continuousbeing2 said:well, it would be show for the most part. ultimately the cts get the final say on what is a fundamental right under the due process clause of the 14th. no matter what congress says, the court could always overturn (assuming there is standing to challenge the law, which is a whole other can of worms that isnt really relevant right here).
Also, from what I've read this would limit the courts power on overturning the bill (The Sanctity of Life Act), Thats what the pro-lifers like about it.
What I get is that "life begins at conception" grants the fetus 14th admendment rights, which includes a right to life. Later the same bill reduces the powers that the courts have when overturning the decision.
Here's something I found at "Students for Life of America" obviously a pro-life student group. This is in response to Ron Paul's bill.
U.S. Rep. Ron Paul is the most pro-life candidate. He introduced HR 2597 The Sanctity of Life Act of 2007 on June 6, 2007: http://www.govtrack.us/congress/bill.xpd?bill=h110-2597
What does HR 2597 do? It does everything the pro-life movement is working towards.
o It establishes legal personhood for preborn children from the moment of conception under the 14th Amendment.
o It tells each state they have the authority to set the penalty for abortion though without “exceptions” since it applies legal personhood at conception.
o It tells federal courts, including the U.S. Supreme Court, that they can no longer take up abortion-related cases.
o It tells state and federal courts that they’re no longer bound by any abortion-related federal court ruling, including Roe v Wade.
o The Sanctity of Life Act is basically The Right to Life Act (which establishes legal personhood at conception) plus The Pledge Protection Act (which passed the U.S. House last session and told the US Supreme Court not to take up any pledge of allegiance cases).
So, when HR 2597 The Sanctity of Life Act of 2007 passes, it won’t matter if we have a majority of pro-abortion justices. It means little when other candidates say they’ll appoint strict constructionist (i.e. pro-life) judges, since Congress can ban abortion regardless of how many pro-abortion justices there are on the U.S. Supreme Court. We don’t need to wait for anymore pro-life justices.
http://207.210.78.162/wp/2007/07/23/ron-paul-takes-a-stand-for-life/
Also from what i've read it limits the Supreme court and other courts from over turning the bill.
Sorry I'm just trying to understand this better.
We need a lawyer or 3 in this thread.
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