The point was that third trimester abortions are not a real problem.
Abortion law post-viability has been around since before and after Roe vs Wade and Dobbs. Of course those abortions have, largely, not been a problem. That's the result we expect!
What we see instead is that immoral antiabortion jerks will try to make it harder for women that need an abortion to have one than is necessary.
I predict that this sort of position won't hold up; I predict that exceptions to abortion will prevail in the end.
One could probably even show that more women's lives would be saved than viable fetuses would be lost. That should satisfy anyone that is truly "prolife".
That's a good point, but I don't think it is sufficient to satisfy anyone who is "prolife". You're statistics would need to be tight in addition to looking good and some who are "prolife" won't be satisfied until the abortion question is settled for every stage of fetal development - not just post-viability. IMO, It makes sense that exceptions exist, even post-viability; it's not a question of statistics.
As to "what changed". Nothing changed. The statistics are just clearer now perhaps. We can see that abortions after viability are not problem. They probably never were.
Nothing changed? Then what reason to think that abortion law on post-viability needs to change? Post-viability abortion already had laws against it both before and after Roe vs Wade and Dobbs and you said Roe vs Wade was a "sound ruling". Are the statistics "clearer"? Or just "perhaps" clearer? In what way are they "clearer now perhaps"?
The third-trimester abortions that are performed are generally medically necessary. (Woman was in an accident, placenta detached, and woman is hemorrhaging; hydrocephalus fetus where you can't get the fetus out without dismembering mother or fetus, or other life-threatening scenarios.) There really isn't a demand for elective third-trimester abortions, so a law against them is not really necessary. If there was a demand for elective third-trimester abortions where a healthy fetus in a healthy woman is killed, then a law regarding it would be reasonable, IMV.
Since laws against elective third-trimester abortions existed to ban elective third-trimester abortion where a healthy fetus in a healthy woman is killed both before and after Roe vs Wade and Dobbs, it's not a simple thing to evaluate the demand for abortions of that sort. The evaluation of the data has to be good and it has to come from people that are trusted. The abortion issue has revealed that a surprising number of people can't be trusted on this issue. For example, you would think that people working with the U.S. Supreme Court are trustworthy. But,
both the Supreme Court Roe vs Wade decision and the Supreme Court Dobbs decision were leaked! How can we trust someone who comes out and says he has the statistics on abortion when we know that people at the highest level (where trust must exist) violate that trust when it comes to the abortion issue?