Their justification for that is twofold: 1) the fetus does not have a right to life before the third trimester and 2) therefore a woman's right to privacy prohibits the gov't from intervening.
Everyone who opposes abortion, does so because of reason #1, not reason #2! There's no reason to attack the right to privacy when your real argument is that the embryo has the right to life as of conception. Especially since the court itself admitted that if the embryo has a right to life, then the woman's privacy is irrelevant and abortions would be illegal.
Ah, yes, Rand Paul,
famous opponent of the right to privacy:
“No one should be allowed to invade your privacy. ...”
And why should no one be allowed to invade our privacy? Could be because it's a
right? If so, why is he criticizing the Supreme Court for recognizing it?
None of these arguments are at all compelling if the reasoning of the Supreme Court is upheld.
Roe v. Wade itself contradicts you.
The only way to prevent this process from taking place is by denying the Supreme Court the right to discover or enforce unenumerated rights at all. .... For if a right to privacy can be read into the Constitution, then I assure you that a right to "free" health care can be read into it as well.
OK, now
this is a valid concern. But it applies to everything Congress and the President do, too. Give someone a power, and they'll find a way to abuse it. It's been happening in this country for 200+ years.
But if you want to draw a line against government abuse of power, criticizing the right to privacy as mentioned in Roe v. Wade seems like a poor place to start. I say this not to minimize the importance of the abortion issue, but because (as I've pointed out) the right to privacy is not the crux of the abortion issue, and demolishing the right to privacy is not the right way to stop abortions.
With respect, you are now making some false assumptions in your response to me. You assume that I think the distinction between positive and negative rights is meaningful
Actually, your conflation of a right to privacy with a right to health care made me assume you were
ignorant of the distinction. Your subsequent analysis convinces me you're merely mistaken.
You also assume that I assumed that you were arguing in favor of abortions. I made no such assumption
Then why did you say "Rand Paul adheres to the radical notion that slaughtering infants is wrong. He doesn't think the Constitution protects anybody's right to kill babies that they don't want. Hope this clears things up for you." It sure sounded like you thought I was talking about abortion.
I detected nothing sinister, only stupid, and see no need for clarification, only education. =)
hope this helps
Then perhaps you should work on your pedagogical skills. Insults and condescension are generally frowned upon in modern educational theory.
- Bob