You're not going to like this post.
My take:
Let's move 15-20 years into the future. From that perspective, an impartial observer is going to look back and reason that the conservative position of "Right to Life" was MORE PROTECTED under Roe, than it is in the Dobbs era ("post-Roe").
How could that be? It wasn't supposed to happen this way, right...?
Wasn't the removal of Roe supposed to "turn back" the abortion issue from an "improperly-decided" Supreme Court decision, and restore it to the states, and thus, "to the people" ???
Wasn't that supposed to be in the best spirit of the [otherwise forgotten] Tenth Amendment ???
Folks, that's EXACTLY WHAT HAPPENED.
The states -- and "the people -- now HAVE "the power" to decide the abortion debate at the state and at the "ballot box level".
Think about this:
The midwestern/western/southern (and mostly "red") states are the ones with the most (cough) "progressive" laws regarding referendum, initiative, and constitutional "amending".
Conversely, the Atlantic/Northeastern (and more likely "blue") states DO NOT HAVE such voter-progressive options. Certainly not in New England.
So... it's going to be in the mostly red states where we see the popular initiatives to liberalize abortion, and such initiatives are going to mostly succeed in them.
Look at Ohio, where the state constitution was amended through a public vote to include liberalized abortion. And that initiative "won bigly".
It's going to happen in Florida and Arizona this November.
The DCommunists have found their winning strategy for the next several election cycles. Even if they put forth an initiative that loses on the first pass, they'll just repeat it and repeat it and repeat it and repeat it until they DO win (the same way they count ballots, eh...?).
If you are anti-abortion, YOU WERE BETTER OFF UNDER ROE.
It's going to take some time for that to sink in.
But eventually, when all "the Dobbs dust clears", you'll look back...
... and wonder, "what the heck happened...?"
(I told you that you weren't going to like this post).