Roe v. Wade overturned -- this is some BS

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I find this line of thinking odd. How does one determine that a zygote, embryo, or fetus is a moral being, capable of innocence or guilt? At the early stages, there isn't even any meaningful brain activity, making the z/e/f about as morally capable as a rock.

And the "most innocent" of what? The traditional religious answer is "sin" or, more specifically, "original sin", but that requires a whole mess of nonsensical belief that should not be the basis of laws in a secular government.

I mean, there are all sorts of wrong with the above quote, but the "innocent" never seems to get any explanation at all.

Excellent. Sometimes I think these anti-choice advocates think a cute little feeling, gurgling sentient being appears in a uterus upon conception.
 
Who is "they?" Who is promoting that view? How much support do they have? Multiple Supreme Court justices reached several decisions, including Roe and Casey, over decades that set out the terms under which abortion was legal, and also the terms under which states could establish reasonable restrictions. No pro-choice advocates were demanding that the SC do anything else except maintain existing law, and federal legislation about abortion wasn't, regrettably, a high priority for Democrats even when they controlled Congress. The status quo generally worked just fine. Six SC justices reached a radical conclusion, to which they were already predisposed, that overturned almost 50 years of jurisprudence. Nothing stops them from doing the same with other established principles. And you think that's a good thing?

You know..."they". The same "they" that always agree with us, or not, as is convenient at the time. The same "they" that tell Trump whatever lie he's making up at the mo.

"They" are also the stars of the sequel to


 
...Six SC justices reached a radical conclusion, to which they were already predisposed, that overturned almost 50 years of jurisprudence...

Just for the record, overturning Roe v Wade was a 5-4 vote.

For:
  • Alito
  • Thomas
  • Barrett
  • Gorsuch
  • Kavanaugh

Dissent:
  • Roberts
  • Breyer
  • Sotomayor
  • Kagan

Rumor has it Kavanaugh waffled a bit. Chief Justice John Roberts explained his opposition by writing:
Calling the decision "a serious jolt to the legal system," he said that both the majority and dissent displayed "a relentless freedom from doubt on the legal issue that I cannot share." NPR report link
 
Rumor has it Kavanaugh waffled a bit. Chief Justice John Roberts explained his opposition by writing:
You know, I really have to wonder what is going through Robert's head.

He has made such a big deal about how the courts are impartial, how it must be above the political infighting, about how the institution must be respected.

And now, approval of the supreme court is falling. The right wing of the court has been very public in its political leanings (such as when the Stepford Wife spoke at a Moscow Mitch political event). And things are only going to get worse.

Does he actually think that the supreme court deserves respect? Or that can be respected again? Does he think it can somehow be saved? Or is he smart enough to realize it is a lost cause, and any talk of impartiality is nothing but empty rhetoric?

See: Confidence in supreme court at historic lows (gallup)
 
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The minority, by far, only 8% say no abortion for any reason. And yet, this is what we are seeing being passed in some states like LA. As of now, there are at least 8 states with this no exception law and 5 with only an exception for the life of the mother. How does this add up mathematically to the "will of the people"? It doesn't.
It puzzles me why so many states are going down this path if it is so unpopular. Are they states that are so gerrymandered that they can show the middle finger to the voters or are they populated with people who are so fundamentally religious that they would bring back the Salem witch trials if they could?
 
The minority, by far, only 8% say no abortion for any reason.

It puzzles me why so many states are going down this path if it is so unpopular. Are they states that are so gerrymandered that they can show the middle finger to the voters or are they populated with people who are so fundamentally religious that they would bring back the Salem witch trials if they could?
Closest I can figure is that the 8% who say "no abortion at all" is a national number, and some of the deep red states may have a more influential white evangelical base.

Or maybe they think the issue won't be important we bought to sway voters (not when there are more important issues, like the war on Christmas and critical race theory to divert attention from the "women are second class citizens" policy.)

Or maybe their plan is to pass a "preteens can get an abortion" law, which somehow makes them look less horrific (while still allowing them to abuse women)

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Closest I can figure is that the 8% who say "no abortion at all" is a national number, and some of the deep red states may have a more influential white evangelical base.
It may be that legislation like this could be the spur that gets otherwise apathetic voters to the polling booth. If it doesn't then it suggests that a lot of people don't really care one way or another about abortion rights.

OTOH it could be that gerrymandering or voter disenfranchisement is such that pro-choice candidates have no chance of getting elected.

Either way, it points to a broken political system and that is just as big a problem as stacking the SC.
 
If the Republicans. led by Mitch McConnell, hadn't refused to allow hearings on Barack Obama's nominee for the Supreme Court -- Obama nominated Merrick Garland on March 16, 2016 -- we might have had a 5-4 vote to uphold Roe V Wade. The Republicans refused to hold hearings saying it was "too close" to the end of Obama's term. Yet many of the same Republicans had no problem holding hearings when donald trump nominated Amy Comey Barrett less than six weeks before the end of trump's term, on September 26, 2020. The Senate confirmed Barrett on October 26, 2020, just eight days before the election.

In 2016, McConnell said:
"The next justice could fundamentally alter the direction of the Supreme Court and have a profound impact on our country, so of course the American people should have a say in the Court’s direction…The American people may well elect a President who decides to nominate Judge Garland for Senate consideration. The next President may also nominate someone very different. Either way, our view is this: Give the people a voice in the filling of this vacancy." Mitch McConnell website link

When Ruth Bader Ginsburg died on September 18, 2020 McConnell reacted quite differently. Reportedly he immediately placed a phone call to president trump.
McConnell told [Trump] two things,” Josh Holmes, McConnell’s former chief of staff, told FRONTLINE in the above excerpt from Supreme Revenge: Battle for the Court. “McConnell said, first, I’m going to put out a statement that says we’re going to fill the vacancy. Second, he said, you’ve gotta nominate Amy Coney Barrett.” PBS Frontline link
 
When Ruth Bader Ginsburg died on September 18, 2020 McConnell reacted quite differently. Reportedly he immediately placed a phone call to president trump.


RBG is as much to blame for the end result, if not more, than Republicans. She should have stepped down.
 
Clearly you didn't read the part where I said I was done with caring about a balanced approach...even though it was in what you quoted. Like, even in the same sentence with your highlighted portion.

Yes, i have moved on to loudly celebrating this defeat for pro-choice advocates. It's quite liberating to just sit back and watch the left suffer, I must say.
And clearly you've just dodged your hypocrisy. But I see, you admit trolling the libs satisfies you. :rolleyes:
 
RBG is as much to blame for the end result, if not more, than Republicans. She should have stepped down.
Nope, won't let you do that.

Whether RGB should have resigned is irrelevant... it was still Moscow Mitch who decided to block Obama's nominee. It was a republican president who decided to nominate Stubby McBonespurs and the Stepford Wife. It was the republican-controlled senate that decided to confirm Trump's picks, despite the fact that one of them likely committed perjury, and one of the others was an incredibly hypocritical pick (not to mention it being obvious that they were going to take away women's rights and force pre-teens to be mother to a rapist's babies.). They are the ones who are responsible, not RGB.

Trying to blame RBG for this situation is like trying to blame a battered wife because her husband "just loses control and its all her fault".

Now, it is possible that RGB could have resigned so that Obama could have had filled her vacancy, but given the way Moscow Mitch operates, he probably would have kept the vacant seat open for years.
 
Trying to blame RBG for this situation is like trying to blame a battered wife because her husband "just loses control and its all her fault".


That is what worshippers of YHWH (a.k.a. Jesus a.k.a. Allah) do in regards to humans (the battered wife) and this abusive husband called YHWH.

So it is not a surprise to blame they would blame RBG as you said.
 
It may be that legislation like this could be the spur that gets otherwise apathetic voters to the polling booth. If it doesn't then it suggests that a lot of people don't really care one way or another about abortion rights.

OTOH it could be that gerrymandering or voter disenfranchisement is such that pro-choice candidates have no chance of getting elected. Either way, it points to a broken political system and that is just as big a problem as stacking the SC.


BINGO!!! well said!!!:thumbsup:
 
It puzzles me why so many states are going down this path if it is so unpopular. Are they states that are so gerrymandered that they can show the middle finger to the voters or are they populated with people who are so fundamentally religious that they would bring back the Salem witch trials if they could?


Both alternatives you posed are right and the reason... well said!!!:thumbsup:
 
Clearly you didn't read the part where I said I was done with caring about a balanced approach...even though it was in what you quoted. Like, even in the same sentence with your highlighted portion.

Yes, i have moved on to loudly celebrating this defeat for pro-choice advocates. It's quite liberating to just sit back and watch the left suffer, I must say.

This is where I have to make my pitch for diversity of thought as being a strength in those societies with the wisdom to embrace it.

I am thinking of all the usually nonpartisan issues that arise in the U.S. upon which the parties nowadays instantly align themselves.

Lest the reader think of this as some sort of meaningless, artificial attempt at a "balanced approach" let me point out that "the sides" here have recently haggled about unwanted pregnancies due to rape and incest as if the issue was a mere debate point the opposition might use to it's advantage, rather than a real societal problem.
 
If some women are truly "horrified" that they won't be able to kill an unwanted baby, well, then maybe they should take measures to ensure they don't get pregnant in the first place.

Yes, women don't have a choice in cases of rape and incest, but such cases account for fewer than 2% of all abortions; some studies put the percentage even lower. The overwhelming percentage of abortions are elective abortions, i.e., abortions done purely for convenience.

Why doesn't "my body, my choice" apply to the baby as well? What right does the mother have to make the life-or-death decision for the baby, when the baby is powerless to express himself/herself at that point?

Because pregnancy is only caused by women, there is no responsibility of men at all.

But again my question, which not a single supporter of this decision has ever answered.

Do you support a state, tax-funded program to teach teenagers about how sex works, mandated across ALL educational programs, combined with a good and free access to contraceptives (including the morning after pill) and a social security system for mothers who otherwise could not support their child, which is generous enough that single mothers are not forced to work?
And what steps have you taken to campaign for that?
 
RBG is as much to blame for the end result, if not more, than Republicans. She should have stepped down.

The slut is as much to blame for getting raped, if not more, than the guy who attacked her. She shouldn't have worn such a short skirt.

:mad:
 
It may be that legislation like this could be the spur that gets otherwise apathetic voters to the polling booth. If it doesn't then it suggests that a lot of people don't really care one way or another about abortion rights.

OTOH it could be that gerrymandering or voter disenfranchisement is such that pro-choice candidates have no chance of getting elected.

Either way, it points to a broken political system and that is just as big a problem as stacking the SC.

It's gotten so bad in some states that only the extremist candidates can get elected because they're the ones being supported by the GOP. The more sane candidates get called RINOS.
 
It may be that legislation like this could be the spur that gets otherwise apathetic voters to the polling booth. If it doesn't then it suggests that a lot of people don't really care one way or another about abortion rights.

OTOH it could be that gerrymandering or voter disenfranchisement is such that pro-choice candidates have no chance of getting elected.

Either way, it points to a broken political system and that is just as big a problem as stacking the SC.

Could be that pro choice candidates are also seen as having more general socialist agendas which are even more unpalatable to a majority of voters. I do wonder what result would be obtained if a pure referendum on the subject of abortion was held. As to a broken political system, maybe - as to incapable of flexibility, most definitely.
 
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