queridiculo wrote:nate33 wrote:No. If Roe vs. Wade is rescinded, the issue will devolve to the states where it belongs. In most states, there is enough public will to keep abortion legal that it will remain legal. In a handful of conservative states, it will be made illegal because that's what the majority in most of those states want. And I seriously doubt any state would make abortion illegal in cases of rape.
By rescinding Roe vs Wade, even more people will be able to live in a region where abortion laws coincide with their personal beliefs.
That's got to be one of the most hilarious takes on Roe vs. Wade I've read in some time. Be honest, did you chuckle when you wrote this, since when is it the laws function to build safe spaces for the delusions of people?
Republicans have made it abundantly clear, they do not want women to abort under any circumstance.
We know this because their proposals are neither science nor fact based.
We know this because countless republicans have said so.
We know this because the states like Iowa have already proposed laws that give women that have been raped a mere 45 days to report the crime in order to receive a permit for an abortion.
First of all, do any of you even understand the Constitution? What part of the 10th Amendment do you not understand? Nearly all of our laws are made at the State level. Why should laws on abortion be different?
Secondly, most conservatives would restrict abortion to a greater degree than it is restricted now, but would still permit abortion in some circumstances like rape and incest. There are some who would oppose even that (and I understand their viewpoint) but not enough to form a majority in many states. For the most part, I would expect abortions to be limited to first trimesters and not funded by the state in any way, but remain legal otherwise, perhaps with measures like mandatory counseling and parental notification also in place.
Even your case about Iowa is consistent with what I just said. It's a completely understandable stance. The closer a "mass of cells" comes to becoming a viable human, the greater the moral outrage it is to kill it. So enough time should be permitted to discover the pregnancy, but any time beyond that becomes more and more morally untenable. Is this not obvious?
And spare me the fact based argument. What about the abortion issue is not based in fact?