About 600 abortion protesters march at Missouri Capitol

Abortion opponents march around the Missouri Capitol on Saturday. About 600 people took part in the morning-long rally, which continued inside the Capitol building with presentations by several speakers.

Abortion opponents march around the Missouri Capitol on Saturday. About 600 people took part in the morning-long rally, which continued inside the Capitol building with presentations by several speakers. Photo by Kelley McCall.

Hundreds of anti-abortion protesters from around Missouri marched to the state Capitol building Saturday to mark the 38th anniversary of Roe v. Wade, the 1973 Supreme Court decision that declared federal laws banning abortion unconstitutional.

About 600 protesters gathered in Jefferson City near the governor’s mansion and the Missouri Secretary of State’s office around 10 a.m., waving signs and singing Christian hymns as they walked up the steps of the Capitol. The protest was one of several that will happen this weekend around the country to mark the Jan. 22 anniversary of the ruling. A march in Washington D.C. is planned Monday.

The line of protesters near the governor’s mansion stretched nearly a city block, despite cold morning temperatures, waiting to begin a walk organized by two anti-abortion campaigns, America Asleep kNOw More and 40 Days for Life.

Kathie Forck, one of the event’s organizers with 40 Days for Life, said the protest was aimed at creating a stigma around abortion, even if the ruling will not be changed.

“We want abortion to be unthinkable, even if it is legal,” she said. “We need to bring chastity and purity back into this country.”

At the front of the line of protesters, Tim Thompson and his cousin Rebecca Townsend, both of Marshall, hoisted an eight-foot cross reading “Everlasting Life” on their shoulders as the march began. Thompson said it was important to mark the anniversary of the court’s ruling, but said the march is meant to draw more attention to their cause on other days as well.

“I think you have to support the idea regardless of what day it is,” he said.

The marchers then gathered in the Capitol rotunda to hear speeches from several anti-abortion speakers, including a physician and a priest. Speaking with two priests sitting behind him, Dave Daubenmire, a former football coach from Ohio, criticized churches for not opposing abortion strongly enough in recent years.

“Thirty-eight years, 38 years of unabated child-killing in America. Abortion won’t end in America because the church doesn’t hate abortion,” Daubenmire said, his voice rising.

Near the end of the rally, school-age children were called to the podium to speak individually about why they do not think abortion should be legal.

Sally Burgess, executive director of the Hope Clinic for Women in Granite City, Ill., said the clinic had a dozen abortion rights advocates from Missouri on hand to escort patients into the clinic Saturday. She said a group of about three dozen protesters had come from Carbondale, Ill., tripling the number of protesters usually outside the clinic, but she said abortion rights groups also recognize the anniversary of the court’s ruling.

“We honor Roe v. Wade each year because we understand that having access to professional, safe abortion care is a public health need,” she said.

In a statement released Friday, Cecile Richards, president of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America, said the group is marking the anniversary while fighting proposed federal legislation that would limit private health insurance coverage of the procedure.

“Today, we celebrate what we achieved 38 years ago with Roe v. Wade and rededicate ourselves to protecting each woman’s constitutional right to make her own private, personal medical decisions,” she said in the statement.

Comments

Graceful 2 years, 4 months ago

These demonstrators are true heroes.

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tonto 2 years, 4 months ago

Graceful, please help me out here. How is a short walk in the cold and a rally in the Capitol heroic?

If you want to find heroes, look elsewhere. A mob is never heroic. A self-righteous little crowd of people working to "create a stigma" about someone else's life-or-death crisis decision is not heroic.

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tonto 2 years, 4 months ago

That is a nice fantasy, but those people are not standing up against anything. They are joining a little crowd who believes the same things they do. It's a cheap feel-good thing.

What tyranny would you imagine them standing against? What evil do you see yourself fighting? Do you really want to make a miserable, sick, frightened pregnant woman's life worse because she makes a very difficult decision that you disagree with?

Why do you think people who disagree with you are immoral? How do you get to this "I'm right and everyone else is wrong!" mindset? What basis do you have for making those claims? Life is complicated and most people are able to work their way through the confusion.

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FarCry 2 years, 4 months ago

It seems to me the REAL heroes in this case are the folks at Planned Parenthood who provide women's health, education, and unwanted pregnancy prevention. Planned Parenthood likely prevents far more abortions than all the "pro-life" protestors combined. And if you're a typical conservative, pro-war, pro-death penalty, and oppose social safety nets, you're only 'anti-abortion', not really "pro-life".

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MK 2 years, 4 months ago

I don't like abortion. In fact, I find the practice to be pretty horrific. However, I don't support laws that try to take control of free people's decisions on what to do with their own bodies. As long as that baby is encased in a woman's body and is unable to live outside of it, I feel that the pregnant individual should be allowed to make whatever decision they feel is right for them in regards to that pregnancy, including terminating it.

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MK 2 years, 4 months ago

I never said I have no regard for the unborn child. I just place more importance on the adult whose body its encased within and their choices in regards to their body. Either way, one of the parties involved is getting a raw deal. As far as immorality, that's an individual perspective. I believe that people who try to force State control over another person's body are immoral.

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bluesfan13 2 years, 4 months ago

What about the types of birth control that don't prevent fertilization of the egg, rather that they preven the implantation of a fertilzed egg?

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newone 2 years, 4 months ago

I am not sure why people debate abortion...Nothing is ever accomplished and no one’s mind is ever changed,it's like peeing in the wind, no point it in.

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JMO 2 years, 4 months ago

While I'm totally NOT getting into this one, I do want to say I have little to no respect for anyone who parades their children out to have them hawk their parent's opinions. And I do mean anyone, from protests to TV commercials. They're your children, not your spokesmen.

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wcywing 2 years, 4 months ago

while i'm all for free speech, one of the girls looked like she did not want to be there. i could be wrong though.

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asb 2 years, 4 months ago

Babies have been born. Children have grown some, Fetuses are neither. By all means, outlaw termination of potential humans, and you'll get a lot more of the grisly abortion on trial out east. More dead and sterile women, more post-birth murder of real babies. Farcry hit it exactly on the nose; Planned Parenthood prevents more abortion than all the religious and moralist anti-abortionists combined.

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