Roe V. Wade Essay

650 Words2 Pages

Since the landmark Supreme Court case of Roe v. Wade in 1973, over 50 million abortions had occurred in the United State. Moreover, the decision also saved many women’s lives. Before 1965 women risked their life’s to have an abortion legally with in and outside Texas because of the risk in using a non-professional doctor. In the case Roe v. Wade, the United State Supreme Court used the First, Fourth, Ninth and Fourteenth Amendment right to privacy, in which gave the mother to decide whether to have an abortion or not.
In a 7-2 decision, the U.S Supreme Court decided that the state of Texas should not interfere in the women’s first trimester of their pregnancy, but in the second trimester the state have the right to interfere because the fetus have “viability” (LII (Legal Information Institute)) meaning that the fetus can move and the women have more danger to an abortion. Furthermore, the court also stated that to legally give privacy right to women during …show more content…

However, is not actually her decision to make but instead her doctor. Yet, with the cuts of taxes that Gov. Perry talked about, it does not let the women so much in power. Since the help they were getting from those taxes where helping the clinics to maintain them clean and in a good shape to provide that “service”. “Federal appeals court overturns decision that temporarily blocked restrictive law requiring clinics to meet hospital-like standards, forcing closure of many” (Gambino). Clinics are closing due to this new law, if that happens they are denying the women’s right to abortion. In conclusion, Roe v Wade (1973) a controversial landmark Supreme Court case, which gave women right to privacy during her pregnancy only in the first trimester, using the First, Fourth, Ninth, and Fourteenth amendment protecting the zone of privacy according to Supreme Court Judge Harry

More about Roe V. Wade Essay

Open Document