No. She does not. I definitely would like sources and stuff to help show her this.
Well,
Roe v. Wade itself was decided in 1973.
The first woman to sit on the Supreme Court (
Sandra Day O'Connor) was not appointed until 1981, by Reagan.
Obviously, that meant that all seven of the Justices who ruled in favor of legislating a right to abortion out of thin air and from the bench in '73 were men.
On the flipside
Amy Coney Barrett, one of the Justices who voted to overturn
Roe just now, is a woman. (A mother, certainly - to seven children at that - but also a former clerk to Scalia and appellate judge before Trump put her on SCOTUS, so she's hardly some inexperienced 'handmaiden'-type stooge who has no qualifications for the job - ironically that definition would better fit the liberal
Elena Kagan, who never served as a judge in any lower court before being promoted to SCOTUS by Obama) And if I remember my math classes correctly, 1 is an infinitely greater number than 0, so there can be no denying that more female Justices supported striking
Roe down than to impose it on the country in the first place.
If it matters, one of the original Justices who decided in favor of abortion was a black man - Thurgood Marshall. But then so is Clarence Thomas, one of the Justices who voted with Barrett to overturn
Roe, so that part of the diversity calculus evens out.