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Here's how Kobe protects the children

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Comments

  • SFGbobSFGbob Member Posts: 33,113

    SFGbob said:

    Goduckies said:

    SFGbob said:

    Goduckies said:

    Wtf

    That's now the official position of the entire Rat party. They reject any limitation on abortion. They actually made this part of the party platform in 2016. The party of infanticide cares about the children.
    I'm for limited abortion choice(when you take a pill only) but that's it... this shit is barbaric
    First 3 months. Allowing an abortion at 8 months is nothing less than infanticide. Which is what all people who care about children do, right Kobe?
    We are in agreement here. Although philosophically there is never a morally logical or "right" place at which to draw the line - I've thought, read and talked about this for a long time - I've concluded that, although there's no reconciling it, first 3 mos makes sense and is a necessary albeit unpleasant reality for our society.
    It's a reasonable compromise on a very shitty issue.
  • Pitchfork51Pitchfork51 Member Posts: 27,086
    I'm still in favor of mandatory abortion
  • UW_Doog_BotUW_Doog_Bot Member, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 16,210 Swaye's Wigwam

    Where we stand is the Supreme Court says legal in the first trimester

    Oklahoma with the over reach. Colorado same. Guess which is the BIG issue in the coming months



    Both Big 8 teams are wrong
    Look at this centrist hot take
    You need the Supreme Court to ban abortion

    States can regulate it 3 months plus one day

    That's a legal hot take

    Whether the mythical and tightly crafted "right to privacy" used by the Court actually exists is another story

    After covid and vaccines especially
    Race channeling Billy Rehnquist and Byron the Wizard Buff in the great dissent, say that right to privacy is made up (which, going beyond abortion, is an interesting concept itself):

    In his dissenting opinion, Justice William H. Rehnquist argued that the framers of the 14th Amendment did not intend for it to protect a right of privacy, a right which they did not recognize and that they definitely did not intend for it to protect a woman’s decision to have an abortion. Justice Rehnquist further argued that the only right to privacy is that which is protected by the Fourth Amendment’s prohibition of unreasonable searches and seizures. The Ninth Amendment does not apply here, he wrote.

    Finally, he concluded that because this issue required a careful balance of the interests of the woman against the interests of the state, it was not an appropriate decision for the Court to make, but instead was a question that should have been left up to state legislatures to resolve.

    Pretend lawyer coming in hot.

    The entire "right to privacy" is indeed made up as they interpreted it into being.

    However, I think it should exist as an extension of the right to property.

    There's a reason the government doesn't want the right to property to be upheld and rolled back to what the founders defined it as though.
  • RaceBannonRaceBannon Member, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 107,737 Founders Club
    You can't have a surveillance state and a right to privacy

    And we have a surveillance state
  • creepycougcreepycoug Member Posts: 23,686

    Where we stand is the Supreme Court says legal in the first trimester

    Oklahoma with the over reach. Colorado same. Guess which is the BIG issue in the coming months



    Both Big 8 teams are wrong
    Look at this centrist hot take
    You need the Supreme Court to ban abortion

    States can regulate it 3 months plus one day

    That's a legal hot take

    Whether the mythical and tightly crafted "right to privacy" used by the Court actually exists is another story

    After covid and vaccines especially
    Race channeling Billy Rehnquist and Byron the Wizard Buff in the great dissent, say that right to privacy is made up (which, going beyond abortion, is an interesting concept itself):

    In his dissenting opinion, Justice William H. Rehnquist argued that the framers of the 14th Amendment did not intend for it to protect a right of privacy, a right which they did not recognize and that they definitely did not intend for it to protect a woman’s decision to have an abortion. Justice Rehnquist further argued that the only right to privacy is that which is protected by the Fourth Amendment’s prohibition of unreasonable searches and seizures. The Ninth Amendment does not apply here, he wrote.

    Finally, he concluded that because this issue required a careful balance of the interests of the woman against the interests of the state, it was not an appropriate decision for the Court to make, but instead was a question that should have been left up to state legislatures to resolve.

    Pretend lawyer coming in hot.

    The entire "right to privacy" is indeed made up as they interpreted it into being.

    However, I think it should exist as an extension of the right to property.

    There's a reason the government doesn't want the right to property to be upheld and rolled back to what the founders defined it as though.
    Although it seems like a pretty good idea.
  • MikeDamoneMikeDamone Member Posts: 37,781

    Where we stand is the Supreme Court says legal in the first trimester

    Oklahoma with the over reach. Colorado same. Guess which is the BIG issue in the coming months



    Both Big 8 teams are wrong
    Look at this centrist hot take
    You need the Supreme Court to ban abortion

    States can regulate it 3 months plus one day

    That's a legal hot take

    Whether the mythical and tightly crafted "right to privacy" used by the Court actually exists is another story

    After covid and vaccines especially
    Race channeling Billy Rehnquist and Byron the Wizard Buff in the great dissent, say that right to privacy is made up (which, going beyond abortion, is an interesting concept itself):

    In his dissenting opinion, Justice William H. Rehnquist argued that the framers of the 14th Amendment did not intend for it to protect a right of privacy, a right which they did not recognize and that they definitely did not intend for it to protect a woman’s decision to have an abortion. Justice Rehnquist further argued that the only right to privacy is that which is protected by the Fourth Amendment’s prohibition of unreasonable searches and seizures. The Ninth Amendment does not apply here, he wrote.

    Finally, he concluded that because this issue required a careful balance of the interests of the woman against the interests of the state, it was not an appropriate decision for the Court to make, but instead was a question that should have been left up to state legislatures to resolve.

    Pretend lawyer coming in hot.

    The entire "right to privacy" is indeed made up as they interpreted it into being.

    However, I think it should exist as an extension of the right to property.

    There's a reason the government doesn't want the right to property to be upheld and rolled back to what the founders defined it as though.
    Right to privacy has a more constitutional basis than many other rights. Such as the right to an abortion, for instance.
  • UW_Doog_BotUW_Doog_Bot Member, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 16,210 Swaye's Wigwam

    Where we stand is the Supreme Court says legal in the first trimester

    Oklahoma with the over reach. Colorado same. Guess which is the BIG issue in the coming months



    Both Big 8 teams are wrong
    Look at this centrist hot take
    You need the Supreme Court to ban abortion

    States can regulate it 3 months plus one day

    That's a legal hot take

    Whether the mythical and tightly crafted "right to privacy" used by the Court actually exists is another story

    After covid and vaccines especially
    Race channeling Billy Rehnquist and Byron the Wizard Buff in the great dissent, say that right to privacy is made up (which, going beyond abortion, is an interesting concept itself):

    In his dissenting opinion, Justice William H. Rehnquist argued that the framers of the 14th Amendment did not intend for it to protect a right of privacy, a right which they did not recognize and that they definitely did not intend for it to protect a woman’s decision to have an abortion. Justice Rehnquist further argued that the only right to privacy is that which is protected by the Fourth Amendment’s prohibition of unreasonable searches and seizures. The Ninth Amendment does not apply here, he wrote.

    Finally, he concluded that because this issue required a careful balance of the interests of the woman against the interests of the state, it was not an appropriate decision for the Court to make, but instead was a question that should have been left up to state legislatures to resolve.

    Pretend lawyer coming in hot.

    The entire "right to privacy" is indeed made up as they interpreted it into being.

    However, I think it should exist as an extension of the right to property.

    There's a reason the government doesn't want the right to property to be upheld and rolled back to what the founders defined it as though.
    Although it seems like a pretty good idea.
    As I said, the founders definition of property would easily include a "right to privacy" as part of the right to property.

    The government doesn't want an expansive definition of property.

    It's actually one of the worst violations of the constitution perpetrated but no one realizes it because of the change of definition. Thought control a la 1984.
  • KaepskneeKaepsknee Member Posts: 14,886
    Yes. Let’s bring abortion front and center for the mid terms. Always a winning issue for the right.

    Many here are just playing for the dash, but few want to do what it takes play for the cash.
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