Intentar ORO - Gratis
Where Roe Doesn't Reach
Mother Jones
|September/October 2019
While people worry about a world in which abortion access is no longerprotected, the women of Mississippi are already living in it.
“I would drink bleach right now.”
Kate shakes her head, and her long, sun-streaked brown hair, piled high in a messy bun, shivers. “That’s so bad, and I don’t mean it,” she quickly adds.
She’s exhausted; shadowy crescents frame her bright eyes. Just a few weeks ago, she graduated from the University of Mississippi. “My one goal, as pathetic as it sounds, was do not walk across that stage pregnant,” she says. “Everything I worked for…I’m going to remember graduating and being pregnant.” Kate has been trying to get an abortion since March. It’s a Friday evening at the end of May, and she was just turned away from an Arkansas clinic, about 200 miles from home.

“My one goal, as pathetic as it sounds, was do not walk across that stage pregnant,” Kate says. “Everything I worked for...I’m going to remember graduating and being pregnant.”
In the morning, she’ll have to go back home to Oxford, Mississippi, where she’ll wait yet another week, and return to the clinic in Little Rock for the third and hopefully final time.
Her day began at 3 a.m., with a text from Laurie Bertram Roberts. Roberts helms the Mississippi Reproductive Freedom Fund, the nonprofit that was helping Kate get her abortion. Around 7:45 a.m., a white medical transport van arrived at her apartment, and Kate climbed in to join two of Roberts’ daughters, Sarah and Aolani, as well as Roberts’ partner, who was driving but did not want to be named. The crew journeyed northwest, through Mississippi, then Tennessee, then Arkansas. Traffic on the interstate slowed them down; by the time they made it for her 10:45 a.m. appointment, it was nearly noon.
Esta historia es de la edición September/October 2019 de Mother Jones.
Suscríbete a Magzter GOLD para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9000 revistas y periódicos.
¿Ya eres suscriptor? Iniciar sesión
MÁS HISTORIAS DE Mother Jones
Mother Jones
THE DOCTOR IS OUT THERE
RFK Jr. wants to end the FDA's “war” on alternative treatments like stem cell therapy. What could go wrong?
4 mins
March/April 2026
Mother Jones
HOUSE ARREST
HIDING OUT WITH AN IMMIGRANT FAMILY IN ICE-OCCUPIED MEMPHIS
17 mins
March/April 2026
Mother Jones
ADVENTURISM
The MAGA critique of globalism never meant the end of war.
4 mins
March/April 2026
Mother Jones
WE'RE SUING RFK JR.
The Epstein files are not the only documents the government is hiding.
3 mins
March/April 2026
Mother Jones
THE INHERITANCE
What being a billionaire scion taught JB Pritzker about standing up to one
21 mins
March/April 2026
Mother Jones
SUNNY WITH A CHANCE OF PROGRESS
Solarpunk imagines what happens when our climate changes—and we pivot.
7 mins
March/April 2026
Mother Jones
TRUMP'S WAR ON HISTORY
As America’s 250th anniversary approaches, the president wants to control the country’s future by rewriting its past.
21 mins
March/April 2026
Mother Jones
"WHO THE FUCK ARE THESE MEN?"
HOW EXTREMISTS RECONQUERED IDAHO—AND HOW SOME LOCALS ARE FIGHTING BACK
22 mins
March/April 2026
Mother Jones
“He Thinks Our People Are Idiots” Trump has betrayed the people of coal country. They love him anyway.
Christy Ratliff is sitting in a folding chair in a public school gym in Grundy, Virginia, waiting for her number to be called.
25 mins
March/April 2026
Mother Jones
LAST RIGHTS
The Reverend Jeff Hood on the moral injury of ministering to death row inmates
3 mins
March/April 2026
Translate
Change font size

