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Old 02-26-2006, 04:47 AM   #1 (permalink)
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South Dakota Abortion Bill

I was hoping we could discuss the likely fallout of this...should it make it to Law. Both the plus and minus of the resulting impact on those who live in this state, and possibly this country:

"The Bill

There are various points to the bill, including that the Legislature finds:

* ... the State of South Dakota has a compelling and paramount interest in the preservation and protection of all human life and finds that the guarantee of due process of law under the South Dakota Bill of Rights applies equally to born and unborn human beings
* ... that the life of a human being begins when the ovum is fertilized by male sperm
* ... abortion procedures impose significant risks to the health and life of the pregnant mother
* ...a pregnant mother, together with the unborn human child, each possess a natural and inalienable right to life under the South Dakota Bill of Rights

The bill includes no exception for rape or incest victims, but does allow an exception for the life of the mother and for a pregnancy that poses a “serious risk of substantial and irreversible impairment of a major bodily function” to the mother. Doctors who perform abortions that do not meet these exceptions will be charged with a felony.

This bill is being called the most restrictive anti-abortion measure in the nation."


http://womensissues.about.com/cs/abo...rtionban_2.htm

In my mind is the detriment to a rape victim, or the mother who finds her developing fetus has congental defects...and will likely die at birth. Both these women will be forced to carry to term regardless of the result. While I personally find Abortion to be a negative aspect of society....I find the above legislation even more bitter to swallow. Truly this is a very tough issue, and though we have discussed it many times in these boards.....the current bill could impact this country in many ways, and is worthy of attention.
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Old 02-26-2006, 06:53 AM   #2 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by tecoyah
In my mind is the detriment to a rape victim, or the mother who finds her developing fetus has congental defects...and will likely die at birth. Both these women will be forced to carry to term regardless of the result.
While the mindset that is against legal elective abortions but for legal abortions in these particular cases is understandable, I don't agree with it.

There could certainly be benefits to carrying out the act when the pregancy is a result of rape or when the fetus has defects - psychological in particular. But I don't believe that these benefits come close to justifying the act.
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Old 02-26-2006, 06:57 AM   #3 (permalink)
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South Dakota is my home state and i'm certian this is going to pass. South Dakota is very red (except we usually vote liberal senaters). I know the governer has said he will sign the bill. With that aside i'll put out my abortion stance.

I am against abortion except in certian cases. I believe the cases for exemption should be 1) health of the mother is in danger and 2) rape/incest case. As for people who get pregnate because they are irresponsible I think they should go through with the pregnacy and if they don't want their kid then we should have adoption centers ready to take the kid and pair them up with parents. However, one of my fears of something like this is we will get a lot of coat hanger abortions by scared girls. In addition in response to the point made about the kid having defects, let the kid live! I dated a girl for a few years whose sister was mentally disabled and she was the sweetest girl in the world. There is nothing wrong with these type of people, they mearly think differently. In addition there are many times when people are born with various genetic defects live long healthy lives. At least give them a chance.

With that been said, I find the timing of this bill curious. Now I haven't lived in SD for 2 years, but I have never heard talk of this bill in the past. All the sudden now this bill is passing the house right after Alito and Roberts are appointed. It seems like this may have been planned for a while and people were just sitting on the bill waiting for the supreme court to slant in a hope that a bill like this could overturn Roe v. Wade. I hope this isn't the case because I really hate politicing.
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Old 02-26-2006, 07:00 AM   #4 (permalink)
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The fact that they actively fought against an exception for rape/incest...

shows what utter lack of humanity these "pro-life" folks have. and i'm being specific to those in SD who support this bill...but it's stuff like this that makes the entire term just a cruel joke.

if you want to talk about "major impairment of a function" then start talking about taking choices away from a sexual assault survivor...at a time when they need so critically to be in control over their body and life again. Apparently, mental health doesn’t enter into it…as long as they’re physically intact and fertile, its alright to help shatter someone’s mind by re-enforcing the loss of control of the rape by making her carry the pregnancy to term.

This is just flat out despicable.
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Old 02-26-2006, 07:23 AM   #5 (permalink)
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This may very well be a test case for States when the inevitable Roe v wade overturn comes...it will be interesting to see the results. If indeed I was a resident of a state that passed such a bill, I would need to move for the benefit of my children, whether I am against abortion or not. After years of considering the ethics of this issue, I decided to take a civil liberties slant on my position, rather than an ethical one.
While I cannot claim to be at ease with my descision to be pro-choice (I dont think there is a "Right" answer to this debate), I find the other options to be far more disturbing in the long run. My position is quite simple actually:

* I cannot , or will not choose an abortion for myself (though the chances of this are zero as I am male)

* Should my wife decide otherwise, I respect her enough to discuss the option, and come to a joint understanding, in other words she must bear the child and thus her choice MUST be considered and given more weight than my own

* The choice of someone I do not know, let alone have any input into how they must live should not be mine

* Government must walk a very fine line in this issue, and should err on the side of human rights, rather than spooky dogma

* All information I have found to this point (scientifically sound) points to a lack of sentience in the fetus, which comforts me to an extent in my stance. This bears heavily on my definition of what is a person, and makes abortion more palatable in my view of society

* My descision not to abort has nothing to do with a soul, but rather with my selfish wants, and desire to have a child

The Key in this....is it is MY Personal Belief.....and I do not think so highly of myself, as to think I have the right to make this choice for everyone else
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Old 02-26-2006, 07:34 AM   #6 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by martinguerre
Apparently, mental health doesn’t enter into it…as long as they’re physically intact and fertile, its alright to help shatter someone’s mind by re-enforcing the loss of control of the rape by making her carry the pregnancy to term.
Mental health concerns cannot, on their own, justify a killing.

It may show a different path to humanity than what you would prefer, but it shows no lack of humanity.

Additionally: I give as much value to the "personal choice" argument as I would if it were used in an instance of elective infanticide.
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Old 02-26-2006, 08:35 AM   #7 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by FoolThemAll
Mental health concerns cannot, on their own, justify a killing.

It may show a different path to humanity than what you would prefer, but it shows no lack of humanity.

Additionally: I give as much value to the "personal choice" argument as I would if it were used in an instance of elective infanticide.
If we believe, as the SD bill writers do, that causing permant damage to an exisiting human life can justify an abortion...i find it to be a dissembling and impermissable breach of logic to hold that mental health concerns are not of the same order as physical ones.

And given my experience as an advocate for survivors of sexual assualt...i'll go back to my assertion that it shows a utter disregard for humanity to fail to address that situation.

I'd disagree with this bill even if it did have such a caveat, but it's lack is the signal and proof of the idolotrous moral fetish of it's authors.
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Old 02-26-2006, 09:27 AM   #8 (permalink)
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Honestly, I don't think there's going to be much "fallout" from this law. It's going to get challenged the moment the govenor's pen touches paper, and the people of South Dakota are going to have to foot the bill for a long legal fiight that, frankly, they're most likely to lose. The far right in the SD legislature is obviously offering this bill up as a test case for the new makeup of the Federal Supreme Court, and it's going to get there. Along the way, every level of the judicial system is going to say that this law is unconstiutional on the grounds that violates the Roe decision, which is clearly one the governing decisions in this situation. Now Alito and Roberts are certainly conservative (I don't think that anyone from either side of the aisle would disagree with that), and they, along with Scalia and Thomas, may find the Roe decision distasteful, but they are not activist judges. That means that SCOTUS is not going to throw out the Roe decision completely under any circumstances, although they might signal that they are willing to hear smaller challenges to it. Really, the SD legislature is being pretty stupid by expecting the Court to overturn Roe completely. If they really wanted to advance their cause, they'd do it in incremental measures. This is a waste of time and money.

By the way, I'm pro-choice but not militantly.
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Old 02-26-2006, 10:12 AM   #9 (permalink)
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I guess that the republican led state legislature didn't want to entrust this kind of decision to the PEOPLE of that state by putting it on the ballot for 06.
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Old 02-26-2006, 10:19 AM   #10 (permalink)
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I am pro choice because I do not think it my right to interfere in someone else's reproduction choices.

Also, as a male, I can not get pregnant.

The one thing that always make me wonder about the so called "Right to Life" folks is where they get off legislating how other people choose to live their lives.

That and the shear hypocracy of the term "Right to Life"

It's not a right to life that they are fighting for, it's a right to BIRTH.

After that unwanted child is born, 99% of them will consider it mission accomplished and turn their backs on these kids. Well, I have a shock for them, a human being requires more than just a right to birth to become a productive and happy person.

Who is going to look after all these unwanted children in the USA?

Their parents? - maybe in the very odd case, but most probably aren't capable of raising a child, or have no desire to raise a child.

Adoption? - there won't be enough prospective adoptive parents out there. Hell, there are kids right now in the USA who are put up for adoption that don't find homes.

Who's going to pay for these unwanted children to have a life? Are the Right to Birthers going to step up to the plate and say, "I am willing to have my taxes increased to cover the costs of my actions here today?"

I doubt it.

The Right to Birth crowd tends to be conservative republicans and they think they pay too much tax now and there are all kinds of kids alive right now living below the poverty line, but the right to birthers don't give a rat's ass about that. The USA is already drowning in 8.5 trillion dollars of debt because conservative republicans don't think they should pay tax.

This legislation is so poorly thought out, it'd be a joke, but it' s not, it's real.

The USA grows more conservative with each passing week it would seem.

Last edited by james t kirk; 02-26-2006 at 10:22 AM..
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Old 02-26-2006, 11:18 AM   #11 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by martinguerre
If we believe, as the SD bill writers do, that causing permant damage to an exisiting human life can justify an abortion...i find it to be a dissembling and impermissable breach of logic to hold that mental health concerns are not of the same order as physical ones.
It's not a matter of mental damage versus physical damage. It's a matter of damage versus mortal damage. You can disagree with the idea that non-life-threatening damage doesn't justify a killing, but to assert that it's an idea lacking in humanity is false. Period.

edit: The reason I believe in some leeway when it comes to physical health is because it seems like a gray area to me - where does the survivable end and the life-threatening begin? Also, if a mind is in danger of 'shattering' due to rape, I'm skeptical of the proposition that abortion will significantly improve that condition. For many (but certainly not all, mind you), I'd imagine it could even worsen the condition.

Quote:
Originally Posted by james t kirk
The one thing that always make me wonder about the so called "Right to Life" folks is where they get off legislating how other people choose to live their lives.
Does anyone actually find this type of argument the least bit insightful anymore? As if it's a strict dichotomy between "let the people do whatever they want" and "let the people only do what my God says they can". It's right up there with "they should've kept their legs closed".

Quote:
It's not a right to life that they are fighting for, it's a right to BIRTH.
Silly. It's both. Life primarily, birth incidentally.

Quote:
After that unwanted child is born, 99% of them will consider it mission accomplished and turn their backs on these kids.
99% of statistics are made up on the spot.

Quote:
Who is going to look after all these unwanted children in the USA?
Even granting the ridiculous proposition that 99% of pro-lifers don't support government assistance,

Even granting the ridiculous implication that opposition to welfare is opposition to any assistance,

This doesn't show any hypocrisy. The right to life is simply that, a right to life. There are no adjectives such as 'comfortable' or 'ideal' there. Restate your argument in terms of the valuelessness of a right to life without a right to a life of opportunity and you might have something.

But that something can only result in "(some) pro-lifers aren't consistent! they're evil hypocrites!" and will do nothing to actually refute the pro-life position.
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Old 02-26-2006, 11:27 AM   #12 (permalink)
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SO... South Dakota...
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Old 02-26-2006, 12:54 PM   #13 (permalink)
 
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my initial reaction was that SD should have to deal with this law. if they want it, so be it. i know this is technically unrealistic at the moment (as RvW would have to be overturned first). but part of the problem with RvW is that it is not democratic policy-making, so abortion laws have less legitimacy with many people. so if SD thinks they will be better off with this law, i don't feel i should waste my time worrying about their decisions.

but aside from the negative aspects mentioned, it seems a law like this would also have negative economic (and criminal, via freakonomics) impacts on the state. people will probably think twice about moving there for a job. but the extent of these and other problems should be sorted out by SD. unfortunately the court battles probably won't allow for it.
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Old 02-26-2006, 01:01 PM   #14 (permalink)
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Fool them all...

Did it ever occur to you that mental illnesses, including those with onset due to trauma, have a significant fatality rate?

I'd never say what was best for all survivors...there's no such pancea. But restoring their control over their body and giving them agency in how they recover seems as close to as a universal as they come. That means a *choice* about if they want to keep the child or not. Some women report that keeping the child was a way of bringing good out of evil. Others abort, and describe that as the moment that they were able to gain closure and separation from the threat that their assailant had inflicted. The universal there is that they felt in control of what came next.

It's precisely why i use the vocabulary of inhumanity. Simply, the only thing that could bring a person to advocate for a lack of exception in these cases is a <i>willing refusal</i> to see the woman as a person.
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Old 02-26-2006, 01:21 PM   #15 (permalink)
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Glad they did it, can't wait until it makes its way up through the courts, at the very least I'm hoping this will put some power back in the hands of the state. I take issue with the stance that people something thing Abortion is an inalienable civil liberty; derived from a very suspect line of reasoning in Griswold V. Conn, the right to privacy. Roe to me is a joke of no legal muster, and what is a perfect example of judicial activism.

Are people here really big on the concept of euthanizing mentally or physically deficent fetus? What's the difference then between said deficent fetuses and regular mentally handicap people? They are nothing but a drain on our resources right? Inconvient, why wouldn't they be expendable? Also let us not forget that blacks are not people, that's why Dred Scott had no standing to sue for freedom. Oh and Hitler was right about the jews too, they aren't human, expendable therefore.
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Old 02-26-2006, 01:51 PM   #16 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by FoolThemAll
Even granting the ridiculous proposition that 99% of pro-lifers don't support government assistance,

Even granting the ridiculous implication that opposition to welfare is opposition to any assistance,

This doesn't show any hypocrisy. The right to life is simply that, a right to life. There are no adjectives such as 'comfortable' or 'ideal' there. Restate your argument in terms of the valuelessness of a right to life without a right to a life of opportunity and you might have something.

But that something can only result in "(some) pro-lifers aren't consistent! they're evil hypocrites!" and will do nothing to actually refute the pro-life position.
I have a question for you then...

What do you propose to do with millions of unwanted children?

Since Roe v. Wade, I believe the statistic is that 41 million abortions have been carried out in the USA.

Tell me, how do you propose to take care of those unwanted children?

When the day comes that the Right to Birth crowd takes up arms to assist the children already living below the poverty line, and they agree to face the implications of millions of unwanted children, then I am all for banning abortion.

Put you money where your mouth is says I.

And no-one is talking a life of comfort, I am just talking the basics of life be that food, shelter, education, health care, and some affection. All this whether you like it or not costs money.

What is your proposal to make these children into healthy, well adjusted, and productive people?

You see, I am a big believer in the so called critical years of a child's life. If these needs aren't met, the results are disasterous. All you have to do is look at the products of the Romanian orphanages from the 80's and 90's. You have children that were essentially born into homelessness who became wards of the state. They were put into iron cribs, they were fed sometimes, and changed maybe once a day.

By age 2 a child growing up in this environment is most likely emotionally and socially crippled. (Believe me, I have seen the results personally.)

So, tell me about that right to life arguement again.

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Old 02-26-2006, 02:16 PM   #17 (permalink)
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This thread, unfortunately, has little to do with the SD bill already, but I'll do my best to turn us around.

The bill will be challenged as unconstitutional. It will go through the court system, being struck down at every level as inconsistent with Supreme Court precident. Finally it will reach the highest court in the land. And there...

The right to privacy was an improper reading of the Constitution from the start. That said, it has been a part of our national law and jurisprudence for so long that some may support it even though they believe it was a faulty concept to begin with.

The likely vote will be: Ginsberg, Stevens, Souter, Breyer, and ?Kennedy? upholding Roe and Thomas, Scalia, Alito, and possibly Roberts voting to overturn it. The Chief is definitely the hardest vote to predict on this one. However, there is very little possibility that the conservative faction could locate a fifth vote, so this speculation is not particularly meaningful.

One final point: if Roe is overturned, what happens to the right to abortion?

A common answer: abortion immediately becomes illegal throughout the United States.

This is, of course, completely false. If Roe is overturned, states will then have the opportunity to decide for themselves if they are interested in banning abortions or not. Thus, abortion would soon be banned in the bible belt, but would remain legal in the blue states.
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Old 02-26-2006, 03:14 PM   #18 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by martinguerre
Did it ever occur to you that mental illnesses, including those with onset due to trauma, have a significant fatality rate?
Sure. What didn't occur to me is that abortion would ever provide life-saving mental benefits that any other treatment (psychological or otherwise) couldn't. Actually, a thought which also isn't occuring to me is that abortion could save a woman who was mentally on the edge of death.

Can you give me a case of mental distress/illness where the only options were losing the patient or killing the fetus?

Can you give me a case of mental distress/illness where abortion could even be a life-saving option?

Quote:
Originally Posted by james t kirk
When the day comes that the Right to Birth crowd takes up arms to assist the children already living below the poverty line, and they agree to face the implications of millions of unwanted children, then I am all for banning abortion.
Here, here's your worst-case scenario: the majority of the country is made up of evil, uncaring, uncharitable Randians. They give nothing and they vote in a government that gives nothing.

Even in that scenario, that would do nothing to fault the pro-life position. "You should be caring for those unwanted children!" does NOT lead to "We should be able to kill them if you don't!" Guilt-tripping ransom does not amount to a logical argument.

Unless, of course, they're just a clump of cells. But that would take the focus off your brand of argument. It's a valueless argument either way.

Quote:
So, tell me about that right to life arguement again.
Abortion isn't an acceptable solution for unwanted children any more than infanticide is. There's that right to life argument again.
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Old 02-26-2006, 03:21 PM   #19 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by FoolThemAll
There could certainly be benefits to carrying out the act when the pregancy is a result of rape or when the fetus has defects - psychological in particular. But I don't believe that these benefits come close to justifying the act.
I don't favor abortion as a means of birth control. You take a life. You don't want to call it human, because if you do that makes it very uncomfortable, so you call it a fetus.

On the rape issue, I don't think capital punishment for the baby in response to the father's crime is appropriate, but I do think that the law should cover severence of rights for a child conceived through sexual assault. What woman wants her rapist to have rights to her child?

In my opinion, any anti-abortion law would have to cover the health of the mother, the viability of the pregnancy, and sever the rights of any rapist (but not the obligation to pay support).
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Old 02-26-2006, 04:14 PM   #20 (permalink)
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Simply, the only thing that could bring a person to advocate for a lack of exception in these cases is a willing refusal to see the woman as a person.
Fool them all...you're either asking a question i don't understand or being deliberatly obtuse. Women do commit suicide in the aftermath of rape, this is well known. And i don't think it's at all out of the question to suggest that compelling a woman by the power of the state to keep a pregnancy that starts in rape....might make the difference between life and death in some cases. I'd already outlined that. So what are you asking? For empirical data? There's no such study, for the same reasons that we haven't the data on how many kids survive when you leave them with wolves. Conducting such a study would necessarily entail the damage of participants. Darkly, i suppose we will find out what happens if this law passes.

i've seen a whole lot of the writing on the opposition to a rape exception...and the only way they get the rhetoric there is by completely eliding the woman in the discussion. Such blindness comes at a price...

SirLance...consider also how few rapes are actually convicted. What woman, who by NO fault of her own is raped and lacks proof to convict her rapist. There might be no witnesses, and the woman probably knew her assailant. A whopping 7% of rapes reported to the police result in convictions (And only 40% of all rapes are in fact reported). So what about the legal limbo the vast majority find themselves in? Do we declare that a woman can terminate the rights of the father by accusing rape? Proving it to a lower standard?

What possible due process claim could actually provide the kind of benifit that you assume is required to make this law just? The answer is simply, that it's not possible.

But you say it like it's a matter of course.
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Old 02-26-2006, 04:21 PM   #21 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by politicophile
This thread, unfortunately, has little to do with the SD bill already, but I'll do my best to turn us around.

The bill will be challenged as unconstitutional. It will go through the court system, being struck down at every level as inconsistent with Supreme Court precident. Finally it will reach the highest court in the land. And there...

The right to privacy was an improper reading of the Constitution from the start. That said, it has been a part of our national law and jurisprudence for so long that some may support it even though they believe it was a faulty concept to begin with.

The likely vote will be: Ginsberg, Stevens, Souter, Breyer, and ?Kennedy? upholding Roe and Thomas, Scalia, Alito, and possibly Roberts voting to overturn it. The Chief is definitely the hardest vote to predict on this one. However, there is very little possibility that the conservative faction could locate a fifth vote, so this speculation is not particularly meaningful.

One final point: if Roe is overturned, what happens to the right to abortion?

A common answer: abortion immediately becomes illegal throughout the United States.

This is, of course, completely false. If Roe is overturned, states will then have the opportunity to decide for themselves if they are interested in banning abortions or not. Thus, abortion would soon be banned in the bible belt, but would remain legal in the blue states.
You might be able to point me right here politico. I thought that Roe v. Wade, or perhaps subsiquent decisions derived from it had been upheld 5-4 by the last court. Rehnquist had been one of the 4, with Scalia, Thomas, and Kennedy ???... Then the 5 would've been Breyer, Souter, Ginsberg, Stevens, and O' Conner.

I guess that leaves me and you asking the same question, where does Kennedy and Roberts come down.
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Old 02-26-2006, 04:28 PM   #22 (permalink)
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Politicophile nailed it. This is intended to be a test case that will rise to the SCOTUS. The absence of language addressing rape or incest assured that.
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Old 02-26-2006, 04:50 PM   #23 (permalink)
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Agreed: this is a trial balloon for a run against Roe v Wade. I also concur with politicophile's assessment of the likely outcome of it.

Then to address the inevitable threadjack topic... I'm pro-choice, but I can respect where pro-lifers are coming from. I'd never want the choice taken away, but my personal choice in the matter, were it ever to come up, would never to be to abort an unborn child I had fathered.

But then, I'm in favor of people having the freedom to say things that offend me, too, so what the hell do I know.

Bottom line, though, in terms of effective social policy is this: abolition never works. It just sends that which you've abolished underground, where it flourishes just fine, thank you very much, while billions are spent in law enforcement to chip away at the edges. We learned that during Abolition! Look at drugs and prostitution, as two fine examples. Thriving industries, both of them. I'm not saying I'm in favor of blanket legalization of those things--just that rendering them illegal is tanamount to putting blinders on.
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Old 02-26-2006, 04:51 PM   #24 (permalink)
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I have a confession to make. This thread was meant to evaluate our membership in politics, to decide what direction was needed to "fix" the partisan split in here...and get people to focus on debate, rather than argument. If we could manage this level of discussion in all aspects of this piece of TFP.....we would all be better off.

I just wanted to congratulate you all....for making this thread well worth the effort, and proving a point to me....and yourselves.


Now....back to the regularly scheduled programming.
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Old 02-26-2006, 04:54 PM   #25 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by politicophile
One final point: if Roe is overturned, what happens to the right to abortion?

A common answer: abortion immediately becomes illegal throughout the United States.

This is, of course, completely false. If Roe is overturned, states will then have the opportunity to decide for themselves if they are interested in banning abortions or not. Thus, abortion would soon be banned in the bible belt, but would remain legal in the blue states.

actually, i have to disagree with you. you're techinically right, but many states still have anti-abortion laws on the books. so as soon as roe v. wade is overturned, those go back into effect. i think i read that when roe was originally decided, abortion was illegal in like 45 or 48 states. some may have made it legal, some may have removed the old ones, but i bet most would revert back to the old laws and make it illegal immediately.
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Old 02-26-2006, 06:08 PM   #26 (permalink)
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Abortion is one of those interesting issues that shows that some people only like democracy when it supports what they believe in, and toss it out when the people do not support their views.

I think those who wish to allow for the termination of pregnancy on a mothers whim have no desire to see this come to a vote, either nation wide or state to state. Honestly I am not either. While most states would outlaw abortion, I'm sure a few would allow it. Much like people in socialized medical systems that take health 'vacations' where they travel to a country with private medical services to escape the inadequacies of their home system, you would see abortion 'vacations' set up to those states that allow it. The net effect would be abortion would only be open to the upper and middle classes in many places.

This would cause me to continue to need to spend more money on the welfare underclass, as well as adding to the numbers of uneducated urban voters who will be pandered to by left with money from the producing classes. Much like having an abortion my support is totally selfish.

This theory is known as the ‘Roe Effect’. It is believed it has cost the democrats a net 5 million votes if you look at voting trends and who had the abortions. I don’t know if this is in fact true but it is an interesting theory.

Wouldn’t it be ironic if the lefts unfaltering support of abortion has cost them the very power to maintain it? Likewise the rights desire to end this practice may well seal its fate as a minority philosophy in the years to come.

You can’t kill some odd 35+ million potential people off and not expect there to be unforseen consequences.
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Old 02-26-2006, 08:24 PM   #27 (permalink)
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Ustwo, the majority of the people in this country support at least some form of legalized abortion. The SD bill clearly goes beyond what the people want.

I echo the notion of this bill as supreme court fodder. I don't know if Roe will be overturned. I am pretty sure that if it is, people will still get abortions. They will just be either more expensive or more dangerous.
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Old 02-26-2006, 08:37 PM   #28 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by hannukah harry
actually, i have to disagree with you. you're techinically right, but many states still have anti-abortion laws on the books. so as soon as roe v. wade is overturned, those go back into effect. i think i read that when roe was originally decided, abortion was illegal in like 45 or 48 states. some may have made it legal, some may have removed the old ones, but i bet most would revert back to the old laws and make it illegal immediately.
This is a good point and one that I had overlooked. You are absolutely right that any currently unconstitutional state abortion bans would be reactivated if Roe were overturned. I do suspect, however, that such bans would be taken off the books if it looked like Roe was headed back to the Supreme Court. It just seems impossible that abortion would be banned in places like California, Washington, New York, etc.

The very worst thing that can happen in constitutional law is for the Court to completely reverse its position: doing so is a blow to the rule of law. The question then becomes: what do you do if the precident is really, really bad? Does anyone really think that Brown v. Board was a bad decision?

Here is the position I find myself in: Griswold invented a right to privacy that absolutely does not exist in the Constitution. If the states wanted to amend the Constitution and add such a right, they could do so. There has been no such amendment, however, so the right continues to not exist. Thus, Roe v. Wade is based on totally faulty precident. The federal judiciary should never have taken it upon itself to regulate a practice that falls squarely in the domain of state legislatures.

BUT: Roe has been on the books for all of my lifetime, plus an additional thirteen years. The instability created by overruling it would be terrible. A cornerstone of our society is stability of law: Locke discusses it, as does Montesquieu.

This bill, should it reach the Supreme Court, will have a massive impact on Constitutional Law in our nation. And yet I remain torn as to what outcome I would prefer.
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Old 02-26-2006, 10:01 PM   #29 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by filtherton
Ustwo, the majority of the people in this country support at least some form of legalized abortion. The SD bill clearly goes beyond what the people want.
Allow abortions for rape, incest, and direct health risk to the mother, and the nation would be behind banning it for its most common use, which is birth control of the uneducated and irresponsible.
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Old 02-26-2006, 10:16 PM   #30 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by martinguerre
Fool them all...you're either asking a question i don't understand or being deliberatly obtuse. Women do commit suicide in the aftermath of rape, this is well known. And i don't think it's at all out of the question to suggest that compelling a woman by the power of the state to keep a pregnancy that starts in rape....might make the difference between life and death in some cases. I'd already outlined that. So what are you asking? For empirical data?
Well, you answered the second question. Not with evidence, but plausibly nonetheless.

I'm not seeing, however, how any such case couldn't be dealt with through therapy. And if therapy doesn't work, why would you expect an abortion to work? You're talking about a measure which ends the life of a human being. You need a damn good justification. It needs to be necessary.

Quote:
i've seen a whole lot of the writing on the opposition to a rape exception...and the only way they get the rhetoric there is by completely eliding the woman in the discussion. Such blindness comes at a price...
Yeah, you still don't have any basis for asserting this.
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Old 02-27-2006, 01:29 PM   #31 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ustwo
Allow abortions for rape, incest, and direct health risk to the mother, and the nation would be behind banning it for its most common use, which is birth control of the uneducated and irresponsible.
Irresponsibility is in the eye of the beholder. You freely speculate about the societal repercussions of legalized abortion. One repurcussion that is probably more likely than your democratic party negative feedback example is in the area of criminal justice. It has been argued that legalized abortion has reduced crime overall. This makes sense, abortion is often employed by those without sufficient resources, responsibility or desire to raise a child; poor, unwanted children with irresponsible parents are more prone to criminal activity. I think that it is responsible to abort a child if you know that you can't do right by that child because it is perhaps highly likely that that child might end up being a complete drain on everything it touches. It sucks that people put themselves in a position where they have to make a choice like that. If it comes down to someone aborting a fetus because they aren't able to raise the child it may become or raising the child when they clearly lack the ability to do so, i would rather they save us all the trouble.

As for lack of education, the majority of the most ardent antiabortionists don't seem to support the education of the uneducated on the matter of birth control. Abstinence only. I would wager that sex education would have at least as large an impact on the number of abortions as criminalization.
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Old 02-27-2006, 02:15 PM   #32 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ustwo
Allow abortions for rape, incest, and direct health risk to the mother, and the nation would be behind banning it for its most common use, which is birth control of the uneducated and irresponsible.
Well, then you will see a whole lot of women who have been raped, subjected to incest, or are going to die.
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Old 03-06-2006, 03:14 PM   #33 (permalink)
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passed and signed..

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060306/...4yBHNlYwNmYw--

Quote:
S.D. Governor Signs Abortion Ban Into Law

By CHET BROKAW, Associated Press Writer 18 minutes ago

PIERRE, S.D. - Gov. Mike Rounds signed legislation Monday banning nearly all abortions in South Dakota, setting up a court fight aimed at challenging the 1973
U.S. Supreme Court decision that legalized abortion.
ADVERTISEMENT

The bill would make it a crime for doctors to perform an abortion unless the procedure was necessary to save the woman's life. It would make no exception for cases of rape or incest.

Planned Parenthood, which operates the state's only abortion clinic, in Sioux Falls, has pledged to challenge the measure.

Rounds issued a written statement saying he expects the law will be tied up in court for years and will not take effect unless the U.S. Supreme Court upholds it.

"In the history of the world, the true test of a civilization is how well people treat the most vulnerable and most helpless in their society. The sponsors and supporters of this bill believe that abortion is wrong because unborn children are the most vulnerable and most helpless persons in our society. I agree with them," Rounds said in the statement.

The governor declined all media requests for interviews Monday.

The Legislature passed the bill last month after supporters argued that the recent appointment of conservative justices John Roberts and
Samuel Alito have made the U.S. Supreme Court more likely to overturn
Roe v. Wade.

Abortion opponents already are offering money to help the state pay legal bills for the anticipated court challenge, Rounds has said. Lawmakers said an anonymous donor has pledged $1 million to defend the ban, and the Legislature set up a special account to accept donations for legal fees.

Under the new law, to go into effect July 1, doctors could get up to five years in prison for performing an illegal abortion.

Rounds noted that it was written to make sure existing restrictions would still be enforced during the legal battle. Current state law sets increasingly stringent restrictions on abortions as pregnancy progresses; after the 24th week, the procedure is allowed only to protect the woman's health and safety.

Kate Looby, state director of Planned Parenthood, said the organization has not yet decided whether to challenge the measure in court or to seek a statewide public vote in November. A referendum would either repeal the abortion ban or delay a court challenge to the legislation.

"Obviously, we're very disappointed that Governor Rounds has sided on the side of politics rather than on the side of the women of South Dakota to protect their health and safety," Looby said.

She said Planned Parenthood would continue providing services that include family planning, emergency contraception and safe and legal abortions.

About 800 abortions are performed each year in the state.

Gov. Mike Rounds looks up as he prepares to sign a bill March 6, 2006, in Pierre, S.D., that bans nearly all abortions in South Dakota Monday, The measure is designed to challenge the U.S. Supreme Court 1973 Roe v Wade decision that legalized abortion. Under the new law, to take effect July 1, doctors in South Dakota will face up to five years in prison if they perform an abortion unless they can show the procedure is necessary to save the woman's life. (AP Photo/Joe Kafka)
Any betting pools on how long this takes to go to Scotus?
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Old 03-06-2006, 03:30 PM   #34 (permalink)
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Take awhile to make it's way through the lower courts, depending on how they rule. 6 months?
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Old 03-06-2006, 04:06 PM   #35 (permalink)
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Mmm does this one go to the 9th Circus?
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Old 03-06-2006, 04:28 PM   #36 (permalink)
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8th circuit.

* Arkansas
* Iowa
* Minnesota
* Missouri
* Nebraska
* North Dakota
* South Dakota
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Old 03-06-2006, 06:05 PM   #37 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by james t kirk
Well, then you will see a whole lot of women who have been raped, subjected to incest, or are going to die.
Quote:
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/law/j...tion_3-03.html
SOUTH DAKOTA BANS ABORTION

March 3, 2006

.....STATE SEN. BILL NAPOLI (R): You know, I we are really think we're pushing the envelope on that issue. I'm not sure that the Supreme Court is ready for us yet, but what's that old saying, "There's no time like the present"?

....... FRED DE SAM LAZARO: One patient she saw was this woman, probably in her early 20s. She would not reveal even her age. With a low-paying job and two children, she said she simply could not afford a third.

"MICHELLE," PATIENT WHO TERMINATED HER PREGNANCY: It was difficult when I found out I was pregnant. I was saddened, because I knew that I'd probably have to make this decision. Like I said, I have two children, so I look into their eyes and I love them. It's been difficult, you know; it's not easy. And I don't think it's, you know, ever easy on a woman, but we need that choice........

STATE REP. ELAINE ROBERTS (D), SOUTH DAKOTA: We've chipped, and chipped, and chipped; now we're here with this full fledge. What will be next? What will be next?

FRED DE SAM LAZARO: Democratic Representative Elaine Roberts is one of South Dakota's few pro-choice legislators. What's next, she fears, is a host of measures that regulate women's private lives.

ELAINE ROBERTS: We already have a law that says that pharmacists by conscience could refuse to fill my prescription for contraceptives. There is already a move from some groups who have worked on this to say that there should be no contraceptives, that sexual intercourse is for the purpose of reproduction.

FRED DE SAM LAZARO: Much of what she fears as an assault on basic rights Senator Napoli sees as a return to traditional values.

<H4>BILL NAPOLI: A real-life description to me would be a rape victim, brutally raped, savaged. The girl was a virgin. She was religious. She planned on saving her virginity until she was married. She was brutalized and raped, sodomized as bad as you can possibly make it, and is impregnated. I mean, that girl could be so messed up, physically and psychologically, that carrying that child could very well threaten her life. [1]</H4>

BILL NAPOLI: When I was growing up here in the wild west, if a young man got a girl pregnant out of wedlock, they got married, and the whole darned neighborhood was involved in that wedding. I mean, you just didn't allow that sort of thing to happen, you know? I mean, they wanted that child to be brought up in a home with two parents, you know, that whole story. And so I happen to believe that can happen again.

FRED DE SAM LAZARO: You really do?

BILL NAPOLI: Yes, I do. I don't think we're so far beyond that, that we can't go back to that.
Quote:
<b>[1]</b><a href="http://digbysblog.blogspot.com/2006_03_01_digbysblog_archive.html#114145668396763220">
The Sodomized Virgin Exception</a> by digby

<i>FRED DE SAM LAZARO: Napoli says most abortions are performed for what he calls "convenience." He insists that exceptions can be made for rape or incest under the provision that protects the mother's life. I asked him for a scenario in which an exception may be invoked.

BILL NAPOLI: A real-life description to me would be a rape victim, brutally raped, savaged. The girl was a virgin. She was religious. She planned on saving her virginity until she was married. She was brutalized and raped, sodomized as bad as you can possibly make it, and is impregnated. I mean, that girl could be so messed up, physically and psychologically, that carrying that child could very well threaten her life.</i>

Digby writes:

Do you suppose all these elements have to be present for it to be sufficiently psychologically damaging for her to be forced to bear her rapists child, or just some of them? I wonder if it would be ok if the woman wasn't religious but she was a virgin who had been brutally, savagely raped and "sodomized as bad as you can make it?" Or if she were a virgin and religious but the brutal savage sodomy wasn't "as bad" as it could have been?

Certainly, we know that if she wasn't a virgin, she was asking for it, so she should be punished with forced childbirth. No lazy "convenient" abortion for her, the little whore. It goes without saying that the victim who was saving it for her marriage is a good girl who didn't ask to be brutally raped and sodomized like the sluts who didn't hold out. But even that wouldn't be quite enough by itself. The woman must be sufficiently destroyed psychologically by the savage brutality that the forced childbirth would drive her to suicide (the presumed scenario in which this pregnancy could conceivably "threaten her life.")

Someone should ask this man about this. He seems to have given it a good deal of thought. I suspect many hours have been spent luridly contemplating the brutal, savage rape and sodomy (as bad as it can be) of a religious virgin and how terrible it would be for her. It seems quite clear in his mind.

Meanwhile, outside the twisted imagination of Senator Psycho there, we have reality:

<i>FRED DE SAM LAZARO: One patient she saw was this woman, probably in her early 20s. She would not reveal even her age. With a low-paying job and two children, she said she simply could not afford a third.

"MICHELLE," PATIENT WHO TERMINATED HER PREGNANCY: It was difficult when I found out I was pregnant. I was saddened, because I knew that I'd probably have to make this decision. Like I said, I have two children, so I look into their eyes and I love them. It's been difficult, you know; it's not easy. And I don't think it's, you know, ever easy on a woman, but we need that choice.</i>

Digby writes:

Too bad. She shouldn't have had sex. Three kids and no money are just what the bitch deserves. Her two little kids deserve it too for choosing a mother like her.
<b>I know....I know...all of the states that pass laws that outlaw abortion, even in the case of rape or incest, could pass the bill below, that is now being considered in Missouri. Then....a woman who is a member of the official state religion who is raped or "incested" into an unwanted pregnancy, and..."was a virgin who had been brutally, savagely raped and "sodomized as bad as you can make it"...and obviously never had sex before, so...it could easily be determined that she wasn't "asking for it".....maybe that RELIGIOUS virgin woman victim could go before a state board and appeal their FORCED PREGNANCY SENTENCE to the Mullahs....I mean the legislators...and be quietly driven in the middle of the night to the nearest state that does not interfere with non-religious women seeking a safe, legal abortion...maybe that would convince the SCOTUS to approve the South Dakota abortion? prohibition
Quote:
http://www.kmov.com/topstories/stori....7d361c3f.html
State bill proposes Christianity be Missouri’s official religion

09:24 PM CST on Saturday, March 4, 2006

By John Mills, News 4

Missouri legislators in Jefferson City considered a bill that would name Christianity the state's official "majority" religion.

House Concurrent Resolution 13 has is pending in the state legislature.

Many Missouri residents had not heard about the bill until Thursday.

Karen Aroesty of the Anti-defamation league, along with other watch-groups, began a letter writing and email campaign to stop the resolution.

<b>The resolution would recognize "a Christian god," and it would not protect minority religions, but "protect the majority's right to express their religious beliefs.</b>

The resolution also recognizes that, "a greater power exists," and only Christianity receives what the resolution calls, "justified recognition."

State representative David Sater of Cassville in southwestern Missouri, sponsored the resolution, but he has refused to talk about it on camera or over the phone.

KMOV also contacted Gov. Matt Blunt's office to see where he stands on the resolution, but he has yet to respond.
I keep coming back to participate here because, if some of the ideas in some of the posts and ideologies of the posters are the "real deal" then I am not losing my mind, as I somtimes fear. The stuff that I read that is allegedly happening in some state legislatures in 2006 (and in the White House and in Congress), in the US of A, seems as surreal to me as viewing the collapse of the twin towers on TV on the morning of 9/11.

After 9/11, I moved downtown to live next to the WTC ruins for a few months, and the close proximity to the site helped to make it "real" for me. There is no chance that I'll move to a place under the rule of such medieval and draconian "thinkers" as the governor and a legislator like STATE SEN. BILL NAPOLI of South Dakota.

Thanks for reminding me via your posts supporting what they are attempting, that some of you and these politicians really think these things, passing laws like this that will really affect the lives of women in tragic ways.

Last edited by host; 03-06-2006 at 06:31 PM..
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Old 03-06-2006, 06:22 PM   #38 (permalink)
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the problem is which most people fail to forget is that pro choice doesn't necessarily mean pro abortion.

This is another attempt for the gov't to make a decision for us as they feel we fail to lack the self-conciouness to make a decision they have deemed right.

oh how the pendulum swings...i hope it start's moving left soon....
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Old 03-06-2006, 06:46 PM   #39 (permalink)
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the fallout will be that a lot of people "on the fence" will think that the legislators went too far, and vote against them.
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Old 03-06-2006, 08:00 PM   #40 (permalink)
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im sorry i dont have a lot to add that has not been said
that being said.... For the women of South Dakota: an abortion manual
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