Having prisoners work denies labour opportunities to the unemployed, because any worthwhile job would otherwise need a paid worker. It is exploitation for the primary benefit of whoever owns the means of production. The "debt" prisoners owe society is for their crime, which they pay simply by having their freedom denied.Having prisoners work is part of paying off their debt to society.
There is certainly a point offering prisoners work, but that is rehabilitation: to encourage them to develop relevant skills and habits of employment which will hopefully keep them on the straight and narrow when they are released. Where such work is commercially viable prisoners should receive a substantial chunk of it: by principle as workers, as incentive, and as beneficial to help them to support themselves whilst they get back on their feet after release.
What the hell are you talking about? How exactly did a pregnant woman not have standing? Did she shove a pillow up her blouse for a few months with no-one noticing, and quickly adopt a baby on the sly to produce to the world when her nine months were up? At best you can point out she later said she lied about being raped, but the manner of her impregnation is far from crucial to the case put forward that women have a right to abortion.Roe was a complete shit-show. IIRC the original lady that made it a case perjured herself to have standing, she didn't even have standing. It was really bad law, there's examples currently where the argument for Roe is not applied to other medical procedures because it's such a bad argument.
Where I'm objecting is not particularly that Roe v Wade was insuperable, but the superficiality and narrow-mindedness that thinks it has some sort of unique legal nature. People are too taken in by the anti-abortion propaganda to apply consistent standards. There are a substantial number of laws currently in the USA decided by SCOTUS that are of similarly weak standards, and yet not remotely on the radar of people convinced Roe v. Wade was a colossal screw-up. Nor do they appear concerned (or are even aware) that the current SCOTUS looks set on re-writing a whole series of established precedents on little more than specious ideology, or any number of wider issues.
In that sense, waffle about legal strength from people like you is a sort red herring, and the fact you apparently understand so little about and around it merely reinforces that point. It's not the basis of why you oppose Roe v Wade, it's a convenient fig leaf to provide some cover to whatever real motive is rattling around your skull.