Abortion
Introduction
During the past quarter century abortion has joined Race and war as one of the most controversial subject in the United States. It discusses human interaction where ethics, emotions and law come together. Abortion poses amoral, social and medical dilemma that faces many individuals to create an emotional and violent atmosphere. There are many points of view toward abortion but the only two distinctions are pro choice and pro life. Pro-choice would feel that the decision to abort a pregnancy is that of the mothers and the state has no right to interfere. A pro-life would hold hat from the moment of conception the embryo or fetus is alive this life imposes on us amoral obligation to preserve it and that abortion tantamount to murder.
Background and history
Abortion laws adopted by nearly all the states by the end of the 19th century it came under strong attack from reform movement beginning in the 1950s. It was slowly expanding when the US Supreme Court invalidated all existing abortion laws in 1973 with its famous landmark decision of roe v. wade. The decision caused a bitter fight between the two opposite groups commonly known as, pro-choice and pro-life now in its fourth decade. By the end of the 1980s Reagan had appeared to shift high court in conservative direction with four appointments in 1981, 1986 and 1987. The shift encouraged pro-life groups to view a challenge to a Missouri abortion law as a vehicle for over turning Roe v.Wade. In fact, the court upheld the law by 5-4 vote in 1989, with four of the justices explicitly criticizing roe. In 1990s Clinton changed three Reagan and bush policies on his second day in office: 20th anniversary of roe. He ended the enforcement of the “gang rule” on family planned clinics and overturned the Mexico City policy on aid to inter national family planning organizations. Current president bush opposed...
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