If the right to an abortion is a strongly desired thing, then just rolling over to let 5 or 6 robed radicals installed by a minority to strip said rights should be resisted. How about every woman in the nation who has an interest in this (and the fellas too) go on a general strike? One humongous, convulsive backlash to scare the crap out of the powers that be. I know it would be hard for many, living in poverty because of the system erected in order to make the populace vulnerable and hence disincentivized to take up just such a protest. But sometimes ya gotta fight and sacrifice in order to prevail against tyranny.
You can't say the law says what it says, unless people don't like it, and then it doesn't. That way lies madness.
That's exactly what's happening, isn't it? The law said what it said, conservatives didn't like it, so they stacked the courts with people who would say that it doesn't say that after all. This is the culmination of that project.You can't say the law says what it says, unless people don't like it, and then it doesn't. That way lies madness.
That's exactly what's happening, isn't it? The law said what it said, conservatives didn't like it, so they stacked the courts with people who would say that it doesn't say that after all. This is the culmination of that project.
Only if by "the law" you mean how SCOTUS interpreted aspects of the 14th Amendment in 1973.That's exactly what's happening, isn't it? The law said what it said, conservatives didn't like it, so they stacked the courts with people who would say that it doesn't say that after all. This is the culmination of that project.
It'd be very nice if we had actual statutes protecting bodily autonomy of pregnant people, but those only exist in blue states at the moment.
I doubt they can get five justices to sign on to a nationwide ban on abortion rooted in the right to life of unborn persons, but a more salient question might be how that question could possibly come before the court in the first place.Exist for now, you mean. Those will be the next target.
Exist for now, you mean. Those will be the next target.
Either case law is law, in which case Roe v. Wade is law, or case law isn't law, in which case protesting the (anticipated) decision is perfectly legitimate.Only if by "the law" you mean how SCOTUS interpreted aspects of the 14th Amendment in 1973.
No doubt.It'd be very nice if we had actual statutes protecting bodily autonomy of pregnant people, but those only exist in blue states at the moment.
Never mind the bloody Beeb, I say **** off!
This is my thread - how dare you beat me by several seconds?
America, turning the clock back, one state at a time.
I doubt they can get five justices to sign on to a nationwide ban on abortion rooted in the right to life of unborn persons, but a more salient question might be how that question could possibly come before the court in the first place.
Zero hits on google.Fetal consent laws...
Until it isn't. I expect the majority opinion in Dobbs will patiently explain how Roe and Casey were reading in liberty interests which were never contemplated by the folks who originally drafted the 14th Amendment.Either case law is law, in which case Roe v. Wade is law...
The right wing has been extremely clear over the years that overturning Roe was a high priority, long term project and the Democrats were totally unresponsive (other than demanding our votes and money to do nothing).
I don't believe the political strategy of codifying case law into statute law is politically costless, though in retrospect it would have been worth it to avert the return of back-alley surgery in the states where Dobbs will be celebrated.The elephant in the room is that Democrats have had plenty of opportunities to write Roe into law over the last few decades and simply did not.
Zero hits on google.
I don't believe the political strategy of codifying case law into statute law is politically costless, though in retrospect it would have been worth it to avert the return of back-alley surgery in the states where Dobbs will be celebrated.