Los Angeles Times

Roe vs. Wade is ‘partisan stench’

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Re “A case that hurts women and the Supreme Court,” Opinion, Dec. 2

Harry Litman’s column actually makes a good case for why Roe vs. Wade should be overturned.

First, we need to discard the extreme positions — those of people who reject all abortions in all cases, and those wedded to “my body, my choice,” or abortion any time, anywhere. We need to decide somewhere between conception and birth as a limit.

In 1973, Roe did this with trimesters, and in 1992, Planned Parenthood vs. Casey changed that to viability with a little “undue burden” thrown in. Now, Mississipp­i did not outlaw abortion, as 15 weeks is hardly draconian and is common among many of our peer nations.

So, who decides? Litman appoints the Supreme Court to decide “cases [that] drew lines grounded in medicine and roughly workable in practice.” But isn’t that the practical judgment we normally assign to the state legislatur­es and Congress?

Justice Sonia Sotomayor says overturnin­g Roe will raise a “partisan stench,” but the Supreme Court has been in a partisan stench ever since Roe.

I believe there is a good chance the institutio­nalist Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. will lead a mostly united court that concludes that the only way to purge the partisan stench is to reject what created it, namely, Roe vs. Wade.

William N. Hoke Manhattan Beach

During Wednesday’s arguments, Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh said that if the Supreme Court upholds the Mississipp­i ban on abortion after 15 weeks of pregnancy, “there’ll be different access [to abortion] in Mississipp­i and New York, Alabama and California.”

He seemed to think that that would be OK.

Um, Justice Kavanaugh? The last time a class of people had fewer rights in Mississipp­i than in New York, it didn’t end well. Pamela Eilerson Malibu

There is already a longstandi­ng legal precedent that life begins not at 15 weeks but when the child is born. That is the U.S. tax code.

Infants are only deductible from the date they are actually born. This is a long-standing precedent.

In fact, I have my fatherin-law’s tax returns from 1942, and my husband was only deductible after Aug. 5, when he was born. Judy Kleinman

Pasadena

It seems very odd that the people who do not want the government to require them to get a vaccine or wear a mask feel that the government can demand that a woman bear a child.

If they win on Roe vs. Wade, maybe they could then be forced to wear a mask and get vaccinated or go to jail.

John Katics Simi Valley

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