How Abortion Bans Are Affecting Where Women Live and Work - Banning abortion is a great way to get leftists to self-deport

Three years after the fall of Roe v. Wade, abortion bans have driven residents from some states, one study finds​

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Alana Tedmon and her husband moved to Philadelphia last summer from Texas. Photo: Rachel Wisniewski for WSJ

By Laura Kusisto and Harriet Torry
July 6, 2025 7:00 am ET

Alana Tedmon and her husband moved to the outskirts of Dallas in June 2022, attracted by the lower cost of living and proximity to family. That same month, the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade and Texas followed by banning abortion through all nine months of pregnancy.

“It seemed like people were always trying to change the legislation around abortion every single year but I never thought it would really happen legitimately,” she said.

The 37-year-old freelance illustrator and her husband moved back to Philadelphia last summer, largely because of the ban. Then Tedmon got pregnant unexpectedly. She was initially excited, but anxiety about the couple’s financial security ultimately led her to get an abortion—something she was grateful was feasible in the state.

“If we have a child, I want it to be because we’re ready, and not because ‘oops, it just happened,’” she said.

Abortion is now banned or heavily restricted in about one-third of U.S. states, and some women of childbearing age say that has introduced a new calculus about where to live and work. Though migration patterns are complicated, early data show that the states with the most restrictive laws are seeing some residents leave.

A recent paper published by the National Bureau of Economic Research estimated that 13 states with abortion bans collectively saw about 146,000 residents leave due to abortion bans in the year after the Supreme Court eliminated the constitutional right to the procedure. The paper found that while those states—mostly in the South—had been gaining population at a significantly faster rate than other parts of the country, that advantage essentially vanished afterward. The authors looked at patterns in Postal Service change-of-address data after the Supreme Court’s ruling.

Over a five-year period, those states’ populations could be about 1% smaller than if they hadn’t passed abortion restrictions, the paper estimated.

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Texas' abortion ban was largely behind the decision of Alana Tedmon, a freelance illustrator, to leave the state. Rachel Wisniewski for WSJ

The extent to which women are making decisions about where to live based on abortion bans has been more pronounced than many economists who study this issue anticipated.

“A single policy change is unlikely to be the marginal factor in deciding on a move. And yet here we have this really strong new evidence that abortion policy really is impacting migration,” said Caitlin Myers, an economist at Middlebury College who studies abortion data. The overturning of Roe, Myers said, was “a moment of understanding the extent to which state policies can become very, very salient.”

Another recent study found a decline in the proportion of high-achieving women applying to universities in states with abortion bans after Roe was overturned compared with a couple of years earlier. Research has also shown a decline in applications to medical school residencies in states that have heavily restricted abortion.

Research in this field remains in a relatively early phase, and the impacts identified so far are small in the context of the larger U.S. economy. For the most part, big companies haven’t made large public shifts in hiring as a result of state-level abortion rules.

The out-migration trend has been most sustained for single people, reflecting the fact that younger people are more likely to be more mobile and better able to move on principle, according to the National Bureau of Economic Research paper. That means that states with bans stand to lose out on workers in some of their prime career-building years.

In interviews, some women who are factoring abortion laws into their life decisions cited worries about suffering complications during a planned pregnancy and being unable to get care or having to travel out of state for an emergency abortion, which can cost in the tens of thousands of dollars.

Kayla Smith had lived in Idaho for more than a decade. But she decided to move after the state’s ban prevented her from obtaining an abortion in her home state for her unborn son who was suffering from a fatal fetal heart condition.

She and her husband took out a $16,000 personal loan because they weren’t sure if their health-insurance provider would cover her abortion in Washington state. That was in addition to travel expenses. (Nine months later her insurance company reimbursed her for the procedure.)

When Smith got pregnant again, the couple left Idaho for good, even though that meant moving to a corner of Washington with limited obstetric care. “That to us was safer than staying in the state of Idaho,” Smith said.

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Kayla Smith, in light blue coat, moved from Idaho after the state’s ban prevented her from obtaining an abortion for her unborn son, who had a fatal fetal heart condition. Photo: Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters

Some women say abortion bans have curtailed their earnings and career advancement, forcing them to forgo conferences or other work travel while pregnant, concerned they wouldn’t be able to obtain emergency medical care. All bans allow doctors to terminate a pregnancy to save the life of the mother, but those exceptions don’t encompass all emergency situations and in practice doctors also have sometimes found them difficult to apply.

For Emilie Aries, who regularly traveled about 40 times a year as a consultant and keynote speaker, the fear of being unable to get emergency care was so great that she decided during her second pregnancy to stop traveling to states with bans. She had suffered a series of miscarriages before that. She said she lost tens of thousands of dollars in income because she wouldn’t travel to states such as Texas.

“No amount of money is worth putting my life at risk. It’s a terrible position to be put in, quite frankly,” Aries said.

Source (Archive)
 
Whenever I hear about a woman having an abortion for their career, it's never a big or high achieving career that would make it seem worthwhile.

It's never a story about a corporate executive making six figures, or a scientist whose team is the verge of curing a rare disease, getting an abortion. It's never even a boring office job. Every time, these women have frivolous careers like "writing orange man bad slop articles into the void of the internet" or "becoming the second best native basket weaver in Arizona"
 
Gimme my puzzle pieces, top hats, whatever. I support abortion for the same reason based ms. Margaret Sanger did.

A dumb bitch who can't figure out contraception in Year Of The Clown 2025. And then can't find any of the loopholes in abortion laws. Or just take a ride on Sleazyjet to the next state over, and get it there. Shouldn't. Fucking. Spawn.

You wanna get infinite niggers (of all races)? Because that's how you get infinite niggers.
 
Gimme my puzzle pieces, top hats, whatever. I support abortion for the same reason based ms. Margaret Sanger did.

A dumb bitch who can't figure out contraception in Year Of The Clown 2025. And then can't find any of the loopholes in abortion laws. Or just take a ride on Sleazyjet to the next state over, and get it there. Shouldn't. Fucking. Spawn.

You wanna get infinite niggers (of all races)? Because that's how you get infinite niggers.
If you don't want niggers, castrate niggers like the Arabs did, the ones who don't currently enjoy a nigger problem. As for white civilization the lack of abortion was no issue for thousands of years.*
*excepting rape incest and life threatening complications, as we always must qualify every single time
 
Whenever I hear about a woman having an abortion for their career, it's never a big or high achieving career that would make it seem worthwhile.
Capable and organizationally desirable women can negotiate 6 months off to have a kid.

Makework employees probably don’t have that luxury.
 
Abortion becoming socially acceptable has made has even led to people bragging about getting an abortion on social media for clout.
This is a cope. They aren't forced to shamefully hide it so they become loud about it to suppress their guilt. I know not a single loud-mouth prochoicer who is not post abortive herself and hopped on the activism/validation train as a coping mechanism. What's the saying, "fanatacism is the first sign of repressed doubt" or something like that? They require social validation because of their (natural) feelings of guilt. The louder they are about it, the worse they actually feel about it, is my take.
 
I know so many women who thought they must be infertile when they got to age 30 as a typically sexually active woman and had never had an accidental pregnancy. Because they used their birth control with high reliability!

I have personally seen at least a full dozen women around my age and younger do this. "I'll go off birth control but I'm nervous, I'm not in my 20s any more and I don't even know if I can get pregnant." "Oh whoops it's 4 weeks later and here's my positive test."

Half the reason this happens is that abortion advocates have made it sound like almost every woman having an abortion was already on birth control that she was using correctly. The pro-abortion groups make these women into their spokespeople because they want to push the message "a lot of women getting abortions did everything right and there's no need to punish them with this baby." But that is not the message many women hear. Instead, they hear "birth control isn't very effective anyway, so it probably doesn't matter that much. If you haven't gotten pregnant, it's probably because you can't get pregnant."

It's stupid but it's a reasonable enough response if someone genuinely believed all the propaganda coming their way from the "pro-choice" lobby.
 
Even when I was a Liberal and voted Dem, one of my biggest problems were always 2 things: pride parades that have children, and abortions.
It's not your body your choice if it involves another life. It is fucking murder, even if the child isn't born yet. I'm (not as much anymore) surprised more Liberals don't have this view
 
he 37-year-old freelance illustrator and her husband moved back to Philadelphia last summer, largely because of the ban. Then Tedmon got pregnant unexpectedly. She was initially excited, but anxiety about the couple’s financial security ultimately led her to get an abortion—something she was grateful was feasible in the state.

Not a good story.. Dumb old broke white whore gets pregnant and is excited about it. Until she discovers that babies cost money and gets an abortion.
“If we have a child, I want it to be because we’re ready, and not because ‘oops, it just happened,’” she said.

All that is in the rear view mirror bitch. If you are talking about not being financially 'ready" at 37, its just not going to happen.

The typical abortion by statistics in the US is a dumb black women who will not use birth control and uses abortion as an alternative.
 
When Smith got pregnant again, the couple left Idaho for good, even though that meant moving to a corner of Washington with limited obstetric care. “That to us was safer than staying in the state of Idaho,” Smith said.
There's a large city in Washington near Idaho. It's telling that they chose a small town with limited medical care over Spokompton.

Seems like that the man also agreed that killing his child was the answer because he was also scared.
Assuming it was his child. There are too many beaners in Idaho, and by "too many" I mean more than zero.
 
Married couple pushing 40 acting as if they're in life circumstances as turbulent and unideal as kids in college. Wife has the art skills to match.

Instead of staying in Dallas near family with a lower cost of living that would make having a child possible by their standards they prefer to go back to a place where having a child is harder so they'll be able to kill it. Quit using finances as an excuse and say you just want to keep living like eighteen year olds.
 
Married couple pushing 40 acting as if they're in life circumstances as turbulent and unideal as kids in college. Wife has the art skills to match.

Instead of staying in Dallas near family with a lower cost of living that would make having a child possible by their standards they prefer to go back to a place where having a child is harder so they'll be able to kill it. Quit using finances as an excuse and say you just want to keep living like eighteen year olds.
Really. Honestly people figure this shit out every day and every one acts like it is impossible. Some with welfare, some with just saying maybe we shouldn't see Taylor Swift for the 5th time this year and buy the newest consoomer item. But I think it is a symptom of a larger problem, people just want to have no responsibility and be children themselves far into adulthood. Part of why God was right, shouldn't have sex before marriage if you don't want to have children. That goes for both men and women for damn sure.
 
"My baby had a horrible condition that would have resulted in his death before or shortly after birth. But that meant I didn't have any control over exactly when his death happened. It felt a lot better to get to control the exact moment when he died, so I could feel like this was part of my life I had control over, rather than a horrible, senseless, tragic loss that kept me out of the driver's seat."
It's sick how doctors are so adamant about pushing "termination for medical reasons." There are way too many cases of couples told "There's an anomaly; you have to abort" only to find out their child was healthy and could've been killed for no reason.

And even when the diagnosis is accurate, there's no evidence that "TFMR" is better for the woman's health or grief. Those who carry to term are assured that their child spent every last moment with the warmth and safety of their mother. They can hold the child, say goodbyes, get footprint keepsakes, and provide a dignified burial. Those who choose fetal euthanasia still end up with a dead child but with no such comfort or closure.
 
It's sick how doctors are so adamant about pushing "termination for medical reasons." There are way too many cases of couples told "There's an anomaly; you have to abort" only to find out their child was healthy and could've been killed for no reason.
Hell, I just learned yesterday this happen twice to an acquaintance. First one suspected downs, they offered abortion. Baby was fine. Next after that one, they told her the baby had water on the brain, suggested abortion. Again, baby was fine. Wild.
 
I've said it before I'll say it again. Women have so many options to be the biggest sluts they want to be, and not get pregnant. Take a pill, get a shot, make him wear a condom, get the morning after pill, etc. This is more bigotry of low expectations.

Women too stupid to not bareback a loser, but no, the final option for a litany of bad choices being off the table means people hate women.

The options are not as good as you think. They can't be used as long as you think either. Over time birth control methods become more threatening to a woman's health. I'm talking being on birth control for more than fifteen years. By age 30 risk of a stroke from contraceptives increases.

A large problem is doctors restricting tubal ligation and bisalp to women who want it. Even women who have already had kids which is why you see many stories of married couples seeking abortion who already have children. But tubal ligation is difficult to get.
 
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