For many women, Roe was more than an abortion. It was about freedom.

Lincoln, Nebraska seemed like a great place for 33-year-old Jessica Verso. It’s a college town where she has a collaborative network of her family and friends. But since the decision, she has spent a lot of time thinking about what the post-low world means to Nebraska.

Software designer Ms. Versaw is now enjoying the idea of ​​moving out of state. Abortion is still legal, but the government. Republican Pete Ricketts said he would work to ban rape, even in the case of rape.

“We thought it was enough to live in this blue spot in the red state,” she said. “But if the state leaves us behind, we leave it behind.”

23-year-old Abbey Lagain, who lives in Lincoln, said she had heard from friends in other states whose access to abortion was threatened or banned, further solidifying her determination to fight a similar move in Nebraska. ..

“We are not working towards the future, nor are we living in a state of preserving existing life,” she said.

Emily Ross, a 33-year-old project manager at a manufacturing plant in Greensburg, Pennsylvania, previously didn’t think she was politically active. But now she feels she’s being forced to volunteer for a political campaign as she tries to elect a Democratic governor in the fall elections. If Rho is likely to capsize, will the Supreme Court then contraceptive?

“This is Step 1, so I’m really worried about what the future holds,” she said. “It doesn’t matter who says it. There are a lot of freedoms we thought we had, and I don’t think they will exist in five years unless we make a serious change.”