In its 50th year of existence, Roe versus Wade, the deadliest and most evil U.S. Supreme Court opinion in America’s history—has fallen.
A warm and hopeful beam of sunlight has finally broken through the clouds of invincible ignorance, heartless deceit, and elitist arrogance to shine once again on those tiny innocent faces who have waited so long.
It is an unspeakable tragedy that, for so many millions of them, help did not come in time.
Roe v. Wade dismembered, disarticulated, and barbarically wiped from the face of the earth more than 63 million of America’s most helpless children. It deprived tens of millions of mothers of the most priceless treasure this earthly life has to offer—and all of the immeasurable gifts of hope, love, and genius these forgotten little children of God might have brought into this world are now lost to humanity forever. This is the legacy of Roe v. Wade.
Like all of the “civilized” genocides in history, there had to first come that “official decree” that the victims were not “persons” like the “rest of us.” America did that very thing in the days of slavery. In the devastating loss and remorse that followed, we passed the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution to attempt to correct and prevent such egregious wrong in the future. It says: [No state shall] deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.
This is the same amendment, where the Roe Court found a federalized right to abortion but somehow missed the right to life for the unborn human child. The Court said they could not “speculate” as to when life begins at that point in the “development of man’s knowledge.”
How different the world might have been had the Roe Court consulted and heeded nearly any 10th grade biology teacher in America.
Indeed, we should ask ourselves how different the world might have been if the U.S. Supreme Court had found the courage to recognize the personhood of a slave named Dred Scott in 1857—or if the Reich Ministry for Public Enlightenment in Germany had found enough humaneness of soul to recognize the humanity of the Jews in 1939; instead of labeling them “untermenschen” (subhuman).
This paramount question of human life is and has always been, the truly relevant and pivotal question. As the Civil War and World War II should have taught us, the danger of dismissing or distorting it cannot be overstated.
Ultimately, if abortion does not take an innocent human life, many of us have wasted much of our own lives addressing a non-issue. If abortion-on-demand does take innocent human lives, then few other human causes could be more worthy than bringing an end to such cataclysmic carnage and suffering.
This is the very nadir of depravity and a merciless doctrine that America will reject in the state-by-state, person-by-person examination of our national conscience in the tumultuous, post-Roe days ahead.
Despite the mind-bending, legal schizophrenia rampant in the pro-abortion intelligentsia (worthy of an entirely new branch of study in psychotic disorders) there is something in each of us, in the quietness of our own hearts, that recognizes that each one of these little victims is one of us.
There will come that day when America will awaken and help the world emerge from this delusional fog of euphemisms and distortions cloaking abortion on demand. The incomprehensible evil of this merciless, mass annihilation of these the most defenseless of all human beings will finally dawn upon us as a human family.
Even the blindest of us will finally see the abortion merchants and their media collaborators as the naked emperors they truly are—and their 63 million victims as the helpless little human innocents they truly were.
When we do finally muster the courage to open our eyes to retrospectively see the dismembered bodies of the “least of these” our little brothers and sisters, we will not see “freedom of choice” or “abortion rights” (like we once saw “slavery rights”).
The inexpressibly evil genocide of abortion-on-demand will finally be clearly seen as the worst a deceived civilization had to offer. It will be, at once, a moment of transcending epiphany and crushing grief.
Daniel Webster said: “Hold on, my friends, to the Constitution and to the Republic for which it stands. Miracles do not cluster, and what has happened once in 6,000 years, may not happen again. Hold on to the Constitution, for if the American Constitution should fail, there will be anarchy throughout the World.”
In the very moment when those destiny words were falling from Daniel Webster’s lips, there was great turmoil in the hearts of Americans over the 6,000-year-old institution of state-sanctioned human slavery.
That turmoil crescendoed in the American Civil War. When it was finally over, Americans began to come together again and recognize anew that all of us are created equal. Juneteenth 1865 marked the day when 6,000 years of state-sanctioned human slavery began to inexorably disappear from the earth.
In the same week when Juneteenth so appropriately became a recognized American holiday, may June 24, 2022, mark the day in history when the state-sanctioned murder of unborn children began to inexorably disappear from the earth.