Blogger’s Abortion Instructions Trouble Both Sides

c. 2006 Religion News Service (UNDATED) A feminist blogger has posted explicit directions online for a surgical abortion, in reaction to the new South Dakota law all but banning the procedure. Her action troubles activists on both sides of the issue: Is it a harbinger of a return to the era of secret, illegal abortions? […]

c. 2006 Religion News Service

(UNDATED) A feminist blogger has posted explicit directions online for a surgical abortion, in reaction to the new South Dakota law all but banning the procedure.

Her action troubles activists on both sides of the issue: Is it a harbinger of a return to the era of secret, illegal abortions?


At her “Molly Saves the Day” weblog, the 21-year-old Florida resident uses the pseudonym Molly Blythe. Given the volatility of the abortion debate, she requested that her real name and city of residence not be used in this story.

In an interview, the blogger said South Dakota’s recent ban on abortion _ even in cases of rape and incest _ prompted her post, “For the Women of South Dakota: An Abortion Manual.” The blogger, who has no medical background, said she has been compiling instructions for several years. She observed an actual abortion, interviewed providers and read medical texts, she said.

She posted directions for a dilation and curettage _ or D and C _ abortion, and plans to next place online the steps for a vacuum aspiration abortion.

“If anyone has a problem with this and they don’t think non-doctors should perform medical procedures, there’s a simple way to guarantee that won’t happen: Make sure Roe v. Wade is not overturned,” she said, referring to the 1973 Supreme Court decision legalizing abortion nationwide.

The blogger _ whose home page describes “Molly Saves the Day” as “feminist issues, liberal talk and news analysis from a former journalist turned phone sex operator” _ said she has received nearly 700 e-mails since the Feb. 23 post, “a lot from people who say I’m going to hell and they’d do their best to put me there.” Others thank her.

Her posting troubles anti-abortion and abortion-rights activists alike.

Olivia Gans, an opponent who now regrets her own 1981 abortion, said she finds it “terrifying that anyone could advocate creating a subculture in which this dangerous, potentially deadly practice would be performed.”

Gans, director of American Victims of Abortion, an outreach program of the National Right to Life Committee, added that such “scare tactics” are used by “pro-abortion groups whose agenda is more important than women’s lives.”


Jim Sedlak, vice president of the American Life League, said, “Anyone who engages in this should be prosecuted for what it is _ murder.”

“Scientifically, human life begins at conception and any effort to end that life either by yourself or with a friend following directions on the Internet is the killing of a human being,” said Sedlak, whose group is the nation’s largest anti-abortion education organization.

Vicki Saporta heads the National Abortion Federation, an industry group for practitioners.

“Women want to be treated by a medical professional, not by a friend,” Saporta said. “I don’t see Roe falling. And if it were to fall, there’d be enough states where abortion was still legal that women could get on a bus.”

The blogger disagrees.

“Worst-case scenario, a woman needs an abortion but doesn’t have a job, or one that lets her leave the state,” she said.

She and several friends began to worry when President Bush made two appointments to the Supreme Court, presumably tilting it further right.

“We didn’t want there to be a services gap if Roe is overturned,” she said.


The gap would occur, the blogger said, immediately following such a ruling, before a network could be arranged to carry women to states with legal clinics.

“I’m not advocating back alley abortions,” she said. “But we need to make this information available. I firmly believe that abortion is something that can be done by someone who is not an M.D.”

For years, it was. Before 1973, abortion was largely illegal, but hardly rare.

“Every town in America had someone who did these things,” said Rickie Solinger of New Paltz, N.Y., author of several books on abortion history.

In “The Abortionist: A Woman Against the Law,” Solinger profiled Ruth Barnett in Portland, Ore., who did some 40,000 abortions from 1918 until 1968. “Everyone knew where her office was,” Solinger said.

Before Roe, rural women especially faced difficulties of access, said David P. Cline, a Durham, N.C., historian and author of the new book, “Creating Choice: A Community Responds to the Need for Abortion and Birth Control, 1961-1973.”

Cline focused on the small towns of the Pioneer Valley around Springfield, Mass., typical of communities across the country with secret networks.


“The underground abortion movement there was not just activists and feminists, but was composed of the backbone families of these small, very conservative Massachusetts towns,” Cline said.

Clergy _ of many denominations _ were instrumental in guiding women to abortion providers, he said.

“There was a nationwide organization called the Clergy Consultation Service on Abortion; in western Massachusetts there were two chapters,” Cline said.

Cline interviewed former members of these networks. “People said should Roe be overturned, they’d be ready to go again. And I want to stress this _ it wasn’t just the feminist activists who said this, but also the clergy.”

Another group was the Jane movement of the Chicago Women’s Liberation Union. From 1969 to 1973, about 125 members counseled and educated women on abortion, learned to perform the procedure and ran surgical clinics in clandestine apartments.

Workers went by the name Jane. One was Laura Kaplan, who wrote the 1996 book, “The Story of Jane: The Legendary Underground Feminist Abortion Service.”


“In the pre-Roe era there was massive, massive, massive civil disobedience,” said Kaplan, who now lives in New York’s Hudson Valley. “Breaking this law was something people did regularly, all the time.”

However, Kaplan cautioned, “I don’t think you can learn to do abortions in a correspondence course. Our process in Jane was a very long and careful apprenticeship. It’s a fairly straightforward procedure, but there are all kinds of caveats.”

(The “Molly Blythe” blog may be found at http://www.mollysavestheday.blogspot.com/2006/02/for-women-of-south-dakota-abortion.html)

MO/LF/RB END SEFTON

Editors: To obtain a 1974 photo of Chicago Women’s Liberation Union headquarters and a 1972 abortion poster, go to the RNS Web site at https://religionnews.com. On the lower right, click on “photos,” then search by subject or slug.

Also note Web address for abortion directions in optional trim, at end of story

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