Yes I do know that. Which is why I dont get why people think electing Republicans is the answer. I do get why Republican politicians want to convince them it is.
Yes well again, at one time 8 of 9 were Republican appointees and they affirmed Roe. Another decision in the early 2000s affirmed Roe with 7 of 9 Republican appointees.
Most of the Republican appointees are not pro life.
This time it is different? Those are the claims an abuser makes to his victim.
The problem with your comparison is at the time the Republicans appointed these Supreme Court Justices the party was supposedly pro life. The issue is not what they say but what they do.
Reagan appointee
Sandra Day O’Connor supported abortion
Reagan appointee and Catholic
Anthony Kennedy supports abortion
Bush I appointee
David Souter supported abortion
Bush II appointee and Catholic
John Roberts does not think Roe should be overturned
I note that two are Catholics because if not even nominating Catholics will put an end to the tragedy of Roe than how can you expect electing Republicans to do so?
I am not encouraging despair. I am saying stop worrying about the political system which has proven beyond a reasonable doubt to you that it will not put and end to Roe. I’d say divert that energy to convincing people of the true horror of abortion. A majority of people being against abortion is not sufficient to stop it. Maybe 90% being against it will put an end to it. But personally I think what will put an end to it is faith in and devotion to the government that enshrined this as a right by means of judicial fiat. When you go the political route you necessarily accept the authority of the system.
You are, indeed, encouraging despair, just as the Democrat operatives do. I assume you do so in good faith. Democrat operatives do it in order to deflect prolife people from opposing them politically.
This “you have to convince the people first” is just one more way the pro-abortion people have of defending abortion on demand. The majority IS convinced. The Democrat party stands in the way, and “Republicans didn’t end abortion when they were in power” is one of the deceptive ways they manage that; by confusing the electorate and encouraging despair among prolife people.
And if you read the Carhart decision, Roberts does not actually defend the decision in Roe. He simply says it’s the law, which it is for now, and used it to buttress his vote against partial birth abortion. Carhart was a limited decision about partial-birth abortion only. In that case, the otherwise abortion-defending Kennedy went along with Roberts, Alito, Scalia and Thomas in affirming a state ban on partial birth abortion. Every one of the Democrat appointees on the Court voted in favor of partial birth abortion. Every single one. But for the Republican appointees, the murderous “right” to conduct partial birth abortions would now ALSO be a “constitutional right”. Because of them, and them alone, it isn’t. No, it really does make a difference who we support for president, even if the progress is measured in small steps.
And it has been repeated on here many, many times, how many prolife actions George Bush took, most all of which have been reversed by Obama. It does matter who is in office. Until the Democrats realize their devotion to killing the unborn (and even the born for some) is going to lose them election after election, they will not change. Prolife Democrats, most of all, should oppose their candidates until the party abandons its wedded devotion to killing the unborn millions. That’s precisely why I, born and raised Democrat, a former party official, now oppose the party’s candidates. There might be a prolife Democrat somewhere, but never on my ballot. So I oppose them without exception. I take plenty of heat for it too, but right is right and wrong is wrong.
Until prolife people stop buying into the Democrat party line about how “Republicans didn’t stop abortion”, and similar deceptions, nothing will change, and those who refuse to oppose the pro-abortion politicians without exception, are complicit in the deaths of millions.
Even if one views with total cynicism the actual personal devotion of Republican candidates to the prolife cause, one still has to acknowledge that the Republican constituency is now so full of prolifers that a pro-abortion Republican presidential candidate has virtually no chance of nomination or, if elected, of re-election if his colors prove false.