"Those wishing to make abortion illegal do so out of sincerely held religious beliefs. As a religious minority, it’s important that we fight to keep religious beliefs separate from laws. Many of those who fear the implementation of sharia law around the world have no problem fighting for laws that are based on their own religion’s tradition. Even our beloved Jewish state of Israel doesn’t force its citizens to adhere to the beliefs of the majority. Leave religion out of law-making". -Jeffrey L. Erlbaum, Lafayette Hill
"A lawsuit brought by a Florida synagogue claims reducing access to abortion is not compatible with Jewish law, making it a violation of the constitutional right to freedom of religious expression. A lawsuit filed by a synagogue in Florida has challenged plans to limit abortions in the state on the grounds that it would violate religious rights and therefore be unconstitutional. The Jewish faith holds the right to an abortion to be inviolable. The Florida bill is set to lower the maximum threshold for abortions from 24 weeks down to 15 weeks on July 1, with exceptions in instances where the medical procedure could save the life or prevent serious injury to the mother. It offers no exceptions for victims of incest, rape, or human trafficking. But these restrictions would infringe upon Jewish women’s right to abortion as guaranteed by their faith and are thus incompatible with the Florida constitution’s right to privacy and religious freedom, says the lawsuit, which was brought by Rabbi Barry Silver on behalf of the roughly 150 members of Congregation L’Dor Va-Dor in Palm Beach County. 'If a fetus poses a threat to the health or emotional well-being of its mother, at any stage of gestation up until birth, Jewish law not only entitles but requires the mother to abort the pregnancy and protect herself,' the suit argues. Jewish law stipulates that life begins at birth and that until that point the mother’s life is prioritized. 'So, in order to protect the health of the pregnant person, abortion is permissible and sometimes mandated,' said Samira Mehta, associate professor of women and gender as well as Jewish studies at the University of Colorado at Boulder". -French 24
It is now a part of the cultural zeitgeist that abortion is “a fundamental Jewish value” and that the Supreme Court, by striking down Roe v. Wade, was preventing Jews from practicing their religion.
Essentially, Roe v. Wade amounted to the imposition of the Jewish religion on every U.S. citizen, no matter what his religion, over the past 49 years.
It’s overtly clear as to why the Jewish-owned media has been worked into a frenzy on account of this. The repudiation of so-called "religious freedom" denotes the end of Jewish hegemony over American society.