In the United States, thirteen states — Arkansas, Idaho, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, North Dakota, Oklahoma,[1] South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas,[2] Utah, and Wyoming[3] have trigger laws that would automatically ban abortion in the first and second trimesters if the landmark case Roe v. Wade were overturned.[4][5][6] Illinois formerly had a trigger law (enacted in 1975), but repealed it in 2017.[7][8][9] Also, nine states — Alabama, Arizona, Michigan, West Virginia, and Wisconsin as well as the already mentioned Arkansas, Mississippi, Oklahoma, and Texas, still have their unenforced pre-Roe v. Wade abortion bans on the law books. Those laws are not currently enforceable due to Roe v. Wade, but could be enforced if Roe v. Wade was overturned.[5]
The one thing I do have to ask is if these 18 states do end up banning abortion, are we going to see women traveling interstate in order to get abortions? What exactly is going to happen? For the ones here who have a problem with black people, if Roe v Wade never happened, do you think the country would have been able to handle having double the amount of black people it’s had since RvW, or no? It’s all rather interesting to me.
Exactly. Low-IQ impulsive people can still generally pay the rent because they can borrow from fiends/payday loan to do what's required in the moment, they just can't plan for the future.
Abortion makes unprotected slutty sex a future problem. Black guys hope they can convince their baby momma to abort, black women get free abortions so they don't need any caution at all.
Clearly abortion was intended to decrease the black population, but it's hard to say whether the degeneracy it fostered didn't completely counteract it. In any case most problems are in some type of equilibrium tradeoff; for instance, society isn't going to pay for 30% of people being blacks on welfare - they'd cut off the welfare/healthcare and that particular problem will take care of it self.