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Opinion
The following is presented as part of The Columbian’s Opinion content, which offers a point of view in order to provoke thought and debate of civic issues. Opinions represent the viewpoint of the author. Unsigned editorials represent the consensus opinion of The Columbian’s editorial board, which operates independently of the news department.
News / Opinion / Columns

Pitts: Texas abortion case offers grim look into the future

By Leonard Pitts
Published: April 15, 2022, 6:01am

Last week, Texas gave us a glimpse of the future.

It was not pretty.

It seems that on Thursday, a 26-year-old woman was arrested and charged with murder. Specifically, according to a statement from the sheriff’s department in tiny Starr County on the Mexican border, Lizelle Herrera “intentionally and knowingly” caused “the death of an individual by self-induced abortion.”

Thankfully, her ordeal was not long-lived. On Monday, the district attorney asked a judge to dismiss the charge.

Although Texas is among the states that have imposed harsh limits on a woman’s constitutional right to end a pregnancy, it has no statute covering what Herrera is alleged to have done.

In fact, Texas law specifically prohibits criminal prosecution of a woman who has an abortion.

One wishes that offered more solace than it does.

To the contrary, it seems reasonable to suspect Herrera’s arrest will someday go down as a harbinger, foreshadowing the achievement of a goal toward which the so-called “pro-life” movement has been driving for almost half a century: a world where abortion is a criminal offense.

They consistently claim otherwise, but their own logic contradicts them.

If a fertilized egg is, as they contend, a human being, then killing a fertilized egg is murder.

If killing a fertilized egg is murder, then those who facilitate the act are murderers. And murderers belong in jail.

Their logic goes off the track, of course, with that first assumption, the moment you challenge yourself to run into a burning house or jump into a flooded river to save a fertilized egg the way you would to save a human being.

But the point is that, by the reasoning of abortion opponents, arrest and prosecution have to follow abortion.

That’s what they are fighting for, whether they admit it, even to themselves, or not.

About the woman at the center of all this, precious little is known.

We don’t know, for instance, what means she chose to end her pregnancy — if, in fact, she did. We don’t even know if Herrera had the supposed abortion or helped someone else to have one.

It is tempting, in the absence of fact, to speculate on why she — or someone else — allegedly did this.

Was it a matter of hiding a pregnancy from an abusive partner?

Of being unable to afford an abortion clinic?

Of being unable to find one?

We don’t know.

This much, however, we can say with some confidence: If a woman decided to self-induce an abortion, it is likely because she felt she had no other choice.

The realization resonates.

Planned Parenthood counts 19 states — including Florida, Mississippi, Missouri, Ohio, and Texas — where access to abortion is now “severely restricted.” With an expected Supreme Court ruling that overturns Roe v. Wade looming on the horizon, those strict restrictions will surely turn to outright bans.

And upon whom will the weight of that prohibition fall most heavily?

Certainly, not upon women who have options. Not upon those whose families or financial situations allow them avenues of escape.

No, as has so often been the case throughout history, this onerous weight will be borne by those least able to bear it, by women who have no other choice.

So yes, one is pleased that Lizelle Herrera will face no charges, but one is hardly reassured.

Last week, this woman was arrested for murder after allegedly availing herself — or helping someone else avail herself — of what is still a constitutional right.

It’s a milestone that raises an ominous question: Who’s next?

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