After Roe v. Wade: The Questions We Must Ask Ourselves
- Morris Patrick III
- Jul 30, 2025
- 3 min read
Updated: Sep 7, 2025
The Supreme Court’s decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization overturned Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey. The Court said the Constitution does not protect the right to abortion. Now each state has the power to decide who can give birth and who cannot.
But what happens to the children? What happens to the ones born into violence, poverty, addiction, or homelessness? What happens when a mother wants help and gets her child taken instead?
State governments banned abortion overnight. But they did not fix their foster care systems. They did not hire more qualified social workers. They did not increase oversight. They did not pass laws to protect children from disappearing in the system. They did not clean up CPS or DCFS.
Instead, they made more children vulnerable. More children for the state to take. More children for the courts to seal. More children to be lost in a system where no one is held accountable.
And here is the truth that most are too afraid to say. This system creates a pipeline that exposes children to sex trafficking. Just like what Jeffrey Epstein did. Just like what Sean Diddy Combs is now accused of doing. These men operated with protection. They had power, money, and access. They trafficked victims in plain sight while the system looked the other way.
Now imagine what happens when a child is taken from their family and placed in the hands of strangers. When court records are sealed. When no one checks on them. When there is no one to protect them.
That is the reality for thousands of foster youth. They become numbers. Then they become victims. Then they disappear.
Dobbs did not create more protection. It created more exposure. It created more opportunities for the state to remove children and push them into a broken system. A system that has already been connected to trafficking. A system that treats children as property and families as obstacles.
And not only that. There are child predators in Congress and higher levels of government. People who write the laws while breaking them behind closed doors. People who claim to protect children while flying on private jets to abuse them. People who hide behind sealed records, political power, and legal immunity.
Jeffrey Epstein did not build his empire alone. He had judges, politicians, billionaires, and intelligence agents around him. He hosted world leaders. He was protected because he was useful. He had information on powerful people. He trafficked children while those in charge looked away or joined in.
And even after his death, the full list of names has never been released. Why?
Because exposing them would mean exposing the truth about how deep this sickness goes.
Sean Diddy Combs is just another piece of the puzzle. A man surrounded by wealth, fame, and silence. Accused of horrific abuse while the industry protected him.
So what happens when those same kinds of people are running our government? What happens when the ones with power are the ones doing the harm?
You cannot reform this system with silence. You cannot protect children by ignoring the predators who sit in offices, wear suits, and pass laws.
This is not a conspiracy theory. It is a pattern. It is real. It is happening.
And until we speak the truth: fully, fearlessly, and publicly; this machine will keep running. Children will keep vanishing. Families will keep being torn apart. And the powerful will keep pretending they are the protectors.
But we know who they really are. And we are not staying silent anymore.




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