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- #61
Lol,
Abortion is constitutional and always be...I don't like it but that is the way the cookie crumbles.
That's your conclusion.
Please share the thought processes you used to reach it.
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Lol,
Abortion is constitutional and always be...I don't like it but that is the way the cookie crumbles.
Where in the constitution says that abortion is illegal?
You have presented them elsewhere, you failed, and I look forward to you offering the opportunity to redeem yourself.Where in the constitution says that abortion is illegal?
I will present the Conservative Constitutional arguments here very soon in a new thread and it will be linked to this one.
Your conclusion is that it should remain legal. I am hoping you will share your thought process on that.
Will you?
Given how abortion was legal and common when the Constitution was written, the writers plainly had no problem with it. It was just common sense to everyone that fetuses weren't people. Still is, despite historically recent pro-life revisionism that tries to pretend otherwise.
So that is your thought process on the matter?
Slavery was legal and women had no right to vote when the Constitution was written too.
How does your appeal to tradition line of thinking fall in line with those being changed over time?
So that is your thought process on the matter?
On the matter of the Constitution, yes.
Slavery was legal and women had no right to vote when the Constitution was written too.
That's why the Constitution had to be amended.
How does your appeal to tradition line of thinking fall in line with those being changed over time?
It's in complete agreement with the process of amending the Constitution.
The question is, given your previously stated thought process of appealing to tradition, would you have seen the injustices of slavery (if you were living in that time) to see that an amendment was warranted
No doubt that there were many who had mindsets likes yours back then who thought that slavery issues was "settled law" and in their mind, no corrections were needed.