"It's not in my imagination to see a world without" the Roe v. Wade ruling, said Pelletier, the president of Mother and Unborn Baby Care, or MUBC. She founded the Fort Worth crisis pregnancy center with her late husband, Chuck, 37 years ago.
While a world without Roe is far from a certainty, the tone and line of questioning from a majority of the justices in the Dobbs case has given people such as Pelletier — whose center has saved more than 9,000 babies by offering women support and care as alternatives to abortion — renewed hope that meaningful change may be on the horizon.
The court will determine whether a 2018 Mississippi law that prohibits most abortions after the 15th week of pregnancy can take effect.
The law has been stymied by lower court rulings — based on Roe and Planned Parenthood v. Casey, which affirmed it decades later. States have been barred from placing limits on abortion prior to "fetal viability," a rather capricious standard currently recognized to occur around 24 weeks of gestation.
But this month, the court's six-justice conservative majority seemed poised to uphold the law. In a nation where close to 1 million legal abortions still occur every year, the significance of such a shift could not be overstated.
But even Pelletier's enthusiasm is tempered by the reality that the collapse of Roe would not mean an end to abortion in America.
"When it does happen," she told me, "it's going to be 50 fights instead of one."
If the court upholds Mississippi's law, it would most likely be because the majority believes — as it signaled this month — that abortion policy should be left to the democratic process.
Indeed, the fight would go to state legislatures. No rest for the weary.
"But these are winnable fights," Pelletier said, pointing to developments in medical technology that are making it harder for people to deny personhood, even in the earliest stages of life.
"For the children growing up [after Roe falls], abortion won't be a reality to them," she continued. Pelletier predicted that over time, states where abortion is not permitted will raise generations of children who cannot even imagine that such an atrocity was allowed to occur with impunity for so long.
For now, though, the horror of abortion and the cause of women who feel it is their only choice, are very real for Pelletier.
Most women who enter her center come seeking to terminate their pregnancies.
At least that was the case before Texas' new heartbeat law, which relies on private citizens to enforce a ban on abortion procedures once a fetal heartbeat is detected, took effect.
The downside to that law, she says, is that it has reduced the number of women coming in because they incorrectly believe her center offers abortions.
But the law also means that women in crisis pregnancies must seek out real help for the problems that underlay their desire to terminate their pregnancies.
"They are learning that there are so many options available," she said. "A baby isn't a crisis."
That doesn't mean an unplanned pregnancy isn't hard. Pelletier knows this; it's why she does what she does.
Her center maintains relationships with mothers for as long as they need help. She says that some come back for assistance even after as long as 15 years.
And MUBC continues to help.
"We promised that to them," she said.
If Roe is overturned, Pelletier's work will increase, but it won't change. More women and babies will need her help, and she will be ready for it.
Perhaps that's why the recent arguments didn't affect her as she expected.
"Our work is the fight to save one single baby at a time," she told me, "thereby changing the entire universe for all of eternity."
(COMMENT, BELOW)
Cynthia M. Allen
Fort Worth Star-Telegram
(TNS)
Cynthia M. Allen is a columnist for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.
Previously:
• 12/07/21Don't lose more holidays: COVID isolation meant my friend died without meeting my son
• 11/24/21Graphic sex content in school libraries is the problem, not Texas' efforts to block it
• 11/24/21 FOUND! New university aims to pursue truth, not suppress speech and ideas
• 11/03/21 Broken supply chain is a problem, but it's also a chance to learn to live with less
• 10/19/21 It's one thing to mock COVID vaccine objectors. Must we rob their livelihoods, too?
• 10/14/21 Kids are already paying the price for short-sighted COVID policies
• 10/04/21 Kids are already paying the price for short-sighted COVID policies
• 08/16/21 As school districts require masks, we have to talk about the downsides for kids, too
• 07/20/21 Dems insult voters claiming they're protecting with Washington walkout
• 06/29/21 Priest explains why Catholic bishops confront Biden, others about abortion
• 06/02/21 East Coasters in Texas experience safe, life-as-normal. Public health scolds should apologize
• 05/24/21Those outside Texas can enforce state's 'heartbeat' abortion law, a game-changer for pro-life cause
• 05/11/21 Voters unite to reject school 'cultural sensitivity' plan designed to divide
• 03/30/21 Are we gluttons for punishment? New study shows a bias for bad news about COVID-19
• 03/23/21 Who's guilty of 'Neanderthal thinking' now? Biden's immigration changes threaten kids
• 03/16/21 CDC guidelines for vaccinated are too cautious, but they hint normalcy is coming soon
• 02/22/21 A very different America?
• 12/13/20 Biden policies threaten Catholic teachings. This priest was right to call it out
• 11/16/20 If kids are not superspreaders, why do we keep treating them like they are?
• 09/27/20
• 09/15/20 News on COVID-19 is not all terrible, especially compared to warnings of 6 months ago
• 07/28/20 A Biden childcare proposal that even conservative could embrace
• 06/30/20 Black lives matter. As we address racism, we must talk about the unborn ones, too
• 06/23/20 Good news: You can be a mask skeptic and still wear one to prevent COVID-19 spread
• 06/16/20 After George Floyd, we must all challenge our assumptions about racism in America
• 06/09/20 George Floyd, good and bad police officers, and the things on which we can all agree
• 06/02/20 A post-coronavirus baby boom seems unlikely. Here's why that's a problem
• 05/26/20 How public health officials created cognitive dissonance, culture war
• 05/18/20 As states start to reopen, be a good neighbor, not a tattletale
• 04/15/20 Abortion is not health care, and amid global coronavirus crisis, it's not 'essential'