Posted on 02/03/2007 1:13:00 PM PST by wagglebee
Every year since 1973, millions of Americans have paused to remember the day when new words entered the American vocabulary. Words fraught with ambiguity, like "the right of personal privacy". Euphemisms, like "terminate one's pregnancy." Obscure phrases, like "the penumbras of the Bill of Rights." January after January we take time to remember these words, and the carnage they have caused.
In an act of breathtaking judicial arrogance, the Supreme Court of the United States on January 23, 1973, "discovered" a right to abortion in the Constitution which had, theretofore, been overlooked by lawyers, judges and scholars for almost 200 years. As a consequence of the court's ruling, over 47 million unborn children have perished at the hands of abortionists in this country. Thousands of women have suffered physical and emotional injury. The entire culture has been poisoned by the rise of a "disposable man" ethic that jeopardizes the elderly, infirm, and handicapped. That ethic has given rise to a spirit of utilitarianism that undergirds a ghoulish form of medical "research" that requires the destruction of human embryos for the "greater good." No single decision in American jurisprudence has resulted in more damage to the American people than Roe v. Wade.
In addition to its social implications, the Roe decision has had profound political implications. The opinion effectively amended the U. S. Constitution without going through the amendatory process. Amendments to the Constitution are not a bad thing. We have had a number of them in the 200 plus years that our Constitution has been in existence. Anticipating the need for modification to the document over time, our forefathers created a democratic process for amendment when large numbers of the American people felt change was in order.
Article V of the Constitution sets out the process by which an amendment is added to the Constitution. Two methods may be employed: one originating in Congress, the other originating in state legislatures. In Roe, however, these procedures were completely short-circuited. Rather than following the prescribed process, the Court aborted it, twisting the words of the Constitution to mean that which they did not.
We are on profoundly dangerous ground when America allows Judges to rewrite the Constitution through the process of interpretation. A passage from Lewis Carroll's book, "Through the Looking-Glass, And What Alice Found There," comes to mind:
"When I use a word it means just what I choose it to mean, neither more nor less," said Humpty Dumpty. "The question is," replied Alice, "whether you can make words mean so many different things." "The question is," replied Humpty Dumpty, "which is to be master -- that's all."
Since Roe, a number of judges on the Supreme Court (as well as judges of other inferior courts) have operated with a Humpty Dumpty mentality, considering themselves the "masters" of words. These judges view the words of the Constitution as no longer having objective, propositional meaning. They are mere wax which can be molded and shaped to mean whatever the judges want them to mean. Judicial activism, however, leads to the end of the democratic process. If the document itself is infinitely flexible, if the written words do not have objective meaning, if they are to be interpreted only in light of the subjective whims of judges, then there is no point in having a Constitution at all. Thomas Jefferson understood this when he declared, "Our peculiar security is in the possession of a written Constitution. Let us not make it a blank paper by construction."
Mr. Jefferson knew that there was security in having a written Constitution, a written document that could be easily referenced in a dispute. Notwithstanding that, he foresaw that some individuals would try to render the document meaningless by interpreting it in absurd ways. His fears have been realized. Judicial activists have done enormous damage to our constitutional form of government by embracing relativism and the concept of "deconstruction", which maintains that the meaning of a text is fluid and culturally bound. Advocates of the so-called "living" Constitution argue that the meaning of the Constitution is different today than it was in 1787, and it may change again tomorrow...depending on how Supreme Court justices read it.
If judges are given the ability to change the meaning of the text by making the words their servants, they will become the masters, not just of the words, but of the American people as well. If judges are to have the final say as to all things constitutional, if they can make the words mean whatever they choose them to meanthen the American people will have ceded ultimate authority to that single branch of government. The United States of America will no longer be a constitutional republic. It will be nothing more than a judicial oligarchy.
The fight against Roe, therefore, is more than a fight for the lives of the unborn. It is also a fight for the survival of our constitutional republic. Our forefathers bled and died to give us a republic. We should not let a small group of judicial activists steal it from us.
The damage count is rapidly approaching 50 MILLION victims.
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And hardened hearts.
Indeed....
susie
Would further argue that the case inadvertently destroyed small government republicanism. Big government religious voters who couldn't stomach the left's embrace of Roe V Wade migrated to the GOP. While electoral success, esp in the Bible Belt, for the GOP has been one consequence, the newly minted GOPers still held on to their love of do goodism by government force. "Compasionate Conservatism" is the inevitable consequence which is harmful to the GOP and to the country.
And Humpty Dumpty was himself an egg. An egg makes us think of an oval poultry product, firm and opaquely white, unable to tell us whether it contains a fully formed baby bird or just the ingredients for an omelette.
But the human egg (or embryo/fetus) is talking to us now through the ultrasound screen, something not as imaginable by the feminists in the 1970s. That little baby is kicking, rolling, and sucking its thumb into the hearts and minds of all Americans. One day soon all but the most beastly will agree: inside the woman's opaque round belly there grows a fully formed human being entitled to the rights we all enjoy.
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That's near the end of pregnancy. I know, 3D ultrasound is amazing. But the new machines show such DETAIL to the 7-12 week EMBRYOS that even there, we are seeing some change in the hearts and minds.
What kind of human mind must one have to be able to rationalize words to cause a moral wrong to become a legal right?
It's really quite simple to understand from a logic perspective. All it takes is an open mind. I was pro-life even when I was a dummycrat because I knew of the differences between a foetus and an embryo. I knew always that a foetus merited every protection of the law. Its only a matter of hours that distinguish an embryo from a foetus. So if a foetus deserves protection, so does an embryo. Similary backwards to a zygote and a blastosphere.
Now, as 4D photography becomes more compelling in furthering our argument, look for the baby killers to say that that photography hurts the babies.
I would argue that Bible believing Christians do not support government sponsored "do goodism". Charity comes from the hearts of individuals. Government sponsored charity cannot work because it has no heart, no soul. I cannot think of a single program that has actually worked as promised. Maybe someone can cite one.
sheesh, where were you when we needed you on this thread?
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1760546/posts
Do I need to go back to some of those idiotic faith based initiatives threads as well?
The fight against Roe, therefore, is more than a fight for the lives of the unborn. It is also a fight for the survival of our constitutional republic.
And so many people - self-styled conservatives even - are wont to assign to this issue equal weight to minimum wage, tax policy, and trade. I fear for the Republic.
PING
Yeah, ultrasound affects their hearing potentially, some say. And that is WAYYY worse than the mercy killing of a D&C. They won't be able to keep that logic up for long (without the help of the lying MSM).
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