02/11/2026
Here is my uterus choker.
This is a visual of what I feel the government wants to do to people with a uterus. Much like how the systems in place used the selflessness of women to repress us for decades, now they’re just using our own bodies as a weapon against us. They can’t legally kill us, so they put laws in place so our bodies do the work for them. Don’t let doctors intervene, or better yet, lets give them the death penalty if they get an abortion because we’re that pro-life (looking at you GA, ID, IA, IN, KY, MO, OK, SC and TX).
Since Roe v. Wade was overturned in 2022, states with abortion bans have seen over 22,000 additional births, 478 excess infant deaths and 59 excess pregnancy-associated deaths. It is worth noting that due to the lack of data that is collected on this matter, these numbers are likely much higher. Texas saw a 50% jump in the sepsis rate among people who lost their pregnancies in the second trimester (sepsis is a life-threatening condition caused by the body’s extreme reaction to an infection). Black infants were severely affected, with mortality rates 11% above expected levels. Under “normal conditions”, black people were already three times more likely to die from pregnancy-related causes than their white counterparts. Today, 21 states ban abortion or restrict it earlier in pregnancy than the standard set by Roe v. Wade, and abortions are completely illegal in 13 states. Here is an incomplete list of people who have died preventable deaths at the hands of the US government:
- Josseli Barnica (TX, 28, hospital refused to intervene in her miscarriage)
- Yeniifer Alvarez-Estrada Glick (TX, 27, complications related to her high-risk pregnancy)
- Porsha Ngumezi (TX, 35, hospital refused to intervene in her miscarriage)
- Nevaeh Crain (TX, 18, hospital refused to intervene in her miscarriage)
- Amber Nicole Thurman (GA, 28, septic shock due to delayed abortion care)
- Candi Miller (GA, 41, afraid to seek medical attention during an at-home abortion)
- Taysha Wilkinson-Sobieski (IN, 26, did not receive care for ectopic pregnancy)
Sources: Population Reference Bureau &