This is pretty extreme but at the end of the day, most of this will be struck down because these laws are extreme enough to challenge Roe v. Wade.
Quite a bit of the country, maybe a majority of states, have laws that would be unconstitutional under Roe v. Wade, but not under Casey v. Planned Parenthood or Gonzales v. Carhart.
Yes, but still in those cases the court holds some sort of heightened level of constitutional scrutiny (more than a level of scrutiny where the court basically takes the government's word) of abortion control legislation. There is a difference between discouraging 10% or banning 1% of abortion and banning or discouraging 60-90% of them (fetal heartbeat laws, forcing abortion clinics to be more like hospitals etc..)