“Defenders of Roe argued that reversing the case would be disruptive, that women have relied on the precedent to guarantee access to abortion for almost 50 years. Yet [the late Justice Ruth Bader] Ginsburg’s 1992 remarks demonstrate that Roe itself was also disruptive. It completely ruptured the prior legal regime, and our nation has been living with the fallout ever since…
“If the Court reverses Roe, it won’t do so because the majority hates women or views women as second-class citizens. Indeed, a woman would almost certainly be in the Court’s majority, and the Court would leave intact the ability of legislatures to protect abortion rights. Instead it will be because the majority embraces a constitutional order that limits the power of the judiciary to write laws and expands the power of the people to define the heart of liberty for themselves.”
David French, The Atlantic
“A few months after Roe was decided, the (pro-choice) legal scholar John Hart Ely noted that Roe had created a ‘super-protected right’ that ‘is not inferable from the language of the Constitution, the framers’ thinking respecting the specific problem in issue, any general value derivable from the provisions they included, or the nation’s governmental structure,’ and thus answered ‘a question the Constitution has not made the Court’s business.’ Roe ‘is bad,’ Ely concluded, ‘because it is bad constitutional law, or rather because it is not constitutional law and gives almost no sense of an obligation to try to be.’ And that should be enough to justify its dissolution…
“[Justice Sonia] Sotomayor suggested more than once that if the Court were to overturn Roe, it might be seen as acting in a ‘political’ manner. But it was Roe that was ‘political.’ Overturning it, and returning it to the people, would be anti-politics. Unlike, say, jury trials or free speech or the right to bear arms, abortion was never a question for the courts, and for them to dispense with it for good would be a significant win for separation of powers.”
Charles C. W. Cooke, National Review
“Decades of advancements in science and technology have enhanced our understanding that human life begins at conception. We now know, for example, that an unborn child’s heart is actively beating around the fifth or sixth week. Pain receptors begin forming around the seventh week…
“Not only does Mississippi’s law limiting elective abortion after 15 weeks align with new scientific insights, it is in line with the laws in Europe where countries are often considered much more progressive than the U.S. The majority of these European nations restrict elective abortions to 12 weeks. An overwhelming 47 out of 50 European nations either prohibit elective abortions or limit them to 15 weeks or earlier…
“Public opinion also supports limits for abortion that Roe doesn’t allow. A large majority (76%) of Americans consistently say they want abortion limited to – at most – the first three months of pregnancy. Poll after poll confirms these findings.”
Jeanne Mancini, Fox News
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