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TX opinion on Roe in Feb 2022
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The majority: 50% vs 47% did not want to see Roe overturned. In addition a lot of people misunderstand the so called "heartbeat" at six weeks is not an actual heart beating. It is a sound the sensitive equipment picks up of heart cells beating. There is no heart in a 6-week old fetus. I wish the news would be more clear about this deception. |
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Also if you read the fine print 100% of Republicans are in favor of abortion for their mistresses and the underage children they rape and knock up.
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We built this system. The same blind formalism that the Senate used to try to ask that question without asking it was used by the judges not answering it when they answered it. It's just not a substantive issue. If we are using this as an example of how this know-nothing approach to reality has rotted the courts and political discourse in general, fine. That this example is somehow outside the lines of what happens on a regular basis notsomuch. |
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A) Winds up B) Where the Republican are TRYING to get it to wind up ... would shock me exactly zero percent. |
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If their own kid gets knocked up, well... that might be closer to 100% especially if they are the ones that did it. |
But again this is old news. The whole "The only good abortion is my abortion" and "Oh you see I'm different, I just made a mistake, I'm not some irresponsible slut like those other women" is well established.
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It all comes back to conservative ideology being about preserving a state where there is an in group the law serves but does not bind and the out group it binds but does not serve. Anything that fits into that dynamic should never surprise anyone. Hypocrisy is a feature. |
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This also happened to Barbara Eden of I Dream of Jeannie fame. She was almost 8 months pregnant when her baby died in 1971. She also was made to carry it for another 6 weeks. |
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After seven months or so, is "abortion" really the right word? When does it become induced labor or emergency caesarian? |
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But I don't agree that the Senators couldn't ask that question directly. Had the judges been evasive about a direct question then that would have been a sign that they were prepared to overturn Roe vs Wade. But because the Senators went softly soflty with the questions, the Judges got away wit concealing their intentions. So they share the blame with the judges. You can redefine a lie to mean concealment if you wish but that doesn't make it so. |
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Having ended Roe vs Wade, it seems unlikely that they would let congress interfere with that decision. |
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In Ye Olden Days the generally accepted belief was that a fetus/embryo acquired a soul at "quickening". This happened at (based on Aristotle who appears to have just Made It Up) 40 days (male) or 90 days (female). This, BTW, is pretty much still the general belief within Islam, at 120 days. Other, pre-xian, cultures and religions tended towards ensoulment at birth (the 'first breath' standard) or occasionally at conception. Aristotelianism was incorporated into xianity by the Church Fathers (e.g. Aquinas, Augustine, Jerome and Tertullian) and if you look at the history of the discussion on quickening and ensoulment it's a mess of arguments between these believers and those to wanted to incorporate the rival Pythagorian doctrine of ensoulment at conception. About a thousand years now passes and we reach Aquinas who reignited the debate, paralleling the reintegration of Aristotelian learning into Europe, by being pretty definitive that ensoulment was well after birth. Hence abortion was, as in he Hebrew tradition, a misdemeanor. Matters continued along these lines for a couple more centuries until Sixtus V who, in 1588, issued the Bull Effraenatam, which subjected those that carried out abortions at any stage of gestation with automatic excommunication and the punishment by civil authorities applied to murderers. This lasted three years until his successor Gregory XIV limited that mandatory excommunication to abortion of a "formed" fetus. This may demonstrate Jesuit influence as the doctrine of ensoulment after birth was pretty common among them. Another century passes and Innocent XI condemns the Jesuit teachings but doesn't actually promulgate the doctrine of ensoulment at conception. Finally we reach the nineteenth century and the medical organisations (such as the nascent AMA) who engaged in a power-grab over midwives, whom they really didn't like and blamed for carrying out terminations. Suddenly civil society started getting in on the act and the first severe restrictions on abortions started being enacted. That's when (in 1869) Pius IX staged an abrupt about-turn in four centuries of church doctrine, and Canon Law, with Apostolicae Sedis, and re-enacted the penalty of excommunication for abortions at any stage of pregnancy, This was very much down to the man himself, who'd undergone an equally abrupt change in views following certain matters in 1848, like being chased out of Rome by the republican revolutionaries and only returning with the French Army. He spent the rest of his life descending into knee-jerk conservatism, condemning liberalism, modernism, moral relativism, secularisation, separation of church and state and other such dangerous ideas. Abortion was really only a tiny part of this process. Hope this helps. |
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Among the many reasons, it is the side diversion of them getting to object and quibble over whether they "really" lied and drag the discussion away from the point, accuse the other person of making attacks against their character, etc. |
In response to complaints by Kavanaugh that demonstrators confronted him at dinner, a columnist observes that there's no Constitutional right to eat dinner either.
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Ha ha. Yeah, I know. It will when they want it to. |
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A pregnant woman in Texas is contesting a traffic ticket for driving alone in an HOV lane by claiming that according to SCOTUS there were 2 "persons" in the car. If the courts want to be consistent, I would think that they would have to rule in her favor.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/natio...n-hov-bottone/ |
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But I've told you that 3 times now and you just ignore that inconvenient fact. Supreme Court Nominee Barrett Declines to Answer Questions on Key Court Cases Quote:
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Legal Eagle has posted another YouTube on Roe vs Wade ("What Next?").
Basically, with such inconsistent reasons being given, every unenumerated right from the last century is up for grabs:
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If you can criminalize residents of your State for what they do in another State where that act is not a Crime, Las Vegas would lose its reason for being.
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Since privacy has been removed from the table, there is, presumably, no right for a woman to conceal her condition except the fifth amendment, which might not not help if other means are used to detect it. And though there are laws concerning interstate commerce and the like, there is actually no Constitutional statement that explicitly allows unrestricted interstate travel. It would be outrageous and ridiculous, but not, it seems, unconstitutional, to control movement across a border. Anti-discrimination laws might make it difficult to apply only to women of fertile age, but probably not impossible. One could, after all, screen everyone, even if the goal is only to catch pregnant women, as we are now screened at airports. We can, I suppose, presume that travel and return is the issue here, but remember that, as far as I can determine, the Constitution fairly explicitly supports the fugitive slave laws, which apply, not to travel and return, but migration. Slavery itself was abolished, and the laws repealed, but I do not think there ever was a Constitutional challenge to the basic principle that a person deemed criminal in one state could be extradited from another in which they are not. It's pretty far fetched to suggest that a person from one state could be extradited and prosecuted for moving to another in order to escape repressive laws, but these days, with this court, I think we should never be too complacent about how far the long dong of the law might reach. This is all ridiculous of course. Ha ha, it will never happen here. It never does. Ha ha. |
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https://www.casinousa.com/map |
That just means that abortion is a crime for those who are too poor to get it done in another state. I'd call it discriminatory.
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Note: Some Indian Tribes have made it clear that they don't intend to host abortion clinics, probably because they already suffer a lot of hate and violence. |
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