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The Roe Countdown

When will Roe v Wade be overturned

  • Before 31 December 2020

    Votes: 20 18.3%
  • Before 31 December 2022

    Votes: 27 24.8%
  • Before 31 December 2024

    Votes: 9 8.3%
  • SCOTUS will not pick a case up

    Votes: 16 14.7%
  • SCOTUS will pick it up and decline to overturn

    Votes: 37 33.9%

  • Total voters
    109
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No, you aren't understanding me. I'm saying that you're assuming bad faith on the part of the judges.
He didn't assume anything, he backed it up with evidence you are ignoring.

I don't give a crap about the motives of the electorate. The can and will try to get judges appointed in the hopes that they will vote their way on every issue. Conservatives succeeded this time, but it's not like liberals aren't trying to do exactly the same thing. Nor does being in the minority ever stop people from trying to exert political influence. Why even should it? So how is it even relevant whether it was a majority or a minority that succeeded this time?
That is not an accurate description of what happened.

Why should "precedent" protect a wrong decision? And why does a right decision need "precedent" to protect it? How long must a wrong decision stand before it can be overturned? Is overturning a right decision OK if you waited long enough to do it?

If RvW was decided wrongly, then that's compelling reason to overturn it. The current pending decision argues that it was. If the current decision's argument on that point is wrong, if RvW was decided correctly, then that's an argument against the current decision on its merits. If that's what you believe, then make that argument. You don't need precedent, or "minority opinion", in order to do that.
Why did all the justices voting to overturn Roe lie in their confirmation hearings? Their lies have been played on the news and social media where we could see for ourselves.
 
They are doing exactly what their records indicated they would do. They are doing exactly what they were appointed to do. It's only bad faith if those justices believe that they are supposed to be impartial. The only time they were dishonest about it was during their confirmation hearings.

Honestly, who would appoint a Supreme Court justice who can't remember what is in the First Amendment? Not someone who cares about upholding what is in the Constitution.


Who is saying it is a wrong decision? It's the justices who were appointed to say it's a wrong decision. Justices who were appointed by representatives of a minority who disagree with the majority of the people. You say you don't care about the motives of the electorate, but you are relying on their popular opinion to decide what is a wrong decision, in this case.
Precedent protects established rights from political whims and is a pillar of the legal system. There are tons of articles out there about why it is important, for example.

Have you read about Dobbs? I have been. Can you tell me what is significantly different about this case that it warrants overturning Roe?
This ^
 
I don't think there's any secret that a significant number of people believe the latter, and have believed that since the day the ruling was issued.

Most of those people are now Republicans.
I knew anti-abortion was a one issue vote getter since Karl Rove said so but I just saw a university political science lecture showing it was Jerry Falwell who first adopted it as a primary political platform. He wasn't even anti-abortion at the time if you can believe that.
 
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Uhhhmmm.....yeah. Well, I would hate to subject you to more bad faith, so I'll just leave it be, and remove the subscription from the thread.

For people interested enough to follow up on facts, the assertions above can be checked. I think you will find if you investigate that there is some interesting interpretation going on.


Don't forget to vote.


Not to ruin your dramatic exit, but my point was that it's evidence of bad faith arguments from the Justices like Alito, not from you. I fully believe you believe your own arguments. Not that I think they have merit, but that your reflex centrism is honest.
 
Given that the ruling spends so much time directly addressing Roe, I would hardly call it ignoring precedent. ....
Oooouu, look at all the double spaced wide margined papers in Alito's tentative ruling. Surely that makes his position valid. :rolleyes:
 
I'm not asking this to make a point, but rather because I really don't know the answer....

When women in the service need an abortion, do they go off base or do they do it on base? (I think most bases have medical facilities. At least the larger ones do.)

Are military doctors subject to the laws of the state when they perform procedures on base? Or are they only subject to federal law?

Would a woman in the service be allowed to travel to a different base for medical care not available on her home base?
Federal law, it would need to be a military or VA hospital, not just a military doctor and patient.

OSHA is the same way, state laws like WISHA and CalOSHA apply in state but the military hospitals and the VA hospital are subject to OSHA law, not the state versions.
 
I knew anti-abortion was a one issue vote getter since Karl Rove said so but I just saw a university political science lecture showing it was Jerry Falwell who first adopted it as a primary political platform. He wasn't even anti-abortion at the time if you can believe that.


Actually, it appears that the evangelicals weren't particularly opposed to abortion before and even after Roe.
The history of that movement, however, is more complicated. White evangelicals in the 1970s did not mobilize against Roe v. Wade, which they considered a Catholic issue. They organized instead to defend racial segregation in evangelical institutions, including Bob Jones University.
https://www.politico.com/news/magaz...istory-right-white-evangelical-1970s-00031480
 
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I can hear the Republicans chortling with glee from here as they dictate what women may and may not do with their bodies.

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/oklahoma-abortion-bill_n_62868898e4b0edd2d01310f7

But hey, there is an upside - more white kids, making it harder for the dagos, spics, coons and ragheads to take over.

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/cpac...apest-viktor-orban_n_6286bac7e4b0933e7362f5c8

Is it just me, or does the openly fascist Viktor Orban look like he's about to perform oral sex on Matt Schlapp?
 
I can hear the Republicans chortling with glee from here as they dictate what women may and may not do with their bodies.

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/oklahoma-abortion-bill_n_62868898e4b0edd2d01310f7

But hey, there is an upside - more white kids, making it harder for the dagos, spics, coons and ragheads to take over.

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/cpac...apest-viktor-orban_n_6286bac7e4b0933e7362f5c8

Is it just me, or does the openly fascist Viktor Orban look like he's about to perform oral sex on Matt Schlapp?
But that upside is an upside-downside, since it's almost certain that it will be poor people who lack the clout, travel ability and resources to get illegal abortions which rich white women can. The whole issue of the so called "replacement theory" is that those jiving enwords and dusky fertile foreigners will swarm in and swamp us gormless spermless whiteys. The right wing wackos can't keep their stories straight.

The decline in the white birth rate is not due to an increase of abortion, which has gone steadily down for decades. It's due to a decrease in initial pregnancy.

Of course it depends a little on how you slice your statistics. In gross numbers, far more whites have abortions than other ethnic groups, simply because there are far more of us. In terms of percentage of pregnancies ending in abortion, whites are at the bottom, blacks much much higher, other groups in between. Ending abortion will increase all the live births of course, but of those, a much greater percentage will be of minorities, especially blacks. Not what the "replacement" idiots would want, one might think.

Of course, I suppose once they're born they can prevent them from voting and shoot them if they get too uppity. Test marketing on that seems to be promising.

And of course since black infant mortality is about twice that of white, and maternal mortality about 3 and a half times, (including from ectopic pregnancy, a leading cause for black women but not for white, and a favorite target of anti-abortion ignorami), we still have a chance to even the playing field through bad medical care.

So buck up, there's more than one way to skin a cat.
 
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Here's an interesting angle...

From: Yahoo News
Republican Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt on Sunday hinted at retribution for Indigenous Oklahomans should doctors readily perform abortions on tribal lands if Roe v. Wade is overturned. But he was stepping outside the boundaries of state authority, according to Indigenous legal experts.
...
Under a 1953 federal law, there are six states — Alaska, California, Minnesota, Nebraska, Oregon and Wisconsin — that have jurisdiction over criminal law on reservations. Some other states, including Florida, Idaho, Montana and Washington, later obtained criminal law jurisdiction on reservations, but a 1968 law prevented any more states from doing so without tribal permission.


I wonder how well that would work, if various indigenous set up abortion clinics on their lands to offer services to, well, everyone. (The article does point out that the law is very murky, especially if a non-native doctor was providing services to a non-native patient. I'm sure there would be court challenges a-plenty.)
 
Here's an interesting angle...

From: Yahoo News
Republican Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt on Sunday hinted at retribution for Indigenous Oklahomans should doctors readily perform abortions on tribal lands if Roe v. Wade is overturned. But he was stepping outside the boundaries of state authority, according to Indigenous legal experts.
...
Under a 1953 federal law, there are six states — Alaska, California, Minnesota, Nebraska, Oregon and Wisconsin — that have jurisdiction over criminal law on reservations. Some other states, including Florida, Idaho, Montana and Washington, later obtained criminal law jurisdiction on reservations, but a 1968 law prevented any more states from doing so without tribal permission.


I wonder how well that would work, if various indigenous set up abortion clinics on their lands to offer services to, well, everyone. (The article does point out that the law is very murky, especially if a non-native doctor was providing services to a non-native patient. I'm sure there would be court challenges a-plenty.)
I think it could depend on whether the law makes leaving the state for an abortion a crime. If so, then the very thing that makes it legal to do makes it illegal to seek. The possibility of border guards and pregnancy checks, with of course rampant profiling, and the like, is one of the possible unintended consequences of all this.
 
Here's an interesting angle...

From: Yahoo News
Republican Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt on Sunday hinted at retribution for Indigenous Oklahomans should doctors readily perform abortions on tribal lands if Roe v. Wade is overturned. But he was stepping outside the boundaries of state authority, according to Indigenous legal experts.
...
Under a 1953 federal law, there are six states — Alaska, California, Minnesota, Nebraska, Oregon and Wisconsin — that have jurisdiction over criminal law on reservations. Some other states, including Florida, Idaho, Montana and Washington, later obtained criminal law jurisdiction on reservations, but a 1968 law prevented any more states from doing so without tribal permission.


I wonder how well that would work, if various indigenous set up abortion clinics on their lands to offer services to, well, everyone. (The article does point out that the law is very murky, especially if a non-native doctor was providing services to a non-native patient. I'm sure there would be court challenges a-plenty.)


Well, I guess that is one way for Indians to get back at the white man. Kill them in the womb when nobody else will? Kind of creepy implications to that, tbh.

Also, is abortion law more relaxed or more stringent on reservations than what we see now, generally? Like, what would be their motivation to become a massive abortion hub?
 
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Well, I guess that is one way for Indians to get back at the white man. Kill them in the womb when nobody else will? Kind of creepy implications to that, tbh.



Every post is some agressive, baseless, silly stuff about skin color, but calling you a certain word? No no no no, that's where you draw the line.
 
Every post is some agressive, baseless, silly stuff about skin color, but calling you a certain word? No no no no, that's where you draw the line.


You don't think the idea that if Roe gets overturned, that Indian Reservations might become a massive hub for aborting non-reservation babies, to be at least a little creepy sounding?

I do. I just can't imagine it happening. Then again, I can't imagine Roe being overturned, either.
 
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