Posted on 10/01/2014 3:06:26 AM PDT by Morgana
In a recent interview with Jeffrey Rosen of The New Republic, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg had harsh words for a Texas law regulating the health and safety of abortion clinics that is almost certainly headed to her desk. This is remarkable enough. As Ed Whelan and Prof. Josh Blackman have noted, these are exactly the kind of remarks, prejudging a specific case, that should trigger a responsibility to recuse.
But propriety aside, the comments also evince an unmoved confidence in the abortion industrys assertions, even when they are proven false. Turning her ire from the Texas legislature to the courts, she said, The courts cant be trusted either. Think of the Carhart decision . Yes, Justice Ginsburg, lets.
ruthbaderginsburg2On April 18, 2007, the Supreme Court announced its opinion in Gonzales v. Carhart, holding that the federal Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act was facially constitutional. For more than seven years this law has been in effect and, generally speaking, partial birth abortions are illegal in the United States. States have also enacted a number of bans on partial birth abortion that remain in force. I say generally speaking because there was a big caveat that Justice Ginsburg seems to have forgotten.
Opponents of the ban, including Planned Parenthood and their allies, had argued strenuously that the law was unconstitutional because it lacked a health exception (it included a life of the mother exception). The Guttmacher Institute, Planned Parenthoods de facto research arm, claimed that roughly 2,200 (probably a low estimate as Ramesh Ponnoru explains at the link) occurred per year prior to the ban almost all of which the abortion industry contended were performed because they were necessary to protect a womans health.
Congress had omitted a health exception because of evidence that such an exception was not necessary in practice and that such an exception would merely be used to circumvent the law entirely, with abortionists claiming falsely that virtually every partial-birth abortion was necessary for health reasons. In Doe v. Bolton the court had created a health exemption so wide that it covered just about everything including depression.
Congresss judgment was buttressed by a 1997 statement from the American Medical Association that partial-birth abortion was not medically indicated. Indeed, , the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists had also agreed that partial-birth abortion was virtually never (if ever) necessary before then White House policy advisor Kagan intervened to prevent what she called a disaster if ACOG took such a position, proposing alternative language for ACOG in its written testimony to Congress.
The Court called the abortionists bluff. It simply held that abortionists could bring future challenges to the law on behalf of actual women who needed a partial-birth abortion for true health reasons. Essentially, the Court said, Prove it. Justice Ginsburgs dissenting opinion, citing the ACOG/Kagan language, specifically invited as-applied challenges on behalf of the alleged thousands of women who needed the partial-birth abortion procedure for health reasons:
One may anticipate that such a preenforcement challenge will be mounted swiftly, to ward off serious, sometimes irremediable harm, to women whose health would be endangered by the intact D&E prohibition.
Hours after the decision, Planned Parenthood was still warning of its imminent negative impact on womens health.
Over seven years later, Justice Ginsburg and the nation still wait. Despite claims that womens health would be immediately harmed by the decision, no one has filed an as-applied challenge to the law alleging that a particular medical case requires partially delivering the baby before killing it. Nor have we seen even one documented story of a woman whose health was impacted by the unavailability of a partial-birth abortion. No as-applied challenge as invited by Justice Ginsburg, no Newsweek cover story, no MSNBC interview of a woman whose identity is hidden, no Journal of the American Medical Association article. Nothing.
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If we accept Guttmachers figure of approximately 2,200 partial-birth abortions per year, then the decision in Gonzales upholding the law and lifting the injunction against it has prevented over 15,000 partial-birth abortions from occurring. Yes, [o]ne may anticipate a challenge for these women unless it was all a lie.
One would hope that Justice Ginsburg, having been persuaded by abortion zealots to ring the alarms in Carhart would become more mindful of believing the abortion industrys press releases as verified fact. Unfortunately, it appears that with the Texas law that she is falling into the same trap.
Jews should be against Abortion...period, but they all seem to love it. Makes no sense, it's against God's law.
Liberals never recuse; they have the unique ability - and all the MSM will back them up on this - to separate objectivity from their politics.
I probably shouldn’t be posting with sleep deprivation but seriously, our nation has been in the pits since Roe. How can a nation survive when those who are to know the difference between good and evil are deaf and blind. Forcing our nation to endure the wrath of God. That is the problem, I suppose. Since the fear of the LORD is the beginning of wisdom, our judicial system is filled with fools.
I love Justice Ginsberg.
I wish her good health and and a long tenure on the Supreme Court that continues until at least after Jan 20, 2017.
GO RUTH!
She is a witch and every bit as evil.
That a justice who is charged with defending the Constitution should denigrate it and suggest to another nation that they use the SOUTH AFRICAN CONSTITUTION - a document that offers
MINIMAL human rights protection - instead of OURS Demonstrates she is manifestly unfit for the job she holds.
Knowing the arrogance of this vicious evil entity, she will sit in that office until she passes away rather than risk having herself replaced with a decent American.
Dan the womb that bore this hideous evil.
I hope nothing happens to her for 2 1/2 years....that’s the only thought I give to Ruth Bader Ginsberg!!
We should pray for her vitality and health or we will get Justice Holder.
Ginsburg would not be on the Supremes except for Ross Perot. Ginsburg’s husband was a tax lawyer who saved Perot a ton of money.
As a thank-you, Perot did two things. First, he endowed a chair at Georgetown Law in the husband’s name. Second, he called in his chips to Bill Clinton to get Ginsburg on the court.
Anyone who doubts Perot intentionally played spoiler to benefit the Democrats in ‘92 and ‘96 need only look at the Ginsburg appointment to the Supremes to see the coziness betweening Sucking Sound Ross and Slick Willie.
My suggestion is to sue every clinic which does not have hospital privileges, when there is a medical problem. Use the legal system against them.
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