Voices for Life Is a blog dedicated to informing and educating the public on pro-life and pro-family issues.
Our focus is to protect the sanctity of all human life from conception until natural death. This includes protecting babies from abortion, fetal tissue experimentation, and embryonic research; and the general population from euthanasia, cloning, population control and human genetic engineering.
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Monday, January 28, 2013
The Texas Woman Who Should be Dead
There is a 43-year-old woman, born in Texas, who should be dead right
now. In fact, she should have never been born. Forty years ago, the
Supreme Court decided that the Texas law that prevented Jane Roe from
ending the life of her unborn daughter was unconstitutional. But by the
time the Supreme Court issued its decision in 1973, she had already been born and adopted by a family—likely not knowing that all that ink spilled in Roe v. Wade was about her.
Norma McCorvey is “Jane Roe.” She claimed then that her pregnancy was the result of a rape,
although for over a decade now she has been outspokenly pro-life and
publicly admitted that this, and virtually every fact on which her case
was built, was a lie. Both McCorvey and Sandra Cano, the Doe of Doe v. Bolton—Roe’s companion case from Georgia decided the same day—are now outspoken pro-life advocates who have sworn that their cases are built on lies.
But before the Supreme Court could decide whether McCorvey did have a
constitutional right to end her unborn daughter’s life, it had to
overcome a procedural obstacle that slowed down the process—a delay that
factored into whether her daughter would ever have a family.
Because of that delay, McCorvey had already had the child by the time
the Supreme Court issued its decision in January 1973. She had been
adopted into a Texas home, perhaps somewhere in the Dallas area where
McCorvey lived. The court nevertheless said
that McCorvey’s case was not moot since her circumstances were “capable
of repetition” because courts would never be able to decide the
question during the time of a woman’s pregnancy.
Procedural history is never the exciting part of a lawsuit. But for
McCorvey’s unborn daughter, the dry complexity of legal procedure is the
reason she exists today. Fortunately for a three-year old girl, “the
wheels of justice grind slowly,” and by the time the court issued its
decision, a Texas family had adopted her. If the courts could have moved
more quickly, she (and her family) would have never had that chance.
Lemonade comes from lemons.
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