A Wisconsin circuit court judge has ruled that an 1849 law that classifies the destruction of a fetus by someone other than the mother as a felony does not outlaw abortions, returning the state’s abortion access to its pre-Dobbs status.

Dane County Circuit Court Judge Diane Schlipper on Tuesday reaffirmed a ruling she issued earlier this year, finding that an 1800s-era law “does not apply to consensual abortions, but to feticide.”

After the Supreme Court overturned the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling in 2022, the question was raised over whether a Wisconsin state law passed in 1849 could go into effect. Roe had effectively invalidated the law when it was in effect.

  • @MuhammadJesusGaySex
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    351 year ago

    Most of these people think that a book from 2000 years ago has valid ideas for today’s world. So, 180 isn’t much of a stretch at all.

    • neoman4426
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      161 year ago

      And funny thing about that book, not only does it never even approach condemning abortion it gives explicit instructions how to perform one with a potion that can detect if a woman cheated as one of the only times it’s mentioned

        • @Zombiepirate
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          111 year ago

          Well. It “detects” it in the same way a trial by fire detects guilt.

          Supposedly if she cheated then she will miscarry. Otherwise, no effect. Fun to imagine all of the women who had to endure the “guilt” thrust upon them by random chance because people believed in magic.

    • Buelldozer
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      91 year ago

      In fairness the 2nd half of that book is pretty damn good, it’s just a shame that they don’t actually practice it.