Several people have asked me what I think of the Roe vs Wade
scandal. I am not American so it is not my direct business, but such a landmark
legal ruling could have significant reverberations for the rights of the unborn
in other countries, as this article explains:
https://www.marchforlife.co.uk/2022/06/24/roe-v-wade-is-overturned-what-does-this-mean-for-the-uk/.
Obviously people wanted my opinion because I am known to be a staunch pro-lifer
(the answer to that question is: yes I would) and so I thought I'd better write
a post about it. In a way I see the loss of Roe as a bit of a storm in a
teacup. The right to have abortions will not be affected in most parts of the
United
States following this ruling. The worst that
could happen, from a pro-abortion position, is that a few women might have to
travel some distance to have the procedure. Roe vs Wade was passed into law by
the US Supreme Court in 1973 following a suit by an anonymous female Texan.
"Jane Roe", or "John Doe" for a male, is an American legal
term used when a person's name in unknown or cannot be revealed. She claimed to
have had a baby in 1970 as a result of being gang-raped. Many years later she
reversed this claim and asserted that this had been a lie. SCOTUS repealed Roe
vs Wade on
June the 4th 2022
on the grounds that the right to terminate a pregnancy was not deeply rooted in
America's
history or tradition and was not considered a right when the Due Process clause
was ratified in 1868. News of this case was leaked prematurely to the media.
This programme provides a good commentary:
https://odysee.com/@lotuseaters_com:1/the-podcast-of-the-lotus-eaters-423-27-06-2022:b.
The response from the pro-abortion community, which is most
people to a greater or lesser degree, has been outrage. Like a lot of leftwing tantrums,
this one has been more amusing than anything else. It has mostly involved
people running around on the streets waving crudely made rainbow coloured placards
and screaming in fury. Also some celebrities have made insipid public
statements. One group of women has organized a "sex strike". This
idea goes right back to the dawn of second-wave feminism; I think the first
example was some time in the 1960's. However, only a tiny minority of women will
go along with it, even among the proportion of women who self-identify as
feminists, which is currently about eight percent and shrinking. Seeing as the
remaining hardcore tend to be extremely unappealing, in both appearance and
personality, we chaps are not particularly bothered. (It is a chilling
revelation of how deep the pathology of feminism goes that making oneself as
ugly as possible is considered an act of feminine rebellion. This is why they
deliberately put on weight, shave their hair or dye it unnatural colours,
overuse piercing jewellery and wear stupid clothes etc.) You have to realize
that the
United States of America
is not a singular country; it is a federation. It consists of fifty separate
semi-independent nations which have a lot of political autonomy. Roe vs Wade
asserted that all women in all the states had a right to terminate their pregnancies.
Its repeal merely means that the federal authorities can no longer dictate that
and the issue is left up to the individual states to decide. Seeing as only
fourteen of the fifty states have outlawed abortion, there is nothing to
prevent a woman having one if she's willing to make the journey. It is rather
like women of
Ireland
crossing the
Irish Sea to have abortions in
Liverpool
and Holyhead; before the repeal of the Eighth, see below. There are thirteen
US
states in which the right to abortion is enshrined in state law.
Intellectually, I think most of the people protesting know this deep down. I
suspect their outburst is really because this is a symbolic victory for people
who, for the most part, are conservative white males (ugh!), and this demographic
cannot ever be allowed to enjoy any victory. This is why the same people rioted
over the acquittal of Kyle Rittenhouse. Obviously, as somebody who asserts the
human right to life from conception and not just birth, the striking down of
Roe doesn't really have any effect that I would like to see. It is a symbolic
triumph; that's the most I can say about it. After a while, the
"pro-choice" brigade will calm down and things will continue as
normal.
See here for
background: https://hpanwo-voice.blogspot.com/2018/05/irish-pro-abortion-victory.html.
And: https://hpanwo-tv.blogspot.com/2021/09/march-for-life.html.