Entry: Choosing Life for the Right Reasons Tuesday, January 24, 2006



The 1973 Roe v. Wade decision made by the Supreme Court was arguably the worst abuse of judicial power ever committed in this country. No other Supreme Court decision has caused so much death, nor caused so many people to become so callous about the taking of innocent life. Roe v. Wade was a severe blow to the moral fiber of America... which is why Liberals must fight so fiercely to protect it from Americans, even after all these years. Abortion is THE issue in any political ring, despite Democrat protests that they don't have a litmus test for candidates and judges. That's a bit like the College of Cardinals claiming they don't have a litmus test to approve only Catholic candidates for Pope.

The Supreme Court's decision was based on a right to privacy that is presumed to exist, one of the "others retained by the people" mentioned in the Ninth Amendment. The "right to abortion" was supposedly discovered in mysterious "emanations" of "penumbras" surrounding the Bill of Rights. In other words, the Bill of Rights doesn't actually mention abortion at all, but the Court wanted to find a way to force the Federal government to protect it.

The Bill of Rights, one must remember, is not a document that grants rights to the people... instead, its purpose is to limit the Federal government's power to encroach upon the rights of both people and states. If an issue isn't specifically mentioned in the Constitution, the Federal government has no automatic right of jurisdiction in the matter. The Tenth Amendment specifically states: "The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the states respectively, or to the people."

The Supreme Court decided that abortion was too important to let the hoi polloi have a say, and removed the right of either states or people to decide the question by creating a new Federal power with a pen stroke. No matter what you may think of abortion, Roe v. Wade is a bad ruling: judicial activism at its worst.

And worse, it's a bad ruling based on a falsehood, one that has become so essential to Liberals that they repudiate any evidence that runs the danger of altering the conclusion. Abortion can only be legal as long as unborn children aren't considered human. That's the debate we really need to have.

Many Liberals continue to insist that an unborn child is about the same, medically speaking, as a wart or tumor. One doesn't need permission to have a wart removed, nor does a tumor have any constitutionally protected rights. As long as they can pretend that an unborn child isn't a human being (though they never seem to say what it might be, in that case), the Left can argue in favor of abortion. They call this "choice," as though opponents of abortion are opposed to making choices. The difference is that abortion opponents usually believe that "choice" is what you make when you get into a bed or a car and the clothes come off. In the real world, choices may lead to unwanted consequences, and killing an innocent life you created is no way to avoid them.

So how can we know whether an unborn child is human, and thus protected by law? Science and reason may help us find the correct answer. To be human is to be a member of the species Homo sapiens sapiens. One's species is determined by one's unique genetic makeup, which is formed at conception and never alters (at least, not in nature). An unborn child is, therefore, demonstrably human -- a living creature with unique human DNA -- and he or she should be entitled to at least some legal protection.

Returning to the Bill of Rights, the Fifth Amendment states: "No person shall be ... deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law." Allowing one person to deprive another of life without due process is a violation of the latter's Fifth Amendment rights. Taking the lives of the most helpless of human beings because they are inconvenient -- the reason almost all abortions are performed -- is simply wrong.

The Left's biggest fear is that Judge Sam Alito, if confirmed to the Supreme Court, will overturn Roe v. Wade. The ruling could only be overturned if a state abortion ban like the one proposed in Ohio is challenged by pro-abortion groups, and comes before the Supreme Court. Even if the Court does overturn it, the only effect would be to return the abortion decision to the states, where it belongs. When that happens, the damage done to the Constitution in 1973 will be healed, and the debate over the fate of unborn children can begin in earnest, instead of being suppressed by fictional constitutional "rights." 

Many state legislatures, more responsive to actual voters than the Federal government, would regulate or abolish abortion. In 2004, the Associated Press reported that thirty states were preparing to ban abortion if Roe v. Wade was overturned. (Of course, the story may have been exaggerated in an attempt to frighten voters into defeating President Bush's re-election.) Some states might throw the question open for the people to decide by direct referendum.

That's how the Founders intended such unanticipated questions be addressed, but the thought of regular people making real choices is a fearful thing to Liberals. It's strange to see people who supposedly advocate "choice" insisting that people have no say in their own laws.

   17 comments

SalGal
January 25, 2006   10:24 AM PST
 
Amen!
RA
January 25, 2006   02:48 PM PST
 
Roe is unconstitutional. Anyone who says differently is either ignorant or willing to subvert the constitution for their own purposes. Of course being dishonest has been a liberal hallmark.
killthelibs
January 25, 2006   09:55 PM PST
 
Hell yeah, amen is right. Less talk and more action is what's needed here, the sinners of judicial activism should be brought to task.
Name
January 27, 2006   09:07 PM PST
 
Quite the demented worldview you live in. Do the world a favor and inflict a self-abortion on yourself.
JM
January 27, 2006   09:08 PM PST
 
I love the way Liberals characterise "responsible" as "demented." Aren't they a hoot?
Daedalus
January 27, 2006   09:15 PM PST
 
I heard a story at a sushi restaurant the other day by some loud guy at another table. The story was about a guy who wanted to start an online ministry. The guy was talking to this minister about his ideas for the website and then turned to questions of faith. Of course, the issue of abortion came up, as it seems to be at the tip of ever gop's tongue. The minister said he was pro-choice, believing it is a woman's right to choose what to do with her body. He then proceeded to say that he was morally against abortion, however, blowing the sushi eater's mind. The guy couldn't grasp the idea that one could be pro-choice and anti-abortion. This leads me to the only logical conclusion about this guy's line of thinking: he must honestly think that pro-choice people WANT abortion to happen, like abortion is a good thing. Now, you have to be a complete idiot to believe there are people out there who are pro-abortion. What these people do not understand is the difference between free will and suffering the moral consequences verses making everything you don't like a crime. The concept of free will is too abstract for many of the gop sheeple, which is evident in such things as "Justice Sunday," Samuel Alito, FCC, RIAA, gay marriage constitutional amendments, anti-flag burning amendments, and the list goes on.

Free will is closely associated with the concept of moral responsibility. By legislating away a right to choose, you are also throwing moral responsibility out the window. Oddly enough, the gops claim to be the party of morality and personal responsibility, yet they want to take that morality away every time someone looks at them wrongly.
JM
January 27, 2006   09:58 PM PST
 
I'm at a loss to understand your strawman argument about anyone legislating away freedom of choice. Sex doesn't happen all by itself -- people choose to have it. Try choosing responsibly. Try choosing to act like a human being instead of an animal. Try choosing not to kill a helpless human being because its existence is inconvenient to you. How about that for choice?
JM
January 27, 2006   10:03 PM PST
 
To everyone else: notice how this Lib, as per usual, shoehorns in as many talking points as possible. What in the name of all that's holy the RIAA and flag burning have to do with killing helpless children, no one but his therapist will ever know.
Aaron
January 27, 2006   11:07 PM PST
 
Daedalus's little tale of a conversation he claimed to overhear in a sushi place with a person who might have been a minister (of what religion?) who stated that he was in favor of abortion sure sounds like a fish story to me.
Ruth Atnip
January 28, 2006   02:52 AM PST
 
The article "Choosing Life for the Right Reasons" was one of the best informative messages I have ever read on Roe. It tell the truth in a way that makes sense, and also makes those who want to have abortions 'legally' without guilt feelings angry because they have to face this truth!
I was thinking about a statement made recently that made the point about ''workers in the US" being few in our generation, and might be fewer in the future. Could it be that Roe has caused this great loss in 'workers' in our nation? I don't doubt one bit that this is the case! This nation may have to face great difficulty in the future in many ways because of the 'sin' of 'murder' many have embraced as 'law' which really is 'judicial activism' at its worst, as the article stated! May God give us time to repent and turn our nation around. It seems that finally many are waking up to the facts of 'life' about 'babies and where they come from'!!!
Hopefully it isn't too late for God's wrath to be averted!
Children are 'gifts' from God, and He sees every one of them, those who make it into this life and those who are murdered before they get here, and this is being recorded with names and dates, and a time of reckoning is coming for those who are choosing 'death' for the unborn, and those who are upholding those 'deaths' as 'good' when they are 'evil' to the core!

cherchu
elmnine
February 8, 2006   01:03 AM PST
 
Daedalus

"The concept of free will is too abstract for many of the gop sheeple"

Nah the concept is just too abstract for an idiot like yourself. Using your logic, we shouldn't punish people for murder (murdering adults, that is hehe) since punishing them would impede their ability to make choices lol.


"gay marriage constitutional amendments"

Completely irelevant to the rest of your fallacious post. Banning gay marriage doesn't hinder free will, the gov isn't stopping gays from living together or having a "marriage-like" ceremony etc. All it does is stop the gov from ENCOURAGING their lifestyle choices.
d'Brit
February 13, 2006   03:18 AM PST
 
I have thought long and hard about abortion. Here is the view I have come too.

As a christian, I am personally anti-abortion but as a rationalist and American, AT THIS TIME, I am reluctantly socially pro choice.

Cavalier aludes to the core of the issue when he says, "Abortion can only be legal as long as unborn children aren't considered human. That's the debate we really need to have."

The issue is whether we are dealing with a fetus or an unborn child.

Whether, <i>prior to birth</i>, it is a <i>person</i>. Whether it is an IT or if he/she already has an individual soul. In order to be a person prior to birth, it must have a soul, it must have conscious self-awareness.

Christians generally believe that 'personhood' begins at conception. This is a religious belief, it is common Christian dogma.

It is my understanding that Jews do not hold the same view, so clearly the Old Testament can be interpreted differently by believers.

Unfortunately, at this time, Science cannot help us decide the issue.

Science cannot offer proof of the soul and cannot even offer proof of conscious self-awareness prior to birth.

Therein lies the problem, in that without <i>independant</i> proof either way, imposing an anti-abortion law upon other people, <i>who do not share a religious belief is in fact using the state to impose aspects of our religion upon them</i>.

I know this is hard to accept, and if in fact, it is a fully formed (spiritually) human being, then abortion is murder.

However, IF in fact, the soul (personhood) does not enter the baby until it takes its first breath for instance, then prior to birth, it is 'just' the womans body.

Regardless of how 'likely' it may be that an unborn fetus is in fact a person, we cannot maintain separation of church and state when we make laws based upon religious beliefs that are objectively unprovable.

Since we cannot KNOW, in the sense of being able to prove to an unbeliever, that prior to birth, it is an unborn child rather than a fetus, as Americans we have to allow individual choice and leave it to their individual concience and ultimately their judgement before God.

Websters define lying as <i>knowingly </i> telling an untruth.

I think it likely that some honestly believe it to be a fetus. Though what they could base that belief upon, I can't guess.

Christians believe that every woman (and man) has to answer before God and God KNOWS what in their hearts they <i>truely</i> believe. For those who believe it to be a child but choose abortion because of a desire to avoid the inconvenience of an unwanted child, they have committed a terrible sin and only in Gods forgiveness do they have any hope.

JM
February 13, 2006   07:40 AM PST
 
>Unfortunately, at this time,
>Science cannot help us decide the
>issue.

All one has to do is check the DNA. If it's human DNA, it's human. If it's gazelle DNA, it's a gazelle. Doesn't get any simpler than that, d'Brit. No need to bring religion into it at all.
Name
February 13, 2006   07:10 PM PST
 
"All one has to do is check the DNA. If it's human DNA, it's human. If it's gazelle DNA, it's a gazelle. Doesn't get any simpler than that, d'Brit. No need to bring religion into it at all. JM"

I hadn't realized it was that simple ;-) Makes you wonder what all the fuss is about.

Since 98% of the objections to abortion are based in religious beliefs that a fetus is a baby, with no difference pre/post I thought it best to address those reasons.

As for human DNA as a determinant factor, my hair and fingernails are human but they are not what makes me 'human'

The issue is whether the life growing in the mothers womb is a 'person' or simply the vessel being prepared for implantation of the 'essence' that makes us a person.
JM
February 13, 2006   07:25 PM PST
 
Your hair and fingernails do not have their own unique DNA, nor are they living creatures in any sense of the word. I'm not even going to try and base a defense of the unborn on some mystical 'essence' no one can detect when science so easily affords us a clear answer.
Name
February 13, 2006   09:31 PM PST
 
As I thought I made clear, I'm not trying to limit a discussion of abortion to a strictly religious context.

The majority of the American public support a womans having the right to make a personal choice' in regard to abortion.

It will be illuminating (for you) in seeing how far you get in convincing those in favor of 'a womans right to choose' to change their minds on purely scientific grounds.

Good luck with that approach.
JM
February 13, 2006   10:52 PM PST
 
It's almost impossibe to argue with pure science and reason... unless, of course, one is a Liberal.

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