Until is and you'll just deny ever saying that and you won't care because your side has already won.
And if it never is, what will
you say? Will you acknowledge that you were wrong?
No. You'll try to claim that it didn't come to pass because you successfully resisted it.
But it's really just like whistling to keep tigers away, even though there are no tigers. But that's just proof to you that it worked.
"The right isn't trying to make the Courts, SCOTUS in particular, more hostile to abortions" is so ludicrous a statement the fact that you don't experience pain when you utter is proof there's no God.
Except I never said that. We aren't talking about the right trying to make the courts more hostile to abortion than they are now. I take that as a given. A lot of the right wants Roe v. Wade overturned. I doubt it will happen within the next few decades, if ever, but I don't discount the possibility.
But that's not what we're discussing. What we're discussing goes far beyond just overturning Roe v. Wade. The
most that the right can even hope for is overturning Roe v. Wade, which throws it back to the states. And some states will outlaw it, and some won't. But at that point, states won't regulate what citizens can do in other states. That won't be a thing. Nobody wants that, nobody is in favor of that.
There are plenty of people on the right who can recognize exactly how dangerous such a precedent would be
to them. Dr. Keith said nobody has tried to do that because nobody cared enough. And that may be true, in part. But nobody has tried it also because it's obviously unconstitutional and wouldn't survive a challenge. If you change that, though, then all bets are off. People who don't care about stuff like prostitution or gun control enough to try doomed laws now might well try it if it's not doomed.
There is no constituency for allowing cross-border state regulation. None. Not on the right, and not on the left, and not in the center. It won't happen, regardless of what happens to Roe v. Wade.