Now it's official. Many of you have read my detonations during the past year about the fact American women's cultural progress is in a stall, if not in a freefall. I've written that the number of women in Congress has remained relatively stagnant for the past decade. I've reported on data that prove the percentage of women occupying seats in state legislatures (the training ground for national politics) is down for the first time this decade after three decades of rising rapidly. I've written that women's progress toward CEO status in major corporations is edging forward at a molasses-like pace and the same is true for women on corporate boards.
But now it's official. The Associated Press reports from Rome, "Over the last 10 years, more than a dozen countries have made it easier to get abortions, and women from Mexico to Ireland have raised court challenges to get access to the procedure. The trend contrasts sharply with the United States, where this week South Dakota's governor signed legislation that would ban most abortions in the state. The law is intended to set up a direct legal challenge to Roe v. Wade, the 1973 Supreme Court decision that made abortion legal."
Of course, abortion rights are not the be all and end all of women's progress. But for decades this nation seemed to have settled on middle ground -- abortion should be legal, but with significant restrictions.
Now, we are "exiting right," retreating from that moderate position to one of extreme conservatism. As a result, I'm beginning to think abortion rights are an increasingly important marker of women's advancement.
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/opinion/262932_erbe15.html