E-MAIL NEWSLETTERS







There was an error processing this request. We cannot subscribe you to newsletters at this time. Please contact technical support with details.
Featured Sponsors
HOME

AVERAGE USER RATING

RATE THIS ARTICLE

  • Email
  • Print
  • Discuss
Search The Bible   
Advanced Search

It’s About Abortion

Dr. D. James Kennedy

Guest Commentary

November 17, 2004

Make no mistake. This is about abortion. It is about whether or not the ruinous reign of Roe will soon come to an end or continue for another generation.

On this question, Sen. Arlen Specter, now engaged in a desperate campaign to win the chairmanship of the Senate Judiciary Committee, could not be more clear. Roe v. Wade, he announced during his campaign, must remain “inviolate.”

For Specter, the most divisive, unfounded, and destructive High Court ruling in American history is as permanent a part of our nation’s legal landscape as Brown v. Board of Education. The right to dismember unborn children is, for him, the judicial equivalent of ending racial segregation in public schools. When it comes to abortion, the “moderate” senator from Pennsylvania is unbending. As he put it in his post-election self-disclosure, “That is my view, now, before, and always.”

So, if Senate Republicans give him the gavel, this famously independent senator will be empowered to scuttle the judicial nominees of a President who won re-election in part on his promise to make ours a culture in which unborn children are “welcomed in life and protected in law.”

If made chairman, Specter will doubtless do to any High Court nominee who threatens Roe what he did 17 years ago to Robert Bork. Back then, Roe was at risk because a Justice Bork would tip the Court to a pro-life majority. He would have been the fifth vote needed in 1992 to overturn Roe when the Court issued its opinion in Planned Parenthood v. Casey.

That didn’t happen, thanks in no small part to Specter. He joined the Borking chorus and labeled one of America’s most brilliant legal minds “extreme.” For Specter, Bork’s view that the Constitution ought to be interpreted according to the original intent of its authors was beyond the pale.

1 | 2 | Next | All
Most Recent User Comments
Be the first to comment on this article!
Sign up to post your comments

It's quick and easy to register with Crosswalk.com! Just fill out the short form below. You'll have the opportunity to post comments, and be more involved in our community and forums. Plus, with this one account, you can sign in anywhere in our network of sites displaying the Salem All-Pass logo, including Oneplace.com, Christianity.com, Lightsource.com, Crosscards.com, and more!