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Roe V. Wade Case

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Roe V. Wade Case
The March for Life Protest
In 1973, Jane Roe filed a court case against Henry Wade in which she accused Wade of impregnating her by sexual assault (Glazer n. pag). During the case, the U.S. Supreme Court first argued that the Fourteenth Amendment does not mention abortion, but rather it guarantees a privilege to individual freedom under due process (“Supreme Court Rules on Roe V. Wade, The” par. 5). The state of Texas argued that it had convincing motivations to protect the life of an unborn child, but the Court countered that by saying the life of an unborn is not a person under the Fourteenth Amendment (par. 6). The Court also pointed out that the unborn could not inherit property rights which begin at the birth of a child (par. 8). The last court choice was 7-2 for (4).
The decision of Roe V. Wade gave abortion advocates a larger amount of rights than what they envisioned. States couldn't regulate first-trimester abortion and could strictly limit second-trimester abortions, and then almost all state laws had to be changed (Jost par. 44). If the court even favored Wade,
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with a Musical Opening. Then at noon they all rally together to get ready to start marching on the grounds of the Washington Monument on the corner of 15th street on Constitution Avenue. Next at 1:00 they all start marching. They go down Constitution Avenue between 15th and 17th Streets and stop at the Capitol of the United States. Then at 3:00 they listen to Silent No More testimonies outside the U.S. Supreme Court ("Rally and March Info” n .pag.). They hold the rally in Washington D.C. because that is where the Supreme Court made its final decision on Roe V. Wade. ("About the March for Life - March For Life” par. 1). A demonstration of how determined the March for Life group really is determined to fight for life is when an escalator broke and many people had to walk to get to the rally for the march (“History of the March for Life - March For Life” par.

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