R
rlg94086
Guest
The problem is not in whether or not a couple, married or not, has a right to privacy and to use or not use contraceptions. The prolem with the decision is that it isn’t a constitutional right, which is what the Supreme Court is supposed to decide. Some states at that time allowed contraceptive use, some didn’t. Both groups of states were fully in line with the Constitution, since anything not covered by the Constitution is the purview of the states.Griswold v. Connecticut dealt with a “marital” right to privacy. the Court held that a married couple had the right, within the context of their marriage, to used contraceptives. The “marital” part was thrown out a few years later in Eisenstadt v. Baird when the court ruled that individuals had an individual right to privacy allowing the individual to purchase and use contraceptives. This, in turn, paved the way for Roe v. Wade. The point is that the right to privacy enunciated in Griswold is very different than that in Eisenstadt or in Roe. Griswold recognized the marital relationship. Eisenstadt, Roe and their progeny do not.