Originally posted on Wednesday, October 12, 2005
Because our culture changes and evolves, we face new issues every year. These issues are complex and occasionally the US Supreme Court must decide on the constitutionality of them.
The constitution is a contract that promises that the government has the obligation to protect "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness". These prioritized unalienable (vs. inalienable) rights can not be taken away. If so, the contract (constitution) becomes null and void.
The utmost right that the government should protect is "life". When a child is conceived, biology tells us that the uniqueness of that individual has been created. Life is born. To unnaturally cause that life to cease is in violation to the constitution. So, the taking of a life through abortion violates the constitution.
When you realize the Roe vs. Wade decision was really about property rights (rights of the mother of the right of life of the child) rather than life, Roe vs. Wade reestablishes those same tenets that were disposed of during slavery (rights of owners over the rights of slaves). In other words, Roe vs. Wade not only establishes that life is property, but it also elevates that property right over the right to life.
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