Ever thought about the “what if’s?” What if I wouldn’t have done this, what would’ve become if I wouldn’t have done that, what could’ve it done? These questions are asked by many women today due to ending a pregnancy. Abortion has become one the biggest medical procedures performed in the United States today. Abortion is defined as the deliberate termination of a human pregnancy, most often performed during the first twenty eight weeks of pregnancy. Within this though comes so much more, and is highly debated within society. More than forty percent of women will end a pregnancy through abortion within their reproductive lives (Turpin,EMedicineHealth). Abortion goes against my personal Catholic moral belief of every person’s right to life no …show more content…
Wade case went to the Supreme Court. Norma McCorvey became the plaintiff who was fighting for the right to have an abortion. In the opinion written by US Supreme Court justice Harry Blackmun, the court ruled that a woman had a right to an abortion during the first 2 trimesters (6 months) of pregnancy (Turpin,EMedicineHealth). The safety protocol for the procedure was cited and gave women the basic rights to decide the way to want to end the pregnancy. A problem within the country with abortions is the death rate. Many women, especially teens, will travel far distances to have an illegal abortion that doesn’t require parent consent if under the age of eighteen.
Many have fought for the right to abortion due to certain circumstances. Rape and incest has become a leading problem in the United States, with ninety thousand people stating they had been sexually abused. Although this isn’t the ideal situation for the mother, the fetus inside her is still a living, breathing child. Regardless of how it got there, the baby should be able to live. There are many options if the mother didn’t want the baby, such as, adoption. Everyone deserves a chance to
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Walking into any high school the whispers of who’s doing who and who just had a pregnancy scare can be heard throughout the halls. To put it bluntly, teens are having sex, it’s something that can’t be ignored anymore. One million teens have gotten pregnant in the past year. That’s four out of ten women before the age of twenty and the government is spending forty million dollars a year to help with teen pregnancy. Most teenage girls are being put on birth control and if still sexually active, are taking the morning after pill (Turpin,EMedicineHealth). These methods are still considered a killing of an unborn baby. A survey stated that seventy five percent of women and fifty five percent of men regret who they lost their virginity to (Turpin,EMedicineHealth). If teens had the proper sex education these numbers could decrease, as well as it loosing it’s “popularity” factor that many shows and movies are commercializing. If one can’t endure the consequences, sex shouldn’t be