On Wikipedia, I found out about an old political strategy used by the Irish Republican Army called the "Armalite and ballot box strategy", and directly from that article, I discovered an article about an American concept called the "Four Boxes of Liberty". In short, it states that there are four boxes to be used in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury and cartridge, in that order. Think about that.
Just a reminder, the Declaration of Independence contains this little gem:
"That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness."
Think about that.
FUCKING PREACH
It’s all about control, sexism, racism, it’s not about babies or lives or the Bible
Okay, but I've seen this argument thrown around for years, and I never believed it because it's been pushed into my brain since I was a child by my extremely Christian parents that abortion is fundamentally evil because it goes against the Bible. But I'm taking a 2nd Wave Feminism course and I finally found out that this is actually 100% true? Until the Reagan campaign and associated Republican politicians tried to find another social issue to sway Southerners, especially Southern women, in their favor, abortion was not a primary issue for churches. It was only when feminists started mobilizing and, as a result, many institutions such as the Catholic church tried to mobilize against them that churches started advocating against abortion. Abortion did not become an issue of morality for the right until the 70s. Before then, abortion was simply not discussed because most things relating to sex weren't publicly discussed. So no, according to popular belief, the argument that abortions are killing babies did not always exist, it was just an argument crafted when the Republican party needed another social group to oppress for political points
Of course it was Reagan
Why’s it always Reagan?
there’s a very good you’re wrong about episode that covers the rise of the anti-choice movement
It's even worse than mentioned above because the Southern churches that started the anti-abortion movement weren't originally fighting against feminism, they were fighting against desegregation.
The Christian Coalition was founded to bring racist Christians of all denominations together after religious schools were desegregated. However they realized early on the support for segregation was limited to the South and they needed to focus on some other cause they could use to undermine Supreme Court rulings and push a "state's rights" agenda. They decided that overturning the recent Roe V Wade ruling would be their fight of choice - I suspect they vastly underestimated how popular Roe V Wade would be.
I actually wrote about this as part of my Masters thesis (which was about portrayals of anti-abortion violence on TV, but the history of the anti-abortion movement was relevant).
It's been a few years and I'm not currently looking at my Masters thesis, so I'm not going to cite any sources off the top of my head, but there are actually a few really interesting points that happened in the anti-abortion movement.
There has actually been an active anti-abortion movement since at least the 1800s in the US. Its shape and motivations have gone through a number of changes across the years, but it's definitely been there.
First, Catholics have basically always (at least in the US) been anti-abortion as part of a broader pro-life effort (anti-death penalty, anti-war, pro-charity, etc.) because they have basically always seen life as beginning at conception. This is not a defense of the Catholic Church or the Catholic anti-abortion movement, but it has historically been pretty distinct from the more modern evangelical anti-abortion movement. Ironically, the modern shift towards evangelical/Republican anti-abortion politics pulled Catholics writ large away from as much active anti-abortion campaigning, because they didn't want to be associated with the evangelical part of the movement.
A lot of early (late 1800s/early 1900s) non-Catholic anti-abortion stuff was about race and immigration--namely, the fear that white Protestant women weren't having enough children and so white Protestants were going to be outpaced by POC and Catholics who had a lot more children. Sound familiar?
Before Roe, abortion was largely seen as a medical procedure. It was a highly and inconsistently regulated one, but it was a medical procedure, and so most mainstream Protestants were cool with it because it wasn't seen as anything beyond that.
A few things happened at around the same time: the growth of the evangelical movement, which strongly opposed feminism and anything that was seen as not fitting the extremely patriarchal hierarchy wherein the father is the head of household and the center of life and women's job is primarily as a mother and a wife first, the passage of Roe, and the Republican effort to grow their base.
A lot of the evangelical part was about race, but you shouldn't discount how much evangelicals fundamentally believe in the anti-abortion movement. They just haven't necessarily always fully believed in it as a "life begins at conception" piece--but the belief that women are first and foremost a mother and anything that prevents them from being in that role is evil is really fundamental.*
But the passage of Roe is that it changed abortion from being seen as basically just a medical procedure to "abortion on demand." Now it wasn't just to save a woman's life or because the fetus wouldn't survive--it was being a woman didn't want to carry a child. Suddenly it was this idea that a woman could (and would) use abortion as birth control, that they would have random irresponsible sex and then get rid of children willy-nilly.
This ran headlong into the swiftly-growing evangelical movement and helped lead to the modern anti-abortion movement.
*You can look up stuff about women-protective/women-centered vs fetus-protective/fetus-centered anti-abortion beliefs. Most of what I read for my Masters is paywalled but you can find some of it online.
And people wonder why I worship Satan!