Alito opinion errors
This qualifies
as merely a dissenting opinion to Roe.
Roe gives a 3 step test for how states should craft their legislation
regarding abortion. That is surely
within the purview of the courts when reviewing legislation. If you allow Mississippi to set up a test,
why not the federal courts? It is a
privileges and immunities issue to give citizens some protection against the
impact of a broad array of rules, and disparate impact, state by state, on a
matter of private consequence.
It is true
that no right to abortion appears in the Constitution’s text, but neither does
the right to carry an AR-15, or authority for the FAA. So are we to jettison all of the
jurisprudence that has sustained the relevance of the Constitution because 5
people find Roe offensive? Or should we
heed Edmund Randolph’s guide to the drafters of the Constitution – “to insert essential principles only, lest the
operations of government should be clogged by rendering those provisions permanent
and unalterable, which ought to be accommodated to times and events”. (The right to privacy is at least provided for in the 4th
amendment.)
Roe provides
a standard for crafting state laws; it does not approve of abortion in all circumstances. It does not prohibit states from passing laws
that prohibit abortion. With Roe gone, there
will be no standard available to states in considering legislation. What about exceptions for incest and
rape? What about other cases where the
Court has intervened in state legislative matters to correct issues? Are we reverting to the Reconstruction Court
which disemboweled the 13th, 14th and 15th
amendments?
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