The saga of an abortion icon continues
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Joseph N. Bell’s column “30 years later, wondering about Jane
Roe’s alter ego” (Jan. 23) was interesting, but quite sad. Norma
McCorvey, alias Jane Roe, whose Supreme Court case legalized
abortion, is the perfect poster girl for abortion: A series of bad
choices found her with an unwanted pregnancy. She wanted a quick and
easy solution to her problem and sought an abortion. It was only
later that she discovered the abortion procedure is quick, but it
certainly is not easy, and like so many after her, McCorvey realized
the body heals, but the mind doesn’t forget.
Thank you, Mr. Bell, for an update on a very “used” woman who has
suffered the fate others have also experienced. Choosing to abort
often creates more problems than it solves.
RACHEL MICHAELS
Newport Beach
Recent articles and letters published in the Daily Pilot have
managed to jog this old fence-straddler on the subject of abortion.
Throughout my adult life, I do not recall much in the form of
reasoned debate on the issue. It seemed to me that any attempt at
civilized discourse on the subject of abortion always degenerated
into shouting matches between emotional people on both sides of the
issue -- with each side attempting to overpower the other with
volume, not reason. Hard as it may be to believe, through all this
rhetoric over all these years -- as abortions were performed at
ever-growing levels and anti-abortionists bombed clinics and murdered
abortion doctors in the name of saving lives -- I have remained
ambivalent on this issue.
Yes, I think I understand both sides of the issue. I hear and
understand the argument some women will make about wanting control
over their own bodies and lives. I understand when they say they
choose not to carry a fetus to term, regardless of the reasons for
the pregnancy. I also understand it when others vilify the
pro-abortion group as murderers and describe in great, grisly detail
the actual process of “aborting.”
Joseph N. Bell’s recent column regarding Norma McCorvey -- the
“Jane Roe” in Roe vs. Wade -- and his relationship with her
stretching back these three decades stirred something inside me. His
eloquent account of the tragic circumstances of her life and how she
has apparently come full circle -- now embraced by the anti-abortion
side, who provide her with the affection she has sought all these
years -- is beyond ironic.
I read the crystal clear response to Bell’s column written by my
friend and neighbor, Peggy Normandin, in the Daily Pilot Tuesday
(“Bell’s column paints a sad picture of America”). The placement of
her excellent letter, following Jim McGee’s loving description of
Sean Fenton, the young Yale student from Corona del Mar tragically
killed in an automobile accident recently, was like a splash of cold
water on my face.
I then read Barry Faulkner’s account of the tributes to Fenton and
found myself wondering how many lives would have been affected had
his mother -- for whatever reason -- decided to abort him. I read the
words, “person who genuinely cared about those he touched”; “He was a
rare spirit with integrity, passion and values of life;” “He was the
best person I know”; and I had my answer.
This was a young man who so affected the lives of those around him
that plans are afoot to erect permanent remembrances dedicated to
him. A conference room will be named for him at Yale, “The brightest
room at Yale.” A scoreboard on the freshman football field at Corona
del Mar is planned. And, as perhaps a perfect metaphor for his young
life, a large shade tree is planned on the campus to provide shelter
for the students who will follow him there.
So, as I sit here typing -- watching many of the wonderful young
children in our neighborhood playing outside my window -- I think of
Sean Fenton. I think of a young man whose incandescence so brightly,
and briefly lighted the world around him, and find myself no longer
straddling the fence.
GEOFF WEST
Costa Mesa
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