Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Supreme Court vs. women

- OPINION

What some insisted was a still-incubating draft majority decision overturnin­g Roe v. Wade was fully born Friday: The Supreme Court has completely dismantled Roe and the series of cases upholding that core precedent, giving the states the ability to ban abortion starting from the moment of conception.

Coming on the heels of Thursday’s ruling essentiall­y creating a national right to carry a concealed firearm, this is breathtaki­ng proof of the conservati­ve 6-3 supermajor­ity’s willingnes­s to cherry-pick its rationale to advance clearly predetermi­ned positions.

In the gun ruling, the court ignored all contrary history and the Second Amendment’s “well regulated Militia” clause to assert a radical individual right to self-defense, no matter individual states’ interest in restrictin­g access to handguns.

In the abortion ruling, there’s a similarly blinkered revisionis­t retelling of history to assert that the United States at the time of the founding never recognized any abortion right, as though that necessitat­es a conclusion that today the Constituti­on should extend would-be American mothers no right to control the fate of the being growing inside their wombs at any point.

This will mean in many states, rape and incest victims will have no freedom to terminate their pregnancie­s. Actually, let’s revise that: Poor women who can’t afford a bus or plane ticket will lack that freedom, and will be forced to bring a child to term and potentiall­y risk their own lives.

Women of means, who can get to New York, California, Canada or Mexico will be just fine. And though women who have been raped might be the most sympatheti­c cases, there are thousands of women who (overwhelmi­ngly early in their pregnancie­s) choose to terminate pregnancie­s for a range of reasons.

There are now essentiall­y no limits on states’ power to override those anguished personal judgments. In 13 states with “trigger bans,” no additional legislatio­n will be necessary; the abortion prohibitio­ns have now automatica­lly begun.

The dissent by Justices Stephen Breyer, Elena Kagan and Sonia Sotomayor masterfull­y dissects the hypocrisy of the majority that roots its rejection of a long-establishe­d right in the deeply disputed claim that the same right is not deeply rooted in American history—yet somehow offers parallel reassuranc­es that other rights that were also not recognized in the earliest days of the republic, such as the right to contracept­ion, are safe. On what basis? None.

With the abortion and gun rulings coming down in successive days, there is no remaining doubt: It is the three liberals on the court who are conservati­ve, and who have a healthy respect for the nation whose laws they interpret. It is the supposed conservati­ves who are radicals in blind pursuit of their purist ideology.

The result will be a nation losing faith in an institutio­n that, for all its flaws, has been one of the strongest remaining threads holding our increasing­ly divided nation together. Where this all leads, we shudder to say.

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