Posted on 09/29/2007 9:06:55 AM PDT by wagglebee
Pro-life organizations are trying to build support for the legal definition that an unborn child is a person to exploit a weakness that was cited by author Harry Blackmun when he wrote the creative Roe V. Wade abortion precedent in 1973.
But their work has generated a huge argument within the pro-life movement: whether it's better to chip away at the opportunities abortionists have to conduct their business or a challenge should be mounted to confront Roe's very premise that the unborn are only tissue.
WND reported earlier when several pro-life organizations launched an advertising campaign that was critical of other pro-lifers for their praise for the U.S. Supreme Court's partial birth abortion decision, which said some procedures could be restricted. Groups including Focus on the Family noted it was the first court opinion in years that actually supported abortion restrictions and said it was a moral victory, while others including the America Life League countered that the court ruling actually would not prohibit a single abortion, just a way of doing them. That argument has been raised to a new level now, with opinions from some of the top legal experts in the pro-life camp squaring off in a sort of debate at the Personhood.net website.
(Excerpt) Read more at worldnetdaily.com ...
(((Blackmun said hed ignore the well-known facts of fetal development in order to deny personhood rights to the unborn.)))
Are you referring to the lies Blackmun wrote within the Roe decision itself or something he might have communicated elsewhere?
It was Griswald in 1965 that led to Roe. It made contraception legal and as far as I can see we will have abortion as long as we have contraception. Pope Paul VI predicted just that in 1968.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.