Oso planning to go pro
49 years of 'settled law' up in smoke determined by an unelected body.What this has shown us is that there is no such thing as stare decisis and any ruling can be overturned based on the make up of the Supreme Court.
Who says? Well most pro-abortion politicians for one.It doesn't have to be. Yet so many who who fight for the unborn seem very happy to fight against certain populations of born people despite claiming to be Christian.As a disclaimer I am both Christian and believe life starts at conception. I just recognize that my belief shouldn't be forced onto others.
Christians for Abortion????I don't believe I've ever heard of that group. Do you guys have a website so I can check you out. And where do you meet, a phone booth???
Ah, the false equivalency to Plessy again raises its ugly head.A few problems with this argument.The first a is that Plessy - unlike Roe - was never explicitly overturned by the court. We didn't have one group of justices arrive on the scene decades later and say "You know, I don't like that ruling. Let's flip it." Now, Brown did have the effect of weakening it in schools specifically, but unlike Dobbs, Brown wasn't written solely to reverse a prior court's decision.Second, unlike Brown and most other instances in with a latter court decision had the effect of weakening or changing a prior court ruling, Dobbs wasn't written to protect or extend a Constitutional right. It was written to eliminate one. I may be wrong here, but I'm not aware of any other instances in which a court threw out a prior court's decision with the express purpose of taking away a right. And third, while Brown reflected the vast change in American law, culture and society when it came to race since Plessy and was reflective of popular sentiment, Dobbs is the opposite. The American public overwhelmingly supports abortion rights, and certainly moreso than 50 years ago. Unlike Brown, this court is cutting against the grain. So, sorry, but your attempt to equate the two is a failure.
No "false eqivelency whatsoever.The Plessy court read into the Constitution something that never existed i.e. a Constitutionally protected right to discriminate against Blacks.The Roe court read into the Constitution something that never existed i.e. the right to an abortion.It took 58 years for the court to decide they had made a mistake thus the Brown decision IMPLICITLY overulling Plessy. And it took the court 49 years to realize and correct their.If you're going to venture into areas you obviously know little about, you should do your homework first.
No "false eqivelency .
Pretty much everything you wrote is wrong.
You do realize that you Christian Fundies are to the right of Islamic Fundies on this subject... don't you?
Thanks for the insight, Hard. That oughta move a lot of hearts and minds.
Source?
TAMUI do know, Newsie is right on you knowing ball.
Outside of that, you make a sexual decision, you live with it. Period.
...but SCOTUS' opinion matters more than yours so your point is moot. Now that Roe is reversed it IS the settled law of the land.
"In his opinion concurring with the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn the constitutional right to abortion established in Roe v. Wade, Justice Clarence Thomas wrote that the high court should revisit all cases built on similar legal footing—including cases that guarantee the right to contraception, same-sex consensual sexual relations, and same-sex marriage.
The lesson to be learned is, religion is a crutch for the feeble-minded. The world is full of thousands of religions, none of which withstand any rational scrutiny.
Hold on, you're saying Xenu didn't fly people to Earth in a DC-8, drop them near volcanoes, and blow them up with hydrogen bombs?Or that a Jewish zombie had to fix people's souls because a rib-woman was convinced by a talking snake to eat a magic apple?Huh. This changes things.
For folks that lean right, the evolution of the Clarence Thomas-Ginny Thomas plot has to make you feel kinda gross, right?
Then don't force me to call someone by their preferred pronoun.