Meadmaker
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- Joined
- Apr 27, 2004
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A better foundation is a well reasoned argument based on laws, the Constitution, and what is fair and just. An argument that does not rely on religious belief, especially when the Constitution forbids it*.
Ok. We'll start with this.
The first two items sound a lot like textualism to me, but perhaps there is some difference than can be explained.
If we go with the second two items, "fair and just", we have no problem as long as the law and Constitution are fair and just, so are we allowing the Supreme Court to overturn laws if those laws are not fair and just? I hear an awful lot of arguments among people about exactly what is fair and just. What is it about those 9 people that makes them able to determine fairness or justice better than you or I could make that determination? They are much better at understanding the law and the Constitution, because they've studied it and they have staff to help them through the finer points, but when it comes to fairness and justice, it sure seems to me like there's a lot of opinion and values built into that. When it comes to fairness and justice, Justice Blackmun had one opinion. Justice Alito has another. I can't see an objective standard by which I can judge who is more fair and more just.
However, let's try and apply that to abortion. The law, the constitution, fairness, and justice.
Law: Mississippi has a law that says it's illegal. That one's pretty straightforward.
Constitution: Scans......hmmm...nothing obvious. I had better check the penumbras and emanations. Well, maybe. There's this thing called "substantive due process", which is not named explicitly in the Constitution, but has guided opinions for a century. Basically, it says if it's none of the government's business, the government can't keep you from doing it.
Abortion is none of the government's business. QED. Right?
Well, I actually buy into that idea to a large extent, but let's play devil's advocate for just a moment. Is it ever the government's business?
What about if a woman is in labor, and it's "normal". The baby is healthy. The mother is in pain, but otherwise healthy. It's the 21st century and within an hour there will be two legally recognized people, both breathing normally. Could the woman decide to have an abortion, killing the baby, right there?
I think we would all say no. (I've heard people say yes to that question, but I'm confident they only say that because they know where this is headed.)
So...when? When does the government gain a legitimate interest in keeping that thing alive? Some suggestions I have heard have been the onset of labor, viability without artificial life support, viability with extreme life support (i.e. intensive neo-natal care), fetal heartbeat detection, ability to feel pain, implantation in the uterus, and conception.
In order to make a law that says you can kill it at some point, but not at others, you have to draw that line somewhere.
<snipping earlier lengthy explaination, I'll get back if interested>
It's my understanding of the theory of the separation of powers that the legislative branch makes that decision.
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