Posted on 06/01/2011 4:10:05 PM PDT by wagglebee
On January 22, 1973, the Supreme Court handed down its decision in Roe v. Wade. That same day, the Court also decided Doe v. Bolton. In Roe, the Court struck down a Texas abortion law. In Doe, the Court threw out the restrictions on abortion in a more liberal Georgia law. The combined result overturned the laws that restricted abortion in every state.
In Roe, the Supreme Court adopted a trimester framework for state regulation of abortion. The Court held: in the first trimester of pregnancy, states may not regulate abortion; in the second trimester, states may regulate abortion only in ways related to protecting the mothers health; and in the third trimester, states may regulate, and even proscribe, abortion except where necessary, in appropriate medical judgment, for the preservation of the life or health of the mother. But the language that seemed to allow a third trimester ban on abortion was deceptive, because in Doe, the Court gave health such a broad definition that states have been prevented from successfully imposing bans on abortion, including late-term abortions.
The Supreme Court ruled that a restriction on abortion is a violation of the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, which protects the right to privacy. Delivering the Courts opinion in Roe, Justice Blackmun wrote, This right of privacy founded in the Fourteenth Amendments concept of personal liberty and restrictions upon state action is broad enough to encompass a womans decision whether or not to terminate her pregnancy.
Even pro-abortion proponents admit that Roe is intellectually indefensible. Edward Lazarus, a former clerk to Blackmun, wrote, What, exactly, is the problem with Roe? The problem, I believe, is that it has little connection to the Constitutional right it purportedly interpreted. A constitutional right to privacy broad enough to include abortion has no meaningful foundation in constitutional text, history, or precedent.
Blackmun claimed that a fetus isnt a person within the language and meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment. He noted that the Constitution does not define person in so many words. The word has application only postnatally. He observed that state laws restricting abortion are not of ancient or even of common-law origin. The laws derive from changes in the latter half of the nineteenth century. So, the word person as used in the Fourteenth Amendment does not include the unborn.
Each of these arguments falls apart under scrutiny. First, the Constitution doesnt define person, but the Constitution doesnt define privacy either. The Supreme Court applied a double standard in Roe, arbitrarily giving the word person a narrow definition and the word privacy a broad definition in order to rationalize its decision to legalize abortion-on-demand. Second, if a fetus isnt a person because the provisions of the Constitution dont apply to a fetus, then infants arent persons either, because the provisions also dont apply to infants. Or adolescents in some instances. Third, its irrelevant if state abortion laws were less restrictive in the past. Many laws were less restrictive in the past. And its irrelevant if state abortion laws originate from statutes not common-law. Many laws originate from statutes. Fourth, when the Fourteenth Amendment was adopted in 1868, abortion was already restricted by at least 36 laws enacted by state or territorial legislatures, including the very Texas law the Supreme Court struck down in Roe. Or in other words, state or territorial laws restricting abortion were already recognized when the Fourteenth Amendment was adopted: the Amendment wasnt intended to overturn laws restricting abortion. Clearly, the Fourteenth Amendment has always included the unborn as persons entitled to Constitutional protection.
Despite the evidence, Blackmun ruled otherwise. Further, he claimed the state laws that restricted abortion were inconsistent with the position that a fetus is entitled to Fourteenth Amendment protection as a person. He challenged three features of the state laws: the exceptions allowing for abortion to save the mothers life; the lack of penalties for the woman with respect to an abortion; and the difference in penalties for abortion compared to murder. If the fetus is a person, he argued, the state laws shouldnt contain these features.
Blackmun overlooked the obvious. First, the Supreme Court accepts that the Fourteenth Amendment protects the right to life of an adult while also accepting that a right to take the life of an adult in self-defense exists. The same principle applies to a mother if the fetus is posing an imminent, physical threat to her life. Abortion laws, including the Texas law, simply recognized this accepted principle. Second, the lack of penalties for a pregnant woman reflect the widely-held view that a pregnant woman is also a victim of those who are willing to perform abortions and take advantage of her vulnerable situation. Third, the penalty for killing an infant in some states is also less than the penalty for murder, but the Supreme Court hasnt legalized infanticide.
After deciding that a fetus isnt a person, Blackmun dodged the main issue of Roe by claiming, We need not resolve the difficult question of when life begins. When those trained in the respective disciplines of medicine, philosophy, and theology are unable to arrive at any consensus, the judiciary, at this point in the development of mans knowledge, is not in a position to speculate as to the answer.
What Blackmun didnt disclose was that the Supreme Court knew the answer. The Court deliberately ignored the facts and misled the public. First, the question of when human life begins is neither one of philosophy nor theology; the question is one of science. Second, the medical community had already arrived at the consensus that human life begins at conception. In October 1971, a group of medical experts filed a brief of amicus curiae (advice to a court from a person or persons not a party to the case) to the Supreme Court. The brief showed conclusively that science (embryology, fetology, genetics, perinatology, all of biology) establishes that human life begins at conception. And not a single person or group refuted the brief.
Instead of reviewing the scientific facts, though, Blackmun undertook perhaps the most disingenuous endeavor of any Supreme Court Justice ever when delivering an opinion. He used nearly 4,000 words to review the history of human thought, informing the public that, among other things, the ancient Greeks and Romans and the early Christians didnt offer much opposition to abortion. Blackmun failed to mention that, while permitting abortion, the ancient Greeks and Romans also engaged in human sacrifices and the early Christians also burned witches at the stake, but in his defense, he probably wasnt implying that we should also permit those practices today. Just abortion.
Because a fetus, Blackmun decided, is merely a potential life. But, while the states cant override a womans right to terminate her pregnancy, the states have an important and legitimate interest in protecting the potential life, he ruled. This interest reaches a compelling point at viability, which is when the fetus then presumably has the capability of meaningful life outside the mothers womb.
Blackmuns argument is illogical and unjustifiable. A fetus inside the womb and an infant outside the womb are both still completely dependent on others for survival. The claim that one has the capability of meaningful life and the other doesnt has no medical or legal basis.
In summary, Blackburn concluded that the abortion decision in all its aspects is inherently, and primarily, a medical decision, and basic responsibility for it must rest with the physician. Wrong. Abortion in all its aspects is the intentional killing of innocent human life, which isnt a medical decision. And responsibility rests with the Supreme Court to uphold the Constitutional protection of life.
Planned Parenthood v. Casey
In Planned Parenthood v. Casey, the Supreme Court considered a Pennsylvania law that imposed regulations on abortion. The law included certain information requirements, a parental consent requirement, a judicial bypass procedure for parental consent, a husband notification requirement, notification exceptions, a medical emergency definition, and reporting requirements for abortion providers. On June 29, 1992, the Courts opinion was delivered by Justice OConnor, Justice Kennedy, and Justice Souter, joined in parts by Justice Stevens and Justice Blackmun.
While Roe v. Wade wasnt directly connected to the Pennsylvania law, which didnt prohibit abortion, the Supreme Court ruled that Roes essential holding be retained and reaffirmed.
The Court noted, Liberty finds no refuge in a jurisprudence of doubt. Yet, 19 years after our holding that the Constitution protects a womans right to terminate her pregnancy in its early stages, Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113 (1973), that definition of liberty is still questioned. But its the Courts definition, or lack of a definition, for human life, and the Courts refusal to protect human life, thats still questioned. And the illogical, unjustifiable arguments the Court made attempting to justify its holding in Roe serve only to intensify the opposition.
Defending its decision in Roe, the Supreme Court argued that the adjudication of substantive due process claims may require this Court to exercise its reasoned judgment in determining the boundaries between the individuals liberty and the demands of organized society.
But as Justice Scalia noted, in dissent, the Court didnt contend that Roe v. Wade was a correct application of reasoned judgment; merely that it must be followed, because of stare decisis [the legal principle of following precedent]. And once again, the Court misrepresented the issue, because its the right to life, and not the demands of organized society, for which boundaries with individual liberty must be determined.
The Court argued, Constitutional protection of the womans decision to terminate her pregnancy derives from the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. It declares that no State shall deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law. The controlling word in the cases before us is liberty. Actually, no. The controlling words are life and liberty.
Continuing with the liberty argument, the Court claimed, Our obligation is to define the liberty of all, not to mandate our own moral code. The underlying constitutional issue is whether the State can resolve these philosophic questions in such a definitive way that a woman lacks all choice in the matter.
First, the Courts obligation is also to define life for all, an obligation the Court failed to fulfill. Second, the Court masterfully slipped morality and philosophy into the issue to avoid facing the facts: the scientific facts that establish a human fetus is a human life, and the legal facts that show a fetus is a person entitled to Fourteenth Amendment protection.
On the defensive, the Court escaped into an ideological fantasy world. At the heart of liberty is the right to define ones own concept of existence, of meaning, of the universe, and of the mystery of human life, the Court claimed. Beliefs about these matters could not define the attributes of personhood were they formed under compulsion of the State.
Again, the Constitution protects life as well as liberty. How can the Supreme Court uphold the Constitution and protect the right to life after it has given away the right to define life? But that was the whole point.
The Court then alleged that by restricting abortion, the states were imposing their own vision of the womans role in society. Questioning others motives is a favorite tactic of pro-abortion proponents. The allegation, though, is unfounded. A state restricts abortion to protect the right to life.
After considerable effort spent evading the main issue of Roe, life, the Court restated, Application of the doctrine of stare decisis confirms that Roes essential holding should be reaffirmed. But as Chief Justice Rehnquist noted, in dissent, the Court didnt claim that Roe was a correct interpretation of the Constitution. And the doctrine of stare decisis doesnt require that a new case adopt the same incorrect interpretation of the Constitution as the original case.
The Court added, Although Roe has engendered opposition, it has in no sense proven unworkable. This is the one point the Court made in either Casey or Roe that actually was true. But while it was true at the time Casey was decided in 1992, its not true now. In the first half of 2011 alone, hundreds of new laws restricting abortion, dozens in direct conflict with Roe, have been introduced in state legislatures, and many have been passed.
Next, the Court tried again to justify its decision to follow precedent, resorting to a flimsy reliance argument, speculating that for two decades of economic and social developments, [people] have organized intimate relationships and made choices that define their views of themselves and their places in society, in reliance on the availability of abortion in the event that contraception should fail. And, The ability of women to participate equally in the economic and social life of the Nation has been facilitated by their ability to control their reproductive lives.
While pro-abortion proponents like to claim that all women, or half of the population, would be adversely impacted by overruling Roe, the reality is that, at most, only 25% of the population is female and in childbearing years, and of that group, approximately 60% believe abortion should be illegal in all circumstances or legal in only a few circumstances. And the suggestion that women owe their current success in society to abortion as opposed to their determination, hard work, and skill is highly suspect.
Chief Justice Rehnquist exposed the error of upholding a decision on the grounds of reliance. He wrote that at various points in the past, the same could have been said about this Courts erroneous [decision] that the Constitution allowed separate but equal treatment of minorities. He concluded that the separate but equal doctrine lasted 58 years but the simple fact that a generation or more had grown used to [that] major [decision] did not prevent the Court from correcting its [error] in [that case] and it shouldnt prevent the Court from correctly interpreting the Constitution here. But it did.
The Courts contempt for the truth was striking. Since 1973, the Court had refused to overrule Roes essential holding, thus preventing any subsequent constitutional developments to Roes central rule. Then in 1992, when deciding Casey, the Court had the gall to rule that Roe wasnt in jeopardy because subsequent constitutional developments hadnt disturbed or threatened to diminish the liberty recognized in Roe.
The Court explained, No change in Roes factual underpinning has left its central holding obsolete, and none supports an argument for its overruling. But the Court in Roe deliberately ignored the scientific facts that establish human life begins at conception. Roes factual underpinning isnt factual. Roe was constructed on errors in reasoning, false claims, deception, and the deliberate omission of facts; facts that prove Roes central holding is invalid.
The Court then went from defensive to desperate, asserting, A decision to overrule Roes essential holding under the existing circumstances would address error, if error there was, at the cost of both profound and unnecessary damage to the Courts legitimacy and to the Nations commitment to the rule of law. The existing circumstances were the public opposition to Roe, and the efforts to overturn it and to thwart its implementation. Overruling Roes central holding, therefore, would appear to be a surrender to political pressure and an unjustified repudiation of the principle on which the Court staked its authority. The countrys loss of confidence in the Court would be underscored if the Court failed to keep faith with those who support the decision at a cost to themselves.
The Court insisted that error wasnt enough of a reason to overrule Roe, because of the damage overruling would cause. But the damage caused by not overruling is over a million innocent human lives killed each year. And its stubbornly upholding Roe with illogical, unjustifiable excuses that erodes the Courts legitimacy and the Nations commitment to the rule of law.
In a display of extreme arrogance, the Court then declared, Where, in the performance of its judicial duties, the Court decides a case in such a way as to resolve the sort of intensely divisive controversy reflected in Roe and those rare, comparable cases, its decision has a dimension that the resolution of the normal case does not carry. It is the dimension present whenever the Courts interpretation of the Constitution calls the contending sides of a national controversy to end their national division by accepting a common mandate rooted in the Constitution.
The Court dictatorially assumed the authority to call an end to political debate. In a democracy. The Court just couldnt accept that, despite its opinion in Roe, the pro-life movement wouldnt accept its interpretation of the Constitution and go away.
Finally, after lecturing about the necessity of following precedent to protect the Courts legitimacy, the Court then abandoned precedent, rejecting Roes trimester framework for evaluating state regulation of abortion, and created a new standard, the undue burden standard, which has no constitutional basis. The Court ruled, An undue burden exists, and therefore a provision of law is invalid, if its purpose or effect is to place substantial obstacles in the path of a woman seeking an abortion before the fetus attains viability.
The Supreme Court
Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey both will be reversed. On what grounds, to what extent, and when are the questions still unanswered. The three most likely scenarios are: Roe and Casey will be reversed not in one decision but over the course of several cases in which the Supreme Court repeatedly upholds increased state restrictions on abortion; Roe and Casey will be reversed in one decision without the Court ruling that a fetus is not a person, which would simply send the abortion issue back to each state; or Roe and Casey will be reversed in one decision with the Court ruling that a fetus is a person, which would prohibit abortion in every state.
A case must be overruled on the basis of facts, or an understanding of facts, changed from those which furnished the claimed justifications for the earlier constitutional resolutions, the Court ruled in Casey. And the overruling decision must be comprehensible to the Nation, and defensible, as the Courts [response] to changed circumstances. Applying the Courts own standards, both Roe and Casey must be overruled.
Every argument made by the Supreme Court when deciding Roe and Casey has been refuted, thus demonstrating a changed understanding of facts. The facts prove that human life begins at conception, and that a fetus is a person within the language and meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment. And the Court admitted in Roe that if the fetus is a person, the fetus right to life would be guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment. So a decision to overrule Roe and Casey would easily be comprehensible, and defensible.
Of the Courts nine Justices, though, four wont overrule Roe or Casey for any reason, while two (Scalia and Thomas) will overrule Roe and Casey and send the issue back to states, and its believed two others (Roberts and Alito) will also overrule Roe and Casey. The other Justice (Kennedy) was part of the Casey decision, which strongly suggests that he wont overrule either Roe or Casey, but its believed new arguments might have an influence on him partly because of his more recent opinions in other abortion-related cases.
Whether Roe and Casey are challenged before the Justices of this Court, or a future Court, will influence the strategy employed by those arguing the case. The beliefs of the individual Justices are, unfortunately, as important as the Constitution, the law, and the facts. But the next time an abortion case comes before the Supreme Court, the Court will be forced to accept the facts and overrule Roe and Casey, or deny the facts in full public view, exposing its own bias and damaging its own legitimacy, while setting the stage for greater public opposition and further defiance from state legislatures. Either way, the days of abortion-on-demand are nearing an end.
LifeNews.com Note: Paul Pauker writes for the Live Action blog and this column is reprinted with permission.
The only truly constitutional ruling will be to overturn Roe and Casey by affirming the personhood of the unborn.
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The “Law” is whatever the Supreme Court says it is.
Until that basic problem is rectified, neither arguments or elections are of any purpose.
Shockingly evil thoughts from the left. An unborn child is a human being from the moment the sperm enters the egg. It’s slap-your-forehead, no DUH, patently obvious.
Indeed. If we could only keep the schools from “educating” that out of them...
“He used nearly 4,000 words to review the history of human thought, informing the public that...the early Christians didnt offer much opposition to abortion. Blackmun failed to mention that, while permitting abortion...the early Christians also burned witches at the stake”
Not true.
Blackmun intentionally misrepresented 1,900 years of Christian doctrine by saying Christianity authorized abortion, when he knew, and it’s abundantly clear, that the Church always called abortion intrinsically evil.
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