Dear friends:Have you ever considered a connection between the 1973 U.S. Supreme
Court decision Roe v. Wade and the recent Virginia Tech massacre?William Murray is the evangelical Christian son of the late atheist
icon, Madalyn Murray O'Hare. He is a very bright and articulate fellow.In a TV interview recently he made an unusual cause-and-effect
connection between the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade abortion decision
and the April 2007 campus massacre at Virginia Tech. It makes sense.He said the Roe v. Wade decision did more than make the mass murder
of babies legal, it also established legal precedent for "privacy,"
which had never, ever before been a Constitutional protection. The
U.S. Supreme Court invented it, thus inventing the "right" to
abortion. It was a liberal sleight-of-hand move.In fact, Murray said history shows that the nation's founders were
opposed to what we consider "privacy" today because of its threat to
society. Privacy entered our legal lexicon because of the radical
feminists and other liberals looking for some legal rationale for a
mother to kill her babies. The liberal justices on the court grabbed
the idea to codify and legalize baby killing.Fast forward from 1973 to 2007. It was "privacy laws" that prevented
the mental history and gun purchase of Seung-Hui Cho to be known so
that his murderous act could have been anticipated and
prevented. Even CBS News reported, "Federal privacy laws governing
health and student information had prevented the panel from reviewing
Seung-Hui Cho's records.... The release of Cho's records follows a
federal report claiming that privacy laws helped prevent school
officials, doctors and police from sharing information about the
gunman.... As a result, information that could be used to get
troubled students counseling or prevent them from buying handguns
never makes it to the appropriate agency, the report by three Cabinet
agencies said. "Roe v. Wade is continuing to kill people. It is no doubt the most
murderous and outrageous law ever written. Even Constitutional
scholars say it was technically bad law.Liberalism has not only killed some 50 million babies since 1973, it
also killed those 32 innocent students at Virginia Tech.One radio talk show host, whom I will not name, says, "Liberalism is
a mental disease." A radical statement but largely true.Jim