"Jane's Revenge is Antifa for Abortion" says Attorney Susan Swift on Frank Speech

1 year ago
45

Susan Swift is an Attorney with The Right to Life League, which is the oldest Pro-Life organization in America. She talks with Emerald Robinson on Frank Speech about the legal perspective of what the upcoming ruling from the Supreme Court amounts to in the lives of women and babies in the US.

She talks about "Jane's Revenge" a domestic terrorist group that is firebombing and defacing pregnancy centers and women's shelters across America. Swift, on Emerald Robinson's The Absolute Truth on Frank Speech, refers to them as "Antifa for Abortion." Swift says if today's ruling changes from its original leaked version of striking down Roe V Wade, and hits a softer tone, then that will embolden these leftist terrorists and it would be a disaster for America.

Susan Swift is also the Vice President of Legal Affairs at The Right to Life League. Prior to working in pro-life Swift served as a litigation attorney at a prominent international law firm in downtown Los Angeles. Susan is the mother of seven children dedicated to using her speaking and legal skills to champion civil rights for the unborn.

FROM JUST THE NEWS:
The Supreme Court released a decision Friday that strikes down the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade case, which, for nearly half-a-century has offered a constitutional protection to a woman's right to an abortion.

The majority opinion, which was issued in the Mississippi case of Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health, was written by Justice Samuel Alito.

The decision was 5-4 according to CNN.

The decision overturns Roe and subsequent the 1992 Planned Parenthood v. Casey decision, which largely upheld the initial right.

"Roe was egregiously wrong from the start," wrote Alito in a first draft of the now official decision that was leaked in early May. "It is time to heed the Constitution and return the issue of abortion to the people’s elected representatives."

The unprecedented leak of the opinion to Politico sent the nation, the high court, and Washington, D.C. into a frenzy as activist groups, politicians, and everyday Americans grappled with the weight of the decision.

Loading comments...