R
ragincajunjoe
Guest
someone wasnt paying attention in civcs class … if the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, it would not be the first time they overturned a previous Supreme Court ruling … In the case of Brown v. Board of Education, the Supreme Court overturned the ruling of Plessy v. Ferguson … the same can happen in other cases … if the Supreme Court’s decision was always final and could never be changed, then mass chaos would result and injustices would have to be allowed because … things like segregated schools would still be in existenceI consistently seem to hear of people claiming to say that politicians “support the overturning of Roe vs Wade”… that is about the most laughable statement I have ever heard. Sorry folks, but it is.
Ask yourself this: Why has it not yet been overturned? Presently there is a clear majority on the Supreme Court of “CATHOLICS”!! I believe the number is FIVE of the NINE Justices are CATHOLICS. This being the case…why has it not been overturned?
Simply put: The Supreme Court cannot overturn and earlier decision made by the Supreme Court. Supreme Court decisions are final. Thats why they call it the Supreme Court. If the present Supreme Court was to overturn any decision previously made by a previously sitting Supreme Court, I believe it would trigger a very serious constitutional crisis, and could lead to legal mayhem in this country.
If the present Supreme Court was to overturn Roe vs Wade, or any other decision made prior…it would signal to America that the Supreme Court is corrupt, for sale, and naught but a political tool to do the bidding of a select group. It would additionally lower and diminish the Supreme Court to the level of a redneck backwater good ole boy traffic court in Podunk where the sheriff, the deputies, and the judge come from the same branchless family tree.
The battle against abortion needs to be carried on educationally, and with prayer, and by setting examples…not with legislation. Time and time and time and again…it has been “proven beyond a shadow of a doubt” that morality cannot be legislated.