DGS49
Diamond Member
It doesn't take a Constitutional scholar to know that the Federal courts, and specifically the U.S. Supreme Court, have no role in making public policy. This is basically the role of the legislature, and occasionally of the President/Governor.
And yet, when it published the decision of Roe v. Wade, the Court purported to define the policy for abortion for the entire United States, with chronological trigger points setting limits for the various states to act independently.
Is this not bullshit? The Court has no such power.
Then you look at the purely Constitutional issue: the foundation of the abortion policy declaration was a "right of privacy" that appears nowhere in the Constitution, and in fact does not exist.
Any lawyer who expresses any disagreement with this apparent reversal is either a fraud or an idiot.
And yet, when it published the decision of Roe v. Wade, the Court purported to define the policy for abortion for the entire United States, with chronological trigger points setting limits for the various states to act independently.
Is this not bullshit? The Court has no such power.
Then you look at the purely Constitutional issue: the foundation of the abortion policy declaration was a "right of privacy" that appears nowhere in the Constitution, and in fact does not exist.
Any lawyer who expresses any disagreement with this apparent reversal is either a fraud or an idiot.