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Question. When was the first law relating to abortion enacted in the U.S.? Anyone know?
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In effect, a number of you have been denying the existence and the power of the anti-abortion movement, not to mention the Christianists, the fascists, the far-right, and their coalition with cowboy capital and libertarian extremists since Goldwater days.
The evidence is that you keep asking the (at this point really stupid) question of how did this SC decision happen, why did it happen now, and who is "really" responsible, thus ignoring/denying their importance and power and stated intent and actions over more than 50 years time.
"Yes, I do see that fellow with a smoking gun standing over that just-shot man, whom he's been threatening to kill, and I do see him cackling. And, okay, I hear him yelling, YES, I SHOT ROEVWADE! NOW I'LL SHOOT THE GODDAMN ADMINISTRATIVE STATE! So I am not denying the existence of that man. But it would be a hasty conclusion to say that this man is the shooter. He has due process rights, after all. I'm just asking questions. Who can say that this shooter is not this other suspect whom I'm personally obsessed with, who isn't present? Why is he not present? Don't you find that suspicious? So I'm going to affect being very serious and thoughtful, double down on that thesis, and insinuate that everyone who doesn't acknowledge the unknown unknowns as their first premise is contributing to some vague thing I like to call divisiveness."
Belligerent Savant » Fri Jul 15, 2022 9:27 am wrote:.
I don't believe I noticed anyone in this thread
denying there was an anti-abortion movement active for some time. But this movement is not mutually exclusive with other factors/agendas,
Of course not, it's an essential part of the right-wing and (bizarrely) libertarian coalition, as I pointed to in the post you were replying to already, and that's where the money comes from. Since the Christianists are essential votes in getting the Republicans in position who will appoint the judges who act as total corporate whores. (More so than the odd Democratic appointment who occasionally fail to do so.)
such as the fore-referenced (and increasingly multi-pronged) efforts to divide citizenry on various ideological issues,
In this case meaning the ones who've been at it openly since the 1960s, however, the culture-warrior right and their funders in the original neoliberal/right-wing coalition, not the invisible masterminds you prefer.
and that such efforts seem to have reached an inflection point, particularly over the last ~2yrs, which is also tied to much of the framing/ostracism of others Re: covid policies and related enforcement, as much as you seem to avoid making that connection.
I do not make the connection as you make it, because your version is speculative or imaginary until you present an iota of evidence other than the usual "spidey-sense" thinking template that on this board is treated as a synonym for ipso facto.
To be clear: The speculation on the part of you and a few others is that anyone bears primary responsibility for the "timing" of overturning Roe v. Wade OTHER THAN the forces who have been fighting, literally and
in public, to do it for 50 years, and who more recently saw their six agents appointed to do this do it immediately when they had the chance. Can you argue it converges with the rest of your construct? Sure, it
converges. But the act and its timing are not "caused by" anyone other than the right-wing coalition of the anti-abortion movement helping to organize a voting bloc, allied with the well-known funders over the last decades of the system of "Law and Economics" centers and right-wing think-tanks and networks who produced at least 5 out of the six motherfucking judges who ruled in the majority.
That being said abortion rights and anti-mandate (certainly for Covid) are allied issues, not antagonistic. I certainly do connect these two issues as matters of rights, and of violations to bodily autonomy. A false binary suggests otherwise. It's time for you to stop engaging in the myth that on R.I. you're arguing with people who think this, since obviously we don't.
But I don't have the shamelessness to turn this thread into yet another Covid thread, or to trivialize the
designation of women as a forced-breeder class (see, I can do the italics too) as something irrelevant by comparison, or to repeatedly serve up the exact same acres of copy-paste sophistry basically making excuses and justifications for the anti-abortion movement. (Which, by the way, if you believe, you may as well say so rather than let Madame Kempe do it for you.)
And that's all we're trying to convey here: an attempt to acknowledge there's connections across topics/issues
Golly gee, so nice of you.
No, I'm not going to get roped into talking about Madame Kempe or the "judicial overreach" argument, and I certainly will not devote the time to deal with your reposting of said acre of sophistry. You're marginally worth deconstructing, your copy pasta is not. (I do like how you italicize "two women" as if this legitimates the nonsense. So? Is Juan Guiado a "Venezuelan voice" now? Will we be hearing next session that Clarence Thomas is a black man, so his argument for nixing voting rights needs to be respected?)
As opposed to the request that all must deal with the works of Madame Kempe et al. (indirectly I have repeatedly up thread, one trick is just not to read me and keep misrepresenting me), I asked a very short question, with a simple answer that might suggest something about "judicial overreach", and overreach generally.
It would take a sharp guy like you about a minute to find the answer. It's not much of a demand, by comparison. How come you're not doing that?
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Question. When was the first law relating to abortion enacted in the U.S.? Anyone know?
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