The Civil War raged and fortune

opinions2024-05-22 10:19:3331819

WASHINGTON (AP) — As Union and Confederate armies clashed in a bloody fourth year of the Civil War, President Abraham Lincoln tasked one man to create the legal code for Arizona, almost 50 years before the territory became a state.

New York judge William Thompson Howell wrote 500 pages that spanned provisions on dueling, accidental homicides by ax and age of consent that would govern the newly formed territory of fewer than 7,000 people. But tucked within the “Howell Code,” just after the section on duels, was an abortion law criminalizing the administering of “any medicinal substances ... with the intention to procure the miscarriage of any woman then being with child.”

That was 160 years ago. Last week, that same 1864 provision was resurrected by the Arizona Supreme Court, which upheld the near-total ban on abortion with no exceptions for rape or incest, a decision that quickly rippled across the political landscape of one of the nation’s most important presidential battleground states.

Address of this article:http://tonga.fidosfortywinks.com/article-73b999831.html

Popular

Caitlin Clark returns for 2nd half against Sun after apparent left leg injury in 1st half

Qingdao top Shandong to seal playoffs spot in CBA

China lose to 10

Village enjoys rising tourist numbers

Proposed $2.77 billion settlement clears first step of NCAA approval with no change to finance plan

Affluent Americans are driving US economy and likely delaying need for Fed rate cuts

China sees robust recovery, vigorous growth in cultural, tourism industries: minister

Asian soccer body set to end presidential term limits in latest pushback on anti

LINKS