Roe’s Midlife Crisis
Today, January 22, 2008, marks the 35th anniversary of Roe v Wade. If you’re reading my blog, you almost certainly know that’s the U.S. Supreme Court case that legalized abortion based on the right to privacy in matters as personal as childbearing.
We’ve kept Roe alive despite a constant tack backward by courts, state laws, and a federal abortion ban that’s been upheld by the Supremes. Meanwhile, in pop culture–movies like Juno and Knocked Up for example–abortion has become increasingly cast, if at all, as some clandestine act that nice people would never engage in.
If this trend continues, then life will imitate art and abortion will become clandestine again. So it’s time to radically rethink our whole approach. We have to stake out a human rights framework for reproductive justice and go for it from the ground up. I don’t care if we thought the battles were fought and won–they were, but that’s democracy, folks. We have to do it again, in terms that resonate with the world we live in today. You get past a midlife crisis by doing something different.
Here are a few pieces I wrote:
For Huffington Post: “I Am Roe and I Have Questions for the Candidates”
For Women’s eNews: “Roe Anniversary Brings Decisive Moment to Choose”
For Salon: “Roe 35 Years Later”
Read on!

GLORIA FELDT is the New York Times bestselling author of several books including No Excuses: 9 Ways Women Can Change How We Think About Power, a sought-after speaker and frequent contributor to major news outlets, and the Co-Founder and President of Take The Lead. People has called her “the voice of experience,” and among the many honors she has been given, Vanity Fair called her one of America’s “Top 200 Women Legends, Leaders, and Trailblazers,” and Glamour chose her as a “Woman of the Year.”
As co-founder and president of Take The Lead, a leading women’s leadership nonprofit, her mission is to achieve gender parity by 2025 through innovative training programs, workshops, a groundbreaking 50 Women Can Change The World immersive, online courses, a free weekly newsletter, and events including a monthly Virtual Happy Hour program and a Take The Lead Day symposium that reached over 400,000 women globally in 2017.