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  3. Roe & Casey overturned.

Roe & Casey overturned.

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  • Catseye3C Offline
    Catseye3C Offline
    Catseye3
    wrote on last edited by
    #41

    Sign of the Times: For a split second, I thought that header was real.

    That is a beautiful building though, isn't it?

    Success is measured by your discipline and inner peace. – Mike Ditka

    1 Reply Last reply
    • taiwan_girlT Offline
      taiwan_girlT Offline
      taiwan_girl
      wrote on last edited by
      #42

      I wonder (and even predict) that at some point in the future (maybe 10, maybe 20, years,etc) there will be new Supreme Court judges. Another lawsuit will be brought and this will probably be reversed.

      JollyJ 1 Reply Last reply
      • LuFins DadL LuFins Dad

        @Jolly said in Roe & Casey overturned.:

        BTW, nothing about abortion has changed in New York.

        Nothing has changed in any state. That’s where the ridiculousness of this comes through.

        By the way, this is all in regard to a state law that restricts abortion at 15 weeks. France restricts abortion at 12 weeks…

        jon-nycJ Online
        jon-nycJ Online
        jon-nyc
        wrote on last edited by jon-nyc
        #43

        @LuFins-Dad said in Roe & Casey overturned.:

        @Jolly said in Roe & Casey overturned.:

        BTW, nothing about abortion has changed in New York.

        Nothing has changed in any state. That’s where the ridiculousness of this comes through.

        I think that’s not true - several states have trigger laws that were designed to change policy immediately upon a potential overturn of Roe.

        Only non-witches get due process.

        • Cotton Mather, Salem Massachusetts, 1692
        LuFins DadL 1 Reply Last reply
        • taiwan_girlT taiwan_girl

          I wonder (and even predict) that at some point in the future (maybe 10, maybe 20, years,etc) there will be new Supreme Court judges. Another lawsuit will be brought and this will probably be reversed.

          JollyJ Offline
          JollyJ Offline
          Jolly
          wrote on last edited by
          #44

          @taiwan_girl said in Roe & Casey overturned.:

          I wonder (and even predict) that at some point in the future (maybe 10, maybe 20, years,etc) there will be new Supreme Court judges. Another lawsuit will be brought and this will probably be reversed.

          FDR.

          “Cry havoc and let slip the DOGE of war!”

          Those who cheered as J-6 American prisoners were locked in solitary for 18 months without trial, now suddenly fight tooth and nail for foreign terrorists’ "due process". — Buck Sexton

          1 Reply Last reply
          • jon-nycJ jon-nyc

            @LuFins-Dad said in Roe & Casey overturned.:

            @Jolly said in Roe & Casey overturned.:

            BTW, nothing about abortion has changed in New York.

            Nothing has changed in any state. That’s where the ridiculousness of this comes through.

            I think that’s not true - several states have trigger laws that were designed to change policy immediately upon a potential overturn of Roe.

            LuFins DadL Offline
            LuFins DadL Offline
            LuFins Dad
            wrote on last edited by
            #45

            @jon-nyc said in Roe & Casey overturned.:

            @LuFins-Dad said in Roe & Casey overturned.:

            @Jolly said in Roe & Casey overturned.:

            BTW, nothing about abortion has changed in New York.

            Nothing has changed in any state. That’s where the ridiculousness of this comes through.

            I think that’s not true - several states have trigger laws that were designed to change policy immediately upon a potential overturn of Roe.

            But generally those trigger laws are generally well supported in the states where they will take effect. The will of the people and all that…

            The Brad

            1 Reply Last reply
            • George KG Offline
              George KG Offline
              George K
              wrote on last edited by
              #46

              McCarthy: Roe was never law.

              It was never law at all. The very able lawyers who have defended Roe over the decades have eschewed arguments rooted in the Constitution. Roe has been defended as precedent: The decision commanded deference because it happened, not because it was compelling — or even coherent. It could never be justified on its own terms as linear, logical, legitimately rooted law.

              Progressives have thus made a talisman of stare decisis, the doctrine of respect for precedent. They would have you believe, at least when it’s a precedent they like, that stare decisis is Latin for “don’t you dare touch this settled law.” Like the rest of the Roe bag of tricks, that’s laughable as a legal argument — we’ve all noticed that Dred Scott, Plessy v. Ferguson, Korematsu, and other precedents in the Court’s lowlight reel were reversed by the Court. More to the point, though, stare decisis has never been a mandate to uphold precedent; it is a multipart test to assess which precedents should be retained.

              It’s a test that Roe was particularly ill-suited to survive.

              We haven’t been under Roe for, now, 30 years. The ruling was so unstable and indefensible that, in Casey (1992), a reluctant, razor-thin majority of the Court could save it only by gutting its rickety foundation while maintaining its bottom-line holding — again, in the manner of “because I say so” diktat, not legal reasoning.

              And what did Casey replace Roe with? A newfangled “undue burden” test — essentially asking: Does a regulation so burden resort to the abortion “right” as to render it illusory? Notice, however, that it is the nature of such a test to invite regulation and therefore to invite constant streams of challenges.

              If we could keep abortion out of it for a moment, then, and think of this as a straight, legal stare decisis question, you had a ruling that was so galactically wrong that it had to be completely overhauled in less than 20 years. A ruling that was so unstable that it was subject to constant regulatory and legal challenge, and thus could not reasonably be relied on. And that’s just the legal landscape, before you ever get to the court of public opinion — the cultural and political arena in which Roe/Casey was never broadly accepted and was always the target of passionate dissent by much of the country.

              Roe was not law and could never be defended as such. It has thus been defended by extortion, by the mob. It still is: The Court’s opinion was not even published before the “Night of Rage” planning was under way. The Left tried to prevent the ruling from issuing by an unprecedented leak of a draft opinion, patently intended to intimidate the justices — just as the Left destroyed the judicial-confirmation process over abortion with the intent of intimidating justices. In the weeks since the leak, we have had illegal protests against which a leftist administration has refused to enforce the laws (Roe having corrupted the Justice Department the same way it corrupted the law), and finally the attempted murder of Justice Kavanaugh — an utterly predictable event incited (to borrow the Left’s promiscuous use of that word) by the likes of the Senate’s Democratic Party leader.

              "Now look here, you Baltic gas passer... " - Mik, 6/14/08

              The saying, "Lite is just one damn thing after another," is a gross understatement. The damn things overlap.

              CopperC 1 Reply Last reply
              • George KG Offline
                George KG Offline
                George K
                wrote on last edited by
                #47

                Countering the "Not in the Constitution" argument.

                James Madison, one of the principal architects of the new Constitution, closely followed this debate. On June 8, 1789, he gave a speech to Congress proposing the group of amendments that would ultimately become the Bill of Rights. While doing so, he directly addressed the Anti-Federalist/Federalist debate. "It has been observed also against a bill of rights, that, by enumerating particular exceptions to the grant of power, it would disparage those rights which were not placed in that enumeration," he said, "and it might follow by implication, that those rights which were not singled out, were intended to be assigned into the hands of the general government, and were consequently insecure." Madison acknowledged that "this is one of the most plausible arguments I have ever heard urged against the admission of a bill of rights into this system; But, I conceive, that may be guarded against. I have attempted it."

                Madison's attempt became enshrined in the Constitution as the Ninth Amendment. Here is what it says: "The enumeration in the Constitution of certain rights shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people." In short, unenumerated rights get the same respect as enumerated ones.

                Today, most legal conservatives purport to be constitutional originalists. What that means for the legal debate over abortion is that any purported originalist must face the question of whether abortion rights may be considered to be among the unenumerated rights "retained by the people" that Madison's Ninth Amendment was specifically written and ratified to protect. Alito's opinion in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization entirely fails to grapple with this necessary question.

                "Now look here, you Baltic gas passer... " - Mik, 6/14/08

                The saying, "Lite is just one damn thing after another," is a gross understatement. The damn things overlap.

                CopperC 1 Reply Last reply
                • George KG George K

                  McCarthy: Roe was never law.

                  It was never law at all. The very able lawyers who have defended Roe over the decades have eschewed arguments rooted in the Constitution. Roe has been defended as precedent: The decision commanded deference because it happened, not because it was compelling — or even coherent. It could never be justified on its own terms as linear, logical, legitimately rooted law.

                  Progressives have thus made a talisman of stare decisis, the doctrine of respect for precedent. They would have you believe, at least when it’s a precedent they like, that stare decisis is Latin for “don’t you dare touch this settled law.” Like the rest of the Roe bag of tricks, that’s laughable as a legal argument — we’ve all noticed that Dred Scott, Plessy v. Ferguson, Korematsu, and other precedents in the Court’s lowlight reel were reversed by the Court. More to the point, though, stare decisis has never been a mandate to uphold precedent; it is a multipart test to assess which precedents should be retained.

                  It’s a test that Roe was particularly ill-suited to survive.

                  We haven’t been under Roe for, now, 30 years. The ruling was so unstable and indefensible that, in Casey (1992), a reluctant, razor-thin majority of the Court could save it only by gutting its rickety foundation while maintaining its bottom-line holding — again, in the manner of “because I say so” diktat, not legal reasoning.

                  And what did Casey replace Roe with? A newfangled “undue burden” test — essentially asking: Does a regulation so burden resort to the abortion “right” as to render it illusory? Notice, however, that it is the nature of such a test to invite regulation and therefore to invite constant streams of challenges.

                  If we could keep abortion out of it for a moment, then, and think of this as a straight, legal stare decisis question, you had a ruling that was so galactically wrong that it had to be completely overhauled in less than 20 years. A ruling that was so unstable that it was subject to constant regulatory and legal challenge, and thus could not reasonably be relied on. And that’s just the legal landscape, before you ever get to the court of public opinion — the cultural and political arena in which Roe/Casey was never broadly accepted and was always the target of passionate dissent by much of the country.

                  Roe was not law and could never be defended as such. It has thus been defended by extortion, by the mob. It still is: The Court’s opinion was not even published before the “Night of Rage” planning was under way. The Left tried to prevent the ruling from issuing by an unprecedented leak of a draft opinion, patently intended to intimidate the justices — just as the Left destroyed the judicial-confirmation process over abortion with the intent of intimidating justices. In the weeks since the leak, we have had illegal protests against which a leftist administration has refused to enforce the laws (Roe having corrupted the Justice Department the same way it corrupted the law), and finally the attempted murder of Justice Kavanaugh — an utterly predictable event incited (to borrow the Left’s promiscuous use of that word) by the likes of the Senate’s Democratic Party leader.

                  CopperC Offline
                  CopperC Offline
                  Copper
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #48

                  @George-K said in Roe & Casey overturned.:

                  McCarthy: Roe was never law.

                  It could never be justified on its own terms as linear, logical, legitimately rooted law.

                  I think that was understood by just about all, even here at tncr.

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  • George KG George K

                    Countering the "Not in the Constitution" argument.

                    James Madison, one of the principal architects of the new Constitution, closely followed this debate. On June 8, 1789, he gave a speech to Congress proposing the group of amendments that would ultimately become the Bill of Rights. While doing so, he directly addressed the Anti-Federalist/Federalist debate. "It has been observed also against a bill of rights, that, by enumerating particular exceptions to the grant of power, it would disparage those rights which were not placed in that enumeration," he said, "and it might follow by implication, that those rights which were not singled out, were intended to be assigned into the hands of the general government, and were consequently insecure." Madison acknowledged that "this is one of the most plausible arguments I have ever heard urged against the admission of a bill of rights into this system; But, I conceive, that may be guarded against. I have attempted it."

                    Madison's attempt became enshrined in the Constitution as the Ninth Amendment. Here is what it says: "The enumeration in the Constitution of certain rights shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people." In short, unenumerated rights get the same respect as enumerated ones.

                    Today, most legal conservatives purport to be constitutional originalists. What that means for the legal debate over abortion is that any purported originalist must face the question of whether abortion rights may be considered to be among the unenumerated rights "retained by the people" that Madison's Ninth Amendment was specifically written and ratified to protect. Alito's opinion in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization entirely fails to grapple with this necessary question.

                    CopperC Offline
                    CopperC Offline
                    Copper
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #49

                    @George-K said in Roe & Casey overturned.:

                    Countering the "Not in the Constitution" argument.

                    What that means for the legal debate over abortion is that any purported originalist must face the question of whether abortion rights may be considered to be among the unenumerated rights "retained by the people" that Madison's Ninth Amendment was specifically written and ratified to protect.

                    Simple. It was enumerated, as murder. That is the starting point.

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    • JollyJ Offline
                      JollyJ Offline
                      Jolly
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #50

                      I suspect Madison was fairly familiar with the Declaration of Independence. Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, would be very familiar concepts to him.

                      “Cry havoc and let slip the DOGE of war!”

                      Those who cheered as J-6 American prisoners were locked in solitary for 18 months without trial, now suddenly fight tooth and nail for foreign terrorists’ "due process". — Buck Sexton

                      jon-nycJ 1 Reply Last reply
                      • JollyJ Jolly

                        I suspect Madison was fairly familiar with the Declaration of Independence. Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, would be very familiar concepts to him.

                        jon-nycJ Online
                        jon-nycJ Online
                        jon-nyc
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #51

                        @Jolly True, but he was known to apply it rather selectively.

                        Only non-witches get due process.

                        • Cotton Mather, Salem Massachusetts, 1692
                        1 Reply Last reply
                        • George KG Offline
                          George KG Offline
                          George K
                          wrote on last edited by George K
                          #52

                          Let that sink in. SecDef: We will not obey the law.

                          "Now look here, you Baltic gas passer... " - Mik, 6/14/08

                          The saying, "Lite is just one damn thing after another," is a gross understatement. The damn things overlap.

                          JollyJ LuFins DadL 2 Replies Last reply
                          • George KG George K

                            Let that sink in. SecDef: We will not obey the law.

                            JollyJ Offline
                            JollyJ Offline
                            Jolly
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #53

                            @George-K said in Roe & Casey overturned.:

                            Let that sink in. SecDef: We will not obey the law.

                            I'm not sure he can do that.

                            “Cry havoc and let slip the DOGE of war!”

                            Those who cheered as J-6 American prisoners were locked in solitary for 18 months without trial, now suddenly fight tooth and nail for foreign terrorists’ "due process". — Buck Sexton

                            George KG 1 Reply Last reply
                            • JollyJ Jolly

                              @George-K said in Roe & Casey overturned.:

                              Let that sink in. SecDef: We will not obey the law.

                              I'm not sure he can do that.

                              George KG Offline
                              George KG Offline
                              George K
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #54

                              @Jolly said in Roe & Casey overturned.:

                              I'm not sure he can do that.

                              Garland will be all over that, right?

                              "Now look here, you Baltic gas passer... " - Mik, 6/14/08

                              The saying, "Lite is just one damn thing after another," is a gross understatement. The damn things overlap.

                              JollyJ 1 Reply Last reply
                              • George KG George K

                                @Jolly said in Roe & Casey overturned.:

                                I'm not sure he can do that.

                                Garland will be all over that, right?

                                JollyJ Offline
                                JollyJ Offline
                                Jolly
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #55

                                @George-K said in Roe & Casey overturned.:

                                @Jolly said in Roe & Casey overturned.:

                                I'm not sure he can do that.

                                Garland will be all over that, right?

                                Shirley, you jest

                                “Cry havoc and let slip the DOGE of war!”

                                Those who cheered as J-6 American prisoners were locked in solitary for 18 months without trial, now suddenly fight tooth and nail for foreign terrorists’ "due process". — Buck Sexton

                                George KG 1 Reply Last reply
                                • JollyJ Jolly

                                  @George-K said in Roe & Casey overturned.:

                                  @Jolly said in Roe & Casey overturned.:

                                  I'm not sure he can do that.

                                  Garland will be all over that, right?

                                  Shirley, you jest

                                  George KG Offline
                                  George KG Offline
                                  George K
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #56

                                  @Jolly said in Roe & Casey overturned.:

                                  Shirley, you jest

                                  Under who's jurisdiction is the DoD?

                                  If a soldier commits a non-federal crime, like burglary, who prosecutes?

                                  "Now look here, you Baltic gas passer... " - Mik, 6/14/08

                                  The saying, "Lite is just one damn thing after another," is a gross understatement. The damn things overlap.

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  • HoraceH Online
                                    HoraceH Online
                                    Horace
                                    wrote on last edited by Horace
                                    #57

                                    The leftist indoctrination into righteous destruction of any and every conservative political principle continues unabated. And next time a conservative leaning miscreant entity gets naughty, it’ll be right back to terrifying existential threats to our very democracy.

                                    The magic of the human mind is that they don’t even recognize the double standard.

                                    Education is extremely important.

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    • George KG George K

                                      Let that sink in. SecDef: We will not obey the law.

                                      LuFins DadL Offline
                                      LuFins DadL Offline
                                      LuFins Dad
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #58

                                      @George-K said in Roe & Casey overturned.:

                                      Let that sink in. SecDef: We will not obey the law.

                                      Insurrectiony!

                                      Seriously, I imagine the military can continue to provide abortion services on their bases, no matter what that state’s laws may be. It’s Federal Property, kind of like how US Embassies in other countries are on US soil, technically.

                                      The Brad

                                      George KG 1 Reply Last reply
                                      • CopperC Offline
                                        CopperC Offline
                                        Copper
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #59

                                        Proudly killing babies since Mỹ Lai

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        • LuFins DadL LuFins Dad

                                          @George-K said in Roe & Casey overturned.:

                                          Let that sink in. SecDef: We will not obey the law.

                                          Insurrectiony!

                                          Seriously, I imagine the military can continue to provide abortion services on their bases, no matter what that state’s laws may be. It’s Federal Property, kind of like how US Embassies in other countries are on US soil, technically.

                                          George KG Offline
                                          George KG Offline
                                          George K
                                          wrote on last edited by George K
                                          #60

                                          @LuFins-Dad said in Roe & Casey overturned.:

                                          I imagine the military can continue to provide abortion services on their bases, no matter what that state’s laws may be. It’s Federal Property

                                          That's right. Now, what if birthing person has an abortion on non-military property? Will the military turn xer over to local law enforcement?

                                          (Did I do that correctly by the way?)

                                          "Now look here, you Baltic gas passer... " - Mik, 6/14/08

                                          The saying, "Lite is just one damn thing after another," is a gross understatement. The damn things overlap.

                                          LuFins DadL 1 Reply Last reply
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