
not access. And I think that an argument that the Constitution didn't originally guarantee us literally a
right to abortion, well, the Constitution didn't give me a right to vote.
And the Constitution didn't recognize the personhood of a black American.
So I don't think that that necessarily holds up
and we seem to have accepted that in many other realms.
But the majority of Americans don't want to see
Roe v. Way overturned.
The majority of West Virginians,
which I only say because we are seen as one of the
one of the states that would be very anti-choice, but the majority of West Virginians don't want to see
Roe v. Wade overturned. So I think that if you personally believe that it is not okay for whatever reason
to have an abortion, bananing abortion won't stop it.
It will just make it very unsafe.
There are programs that would make it easier for people to have children
on their own timeline and when they desire to,
we could make sure that everybody has access to birth control
and to family planning and education.
We could make sure that you could provide paid family leave for people
so that they know when they have a child they don't have to miss work and they can still
pay the bills and you know feed their other children that they have because a lot of people who
seek this care already have children. We could pay people living wage. We could make sure that
everybody has access to health care so they don't have to worry about how am I going to go to the
doctor and take my kids to the doctor and what are we you know go to the dentist and go to the eye doctor and
all the other things that become such giant hurdles for families. We could make sure that having a
child is feasible if you want to. But at the end of the day I deeply value my autonomy and my privacy.
And I believe most Americans do too.
I agree.
You know, it's interesting we did the baby formula episode last week.
And that is food to keep babies alive. And just this past week with the infant formula supplement
to the Appropriations Act, which was to make it easier for those babies to be fed a 192 Republicans were against.
That's gonna do it for this week on solbons.
Thank you so much for listening.
Hang in there.
I don't know.
I don't know.
Vote?
Well, the one thing I'll say is that it is imperative
So the one thing I'll say is that it is imperative that we increase the knowledge of access to safe abortion.
And by the way, I didn't even talk about the fact that there is medicine that you can
take to.
Like it is not always surgical anymore, that we have a medical therapy as well, that is a pill.
So, I know we've been focused a lot on the surgery, but that should be noted. And that, again,
there's so much history in this topic, you could do a hundred episodes and still not cover everything
there is to say about it. But I think that what is going to be really imperative is to remember that
really imperative is to remember that getting people who desire this care, helping them access it in a safe way has got to be, for those of you who think, how can I help, what
can I do?
That is what you can do.
Returning to these other methods that were unsafe and that resulted in harm cannot be
what people feel forced to do. We have to
to provide a safe way to get people to the care. If we can't give the care to them where they live,
then they need to get to where the care is and we have to work on systems and there are
already our systems like this by the way. There was very huge articles on organizations that do just that.
But that has to be where the focus is.
We cannot return to the days of, I don't even want to say it.
We just can't go back to that.
Thanks, Mr. taxpayers, for these.
There are some medicines as the intro and outro of our program and thanks to you for listening
Until next time my name is just a macro. I'm saving my boy, and it's always don't drill a hole
Alright!