


‘Murdering someone for their difference is not good.’ Does that apply to the unborn, Whoopi?
Noah Rothman already more than ably responded to Whoopi Goldberg’s madness on the U.S. vs. Iran.
Playing to type, here’s what I wanted to fixate on from what Goldberg said: “Murdering someone for their difference is not good, whoever does it.”
Yup. I can meet you there, fellow New York City projects native, Whoopi! Not quite with the Iran point, but on the evil of murder. Let’s call it what it is, when it is. After all, we do kill the unborn here in America. Our governor here in the Empire State defends doctors in New York who send abortion pills to states (like Texas and Louisiana) where they have chosen to protect the unborn — and their mothers — from abortion.
Of course, Goldberg is not likely to agree with me. She is adamantly pro-abortion.
She didn’t get into abortion during the Iran meltdown this week, but Goldberg has never been shy on the matter. It may be safe to assume that, for Goldberg, Samuel Alito’s existence on the Supreme Court is further evidence that we are a dark nation, at the very least akin to Iran — assuming you think Iran is a dark place under the ayatollah.
She irrationally lashed out at Justice Alito after oral arguments in the Mississippi Dobbs case, which would eventually overturn Roe v. Wade, three years ago next week. She was incensed that a man would dare try to defend the unborn. He who will never have eggs or a fetus within him cannot speak to the rights of a fetus.
Charlie Cooke commented at the time.
“Do any of you men have any eggs or the possibility of carrying a fetus?,” Goldberg actually asked the audience.
Presumably she was careful to avoid misgendering anyone in the audience in the process.
So it is safe to assume that she wasn’t talking about murdering the unborn for the difference of being located in their mothers’ wombs during her comments this week.
Some of us appreciate we have the Constitution that we do and men and women who read it and try to honestly interpret what it means as they are faced with specific cases. And so we can wind up undoing mistakes. And, thanks be to God, afterward sometimes that means the vulnerable wind up protected, at least in some states, in some circumstances.
Or, thanks be to God, we are most definitely not Iran in the United States. Even before Roe. And even especially after.
Even if New York still chooses abysmally for life. And hurts women and girls — born and unborn/murdered — in the process.