J
JimG
Guest
As it was called when the Dred Scott decision concluded that slavery was legal.It’s called stare decisis.
As it was called when the Dred Scott decision concluded that slavery was legal.It’s called stare decisis.
Your point being?As it was called when the Dred Scott decision concluded that slavery was legal.
My point is that stare decisis ought not to mean keeping bad law in place forever. It ought not to foreclose the ability to correct a mistake.Your point being?
From a legal standpoint I would disagree with this statement. It is important to remember that the intent of the Constitution was to limit the power of the federal government - not to limit individuals. The limits of the federal government were clearly outlined in the 10th Amendment. Conversely, the liberty and soveriegnty of the individual was explained in the 9th Amendment. A right to privacy did not need to be specifically stated. Said another way - unless the Constitution took away a right to privacy, the people retain this right. And the courts have validated that the right to privacy includes issues of sexuality and reproduction.Yes, the Roe court did manufacture a right to abortion out of the blue.
=Charlemagne II;6339065]Doc Keele
I’m still waiting for someone to cite the specific passage in the Constitution that provides for the murdering of babies in the womb as a right of privacy.
Any takers?
Only if you show how the Church came up with the concept of the Trinity and the Immaculate Conception when reading the Bible.Or has common sense at last prevailed?
Didn’t the 10th Amendment leave it to the states or the people to legislate what was not in the Constitution? Well, abortion is not in the constitution. The founders would have been very surprised to discover that it was.From a legal standpoint I would disagree with this statement. It is important to remember that the intent of the Constitution was to limit the power of the federal government - not to limit individuals. The limits of the federal government were clearly outlined in the 10th Amendment. Conversely, the liberty and soveriegnty of the individual was explained in the 9th Amendment. A right to privacy did not need to be specifically stated. Said another way - unless the Constitution took away a right to privacy, the people retain this right. And the courts have validated that the right to privacy includes issues of sexuality and reproduction.
As my comments were regarding ‘legality’ as opposed to morality, I will continue in this manner. As the legal definition of ‘children’ is ‘human beings between the stages of birth and puberty’, I can assure you that the right to kill our children in private is most clealry not stated in the Constitution.Didn’t the 10th Amendment leave it to the states or the people to legislate what was not in the Constitution? Well, abortion is not in the constitution. The founders would have been very surprised to discover that it was.
It’s hard to say what might be included in a right to privacy, since it’s not explicitly state in the constitution either. But I have to quarrel with the proposition that we have the right to kill our children in private. And abortion clinics are actually public businesses.
Charlemagne II;6339227]
Immaculate Conception: Luke 1:35
Sorry, that is the Virgin Birth.*But Mary said to the angel, “How can this be, since I have no relations with a man?”
And the angel said to her in reply, "The holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you. Therefore the child to be born will be called holy, the Son of God. *
Trinity:
Go ye therefore, and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father , and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost (Matthew 28:19). …
And, so you just proved the point. How do you conclude that this passage clearly shows that God is three persons in One being. It takes a teaching authority to flush this out of such language. The Church is that authority. The Court does so with the Constitution. Again Justice Blackmun:
The Church speaks as Christ. The court misused their authority and has no such mandate to rule that killing is a “right”. Are you claiming that the court is correct simply because they are the court?And, so you just proved the point. How do you conclude that this passage clearly shows that God is three persons in One being. It takes a teaching authority to flush this out of such language. The Church is that authority. The Court does so with the Constitution. Again Justice Blackmun:
“This right of privacy, whether it be founded in the Fourteenth Amendment’s concept of personal liberty and restrictions upon state action, as we feel it is, or, as the District Court determined, in the Ninth Amendment’s reservation of rights to the people, is broad enough to encompass a woman’s decision whether or not to terminate her pregnancy.”
Doc Keele
*Charlemagne, you just don’t understand the law. *
Well, Lincoln understood it. And he was not loathe to attack those who would pervert the Constitution.
I’m still waiting for someone to cite the specific passage in the Constitution that provides for the murdering of babies in the womb as a right of privacy.
Any takers?
Or has common sense at last prevailed?
I’ve seen this before and it always makes me smile (just a little bit, because of course the subject is gruesome). Thanks for posting it!What I hear some of you saying is that reason just doesn’t get through to some people when they have been conditioned all their lives and by the mainstream culture to regard a woman’s right to choose as more sacred than a child’s right to live.
Yes, I think reason can provoke irrational responses such as some noted above. Lots of people just don’t like to reason.
Here’s one argument I found in the telling of a story about a pregnant woman’s visit to her physician.
*A worried woman went to her gynecologist and said:
'Doctor, I have a serious problem and desperately need your help!
My baby is not even 1 yr. old and I’m pregnant again.
I don’t want kids so close together.’
So the doctor said: ‘Ok, and what do you want me to do?’
She said: ‘I want you to end my pregnancy, and I’m counting on your help with this.’
The doctor thought for a little, and after some silence he said to the lady:
‘I think I have a better solution for your problem. It’s less dangerous for you too.’
She smiled, thinking that the doctor was going to accept her request.
Then he continued: You see, in order for you not to have to take care of 2 babies at the same time, let’s kill the one in your arms. This way, you could rest some before the other one is born.
If we’re going to kill one of them, it doesn’t matter which one it is.
There would be no risk for your body if you chose the one in your arms.
The lady was horrified and said: 'No doctor! How terrible! It’s a crime to kill a child!
‘I agree’, the doctor replied. 'But you seemed to be ok with it, so I thought maybe that was the best solution.
*
Thaaat’s right. Read Article III of the Constitution:=fix;6339470]The Church speaks as Christ. The court misused their authority and has no such mandate to rule that killing is a “right”. Are you claiming that the court is correct simply because they are the court?
At one time we were a nation to whom prayer came easily and naturally. While many still are, perhaps we as a nation, as a society, are no longer a people of prayer. Maybe we haven’t prayed long and hard enough about abortion because it’s other people’s children who are being exterminated. And after all, the supreme court has spoken, hasn’t it.After 37 years it seems increasingly unlikely that any argument will make a difference. What I don’t understand is why prayer hasn’t worked? How can it be that the Catholic Church has been praying to end abortion for 37 years without success? Does this mean that the Church lacks faith in God? Did Jesus mean something else in Matthew 21:22 when he said “And in all things whatsoever you shall ask in prayer, believing, you shall receive?”
Are you claiming that the court is correct simply because they are the court?
This passage does not grant the power of creating truth to the Supreme Court.Thaaat’s right. Read Article III of the Constitution:
" Section 1. The judicial Power of the United States, shall be vested in one supreme Court, and in such inferior Courts as the Congress may from time to time ordain and establish. The Judges, both of the supreme and inferior Courts, shall hold their Offices during good Behavior, and shall, at stated Times, receive for their Services a Compensation which shall not be diminished during their Continuance in Office."