Lothar wrote:Not quite. What I'm saying is, the Supreme Court overstepped their bounds and shortcut the entire process of reason, debate, and compromise in lawmaking, which polarized the issue so much that 44 years later it's still one of the most hotly debated issues in American politics.
Others will say that the Supreme Court interpreted existing law. The main argument for this statement, instead of your version, is that no new law was passed, since the Supreme Court does not have that power.
Lothar wrote:Had abortion laws come about in a more sensible and legally valid manner (which would've led to a more sensible conclusion) the issue wouldn't be nearly as inflammatory or "weird" as it is now.
See above. No abortion law was created by any Supreme Court decision.
Lothar wrote:Just one example: a doctor can't give a 16-year-old girl an aspirin without parental consent.
Totally and completely false. Under HIPAA, purchasing OTC medications such as aspirin is a decision that can be made by a minor and as such (strictly speaking) the pharmacy, doctor, healthcare practice, HMO, etc. are all prohibited from disclosing that information to the parent. Schools, however, are forbidden from dispensing medication by other statutes.
Lothar wrote:But that same girl can have an abortion (a surgical procedure) completely secretly. Every time a state tries to pass a law to require parental notification (not consent, merely notification) for abortion for minors, we get all kinds of lawsuits and the supreme court finding that it places an "undue burden" on abortion providers, and Planned Parenthood celebrates a victory for "Women's rights" by denying a mother the right to know about a medical procedure being performed on her minor child.
Yet that hasn't stopped Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming from mandating
parental consent (these states still have these laws on the books). In fact, the only states that do not require either parental consent or notification are Alaska, California, Connecticut, Washington DC, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Maine, Montana, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Vermont, and Washington.
To tally that up,
34 of 51 states/district, or two-thirds, require either parental consent or notification.
Lothar wrote:The people who wanted/voted for parental notification get labelled as "anti-woman extremists". Isn't that ridiculous?
And the people who vote against the legislation get labeled as baby-killers. And the people who perform abortions get blowed up by Fundamentalist Christian terrorists. Isn't that ridiculous?
Lothar wrote:The main reason it remains on "low heat" is that, because it came about by judicial fiat, the only way to change it is through judicial fiat. Candidates can talk big about it either way (and rally one side's extreme while alienating the moderates or vice-versa), but the only time it really matters is in appointing Supreme Court justices, because they're the only people who have the authority to say "oops, Roe v Wade was wrongly decided" and re-open the door to sensible abortion laws. Until such time as that happens, we're stuck with unrestricted abortion, and we're stuck with Planned Parenthood getting their panties in a bunch when a pregnant woman is killed and someone's tried for double murder because they worry it'll set a precedent for challenging Roe v Wade.
The Supreme Court didn't make any laws. It also didn't strike down any federal laws.
Lothar wrote:Ignoring all the ethical and moral questions, abortions are simple surgeries, normally performed by doctors (or, anyway, people who make doctor-like salaries.) About three thousand are performed every day in the US -- that's about a million a year. I'd be surprised if it was only costing people a thousand dollars per abortion (by "people" I mean individuals, insurance providers, and taxpayers.) That might be the most absurd thing of all -- despite the fact that the majority of Americans have at least some moral problems with some abortions, our tax dollars go to fund them.
Many insurance companies cover abortions, so the only cost to the recipient is a copay. And where the hell are you getting this "taxpayer-funded" idea? The only generally-available healthcare plan that is federally funded, Medicaid, does not cover abortions as per the Hyde Amendment of 1976.
By the way, surgeons are not doctors, per se. They're usually paid by the procedure. In this case, the average cost of an abortion procedure is
$372.
Lothar wrote:I hope it's becoming clearer why this is such a big issue for Americans. A lot of bull went into Roe v Wade, Doe v Bolton, and many of the related laws, and normal people who want sensible laws can't do a thing about it except watch their tax dollars go to fund something they think is immoral. (It's like, if you took all the same arguments people made against the Iraq war, made it go on for 40 years longer, upped the body count to about 50 million innocents, and didn't even take out a crazed dictator.)
Again with the imaginary taxpayer funding. None of your federal tax dollars are funding abortions. Only seventeen states cover abortions under state-financed Medicaid.