Chattanooga Times Free Press

THANK THE DEMOCRATS

- CREATORS.COM

Progressiv­es claim no judge should have the power to tell them they can or cannot have an abortion. They do not want to admit it, but they are agreeing with Justice Samuel Alito’s point in the leaked Supreme Court draft opinion of Dobbs vs. Jackson Women’s Health. The court should never have entered the abortion fray.

In 1973, seven men on the United States Supreme Court shut down a debate over abortion in the country. There had never been a right to an abortion in American jurisprude­nce. Some states were slowly moving that way through legislativ­e acts. But overwhelmi­ngly, Americans did not have the right to an abortion.

The rights to speech, religion and assembly are all found explicitly in the Constituti­on. The right to gun ownership can be found explicitly in the Constituti­on. The right to privacy can easily be surmised to be in the Constituti­on. An abortion right was a conjuring act by black-robed, life-tenured masters of the universe empowered by the infallible language of “because we say so.”

The Supreme Court is now on the verge of righting that wrong. If you listen carefully to the conversati­ons and hysterics on television, the arguments are all about the policy choices of abortion, the costs to women and the injustice of the Supreme Court taking away a right no one can find in the Constituti­on or the history of American jurisprude­nce. No one talks about the children being killed. As importantl­y, no one talks about the constituti­onal jurisprude­nce. Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg conceded Roe was a terribly decided case even as she supported abortion rights.

Since 1973, the pro-life movement has done what the pro-abortion movement has not done, i.e., play by the rules of the democratic process. The pro-abortion movement has hidden behind courts and progressiv­e regulators. Pro-lifers started electing pro-life legislator­s. They elected pro-life presidents. They advanced pro-life senators. They pushed for and fostered an academic field of law that trained new lawyers who would become pro-life judges who would advance to the United States Supreme Court.

In the late 1980s, pro-abortion activists caught on and began to fight back in the Senate by blocking Judge Robert Bork. Polite hearings on judicial nomination­s became contentiou­s. Still, pro-lifers worked. They had setbacks like David Souter. They had advances like Clarence Thomas. They had the weight of intellectu­al arguments from Antonin Scalia.

The pro-life movement kept advancing even as the national media worked with the left against them. With the rise of the internet, it became harder for the media to cover up the stories of monsters like Kermit Gosnell or evil acts like former President Barack Obama suing nuns to force their complicity in the abortion industry.

Ironically, it would have all been for nothing had Sen. Harry Reid and the Democrats not broken the Senate’s own rules. They scuttled the filibuster for nomination­s in the Senate. That paved the way for Justices Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett. It paved the way for a host of pro-life judges on courts of appeals. Though a hardball tactic, even refusing a hearing on Merrick Garland followed the rules and precedents of the Senate. The prolife movement’s apparent victory in Dobbs, despite all the work, would not have come but for Reid and the Democrats throwing away the filibuster. God has a sense of humor.

 ?? ?? Erick Erickson
Erick Erickson

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