You are taking the approach that all pro abortion people take that somehow there is a right to privacy implied in the constitution.
There is no doubt about the fact we have a right to be left alone to live a private, non-aggressive life.
The Roe V Wade decision was based on the right to privacy which justice Blackman decided that, while not mentioned in the Constitution, was to be found in the roots of other Justices's decisions. In other words, even though it wasn't there, they found it.
That is your erroneous opinion. Feel free to rant on.
Once you start finding things in the constitution you may as well open yourself up to anything, which is precisely what Blackman did in order to decide something he thought was a good thing could be made a "right" protected by the constitution.
You think its a 'good thing' to prohibit what you see as 'evil' behavior by government legislation. -- I don't.
There are many legal scholars that agree with you and many that agree with me. My problem is that by finding a right to privacy the supreme court legitimized killing.
I don't see early term abortion as murder. Murder is decided by a jury in the USA, not by government decree.
I have visited about 10 websites discussing the ROE V WADE decision and in every single case it stated categorically that the majority based their decision on the right to privacy. Below is just one item
Subsequently, in Roe v. Wade , by a 7:2 majority the U.S. Supreme Court struck down a Texas statute that prohibited abortions (on the ground that it violated the right to privacy) except in cases where the life of the mother was medically endangered.
So feel free to rant on.
There is no doubt about the fact we have a right to be left alone to live a private, non-aggressive life.
I don't see early term abortion as murder.
I guess an unborn baby does not get the right to live a non-aggressive life. I'd certainly like for you to define an early term abortion. Please tell us when the exact instant occurs when it moves from early term to mid term. It is a life and therefore it does seem as if we shouldn't just be "sort of" deciding when it can and can't be killed. The problem with you pro-choicers is you are never willing to define when a baby becomes a baby. You used terms like "early term" and then walk away from the consequences. I think the government should stay totally out of people's private lives and there are plenty of protections without finding privacy in the constitution. No doubt you can find judicial scholars who support your position. I can find plenty of scholars (Bork) who support mine. So this is not about one of us being wrong. It is about a difference of opinion.