Heather Cox Richardson is a historian who blogs frequently on current events. She is brilliant.
She wrote:
In Arizona, Pima County Superior Court Judge Kellie Johnson has restored a law put into effect by Arizona’s Territorial legislature in 1864 and then reworked in 1901 that has been widely interpreted as a ban on all abortions except to save a woman’s life. Oddly, I know quite a bit about the 1864 Arizona Territorial legislature, and its story matters as we think about the attempt to impose its will in modern America.
In fact, the Civil War era law seems not particularly concerned with women handling their own reproductive care—it actually seems to ignore that practice entirely. The laws for this territory, chaotic and still at war in 1864, appear to reflect the need to rein in a lawless population of men.
The criminal code talks about “miscarriage” in the context of other male misbehavior. It focuses at great length on dueling, for example— making illegal not only the act of dueling (punishable by three years in jail) but also having anything to do with a duel. And then, in the section that became the law now resurrected in Arizona, the law takes on the issue of poisoning.
In that context, the context of punishing those who secretly administer poison to kill someone, it says that anyone who uses poison or instruments “with the intention to procure the miscarriage of any woman then being with child” would face two to five years in jail, “Provided, that no physician shall be affected by the last clause of this section, who in the discharge of his professional duties deems it necessary to produce the miscarriage of any woman in order to save her life.”
The next section warns against cutting out tongues or eyes, slitting noses or lips, or “rendering…useless” someone’s arm or leg.
The law that is currently interpreted to outlaw abortion care seemed designed to keep men in the chaos of the Civil War from inflicting damage on others—including pregnant women—rather than to police women’s reproductive care, which women largely handled on their own or through the help of doctors who used drugs and instruments to remove what they called dangerous blockages of women’s natural cycles in the four to five months before fetal movement became obvious.
Written to police the behavior of men, the code tells a larger story about power and control.
The Arizona Territorial legislature in 1864 had 18 men in the lower House of Representatives and 9 men in the upper house, the Council, for a total of 27 men. They met on September 26, 1864, in Prescott. The session ended about six weeks later, on November 10.
The very first thing the legislators did was to authorize the governor to appoint a commissioner to prepare a code of laws for the territory. But William T. Howell, a judge who had arrived in the territory the previous December, had already written one, which the legislature promptly accepted as a blueprint.
Although they did discuss his laws, the members later thanked Judge Howell for “preparing his excellent and able Code of Laws” and, as a mark of their appreciation, provided that the laws would officially be called “The Howell Code.” (They also paid him a handsome $2500, which was equivalent to at least 5 years’ salary for a workingman in that era.) Judge Howell wrote the territory’s criminal code essentially single-handedly.
The second thing the legislature did was to give a member of the House of Representatives a divorce from his wife.
Then they established a county road near Prescott.
Then they gave a local army surgeon a divorce from his wife.
In a total of 40 laws, the legislature incorporated a number of road companies, railway companies, ferry companies, and mining companies. They appropriated money for schools and incorporated the Arizona Historical Society.
These 27 men constructed a body of laws to bring order to the territory and to jump-start development. But their vision for the territory was a very particular one.
The legislature provided that “No black or mulatto, or Indian, Mongolian, or Asiatic, shall be permitted to [testify in court] against any white person,” thus making it impossible for them to protect their property, their families, or themselves from their white neighbors. It declared that “all marriages between a white person and a [Black person], shall…be absolutely void.”
And it defined the age of consent for sexual intercourse to be just ten years old (even if a younger child had “consented”).
So, in 1864, a legislature of 27 white men created a body of laws that discriminated against Black people and people of color and considered girls as young as 10 able to consent to sex, and they adopted a body of criminal laws written by one single man.
And in 2022, one of those laws is back in force in Arizona.

Agree. Richardson is brilliant and learned and always interesting and a great writer. And this piece is magnificent.
News of the Weird from 1864, 1901, and 2022.
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Simply fabulous!
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Reblogged this on Politicians Are Poody Heads.
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Rumor has it, that MEANINGFUL change
is not so much the product of chance, but
rather, the result of meaningful strategy
for meaningful change.
Is trying to change “what is” by speaking
in terms of “what was”, a meaningful
strategy? Has it produced meaningful
change?
Is the “proof” of a strategy revealed
in the results? Has know-that provided
know-how?
What isn’t known about the dispossessed,
racism, inequality, test scores, shit heads
from rump to Gates to Putin, to (fill in)?
Read this book, write that book, check
out this essay, quote this guy, quote
that girl, vote for him, vote for her,
demonize that one, sanctify this one,
bla bla bla.
What the hell can be changed, if you
can’t/won’t change your mind or
strategy???
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Fascinating story. It calls to mind that the originalists in modern jurisprudence are only originalist when they agree with the odea put forth by the original old dudes, or perhaps more accurately, when the old dudes can be twisted into the vision needed by the new old dudes.
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Clarification: an odea is an old idea. You shut up, Shakespeare!
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I have a simple solution for the abortion issue. Sterilize every man that voted for Trump and still supports him. Once they all die out without children to replace them, the abortion issue should go with them.
Let’s start with every man that belongs to ALEC.
Make every RINO Theofascist male over the age of 18 a eunuch.
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Eugenics, Lloyd style. I get your jest, but in all seriousness, it is remarkable how many youths I have met whose attitudes run counter to their parents’ acceptance of the Trump Revolution. I am thinking of a young lady I knew last year whose father would not let her get a covid vaccination. She had suffered covid three times since the beginning of the pandemic, and was emphatic about her beliefs to the contrary of her father. Others reject the homophobic tendency of the Right, at least declaring their live and let love attitude for now in their lives.
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I have written many times here that if one looks at the polling, young people in the U.S. are on the opposite side of the Repugnicans on ALL the major issues. I think that the smarter Pugs know this, and that’s why they are so intent on creating taxpayer-funded Christian fundamentalist madrasas, the turn that around. But no one else seems to agree with me about this. At least, no one has seemed to agree with me how extraordinarily important, how profound, this is. Yes, the Fascist Pugs might win it all for a short while, but the tide will eventually carry them away. The question is, how ugly will it get in the interim?
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Maybe the United States should return Arizona to territory status. Seems like that is what they desire, at any rate.
Then the backward nutballs in Arizona would be free to have things exactly like they used to be, with back alley abortions, Tombstone shootouts and all the rest.
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And maybe Texas would like to join them.
It would be just like the good ol Wild West days.
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Wasn’t that guy a member of the Village People?
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I say, expand New Mexico halfway into the borders of Arizona on the left and Texas on the right, have the sane people of those states move into the expanded New Mexico, and have all the Trumpanzees and DeSatanists in Arizona and Texas move into the leftover lands, secede, and form their own inbred countries of Ivankalandia and Do-wah, Donnie, Donnie, Do-Wah Wah. There. No need for Civil War.
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What makes you believe there are sane people in any of those states?
To be sure, they are sayin lots of stuff, but none of it is sane.
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Texas was purple but has listed red. Arizona is solidly purple.
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But in the exchange of the sane and insane, there would be war. Someone might have to go on a beer fast to stop it,
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Does party membership define sanity?
I see lots of Democrats doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results each time. Barack Obama’s dealings with Republicans were the epitome of this.
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With Friends like These
Insanely repeating:
“I welcome the beating”
Will lead to an end
That isn’t your friend
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Az. Atty Gen. Mark Brnovich brought the case to the judge. He praised the judge’s decision. Growing up, his family attended a Serbian Orthodox Church.
Media and influencers’ attempts to mask the connection between attacks on abortion and conservative religion serves the purpose of…..?
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Quite a part from the obvious role religion played in this case, any judge who would effectively re-instate an 1864 antiabortion law that is even more extreme than the one the Arizona legislature just passed is just 🦇 $#!t crazy.
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The recent passing of actress Louise Fletcher brings Nurse Ratched immediately to mind.
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It’s kinda like all the nutball psychiatrists and “neurohackers” of the 1940’s – 1960’s who thought that poking ice picks into people’s brains and swishing them around like egg beaters (aka, frontal lobotomy) would cure schizophrenia — and even headaches! (If you can believe it)
Incidentally, some neurohackers are now trying to revive lobotomy — sans the ice picks, of course (which , as you can well imagine had a slightly negative impact on public perception of the procedure)
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“obvious role religion played” yet, the public construct (including SCOTUS’s claims) is built on a refusal to connect them. We are witnessing the power of the Catholic Church and conservative protestant churches. Those who aren’t afraid should be.
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