Posted on 05/21/2020 6:17:45 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
Pro-life activists, some of whom have known Norma McCorvey for many years, are rejecting a new documentarys claim that the woman behind the landmark Supreme Court abortion case Roe v. Wade was paid later in life to promote anti-abortion views.
FX on Hulu will officially release a documentary on Friday titled AKA Jane Roe." The documentary features a 2017 interview of the famed woman behind the 1973 decision near the end of her life.
A major point of controversy for the documentary is the claim that McCorvey famously went from being an advocate for abortion rights to becoming a pro-life activist in the 1990s only because she was paid.
What I can tell you is I had 22 years of conversations & experiences w her. She was sincere, Father Frank Pavone, who reportedly led McCorvey to convert to Catholic Christianity, wrote in a tweet.
Pavone, the national director of Priests for Life, warned that people should wait to "see the unedited footage" and "hear all the conversations preceding it" before making judgments on McCorvey's alleged "deathbed confession."
In an excerpt of the film reviewed by media outlets, McCorvey stated:
I was the big fish. I think it was a mutual thing. I took their money and theyd put me out in front of the cameras and tell me what to say. Thats what Id say. It was all an act. I did it well too. I am a good actress.
Calling her own words a deathbed confession, McCorvey reportedly said that she still supported legalized abortion. She was quoted as saying that if a young woman wants to have an abortion, thats no skin off my ass. Thats why they call it choice.
Filmmaker Nick Sweeney began working on the documentary in April 2016, often visiting McCorvey and interviewing her before her death in February 2017, reports the Los Angeles Times.
Among other interviewees, Sweeney also spoke with Rob Schenck, an evangelical minister and former leader of the pro-life advocacy group Operation Rescue. Schenck has since distanced himself from pro-life activism.
For his part, Schenck said that McCorvey was indeed paid by activists out of concern that she would go back to the other side.
There were times I wondered: Is she playing us? And what I didnt have the guts to say was, because I know [pretty] well we were playing her, said Schenck, as reported by the newspaper. What we did with Norma was highly unethical. The jig is up.
But others who knew McCorvey have refuted the recent headlines suggesting that McCorvey was paid to be pro-life.
Cheryl Sullenger, a leader with Operation Rescue who knew McCorvey for many years, has called the headlines surrounding the interview out-of-context fake news.
I knew Norma personally and saw her during unguarded moments, said Sullenger to LifeNews.com. Norma was frank, and if she was in a mood, she could say things that were controversial.
But never did she ever show any hint of being anything other than 100% pro-life as long as I knew her," Sullenger continued. "This latest attack on her pro-life beliefs is nothing but out-of-context fake news.
Pavone said in another tweet that he had received text messages from McCorvey in 2016 about the interview with Sweeney and how he had paid for her involvement in the film.
Prior to these sentences she said, I sitting here broke and extremely upset. She was paid by him, Pavone stated in the tweet.
Kristan Hawkins, president of the Students for Life of America, took to Twitter to reject the deathbed confession claim. Hawkins wrote that McCorvey always spoke w/ passion about her pro-life convictions, which represented a huge & public shift from how she had been seen for so long.
The woman that I personally knew lived a painful & complicated life, but spoke directly about how she felt about it, Hawkins added.
Hawkins also questioned the source of the interview, pointing out that FX on Hulu had recently released a miniseries about the life of the longtime conservative leader and pro-life activist Phyllis Schlafly, who died in 2016 at the age of 92.
I also don't believe that [FX] is a good actor, when you consider that earlier this year, they went after the iconic Phyllis Schlafly, Hawkins argued. Tearing down pro-life champions won't work for those of us who have had the privilege of knowing the real people behind the headlines.
Abby Johnson, a former Planned Parenthood staffer who has gained national attention for her conversion to the pro-life movement, tweeted that McCorvey was used by both sides of the abortion debate.
Johnson also argued that McCorvey was not mentally well near the end of her life, believing that the documentary filmmakers preyed upon that.
How about an expose on Billy Graham?
If she was used it was by the left. The same way they use blacks.
Thanks to the testimony of Norman, many lives were saved. If Norma’s goal was merely a paycheck, she was a fool. Everyone knows that the proponents of death could have paid hermany times more as a speaker.
It’s really a moot claim at the person involved is dead and can not speak for herself. Death closes all arguments about one’s life.
Nothing new here... when you die, you support democrats no matter what you did or believed when you were alive. That’s the way it works.
Did the “documentary” point out that she lied to the court when she said she was raped? Evidently her pro-choice advocacy has a history of lying.
Pray for her -— pray for them all, but please, individually and personally, pray for Norma.
The people who knew her best and stood by her in her last years -—Abby Johnson but specially Fr. Frank Pavone -— agree strongly that she was both a woman who sincerely and agonizingly repented of her role in legalized abortion, and also that she was a damaged, shattered soul.
I sure don’t put any credence in the Left activists who know how to groom and take advantage of an “unreliable narrator,” but I do believe in Him who carries on His shoulders the wounded lamb.
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