http://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/api.php?action=feedcontributions&user=DaveLeach&feedformat=atomSaveTheWorld - User contributions [en]2024-03-28T11:22:54ZUser contributionsMediaWiki 1.30.0http://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Open_letter_to_Jeff_Angelo,_WHO_Radio,_and_Iowa_Governor_Kim_Reynolds&diff=50398Open letter to Jeff Angelo, WHO Radio, and Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds2024-02-14T21:22:18Z<p>DaveLeach: </p>
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by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 21:22, 14 February 2024 (UTC)<br />
<br />
To Jeff Angelo <br />
<br />
You invited listeners, February 8, 2024, to talk you out of your belief that satanists have a perfect right under the Constitution to display their idol at the state capitol, to host after-school Satan clubs, and to send their own “pastors” into schools when that bill passes. <br />
<br />
My response is in three parts. I can’t decide which to put first, so I’ll list them and you can skip to whichever one interests you: (1) Acknowledging the logic of your position, which is shared by most judges, lawyers, and Christian leaders. Histories showing the very different understanding of “establishment of religion” by the authors of the 1st Amendment leave many questions unanswered. (2) History of how SCOTUS has mangled the original meaning, usurped jurisdiction over the issue never given it, and sown confusion. (3) Solutions. Legal arguments ready for today’s courts, with explanations. <br />
<br />
=====1. Acknowledgement of the logic of your position.=====<br />
<br />
It genuinely confuses not just judges and lawyers, but many Christians, today, how it would be fair to everyone to allow Christians to display a baby Jesus in a manger in the state capitol or in schools, while prohibiting Satanists from displaying next to it a baby on one of their sacrificial altars, Moslems from displaying a baby with its head lopped off by a nearby toy machete, Chinese Communists from displaying a dismembered baby next to forceps and a suction machine, or witch doctors from displaying a voodoo doll of the state governor or the school principal stuck with pins. <br />
Today’s Poorly Answered questions (which are addressed in Part 3):<br />
<br />
a. Aren’t all “religions” supposed to stand equal before American law? Isn’t that what prohibiting “establishment of religion” means? <br />
<br />
b. Historians like David Barton prove that America’s Founders did not equalize all religions. During the same months our Founders debated the First Amendment, they authorized and funded the printing of Bibles for schools in the Northwest Territories. They obviously didn’t consider that an “establishment of religion”. But why wasn’t it? Barton’s explanations did not make that clear, at least not to me. As late as 1947, SCOTUS ruled that spending taxes on bus rides for Catholic students to Catholic schools was not an “establishment of religion”. But that was not at all clear to the four justices who dissented, who thought it was. <br />
<br />
c. OK, so they were all Christians back then. A little inconsistency then wasn’t so big a deal maybe. But now? Is favoring the Bible practical, constitutional, and fair, now? Aren’t we more free when all ideas are on a level playing field?”<br />
<br />
d. Trinity v. United States (1892) is at times cited as acknowledgment by SCOTUS that the U.S. is, indeed, “a Christian nation”. (The issue of the case was whether to let a Christian pastor from England immigrate with less red tape.) But the evidence weighed in the case is over trivial matters: like Governments are closed on Sundays. But today, with almost everyone else but government open all the time, how is that ruling relevant today? How does our freedom, or rule of law, hang on our acknowledgment of the Bible? <br />
(Similarly, United States v. Macintosh, 1931, concluded that Americans are a “Christian people...according to [giving] one another the equal right of religious freedom, and acknowledging with reverence the duty of obedience to the will of God.”)<br />
<br />
e. I am a Christian who wants to compare American Freedom with the Bible. Haven’t our Founders, and shouldn’t we, compromise with God for the sake of our freedom? For example, elections. If we pattern our government after the Bible, must we cancel elections? Where are elections in the Bible? How about Freedom of Religion? Doesn’t the Bible call for unbelievers to be stoned? How about slavery? Would we have to legalize slavery again? We have a Democracy (a Republic, technically, though there is little agreement on the difference) in which we approve our own laws and elect our leaders, not a Theocracy in which God writes our laws and is our dictator. How is it practical, sensible, or possible to make law anything other than neutral towards all religions?<br />
<br />
f. Thomas Jefferson was the point of the spear for religious liberty in our founding documents. But he warned against the threat from false religions: “Can the liberties of a nation be thought secure when we have removed their only firm basis, a conviction in the minds of the people that these liberties are the gift of God?” (Notes on the State of Virginia, “Query XVIII”, reprinted in Writings, 289.)<br />
<br />
Also see: “Liberty of conscience in matters of religion consists in the absolute and unrestrained exercise of our religious opinion, and duties, in that mode which our own reason and conviction dictate, without the control or intervention of any human power or authority whatsoever.” (St. George Tucker, Blackstone’s Commentaries: with Notes of Reference, to the Constitution and Laws, of the Federal Government of the United States; and of the Commonwealth of Virginia (Philadelphia: William Young Birch and Abraham Small: 1803), I:489, “Appendix: Note G. Of the Right of Conscience; and Of the Freedom of Speech and Of The Press”:)<br />
<br />
But what about the duty of a Moslem to behead Christians and Jews? Of of a Satanist to offer human sacrifice, including to perform abortions as part of a ritual? (Cases in Texas and Pennsylvania where abortion has become illegal) What about Native Americans smoking Peyote, an illegal drug, and then applying for unemployment compensation when they are fired from their jobs as drug counselors? (Employment Division v. Smith) <br />
<br />
I don’t know how much these unanswered questions overlap your own. They are questions that tormented me for decades. Only recently have I glimpsed a “light at the end of the tunnel” of confusion, and I will welcome any help finally reaching it. <br />
<br />
=====2. 2. History of how SCOTUS has mangled the original meaning of the “Establishment Clause”, usurped jurisdiction over the issue never given it, and sown confusion.===== <br />
<br />
Summary: Before 1868 the rights listed in the Constitution and Bill of Rights, like freedom of speech and religion, restrained only Congress, but state legislatures could still force their citizens to attend the state church, and could subject blacks to very unequal rights. In 1868, the 14th Amendment gave Congress, not courts, jurisdiction over states who couldn’t or wouldn’t protect the rights of their citizens. Courts had never reversed Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857) so Congress, which drafted the Amendment, understandably doubted SCOTUS’ capacity for and commitment to understanding and protecting God-given rights. <br />
<br />
Only five years later, SCOTUS ruled (Slaughterhouse, 1873) that Congress can’t enforce any of the rights listed in the Constitution that are violated by states. Over the decades SCOTUS decided courts have jurisdiction over states to protect rights of state citizens, though not all constitutional rights, and they can make up rights that are hostile to constitutional rights. <br />
<br />
It wasn’t until 1943 that SCOTUS decided to usurp authority over states to enforce the “Establishment Clause” of the First Amendment, which prohibits “establishment” of religion. Everson v. Board of Education. It was a Trojan Horse ruling (disguised as friendly to Christians) because it ruled that taxpayer support of bussing for Catholic students to Catholic schools was OK; that didn’t “establish” religion. But it planted two time bombs under Freedom of Religion. <br />
<br />
The first was usurping authority over states, an authority designated by Section 5 of the 14th Amendment only for Congress. It is questionable whether even Congress is given authority to bar “establishment of religion”, because “no establishment of religion” is not directly a “right” of citizens. It is an indirect tool for protecting the “freedom of religion” of citizens. But the Freedom of Religion enjoyed by individuals, free from forcible support of or agreement with a repugnant faith, is the direct measure of whether “no establishment of religion” has been achieved. <br />
<br />
Never before 1943 had SCOTUS interfered with state decisions about religion.<br />
<br />
The second never-before-committed crime of Everson was equating “favoring” Christianity with “establishing” Christianity. American law had always previously “favored” Christianity without anyone suspecting Christianity was being “established”. America’s Founders understood that “establishing” Christianity was evil, but “favoring” Christianity was essential. Yet how many today grasp the difference? Understanding that difference is a key to solving this great problem. <br />
<br />
(This section awaits much more work.)<br />
<br />
=====3. Solutions: Arguments Nearly Ready for Court?=====<br />
<br />
'''“Favoring” Freedom: a “Compelling Government Interest”.''' Allowing a manger scene in the state capitol does not create a right for satanists to erect an idol glaring down at the baby Jesus, because it is a “compelling interest” of freedom-guarding government to “favor” the ''Author'' of Freedom without enabling the avowed ''Enemy'' of Freedom. <br />
<br />
<blockquote>It does not “establish” religion to “favor” the Bible, as ''Everson v. Board of Education'' falsely alleged for the first time in 1947. The authors of the “Establishment Clause” in 1791 considered it ''essential'' to favor the Bible by funding its printing for schools in the Northwest Territories during the same months they debated the Clause. They considered it evil to “establish” Christianity, by which they meant compelling people to endorse, attend, believe, or tithe to any church. For the same reasons that was evil then, it is evil now; and for the same reasons it was essential then to favor the Bible in public schools, it is essential now to favor God as revealed in the Bible on our money, in schools, art and prayers in legislatures, and even in 10 Commandments art in the Supreme Court building which is closed on Sunday. </blockquote><br />
<br />
It is a “compelling government interest” of any government to promote religion(s) which supports its own existence over religions hostile to it. (Though without ''compelling'' consent or obedience, which ''destroys'' freedom.) <br />
<br />
When Moslems, Atheists, or Satanists sue for the same public platform that Christians historically had, they are petitioning courts to favor a ''Biblical'' right not found in ''their'' religions: freedom of conscience ''for all''. Courts should do as they ask and “favor” the Bible, for the sake of all believers of all faiths: religion that ''protects'' conscience ''merits greater access'' to free people than religions that ''crush'' conscience. <br />
<br />
'''No “establishment of religion” – not even by Courts.''' Courts threaten Freedom by ordering God to stand equal before American law with religions from Hell. Courts must stop forcing governments to give equal access to public displays of imaginary gods, for the same practical reason – the same “compelling government interest” that the Bible prohibits idols in the land: equal support for the ''enemies'' of Freedom with the ''friends'' of Freedom normalizes tyranny, which peels confused voters away from supporting details essential to Freedom. (Israel’s leaders were elected, too.)<br />
<br />
“Favoring” the principles of Freedom protects Freedom of Conscience for all until it develops into an “establishment”, meaning a human-managed hierarchy with laws and police which force people to believe, endorse, attend, or support anything. An “establishment” makes humans the masters of others’ consciences who cannot master their own. Courts “establish” their own irreligion with their arbitrary rules regulating the expression of governments, businesses, and individuals. <br />
<br />
<blockquote>The rights of conscience are, indeed, beyond the just reach of any human power. They are given by God, and cannot be encroached upon by human authority, without a criminal disobedience of the precepts of natural, as well as revealed religion. The real object of the amendment was, not to countenance, much less to advance Mahometanism, or Judaism, or infidelity, by prostrating Christianity; but to exclude all rivalry among Christian sects, and to '''prevent any national ecclesiastical establishment''', which should give to an hierarchy the exclusive patronage of the national government. It thus sought to '''cut off the means of religious persecution''', (the vice and pest of former ages,) and the power of subverting the rights of conscience in matters of religion, which had been trampled upon almost from the days of the Apostles to the present age. (Joseph Story, Commentaries on the Constitution of the United States (Boston: Hilliard, Gray, and Company, 1833), I:701, § 990-991) </blockquote><br />
<br />
The “Establishment Clause” prohibits “Congress” from passing “any law respecting [on the subject of] the establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.” Courts are not more competent than Congress to govern our consciences. <br />
<br />
<blockquote>(How Thomas Jefferson explained the “Establishment Clause”:) “[N]o power over the freedom of religion [of states]. . . [is] delegated to the United States by the Constitution.” Kentucky Resolution, 1798<br />
<br />
“In matters of religion, I have considered that its free exercise is placed by the Constitution independent of the powers of the general [federal] government.” Second Inaugural Address, 1805<br />
<br />
“[O]ur excellent Constitution . . . has not placed our religious rights under the power of any public functionary.” Letter to the Methodist Episcopal Church, 1808<br />
<br />
“I consider the government of the United States as interdicted [prohibited] by the Constitution from intermeddling with religious institutions . . . or exercises.” Letter to Samuel Millar, 1808<br />
<br />
''Reynolds v. United States'' (1878) “Coming as this does from an acknowledged leader of the advocates of the measure, it [Jefferson’s ‘separation of church and state’ letter] may be accepted almost as an authoritative declaration of the scope and effect of the Amendment thus secured. '''Congress''' was deprived of all '''legislative power''' over mere [religious] opinion, but was left free to reach '''actions which were in violation of social duties''' or subversive of good order. [T]he rightful purposes of civil government are for its officers to interfere when principles break out into '''overt acts against peace''' and good order. In th[is] . . . is found the true distinction between '''what properly belongs to the church and what to the State.”''' <br />
<br />
[https://wallbuilders.com/resource/lesson-4-american-founding-and-federal-era-1785-early-1800s/ Wallbuilders] President Thomas Jefferson authored the original plan of education for the public schools of Washington, DC. He used the Bible and Watt’s Hymnal (one of the greatest doctrinal hymnals in Christendom) as the primary reading texts.<small>[Records of the Columbia Historical Society (Washington, D. C.: Columbia Historical Society, 1897), Vol. 1, pp. 122-123, 127, from the report by Mr. Henry Ould on February 10, 1813. See also National Intelligencer, March 20, 1817, p. 2. ] </small><br />
<br />
President Jefferson, in 1803, signed a federal act renewing provisions related to propagating the Gospel among the Delaware Indian tribes. <small>[The Debates and Proceedings in the Congress of the United States (Washington: Gales and Seaton, 1851), 7th Cong., 2nd Sess., p. 1602, “An Act to Revive and Continue in Force An Act in Addition to an Act, Entitled, ‘An Act in Addition to an Act Regulating the Grants of Land Appropriated for Military Services, and for the Society of the United Brethren for Propagating the Gospel Among the Heathen,’ and for Other Purposes,” March 3, 1803] </small><br />
<br />
President Jefferson approved a treaty with the Kaskaskia tribe to provide them Christian ministry and teaching. <small>[American State Papers: Documents, Legislative and Executive of the Congress of the United States, Walter Lowrie and Matthew St. Claire Clarke, editors (Washington, D. C.: Gales and Seaton, 1832), Vol. IV, p. 687, “The Kaskaskia and Other Tribes,” October 31, 1803.]</small><br />
<br />
President Jefferson in1804 signed a federal act related to the propagation of the Gospel among Indians on federal land trusts. <small>[The Public Statutes at Large of the United States of America, Richard Peters, editor (Boston: Charles C. Little and James Brown, 1845), Vol. II, pp. 271-272, “An Act Granting Further Time for Locating Military Land Warrants, and for Other Purposes,” March 19, 1804.]</small><br />
<br />
President Jefferson praised others who, like himself, used federal resources to spread Christianity among natives. <small>[See, for example, Thomas Jefferson, The Writings of Thomas Jefferson, Andrew A. Lipscomb, editor (Washington, D. C.: The Thomas Jefferson Memorial Association, 1904), Vol. XVI, p. 289, to Thomas, Ellicot, and Others on November 13, 1807.]</small></blockquote><br />
<br />
The 14th Amendment is the only vehicle of federal power over states, and its Section 5 gives enforcement authority to Congress, not courts. The only authority federal courts have from the Constitution is to enforce federal laws. <br />
<br />
Neither courts nor Congress have any constitutional authority to dictate terms of religious expression to anybody.<br />
<br />
<blockquote>“[N]o purpose of action against religion [particulary Christianity] can be imputed to any legislation, state or national because this is a religious people….[T]his is a Christian nation.” ''Church of the Holy Trinity'' v. U. S., 143 U. S. 457, 465, 471 (1892) [a unanimous ruling]. </blockquote><br />
<br />
Courts have usurped this authority without even any fact finding to determine which religions are consonant with reality, thereby “establishing” idiocy. Neither has there been fact finding to determine which religions support free government and virtues in citizens necessary to make freedom function. Straying so far from reality, so far outside their lawful jurisdiction, courts thereby “establish” the seeds of destruction of their own existence. <br />
<br />
'''Elements of Freedom in Religions.''' Religious expression is freest in nations where Biblical influence is greatest and least free in nations where Biblical influence is weakest because the “swordpoint conversions” common to other religions are absent from the Bible. <br />
<br />
<blockquote>Deuteronomy 13:1-7 is the closest the Bible comes to endorsing any human-enforced penalty for sincerely held disagreement with God. The passage draws the line the same place as did Employment Division v. Smith; you can believe you should commit a crime, but if you do it you will be prosecuted. “Serving” the surrounding gods at the time meant human sacrifice, temple orgies, drugs, drinking blood. Persuading others to “serve” other gods was what we call “incitement to crime”.<br />
<br />
Biblical Christianity: The Origin of the Rights of Conscience, Wallbuilders.com, May 29, 2023 “...only nations who respect Biblical teachings and traditions offer protection for the rights of religious conscience. Secular and non-Biblical nations, and those with state-established churches (such as those that predominated in England and Europe at the time of the American Founding), do not allow rights of conscience but instead demand conformity, which often requires governmental punishment coercion concerning religious beliefs, which violates the Scriptures.<br />
<br />
“Christ Himself established religious non-coercion as the standard. His approach was so voluntary that He even directed His disciples that when they presented the Gospel to others, if someone was interested, then they could stay and share the message with them; but if someone did not want to hear, then they were to leave the area and not force the issue (Luke 10:8-12). There was absolutely no coercion. It was also this way with Paul and the other Apostles: in every case; hearers then chose whether or not to follow Christianity; there was never any penalty, pressure, or force levied against them.<br />
<br />
“As John Quincy Adams noted, Jesus Christ ‘came to teach and not to compel. His law was a Law of Liberty. He left the human mind and human action free.’ (John Quincy Adams, A Discourse on Education Delivered at Braintree, Thursday, October 24th, 1839 (Boston: Perkins & Marvin, 1840), 18.)<br />
<br />
“Two generations later, legal writer Stephen Cowell (1800-1872) similarly avowed: ‘Nonconformity, dissent, free inquiry, individual conviction, mental independence, are forever consecrated by the religion of the New Testament as the breath of its own life – the conditions of its own existence on the earth. The book is a direct transfer of human allegiance in things spiritual from the civil and ecclesiastical powers to the judgment and conscience of the individual.’ (Stephen Colwell, Politics for American Christians: A Word upon our Example as a Nation, our Labour, our Trade, Elections, Education, and Congressional Legislation (Philadelphia: Lippincott, Grambo & Co. 1852), 82, Tait’s Edinburgh Magazine, for 1844 (Edinburgh: William Tait, 1844), 752, “The Politics of the New Testament,” December 1844.)<br />
<br />
“And several generations after that, President Franklin D. Roosevelt continued to affirm the same truth, noting: ‘We want to do it the voluntary way – and most human beings in all the world want to do it the voluntary way. We do not want to have the way imposed. . . . That would not follow in the footsteps of Christ.’ ” (“Franklin D. Roosevelt, “Christmas Greeting to the Nation,” The American Presidency Project, December 24, 1940.)</blockquote><br />
<br />
A judge imagining he can rule without “favoring” the Bible, in an American court enforcing American law, is like a fish denying the value of water. The most fundamental principles of American law are taken from the Bible while competing religions and philosophies are, to varying degrees, hostile to Freedom. A judge enforcing the law, following the Constitution, favors the Bible and suppresses the dehumanization, unequal rights, and tyranny of other religions. For example:<br />
<br />
<blockquote>'''Equal Rights.''' A judge who upholds “equal protection of the laws” (14th Amendment) and “all men are created equal, and endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights...” (Declaration of Independence) thus favors equal justice for the poor with the rich (Exodus 23:3), women with men (Deuteronomy 24:17), immigrants with citizens (Exodus 12:49, Leviticus 24:22, Numbers 15:15), employees with employers (Leviticus 24:17, 21:20), those without a bribe with those with (Deuteronomy 16:19), and all races, nationalities, and religions (Galatians 3:28, Colossians 3:11). He rules against Islam’s dehumanization of Christians and Jews as “apes and pigs” deserving of the jizra tax, if not slavery, mutilation, and execution, against Hinduism’s “caste system”, and against the utter lack of any rights or law of Satanism.<br />
<br />
'''Elections.''' Courts favor the Bible over other religions when they enforce laws requiring honest elections for all citizens, which are demanded by no other religion or philosophy, but were first introduced in 1462 BC with elections of over 70,000 local and national leaders (Deuteronomy 1:13), were equated in 1065 BC with the rule of God (1 Samuel 8:7), and after 35 AD with elections of elders (Acts 14:23 & 2 Corinthians 8:19 - the “ordaining” of elders after 35AD was done by χειρτονεω, voting by raising hands)). God equated abandoning elections in with abandoning God, , <br />
<br />
'''Freedom of Speech.''' Courts which enforce Freedom of Speech favor the laws of nations influenced by the Bible, whose heroes are those who told the truth even when truth was against the law. Such courts ignore the laws of nations dominated by other religions or philosophies whose heroes are the “strongest”, who most successfully dominate others, whose approved methods include deception and torture. <br />
<br />
'''Freedom of Religion.''' Even Freedom of Religion is a uniquely Biblical value. The Bible respects no “swordpoint conversions”. Deuteronomy 13:1-7 is the closest the Bible comes to endorsing any human-enforced penalty for sincerely held disagreement with God. The passage draws the line the same place as did ''Employment Division v. Smith;'' you can believe you should commit a crime, but if you do it you will be prosecuted. “Serving” the surrounding gods at the time meant human sacrifice, temple orgies, drugs, drinking blood. Persuading others to “serve” other gods was what we call “incitement to crime”. God “reasons” with people. (Isaiah 1:18). His people persuade by reason, not force. (Acts 17:2, 1 Peter 3:15. We address wrongs with reason, evidence, and law, and jail those who start physical fights; we do not go to war to gain territory, slaves, or booty, but only to defend ourselves and others).<br />
<br />
'''Lower Crime.''' The 10 Commandments is an outline of the laws God offers for the benefit of all mankind. They doubly serve as an outline of American law. The fact that they are universally recognized as principles of God’s laws secures voluntary obedience to them of all who love God, without the need of hiring police to compel their compliance. We are taught not only to fear the consequences of, but to hate murder, stealing, perversion, and lying – especially false accusations. Children are placed under the jurisdiction of those most likely to love them most, and are urged to obey voluntarily for their own benefit. Hard, slave-grade labor is outlawed by requiring periods of rest. And not only is obedience secured voluntarily, but disobedience is prevented by the final command to not even want any of the goals of these crimes. And the first command is to love and obey the Author of all these rules upon which freedom and prosperity hangs. This positive incentive for obeying laws is supplemented by the negative incentive implied in the first Commandment: the fear of God’s judgments, added to human-enforced penalties, for disobeying.<br />
<br />
All of which makes it insane that the Supreme Court’s reason for not allowing posts of the 10 Commandments in schools was: “ If the posted copies of the Ten Commandments are to have any effect at all, it will be to induce the schoolchildren to read, meditate upon, perhaps to venerate '''and obey''', the Commandments. However desirable this might be as a matter of private devotion, it is not a permissible state objective under the Establishment Clause.” ''Stone v. Graham'', 449 U.S. 39 (1980) https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/449/39/</blockquote><br />
<br />
It is also a “legitimate government interest” to “favor” any religion to the extent it inspires in voters and citizens character qualities essential to the success of freedom. Therefore evidence is relevant, in any case concerning government involvement in free expression, of a religion’s promotion of personal virtues that enable freedom to function, such as:<br />
<br />
service to others (Luke 22:25-27; American society honors most who serve most), <br />
<br />
respect for all humans (Genesis 1:27), <br />
<br />
honesty (Proverbs 6:16-17, Matthew 19:18; fraud and bribery are crimes and scandals in America), <br />
<br />
tolerance (Americans value freedom of speech and religion, rejecting “swordpoint conversions” and prosecution of dissent; we oppose discrimination over morally neutral differences. Tolerance for those who look or think different is not found in other religions or practiced by their followers), <br />
<br />
impartiality (Proverbs 17:23 We demand equal rights and opportunities for all in which people are judged by and rewarded for their service and the content of their character), <br />
<br />
peacemakers (Matthew 5:9; We address wrongs with reason, evidence, and law, and jail those who start physical fights; we do not go to war to gain territory, slaves, or booty, but only to defend ourselves and others), and <br />
<br />
religious obedience to legitimate law (Romans 13:1-5, 1 Peter 2:13, Matthew 22:21). <br />
<br />
It is a “compelling government interest” to support those foundational virtues over religions which are relatively hostile to Freedom, though without physically or financially coercing anyone’s conscience, which destroys Freedom. <br />
<br />
'''Relevant evidence''' in court includes results of scrutiny of the scriptures of any religion whose accommodation or promotion is being reviewed, to establish any consonance with reality beyond any reasonable possibility of human understanding at the time of its authorship, and therefore the likelihood that taking seriously its advice, promises and warnings comport with reality and are in the national interest. <br />
<br />
It does not “establish religion” to publicly, officially establish facts. Religions make claims about God or the absence thereof. The Bible uniquely claims that God “turns the hearts of kings”, (Proverbs 21:1) and brings judgments upon whole nations for violating laws given, again uniquely, for the benefit of all mankind. The Bible thus claims God is the “highest authority”, a “king of kings”. (Psalm 2:1 ...Why are the people making such foolish plans? 2 Their kings and leaders join together to fight against the LORD and his chosen king....4 But the one who rules in heaven laughs at them. The Lord makes fun of them.... 10 So, kings and rulers, be smart and learn this lesson. 11 Serve the LORD with fear and trembling. 12 Show that you are loyal to his son, or the Lord will be angry and destroy you. He is almost angry enough to do that now, but those who go to him for protection will be blessed.) <br />
<br />
It is a “compelling government interest” to investigate such claims, and if they survive scrutiny, to adjust national policy to conform to reality – to not be “foolish”. This makes relevant in legislatures and in courts a review of the scrutiny of the Bible, compared with a review of results of any scrutiny of other sacred writings (if any such scrutiny can be found) to determine which is the more reliable guide to what will most benefit citizens and their government.<br />
<br />
Blindness about the differences between religions in these areas, leading to equal treatment of them in courts and politics, threaten our freedoms, is not in the national interest, and is the definition of willful ignorance.<br />
<br />
The fact that all human fact-finding is imperfect and subject to the possibility of evidence available in the future is not a reason to throw up America’s hands and rule reality irrelevant. <br />
<br />
Reality is not irrelevant. It is self-enforcing.</div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Forum&diff=50397Forum2024-02-14T21:18:54Z<p>DaveLeach: /* The Supreme Court's War Against God */</p>
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[[VA_Hospital,_asked_for_medical_justification_for_mask_policy,_consults_lawyers]]<br />
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This is a record of my interaction with the Veterans Administration Hospital of central Iowa about their requirement that everyone wear a mask all the time they are in the hospital. I showed them the research proving masks are completely ineffective at stopping covid, but they do a magnificent job of blocking oxygen so that wearers' oxygen levels drop and carbon dioxide levels rise, causing a wide variety of serious medical issues.<br />
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I had a few exchanges with VA staff, followed by attempts to involve newspapers to report it, and lawyers to sue in federal court.<br />
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The basis of my complaint is in two parts: Section One explains in what sense blind faith in rituals proved by research to accomplish nothing, loaded with social rejection of anyone who questions them, runs towards the essence of the False Gods of primitive paganism and offends the Biblical importance placed on Truth. Section Two summarizes tons of research showing that masks and vaccines don't help but harm, while covid tests are very unreliable. <br />
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[[God's Coronavirus Cure in 3 Verses]] (Probably a situation that brings most politics to a screeching halt, shutting down entire legislatures, should be classified as "political")<br />
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[[Cure for Covid Censors]] '''A petition to state governors''': "Governors: base mandates on ALL the science. Sponsor an Online Forum where Doctors can Interact without fear of Censorship, which you will use as a knowlege base for your emergency orders." (See this article for complete information, and model Emergency Powers legislation. See [https://citizengo.org/en-us/node/204001?tcid=89997709 PETITION] for an online petition at CitizenGo.) <br />
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[[Application_for_Religious/Secular Exemption from Mask Vaccine & testing_Mandates]]<br />
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'''Section One''' of this Application explains (1) my reverence for Truth and evidence, (2) the Bible’s emphasis on Truth and evidence, (3) Bible heroes who resisted health laws not based on reality, (4) why mask and vaccine mandates which cannot rationally claim support from evidence must be classified as “religious”, and are presented as false gods, and (5) what the Bible says about bowing down to false gods, and the importance of openly, decisively disclaiming them. Section One presents legal analysis of the First Amendment prohibition of “establishment of religion”, as well as theological analysis. <br />
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[[Application for Secular/Religious Exemption from Mask/Vaccine Mandate - Section Two, The Evidence]] '''Section Two''' of this Application reviews medical research that shows (1) masks do not slow covid spread with any “statistical significance”, (2) masks cause serious medical and emotional problems, most tragically in children, (3) vaccines cause more deaths than covid, and (4) government blockage of proven covid cures points to some other government purpose than reducing covid. But you probably don’t need this evidence; you probably have plenty of your own, or you wouldn’t want an exemption. This information is widely available, and expands daily, so Section Two is out of date anyway. (Section Two also lists arguments common in other Applications for Religious Exemption: vaccines are developed from a murdered baby, and the Bible calls us to treat our bodies as the Temple of God.)<br />
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[[Covid_Updates]] (through 2020)<br />
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[[Free Speech Laws, Precedents & Scripture]]<br />
<br />
[[Bill Gates' Dream is our Nightmare]]<br />
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===The Supreme Court's War Against God===<br />
<br />
[[Open letter to Jeff Angelo, WHO Radio, and Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds]]<br />
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You invited listeners, February 8, a week ago, to talk you out of your belief that satanists have a perfect right under the Constitution to display their idol at the state capitol, to host after-school Satan clubs, and to send their own “pastors” into schools when that bill passes. <br />
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Thank you for giving me something to do to fill up my week.<br />
<br />
===Life===<br />
<br />
[[Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases]]<br />
<br>'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters <br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion<br />
<br>by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
<br>''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal'' <br />
<br>''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal'' <br />
<br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen<br />
<br />
[[The 140 Amicus Briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson]]<br />
<br />
[[The “Outlawing Abortion in Compliance with Unanimous Court-Recognized Evidence that Abortion is Murder” Act]] '''A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life''' Featuring Nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' (which overturned ''Roe v. Wade'' June 24, 2022. "Amicus briefs", also called "Friend of Court" briefs, are filed by groups with a strong interest in the case, such as prolife and prodeath groups, who are not direct parties to the case but who will be affected by the outcome.)<br />
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'''Some claims are so unacceptable that it becomes almost irrelevant whether they are true, but some Truths are so irrefutable that censorship fails, like Darkness trying to put out Light, John 1:5.''' <br />
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[[Ending Legal Abortion in Every State in about a Year]] (This is an earlier, shorter draft of the preceding article.) By including the irrefutable, unanimous, unchallenged evidence that babies are fully human, with conscious souls, in the "findings of facts" of a prolife law, courts are forced to address that fact when they review the law. It is impossible for any judge to squarely address that evidence and keep abortion legal, in ANY state. It is just as impossible for any news reporter or Democrat to squarely address this evidence, and still defend abortion. Therefore if ''any'' prolife lawmaker anywhere in America can be found to simply INTRODUCE a prolife bill with these Findings of Facts, this evidence will take on a life of its own and be impossible to censor for long. Some claims are so unacceptable that it becomes almost irrelevant whether they are true; likewise, some truths so challenge the censors that they are like Light in Darkness which Darkness can no longer put out, John 1:5. <br />
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[[Alito Draft Treats ITS A BABY as a Matter of Opinion]] This letter written to six conservative Supreme Court justices responds to several outrageous quotes in the leaked draft by Justice Alito, and on their statements during oral arguments the previous December, in which they said they couldn't tell if unborn babies are real people, which should flabbergast any prolifer. I sent this letter June 15, 2022 BEFORE their ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson repealing Roe v. Wade. I gave evidence they should respect that babies really are people, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder. They had said since they can't tell, voters should decide, through their elected state representatives. <br />
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I answered that the right to murder cannot be on any ballot. I reminded them that the 14th Amendment was passed specifically to protect those who “as a matter of law” were never treated as “persons in the whole sense”. I said that repealing Roe while calling ITS A BABY a Matter of Opinion won't end aborticide cases. I pointed out that repealing Roe, leaving liberal states free to continue the slaughter, is no better than Dred Scott v. Sandford which left liberal states free to continue the slavery. <br />
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They had written that voters must decide whether to murder babies based on the "social value" voters place on babies. I responded that the "social value" that women have to be allowed to kill babies in order to have "full equality" is held by most non-Christian religions and philosophies but is alien to "all men are created equal...in the Image of God". I pointed out that every court-recognized fact finder that has taken a position has ruled that "It's a Baby!" If the unanimous ruling of every court-recognized fact finder is not enough for a judge to know a fact, how can any judge ever know anything? I acknowledged that every state appellate court in abortion prevention cases said Roe made the FACT that babies are people irrelevant, by ruling that babies are NOT people "as a matter of law". Besides pointing out that the Supreme Court actually never said such nonsense, the 14th Amendment protects all who are IN FACT humans. What is irrelevant is whether they are “persons” “as a matter of law”. Even Roe treated ITS A BABY as a fact question, for fact finders.<br />
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[[ND_Court_Gives_Moms_Fundamental_Right to_Save_Themselves_from_their_Babies]] <br />
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[[Troubling Excerpts & Analysis from Dobbs v. Jackson]] My letter to SCOTUS didn't improve their understanding of babies. SCOTUS ruled that "it's a baby" is a matter of opinion beyond the ability of courts to resolve, so voters - not courts - should decide whether to keep baby killing legal. My analysis points out that SCOTUS doesn't treat the humanity of any ''other'' group of people as so subjective that states need the freedom to decide whether to legalize murdering them. <br />
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Well, At least aborticide is not a "fundamental right" - though not because babies are people so killing them is murder. No, the best reason they could come up with for ruling that aborticide is not a fundamental right is that it hasn't been legal in past centuries. Pardon the french, but state legislatures need to pass laws that will fill that vacuum of intelligence. If crimes against people should be kept legal according to whether they have been legal in past centuries, with no discussion of the very real people hurt by them, then ''slavery'' should still be legal.<br />
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[[Valentine Letter to Supreme Court Justices: outlaw baby killing in EVERY state]] This was my first letter to the Supreme Court, mailed on February 14, 2022, before the leaked Alito draft. It responds to alarming, foolish quotes from the most conservative justices in the December 1, 2021 oral arguments in Dobbs v. Jackson. <br />
<br />
[[Scriptures SCOTUS must address before saying Christianity supports abortion]] Roe v. Wade said part of the reason "the judiciary, at this point in the development of man's knowledge, is unable to speculate as to the answer...to 'when life begins'" was because preachers and doctors don't agree! Yet no preacher from the last 1,000 years was consulted! So obviously, SCOTUS' theology is due for an update. Here is some of what God says about it. God made babies, so God knows what He made. <br />
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[[Four_Drawbacks_of_a_No-Right-to-Abortion_State_Constitutional_Amendment]] The Iowa Supreme Court overturned a prolife law and claimed that abortion is a "fundamental right" in Iowa, no matter what it is elsewhere. I don't think that is quite the meaning of the ruling, but Iowa prolifers now think they have to pass an amendment to the Iowa Constitution before they can think about any other prolife laws. Which means more years of waiting. Here are the legal reasons that is unnecessary.<br />
<br />
[[Answers to Lawmakers' Objections]]<br />
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[[The consensus of court-recognized fact-finders that babies are people even before they are born]] This is the core legal consensus that no judge can squarely address and keep abortion legal. <br />
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[[Abortion Law Alabama]] Here is my analysis of an Alabama prolife law with robust Findings of Facts, but that did not go far enough to survive courts. <br />
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[[Missouri Encyclopedia of Abortion Arguments]] Here is my analysis of a Missouri prolife law with robust Findings of Facts, but that did not go far enough to survive courts. <br />
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[[Abortion]]<br />
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[[Outreach to 2800 Republican Lawmakers in 30 States where Republicans Control Both Chambers]] In 2019 I offered my book, "How States can Outlaw Abortion in a way that Survives Courts", to Republican lawmakers. Over 50 accepted a copy. But so far I know of none who acted on the opportunity.<br />
<br />
[[Forsythe]]<br />
<br />
===Immigration===<br />
<br />
[[Another AntiImmigrant Bible Claim]]<br />
<br />
[[Deadly Immigration Rhetoric]]<br />
<br />
[[Many of our ancestors documented THEMSELVES]]<br />
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[[The Immigration Solution best for our Economy, our Security, and our Faith]]<br />
<br />
[[Cruz, Trump, Keyes, and the Bible]]<br />
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[["Never Trump" and the Bible]]<br />
<br />
[[Democrat Platform on immigration]]<br />
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[[Republican Platform on immigration]]<br />
<br />
:[[Republican and Democrat Immigration Platforms are Similar]]<br />
<br />
[[Immigration]] ''(Comparing what parties and candidates say)''<br />
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[[Setting Immigration Quotas - the Mystery of the Wages]] ''(There is no measure of the number best for citizens)''<br />
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[[Whose Expertise Inspired Our Immigration Laws?]] ''(U.S. immigration policy is driven by those who have least studied the key facts)''<br />
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[[Personal to Ted Cruz]]<br />
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===Sudan===<br />
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[[Saving South Sudan]] ''(How refugees can open U.S. refugee quotas so their families can come, and How Refugees can heal the government of South Sudan so their families won't have to leave) ''<br />
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[[Saving South Sudan - general discussion]]<br />
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[[Optional: Turn your Response into a New Article]]<br />
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[[Principles of the proposed UTSS Constitution in the Bible]]<br />
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===Other Political Issues===<br />
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[[Open Letter to Election Affirmers/Fake News Subscribers]] Reflections on my interview with a Washington Post reporter and her article<br />
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[[File:SinTiny.gif|center]]<br />
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[[Racism - Whether Blacks are even Citizens - A Debate]]<br />
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[[Judicial Accountability Act: How Legislatures can stop judges from legislating]]<br />
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[[Election Fraud]] What can we do to ensure future fair elections? Consider the degree of election fraud we have just been through, the degree of Republican acceptance of the results as correct despite the fraud, and now with the fraud machine in charge of the U.S. legislature and presidency while promising to pack the courts, while free speech is being completely shut down in our newsrooms and social media against any suggestion of the least fraud. What will keep fraud from spreading to the remaining 44 states, and from presidential elections on down the line - if they haven't already? What courageous new movement will rise to restore honest elections? <br />
<br />
[[This Judge ruled like a Christian Historian]]<br />
<br />
[[Climate Change]]<br />
<br />
==Spiritual Preparation for Action==<br />
<br />
[[How to React when God's Answer to your Prayers is Delivered by an Unqualified Messenger or is Gift Wrapped in Hard Work or in a Lot of Reading]]<br />
<br />
[[God's Blueprints for Political Victories]]<br />
<br />
[[Bible Blueprints for Christian Meetings]]<br />
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<blockquote>1: Obeying God beats traditional worship<br />
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2: "Good works", not just talk with no intent to act, are God’s goals for meetings<br />
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3: God answers prayers through forums where “all” reason and “exhort”. Sermons aren’t mentioned.<br />
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4: Bible heroes, like God, are very Political<br />
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5: "The Gospel" is not just about Heaven, but also about Heroic Hard Work Here<br />
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6: "Light in the Darkness" means quoting God about Darkness in the Darkness<br />
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7: The "Cross" we must carry is an "easy yoke", a "light burden". It is a reward. It is Life, now. It may "cost" money, friends, wealth, careers, comfort, life, but not anything we need </blockquote><br />
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[[Beast or Savior? Musk v. 1 Cor 14 Fellowship]]<br />
<br />
[[Shall we rejoice when an abortionist goes to Hell?]]<br />
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[[Trump - America Needs Him but not his Pride or his Sodomite Patronage]] Bible perspectives by Scott Lively (pastor, lawyer, anti-sodomy activist from Oregon to Uganda), David Lane (organizer of American Renewal Project which brings pastors to hear political leaders and encourages them to run for office) and Dave Leach, website guy]] <br />
<br />
[[Personal Attack Headlines that Violate Proverbs 24:17]]<br />
<br />
[[Are Christians Happier?]]<br />
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[[Drinking is for Death Beds]]<br />
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[[Multitude Of Counsellors Project]]<br />
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[[America got Freedom from the Bible]]<br />
<br />
[[Upon this Rock I will build my Congress]] <> [[Part Two: WHICH "Rock"?]] <> [[Part Three: Politics in the Gates]] <> [[Part Four: Congregation/Congress v. “Church”]] <> [[Part Five: The Congress of Living Stones]]<br />
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[[What God says we will accomplish by meeting His way]] (Invitation to join a "Multitude of Counsellors", Proverbs 15:22)<br />
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[[God's Relationship Primer]]<br />
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[[The Bible on Equal Rights for Women: Did God Write "For Men Only" on the Pulpit?]]<br />
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[[Psychology vs. the Bible]]<br />
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[[What we can Pray for that isn't Forbidden by Prophecy]]<br />
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[[The fewer who are willing to manage the interactions of citizens the closer their only possible government comes to being a dictatorship]]<br />
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[[Evidence that in God All Nations May Trust]]<br />
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[[Shining "the Gospel" Outside the Bushel]]<br />
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[[Gospel Light turned off by Christians]]<br />
<br />
==Reasoning with Pastors==<br />
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This section is for reports of dialog with pastors about those "Noninvolvement Theologies" that are keeping the "Armies of God" from shining the Light (of what God says about our national abominations) out into the government-entangled Darkness outside the church walls - out in those forums where voters decide whether to pattern our laws after the principles of Heaven or of Hell. Even where pastors give occasional sermons identifying some of those abominations, and more rarely direct token political action, there remain prohibitions against other churchgoers besides the pastor being allowed, on church premises and through church communication channels, to discuss, reason, investigate, strategize, and take action together, not limited to the pastor's political knowledge, to shine that Light out where it will get rid of some of that Darkness. See [[Reasoning with Pastors - Introduction]] for Dave Leach's explanation of why he is publishing these reports of dialog with several pastors which, as they occurred over the past 30 years, he did not expect to make public.<br />
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<blockquote>Ye are the salt of the earth: but if the salt have lost his savour, wherewith shall it be salted? it is thenceforth good for nothing, but to be cast out, and to be trodden under foot of men. Ye are the light of the world. A city that is set on an hill cannot be hid. Neither do men light a candle, and put it under a bushel, but on a candlestick; and it giveth light unto all that are in the house. Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven. - Matthew 5:13-16</blockquote><br />
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<blockquote>Thou shalt not mix politics and religion. - 2 Denominations 3:16</blockquote><br />
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<blockquote>Thou shalt not talk about anything controversial in church. That is, anything important enough that the discovery of disagreement in another is disturbing. - 1 Controversies 23</blockquote><br />
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[[Reasoning with Pastors - Introduction]]<br />
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[[Pastor Terry Amann, Church of the Way]]</div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Open_letter_to_Jeff_Angelo,_WHO_Radio,_and_Iowa_Governor_Kim_Reynolds&diff=50396Open letter to Jeff Angelo, WHO Radio, and Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds2024-02-14T21:17:37Z<p>DaveLeach: Created page with " To Jeff Angelo You invited listeners, February 8, to talk you out of your belief that satanists have a perfect right under the Constitution to display their idol at the sta..."</p>
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<div><br />
To Jeff Angelo <br />
<br />
You invited listeners, February 8, to talk you out of your belief that satanists have a perfect right under the Constitution to display their idol at the state capitol, to host after-school Satan clubs, and to send their own “pastors” into schools when that bill passes. <br />
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My response is in three parts. I can’t decide which to put first, so I’ll list them and you can skip to whichever one interests you: (1) Acknowledging the logic of your position, which is shared by most judges, lawyers, and Christian leaders. Histories showing the very different understanding of “establishment of religion” by the authors of the 1st Amendment leave many questions unanswered. (2) History of how SCOTUS has mangled the original meaning, usurped jurisdiction over the issue never given it, and sown confusion. (3) Solutions. Legal arguments ready for today’s courts, with explanations. <br />
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=====1. Acknowledgement of the logic of your position.=====<br />
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It genuinely confuses not just judges and lawyers, but many Christians, today, how it would be fair to everyone to allow Christians to display a baby Jesus in a manger in the state capitol or in schools, while prohibiting Satanists from displaying next to it a baby on one of their sacrificial altars, Moslems from displaying a baby with its head lopped off by a nearby toy machete, Chinese Communists from displaying a dismembered baby next to forceps and a suction machine, or witch doctors from displaying a voodoo doll of the state governor or the school principal stuck with pins. <br />
Today’s Poorly Answered questions (which are addressed in Part 3):<br />
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a. Aren’t all “religions” supposed to stand equal before American law? Isn’t that what prohibiting “establishment of religion” means? <br />
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b. Historians like David Barton prove that America’s Founders did not equalize all religions. During the same months our Founders debated the First Amendment, they authorized and funded the printing of Bibles for schools in the Northwest Territories. They obviously didn’t consider that an “establishment of religion”. But why wasn’t it? Barton’s explanations did not make that clear, at least not to me. As late as 1947, SCOTUS ruled that spending taxes on bus rides for Catholic students to Catholic schools was not an “establishment of religion”. But that was not at all clear to the four justices who dissented, who thought it was. <br />
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c. OK, so they were all Christians back then. A little inconsistency then wasn’t so big a deal maybe. But now? Is favoring the Bible practical, constitutional, and fair, now? Aren’t we more free when all ideas are on a level playing field?”<br />
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d. Trinity v. United States (1892) is at times cited as acknowledgment by SCOTUS that the U.S. is, indeed, “a Christian nation”. (The issue of the case was whether to let a Christian pastor from England immigrate with less red tape.) But the evidence weighed in the case is over trivial matters: like Governments are closed on Sundays. But today, with almost everyone else but government open all the time, how is that ruling relevant today? How does our freedom, or rule of law, hang on our acknowledgment of the Bible? <br />
(Similarly, United States v. Macintosh, 1931, concluded that Americans are a “Christian people...according to [giving] one another the equal right of religious freedom, and acknowledging with reverence the duty of obedience to the will of God.”)<br />
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e. I am a Christian who wants to compare American Freedom with the Bible. Haven’t our Founders, and shouldn’t we, compromise with God for the sake of our freedom? For example, elections. If we pattern our government after the Bible, must we cancel elections? Where are elections in the Bible? How about Freedom of Religion? Doesn’t the Bible call for unbelievers to be stoned? How about slavery? Would we have to legalize slavery again? We have a Democracy (a Republic, technically, though there is little agreement on the difference) in which we approve our own laws and elect our leaders, not a Theocracy in which God writes our laws and is our dictator. How is it practical, sensible, or possible to make law anything other than neutral towards all religions?<br />
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f. Thomas Jefferson was the point of the spear for religious liberty in our founding documents. But he warned against the threat from false religions: “Can the liberties of a nation be thought secure when we have removed their only firm basis, a conviction in the minds of the people that these liberties are the gift of God?” (Notes on the State of Virginia, “Query XVIII”, reprinted in Writings, 289.)<br />
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Also see: “Liberty of conscience in matters of religion consists in the absolute and unrestrained exercise of our religious opinion, and duties, in that mode which our own reason and conviction dictate, without the control or intervention of any human power or authority whatsoever.” (St. George Tucker, Blackstone’s Commentaries: with Notes of Reference, to the Constitution and Laws, of the Federal Government of the United States; and of the Commonwealth of Virginia (Philadelphia: William Young Birch and Abraham Small: 1803), I:489, “Appendix: Note G. Of the Right of Conscience; and Of the Freedom of Speech and Of The Press”:)<br />
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But what about the duty of a Moslem to behead Christians and Jews? Of of a Satanist to offer human sacrifice, including to perform abortions as part of a ritual? (Cases in Texas and Pennsylvania where abortion has become illegal) What about Native Americans smoking Peyote, an illegal drug, and then applying for unemployment compensation when they are fired from their jobs as drug counselors? (Employment Division v. Smith) <br />
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I don’t know how much these unanswered questions overlap your own. They are questions that tormented me for decades. Only recently have I glimpsed a “light at the end of the tunnel” of confusion, and I will welcome any help finally reaching it. <br />
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=====2. 2. History of how SCOTUS has mangled the original meaning of the “Establishment Clause”, usurped jurisdiction over the issue never given it, and sown confusion.===== <br />
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Summary: Before 1868 the rights listed in the Constitution and Bill of Rights, like freedom of speech and religion, restrained only Congress, but state legislatures could still force their citizens to attend the state church, and could subject blacks to very unequal rights. In 1868, the 14th Amendment gave Congress, not courts, jurisdiction over states who couldn’t or wouldn’t protect the rights of their citizens. Courts had never reversed Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857) so Congress, which drafted the Amendment, understandably doubted SCOTUS’ capacity for and commitment to understanding and protecting God-given rights. <br />
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Only five years later, SCOTUS ruled (Slaughterhouse, 1873) that Congress can’t enforce any of the rights listed in the Constitution that are violated by states. Over the decades SCOTUS decided courts have jurisdiction over states to protect rights of state citizens, though not all constitutional rights, and they can make up rights that are hostile to constitutional rights. <br />
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It wasn’t until 1943 that SCOTUS decided to usurp authority over states to enforce the “Establishment Clause” of the First Amendment, which prohibits “establishment” of religion. Everson v. Board of Education. It was a Trojan Horse ruling (disguised as friendly to Christians) because it ruled that taxpayer support of bussing for Catholic students to Catholic schools was OK; that didn’t “establish” religion. But it planted two time bombs under Freedom of Religion. <br />
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The first was usurping authority over states, an authority designated by Section 5 of the 14th Amendment only for Congress. It is questionable whether even Congress is given authority to bar “establishment of religion”, because “no establishment of religion” is not directly a “right” of citizens. It is an indirect tool for protecting the “freedom of religion” of citizens. But the Freedom of Religion enjoyed by individuals, free from forcible support of or agreement with a repugnant faith, is the direct measure of whether “no establishment of religion” has been achieved. <br />
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Never before 1943 had SCOTUS interfered with state decisions about religion.<br />
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The second never-before-committed crime of Everson was equating “favoring” Christianity with “establishing” Christianity. American law had always previously “favored” Christianity without anyone suspecting Christianity was being “established”. America’s Founders understood that “establishing” Christianity was evil, but “favoring” Christianity was essential. Yet how many today grasp the difference? Understanding that difference is a key to solving this great problem. <br />
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(This section awaits much more work.)<br />
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=====3. Solutions: Arguments Nearly Ready for Court?=====<br />
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'''“Favoring” Freedom: a “Compelling Government Interest”.''' Allowing a manger scene in the state capitol does not create a right for satanists to erect an idol glaring down at the baby Jesus, because it is a “compelling interest” of freedom-guarding government to “favor” the ''Author'' of Freedom without enabling the avowed ''Enemy'' of Freedom. <br />
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<blockquote>It does not “establish” religion to “favor” the Bible, as ''Everson v. Board of Education'' falsely alleged for the first time in 1947. The authors of the “Establishment Clause” in 1791 considered it ''essential'' to favor the Bible by funding its printing for schools in the Northwest Territories during the same months they debated the Clause. They considered it evil to “establish” Christianity, by which they meant compelling people to endorse, attend, believe, or tithe to any church. For the same reasons that was evil then, it is evil now; and for the same reasons it was essential then to favor the Bible in public schools, it is essential now to favor God as revealed in the Bible on our money, in schools, art and prayers in legislatures, and even in 10 Commandments art in the Supreme Court building which is closed on Sunday. </blockquote><br />
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It is a “compelling government interest” of any government to promote religion(s) which supports its own existence over religions hostile to it. (Though without ''compelling'' consent or obedience, which ''destroys'' freedom.) <br />
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When Moslems, Atheists, or Satanists sue for the same public platform that Christians historically had, they are petitioning courts to favor a ''Biblical'' right not found in ''their'' religions: freedom of conscience ''for all''. Courts should do as they ask and “favor” the Bible, for the sake of all believers of all faiths: religion that ''protects'' conscience ''merits greater access'' to free people than religions that ''crush'' conscience. <br />
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'''No “establishment of religion” – not even by Courts.''' Courts threaten Freedom by ordering God to stand equal before American law with religions from Hell. Courts must stop forcing governments to give equal access to public displays of imaginary gods, for the same practical reason – the same “compelling government interest” that the Bible prohibits idols in the land: equal support for the ''enemies'' of Freedom with the ''friends'' of Freedom normalizes tyranny, which peels confused voters away from supporting details essential to Freedom. (Israel’s leaders were elected, too.)<br />
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“Favoring” the principles of Freedom protects Freedom of Conscience for all until it develops into an “establishment”, meaning a human-managed hierarchy with laws and police which force people to believe, endorse, attend, or support anything. An “establishment” makes humans the masters of others’ consciences who cannot master their own. Courts “establish” their own irreligion with their arbitrary rules regulating the expression of governments, businesses, and individuals. <br />
<br />
<blockquote>The rights of conscience are, indeed, beyond the just reach of any human power. They are given by God, and cannot be encroached upon by human authority, without a criminal disobedience of the precepts of natural, as well as revealed religion. The real object of the amendment was, not to countenance, much less to advance Mahometanism, or Judaism, or infidelity, by prostrating Christianity; but to exclude all rivalry among Christian sects, and to '''prevent any national ecclesiastical establishment''', which should give to an hierarchy the exclusive patronage of the national government. It thus sought to '''cut off the means of religious persecution''', (the vice and pest of former ages,) and the power of subverting the rights of conscience in matters of religion, which had been trampled upon almost from the days of the Apostles to the present age. (Joseph Story, Commentaries on the Constitution of the United States (Boston: Hilliard, Gray, and Company, 1833), I:701, § 990-991) </blockquote><br />
<br />
The “Establishment Clause” prohibits “Congress” from passing “any law respecting [on the subject of] the establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.” Courts are not more competent than Congress to govern our consciences. <br />
<br />
<blockquote>(How Thomas Jefferson explained the “Establishment Clause”:) “[N]o power over the freedom of religion [of states]. . . [is] delegated to the United States by the Constitution.” Kentucky Resolution, 1798<br />
<br />
“In matters of religion, I have considered that its free exercise is placed by the Constitution independent of the powers of the general [federal] government.” Second Inaugural Address, 1805<br />
<br />
“[O]ur excellent Constitution . . . has not placed our religious rights under the power of any public functionary.” Letter to the Methodist Episcopal Church, 1808<br />
<br />
“I consider the government of the United States as interdicted [prohibited] by the Constitution from intermeddling with religious institutions . . . or exercises.” Letter to Samuel Millar, 1808<br />
<br />
''Reynolds v. United States'' (1878) “Coming as this does from an acknowledged leader of the advocates of the measure, it [Jefferson’s ‘separation of church and state’ letter] may be accepted almost as an authoritative declaration of the scope and effect of the Amendment thus secured. '''Congress''' was deprived of all '''legislative power''' over mere [religious] opinion, but was left free to reach '''actions which were in violation of social duties''' or subversive of good order. [T]he rightful purposes of civil government are for its officers to interfere when principles break out into '''overt acts against peace''' and good order. In th[is] . . . is found the true distinction between '''what properly belongs to the church and what to the State.”''' <br />
<br />
[https://wallbuilders.com/resource/lesson-4-american-founding-and-federal-era-1785-early-1800s/ Wallbuilders] President Thomas Jefferson authored the original plan of education for the public schools of Washington, DC. He used the Bible and Watt’s Hymnal (one of the greatest doctrinal hymnals in Christendom) as the primary reading texts.<small>[Records of the Columbia Historical Society (Washington, D. C.: Columbia Historical Society, 1897), Vol. 1, pp. 122-123, 127, from the report by Mr. Henry Ould on February 10, 1813. See also National Intelligencer, March 20, 1817, p. 2. ] </small><br />
<br />
President Jefferson, in 1803, signed a federal act renewing provisions related to propagating the Gospel among the Delaware Indian tribes. <small>[The Debates and Proceedings in the Congress of the United States (Washington: Gales and Seaton, 1851), 7th Cong., 2nd Sess., p. 1602, “An Act to Revive and Continue in Force An Act in Addition to an Act, Entitled, ‘An Act in Addition to an Act Regulating the Grants of Land Appropriated for Military Services, and for the Society of the United Brethren for Propagating the Gospel Among the Heathen,’ and for Other Purposes,” March 3, 1803] </small><br />
<br />
President Jefferson approved a treaty with the Kaskaskia tribe to provide them Christian ministry and teaching. <small>[American State Papers: Documents, Legislative and Executive of the Congress of the United States, Walter Lowrie and Matthew St. Claire Clarke, editors (Washington, D. C.: Gales and Seaton, 1832), Vol. IV, p. 687, “The Kaskaskia and Other Tribes,” October 31, 1803.]</small><br />
<br />
President Jefferson in1804 signed a federal act related to the propagation of the Gospel among Indians on federal land trusts. <small>[The Public Statutes at Large of the United States of America, Richard Peters, editor (Boston: Charles C. Little and James Brown, 1845), Vol. II, pp. 271-272, “An Act Granting Further Time for Locating Military Land Warrants, and for Other Purposes,” March 19, 1804.]</small><br />
<br />
President Jefferson praised others who, like himself, used federal resources to spread Christianity among natives. <small>[See, for example, Thomas Jefferson, The Writings of Thomas Jefferson, Andrew A. Lipscomb, editor (Washington, D. C.: The Thomas Jefferson Memorial Association, 1904), Vol. XVI, p. 289, to Thomas, Ellicot, and Others on November 13, 1807.]</small></blockquote><br />
<br />
The 14th Amendment is the only vehicle of federal power over states, and its Section 5 gives enforcement authority to Congress, not courts. The only authority federal courts have from the Constitution is to enforce federal laws. <br />
<br />
Neither courts nor Congress have any constitutional authority to dictate terms of religious expression to anybody.<br />
<br />
<blockquote>“[N]o purpose of action against religion [particulary Christianity] can be imputed to any legislation, state or national because this is a religious people….[T]his is a Christian nation.” ''Church of the Holy Trinity'' v. U. S., 143 U. S. 457, 465, 471 (1892) [a unanimous ruling]. </blockquote><br />
<br />
Courts have usurped this authority without even any fact finding to determine which religions are consonant with reality, thereby “establishing” idiocy. Neither has there been fact finding to determine which religions support free government and virtues in citizens necessary to make freedom function. Straying so far from reality, so far outside their lawful jurisdiction, courts thereby “establish” the seeds of destruction of their own existence. <br />
<br />
'''Elements of Freedom in Religions.''' Religious expression is freest in nations where Biblical influence is greatest and least free in nations where Biblical influence is weakest because the “swordpoint conversions” common to other religions are absent from the Bible. <br />
<br />
<blockquote>Deuteronomy 13:1-7 is the closest the Bible comes to endorsing any human-enforced penalty for sincerely held disagreement with God. The passage draws the line the same place as did Employment Division v. Smith; you can believe you should commit a crime, but if you do it you will be prosecuted. “Serving” the surrounding gods at the time meant human sacrifice, temple orgies, drugs, drinking blood. Persuading others to “serve” other gods was what we call “incitement to crime”.<br />
<br />
Biblical Christianity: The Origin of the Rights of Conscience, Wallbuilders.com, May 29, 2023 “...only nations who respect Biblical teachings and traditions offer protection for the rights of religious conscience. Secular and non-Biblical nations, and those with state-established churches (such as those that predominated in England and Europe at the time of the American Founding), do not allow rights of conscience but instead demand conformity, which often requires governmental punishment coercion concerning religious beliefs, which violates the Scriptures.<br />
<br />
“Christ Himself established religious non-coercion as the standard. His approach was so voluntary that He even directed His disciples that when they presented the Gospel to others, if someone was interested, then they could stay and share the message with them; but if someone did not want to hear, then they were to leave the area and not force the issue (Luke 10:8-12). There was absolutely no coercion. It was also this way with Paul and the other Apostles: in every case; hearers then chose whether or not to follow Christianity; there was never any penalty, pressure, or force levied against them.<br />
<br />
“As John Quincy Adams noted, Jesus Christ ‘came to teach and not to compel. His law was a Law of Liberty. He left the human mind and human action free.’ (John Quincy Adams, A Discourse on Education Delivered at Braintree, Thursday, October 24th, 1839 (Boston: Perkins & Marvin, 1840), 18.)<br />
<br />
“Two generations later, legal writer Stephen Cowell (1800-1872) similarly avowed: ‘Nonconformity, dissent, free inquiry, individual conviction, mental independence, are forever consecrated by the religion of the New Testament as the breath of its own life – the conditions of its own existence on the earth. The book is a direct transfer of human allegiance in things spiritual from the civil and ecclesiastical powers to the judgment and conscience of the individual.’ (Stephen Colwell, Politics for American Christians: A Word upon our Example as a Nation, our Labour, our Trade, Elections, Education, and Congressional Legislation (Philadelphia: Lippincott, Grambo & Co. 1852), 82, Tait’s Edinburgh Magazine, for 1844 (Edinburgh: William Tait, 1844), 752, “The Politics of the New Testament,” December 1844.)<br />
<br />
“And several generations after that, President Franklin D. Roosevelt continued to affirm the same truth, noting: ‘We want to do it the voluntary way – and most human beings in all the world want to do it the voluntary way. We do not want to have the way imposed. . . . That would not follow in the footsteps of Christ.’ ” (“Franklin D. Roosevelt, “Christmas Greeting to the Nation,” The American Presidency Project, December 24, 1940.)</blockquote><br />
<br />
A judge imagining he can rule without “favoring” the Bible, in an American court enforcing American law, is like a fish denying the value of water. The most fundamental principles of American law are taken from the Bible while competing religions and philosophies are, to varying degrees, hostile to Freedom. A judge enforcing the law, following the Constitution, favors the Bible and suppresses the dehumanization, unequal rights, and tyranny of other religions. For example:<br />
<br />
<blockquote>'''Equal Rights.''' A judge who upholds “equal protection of the laws” (14th Amendment) and “all men are created equal, and endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights...” (Declaration of Independence) thus favors equal justice for the poor with the rich (Exodus 23:3), women with men (Deuteronomy 24:17), immigrants with citizens (Exodus 12:49, Leviticus 24:22, Numbers 15:15), employees with employers (Leviticus 24:17, 21:20), those without a bribe with those with (Deuteronomy 16:19), and all races, nationalities, and religions (Galatians 3:28, Colossians 3:11). He rules against Islam’s dehumanization of Christians and Jews as “apes and pigs” deserving of the jizra tax, if not slavery, mutilation, and execution, against Hinduism’s “caste system”, and against the utter lack of any rights or law of Satanism.<br />
<br />
'''Elections.''' Courts favor the Bible over other religions when they enforce laws requiring honest elections for all citizens, which are demanded by no other religion or philosophy, but were first introduced in 1462 BC with elections of over 70,000 local and national leaders (Deuteronomy 1:13), were equated in 1065 BC with the rule of God (1 Samuel 8:7), and after 35 AD with elections of elders (Acts 14:23 & 2 Corinthians 8:19 - the “ordaining” of elders after 35AD was done by χειρτονεω, voting by raising hands)). God equated abandoning elections in with abandoning God, , <br />
<br />
'''Freedom of Speech.''' Courts which enforce Freedom of Speech favor the laws of nations influenced by the Bible, whose heroes are those who told the truth even when truth was against the law. Such courts ignore the laws of nations dominated by other religions or philosophies whose heroes are the “strongest”, who most successfully dominate others, whose approved methods include deception and torture. <br />
<br />
'''Freedom of Religion.''' Even Freedom of Religion is a uniquely Biblical value. The Bible respects no “swordpoint conversions”. Deuteronomy 13:1-7 is the closest the Bible comes to endorsing any human-enforced penalty for sincerely held disagreement with God. The passage draws the line the same place as did ''Employment Division v. Smith;'' you can believe you should commit a crime, but if you do it you will be prosecuted. “Serving” the surrounding gods at the time meant human sacrifice, temple orgies, drugs, drinking blood. Persuading others to “serve” other gods was what we call “incitement to crime”. God “reasons” with people. (Isaiah 1:18). His people persuade by reason, not force. (Acts 17:2, 1 Peter 3:15. We address wrongs with reason, evidence, and law, and jail those who start physical fights; we do not go to war to gain territory, slaves, or booty, but only to defend ourselves and others).<br />
<br />
'''Lower Crime.''' The 10 Commandments is an outline of the laws God offers for the benefit of all mankind. They doubly serve as an outline of American law. The fact that they are universally recognized as principles of God’s laws secures voluntary obedience to them of all who love God, without the need of hiring police to compel their compliance. We are taught not only to fear the consequences of, but to hate murder, stealing, perversion, and lying – especially false accusations. Children are placed under the jurisdiction of those most likely to love them most, and are urged to obey voluntarily for their own benefit. Hard, slave-grade labor is outlawed by requiring periods of rest. And not only is obedience secured voluntarily, but disobedience is prevented by the final command to not even want any of the goals of these crimes. And the first command is to love and obey the Author of all these rules upon which freedom and prosperity hangs. This positive incentive for obeying laws is supplemented by the negative incentive implied in the first Commandment: the fear of God’s judgments, added to human-enforced penalties, for disobeying.<br />
<br />
All of which makes it insane that the Supreme Court’s reason for not allowing posts of the 10 Commandments in schools was: “ If the posted copies of the Ten Commandments are to have any effect at all, it will be to induce the schoolchildren to read, meditate upon, perhaps to venerate '''and obey''', the Commandments. However desirable this might be as a matter of private devotion, it is not a permissible state objective under the Establishment Clause.” ''Stone v. Graham'', 449 U.S. 39 (1980) https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/449/39/</blockquote><br />
<br />
It is also a “legitimate government interest” to “favor” any religion to the extent it inspires in voters and citizens character qualities essential to the success of freedom. Therefore evidence is relevant, in any case concerning government involvement in free expression, of a religion’s promotion of personal virtues that enable freedom to function, such as:<br />
<br />
service to others (Luke 22:25-27; American society honors most who serve most), <br />
<br />
respect for all humans (Genesis 1:27), <br />
<br />
honesty (Proverbs 6:16-17, Matthew 19:18; fraud and bribery are crimes and scandals in America), <br />
<br />
tolerance (Americans value freedom of speech and religion, rejecting “swordpoint conversions” and prosecution of dissent; we oppose discrimination over morally neutral differences. Tolerance for those who look or think different is not found in other religions or practiced by their followers), <br />
<br />
impartiality (Proverbs 17:23 We demand equal rights and opportunities for all in which people are judged by and rewarded for their service and the content of their character), <br />
<br />
peacemakers (Matthew 5:9; We address wrongs with reason, evidence, and law, and jail those who start physical fights; we do not go to war to gain territory, slaves, or booty, but only to defend ourselves and others), and <br />
<br />
religious obedience to legitimate law (Romans 13:1-5, 1 Peter 2:13, Matthew 22:21). <br />
<br />
It is a “compelling government interest” to support those foundational virtues over religions which are relatively hostile to Freedom, though without physically or financially coercing anyone’s conscience, which destroys Freedom. <br />
<br />
'''Relevant evidence''' in court includes results of scrutiny of the scriptures of any religion whose accommodation or promotion is being reviewed, to establish any consonance with reality beyond any reasonable possibility of human understanding at the time of its authorship, and therefore the likelihood that taking seriously its advice, promises and warnings comport with reality and are in the national interest. <br />
<br />
It does not “establish religion” to publicly, officially establish facts. Religions make claims about God or the absence thereof. The Bible uniquely claims that God “turns the hearts of kings”, (Proverbs 21:1) and brings judgments upon whole nations for violating laws given, again uniquely, for the benefit of all mankind. The Bible thus claims God is the “highest authority”, a “king of kings”. (Psalm 2:1 ...Why are the people making such foolish plans? 2 Their kings and leaders join together to fight against the LORD and his chosen king....4 But the one who rules in heaven laughs at them. The Lord makes fun of them.... 10 So, kings and rulers, be smart and learn this lesson. 11 Serve the LORD with fear and trembling. 12 Show that you are loyal to his son, or the Lord will be angry and destroy you. He is almost angry enough to do that now, but those who go to him for protection will be blessed.) <br />
<br />
It is a “compelling government interest” to investigate such claims, and if they survive scrutiny, to adjust national policy to conform to reality – to not be “foolish”. This makes relevant in legislatures and in courts a review of the scrutiny of the Bible, compared with a review of results of any scrutiny of other sacred writings (if any such scrutiny can be found) to determine which is the more reliable guide to what will most benefit citizens and their government.<br />
<br />
Blindness about the differences between religions in these areas, leading to equal treatment of them in courts and politics, threaten our freedoms, is not in the national interest, and is the definition of willful ignorance.<br />
<br />
The fact that all human fact-finding is imperfect and subject to the possibility of evidence available in the future is not a reason to throw up America’s hands and rule reality irrelevant. <br />
<br />
Reality is not irrelevant. It is self-enforcing.</div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Forum&diff=50395Forum2024-02-14T21:17:14Z<p>DaveLeach: /* The Supreme Court's War Against God */</p>
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<br>You can "comment" not only at the end of any article here, but ''in'' the article, by the point with which you want to interact. You can also vote, "Like", rate, or argue. Also you can change your past comment, add a section with a heading that appears in the Table of Contents, start a new article, use colors, or write in Greek! Find suggestions and codes at [[Begin!]]</small></span><br />
<br />
==Politics==<br />
<br />
===Vaccines, Masks, Censors===<br />
<br />
[[VA_Hospital,_asked_for_medical_justification_for_mask_policy,_consults_lawyers]]<br />
<br />
This is a record of my interaction with the Veterans Administration Hospital of central Iowa about their requirement that everyone wear a mask all the time they are in the hospital. I showed them the research proving masks are completely ineffective at stopping covid, but they do a magnificent job of blocking oxygen so that wearers' oxygen levels drop and carbon dioxide levels rise, causing a wide variety of serious medical issues.<br />
<br />
I had a few exchanges with VA staff, followed by attempts to involve newspapers to report it, and lawyers to sue in federal court.<br />
<br />
The basis of my complaint is in two parts: Section One explains in what sense blind faith in rituals proved by research to accomplish nothing, loaded with social rejection of anyone who questions them, runs towards the essence of the False Gods of primitive paganism and offends the Biblical importance placed on Truth. Section Two summarizes tons of research showing that masks and vaccines don't help but harm, while covid tests are very unreliable. <br />
<br />
[[God's Coronavirus Cure in 3 Verses]] (Probably a situation that brings most politics to a screeching halt, shutting down entire legislatures, should be classified as "political")<br />
<br />
[[Cure for Covid Censors]] '''A petition to state governors''': "Governors: base mandates on ALL the science. Sponsor an Online Forum where Doctors can Interact without fear of Censorship, which you will use as a knowlege base for your emergency orders." (See this article for complete information, and model Emergency Powers legislation. See [https://citizengo.org/en-us/node/204001?tcid=89997709 PETITION] for an online petition at CitizenGo.) <br />
<br />
[[Application_for_Religious/Secular Exemption from Mask Vaccine & testing_Mandates]]<br />
<br />
'''Section One''' of this Application explains (1) my reverence for Truth and evidence, (2) the Bible’s emphasis on Truth and evidence, (3) Bible heroes who resisted health laws not based on reality, (4) why mask and vaccine mandates which cannot rationally claim support from evidence must be classified as “religious”, and are presented as false gods, and (5) what the Bible says about bowing down to false gods, and the importance of openly, decisively disclaiming them. Section One presents legal analysis of the First Amendment prohibition of “establishment of religion”, as well as theological analysis. <br />
<br />
[[Application for Secular/Religious Exemption from Mask/Vaccine Mandate - Section Two, The Evidence]] '''Section Two''' of this Application reviews medical research that shows (1) masks do not slow covid spread with any “statistical significance”, (2) masks cause serious medical and emotional problems, most tragically in children, (3) vaccines cause more deaths than covid, and (4) government blockage of proven covid cures points to some other government purpose than reducing covid. But you probably don’t need this evidence; you probably have plenty of your own, or you wouldn’t want an exemption. This information is widely available, and expands daily, so Section Two is out of date anyway. (Section Two also lists arguments common in other Applications for Religious Exemption: vaccines are developed from a murdered baby, and the Bible calls us to treat our bodies as the Temple of God.)<br />
<br />
[[Covid_Updates]] (through 2020)<br />
<br />
[[Free Speech Laws, Precedents & Scripture]]<br />
<br />
[[Bill Gates' Dream is our Nightmare]]<br />
<br />
===The Supreme Court's War Against God===<br />
<br />
[[Open letter to Jeff Angelo, WHO Radio, and Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds]]<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
====Open letter to Jeff Angelo, WHO Radio, and Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds====<br />
<br />
You invited listeners, February 8, a week ago, to talk you out of your belief that satanists have a perfect right under the Constitution to display their idol at the state capitol, to host after-school Satan clubs, and to send their own “pastors” into schools when that bill passes. <br />
<br />
Thank you for giving me something to do to fill up my week.<br />
<br />
===Life===<br />
<br />
[[Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases]]<br />
<br>'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters <br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion<br />
<br>by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
<br>''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal'' <br />
<br>''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal'' <br />
<br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen<br />
<br />
[[The 140 Amicus Briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson]]<br />
<br />
[[The “Outlawing Abortion in Compliance with Unanimous Court-Recognized Evidence that Abortion is Murder” Act]] '''A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life''' Featuring Nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' (which overturned ''Roe v. Wade'' June 24, 2022. "Amicus briefs", also called "Friend of Court" briefs, are filed by groups with a strong interest in the case, such as prolife and prodeath groups, who are not direct parties to the case but who will be affected by the outcome.)<br />
<br />
'''Some claims are so unacceptable that it becomes almost irrelevant whether they are true, but some Truths are so irrefutable that censorship fails, like Darkness trying to put out Light, John 1:5.''' <br />
<br />
[[Ending Legal Abortion in Every State in about a Year]] (This is an earlier, shorter draft of the preceding article.) By including the irrefutable, unanimous, unchallenged evidence that babies are fully human, with conscious souls, in the "findings of facts" of a prolife law, courts are forced to address that fact when they review the law. It is impossible for any judge to squarely address that evidence and keep abortion legal, in ANY state. It is just as impossible for any news reporter or Democrat to squarely address this evidence, and still defend abortion. Therefore if ''any'' prolife lawmaker anywhere in America can be found to simply INTRODUCE a prolife bill with these Findings of Facts, this evidence will take on a life of its own and be impossible to censor for long. Some claims are so unacceptable that it becomes almost irrelevant whether they are true; likewise, some truths so challenge the censors that they are like Light in Darkness which Darkness can no longer put out, John 1:5. <br />
<br />
[[Alito Draft Treats ITS A BABY as a Matter of Opinion]] This letter written to six conservative Supreme Court justices responds to several outrageous quotes in the leaked draft by Justice Alito, and on their statements during oral arguments the previous December, in which they said they couldn't tell if unborn babies are real people, which should flabbergast any prolifer. I sent this letter June 15, 2022 BEFORE their ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson repealing Roe v. Wade. I gave evidence they should respect that babies really are people, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder. They had said since they can't tell, voters should decide, through their elected state representatives. <br />
<br />
I answered that the right to murder cannot be on any ballot. I reminded them that the 14th Amendment was passed specifically to protect those who “as a matter of law” were never treated as “persons in the whole sense”. I said that repealing Roe while calling ITS A BABY a Matter of Opinion won't end aborticide cases. I pointed out that repealing Roe, leaving liberal states free to continue the slaughter, is no better than Dred Scott v. Sandford which left liberal states free to continue the slavery. <br />
<br />
They had written that voters must decide whether to murder babies based on the "social value" voters place on babies. I responded that the "social value" that women have to be allowed to kill babies in order to have "full equality" is held by most non-Christian religions and philosophies but is alien to "all men are created equal...in the Image of God". I pointed out that every court-recognized fact finder that has taken a position has ruled that "It's a Baby!" If the unanimous ruling of every court-recognized fact finder is not enough for a judge to know a fact, how can any judge ever know anything? I acknowledged that every state appellate court in abortion prevention cases said Roe made the FACT that babies are people irrelevant, by ruling that babies are NOT people "as a matter of law". Besides pointing out that the Supreme Court actually never said such nonsense, the 14th Amendment protects all who are IN FACT humans. What is irrelevant is whether they are “persons” “as a matter of law”. Even Roe treated ITS A BABY as a fact question, for fact finders.<br />
<br />
[[ND_Court_Gives_Moms_Fundamental_Right to_Save_Themselves_from_their_Babies]] <br />
<br />
<br />
[[Troubling Excerpts & Analysis from Dobbs v. Jackson]] My letter to SCOTUS didn't improve their understanding of babies. SCOTUS ruled that "it's a baby" is a matter of opinion beyond the ability of courts to resolve, so voters - not courts - should decide whether to keep baby killing legal. My analysis points out that SCOTUS doesn't treat the humanity of any ''other'' group of people as so subjective that states need the freedom to decide whether to legalize murdering them. <br />
<br />
Well, At least aborticide is not a "fundamental right" - though not because babies are people so killing them is murder. No, the best reason they could come up with for ruling that aborticide is not a fundamental right is that it hasn't been legal in past centuries. Pardon the french, but state legislatures need to pass laws that will fill that vacuum of intelligence. If crimes against people should be kept legal according to whether they have been legal in past centuries, with no discussion of the very real people hurt by them, then ''slavery'' should still be legal.<br />
<br />
[[Valentine Letter to Supreme Court Justices: outlaw baby killing in EVERY state]] This was my first letter to the Supreme Court, mailed on February 14, 2022, before the leaked Alito draft. It responds to alarming, foolish quotes from the most conservative justices in the December 1, 2021 oral arguments in Dobbs v. Jackson. <br />
<br />
[[Scriptures SCOTUS must address before saying Christianity supports abortion]] Roe v. Wade said part of the reason "the judiciary, at this point in the development of man's knowledge, is unable to speculate as to the answer...to 'when life begins'" was because preachers and doctors don't agree! Yet no preacher from the last 1,000 years was consulted! So obviously, SCOTUS' theology is due for an update. Here is some of what God says about it. God made babies, so God knows what He made. <br />
<br />
[[Four_Drawbacks_of_a_No-Right-to-Abortion_State_Constitutional_Amendment]] The Iowa Supreme Court overturned a prolife law and claimed that abortion is a "fundamental right" in Iowa, no matter what it is elsewhere. I don't think that is quite the meaning of the ruling, but Iowa prolifers now think they have to pass an amendment to the Iowa Constitution before they can think about any other prolife laws. Which means more years of waiting. Here are the legal reasons that is unnecessary.<br />
<br />
[[Answers to Lawmakers' Objections]]<br />
<br />
[[The consensus of court-recognized fact-finders that babies are people even before they are born]] This is the core legal consensus that no judge can squarely address and keep abortion legal. <br />
<br />
[[Abortion Law Alabama]] Here is my analysis of an Alabama prolife law with robust Findings of Facts, but that did not go far enough to survive courts. <br />
<br />
[[Missouri Encyclopedia of Abortion Arguments]] Here is my analysis of a Missouri prolife law with robust Findings of Facts, but that did not go far enough to survive courts. <br />
<br />
[[Abortion]]<br />
<br />
[[Outreach to 2800 Republican Lawmakers in 30 States where Republicans Control Both Chambers]] In 2019 I offered my book, "How States can Outlaw Abortion in a way that Survives Courts", to Republican lawmakers. Over 50 accepted a copy. But so far I know of none who acted on the opportunity.<br />
<br />
[[Forsythe]]<br />
<br />
===Immigration===<br />
<br />
[[Another AntiImmigrant Bible Claim]]<br />
<br />
[[Deadly Immigration Rhetoric]]<br />
<br />
[[Many of our ancestors documented THEMSELVES]]<br />
<br />
[[The Immigration Solution best for our Economy, our Security, and our Faith]]<br />
<br />
[[Cruz, Trump, Keyes, and the Bible]]<br />
<br />
[["Never Trump" and the Bible]]<br />
<br />
[[Democrat Platform on immigration]]<br />
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[[Republican Platform on immigration]]<br />
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:[[Republican and Democrat Immigration Platforms are Similar]]<br />
<br />
[[Immigration]] ''(Comparing what parties and candidates say)''<br />
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[[Setting Immigration Quotas - the Mystery of the Wages]] ''(There is no measure of the number best for citizens)''<br />
<br />
[[Whose Expertise Inspired Our Immigration Laws?]] ''(U.S. immigration policy is driven by those who have least studied the key facts)''<br />
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[[Personal to Ted Cruz]]<br />
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===Sudan===<br />
<br />
[[Saving South Sudan]] ''(How refugees can open U.S. refugee quotas so their families can come, and How Refugees can heal the government of South Sudan so their families won't have to leave) ''<br />
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[[Saving South Sudan - general discussion]]<br />
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[[Optional: Turn your Response into a New Article]]<br />
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[[Principles of the proposed UTSS Constitution in the Bible]]<br />
<br />
===Other Political Issues===<br />
<br />
[[Open Letter to Election Affirmers/Fake News Subscribers]] Reflections on my interview with a Washington Post reporter and her article<br />
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<br />
<br />
[[File:SinTiny.gif|center]]<br />
<br />
[[Racism - Whether Blacks are even Citizens - A Debate]]<br />
<br />
[[Judicial Accountability Act: How Legislatures can stop judges from legislating]]<br />
<br />
[[Election Fraud]] What can we do to ensure future fair elections? Consider the degree of election fraud we have just been through, the degree of Republican acceptance of the results as correct despite the fraud, and now with the fraud machine in charge of the U.S. legislature and presidency while promising to pack the courts, while free speech is being completely shut down in our newsrooms and social media against any suggestion of the least fraud. What will keep fraud from spreading to the remaining 44 states, and from presidential elections on down the line - if they haven't already? What courageous new movement will rise to restore honest elections? <br />
<br />
[[This Judge ruled like a Christian Historian]]<br />
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[[Climate Change]]<br />
<br />
==Spiritual Preparation for Action==<br />
<br />
[[How to React when God's Answer to your Prayers is Delivered by an Unqualified Messenger or is Gift Wrapped in Hard Work or in a Lot of Reading]]<br />
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[[God's Blueprints for Political Victories]]<br />
<br />
[[Bible Blueprints for Christian Meetings]]<br />
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<blockquote>1: Obeying God beats traditional worship<br />
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2: "Good works", not just talk with no intent to act, are God’s goals for meetings<br />
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3: God answers prayers through forums where “all” reason and “exhort”. Sermons aren’t mentioned.<br />
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4: Bible heroes, like God, are very Political<br />
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5: "The Gospel" is not just about Heaven, but also about Heroic Hard Work Here<br />
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6: "Light in the Darkness" means quoting God about Darkness in the Darkness<br />
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7: The "Cross" we must carry is an "easy yoke", a "light burden". It is a reward. It is Life, now. It may "cost" money, friends, wealth, careers, comfort, life, but not anything we need </blockquote><br />
<br />
[[Beast or Savior? Musk v. 1 Cor 14 Fellowship]]<br />
<br />
[[Shall we rejoice when an abortionist goes to Hell?]]<br />
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[[Trump - America Needs Him but not his Pride or his Sodomite Patronage]] Bible perspectives by Scott Lively (pastor, lawyer, anti-sodomy activist from Oregon to Uganda), David Lane (organizer of American Renewal Project which brings pastors to hear political leaders and encourages them to run for office) and Dave Leach, website guy]] <br />
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[[Personal Attack Headlines that Violate Proverbs 24:17]]<br />
<br />
[[Are Christians Happier?]]<br />
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[[Drinking is for Death Beds]]<br />
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[[Multitude Of Counsellors Project]]<br />
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[[America got Freedom from the Bible]]<br />
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[[Upon this Rock I will build my Congress]] <> [[Part Two: WHICH "Rock"?]] <> [[Part Three: Politics in the Gates]] <> [[Part Four: Congregation/Congress v. “Church”]] <> [[Part Five: The Congress of Living Stones]]<br />
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[[What God says we will accomplish by meeting His way]] (Invitation to join a "Multitude of Counsellors", Proverbs 15:22)<br />
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[[God's Relationship Primer]]<br />
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[[The Bible on Equal Rights for Women: Did God Write "For Men Only" on the Pulpit?]]<br />
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[[Psychology vs. the Bible]]<br />
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[[What we can Pray for that isn't Forbidden by Prophecy]]<br />
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[[The fewer who are willing to manage the interactions of citizens the closer their only possible government comes to being a dictatorship]]<br />
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[[Evidence that in God All Nations May Trust]]<br />
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[[Shining "the Gospel" Outside the Bushel]]<br />
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[[Gospel Light turned off by Christians]]<br />
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==Reasoning with Pastors==<br />
<br />
This section is for reports of dialog with pastors about those "Noninvolvement Theologies" that are keeping the "Armies of God" from shining the Light (of what God says about our national abominations) out into the government-entangled Darkness outside the church walls - out in those forums where voters decide whether to pattern our laws after the principles of Heaven or of Hell. Even where pastors give occasional sermons identifying some of those abominations, and more rarely direct token political action, there remain prohibitions against other churchgoers besides the pastor being allowed, on church premises and through church communication channels, to discuss, reason, investigate, strategize, and take action together, not limited to the pastor's political knowledge, to shine that Light out where it will get rid of some of that Darkness. See [[Reasoning with Pastors - Introduction]] for Dave Leach's explanation of why he is publishing these reports of dialog with several pastors which, as they occurred over the past 30 years, he did not expect to make public.<br />
<br />
<blockquote>Ye are the salt of the earth: but if the salt have lost his savour, wherewith shall it be salted? it is thenceforth good for nothing, but to be cast out, and to be trodden under foot of men. Ye are the light of the world. A city that is set on an hill cannot be hid. Neither do men light a candle, and put it under a bushel, but on a candlestick; and it giveth light unto all that are in the house. Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven. - Matthew 5:13-16</blockquote><br />
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<blockquote>Thou shalt not mix politics and religion. - 2 Denominations 3:16</blockquote><br />
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<blockquote>Thou shalt not talk about anything controversial in church. That is, anything important enough that the discovery of disagreement in another is disturbing. - 1 Controversies 23</blockquote><br />
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[[Reasoning with Pastors - Introduction]]<br />
<br />
[[Pastor Terry Amann, Church of the Way]]</div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Forum&diff=50394Forum2024-02-14T21:13:02Z<p>DaveLeach: /* 3. Solutions: Arguments Nearly Ready for Court? */</p>
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<br>You can "comment" not only at the end of any article here, but ''in'' the article, by the point with which you want to interact. You can also vote, "Like", rate, or argue. Also you can change your past comment, add a section with a heading that appears in the Table of Contents, start a new article, use colors, or write in Greek! Find suggestions and codes at [[Begin!]]</small></span><br />
<br />
==Politics==<br />
<br />
===Vaccines, Masks, Censors===<br />
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[[VA_Hospital,_asked_for_medical_justification_for_mask_policy,_consults_lawyers]]<br />
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This is a record of my interaction with the Veterans Administration Hospital of central Iowa about their requirement that everyone wear a mask all the time they are in the hospital. I showed them the research proving masks are completely ineffective at stopping covid, but they do a magnificent job of blocking oxygen so that wearers' oxygen levels drop and carbon dioxide levels rise, causing a wide variety of serious medical issues.<br />
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I had a few exchanges with VA staff, followed by attempts to involve newspapers to report it, and lawyers to sue in federal court.<br />
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The basis of my complaint is in two parts: Section One explains in what sense blind faith in rituals proved by research to accomplish nothing, loaded with social rejection of anyone who questions them, runs towards the essence of the False Gods of primitive paganism and offends the Biblical importance placed on Truth. Section Two summarizes tons of research showing that masks and vaccines don't help but harm, while covid tests are very unreliable. <br />
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[[God's Coronavirus Cure in 3 Verses]] (Probably a situation that brings most politics to a screeching halt, shutting down entire legislatures, should be classified as "political")<br />
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[[Cure for Covid Censors]] '''A petition to state governors''': "Governors: base mandates on ALL the science. Sponsor an Online Forum where Doctors can Interact without fear of Censorship, which you will use as a knowlege base for your emergency orders." (See this article for complete information, and model Emergency Powers legislation. See [https://citizengo.org/en-us/node/204001?tcid=89997709 PETITION] for an online petition at CitizenGo.) <br />
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[[Application_for_Religious/Secular Exemption from Mask Vaccine & testing_Mandates]]<br />
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'''Section One''' of this Application explains (1) my reverence for Truth and evidence, (2) the Bible’s emphasis on Truth and evidence, (3) Bible heroes who resisted health laws not based on reality, (4) why mask and vaccine mandates which cannot rationally claim support from evidence must be classified as “religious”, and are presented as false gods, and (5) what the Bible says about bowing down to false gods, and the importance of openly, decisively disclaiming them. Section One presents legal analysis of the First Amendment prohibition of “establishment of religion”, as well as theological analysis. <br />
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[[Application for Secular/Religious Exemption from Mask/Vaccine Mandate - Section Two, The Evidence]] '''Section Two''' of this Application reviews medical research that shows (1) masks do not slow covid spread with any “statistical significance”, (2) masks cause serious medical and emotional problems, most tragically in children, (3) vaccines cause more deaths than covid, and (4) government blockage of proven covid cures points to some other government purpose than reducing covid. But you probably don’t need this evidence; you probably have plenty of your own, or you wouldn’t want an exemption. This information is widely available, and expands daily, so Section Two is out of date anyway. (Section Two also lists arguments common in other Applications for Religious Exemption: vaccines are developed from a murdered baby, and the Bible calls us to treat our bodies as the Temple of God.)<br />
<br />
[[Covid_Updates]] (through 2020)<br />
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[[Free Speech Laws, Precedents & Scripture]]<br />
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[[Bill Gates' Dream is our Nightmare]]<br />
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===The Supreme Court's War Against God===<br />
<br />
====Open letter to Jeff Angelo, WHO Radio, and Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds====<br />
<br />
<br />
To Jeff Angelo <br />
<br />
You invited listeners, February 8, to talk you out of your belief that satanists have a perfect right under the Constitution to display their idol at the state capitol, to host after-school Satan clubs, and to send their own “pastors” into schools when that bill passes. <br />
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My response is in three parts. I can’t decide which to put first, so I’ll list them and you can skip to whichever one interests you: (1) Acknowledging the logic of your position, which is shared by most judges, lawyers, and Christian leaders. Histories showing the very different understanding of “establishment of religion” by the authors of the 1st Amendment leave many questions unanswered. (2) History of how SCOTUS has mangled the original meaning, usurped jurisdiction over the issue never given it, and sown confusion. (3) Solutions. Legal arguments ready for today’s courts, with explanations. <br />
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=====1. Acknowledgement of the logic of your position.=====<br />
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It genuinely confuses not just judges and lawyers, but many Christians, today, how it would be fair to everyone to allow Christians to display a baby Jesus in a manger in the state capitol or in schools, while prohibiting Satanists from displaying next to it a baby on one of their sacrificial altars, Moslems from displaying a baby with its head lopped off by a nearby toy machete, Chinese Communists from displaying a dismembered baby next to forceps and a suction machine, or witch doctors from displaying a voodoo doll of the state governor or the school principal stuck with pins. <br />
Today’s Poorly Answered questions (which are addressed in Part 3):<br />
<br />
a. Aren’t all “religions” supposed to stand equal before American law? Isn’t that what prohibiting “establishment of religion” means? <br />
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b. Historians like David Barton prove that America’s Founders did not equalize all religions. During the same months our Founders debated the First Amendment, they authorized and funded the printing of Bibles for schools in the Northwest Territories. They obviously didn’t consider that an “establishment of religion”. But why wasn’t it? Barton’s explanations did not make that clear, at least not to me. As late as 1947, SCOTUS ruled that spending taxes on bus rides for Catholic students to Catholic schools was not an “establishment of religion”. But that was not at all clear to the four justices who dissented, who thought it was. <br />
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c. OK, so they were all Christians back then. A little inconsistency then wasn’t so big a deal maybe. But now? Is favoring the Bible practical, constitutional, and fair, now? Aren’t we more free when all ideas are on a level playing field?”<br />
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d. Trinity v. United States (1892) is at times cited as acknowledgment by SCOTUS that the U.S. is, indeed, “a Christian nation”. (The issue of the case was whether to let a Christian pastor from England immigrate with less red tape.) But the evidence weighed in the case is over trivial matters: like Governments are closed on Sundays. But today, with almost everyone else but government open all the time, how is that ruling relevant today? How does our freedom, or rule of law, hang on our acknowledgment of the Bible? <br />
(Similarly, United States v. Macintosh, 1931, concluded that Americans are a “Christian people...according to [giving] one another the equal right of religious freedom, and acknowledging with reverence the duty of obedience to the will of God.”)<br />
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e. I am a Christian who wants to compare American Freedom with the Bible. Haven’t our Founders, and shouldn’t we, compromise with God for the sake of our freedom? For example, elections. If we pattern our government after the Bible, must we cancel elections? Where are elections in the Bible? How about Freedom of Religion? Doesn’t the Bible call for unbelievers to be stoned? How about slavery? Would we have to legalize slavery again? We have a Democracy (a Republic, technically, though there is little agreement on the difference) in which we approve our own laws and elect our leaders, not a Theocracy in which God writes our laws and is our dictator. How is it practical, sensible, or possible to make law anything other than neutral towards all religions?<br />
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f. Thomas Jefferson was the point of the spear for religious liberty in our founding documents. But he warned against the threat from false religions: “Can the liberties of a nation be thought secure when we have removed their only firm basis, a conviction in the minds of the people that these liberties are the gift of God?” (Notes on the State of Virginia, “Query XVIII”, reprinted in Writings, 289.)<br />
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Also see: “Liberty of conscience in matters of religion consists in the absolute and unrestrained exercise of our religious opinion, and duties, in that mode which our own reason and conviction dictate, without the control or intervention of any human power or authority whatsoever.” (St. George Tucker, Blackstone’s Commentaries: with Notes of Reference, to the Constitution and Laws, of the Federal Government of the United States; and of the Commonwealth of Virginia (Philadelphia: William Young Birch and Abraham Small: 1803), I:489, “Appendix: Note G. Of the Right of Conscience; and Of the Freedom of Speech and Of The Press”:)<br />
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But what about the duty of a Moslem to behead Christians and Jews? Of of a Satanist to offer human sacrifice, including to perform abortions as part of a ritual? (Cases in Texas and Pennsylvania where abortion has become illegal) What about Native Americans smoking Peyote, an illegal drug, and then applying for unemployment compensation when they are fired from their jobs as drug counselors? (Employment Division v. Smith) <br />
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I don’t know how much these unanswered questions overlap your own. They are questions that tormented me for decades. Only recently have I glimpsed a “light at the end of the tunnel” of confusion, and I will welcome any help finally reaching it. <br />
<br />
=====2. 2. History of how SCOTUS has mangled the original meaning of the “Establishment Clause”, usurped jurisdiction over the issue never given it, and sown confusion.===== <br />
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Summary: Before 1868 the rights listed in the Constitution and Bill of Rights, like freedom of speech and religion, restrained only Congress, but state legislatures could still force their citizens to attend the state church, and could subject blacks to very unequal rights. In 1868, the 14th Amendment gave Congress, not courts, jurisdiction over states who couldn’t or wouldn’t protect the rights of their citizens. Courts had never reversed Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857) so Congress, which drafted the Amendment, understandably doubted SCOTUS’ capacity for and commitment to understanding and protecting God-given rights. <br />
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Only five years later, SCOTUS ruled (Slaughterhouse, 1873) that Congress can’t enforce any of the rights listed in the Constitution that are violated by states. Over the decades SCOTUS decided courts have jurisdiction over states to protect rights of state citizens, though not all constitutional rights, and they can make up rights that are hostile to constitutional rights. <br />
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It wasn’t until 1943 that SCOTUS decided to usurp authority over states to enforce the “Establishment Clause” of the First Amendment, which prohibits “establishment” of religion. Everson v. Board of Education. It was a Trojan Horse ruling (disguised as friendly to Christians) because it ruled that taxpayer support of bussing for Catholic students to Catholic schools was OK; that didn’t “establish” religion. But it planted two time bombs under Freedom of Religion. <br />
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The first was usurping authority over states, an authority designated by Section 5 of the 14th Amendment only for Congress. It is questionable whether even Congress is given authority to bar “establishment of religion”, because “no establishment of religion” is not directly a “right” of citizens. It is an indirect tool for protecting the “freedom of religion” of citizens. But the Freedom of Religion enjoyed by individuals, free from forcible support of or agreement with a repugnant faith, is the direct measure of whether “no establishment of religion” has been achieved. <br />
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Never before 1943 had SCOTUS interfered with state decisions about religion.<br />
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The second never-before-committed crime of Everson was equating “favoring” Christianity with “establishing” Christianity. American law had always previously “favored” Christianity without anyone suspecting Christianity was being “established”. America’s Founders understood that “establishing” Christianity was evil, but “favoring” Christianity was essential. Yet how many today grasp the difference? Understanding that difference is a key to solving this great problem. <br />
<br />
(This section awaits much more work.)<br />
<br />
=====3. Solutions: Arguments Nearly Ready for Court?=====<br />
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'''“Favoring” Freedom: a “Compelling Government Interest”.''' Allowing a manger scene in the state capitol does not create a right for satanists to erect an idol glaring down at the baby Jesus, because it is a “compelling interest” of freedom-guarding government to “favor” the ''Author'' of Freedom without enabling the avowed ''Enemy'' of Freedom. <br />
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<blockquote>It does not “establish” religion to “favor” the Bible, as ''Everson v. Board of Education'' falsely alleged for the first time in 1947. The authors of the “Establishment Clause” in 1791 considered it ''essential'' to favor the Bible by funding its printing for schools in the Northwest Territories during the same months they debated the Clause. They considered it evil to “establish” Christianity, by which they meant compelling people to endorse, attend, believe, or tithe to any church. For the same reasons that was evil then, it is evil now; and for the same reasons it was essential then to favor the Bible in public schools, it is essential now to favor God as revealed in the Bible on our money, in schools, art and prayers in legislatures, and even in 10 Commandments art in the Supreme Court building which is closed on Sunday. </blockquote><br />
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It is a “compelling government interest” of any government to promote religion(s) which supports its own existence over religions hostile to it. (Though without ''compelling'' consent or obedience, which ''destroys'' freedom.) <br />
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When Moslems, Atheists, or Satanists sue for the same public platform that Christians historically had, they are petitioning courts to favor a ''Biblical'' right not found in ''their'' religions: freedom of conscience ''for all''. Courts should do as they ask and “favor” the Bible, for the sake of all believers of all faiths: religion that ''protects'' conscience ''merits greater access'' to free people than religions that ''crush'' conscience. <br />
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'''No “establishment of religion” – not even by Courts.''' Courts threaten Freedom by ordering God to stand equal before American law with religions from Hell. Courts must stop forcing governments to give equal access to public displays of imaginary gods, for the same practical reason – the same “compelling government interest” that the Bible prohibits idols in the land: equal support for the ''enemies'' of Freedom with the ''friends'' of Freedom normalizes tyranny, which peels confused voters away from supporting details essential to Freedom. (Israel’s leaders were elected, too.)<br />
<br />
“Favoring” the principles of Freedom protects Freedom of Conscience for all until it develops into an “establishment”, meaning a human-managed hierarchy with laws and police which force people to believe, endorse, attend, or support anything. An “establishment” makes humans the masters of others’ consciences who cannot master their own. Courts “establish” their own irreligion with their arbitrary rules regulating the expression of governments, businesses, and individuals. <br />
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<blockquote>The rights of conscience are, indeed, beyond the just reach of any human power. They are given by God, and cannot be encroached upon by human authority, without a criminal disobedience of the precepts of natural, as well as revealed religion. The real object of the amendment was, not to countenance, much less to advance Mahometanism, or Judaism, or infidelity, by prostrating Christianity; but to exclude all rivalry among Christian sects, and to '''prevent any national ecclesiastical establishment''', which should give to an hierarchy the exclusive patronage of the national government. It thus sought to '''cut off the means of religious persecution''', (the vice and pest of former ages,) and the power of subverting the rights of conscience in matters of religion, which had been trampled upon almost from the days of the Apostles to the present age. (Joseph Story, Commentaries on the Constitution of the United States (Boston: Hilliard, Gray, and Company, 1833), I:701, § 990-991) </blockquote><br />
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The “Establishment Clause” prohibits “Congress” from passing “any law respecting [on the subject of] the establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.” Courts are not more competent than Congress to govern our consciences. <br />
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<blockquote>(How Thomas Jefferson explained the “Establishment Clause”:) “[N]o power over the freedom of religion [of states]. . . [is] delegated to the United States by the Constitution.” Kentucky Resolution, 1798<br />
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“In matters of religion, I have considered that its free exercise is placed by the Constitution independent of the powers of the general [federal] government.” Second Inaugural Address, 1805<br />
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“[O]ur excellent Constitution . . . has not placed our religious rights under the power of any public functionary.” Letter to the Methodist Episcopal Church, 1808<br />
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“I consider the government of the United States as interdicted [prohibited] by the Constitution from intermeddling with religious institutions . . . or exercises.” Letter to Samuel Millar, 1808<br />
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''Reynolds v. United States'' (1878) “Coming as this does from an acknowledged leader of the advocates of the measure, it [Jefferson’s ‘separation of church and state’ letter] may be accepted almost as an authoritative declaration of the scope and effect of the Amendment thus secured. '''Congress''' was deprived of all '''legislative power''' over mere [religious] opinion, but was left free to reach '''actions which were in violation of social duties''' or subversive of good order. [T]he rightful purposes of civil government are for its officers to interfere when principles break out into '''overt acts against peace''' and good order. In th[is] . . . is found the true distinction between '''what properly belongs to the church and what to the State.”''' <br />
<br />
[https://wallbuilders.com/resource/lesson-4-american-founding-and-federal-era-1785-early-1800s/ Wallbuilders] President Thomas Jefferson authored the original plan of education for the public schools of Washington, DC. He used the Bible and Watt’s Hymnal (one of the greatest doctrinal hymnals in Christendom) as the primary reading texts.<small>[Records of the Columbia Historical Society (Washington, D. C.: Columbia Historical Society, 1897), Vol. 1, pp. 122-123, 127, from the report by Mr. Henry Ould on February 10, 1813. See also National Intelligencer, March 20, 1817, p. 2. ] </small><br />
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President Jefferson, in 1803, signed a federal act renewing provisions related to propagating the Gospel among the Delaware Indian tribes. <small>[The Debates and Proceedings in the Congress of the United States (Washington: Gales and Seaton, 1851), 7th Cong., 2nd Sess., p. 1602, “An Act to Revive and Continue in Force An Act in Addition to an Act, Entitled, ‘An Act in Addition to an Act Regulating the Grants of Land Appropriated for Military Services, and for the Society of the United Brethren for Propagating the Gospel Among the Heathen,’ and for Other Purposes,” March 3, 1803] </small><br />
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President Jefferson approved a treaty with the Kaskaskia tribe to provide them Christian ministry and teaching. <small>[American State Papers: Documents, Legislative and Executive of the Congress of the United States, Walter Lowrie and Matthew St. Claire Clarke, editors (Washington, D. C.: Gales and Seaton, 1832), Vol. IV, p. 687, “The Kaskaskia and Other Tribes,” October 31, 1803.]</small><br />
<br />
President Jefferson in1804 signed a federal act related to the propagation of the Gospel among Indians on federal land trusts. <small>[The Public Statutes at Large of the United States of America, Richard Peters, editor (Boston: Charles C. Little and James Brown, 1845), Vol. II, pp. 271-272, “An Act Granting Further Time for Locating Military Land Warrants, and for Other Purposes,” March 19, 1804.]</small><br />
<br />
President Jefferson praised others who, like himself, used federal resources to spread Christianity among natives. <small>[See, for example, Thomas Jefferson, The Writings of Thomas Jefferson, Andrew A. Lipscomb, editor (Washington, D. C.: The Thomas Jefferson Memorial Association, 1904), Vol. XVI, p. 289, to Thomas, Ellicot, and Others on November 13, 1807.]</small></blockquote><br />
<br />
The 14th Amendment is the only vehicle of federal power over states, and its Section 5 gives enforcement authority to Congress, not courts. The only authority federal courts have from the Constitution is to enforce federal laws. <br />
<br />
Neither courts nor Congress have any constitutional authority to dictate terms of religious expression to anybody.<br />
<br />
<blockquote>“[N]o purpose of action against religion [particulary Christianity] can be imputed to any legislation, state or national because this is a religious people….[T]his is a Christian nation.” ''Church of the Holy Trinity'' v. U. S., 143 U. S. 457, 465, 471 (1892) [a unanimous ruling]. </blockquote><br />
<br />
Courts have usurped this authority without even any fact finding to determine which religions are consonant with reality, thereby “establishing” idiocy. Neither has there been fact finding to determine which religions support free government and virtues in citizens necessary to make freedom function. Straying so far from reality, so far outside their lawful jurisdiction, courts thereby “establish” the seeds of destruction of their own existence. <br />
<br />
'''Elements of Freedom in Religions.''' Religious expression is freest in nations where Biblical influence is greatest and least free in nations where Biblical influence is weakest because the “swordpoint conversions” common to other religions are absent from the Bible. <br />
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<blockquote>Deuteronomy 13:1-7 is the closest the Bible comes to endorsing any human-enforced penalty for sincerely held disagreement with God. The passage draws the line the same place as did Employment Division v. Smith; you can believe you should commit a crime, but if you do it you will be prosecuted. “Serving” the surrounding gods at the time meant human sacrifice, temple orgies, drugs, drinking blood. Persuading others to “serve” other gods was what we call “incitement to crime”.<br />
<br />
Biblical Christianity: The Origin of the Rights of Conscience, Wallbuilders.com, May 29, 2023 “...only nations who respect Biblical teachings and traditions offer protection for the rights of religious conscience. Secular and non-Biblical nations, and those with state-established churches (such as those that predominated in England and Europe at the time of the American Founding), do not allow rights of conscience but instead demand conformity, which often requires governmental punishment coercion concerning religious beliefs, which violates the Scriptures.<br />
<br />
“Christ Himself established religious non-coercion as the standard. His approach was so voluntary that He even directed His disciples that when they presented the Gospel to others, if someone was interested, then they could stay and share the message with them; but if someone did not want to hear, then they were to leave the area and not force the issue (Luke 10:8-12). There was absolutely no coercion. It was also this way with Paul and the other Apostles: in every case; hearers then chose whether or not to follow Christianity; there was never any penalty, pressure, or force levied against them.<br />
<br />
“As John Quincy Adams noted, Jesus Christ ‘came to teach and not to compel. His law was a Law of Liberty. He left the human mind and human action free.’ (John Quincy Adams, A Discourse on Education Delivered at Braintree, Thursday, October 24th, 1839 (Boston: Perkins & Marvin, 1840), 18.)<br />
<br />
“Two generations later, legal writer Stephen Cowell (1800-1872) similarly avowed: ‘Nonconformity, dissent, free inquiry, individual conviction, mental independence, are forever consecrated by the religion of the New Testament as the breath of its own life – the conditions of its own existence on the earth. The book is a direct transfer of human allegiance in things spiritual from the civil and ecclesiastical powers to the judgment and conscience of the individual.’ (Stephen Colwell, Politics for American Christians: A Word upon our Example as a Nation, our Labour, our Trade, Elections, Education, and Congressional Legislation (Philadelphia: Lippincott, Grambo & Co. 1852), 82, Tait’s Edinburgh Magazine, for 1844 (Edinburgh: William Tait, 1844), 752, “The Politics of the New Testament,” December 1844.)<br />
<br />
“And several generations after that, President Franklin D. Roosevelt continued to affirm the same truth, noting: ‘We want to do it the voluntary way – and most human beings in all the world want to do it the voluntary way. We do not want to have the way imposed. . . . That would not follow in the footsteps of Christ.’ ” (“Franklin D. Roosevelt, “Christmas Greeting to the Nation,” The American Presidency Project, December 24, 1940.)</blockquote><br />
<br />
A judge imagining he can rule without “favoring” the Bible, in an American court enforcing American law, is like a fish denying the value of water. The most fundamental principles of American law are taken from the Bible while competing religions and philosophies are, to varying degrees, hostile to Freedom. A judge enforcing the law, following the Constitution, favors the Bible and suppresses the dehumanization, unequal rights, and tyranny of other religions. For example:<br />
<br />
<blockquote>'''Equal Rights.''' A judge who upholds “equal protection of the laws” (14th Amendment) and “all men are created equal, and endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights...” (Declaration of Independence) thus favors equal justice for the poor with the rich (Exodus 23:3), women with men (Deuteronomy 24:17), immigrants with citizens (Exodus 12:49, Leviticus 24:22, Numbers 15:15), employees with employers (Leviticus 24:17, 21:20), those without a bribe with those with (Deuteronomy 16:19), and all races, nationalities, and religions (Galatians 3:28, Colossians 3:11). He rules against Islam’s dehumanization of Christians and Jews as “apes and pigs” deserving of the jizra tax, if not slavery, mutilation, and execution, against Hinduism’s “caste system”, and against the utter lack of any rights or law of Satanism.<br />
<br />
'''Elections.''' Courts favor the Bible over other religions when they enforce laws requiring honest elections for all citizens, which are demanded by no other religion or philosophy, but were first introduced in 1462 BC with elections of over 70,000 local and national leaders (Deuteronomy 1:13), were equated in 1065 BC with the rule of God (1 Samuel 8:7), and after 35 AD with elections of elders (Acts 14:23 & 2 Corinthians 8:19 - the “ordaining” of elders after 35AD was done by χειρτονεω, voting by raising hands)). God equated abandoning elections in with abandoning God, , <br />
<br />
'''Freedom of Speech.''' Courts which enforce Freedom of Speech favor the laws of nations influenced by the Bible, whose heroes are those who told the truth even when truth was against the law. Such courts ignore the laws of nations dominated by other religions or philosophies whose heroes are the “strongest”, who most successfully dominate others, whose approved methods include deception and torture. <br />
<br />
'''Freedom of Religion.''' Even Freedom of Religion is a uniquely Biblical value. The Bible respects no “swordpoint conversions”. Deuteronomy 13:1-7 is the closest the Bible comes to endorsing any human-enforced penalty for sincerely held disagreement with God. The passage draws the line the same place as did ''Employment Division v. Smith;'' you can believe you should commit a crime, but if you do it you will be prosecuted. “Serving” the surrounding gods at the time meant human sacrifice, temple orgies, drugs, drinking blood. Persuading others to “serve” other gods was what we call “incitement to crime”. God “reasons” with people. (Isaiah 1:18). His people persuade by reason, not force. (Acts 17:2, 1 Peter 3:15. We address wrongs with reason, evidence, and law, and jail those who start physical fights; we do not go to war to gain territory, slaves, or booty, but only to defend ourselves and others).<br />
<br />
'''Lower Crime.''' The 10 Commandments is an outline of the laws God offers for the benefit of all mankind. They doubly serve as an outline of American law. The fact that they are universally recognized as principles of God’s laws secures voluntary obedience to them of all who love God, without the need of hiring police to compel their compliance. We are taught not only to fear the consequences of, but to hate murder, stealing, perversion, and lying – especially false accusations. Children are placed under the jurisdiction of those most likely to love them most, and are urged to obey voluntarily for their own benefit. Hard, slave-grade labor is outlawed by requiring periods of rest. And not only is obedience secured voluntarily, but disobedience is prevented by the final command to not even want any of the goals of these crimes. And the first command is to love and obey the Author of all these rules upon which freedom and prosperity hangs. This positive incentive for obeying laws is supplemented by the negative incentive implied in the first Commandment: the fear of God’s judgments, added to human-enforced penalties, for disobeying.<br />
<br />
All of which makes it insane that the Supreme Court’s reason for not allowing posts of the 10 Commandments in schools was: “ If the posted copies of the Ten Commandments are to have any effect at all, it will be to induce the schoolchildren to read, meditate upon, perhaps to venerate '''and obey''', the Commandments. However desirable this might be as a matter of private devotion, it is not a permissible state objective under the Establishment Clause.” ''Stone v. Graham'', 449 U.S. 39 (1980) https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/449/39/</blockquote><br />
<br />
It is also a “legitimate government interest” to “favor” any religion to the extent it inspires in voters and citizens character qualities essential to the success of freedom. Therefore evidence is relevant, in any case concerning government involvement in free expression, of a religion’s promotion of personal virtues that enable freedom to function, such as:<br />
<br />
service to others (Luke 22:25-27; American society honors most who serve most), <br />
<br />
respect for all humans (Genesis 1:27), <br />
<br />
honesty (Proverbs 6:16-17, Matthew 19:18; fraud and bribery are crimes and scandals in America), <br />
<br />
tolerance (Americans value freedom of speech and religion, rejecting “swordpoint conversions” and prosecution of dissent; we oppose discrimination over morally neutral differences. Tolerance for those who look or think different is not found in other religions or practiced by their followers), <br />
<br />
impartiality (Proverbs 17:23 We demand equal rights and opportunities for all in which people are judged by and rewarded for their service and the content of their character), <br />
<br />
peacemakers (Matthew 5:9; We address wrongs with reason, evidence, and law, and jail those who start physical fights; we do not go to war to gain territory, slaves, or booty, but only to defend ourselves and others), and <br />
<br />
religious obedience to legitimate law (Romans 13:1-5, 1 Peter 2:13, Matthew 22:21). <br />
<br />
It is a “compelling government interest” to support those foundational virtues over religions which are relatively hostile to Freedom, though without physically or financially coercing anyone’s conscience, which destroys Freedom. <br />
<br />
'''Relevant evidence''' in court includes results of scrutiny of the scriptures of any religion whose accommodation or promotion is being reviewed, to establish any consonance with reality beyond any reasonable possibility of human understanding at the time of its authorship, and therefore the likelihood that taking seriously its advice, promises and warnings comport with reality and are in the national interest. <br />
<br />
It does not “establish religion” to publicly, officially establish facts. Religions make claims about God or the absence thereof. The Bible uniquely claims that God “turns the hearts of kings”, (Proverbs 21:1) and brings judgments upon whole nations for violating laws given, again uniquely, for the benefit of all mankind. The Bible thus claims God is the “highest authority”, a “king of kings”. (Psalm 2:1 ...Why are the people making such foolish plans? 2 Their kings and leaders join together to fight against the LORD and his chosen king....4 But the one who rules in heaven laughs at them. The Lord makes fun of them.... 10 So, kings and rulers, be smart and learn this lesson. 11 Serve the LORD with fear and trembling. 12 Show that you are loyal to his son, or the Lord will be angry and destroy you. He is almost angry enough to do that now, but those who go to him for protection will be blessed.) <br />
<br />
It is a “compelling government interest” to investigate such claims, and if they survive scrutiny, to adjust national policy to conform to reality – to not be “foolish”. This makes relevant in legislatures and in courts a review of the scrutiny of the Bible, compared with a review of results of any scrutiny of other sacred writings (if any such scrutiny can be found) to determine which is the more reliable guide to what will most benefit citizens and their government.<br />
<br />
Blindness about the differences between religions in these areas, leading to equal treatment of them in courts and politics, threaten our freedoms, is not in the national interest, and is the definition of willful ignorance.<br />
<br />
The fact that all human fact-finding is imperfect and subject to the possibility of evidence available in the future is not a reason to throw up America’s hands and rule reality irrelevant. <br />
<br />
Reality is not irrelevant. It is self-enforcing.<br />
<br />
===Life===<br />
<br />
[[Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases]]<br />
<br>'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters <br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion<br />
<br>by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
<br>''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal'' <br />
<br>''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal'' <br />
<br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen<br />
<br />
[[The 140 Amicus Briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson]]<br />
<br />
[[The “Outlawing Abortion in Compliance with Unanimous Court-Recognized Evidence that Abortion is Murder” Act]] '''A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life''' Featuring Nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' (which overturned ''Roe v. Wade'' June 24, 2022. "Amicus briefs", also called "Friend of Court" briefs, are filed by groups with a strong interest in the case, such as prolife and prodeath groups, who are not direct parties to the case but who will be affected by the outcome.)<br />
<br />
'''Some claims are so unacceptable that it becomes almost irrelevant whether they are true, but some Truths are so irrefutable that censorship fails, like Darkness trying to put out Light, John 1:5.''' <br />
<br />
[[Ending Legal Abortion in Every State in about a Year]] (This is an earlier, shorter draft of the preceding article.) By including the irrefutable, unanimous, unchallenged evidence that babies are fully human, with conscious souls, in the "findings of facts" of a prolife law, courts are forced to address that fact when they review the law. It is impossible for any judge to squarely address that evidence and keep abortion legal, in ANY state. It is just as impossible for any news reporter or Democrat to squarely address this evidence, and still defend abortion. Therefore if ''any'' prolife lawmaker anywhere in America can be found to simply INTRODUCE a prolife bill with these Findings of Facts, this evidence will take on a life of its own and be impossible to censor for long. Some claims are so unacceptable that it becomes almost irrelevant whether they are true; likewise, some truths so challenge the censors that they are like Light in Darkness which Darkness can no longer put out, John 1:5. <br />
<br />
[[Alito Draft Treats ITS A BABY as a Matter of Opinion]] This letter written to six conservative Supreme Court justices responds to several outrageous quotes in the leaked draft by Justice Alito, and on their statements during oral arguments the previous December, in which they said they couldn't tell if unborn babies are real people, which should flabbergast any prolifer. I sent this letter June 15, 2022 BEFORE their ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson repealing Roe v. Wade. I gave evidence they should respect that babies really are people, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder. They had said since they can't tell, voters should decide, through their elected state representatives. <br />
<br />
I answered that the right to murder cannot be on any ballot. I reminded them that the 14th Amendment was passed specifically to protect those who “as a matter of law” were never treated as “persons in the whole sense”. I said that repealing Roe while calling ITS A BABY a Matter of Opinion won't end aborticide cases. I pointed out that repealing Roe, leaving liberal states free to continue the slaughter, is no better than Dred Scott v. Sandford which left liberal states free to continue the slavery. <br />
<br />
They had written that voters must decide whether to murder babies based on the "social value" voters place on babies. I responded that the "social value" that women have to be allowed to kill babies in order to have "full equality" is held by most non-Christian religions and philosophies but is alien to "all men are created equal...in the Image of God". I pointed out that every court-recognized fact finder that has taken a position has ruled that "It's a Baby!" If the unanimous ruling of every court-recognized fact finder is not enough for a judge to know a fact, how can any judge ever know anything? I acknowledged that every state appellate court in abortion prevention cases said Roe made the FACT that babies are people irrelevant, by ruling that babies are NOT people "as a matter of law". Besides pointing out that the Supreme Court actually never said such nonsense, the 14th Amendment protects all who are IN FACT humans. What is irrelevant is whether they are “persons” “as a matter of law”. Even Roe treated ITS A BABY as a fact question, for fact finders.<br />
<br />
[[ND_Court_Gives_Moms_Fundamental_Right to_Save_Themselves_from_their_Babies]] <br />
<br />
<br />
[[Troubling Excerpts & Analysis from Dobbs v. Jackson]] My letter to SCOTUS didn't improve their understanding of babies. SCOTUS ruled that "it's a baby" is a matter of opinion beyond the ability of courts to resolve, so voters - not courts - should decide whether to keep baby killing legal. My analysis points out that SCOTUS doesn't treat the humanity of any ''other'' group of people as so subjective that states need the freedom to decide whether to legalize murdering them. <br />
<br />
Well, At least aborticide is not a "fundamental right" - though not because babies are people so killing them is murder. No, the best reason they could come up with for ruling that aborticide is not a fundamental right is that it hasn't been legal in past centuries. Pardon the french, but state legislatures need to pass laws that will fill that vacuum of intelligence. If crimes against people should be kept legal according to whether they have been legal in past centuries, with no discussion of the very real people hurt by them, then ''slavery'' should still be legal.<br />
<br />
[[Valentine Letter to Supreme Court Justices: outlaw baby killing in EVERY state]] This was my first letter to the Supreme Court, mailed on February 14, 2022, before the leaked Alito draft. It responds to alarming, foolish quotes from the most conservative justices in the December 1, 2021 oral arguments in Dobbs v. Jackson. <br />
<br />
[[Scriptures SCOTUS must address before saying Christianity supports abortion]] Roe v. Wade said part of the reason "the judiciary, at this point in the development of man's knowledge, is unable to speculate as to the answer...to 'when life begins'" was because preachers and doctors don't agree! Yet no preacher from the last 1,000 years was consulted! So obviously, SCOTUS' theology is due for an update. Here is some of what God says about it. God made babies, so God knows what He made. <br />
<br />
[[Four_Drawbacks_of_a_No-Right-to-Abortion_State_Constitutional_Amendment]] The Iowa Supreme Court overturned a prolife law and claimed that abortion is a "fundamental right" in Iowa, no matter what it is elsewhere. I don't think that is quite the meaning of the ruling, but Iowa prolifers now think they have to pass an amendment to the Iowa Constitution before they can think about any other prolife laws. Which means more years of waiting. Here are the legal reasons that is unnecessary.<br />
<br />
[[Answers to Lawmakers' Objections]]<br />
<br />
[[The consensus of court-recognized fact-finders that babies are people even before they are born]] This is the core legal consensus that no judge can squarely address and keep abortion legal. <br />
<br />
[[Abortion Law Alabama]] Here is my analysis of an Alabama prolife law with robust Findings of Facts, but that did not go far enough to survive courts. <br />
<br />
[[Missouri Encyclopedia of Abortion Arguments]] Here is my analysis of a Missouri prolife law with robust Findings of Facts, but that did not go far enough to survive courts. <br />
<br />
[[Abortion]]<br />
<br />
[[Outreach to 2800 Republican Lawmakers in 30 States where Republicans Control Both Chambers]] In 2019 I offered my book, "How States can Outlaw Abortion in a way that Survives Courts", to Republican lawmakers. Over 50 accepted a copy. But so far I know of none who acted on the opportunity.<br />
<br />
[[Forsythe]]<br />
<br />
===Immigration===<br />
<br />
[[Another AntiImmigrant Bible Claim]]<br />
<br />
[[Deadly Immigration Rhetoric]]<br />
<br />
[[Many of our ancestors documented THEMSELVES]]<br />
<br />
[[The Immigration Solution best for our Economy, our Security, and our Faith]]<br />
<br />
[[Cruz, Trump, Keyes, and the Bible]]<br />
<br />
[["Never Trump" and the Bible]]<br />
<br />
[[Democrat Platform on immigration]]<br />
<br />
[[Republican Platform on immigration]]<br />
<br />
:[[Republican and Democrat Immigration Platforms are Similar]]<br />
<br />
[[Immigration]] ''(Comparing what parties and candidates say)''<br />
<br />
[[Setting Immigration Quotas - the Mystery of the Wages]] ''(There is no measure of the number best for citizens)''<br />
<br />
[[Whose Expertise Inspired Our Immigration Laws?]] ''(U.S. immigration policy is driven by those who have least studied the key facts)''<br />
<br />
[[Personal to Ted Cruz]]<br />
<br />
===Sudan===<br />
<br />
[[Saving South Sudan]] ''(How refugees can open U.S. refugee quotas so their families can come, and How Refugees can heal the government of South Sudan so their families won't have to leave) ''<br />
<br />
[[Saving South Sudan - general discussion]]<br />
<br />
[[Optional: Turn your Response into a New Article]]<br />
<br />
[[Principles of the proposed UTSS Constitution in the Bible]]<br />
<br />
===Other Political Issues===<br />
<br />
[[Open Letter to Election Affirmers/Fake News Subscribers]] Reflections on my interview with a Washington Post reporter and her article<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
[[File:SinTiny.gif|center]]<br />
<br />
[[Racism - Whether Blacks are even Citizens - A Debate]]<br />
<br />
[[Judicial Accountability Act: How Legislatures can stop judges from legislating]]<br />
<br />
[[Election Fraud]] What can we do to ensure future fair elections? Consider the degree of election fraud we have just been through, the degree of Republican acceptance of the results as correct despite the fraud, and now with the fraud machine in charge of the U.S. legislature and presidency while promising to pack the courts, while free speech is being completely shut down in our newsrooms and social media against any suggestion of the least fraud. What will keep fraud from spreading to the remaining 44 states, and from presidential elections on down the line - if they haven't already? What courageous new movement will rise to restore honest elections? <br />
<br />
[[This Judge ruled like a Christian Historian]]<br />
<br />
[[Climate Change]]<br />
<br />
==Spiritual Preparation for Action==<br />
<br />
[[How to React when God's Answer to your Prayers is Delivered by an Unqualified Messenger or is Gift Wrapped in Hard Work or in a Lot of Reading]]<br />
<br />
[[God's Blueprints for Political Victories]]<br />
<br />
[[Bible Blueprints for Christian Meetings]]<br />
<br />
<blockquote>1: Obeying God beats traditional worship<br />
<br />
2: "Good works", not just talk with no intent to act, are God’s goals for meetings<br />
<br />
3: God answers prayers through forums where “all” reason and “exhort”. Sermons aren’t mentioned.<br />
<br />
4: Bible heroes, like God, are very Political<br />
<br />
5: "The Gospel" is not just about Heaven, but also about Heroic Hard Work Here<br />
<br />
6: "Light in the Darkness" means quoting God about Darkness in the Darkness<br />
<br />
7: The "Cross" we must carry is an "easy yoke", a "light burden". It is a reward. It is Life, now. It may "cost" money, friends, wealth, careers, comfort, life, but not anything we need </blockquote><br />
<br />
[[Beast or Savior? Musk v. 1 Cor 14 Fellowship]]<br />
<br />
[[Shall we rejoice when an abortionist goes to Hell?]]<br />
<br />
[[Trump - America Needs Him but not his Pride or his Sodomite Patronage]] Bible perspectives by Scott Lively (pastor, lawyer, anti-sodomy activist from Oregon to Uganda), David Lane (organizer of American Renewal Project which brings pastors to hear political leaders and encourages them to run for office) and Dave Leach, website guy]] <br />
<br />
[[Personal Attack Headlines that Violate Proverbs 24:17]]<br />
<br />
[[Are Christians Happier?]]<br />
<br />
[[Drinking is for Death Beds]]<br />
<br />
[[Multitude Of Counsellors Project]]<br />
<br />
[[America got Freedom from the Bible]]<br />
<br />
[[Upon this Rock I will build my Congress]] <> [[Part Two: WHICH "Rock"?]] <> [[Part Three: Politics in the Gates]] <> [[Part Four: Congregation/Congress v. “Church”]] <> [[Part Five: The Congress of Living Stones]]<br />
<br />
[[What God says we will accomplish by meeting His way]] (Invitation to join a "Multitude of Counsellors", Proverbs 15:22)<br />
<br />
[[God's Relationship Primer]]<br />
<br />
[[The Bible on Equal Rights for Women: Did God Write "For Men Only" on the Pulpit?]]<br />
<br />
[[Psychology vs. the Bible]]<br />
<br />
[[What we can Pray for that isn't Forbidden by Prophecy]]<br />
<br />
[[The fewer who are willing to manage the interactions of citizens the closer their only possible government comes to being a dictatorship]]<br />
<br />
[[Evidence that in God All Nations May Trust]]<br />
<br />
[[Shining "the Gospel" Outside the Bushel]]<br />
<br />
[[Gospel Light turned off by Christians]]<br />
<br />
==Reasoning with Pastors==<br />
<br />
This section is for reports of dialog with pastors about those "Noninvolvement Theologies" that are keeping the "Armies of God" from shining the Light (of what God says about our national abominations) out into the government-entangled Darkness outside the church walls - out in those forums where voters decide whether to pattern our laws after the principles of Heaven or of Hell. Even where pastors give occasional sermons identifying some of those abominations, and more rarely direct token political action, there remain prohibitions against other churchgoers besides the pastor being allowed, on church premises and through church communication channels, to discuss, reason, investigate, strategize, and take action together, not limited to the pastor's political knowledge, to shine that Light out where it will get rid of some of that Darkness. See [[Reasoning with Pastors - Introduction]] for Dave Leach's explanation of why he is publishing these reports of dialog with several pastors which, as they occurred over the past 30 years, he did not expect to make public.<br />
<br />
<blockquote>Ye are the salt of the earth: but if the salt have lost his savour, wherewith shall it be salted? it is thenceforth good for nothing, but to be cast out, and to be trodden under foot of men. Ye are the light of the world. A city that is set on an hill cannot be hid. Neither do men light a candle, and put it under a bushel, but on a candlestick; and it giveth light unto all that are in the house. Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven. - Matthew 5:13-16</blockquote><br />
<br />
<blockquote>Thou shalt not mix politics and religion. - 2 Denominations 3:16</blockquote><br />
<br />
<blockquote>Thou shalt not talk about anything controversial in church. That is, anything important enough that the discovery of disagreement in another is disturbing. - 1 Controversies 23</blockquote><br />
<br />
[[Reasoning with Pastors - Introduction]]<br />
<br />
[[Pastor Terry Amann, Church of the Way]]</div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Forum&diff=50393Forum2024-02-14T21:01:29Z<p>DaveLeach: /* The Supreme Court's War Against God */</p>
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<br>You can "comment" not only at the end of any article here, but ''in'' the article, by the point with which you want to interact. You can also vote, "Like", rate, or argue. Also you can change your past comment, add a section with a heading that appears in the Table of Contents, start a new article, use colors, or write in Greek! Find suggestions and codes at [[Begin!]]</small></span><br />
<br />
==Politics==<br />
<br />
===Vaccines, Masks, Censors===<br />
<br />
[[VA_Hospital,_asked_for_medical_justification_for_mask_policy,_consults_lawyers]]<br />
<br />
This is a record of my interaction with the Veterans Administration Hospital of central Iowa about their requirement that everyone wear a mask all the time they are in the hospital. I showed them the research proving masks are completely ineffective at stopping covid, but they do a magnificent job of blocking oxygen so that wearers' oxygen levels drop and carbon dioxide levels rise, causing a wide variety of serious medical issues.<br />
<br />
I had a few exchanges with VA staff, followed by attempts to involve newspapers to report it, and lawyers to sue in federal court.<br />
<br />
The basis of my complaint is in two parts: Section One explains in what sense blind faith in rituals proved by research to accomplish nothing, loaded with social rejection of anyone who questions them, runs towards the essence of the False Gods of primitive paganism and offends the Biblical importance placed on Truth. Section Two summarizes tons of research showing that masks and vaccines don't help but harm, while covid tests are very unreliable. <br />
<br />
[[God's Coronavirus Cure in 3 Verses]] (Probably a situation that brings most politics to a screeching halt, shutting down entire legislatures, should be classified as "political")<br />
<br />
[[Cure for Covid Censors]] '''A petition to state governors''': "Governors: base mandates on ALL the science. Sponsor an Online Forum where Doctors can Interact without fear of Censorship, which you will use as a knowlege base for your emergency orders." (See this article for complete information, and model Emergency Powers legislation. See [https://citizengo.org/en-us/node/204001?tcid=89997709 PETITION] for an online petition at CitizenGo.) <br />
<br />
[[Application_for_Religious/Secular Exemption from Mask Vaccine & testing_Mandates]]<br />
<br />
'''Section One''' of this Application explains (1) my reverence for Truth and evidence, (2) the Bible’s emphasis on Truth and evidence, (3) Bible heroes who resisted health laws not based on reality, (4) why mask and vaccine mandates which cannot rationally claim support from evidence must be classified as “religious”, and are presented as false gods, and (5) what the Bible says about bowing down to false gods, and the importance of openly, decisively disclaiming them. Section One presents legal analysis of the First Amendment prohibition of “establishment of religion”, as well as theological analysis. <br />
<br />
[[Application for Secular/Religious Exemption from Mask/Vaccine Mandate - Section Two, The Evidence]] '''Section Two''' of this Application reviews medical research that shows (1) masks do not slow covid spread with any “statistical significance”, (2) masks cause serious medical and emotional problems, most tragically in children, (3) vaccines cause more deaths than covid, and (4) government blockage of proven covid cures points to some other government purpose than reducing covid. But you probably don’t need this evidence; you probably have plenty of your own, or you wouldn’t want an exemption. This information is widely available, and expands daily, so Section Two is out of date anyway. (Section Two also lists arguments common in other Applications for Religious Exemption: vaccines are developed from a murdered baby, and the Bible calls us to treat our bodies as the Temple of God.)<br />
<br />
[[Covid_Updates]] (through 2020)<br />
<br />
[[Free Speech Laws, Precedents & Scripture]]<br />
<br />
[[Bill Gates' Dream is our Nightmare]]<br />
<br />
===The Supreme Court's War Against God===<br />
<br />
====Open letter to Jeff Angelo, WHO Radio, and Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds====<br />
<br />
<br />
To Jeff Angelo <br />
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You invited listeners, February 8, to talk you out of your belief that satanists have a perfect right under the Constitution to display their idol at the state capitol, to host after-school Satan clubs, and to send their own “pastors” into schools when that bill passes. <br />
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My response is in three parts. I can’t decide which to put first, so I’ll list them and you can skip to whichever one interests you: (1) Acknowledging the logic of your position, which is shared by most judges, lawyers, and Christian leaders. Histories showing the very different understanding of “establishment of religion” by the authors of the 1st Amendment leave many questions unanswered. (2) History of how SCOTUS has mangled the original meaning, usurped jurisdiction over the issue never given it, and sown confusion. (3) Solutions. Legal arguments ready for today’s courts, with explanations. <br />
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=====1. Acknowledgement of the logic of your position.=====<br />
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It genuinely confuses not just judges and lawyers, but many Christians, today, how it would be fair to everyone to allow Christians to display a baby Jesus in a manger in the state capitol or in schools, while prohibiting Satanists from displaying next to it a baby on one of their sacrificial altars, Moslems from displaying a baby with its head lopped off by a nearby toy machete, Chinese Communists from displaying a dismembered baby next to forceps and a suction machine, or witch doctors from displaying a voodoo doll of the state governor or the school principal stuck with pins. <br />
Today’s Poorly Answered questions (which are addressed in Part 3):<br />
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a. Aren’t all “religions” supposed to stand equal before American law? Isn’t that what prohibiting “establishment of religion” means? <br />
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b. Historians like David Barton prove that America’s Founders did not equalize all religions. During the same months our Founders debated the First Amendment, they authorized and funded the printing of Bibles for schools in the Northwest Territories. They obviously didn’t consider that an “establishment of religion”. But why wasn’t it? Barton’s explanations did not make that clear, at least not to me. As late as 1947, SCOTUS ruled that spending taxes on bus rides for Catholic students to Catholic schools was not an “establishment of religion”. But that was not at all clear to the four justices who dissented, who thought it was. <br />
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c. OK, so they were all Christians back then. A little inconsistency then wasn’t so big a deal maybe. But now? Is favoring the Bible practical, constitutional, and fair, now? Aren’t we more free when all ideas are on a level playing field?”<br />
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d. Trinity v. United States (1892) is at times cited as acknowledgment by SCOTUS that the U.S. is, indeed, “a Christian nation”. (The issue of the case was whether to let a Christian pastor from England immigrate with less red tape.) But the evidence weighed in the case is over trivial matters: like Governments are closed on Sundays. But today, with almost everyone else but government open all the time, how is that ruling relevant today? How does our freedom, or rule of law, hang on our acknowledgment of the Bible? <br />
(Similarly, United States v. Macintosh, 1931, concluded that Americans are a “Christian people...according to [giving] one another the equal right of religious freedom, and acknowledging with reverence the duty of obedience to the will of God.”)<br />
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e. I am a Christian who wants to compare American Freedom with the Bible. Haven’t our Founders, and shouldn’t we, compromise with God for the sake of our freedom? For example, elections. If we pattern our government after the Bible, must we cancel elections? Where are elections in the Bible? How about Freedom of Religion? Doesn’t the Bible call for unbelievers to be stoned? How about slavery? Would we have to legalize slavery again? We have a Democracy (a Republic, technically, though there is little agreement on the difference) in which we approve our own laws and elect our leaders, not a Theocracy in which God writes our laws and is our dictator. How is it practical, sensible, or possible to make law anything other than neutral towards all religions?<br />
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f. Thomas Jefferson was the point of the spear for religious liberty in our founding documents. But he warned against the threat from false religions: “Can the liberties of a nation be thought secure when we have removed their only firm basis, a conviction in the minds of the people that these liberties are the gift of God?” (Notes on the State of Virginia, “Query XVIII”, reprinted in Writings, 289.)<br />
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Also see: “Liberty of conscience in matters of religion consists in the absolute and unrestrained exercise of our religious opinion, and duties, in that mode which our own reason and conviction dictate, without the control or intervention of any human power or authority whatsoever.” (St. George Tucker, Blackstone’s Commentaries: with Notes of Reference, to the Constitution and Laws, of the Federal Government of the United States; and of the Commonwealth of Virginia (Philadelphia: William Young Birch and Abraham Small: 1803), I:489, “Appendix: Note G. Of the Right of Conscience; and Of the Freedom of Speech and Of The Press”:)<br />
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But what about the duty of a Moslem to behead Christians and Jews? Of of a Satanist to offer human sacrifice, including to perform abortions as part of a ritual? (Cases in Texas and Pennsylvania where abortion has become illegal) What about Native Americans smoking Peyote, an illegal drug, and then applying for unemployment compensation when they are fired from their jobs as drug counselors? (Employment Division v. Smith) <br />
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I don’t know how much these unanswered questions overlap your own. They are questions that tormented me for decades. Only recently have I glimpsed a “light at the end of the tunnel” of confusion, and I will welcome any help finally reaching it. <br />
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=====2. 2. History of how SCOTUS has mangled the original meaning of the “Establishment Clause”, usurped jurisdiction over the issue never given it, and sown confusion.===== <br />
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Summary: Before 1868 the rights listed in the Constitution and Bill of Rights, like freedom of speech and religion, restrained only Congress, but state legislatures could still force their citizens to attend the state church, and could subject blacks to very unequal rights. In 1868, the 14th Amendment gave Congress, not courts, jurisdiction over states who couldn’t or wouldn’t protect the rights of their citizens. Courts had never reversed Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857) so Congress, which drafted the Amendment, understandably doubted SCOTUS’ capacity for and commitment to understanding and protecting God-given rights. <br />
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Only five years later, SCOTUS ruled (Slaughterhouse, 1873) that Congress can’t enforce any of the rights listed in the Constitution that are violated by states. Over the decades SCOTUS decided courts have jurisdiction over states to protect rights of state citizens, though not all constitutional rights, and they can make up rights that are hostile to constitutional rights. <br />
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It wasn’t until 1943 that SCOTUS decided to usurp authority over states to enforce the “Establishment Clause” of the First Amendment, which prohibits “establishment” of religion. Everson v. Board of Education. It was a Trojan Horse ruling (disguised as friendly to Christians) because it ruled that taxpayer support of bussing for Catholic students to Catholic schools was OK; that didn’t “establish” religion. But it planted two time bombs under Freedom of Religion. <br />
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The first was usurping authority over states, an authority designated by Section 5 of the 14th Amendment only for Congress. It is questionable whether even Congress is given authority to bar “establishment of religion”, because “no establishment of religion” is not directly a “right” of citizens. It is an indirect tool for protecting the “freedom of religion” of citizens. But the Freedom of Religion enjoyed by individuals, free from forcible support of or agreement with a repugnant faith, is the direct measure of whether “no establishment of religion” has been achieved. <br />
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Never before 1943 had SCOTUS interfered with state decisions about religion.<br />
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The second never-before-committed crime of Everson was equating “favoring” Christianity with “establishing” Christianity. American law had always previously “favored” Christianity without anyone suspecting Christianity was being “established”. America’s Founders understood that “establishing” Christianity was evil, but “favoring” Christianity was essential. Yet how many today grasp the difference? Understanding that difference is a key to solving this great problem. <br />
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(This section awaits much more work.)<br />
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=====3. Solutions: Arguments Nearly Ready for Court?=====<br />
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'''“Favoring” Freedom: a “Compelling Government Interest”.''' Allowing a manger scene in the state capitol does not create a right for satanists to erect an idol glaring down at the baby Jesus, because it is a “compelling interest” of freedom-guarding government to “favor” the ''Author'' of Freedom without enabling the avowed ''Enemy'' of Freedom. <br />
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<blockquote>It does not “establish” religion to “favor” the Bible, as ''Everson v. Board of Education'' falsely alleged for the first time in 1947. The authors of the “Establishment Clause” in 1791 considered it ''essential'' to favor the Bible by funding its printing for schools in the Northwest Territories during the same months they debated the Clause. They considered it evil to “establish” Christianity, by which they meant compelling people to endorse, attend, believe, or tithe to any church. For the same reasons that was evil then, it is evil now; and for the same reasons it was essential then to favor the Bible in public schools, it is essential now to favor God as revealed in the Bible on our money, in schools, art and prayers in legislatures, and even in 10 Commandments art in the Supreme Court building which is closed on Sunday. </blockquote><br />
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It is a “compelling government interest” of any government to promote religion(s) which supports its own existence over religions hostile to it. (Though without ''compelling'' consent or obedience, which ''destroys'' freedom.) <br />
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When Moslems, Atheists, or Satanists sue for the same public platform that Christians historically had, they are petitioning courts to favor a ''Biblical'' right not found in ''their'' religions: freedom of conscience ''for all''. Courts should do as they ask and “favor” the Bible, for the sake of all believers of all faiths: religion that ''protects'' conscience ''merits greater access'' to free people than religions that ''crush'' conscience. <br />
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'''No “establishment of religion” – not even by Courts.''' Courts threaten Freedom by ordering God to stand equal before American law with religions from Hell. Courts must stop forcing governments to give equal access to public displays of imaginary gods, for the same practical reason – the same “compelling government interest” that the Bible prohibits idols in the land: equal support for the ''enemies'' of Freedom with the ''friends'' of Freedom normalizes tyranny, which peels confused voters away from supporting details essential to Freedom. (Israel’s leaders were elected, too.)<br />
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“Favoring” the principles of Freedom protects Freedom of Conscience for all until it develops into an “establishment”, meaning a human-managed hierarchy with laws and police which force people to believe, endorse, attend, or support anything. An “establishment” makes humans the masters of others’ consciences who cannot master their own. Courts “establish” their own irreligion with their arbitrary rules regulating the expression of governments, businesses, and individuals. <br />
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<blockquote>The rights of conscience are, indeed, beyond the just reach of any human power. They are given by God, and cannot be encroached upon by human authority, without a criminal disobedience of the precepts of natural, as well as revealed religion. The real object of the amendment was, not to countenance, much less to advance Mahometanism, or Judaism, or infidelity, by prostrating Christianity; but to exclude all rivalry among Christian sects, and to '''prevent any national ecclesiastical establishment''', which should give to an hierarchy the exclusive patronage of the national government. It thus sought to '''cut off the means of religious persecution''', (the vice and pest of former ages,) and the power of subverting the rights of conscience in matters of religion, which had been trampled upon almost from the days of the Apostles to the present age. (Joseph Story, Commentaries on the Constitution of the United States (Boston: Hilliard, Gray, and Company, 1833), I:701, § 990-991) </blockquote><br />
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The “Establishment Clause” prohibits “Congress” from passing “any law respecting [on the subject of] the establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.” Courts are not more competent than Congress to govern our consciences. <br />
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<blockquote>(How Thomas Jefferson explained the “Establishment Clause”:) “[N]o power over the freedom of religion [of states]. . . [is] delegated to the United States by the Constitution.” Kentucky Resolution, 1798<br />
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“In matters of religion, I have considered that its free exercise is placed by the Constitution independent of the powers of the general [federal] government.” Second Inaugural Address, 1805<br />
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“[O]ur excellent Constitution . . . has not placed our religious rights under the power of any public functionary.” Letter to the Methodist Episcopal Church, 1808<br />
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“I consider the government of the United States as interdicted [prohibited] by the Constitution from intermeddling with religious institutions . . . or exercises.” Letter to Samuel Millar, 1808<br />
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''Reynolds v. United States'' (1878) “Coming as this does from an acknowledged leader of the advocates of the measure, it [Jefferson’s ‘separation of church and state’ letter] may be accepted almost as an authoritative declaration of the scope and effect of the Amendment thus secured. '''Congress''' was deprived of all '''legislative power''' over mere [religious] opinion, but was left free to reach '''actions which were in violation of social duties''' or subversive of good order. [T]he rightful purposes of civil government are for its officers to interfere when principles break out into '''overt acts against peace''' and good order. In th[is] . . . is found the true distinction between '''what properly belongs to the church and what to the State.”''' <br />
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[https://wallbuilders.com/resource/lesson-4-american-founding-and-federal-era-1785-early-1800s/ Wallbuilders] President Thomas Jefferson authored the original plan of education for the public schools of Washington, DC. He used the Bible and Watt’s Hymnal (one of the greatest doctrinal hymnals in Christendom) as the primary reading texts.<small>[Records of the Columbia Historical Society (Washington, D. C.: Columbia Historical Society, 1897), Vol. 1, pp. 122-123, 127, from the report by Mr. Henry Ould on February 10, 1813. See also National Intelligencer, March 20, 1817, p. 2. ] </small><br />
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President Jefferson, in 1803, signed a federal act renewing provisions related to propagating the Gospel among the Delaware Indian tribes. <small>[The Debates and Proceedings in the Congress of the United States (Washington: Gales and Seaton, 1851), 7th Cong., 2nd Sess., p. 1602, “An Act to Revive and Continue in Force An Act in Addition to an Act, Entitled, ‘An Act in Addition to an Act Regulating the Grants of Land Appropriated for Military Services, and for the Society of the United Brethren for Propagating the Gospel Among the Heathen,’ and for Other Purposes,” March 3, 1803] </small><br />
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President Jefferson approved a treaty with the Kaskaskia tribe to provide them Christian ministry and teaching. <small>[American State Papers: Documents, Legislative and Executive of the Congress of the United States, Walter Lowrie and Matthew St. Claire Clarke, editors (Washington, D. C.: Gales and Seaton, 1832), Vol. IV, p. 687, “The Kaskaskia and Other Tribes,” October 31, 1803.]</small><br />
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President Jefferson in1804 signed a federal act related to the propagation of the Gospel among Indians on federal land trusts. <small>[The Public Statutes at Large of the United States of America, Richard Peters, editor (Boston: Charles C. Little and James Brown, 1845), Vol. II, pp. 271-272, “An Act Granting Further Time for Locating Military Land Warrants, and for Other Purposes,” March 19, 1804.]</small><br />
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President Jefferson praised others who, like himself, used federal resources to spread Christianity among natives. <small>[See, for example, Thomas Jefferson, The Writings of Thomas Jefferson, Andrew A. Lipscomb, editor (Washington, D. C.: The Thomas Jefferson Memorial Association, 1904), Vol. XVI, p. 289, to Thomas, Ellicot, and Others on November 13, 1807.]</small></blockquote><br />
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The 14th Amendment is the only vehicle of federal power over states, and its Section 5 gives enforcement authority to Congress, not courts. The only authority federal courts have from the Constitution is to enforce federal laws. <br />
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Neither courts nor Congress have any constitutional authority to dictate terms of religious expression to anybody.<br />
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<blockquote>“[N]o purpose of action against religion [particulary Christianity] can be imputed to any legislation, state or national because this is a religious people….[T]his is a Christian nation.” ''Church of the Holy Trinity'' v. U. S., 143 U. S. 457, 465, 471 (1892) [a unanimous ruling]. </blockquote><br />
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Courts have usurped this authority without even any fact finding to determine which religions are consonant with reality, thereby “establishing” idiocy. Neither has there been fact finding to determine which religions support free government and virtues in citizens necessary to make freedom function. Straying so far from reality, so far outside their lawful jurisdiction, courts thereby “establish” the seeds of destruction of their own existence. <br />
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'''Elements of Freedom in Religions.''' Religious expression is freest in nations where Biblical influence is greatest and least free in nations where Biblical influence is weakest because the “swordpoint conversions” common to other religions are absent from the Bible. <br />
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<blockquote>Deuteronomy 13:1-7 is the closest the Bible comes to endorsing any human-enforced penalty for sincerely held disagreement with God. The passage draws the line the same place as did Employment Division v. Smith; you can believe you should commit a crime, but if you do it you will be prosecuted. “Serving” the surrounding gods at the time meant human sacrifice, temple orgies, drugs, drinking blood. Persuading others to “serve” other gods was what we call “incitement to crime”.<br />
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Biblical Christianity: The Origin of the Rights of Conscience, Wallbuilders.com, May 29, 2023 “...only nations who respect Biblical teachings and traditions offer protection for the rights of religious conscience. Secular and non-Biblical nations, and those with state-established churches (such as those that predominated in England and Europe at the time of the American Founding), do not allow rights of conscience but instead demand conformity, which often requires governmental punishment coercion concerning religious beliefs, which violates the Scriptures.<br />
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“Christ Himself established religious non-coercion as the standard. His approach was so voluntary that He even directed His disciples that when they presented the Gospel to others, if someone was interested, then they could stay and share the message with them; but if someone did not want to hear, then they were to leave the area and not force the issue (Luke 10:8-12). There was absolutely no coercion. It was also this way with Paul and the other Apostles: in every case; hearers then chose whether or not to follow Christianity; there was never any penalty, pressure, or force levied against them.<br />
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“As John Quincy Adams noted, Jesus Christ ‘came to teach and not to compel. His law was a Law of Liberty. He left the human mind and human action free.’ (John Quincy Adams, A Discourse on Education Delivered at Braintree, Thursday, October 24th, 1839 (Boston: Perkins & Marvin, 1840), 18.)<br />
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“Two generations later, legal writer Stephen Cowell (1800-1872) similarly avowed: ‘Nonconformity, dissent, free inquiry, individual conviction, mental independence, are forever consecrated by the religion of the New Testament as the breath of its own life – the conditions of its own existence on the earth. The book is a direct transfer of human allegiance in things spiritual from the civil and ecclesiastical powers to the judgment and conscience of the individual.’ (Stephen Colwell, Politics for American Christians: A Word upon our Example as a Nation, our Labour, our Trade, Elections, Education, and Congressional Legislation (Philadelphia: Lippincott, Grambo & Co. 1852), 82, Tait’s Edinburgh Magazine, for 1844 (Edinburgh: William Tait, 1844), 752, “The Politics of the New Testament,” December 1844.)<br />
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“And several generations after that, President Franklin D. Roosevelt continued to affirm the same truth, noting: ‘We want to do it the voluntary way – and most human beings in all the world want to do it the voluntary way. We do not want to have the way imposed. . . . That would not follow in the footsteps of Christ.’ ” (“Franklin D. Roosevelt, “Christmas Greeting to the Nation,” The American Presidency Project, December 24, 1940.)</blockquote><br />
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A judge imagining he can rule without “favoring” the Bible, in an American court enforcing American law, is like a fish denying the value of water. The most fundamental principles of American law are taken from the Bible while competing religions and philosophies are, to varying degrees, hostile to Freedom. A judge enforcing the law, following the Constitution, favors the Bible and suppresses the dehumanization, unequal rights, and tyranny of other religions. For example:<br />
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<blockquote>'''Equal Rights.''' A judge who upholds “equal protection of the laws” (14th Amendment) and “all men are created equal, and endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights...” (Declaration of Independence) thus favors equal justice for the poor with the rich (Exodus 23:3), women with men (Deuteronomy 24:17), immigrants with citizens (Exodus 12:49, Leviticus 24:22, Numbers 15:15), employees with employers (Leviticus 24:17, 21:20), those without a bribe with those with (Deuteronomy 16:19), and all races, nationalities, and religions (Galatians 3:28, Colossians 3:11). He rules against Islam’s dehumanization of Christians and Jews as “apes and pigs” deserving of the jizra tax, if not slavery, mutilation, and execution, against Hinduism’s “caste system”, and against the utter lack of any rights or law of Satanism.<br />
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'''Elections.''' Courts favor the Bible over other religions when they enforce laws requiring honest elections for all citizens, which are demanded by no other religion or philosophy, but were first introduced in 1462 BC with elections of over 70,000 local and national leaders (Deuteronomy 1:13), were equated in 1065 BC with the rule of God (1 Samuel 8:7), and after 35 AD with elections of elders (Acts 14:23 & 2 Corinthians 8:19 - the “ordaining” of elders after 35AD was done by χειρτονεω, voting by raising hands)). God equated abandoning elections in with abandoning God, , <br />
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'''Freedom of Speech.''' Courts which enforce Freedom of Speech favor the laws of nations influenced by the Bible, whose heroes are those who told the truth even when truth was against the law. Such courts ignore the laws of nations dominated by other religions or philosophies whose heroes are the “strongest”, who most successfully dominate others, whose approved methods include deception and torture. <br />
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'''Freedom of Religion.''' Even Freedom of Religion is a uniquely Biblical value. The Bible respects no “swordpoint conversions”. Deuteronomy 13:1-7 is the closest the Bible comes to endorsing any human-enforced penalty for sincerely held disagreement with God. The passage draws the line the same place as did ''Employment Division v. Smith;'' you can believe you should commit a crime, but if you do it you will be prosecuted. “Serving” the surrounding gods at the time meant human sacrifice, temple orgies, drugs, drinking blood. Persuading others to “serve” other gods was what we call “incitement to crime”. God “reasons” with people. (Isaiah 1:18). His people persuade by reason, not force. (Acts 17:2, 1 Peter 3:15. We address wrongs with reason, evidence, and law, and jail those who start physical fights; we do not go to war to gain territory, slaves, or booty, but only to defend ourselves and others).<br />
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'''Lower Crime.''' The 10 Commandments is an outline of the laws God offers for the benefit of all mankind. They doubly serve as an outline of American law. The fact that they are universally recognized as principles of God’s laws secures voluntary obedience to them of all who love God, without the need of hiring police to compel their compliance. We are taught not only to fear the consequences of, but to hate murder, stealing, perversion, and lying – especially false accusations. Children are placed under the jurisdiction of those most likely to love them most, and are urged to obey voluntarily for their own benefit. Hard, slave-grade labor is outlawed by requiring periods of rest. And not only is obedience secured voluntarily, but disobedience is prevented by the final command to not even want any of the goals of these crimes. And the first command is to love and obey the Author of all these rules upon which freedom and prosperity hangs. This positive incentive for obeying laws is supplemented by the negative incentive implied in the first Commandment: the fear of God’s judgments, added to human-enforced penalties, for disobeying.<br />
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All of which makes it insane that the Supreme Court’s reason for not allowing posts of the 10 Commandments in schools was: “ If the posted copies of the Ten Commandments are to have any effect at all, it will be to induce the schoolchildren to read, meditate upon, perhaps to venerate '''and obey''', the Commandments. However desirable this might be as a matter of private devotion, it is not a permissible state objective under the Establishment Clause.” ''Stone v. Graham'', 449 U.S. 39 (1980) https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/449/39/</blockquote><br />
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It is also a “legitimate government interest” to “favor” any religion to the extent it inspires in voters and citizens character qualities essential to the success of freedom. Therefore evidence is relevant, in any case concerning government involvement in free expression, of a religion’s promotion of personal virtues that enable freedom to function, such as service to others (Luke 22:25-27; American society honors most who serve most), respect for all humans (Genesis 1:27), honesty (Proverbs 6:16-17, Matthew 19:18; fraud and bribery are crimes and scandals in America), tolerance (Americans value freedom of speech and religion, rejecting “swordpoint conversions” and prosecution of dissent; we oppose discrimination over morally neutral differences), impartiality (Proverbs 17:23 We demand equal rights and opportunities for all in which people are judged by and rewarded for their service and the content of their character), peacemakers (Matthew 5:9; We address wrongs with reason, evidence, and law, and jail those who start physical fights; we do not go to war to gain territory, slaves, or booty, but only to defend ourselves and others), and obedience to legitimate law (Romans 13:1-5, 1 Peter 2:13, Matthew 22:21). <br />
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It is a “compelling government interest” to support those foundational virtues over religions which are relatively hostile to Freedom, though without physically or financially coercing anyone’s conscience, which destroys Freedom. <br />
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Relevant evidence in court includes results of scrutiny of the scriptures of any religion whose accommodation or promotion is being reviewed, to establish any consonance with reality beyond any reasonable possibility of human understanding at the time of its authorship, and therefore the likelihood that taking seriously its advice, promises and warnings comport with reality and are in the national interest. <br />
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It does not “establish religion” to publicly, officially establish facts. Religions make claims about God or the absence thereof. The Bible uniquely claims that God “turns the hearts of kings”, (Proverbs 21:1) and brings judgments upon whole nations for violating laws given, again uniquely, for the benefit of all mankind. The Bible thus claims God is the “highest authority”, a “king of kings”. (Psalm 2:1 ...Why are the people making such foolish plans? 2 Their kings and leaders join together to fight against the LORD and his chosen king....4 But the one who rules in heaven laughs at them. The Lord makes fun of them.... 10 So, kings and rulers, be smart and learn this lesson. 11 Serve the LORD with fear and trembling. 12 Show that you are loyal to his son, or the Lord will be angry and destroy you. He is almost angry enough to do that now, but those who go to him for protection will be blessed.) It is a “compelling government interest” to investigate such claims, and if they survive scrutiny, to adjust national policy to conform to reality – to not be “foolish”. This makes relevant in legislatures and in courts a review of the scrutiny of the Bible, compared with a review of results of any scrutiny of other sacred writings (if any such scrutiny can be found) to determine which is the more reliable guide to what will most benefit citizens and their government.<br />
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Blindness about the differences between religions in these areas, leading to equal treatment of them in courts and politics, threaten our freedoms, is not in the national interest, and is the definition of willful ignorance.<br />
The fact that all human fact-finding is imperfect and subject to the possibility of evidence available in the future is not a reason to throw up America’s hands and rule reality irrelevant. <br />
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Reality is not irrelevant. It is self-enforcing.<br />
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===Life===<br />
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[[Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases]]<br />
<br>'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters <br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion<br />
<br>by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
<br>''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal'' <br />
<br>''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal'' <br />
<br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen<br />
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[[The 140 Amicus Briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson]]<br />
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[[The “Outlawing Abortion in Compliance with Unanimous Court-Recognized Evidence that Abortion is Murder” Act]] '''A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life''' Featuring Nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' (which overturned ''Roe v. Wade'' June 24, 2022. "Amicus briefs", also called "Friend of Court" briefs, are filed by groups with a strong interest in the case, such as prolife and prodeath groups, who are not direct parties to the case but who will be affected by the outcome.)<br />
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'''Some claims are so unacceptable that it becomes almost irrelevant whether they are true, but some Truths are so irrefutable that censorship fails, like Darkness trying to put out Light, John 1:5.''' <br />
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[[Ending Legal Abortion in Every State in about a Year]] (This is an earlier, shorter draft of the preceding article.) By including the irrefutable, unanimous, unchallenged evidence that babies are fully human, with conscious souls, in the "findings of facts" of a prolife law, courts are forced to address that fact when they review the law. It is impossible for any judge to squarely address that evidence and keep abortion legal, in ANY state. It is just as impossible for any news reporter or Democrat to squarely address this evidence, and still defend abortion. Therefore if ''any'' prolife lawmaker anywhere in America can be found to simply INTRODUCE a prolife bill with these Findings of Facts, this evidence will take on a life of its own and be impossible to censor for long. Some claims are so unacceptable that it becomes almost irrelevant whether they are true; likewise, some truths so challenge the censors that they are like Light in Darkness which Darkness can no longer put out, John 1:5. <br />
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[[Alito Draft Treats ITS A BABY as a Matter of Opinion]] This letter written to six conservative Supreme Court justices responds to several outrageous quotes in the leaked draft by Justice Alito, and on their statements during oral arguments the previous December, in which they said they couldn't tell if unborn babies are real people, which should flabbergast any prolifer. I sent this letter June 15, 2022 BEFORE their ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson repealing Roe v. Wade. I gave evidence they should respect that babies really are people, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder. They had said since they can't tell, voters should decide, through their elected state representatives. <br />
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I answered that the right to murder cannot be on any ballot. I reminded them that the 14th Amendment was passed specifically to protect those who “as a matter of law” were never treated as “persons in the whole sense”. I said that repealing Roe while calling ITS A BABY a Matter of Opinion won't end aborticide cases. I pointed out that repealing Roe, leaving liberal states free to continue the slaughter, is no better than Dred Scott v. Sandford which left liberal states free to continue the slavery. <br />
<br />
They had written that voters must decide whether to murder babies based on the "social value" voters place on babies. I responded that the "social value" that women have to be allowed to kill babies in order to have "full equality" is held by most non-Christian religions and philosophies but is alien to "all men are created equal...in the Image of God". I pointed out that every court-recognized fact finder that has taken a position has ruled that "It's a Baby!" If the unanimous ruling of every court-recognized fact finder is not enough for a judge to know a fact, how can any judge ever know anything? I acknowledged that every state appellate court in abortion prevention cases said Roe made the FACT that babies are people irrelevant, by ruling that babies are NOT people "as a matter of law". Besides pointing out that the Supreme Court actually never said such nonsense, the 14th Amendment protects all who are IN FACT humans. What is irrelevant is whether they are “persons” “as a matter of law”. Even Roe treated ITS A BABY as a fact question, for fact finders.<br />
<br />
[[ND_Court_Gives_Moms_Fundamental_Right to_Save_Themselves_from_their_Babies]] <br />
<br />
<br />
[[Troubling Excerpts & Analysis from Dobbs v. Jackson]] My letter to SCOTUS didn't improve their understanding of babies. SCOTUS ruled that "it's a baby" is a matter of opinion beyond the ability of courts to resolve, so voters - not courts - should decide whether to keep baby killing legal. My analysis points out that SCOTUS doesn't treat the humanity of any ''other'' group of people as so subjective that states need the freedom to decide whether to legalize murdering them. <br />
<br />
Well, At least aborticide is not a "fundamental right" - though not because babies are people so killing them is murder. No, the best reason they could come up with for ruling that aborticide is not a fundamental right is that it hasn't been legal in past centuries. Pardon the french, but state legislatures need to pass laws that will fill that vacuum of intelligence. If crimes against people should be kept legal according to whether they have been legal in past centuries, with no discussion of the very real people hurt by them, then ''slavery'' should still be legal.<br />
<br />
[[Valentine Letter to Supreme Court Justices: outlaw baby killing in EVERY state]] This was my first letter to the Supreme Court, mailed on February 14, 2022, before the leaked Alito draft. It responds to alarming, foolish quotes from the most conservative justices in the December 1, 2021 oral arguments in Dobbs v. Jackson. <br />
<br />
[[Scriptures SCOTUS must address before saying Christianity supports abortion]] Roe v. Wade said part of the reason "the judiciary, at this point in the development of man's knowledge, is unable to speculate as to the answer...to 'when life begins'" was because preachers and doctors don't agree! Yet no preacher from the last 1,000 years was consulted! So obviously, SCOTUS' theology is due for an update. Here is some of what God says about it. God made babies, so God knows what He made. <br />
<br />
[[Four_Drawbacks_of_a_No-Right-to-Abortion_State_Constitutional_Amendment]] The Iowa Supreme Court overturned a prolife law and claimed that abortion is a "fundamental right" in Iowa, no matter what it is elsewhere. I don't think that is quite the meaning of the ruling, but Iowa prolifers now think they have to pass an amendment to the Iowa Constitution before they can think about any other prolife laws. Which means more years of waiting. Here are the legal reasons that is unnecessary.<br />
<br />
[[Answers to Lawmakers' Objections]]<br />
<br />
[[The consensus of court-recognized fact-finders that babies are people even before they are born]] This is the core legal consensus that no judge can squarely address and keep abortion legal. <br />
<br />
[[Abortion Law Alabama]] Here is my analysis of an Alabama prolife law with robust Findings of Facts, but that did not go far enough to survive courts. <br />
<br />
[[Missouri Encyclopedia of Abortion Arguments]] Here is my analysis of a Missouri prolife law with robust Findings of Facts, but that did not go far enough to survive courts. <br />
<br />
[[Abortion]]<br />
<br />
[[Outreach to 2800 Republican Lawmakers in 30 States where Republicans Control Both Chambers]] In 2019 I offered my book, "How States can Outlaw Abortion in a way that Survives Courts", to Republican lawmakers. Over 50 accepted a copy. But so far I know of none who acted on the opportunity.<br />
<br />
[[Forsythe]]<br />
<br />
===Immigration===<br />
<br />
[[Another AntiImmigrant Bible Claim]]<br />
<br />
[[Deadly Immigration Rhetoric]]<br />
<br />
[[Many of our ancestors documented THEMSELVES]]<br />
<br />
[[The Immigration Solution best for our Economy, our Security, and our Faith]]<br />
<br />
[[Cruz, Trump, Keyes, and the Bible]]<br />
<br />
[["Never Trump" and the Bible]]<br />
<br />
[[Democrat Platform on immigration]]<br />
<br />
[[Republican Platform on immigration]]<br />
<br />
:[[Republican and Democrat Immigration Platforms are Similar]]<br />
<br />
[[Immigration]] ''(Comparing what parties and candidates say)''<br />
<br />
[[Setting Immigration Quotas - the Mystery of the Wages]] ''(There is no measure of the number best for citizens)''<br />
<br />
[[Whose Expertise Inspired Our Immigration Laws?]] ''(U.S. immigration policy is driven by those who have least studied the key facts)''<br />
<br />
[[Personal to Ted Cruz]]<br />
<br />
===Sudan===<br />
<br />
[[Saving South Sudan]] ''(How refugees can open U.S. refugee quotas so their families can come, and How Refugees can heal the government of South Sudan so their families won't have to leave) ''<br />
<br />
[[Saving South Sudan - general discussion]]<br />
<br />
[[Optional: Turn your Response into a New Article]]<br />
<br />
[[Principles of the proposed UTSS Constitution in the Bible]]<br />
<br />
===Other Political Issues===<br />
<br />
[[Open Letter to Election Affirmers/Fake News Subscribers]] Reflections on my interview with a Washington Post reporter and her article<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
[[File:SinTiny.gif|center]]<br />
<br />
[[Racism - Whether Blacks are even Citizens - A Debate]]<br />
<br />
[[Judicial Accountability Act: How Legislatures can stop judges from legislating]]<br />
<br />
[[Election Fraud]] What can we do to ensure future fair elections? Consider the degree of election fraud we have just been through, the degree of Republican acceptance of the results as correct despite the fraud, and now with the fraud machine in charge of the U.S. legislature and presidency while promising to pack the courts, while free speech is being completely shut down in our newsrooms and social media against any suggestion of the least fraud. What will keep fraud from spreading to the remaining 44 states, and from presidential elections on down the line - if they haven't already? What courageous new movement will rise to restore honest elections? <br />
<br />
[[This Judge ruled like a Christian Historian]]<br />
<br />
[[Climate Change]]<br />
<br />
==Spiritual Preparation for Action==<br />
<br />
[[How to React when God's Answer to your Prayers is Delivered by an Unqualified Messenger or is Gift Wrapped in Hard Work or in a Lot of Reading]]<br />
<br />
[[God's Blueprints for Political Victories]]<br />
<br />
[[Bible Blueprints for Christian Meetings]]<br />
<br />
<blockquote>1: Obeying God beats traditional worship<br />
<br />
2: "Good works", not just talk with no intent to act, are God’s goals for meetings<br />
<br />
3: God answers prayers through forums where “all” reason and “exhort”. Sermons aren’t mentioned.<br />
<br />
4: Bible heroes, like God, are very Political<br />
<br />
5: "The Gospel" is not just about Heaven, but also about Heroic Hard Work Here<br />
<br />
6: "Light in the Darkness" means quoting God about Darkness in the Darkness<br />
<br />
7: The "Cross" we must carry is an "easy yoke", a "light burden". It is a reward. It is Life, now. It may "cost" money, friends, wealth, careers, comfort, life, but not anything we need </blockquote><br />
<br />
[[Beast or Savior? Musk v. 1 Cor 14 Fellowship]]<br />
<br />
[[Shall we rejoice when an abortionist goes to Hell?]]<br />
<br />
[[Trump - America Needs Him but not his Pride or his Sodomite Patronage]] Bible perspectives by Scott Lively (pastor, lawyer, anti-sodomy activist from Oregon to Uganda), David Lane (organizer of American Renewal Project which brings pastors to hear political leaders and encourages them to run for office) and Dave Leach, website guy]] <br />
<br />
[[Personal Attack Headlines that Violate Proverbs 24:17]]<br />
<br />
[[Are Christians Happier?]]<br />
<br />
[[Drinking is for Death Beds]]<br />
<br />
[[Multitude Of Counsellors Project]]<br />
<br />
[[America got Freedom from the Bible]]<br />
<br />
[[Upon this Rock I will build my Congress]] <> [[Part Two: WHICH "Rock"?]] <> [[Part Three: Politics in the Gates]] <> [[Part Four: Congregation/Congress v. “Church”]] <> [[Part Five: The Congress of Living Stones]]<br />
<br />
[[What God says we will accomplish by meeting His way]] (Invitation to join a "Multitude of Counsellors", Proverbs 15:22)<br />
<br />
[[God's Relationship Primer]]<br />
<br />
[[The Bible on Equal Rights for Women: Did God Write "For Men Only" on the Pulpit?]]<br />
<br />
[[Psychology vs. the Bible]]<br />
<br />
[[What we can Pray for that isn't Forbidden by Prophecy]]<br />
<br />
[[The fewer who are willing to manage the interactions of citizens the closer their only possible government comes to being a dictatorship]]<br />
<br />
[[Evidence that in God All Nations May Trust]]<br />
<br />
[[Shining "the Gospel" Outside the Bushel]]<br />
<br />
[[Gospel Light turned off by Christians]]<br />
<br />
==Reasoning with Pastors==<br />
<br />
This section is for reports of dialog with pastors about those "Noninvolvement Theologies" that are keeping the "Armies of God" from shining the Light (of what God says about our national abominations) out into the government-entangled Darkness outside the church walls - out in those forums where voters decide whether to pattern our laws after the principles of Heaven or of Hell. Even where pastors give occasional sermons identifying some of those abominations, and more rarely direct token political action, there remain prohibitions against other churchgoers besides the pastor being allowed, on church premises and through church communication channels, to discuss, reason, investigate, strategize, and take action together, not limited to the pastor's political knowledge, to shine that Light out where it will get rid of some of that Darkness. See [[Reasoning with Pastors - Introduction]] for Dave Leach's explanation of why he is publishing these reports of dialog with several pastors which, as they occurred over the past 30 years, he did not expect to make public.<br />
<br />
<blockquote>Ye are the salt of the earth: but if the salt have lost his savour, wherewith shall it be salted? it is thenceforth good for nothing, but to be cast out, and to be trodden under foot of men. Ye are the light of the world. A city that is set on an hill cannot be hid. Neither do men light a candle, and put it under a bushel, but on a candlestick; and it giveth light unto all that are in the house. Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven. - Matthew 5:13-16</blockquote><br />
<br />
<blockquote>Thou shalt not mix politics and religion. - 2 Denominations 3:16</blockquote><br />
<br />
<blockquote>Thou shalt not talk about anything controversial in church. That is, anything important enough that the discovery of disagreement in another is disturbing. - 1 Controversies 23</blockquote><br />
<br />
[[Reasoning with Pastors - Introduction]]<br />
<br />
[[Pastor Terry Amann, Church of the Way]]</div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Forum&diff=50392Forum2024-02-14T20:28:06Z<p>DaveLeach: /* Life */</p>
<hr />
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|[[Forum]] (Articles)<br />
|[[Offer]]<br />
|[[Partners]]<br />
|[[Rules]]<br />
|[[Tips]]<br />
|[[SaveTheWorld:FAQ]]<br />
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[[File:TrustJesusTransparentSmall.gif|right]]<span style="color:#0000FF"><small><br />
<br>You can "comment" not only at the end of any article here, but ''in'' the article, by the point with which you want to interact. You can also vote, "Like", rate, or argue. Also you can change your past comment, add a section with a heading that appears in the Table of Contents, start a new article, use colors, or write in Greek! Find suggestions and codes at [[Begin!]]</small></span><br />
<br />
==Politics==<br />
<br />
===Vaccines, Masks, Censors===<br />
<br />
[[VA_Hospital,_asked_for_medical_justification_for_mask_policy,_consults_lawyers]]<br />
<br />
This is a record of my interaction with the Veterans Administration Hospital of central Iowa about their requirement that everyone wear a mask all the time they are in the hospital. I showed them the research proving masks are completely ineffective at stopping covid, but they do a magnificent job of blocking oxygen so that wearers' oxygen levels drop and carbon dioxide levels rise, causing a wide variety of serious medical issues.<br />
<br />
I had a few exchanges with VA staff, followed by attempts to involve newspapers to report it, and lawyers to sue in federal court.<br />
<br />
The basis of my complaint is in two parts: Section One explains in what sense blind faith in rituals proved by research to accomplish nothing, loaded with social rejection of anyone who questions them, runs towards the essence of the False Gods of primitive paganism and offends the Biblical importance placed on Truth. Section Two summarizes tons of research showing that masks and vaccines don't help but harm, while covid tests are very unreliable. <br />
<br />
[[God's Coronavirus Cure in 3 Verses]] (Probably a situation that brings most politics to a screeching halt, shutting down entire legislatures, should be classified as "political")<br />
<br />
[[Cure for Covid Censors]] '''A petition to state governors''': "Governors: base mandates on ALL the science. Sponsor an Online Forum where Doctors can Interact without fear of Censorship, which you will use as a knowlege base for your emergency orders." (See this article for complete information, and model Emergency Powers legislation. See [https://citizengo.org/en-us/node/204001?tcid=89997709 PETITION] for an online petition at CitizenGo.) <br />
<br />
[[Application_for_Religious/Secular Exemption from Mask Vaccine & testing_Mandates]]<br />
<br />
'''Section One''' of this Application explains (1) my reverence for Truth and evidence, (2) the Bible’s emphasis on Truth and evidence, (3) Bible heroes who resisted health laws not based on reality, (4) why mask and vaccine mandates which cannot rationally claim support from evidence must be classified as “religious”, and are presented as false gods, and (5) what the Bible says about bowing down to false gods, and the importance of openly, decisively disclaiming them. Section One presents legal analysis of the First Amendment prohibition of “establishment of religion”, as well as theological analysis. <br />
<br />
[[Application for Secular/Religious Exemption from Mask/Vaccine Mandate - Section Two, The Evidence]] '''Section Two''' of this Application reviews medical research that shows (1) masks do not slow covid spread with any “statistical significance”, (2) masks cause serious medical and emotional problems, most tragically in children, (3) vaccines cause more deaths than covid, and (4) government blockage of proven covid cures points to some other government purpose than reducing covid. But you probably don’t need this evidence; you probably have plenty of your own, or you wouldn’t want an exemption. This information is widely available, and expands daily, so Section Two is out of date anyway. (Section Two also lists arguments common in other Applications for Religious Exemption: vaccines are developed from a murdered baby, and the Bible calls us to treat our bodies as the Temple of God.)<br />
<br />
[[Covid_Updates]] (through 2020)<br />
<br />
[[Free Speech Laws, Precedents & Scripture]]<br />
<br />
[[Bill Gates' Dream is our Nightmare]]<br />
<br />
===The Supreme Court's War Against God===<br />
<br />
<br />
===Life===<br />
<br />
[[Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases]]<br />
<br>'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters <br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion<br />
<br>by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
<br>''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal'' <br />
<br>''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal'' <br />
<br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen<br />
<br />
[[The 140 Amicus Briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson]]<br />
<br />
[[The “Outlawing Abortion in Compliance with Unanimous Court-Recognized Evidence that Abortion is Murder” Act]] '''A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life''' Featuring Nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' (which overturned ''Roe v. Wade'' June 24, 2022. "Amicus briefs", also called "Friend of Court" briefs, are filed by groups with a strong interest in the case, such as prolife and prodeath groups, who are not direct parties to the case but who will be affected by the outcome.)<br />
<br />
'''Some claims are so unacceptable that it becomes almost irrelevant whether they are true, but some Truths are so irrefutable that censorship fails, like Darkness trying to put out Light, John 1:5.''' <br />
<br />
[[Ending Legal Abortion in Every State in about a Year]] (This is an earlier, shorter draft of the preceding article.) By including the irrefutable, unanimous, unchallenged evidence that babies are fully human, with conscious souls, in the "findings of facts" of a prolife law, courts are forced to address that fact when they review the law. It is impossible for any judge to squarely address that evidence and keep abortion legal, in ANY state. It is just as impossible for any news reporter or Democrat to squarely address this evidence, and still defend abortion. Therefore if ''any'' prolife lawmaker anywhere in America can be found to simply INTRODUCE a prolife bill with these Findings of Facts, this evidence will take on a life of its own and be impossible to censor for long. Some claims are so unacceptable that it becomes almost irrelevant whether they are true; likewise, some truths so challenge the censors that they are like Light in Darkness which Darkness can no longer put out, John 1:5. <br />
<br />
[[Alito Draft Treats ITS A BABY as a Matter of Opinion]] This letter written to six conservative Supreme Court justices responds to several outrageous quotes in the leaked draft by Justice Alito, and on their statements during oral arguments the previous December, in which they said they couldn't tell if unborn babies are real people, which should flabbergast any prolifer. I sent this letter June 15, 2022 BEFORE their ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson repealing Roe v. Wade. I gave evidence they should respect that babies really are people, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder. They had said since they can't tell, voters should decide, through their elected state representatives. <br />
<br />
I answered that the right to murder cannot be on any ballot. I reminded them that the 14th Amendment was passed specifically to protect those who “as a matter of law” were never treated as “persons in the whole sense”. I said that repealing Roe while calling ITS A BABY a Matter of Opinion won't end aborticide cases. I pointed out that repealing Roe, leaving liberal states free to continue the slaughter, is no better than Dred Scott v. Sandford which left liberal states free to continue the slavery. <br />
<br />
They had written that voters must decide whether to murder babies based on the "social value" voters place on babies. I responded that the "social value" that women have to be allowed to kill babies in order to have "full equality" is held by most non-Christian religions and philosophies but is alien to "all men are created equal...in the Image of God". I pointed out that every court-recognized fact finder that has taken a position has ruled that "It's a Baby!" If the unanimous ruling of every court-recognized fact finder is not enough for a judge to know a fact, how can any judge ever know anything? I acknowledged that every state appellate court in abortion prevention cases said Roe made the FACT that babies are people irrelevant, by ruling that babies are NOT people "as a matter of law". Besides pointing out that the Supreme Court actually never said such nonsense, the 14th Amendment protects all who are IN FACT humans. What is irrelevant is whether they are “persons” “as a matter of law”. Even Roe treated ITS A BABY as a fact question, for fact finders.<br />
<br />
[[ND_Court_Gives_Moms_Fundamental_Right to_Save_Themselves_from_their_Babies]] <br />
<br />
<br />
[[Troubling Excerpts & Analysis from Dobbs v. Jackson]] My letter to SCOTUS didn't improve their understanding of babies. SCOTUS ruled that "it's a baby" is a matter of opinion beyond the ability of courts to resolve, so voters - not courts - should decide whether to keep baby killing legal. My analysis points out that SCOTUS doesn't treat the humanity of any ''other'' group of people as so subjective that states need the freedom to decide whether to legalize murdering them. <br />
<br />
Well, At least aborticide is not a "fundamental right" - though not because babies are people so killing them is murder. No, the best reason they could come up with for ruling that aborticide is not a fundamental right is that it hasn't been legal in past centuries. Pardon the french, but state legislatures need to pass laws that will fill that vacuum of intelligence. If crimes against people should be kept legal according to whether they have been legal in past centuries, with no discussion of the very real people hurt by them, then ''slavery'' should still be legal.<br />
<br />
[[Valentine Letter to Supreme Court Justices: outlaw baby killing in EVERY state]] This was my first letter to the Supreme Court, mailed on February 14, 2022, before the leaked Alito draft. It responds to alarming, foolish quotes from the most conservative justices in the December 1, 2021 oral arguments in Dobbs v. Jackson. <br />
<br />
[[Scriptures SCOTUS must address before saying Christianity supports abortion]] Roe v. Wade said part of the reason "the judiciary, at this point in the development of man's knowledge, is unable to speculate as to the answer...to 'when life begins'" was because preachers and doctors don't agree! Yet no preacher from the last 1,000 years was consulted! So obviously, SCOTUS' theology is due for an update. Here is some of what God says about it. God made babies, so God knows what He made. <br />
<br />
[[Four_Drawbacks_of_a_No-Right-to-Abortion_State_Constitutional_Amendment]] The Iowa Supreme Court overturned a prolife law and claimed that abortion is a "fundamental right" in Iowa, no matter what it is elsewhere. I don't think that is quite the meaning of the ruling, but Iowa prolifers now think they have to pass an amendment to the Iowa Constitution before they can think about any other prolife laws. Which means more years of waiting. Here are the legal reasons that is unnecessary.<br />
<br />
[[Answers to Lawmakers' Objections]]<br />
<br />
[[The consensus of court-recognized fact-finders that babies are people even before they are born]] This is the core legal consensus that no judge can squarely address and keep abortion legal. <br />
<br />
[[Abortion Law Alabama]] Here is my analysis of an Alabama prolife law with robust Findings of Facts, but that did not go far enough to survive courts. <br />
<br />
[[Missouri Encyclopedia of Abortion Arguments]] Here is my analysis of a Missouri prolife law with robust Findings of Facts, but that did not go far enough to survive courts. <br />
<br />
[[Abortion]]<br />
<br />
[[Outreach to 2800 Republican Lawmakers in 30 States where Republicans Control Both Chambers]] In 2019 I offered my book, "How States can Outlaw Abortion in a way that Survives Courts", to Republican lawmakers. Over 50 accepted a copy. But so far I know of none who acted on the opportunity.<br />
<br />
[[Forsythe]]<br />
<br />
===Immigration===<br />
<br />
[[Another AntiImmigrant Bible Claim]]<br />
<br />
[[Deadly Immigration Rhetoric]]<br />
<br />
[[Many of our ancestors documented THEMSELVES]]<br />
<br />
[[The Immigration Solution best for our Economy, our Security, and our Faith]]<br />
<br />
[[Cruz, Trump, Keyes, and the Bible]]<br />
<br />
[["Never Trump" and the Bible]]<br />
<br />
[[Democrat Platform on immigration]]<br />
<br />
[[Republican Platform on immigration]]<br />
<br />
:[[Republican and Democrat Immigration Platforms are Similar]]<br />
<br />
[[Immigration]] ''(Comparing what parties and candidates say)''<br />
<br />
[[Setting Immigration Quotas - the Mystery of the Wages]] ''(There is no measure of the number best for citizens)''<br />
<br />
[[Whose Expertise Inspired Our Immigration Laws?]] ''(U.S. immigration policy is driven by those who have least studied the key facts)''<br />
<br />
[[Personal to Ted Cruz]]<br />
<br />
===Sudan===<br />
<br />
[[Saving South Sudan]] ''(How refugees can open U.S. refugee quotas so their families can come, and How Refugees can heal the government of South Sudan so their families won't have to leave) ''<br />
<br />
[[Saving South Sudan - general discussion]]<br />
<br />
[[Optional: Turn your Response into a New Article]]<br />
<br />
[[Principles of the proposed UTSS Constitution in the Bible]]<br />
<br />
===Other Political Issues===<br />
<br />
[[Open Letter to Election Affirmers/Fake News Subscribers]] Reflections on my interview with a Washington Post reporter and her article<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
[[File:SinTiny.gif|center]]<br />
<br />
[[Racism - Whether Blacks are even Citizens - A Debate]]<br />
<br />
[[Judicial Accountability Act: How Legislatures can stop judges from legislating]]<br />
<br />
[[Election Fraud]] What can we do to ensure future fair elections? Consider the degree of election fraud we have just been through, the degree of Republican acceptance of the results as correct despite the fraud, and now with the fraud machine in charge of the U.S. legislature and presidency while promising to pack the courts, while free speech is being completely shut down in our newsrooms and social media against any suggestion of the least fraud. What will keep fraud from spreading to the remaining 44 states, and from presidential elections on down the line - if they haven't already? What courageous new movement will rise to restore honest elections? <br />
<br />
[[This Judge ruled like a Christian Historian]]<br />
<br />
[[Climate Change]]<br />
<br />
==Spiritual Preparation for Action==<br />
<br />
[[How to React when God's Answer to your Prayers is Delivered by an Unqualified Messenger or is Gift Wrapped in Hard Work or in a Lot of Reading]]<br />
<br />
[[God's Blueprints for Political Victories]]<br />
<br />
[[Bible Blueprints for Christian Meetings]]<br />
<br />
<blockquote>1: Obeying God beats traditional worship<br />
<br />
2: "Good works", not just talk with no intent to act, are God’s goals for meetings<br />
<br />
3: God answers prayers through forums where “all” reason and “exhort”. Sermons aren’t mentioned.<br />
<br />
4: Bible heroes, like God, are very Political<br />
<br />
5: "The Gospel" is not just about Heaven, but also about Heroic Hard Work Here<br />
<br />
6: "Light in the Darkness" means quoting God about Darkness in the Darkness<br />
<br />
7: The "Cross" we must carry is an "easy yoke", a "light burden". It is a reward. It is Life, now. It may "cost" money, friends, wealth, careers, comfort, life, but not anything we need </blockquote><br />
<br />
[[Beast or Savior? Musk v. 1 Cor 14 Fellowship]]<br />
<br />
[[Shall we rejoice when an abortionist goes to Hell?]]<br />
<br />
[[Trump - America Needs Him but not his Pride or his Sodomite Patronage]] Bible perspectives by Scott Lively (pastor, lawyer, anti-sodomy activist from Oregon to Uganda), David Lane (organizer of American Renewal Project which brings pastors to hear political leaders and encourages them to run for office) and Dave Leach, website guy]] <br />
<br />
[[Personal Attack Headlines that Violate Proverbs 24:17]]<br />
<br />
[[Are Christians Happier?]]<br />
<br />
[[Drinking is for Death Beds]]<br />
<br />
[[Multitude Of Counsellors Project]]<br />
<br />
[[America got Freedom from the Bible]]<br />
<br />
[[Upon this Rock I will build my Congress]] <> [[Part Two: WHICH "Rock"?]] <> [[Part Three: Politics in the Gates]] <> [[Part Four: Congregation/Congress v. “Church”]] <> [[Part Five: The Congress of Living Stones]]<br />
<br />
[[What God says we will accomplish by meeting His way]] (Invitation to join a "Multitude of Counsellors", Proverbs 15:22)<br />
<br />
[[God's Relationship Primer]]<br />
<br />
[[The Bible on Equal Rights for Women: Did God Write "For Men Only" on the Pulpit?]]<br />
<br />
[[Psychology vs. the Bible]]<br />
<br />
[[What we can Pray for that isn't Forbidden by Prophecy]]<br />
<br />
[[The fewer who are willing to manage the interactions of citizens the closer their only possible government comes to being a dictatorship]]<br />
<br />
[[Evidence that in God All Nations May Trust]]<br />
<br />
[[Shining "the Gospel" Outside the Bushel]]<br />
<br />
[[Gospel Light turned off by Christians]]<br />
<br />
==Reasoning with Pastors==<br />
<br />
This section is for reports of dialog with pastors about those "Noninvolvement Theologies" that are keeping the "Armies of God" from shining the Light (of what God says about our national abominations) out into the government-entangled Darkness outside the church walls - out in those forums where voters decide whether to pattern our laws after the principles of Heaven or of Hell. Even where pastors give occasional sermons identifying some of those abominations, and more rarely direct token political action, there remain prohibitions against other churchgoers besides the pastor being allowed, on church premises and through church communication channels, to discuss, reason, investigate, strategize, and take action together, not limited to the pastor's political knowledge, to shine that Light out where it will get rid of some of that Darkness. See [[Reasoning with Pastors - Introduction]] for Dave Leach's explanation of why he is publishing these reports of dialog with several pastors which, as they occurred over the past 30 years, he did not expect to make public.<br />
<br />
<blockquote>Ye are the salt of the earth: but if the salt have lost his savour, wherewith shall it be salted? it is thenceforth good for nothing, but to be cast out, and to be trodden under foot of men. Ye are the light of the world. A city that is set on an hill cannot be hid. Neither do men light a candle, and put it under a bushel, but on a candlestick; and it giveth light unto all that are in the house. Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven. - Matthew 5:13-16</blockquote><br />
<br />
<blockquote>Thou shalt not mix politics and religion. - 2 Denominations 3:16</blockquote><br />
<br />
<blockquote>Thou shalt not talk about anything controversial in church. That is, anything important enough that the discovery of disagreement in another is disturbing. - 1 Controversies 23</blockquote><br />
<br />
[[Reasoning with Pastors - Introduction]]<br />
<br />
[[Pastor Terry Amann, Church of the Way]]</div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=The_140_Amicus_Briefs_filed_in_Dobbs_v._Jackson&diff=50391The 140 Amicus Briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson2024-01-22T21:47:28Z<p>DaveLeach: /* 54 Reason for Life */</p>
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<span style="color:#0000FF">This forum was created by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 13:35, 2 October 2023 (UTC) to mine the gold from the 140 "Amicus" Briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'', June 24, 2022, the ruling that overturned ''Roe v. Wade'' (1973) and ''Planned Parenthood v. Casey'' (1992), returning the decision whether to continue the slaughter to voters state by state. The search here is for nuggets that can help end the slaughter in ''every'' state. I am mining these nuggets for my book, [[Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases]].<br />
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<span style="color:#0DA">Register (see [[Begin!]]) and join the discussion. [http://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/wiki/Template#Vote Vote]. Improve it. Critique it. Sign your name with 4 tildes (<nowiki>(~~~~)</nowiki>).</span><br />
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Below are the titles, dates filed, and links to, the 140 Amicus Briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' (2022), and excerpts from them, and my comments. I indicate which of them I include in my book, [[Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases]]. They are numbered in the order they were filed.<br />
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<br />
==1. Roman Catholic Diocese of Jackson and Roman Catholic Diocese of Biloxi== <br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/147736/20200714142159951_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20Roman%20Catholic%20Diocese%20of%20Jackson.pdf July 14, 2021 filed]. Summary: this Court should find that the state’s interest in protecting unborn children who have the capacity to feel pain is sufficiently compelling to support a limited prohibition on abortion.<br />
<br />
===Excerpts===<br />
<br />
"The purpose of H.B.1510 is to protect those unborn children who, at 15 weeks gestation, have the capacity to feel pain. ...The government supplied expert testimony on this point" (which was excluded by the district court). <br />
<br />
The main argument seems to be that banning abortions at 15 weeks is not a "substantial" obstacle to abortion, so it doesn't violate Casey, 1992, which prohibits a "substantial" obstacle. While it enhances "respect for life", which Gonzales, 2003, endorses. "Respect for life is clearly shown in Gonzales to be a sufficient governmental interest in abortion regulations." <br />
<br />
States have an "important interest regarding the sanctity of life." Quoted from Carhart, 2000.<br />
<br />
Justice Thomas was quoted saying SCOTUS has “struggle[d] to find a guiding principle to distinguish fundamental rights that warrant protection from nonfundamental rights that do not", and then it is asked, "Does an unborn child have a fundamental right to be free from pain in the womb?"<br />
<br />
[COMMENT: what an understatement! No mention of the right to live? Actually being dead is an effective way to be free from pain. Life involves pain, and every day of life is a gift.]<br />
<br />
The district court shouldn't have forbidden expert testimony about babies feeling pain as they are being murdered. "Whether an unborn child can feel pain when a doctor...kills it, it is clearly relevant to a law which forbids abortions at a time when the unborn child can feel pain." <br />
<br />
"Consider how the Supreme Court has construed the Cruel and Unusual Punishments Clause of the Eighth Amendment to forbid executions of convicted murderers that involve unnecessary pain." Judge Ho added, "If courts grant convicted murderers the right to discovery to mitigate pain from executions, there's no reason they shouldn't be even more solicitous of unborn babies."<br />
<br />
"Should Lady Justice turn a blind eye to the cry of the unborn child, sucking its thumb, hidden in the sacred dark refuge of his or her mother's womb, only to have that womb become a tomb? Justice should not abandon the unborn child. One of the most important roles of law is to fight for those that cannot fight for themselves."<br />
<br />
"...the most fundamental of all rights - life. The right to life is, according to the Declaration of Independence, 'self-evident'. It is the sacred duty of our government to protect and respect this right...." "...a human being must be recognized as having the rights of a person - among which is the inviolable right of every innocent being to life." That's a quote from the Catholic catechism. Paragraph 2270. <br />
<br />
"Before I formed you in the womb, I knew you. Jeremiah 1:5."<br />
<br />
[COMMENT: It is stated that babies are people, yet far less is asked than the outlawing of murdering them in every state, which that fact demands. Not even the overturning of Roe and Casey are asked, but merely the survival of Mississippi's 15 week aborticide ban. Only one Bible verse in support of that fact is given. No evidence that babies are people is offered. The testimony of court-recognized fact finders is absent. <br />
<br />
[The comparison with pain studies for the benefit of convicted murderers being executed is a very strong point. But I am suspicious of the theory that babies much younger ''can't'' feel pain. A worm on a fish hook obviously feels pain. And a human baby, at the same size, can't?]<br />
<br />
==2. American Center for Law & Justice==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/148010/20200717125225969_Dobbs%20v.%20JWHO%20ACLJ%20amicus%20in%20support%20of%20cert.pdf Filed July 14, 2021]. Stare decisis cannot trump adherence to the Constitution as the supreme law of the land.<br />
<br />
===Excerpts===<br />
<br />
"Stare Decisis...cannot exalt knowingly incorrect supreme court decisions over the Constitution itself." "...the justices must prefer a a faithful reading of the Constitution to an acknowledged false reading."<br />
<br />
The "Supremacy Clause" of the Constitution, declaring the Constitution "the supreme law of the land", does not include "decisions of the United States Supreme Court". Judges take an oath to uphold the Constitution. <br />
<br />
"Abortion advocates, recognizing the doctrinal flimisness of this court's abortion jurisprudence, invoke the doctrine of stare decisis as counseling adherence to Roe and Casey even though they were wrongly decided." <br />
<br />
[COMMENT: The brevity of this brief is itself a strong statement, along with its only court cites being about judges not putting themselves above the Constitution. I think it is less than half the length allowed by the Court for an amicus brief. As if to say "Look, you know how wrong Roe and Casey are. Just, STOP!"<br />
<br />
[Nothing is explicitly said about a right to life for babies, to counter all the arguments from Hell for murdering them. But the nose-thumbing at all the arguments from Hell is breathtaking.]<br />
<br />
==3. 375 WOMEN INJURED BY SECOND AND THIRD TRIMESTER LATE TERM ABORTIONS AND ABORTION RECOVERY LEADERS==<br />
<br />
[https://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184712/20210722163259351_41205%20pdf%20Parker%20I%20br.pdf Filed July 20, 2021] “The Dignity Of Infant Life In The Womb” is appealed to.<br />
<br />
The brief says “Amici Women who actually experienced this gruesome<br />
reality request this Court to consider the effect on the woman who has felt her baby moving alive in her body, then realizing the baby is dead and not moving, for two days, before removal. This overall description is clinical gruesomeness at its most wretched level.”<br />
<br />
[COMMENT: Dignity of infant life. It was not pointed out that their “dignity” is made possible only by realization that they are human beings. We eat animals, and do not talk about their “dignity” as we slaughter them. Oh wait, I'm wrong. Democrats regard animal slaughter as way more violative of "dignity" than human slaughter. So maybe it is a more powerful argument in court to DENY that babies of humans are humans? They are animals, which merit greater protection? <br />
<br />
The sentence following: “Especially if one inserts the term ‘baby’ which is the term most women use instead of the clinical term ‘fetus.’”<br />
<br />
“Late term abortions are also a crime against humanity, which occurs when the government withdraws legal protection from a class of human beings.”<br />
<br />
[COMMENT: Three things are missing from making this a powerful argument against legal abortion: (1) ''evidence'' that babies are “human beings”, to trigger what Roe said would “of course...collapse” legal abortion, (2) a request of the Court to end legal abortion, without which there is little pressure on the Court to address this evidence, and (3) citing the fact that babies are human beings - not just the fact that some mothers are grossed out - as the reason legal abortion should end.] <br />
<br />
The only “remedies” requested by the “amici women” brief are: the right to “Protect Women’s Psychological Well-Being (Health), The Dignity<br />
Of “Infant Life” In The Womb, And The Integrity Of The Medical Profession And Society”. Amici women never ask for the end of all legal abortions, but only for an end to abortions after 15 weeks as the Mississippi law targets, because “Late Term Abortion Severely Injures Significant Numbers Of Women”. It causes “Grief More Anguished and Sorrow More Profound” and “Devastating Psychological Consequences”. (For some mothers, that is.) <br />
<br />
The murder of babies, though alleged, is not presented as a reason for the Court to do anything. The fact that only abortions past 15 weeks, which are only 4.5% of abortions, are the target, is consistent with the primary concern being for mothers, since concern for babies would call for outlawing all abortions. <br />
<br />
This analysis should not be taken to imply that the lawyers and women involved don’t care primarily for the slaughtered, dismembered babies! Of course that is their primary concern! But I marvel that they don’t say so in their brief, citing the overwhelming, irrefutable evidence of unborn personhood by the consensus of every court-recognized finder of fact that has taken a position on “when life begins”. <br />
<br />
==4. The States of Texas Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas Georgia Idaho Indiana Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Missouri Nebraska Ohio Oklahoma South Carolina Tennessee West Virginia==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/148156/20200720160750082_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief.pdf Filed July 20, 2021]<br />
<br />
Summary: Changed circumstances require the Court to reevaluate its viability precedent.<br />
<br />
==5. Illinois Right to Life==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/148202/20200720191618686_19-1392%20BRIEF%20FOR%20AMICUS%20CURIAE%20ILLINOIS%20RIGHT%20TO%20LIFE%20IN%20SUPPORT%20OF%20PETITIONERS.pdf Filed July 20, 2021] Our Declaration of Independence guarantees the “right to life.” This Court is the guardian of the Constitution and thus should take cognizance of the changes in culture, science, and law since Roe. The Court should revise its abortion jurisprudence to allow Mississippi and other states to enact laws to protect and further the inalienable and constitutional rights of preborn human beings. A consensus of biologists now acknowledges that a human fetus is, biologically speaking, a human being.<br />
<br />
Footnote 10 a. The scientific literature has established that fertilization initiates a new human being. . An overwhelming majority of biologists recognize that a human’s life begins at fertilization . . . . . . . . . . <br />
<br />
Footnote 13 c. Legislative hearings on when life begins marshalled scientific evidence that life begins at fertilization . Even doctors who perform abortions and proponents of abortion rights admit fetuses are human beings Views opposing the position that human life starts at fertilization are unscientific and ideological . Changes in the law have further e r o de d t he u nde r pi n n i ng s Roe. Those changes recognize the human fetus as a human being . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . <br />
<br />
Footnote 17 a. Enactment of fetal homicide laws in almost 80% of states demonstrates that, outside of the abortion context, a human fetus is legally recognized as a human being St at es a re i ncrea si ngly proposing and enacting laws protective of unborn human beings even when abortion is curtailed as a result . . . . . . . . . .<br />
<br />
Footnote 18 4. P r ot e c t i ve le g i s l at ion h a s ameliorated many detriments associated with pregnancy The Court should not continue to follow Roe’s viability standard since it ignores the fact that a human fetus is a biological human being and legal person at all stages of the human life cycle . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 II. SINCE A HU M A N FET US IS A HUMAN BEING, H.B. 1510 SHOULD BE SUSTAINED AS A REASONABLE PRO T EC T ION OF A PR EBOR N PERSON UNDER THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT <br />
The Fourteenth Amendment covers all human beings, including preborn humans, and guarantees the due process right to life and equal protection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 1. The Fourteenth Amendment was intended to protect every human being within the jurisdiction of the U.S. Over whelming evidence now exists that human fetuses are human beings and therefore protected by the Fourteenth Amendment The Court has a constitutional duty to recognize the right of human fetuses to legal protections as persons, and to begin to build a consensus favoring protection of fetuses under law . . . . . . . . . . . . <br />
<br />
23 B. Mississippi is entitled to pass legislation that protects prenatal humans from abortion <br />
<br />
The question of when a human’s life begins is now recognized to be biologically determinable, and '''an overwhelming scientific consensus confirms the view that a human’s life begins at fertilization.''' (See infra at Argument I.C.2.a-c). This growing scientific consensus has prompted '''38 states to enact changes in fetal homicide laws that recognize the humanity of preborn humans in non-abortive contexts, and other laws are being passed to protect preborn humans even though abortion restrictions are a consequence ...RECENT DEVELOPMENTS ESTABLISH PREVIABLE FETUSES ARE HUMAN PERSONS, RENDERING ROE AND ITS PROGENY OBSOLETE.''' A. State interest in protecting life is the most fundamental and important government duty. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In Roe, the Court based its “viability” standard on: (a) lack of a scientific consensus on when human life begins, </span> (b) absence of uniform legal protection of fetuses, and (c) maternal burdens of pregnancy and child-rearing. <br />
<br />
....” Roe, 410 U.S. at 153. The Court rejected that argument. Id. <span style="color:red">It recognized that if a human fetus is a “person” under the Fourteenth Amendment, the case for unrestricted abortion would be untenable “for the fetus’ right to life would then be guaranteed specifically by the Amendment.” Id. at 157. </span><br />
<br />
The Court acknowledged that the state may assert a “legitimate interest in protecting the potentiality of human life.” Id. at 154, 162. But the Court ultimately determined that the '''evidentiary record was insufficient to establish in science or in law when a human’s life begins'''. ...Thus, <span style="color:red">in Roe, the Court’s decision was based on its stated inability to locate in the record a scientific or legal basis for the humanity or personhood of the fetus, and the detriments posed by pregnancy and child-rearing. However, these conditions no longer prevail,12 </span> so the Court is obliged to reconsider Roe in light of these changed circumstances. C. Scientific, legal, and social developments have robbed Roe’s viability standard of its original justification p. 8 <br />
...Casey: “[I]n constitutional adjudication as elsewhere in life, changed circumstances may impose new obligations.” Id. at 864 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">...Roe’s recognition of a right to abort a previable pregnancy rests on the belief that the termination would not extinguish the life of a human person. That belief is no longer factually tenable given the current state of scientific knowledge concerning the origin and development of the human fetus. Roe also rests on a determination that the humanity and personhood of a human fetus was not generally recognized in law. That legal context has changed as well. Among other changes in the law, fetuses are now protected as human beings under laws prohibiting fetal homicide. Other laws, such as “heartbeat” laws and laws protecting against fetal pain, which are increasingly being enacted by the states, demonstrate their interest in protecting the youngest and most vulnerable humans. Finally, changes in the laws and the availability of social services that support and protect pregnant women have ameliorated the plight of pregnancy and lessened the burden of child-rearing. All of these changes rob Roe of its factual and legal underpinnings </span>and require the Court to revisit and overrule it or, at a minimum, to recalibrate the viability standard in Roe and Casey, to reflect the current state of scientific understanding and the legal realities of today. 2. A consensus of biologists now acknowledges that a human fetus is, biologically speaking, a human being. a. T he scienti f ic lit er atu re ha s established that fertilization initiates a new human being. <br />
<br />
A review of recent discoveries13 and the development of scientific literature since Roe reveal a strong consensus that sperm-egg plasma membrane fusion (fertilization) is the starting point of the life of a human organism (a human being).14 Dr. Maureen Condic, who is a member <br />
<br />
Footnote 13. The Virtual Human Embryo (VHE), a 14,250-page illustrated atlas of human embryology, describes the stages of human development called the Carnegie Stages of Embryonic Development. Mark A. Hill, Embryology Carnegie Stages, University of New South Wales, Dec. 24, 2019, https://perma. cc/QX4R-UZXM; see also: Conception to birth -- visualized | Alexander Tsiaras TED Talk, YouTube, https://perma.cc/VL9ZRQB5, and 9 Months In The Womb: A Remarkable Look At Fetal Development Through Ultrasound By PregnancyChat.com, YouTube, https://perma.cc/ZNJ3-T4GU. <br />
<br />
Footnote 14. Maureen L. Condic, When Does Human Life Begin? The Scientific Evidence and Terminology Revisited, 8 U. St. Thomas J.L. & Pub. Pol’y, 2013, https://perma.cc/JP33-Y8BH; Rita L. Gitchell, Should Legal Precedent Based on Old, Flawed, Scientific Analysis Regarding When Life Begins, Continue To Apply to Parental Disputes over the Fate of Frozen Embryos, When There Are Now Scientifically Known and Observed Facts Proving Life Begins at Fertilization?, 20 DePaul J. Health Care L. 1, at 8-9. (2018). <br />
<br />
Footnote 18. <span style="color:red">Dr. Alfred Bongiovanni, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, in his testimony in connection with the 1981 hearing on Senate Bill 158, the “Human Life Bill, see infra at 15-16, concluded, “I am no more prepared to say that these early stages [of development in the womb] represent an incomplete human being than I would be to say that the child prior to the dramatic effects of puberty . . . is not a human being. This is human life at every stage.” Cited in House Resolution No. 214, https://perma. cc/6XRG-L2C8. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">b. An overwhelming majority of biologists recognize that a human’s life begins at fertilization. A recent international study involving 5,577 biologists from 86 countries who work at 1,061 top-ranked academic institutions22 confirmed the scientific consensus on when life begins.23 The study asked biologists to confirm or reject five statements that represent the view that a human’s life begins at fertilization. The majority of the biologists in the study identified as liberal (89%), prochoice (85%), and non-religious (63%). 5,337 biologists (96%) affirmed at least one of the statements and only 240 participants declined to affirm any statements (4%). The study participants were also asked to answer an essay question: “From a biological perspective, how would you answer the question, ‘When does a human’s life begin?’” Most biologists (68%) indicated fertilization. Thus, while in Roe, the Court found that experts could not arrive at any consensus at that point in the development of man’s knowledge, that is no longer the case. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">c. Legislative hearings on when life begins marshalled scientific evidence that life begins at fertilization. During hearings conducted by the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Senate Bill 158, the “Human Life Bill”, numerous scientific experts testified regarding when life begins. The Official Senate Report concluded that: “Physicians, biologists, and other scientists agree that conception marks the beginning of the life of a human being - a being that is alive and is a member of the human species. There is overwhelming agreement on this point in countless medical, biological, and scientific writings.”24 In the hearings, Dr. Jerome Lejeune testified that “[l]ife has a very, very long history, but each individual has a very neat beginning – the moment of its conception” because “[t]o accept the fact that after fertilization has taken place a new human has come into being is no longer a matter of taste or opinion ... it is plain experimental evidence.” S-158 Hearings, April 23, 1981 transcript, 18.25 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Experts from leading institutions have testified that there are no alternative theories on when a human’s life...<br />
<br />
Footnote 24. Report, Subcommittee on Separation of Powers to Senate JudFootnote iciary Committee S-158, 97th Congress, 1st Session 1981, 7; similarly, in 2006, the legislature in South Dakota heard expert medical testimony on when human life begins and concluded that “abortion terminates the life of a unique, whole, living human being”. Report of The South Dakota Task Force to Study Abortion, Submitted to the Governor and Legislature of South Dakota, Dec. 2005, https://perma.cc/4WF8-TNM3. <br />
<br />
Footnote 25. S-158 Hearings, April 23, 1981 Transcript, https://perma. cc/6DCT-UT4P. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">begins in the scientific literature. Dr. Hymie Gordon, Professor of Medical Genetics and physician at the Mayo Clinic, testified: “I have never ever seen in my own scientific reading, long before I became concerned with issues of life of this nature, that anyone has ever argued that life did not begin at the moment of conception and that it was a human conception if it resulted from the fertilization of the human egg by a human sperm. As far as I know, these have never been argued against.” Id. at 52. This lack of any published, let alone generally accepted, alternative scientific theories was also attested to by Dr. Micheline Matthew-Roth, a principal research associate in the Department of Medicine at the Harvard Medical School. Id. at 41-42. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">d. Even doctors who perform abortions and proponents of abortion rights admit fetuses are human beings. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Many practitioners of abortion and supporters of abortion rights acknowledge human life begins at conception.26 For example, when abortion doctor Dr. Curtis Boyd was interviewed, he acknowledged with respect to abortion: “Am I killing? Yes, I am. I know that.”27 Abortion rights supporter and ethicist Peter Singer has written that being “a member of a given species is something that <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Footnote 26. Derek Smith, Pro-Choice Concedes: Prominent Abortion Proponents Concede The Barbarity Of Abortion, Human Defense Initiative, Nov. 7, 2018, https://perma.cc/GXH8-MAUU. See also, A New Ethic for Medicine and Society, California Medicine, Sep. 1970. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Footnote 27. KVUE Austin Interview of Dr. Curtis Boyd, at 0:23, YouTube, Nov. 6, 2009, https://perma.cc/GYB2-3YFY. <br />
<br />
Page 16 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">can be determined scientifically, by an examination of the nature of the chromosomes in the cells of living organisms. In this sense there is no doubt that from the first moments of its existence an embryo conceived from human sperm and eggs is a human being.”28 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">e. Views opposing the position that human life starts at fertilization are unscientific and ideological. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">While some oppose the consensus view that human life begins at fertilization, the few counter-arguments made are philosophical or ideological, rather than scientific or fact-driven. In point of fact, no viable alternative to the consensus view has been propounded.29 <br />
<br />
One opposing argument is that biological principles are incapable of classifying humans30 despite the fact that scientists have done so for countless other animal species on Earth. Other opponents suggest that a human zygote cannot be considered a human individual because it is physiologically dependent on another human. Setting aside the fact that infants are also wholly dependent on other humans for survival, this ableist distinction rejects the humanity of conjoined twins who are physiologically dependent on each other’s bodies for survival. It is also sometimes claimed that a human zygote is not yet a human <br />
<br />
Footnote 28. Peter Singer, Practical Ethics, 2nd ed., Cambridge University Press, 85-86, 1993. <br />
<br />
Footnote 29. See supra, p. 15. <br />
<br />
Footnote 30. Richard J. Paulson, The unscientific nature of the concept that “human life begins at fertilization,” and why it matters, Fertility and Sterility, Volume 107, Issue 3, Mar. 2017, https:// perma.cc/QDE5-C5C4. <br />
<br />
Page 17 <br />
<br />
being because many fetuses fail to survive pregnancy and childbirth. But this view is fallacious because whether a human being is able to continue in life is not a condition of his or her status as a human being. A human life is always a life with potential, which may or may not be realized. <br />
<br />
'''Ultimately, opposing arguments to the scientific consensus that a human’s life begins at fertilization are fallacious or focus on aspects of biology that are not relevant to the biological classification of human beings. '''<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">3. Changes in the law have further eroded the underpinnings Roe. Those changes recognize the human fetus as a human being. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">a. Enactment of fetal homicide laws in almost 80% of states demonstrates that, outside of the abortion context, a human fetus is legally recognized as a human being. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In its 1973 Roe decision, the Court stated, “the unborn have never been recognized in the law as persons in the whole sense.” Roe, 410 U.S. at 162. This has changed markedly since that time. Legislators in 38 of 50 states have enacted laws that criminalize the intentional killing of a human fetus. These “fetal homicide” laws, which only apply to non-abortive killings, recognize that preborn human fetuses are human beings entitled to protection under the law. In this context, a majority of states today recognize a human fetus as a human person from the moment of fertilization.31 <br />
<br />
'''Footnote 31. A listing of the states with fetal homicide laws can be found at: State Laws on Fetal Homicide and Penalty-enhancement''' <br />
<br />
Page 18 <br />
<br />
'''Fetuses are recognized as human persons in numerous contexts: (1) laws that restrict abortion at some point in fetal development, (2) fetal homicide laws, (3) prohibitions against capital punishment imposed upon pregnant women, (4) recovery for fetal deaths under wrongful death statutes, (5) the rights of preborn children under property law, (6) legal guardianship of prenatal humans,32 (7) the rights of preborn children to a deceased parent’s Social Security and Disability benefits33, and (8) the rights of inheritance of posthumously born children.34 Despite the plethora of contexts in which fetuses are recognized as persons under the law, this Court has yet to recognize the personhood of preborn humans.''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">b. States are increasingly proposing and enacting laws protective of unborn human beings even when abortion is curtailed as a result. <br />
<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Today, 43 states have enacted laws protecting prenatal humans although abortion is thereby restricted. All but one restrict abortion access at the earliest point <br />
<br />
for Crimes Against Pregnant Women, National Conference of State Legislatures, May 1, 2018, https://perma.cc/3XTG-WDLB. <br />
<br />
'''Footnote 32. See Paul Benjamin Linton, The Legal Status of the Unborn Child Under State Law, 6 U. St. Thomas J.L. & Pub. Pol’y, 2011, https://perma.cc/XB8E-G375. <br />
<br />
Footnote 33. SSR 68-22: SECTION 216(h)(3)(C). – Relationship – Status of Illegitimate Posthumous Child, Social Security Administration, https://perma.cc/W3TR-89L9. <br />
<br />
Footnote 34. Alea Roberts, Where’s My Share?: Inheritance Rights of Posthumous Children, American Bar Association, Jun. 13, 2019, https://perma.cc/36VN-HZZ8''' <br />
<br />
Page 19 <br />
<br />
'''permissible by Roe (viability), and states have recently more emphatically asserted a state interest in the lives of previable human beings by seeking to protect them: (1) after the sixth week since that is known to be the point at which a fetus’ heart first beats (AL HB314; IA SF359) and (2) after the twentieth week since that has been found to be the point at which a fetus can first feel pain (OH SB 127).''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Altogether, given the Court’s willingness to permit states to protect prenatal humans from harm and states’ desire to do so, it is clear that our nation prizes the protection of humans over the right to abortion. However, in the present case, the District and Circuit courts enjoined Mississippi’s law because this Court has yet to recognize that previable human fetuses are humans. <br />
<br />
'''4. Protective legislation has ameliorated many detriments associated with pregnancy. <br />
<br />
In deciding Roe in 1973, the Court considered the burdens upon women associated with child-rearing such as “a distressful life and future,” “[m]ental and physical health may be taxed by child care,” and “additional difficulties and continuing stigma of unwed motherhood may be involved.” Roe, 410 U.S. at 153. These considerations have since been significantly ameliorated through legislation including: Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972,35 the Pregnancy Discrimination Act,36 the Family <br />
<br />
Footnote 35. 20 U.S.C. §1681 et seq. <br />
<br />
Footnote 36. The Pregnancy Discrimination Act of 1978, U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, https://perma.cc/MH3SMLFE''' <br />
<br />
<br />
Page 20 <br />
<br />
'''and Medical Leave Act (“FMLA”),37 the Women, Infants, and Children program (“WIC”),38 and the Pregnancy Assistance Fund (“PAF”).39 <br />
<br />
D. The Court should not continue to follow Roe’s viability standard since it ignores the fact that a human fetus is a biological human being and legal person at all stages of the human life cycle. <br />
<br />
Roe’s recognition of a right to abort a previable pregnancy rested on the belief that termination would not extinguish the life of a human being. Developments in science and law since Roe reveal that belief to be erroneous. An abortion does take a human’s life. Given these changes, the Court should reassess Roe. ....'''<br />
<br />
==6. American Association of Pro-Life Obstetricians & Gynecologists==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/148145/20200720153839672_19-1392%20Amici%20Brief%20AAPLOG.pdf Filed July 20, 2021]<br />
<br />
THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT DOES NOT INCLUDE A LIBERTY INTEREST TO ABORT ALL PRE-VIABILITY UNBORN CHILDREN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 A. Historical Evidence Demonstrates that the Constitution Does Not Require a Ban Against All State Regulation of Previability Abortion.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Mississippi’s law is partially based on legislative findings pertaining to the advanced development and humanity of pre-born children at the gestational age of fifteen to twenty weeks. Pet. at 7-9. At twenty two days, the child’s heart begins to beat. https://www.ehd.org/your-life-before-birth-video/ (last visited July 15, 2020). At six weeks, the child begins moving. Id. At seven weeks, scientists can detect a child’s brainwaves, and the child can move his or her head and hands. Id. The child displays leg movements and the startle response. Id. At eight weeks, the child’s brain exhibits complex development. Id (Page 18)<br />
<br />
==7. Inner Life Fund and Institute for Faith and Family==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/148139/20200720153319734_19-1392 Amici Brief Inner Life Fund.pdf Filed July 20, 2021]<br />
<br />
SCOTUS should grant Missippi's petition. The time has come to expose the “social equality fallacy” that demeans the ability and contributions of women by presupposing they can only achieve equality through the “right” to abortion. Great progress has been made toward the goal of gender equality in the decades since Roe and Casey — independent of access to abortion or contraception.<br />
<br />
==8. Robin Pierucci, M.D., and Life Legal Defense Foundation==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/148122/20200720132309321_19-1392 Dobbs v. JWHO petition AC LLDF.pdf Filed July 20, 2021]<br />
<br />
“viability threshold for a compelling state interest in preserving human life, created by this Court in 1973, should be abandoned in favor of the medically updated and philosophically consistent standard of an “unqualified” interest in protecting life...” <br />
<br />
In Roe, this Court determined that the state’s interest in the protection of human life <br />
became compelling at viability, relying on the fetus’ “capability of meaningful life outside the mother's womb.” Id. at 163. <br />
<br />
By contrast, '''in Cruzan this Court rejected the idea of “meaningful life,” holding that “a State may properly decline to make judgments about the ‘quality’ of life that a particular individual may enjoy, and simply assert an unqualified interest in the preservation of human life to be weighed against the constitutionally protected interests of the individual.”''' Cruzan, 497 U.S. at 282; Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 U.S. 702, 729 (1997) (quoting Cruzan and holding that the state “has an unqualified interest in the preservation of human life”) (emphasis added). See also Britell v. United States, 372 F.3d 1370, 1383 (Fed. Cir. 2004) (“It is not the role of the courts to draw lines as to which fetal abnormalities or birth defects are so severe as to negate the state's otherwise legitimate interest in the fetus' potential life.”); State v. Final Exit Network, Inc., 889 N.W.2d 296, 305-06 (Minn. Ct. App. 2016) (“The state has a compelling interest in the preservation of D.D.’s life, and the prevention of her suicide, regardless of her incurable [non-viable] condition.”) <br />
<br />
Limiting a state’s ability to protect human lives directly to only those lives deemed <br />
“meaningful” because the arbitrary benchmark of viability has been reached is in direct conflict with this Court’s 1990 holding in Cruzan, that a state need not qualify its interest in the preservation of human life before acting. This Court should grant the petition to resolve the conflict between its abortion jurisprudence and its decisions in Cruzan and Glucksberg allowing states to protect human life regardless of the meaningfulness” of that life as measured by the uncertain yardstick of viability. <br />
<br />
==9. Cleveland Lawyers for Life==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184253/20210719151428392_19-1392 TSAC Cleveland Lawyers for Life.pdf filed July 19, 2021]<br />
<br />
The viability standard should be jettisoned in favor of the point at which the physical humanity of the fetus has become biologically manifest. Mississippi has met that burden of proof.” (15 week development is described. The cutoff for legal abortion should be when there are “biological markers” rather than when babies can survive outside wombs.)<br />
<br />
==10. David Boyle==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184456/20210720221629952_19-1392_tsac_DavidBoyle.pdf Filed July 20, 2021]<br />
<br />
This is an attempt at a “neutral” plea for compromise. It promises respect for both sides. The index doesn’t indicate that the humanity of the unborn is remotely addressed. <br />
<br />
==11. Jewish Pro-life Foundation==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184580/20210721170924501_41204%20pdf%20Parker.pdf Filed July 21, 2021]<br />
<br />
The Coalition for Jewish Values, Rabbi Yacov David Cohen, Rabbi Chananya Weissman, and Bonnie Chernin (President, Jewish Life League) <br />
<br />
Glory to God! This is largely '''a Bible study that addresses Deuteronomy 30:19, Exodus 21:22-25, Exodus 23:7, Genesis 9:6-7, Isaiah 49:1, Jeremiah 1:5, Jeremiah 22:3, Jeremiah 29:6, Jeremiah 29:11, Leviticus 18:21, Leviticus 19:16, Proverbs 24:11-12, Proverbs 31:8, Psalm 139:13-16, Psalm 106:35-38.'''<br />
<br />
This brief doesn’t say so, but Roe “opened the door” to the relevance of a Bible study by saying the alleged failure of doctors and preachers “to arrive at any consensus” about “when life begins” was Roe’s principal reason why “the judiciary, at this point in the development of man’s knowledge, is unable to speculate” about whether babies are people. Roe thus treated theology as highly relevant, and yet Roe analyzed no Scripture. This cries out for correction and updating. <br />
<br />
This pleading to the Court is Amici’s attempt to rescue innocent children in the womb from execution, as commanded in our Bible, Proverbs 24:11-12: “Rescue those being led away to death; hold back those staggering toward slaughter. If you say, ‘But we knew nothing about this’, does not He who weighs the heart perceive it? Does not He who guards your life know it? Will He not repay everyone for what they have done?”<br />
<br />
'''This brief begins by asking for more than just to outlaw abortions after 15 weeks:''' “The Mississippi law in this case seeks to protect the God-given right to life for babies of 15 weeks gestation and beyond. Yet, most significant developmental milestones occur during the first eight weeks following conception. A baby’s heart beats at 22 days, and her brainwaves can be measured at 6 weeks. At 9 weeks all internal organs are present and the baby is sensitive to touch. As early as 8 weeks, the ‘infant’ feels real physical pain during an abortion.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">'''“.... Jeremiah 22:3 admonishes us to avoid causing pain and death to the powerless: Do what is right and just; rescue the wronged from their oppressors; do nothing wrong or violent to the stranger, orphan or widow; don’t shed innocent blood in this place.’”'''<br />
<br />
The brief asks nothing less than overturning of Roe, Doe, and Casey. Not explicitly asked for but strongly implied is also ''protection'' of the unborn, meaning not allowing ''any'' state to keep abortion legal: <span style="color:red">'''“Amici implore the Court to study our arguments in this filing and thereby find the moral authority and conviction to overturn Roe, Doe and Casey. Indeed, to apply the protective elements of the 14th Amendment of the Constitution to all children.”'''<br />
<br />
The brief makes a claim for Judiasm which is even more so a claim for its Bible, which of course is shared with Christians. It is a claim about what the Bible did first. But stating what the Bible pioneered actually understates its uniqueness, because ''to this day'' no other religion, except to the extent it was influenced by the Bible, supports these rights and freedoms: <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Judaism Is The Original Pro-Life Religion. It Was The First Religion In Human History To Sanctify Human Life From Conception To Natural Death And To Prohibit Child Sacrifice.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Judaism has a strong legal tradition of protecting human life and prohibiting the murder of innocents. Jewish law and tradition emphasize and support the moral right to life for all human beings at every stage of development based on the understanding that all people are created in the image of God; therefore, each of us has intrinsic value and worth with a destiny to fulfill God’s vision for humanity on Earth.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Psalm 139:13-16 reveals this: ‘For you created my inmost being: you knit me together in my mother’s womb. I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made . . .My frame was not hidden from you when I was made in the secret place. When I was woven together in the depths of the earth, your eyes saw my unformed body. All the days ordained for me were written in your book before one of them came to me.’” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">…. “All of us who are able to do so have the duty to enforce this right of the child in the womb: Leviticus 19:16: ‘Do not stand idly by when your neighbor’s life is at stake.’” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">…. “The Almighty gives clear instructions on the life issue in Deuteronomy 30:19: ‘This day I call the heavens and the earth as witnesses against you that I have set before you life and death, blessings and curses. Now choose life, so that you and your children may live.’”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">…. “Maimonides, declared in his compilation of Jewish law, the Mishneh Torah: ‘The definition of murder according to the Noahide Laws includes a person “who kills even one unborn in the womb of its mother,” and adds that such a person is liable for the death penalty.’” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“The Talmud (Sanhedrin 57b) says that an unborn child is included in the Noahide prohibition of bloodshed that is learned from Genesis 9:6-7: (from a direct translation of the original text), ‘He who spills the blood of man within man shall have his blood spilt for in the image of God made He man. And you, be fruitful, and multiply; swarm in the earth, and multiply therein.’ The Talmud interprets ‘the blood of man in man” to include a fetus, which is the blood of man in man.’”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">…. “Clearly, the Jewish religion prohibits child sacrifice, the modern day version being abortion, as stated in the Torah: Leviticus 18:21: ‘Do not give any of your children to be sacrificed to Molek, for you must not profane the name of your God. I am the Lord.’ Psalm 106:35-38: ‘They mingled with the nations and adopted their customs. They worshiped their idols, which became a snare to them. They sacrificed their sons and their daughters to false gods. They shed innocent blood, the blood of their sons and daughters, whom they sacrificed to the idols of Canaan, and the land was desecrated by their blood.’”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Rabbinical opinion prohibits even helping non-Jews abort – even for “physical abnormalities”.''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Rabbi Chananya Weissman: “It should not need to be debated that unborn children have the right to be born, and the lives of the elderly and infirm are no less precious than the lives of society’s most fortunate. The rich and powerful do not have the right to decide the value of anyone’s life, nor when someone has ‘already lived their life’ and it’s time for them to go. That is strictly the purview of God, who forbids us to make such distinctions or calculations, even for the alleged ‘greater good.’ It is always for the greater evil. It is always to displace God. The Torah teaches that every life is a unique world, and every moment of every life is infused with the potential to<br />
achieve great spiritual heights.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Rabbi Pinchas Teitz: (Commenting on Deuteronomy 21:7): “Shedding innocent blood in Jewish life is so reprehensible that at times even those not responsible for the act of murder who hear of such an incident must dissociate themselves from it. This is expressed by the recitation of the elders of the city in whose proximity a dead man is found. In the eglo arufo ceremony that the Torah mandates, they must wash their hands, saying: ‘Our hands did not shed this blood,’ even though there is no reason to assume that they were directly involved in the death. How, then, are we to respond with less than shock to the killing of 100,000 fetuses through abortion in Israel, year after year? This is certainly a sin against Torah . . . It is a crime against Jewry, against mankind, and even against the Land itself—for the Torah clearly warns that the Land, in its sensitivity to corruption, can tolerate no bloodshed.”''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In Jewish law the only time abortion is permitted is to save the life of the mother. The brief doesn’t give a reference from the Bible, but a footnote explains, “One who is ‘pursuing’ another to murder him or her. According to Jewish law, such a person must be killed by any bystander after being warned to stop and refusing.” This describes a kind of self defense or defense of others. Scriptures I think of are: 2 Samuel 2:18-23, where Abner begged Asahel not to attack him, but Asahel refused so Abner killed him. Or Exodus 22:2 which excuses a homeowner for killing a thief who breaks in at night. <br />
<br />
I particularly appreciate the brief’s analysis of Exodus 21:22-25, the ONLY citation of the Bible included in Roe v. Wade, in a footnote. The brief says: <span style="color:red">“A note about Exodus 21:22-25, the mistranslation of which has led many to conclude that Judaism condones the mass slaughter of infant life.''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“This conclusion is entirely false. The verse describes a case in which fighting men in close proximity to a pregnant woman inadvertently cause a miscarriage. The Torah specifies that the guilty party would be prosecuted for involuntary manslaughter only if the pregnant woman herself dies. If the infant in the womb dies, they must pay only a monetary fine. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Long used by abortion advocates to reframe abortion as legal in Judaism, this text is not a license to abort infant life; rather, it is a reference to involuntary manslaughter requiring an adjudicated fine. It is not a capital crime.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“...This verse must be carefully understood. Many translations read ‘and a miscarriage occurs’ rather than as ‘a premature birth results’ as I have it here. The passage, in my opinion, is to ‘a premature birth’ when the context is considered. The text actually says that if the child ‘departs’ [“yasa”] the womb and no other damage ensues from the event. In other words, if because of the struggle the baby is born early but is otherwise fine, then the men may be required to pay damages for their carelessness but no more. ‘But if other damage ensues,’ i.e. the baby is born with some deformity or born dead, then the standard penalties will apply, ‘an eye for eye, tooth for tooth’. If the child dies as a result, the men are guilty of the murder, a life for a life. The text makes no sense any other way. The Hebrew term shachol references an abortion or miscarriage. That word is not used here. There is conclusive evidence that both Torah and Rabbinic halacha regarding the pre-birth child as fully human and subject to the same protections and respect as all other people.”''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">(I will further note that the penalty is to be decided by a jury. I take this as so the jury can take into account eyewitness testimony about how deliberately the woman was struck. Did a man deliberately aim his fist at her? Did she insert herself into the dispute so much as to make her injury unavoidable?)<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">More Scripture: “Our tradition teaches us to advocate for vulnerable and victimized targets of abuse and murder. Proverbs 31:8 demands, ‘Speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves.’ We acknowledge the harms done by abortion and speak out to prevent them.”<br />
<br />
The brief is the only one to note fornication as another deadly (spiritually and physically) consequence of abortion: “Abortion has become an accepted means of birth control, encouraging irresponsible, dangerous sexual activity leading to an explosion of sexually transmitted disease. Women die from legal abortion.”<br />
<br />
Scripture is cited in sympathy for the loss to men of abortion:<span style="color:red"> “It is now confirmed that men grieve lost fatherhood, resulting in broken relationships and dysfunctional family life. We heed Jeremiah 29:6, emphasizing the importance of the family even in difficult times: ‘Marry and have sons and daughters; find wives for your sons and give your daughters in marriage, so that they too may have sons and daughters. Increase in number there; do not decrease.’” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Judaism’s biblical tradition identifies the child in the womb as precious, valuable and unique. Isaiah 49:1: ‘Before I was born the Lord called me; from my mother’s womb he has spoken my name.’ And Jeremiah 1:5: ‘Before I formed you in the womb I knew you, before you were born I set you apart, I appointed you as a prophet of nations.’” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Evidence of the regard for unborn human life in Jewish law: “when human life is endangered, a Jew is required to violate any Sabbath law that stands in the way of saving that person. The concept of life being in danger is interpreted broadly; for example, it is mandated that one violate the Sabbath to take a woman in active labor to a hospital. Jewish law also not merely permits, but demands, that the Sabbath be violated in order to save infant life in the womb. As lifesaving activity is the only situation in which a Sabbath violation is permitted, were the infant child not deemed alive by the Torah, this behavior would be entirely prohibited.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Abortion industry practices dramatically contrast with Jewish ethics and moral guidelines in business, cleanliness, sexual propriety, responsibility to protect friends and neighbors from harm, honesty, and women’s safety. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Exodus 23:7 admonishes us: ‘Keep away from fraud, and do not cause the death of the innocent and righteous; for I will not justify the wicked.’ <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Abortion providers have long been exempted from standard medical practices and regulatory oversight. They perpetuate sex crimes by routinely failing to report evidence of sexual assault and sex trafficking. They fail to provide informed consent to patients and fail to counsel patients on alternatives to the abortion procedure or possible immediate and long-term negative consequences of the procedure.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">…. “Judaism prohibits desecrating the human body, but abortion destroys a human body, and the harvesting of baby parts for profit defies Jewish respect for the dead.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Today, the Justices have all the information needed to fully understand and acknowledge the status of the infant life, and have done so in Gonzales, at 159, 160. From conception onward, children in their mother’s womb manifest humanity to such an extent that only a decision that protects their lives and futures is humane and just.”<br />
<br />
The rest of the brief reports striking parallels between the Jew-dehumanizing rhetoric of Nazi Germany and the baby-dehumanizing rhetoric of American abortionists. Except that “only” 6 million Jews were slaughtered in Germany, compared with 60 million babies in America.<br />
<br />
I didn’t know the abortion pill, RU486, is actually the same chemical Hitler used to gas Jews, when it was called Zyklon B! “The Population Council brought the abortion pill to the United States in 1994. Originally called Zyklon B, Nazi scientists developed it in gaseous form to kill Jews in concentration camp ‘showers.’62 RU 486 is now used in 40% of all abortions due to inflated pricing and low overhead costs.” https://www.lifenews.com/2014/02/23/company-that-madezyklon-b-for-nazi-holocaust-made-ru-486-for-abortions/ <br />
<br />
“In a 1999 speech in Washington, D.C., Mr. Ellie Wiesel stressed our obligation to defend the defenseless. ‘We must always take sides. Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the victim. Silence encourages the tormentor, never the tormented.’”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The conclusion is the most magnificent I have read, which it would not have been without quoting God: “We must end abortion, an appalling crime against humanity. To begin the process of reconciliation with our Creator, to restore the dignity of those who have perished, and to return our country to a life affirming nation. Amici ask the Court to rise above political concerns and to contemplate the Divine promise bestowed upon every human being as pledged in Jeremiah 29:11: ‘For I know the plans I have for you, declares the LORD, plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.’”<br />
<br />
----<br />
(My online account is out of red ink, but the entire section from here to the end is included in Statement of Fact #4, Footnote #2)<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<u>Jewish Prolife Foundation</u> [http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184580/20210721170924501_41204%20pdf%20Parker.pdf] <br />
<blockquote>This tragic human rights violation must be remedied. The Mississippi law in this case seeks to protect the God-given right to life for babies of 15 weeks gestation and beyond. Yet, most significant developmental milestones occur during the first eight weeks following conception. A baby’s heart beats at 22 days, and her brainwaves can be measured at 6 weeks. At 9 weeks all internal organs are present and the baby is sensitive to touch.4 As early as 8 weeks, the “infant”5 feels real physical pain during an abortion.6 This is much sooner than the 15-week issue before the Court, a gestational age when the pain felt by the baby must surely be considered. Jeremiah 22:3 admonishes us to avoid causing pain and death to the powerless: “Do what is right and just; rescue the wronged from their oppressors; do nothing wrong or violent to the stranger, orphan or widow; don’t shed innocent blood in this place.”</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnotes: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 Endowment for Human Development. Prenatal Summary. https://www.ehd.org/prenatal-summary.php<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 Gonzales 159, 160<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 5 Gonzales 159, 160. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 Expert Tells Congress Unborn Babies Can Feel Pain Starting at 8 Weeks. Ertelt, Steven. May 23, 2013. LifeNews. https://www.lifenews.com/2013/05/23/expert-tells-congress-unborn-babies#can-feel-pain-starting-at-8-weeks/<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<u>Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide</u> www.supremecourt.gov /DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185155/20210728163153060_Amici%20Brief%20of%20CMP-Daleiden.pdf]<br />
<blockquote>1. By 15 weeks’ gestation, the human infant in the womb unmistakably manifests “the human form” identical to any other member of our community. Gonzales v. Carhart, 550 U.S. 124, 160 (2007). Ironically, it is precisely from this point when the fetus becomes most recognizably a fellow human being, that the fetuses vulnerable to abortion become most useful as an experimental biologic “resource.” Even though four-month-old infants in the womb move, kick, suck their thumbs, hiccup, and demonstrate a readily discernable heartbeat and brainwaves, App. 65a,4 and even though the Constitution guarantees that “neither slavery nor involuntary servitude” shall exist in America nor that any person be deprived of life without due process of law, U.S. Const., amends. XIII § 1, XIV § 1, these same children can be routinely killed through livedismemberment abortions or trafficked and sold for experimental use. (Page 3)</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnote: 4 Katrina Furth, Fetal EEGs: Signals from the Dawn of Life, ON POINT SERIES 28 (Nov. 2018), https://lozierinstitute.org/fetal#eegs-signals-from-the-dawn-of-life/; Winslow J. Borkowski & Richard L. Bernstine, Electroencephalography of the Fetus, 5(5) NEUROLOGY 362–65 (May 1, 1955)<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<u>National Catholic Bioethics Center, et al.</u> [www.supremecourt.gov/ DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185239/20210729121001402_19-1392%20tsac%20National%20Catholic%20Bioethics%20Center.pdf]<br />
<blockquote>Mississippi’s law is partially based on legislative findings pertaining to the advanced development and obvious humanity of pre-born children at the gestational age of fifteen to twenty weeks. Pet. at 7-9. At twenty-two days, the child’s heart begins to beat. https://www.ehd.org/your-life-before-birth-video/ (last visited July 15, 2020). At six weeks, the child begins moving. Id. At seven weeks, scientists can detect a child’s brainwaves, and the child can move his or her own head and hands. Id. The child also displays leg movements and the startle response by that time. Id. At eight weeks, the child’s brain exhibits complex development. Id. (p. 14)</blockquote><br />
<br />
==12. Alabama Center for Law and Liberty== <br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184666/20210722141347032_Dobbs%20ACLL%20Amicus.pdf Filed July 23, 2021]<br />
<br />
“ACLL believes that life begins at the moment of fertilization and that unborn children are people entitled to equal protection of the law.” This statement falls short of claiming unborn “personhood” is an objective fact. It also falls short of ''proving'' it is an objective fact. This phrasing treats it as ACLL’s subjective “belief”. <br />
<br />
Supposing ACLL’ “belief” to be true, then murdering the unborn violates the 14th Amendment: “The Framers of the Fourteenth Amendment believed that God gave every person the natural right to life and that unborn children were ‘people’ entitled to the Amendment’s protection. Consequently, laws that protect everyone from murder except unborn children violate the Equal Protection Clause.”<br />
<br />
ACLL asks that abortions after 15 weeks be outlawed. That requires the Court to overturn Roe’s claim that a state can’t protect babies before “viability”. <br />
<br />
ACLL therefore points out '''something illogical about the “viability” standard: “if a person’s right to life is dependent on his ability to survive without the help of others, then most people would not have a right to life. Most of us wake up each day in a dwelling that was built by someone else, eat food that was grown by someone else, drink water that was sent to our house by someone else, go to work in a car that was built by someone else, and provide goods or services to someone else in exchange for payment...”'''<br />
<br />
ACLL notes “we know far more about prenatal life now than we did when Roe and Casey were decided”, but none of what we now know is offered as evidence proving the veracity of ACLL’s “belief” that “life begins at the moment of fertilization and that unborn children are people entitled to equal protection of the law.”<br />
<br />
Inconsistency in law through abortion precedents is given as a reason to overturn Roe: “criminal law, tort law, guardianship law, health care law, property law, and family law often treat the unborn as persons, leaving abortion as an outlier.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">ACLL asks more than any other brief: not just that Roe be overturned, but that all unborn babies be protected, which means no state could keep abortion legal: “C. The Court Should Not Only Overrule Roe but Also Hold That the Constitution Protects the Child’s Right to Life.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Why should the Court do that? ACLL offers another “if...then” argument: “Roe itself conceded that if an unborn child is a person, the case for abortion collapses, because the child’s right to life would be specifically guaranteed by the Amendment. Roe, 410 U.S. at 156-57. The Court was correct in that regard.”<br />
<br />
Well, yes, Roe was right, but Roe didn’t, 50 years ago, think an unborn child being a “person” was “established”. Is it established now? Surely it is now that every court-recognized fact-finder that has taken a position has ruled unanimously, but ACLL didn’t mention that evidence, or any other evidence over the past 50 years. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">ACLL continues: “The Fourteenth Amendment states, in relevant part: “nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.” U.S. Const., amend. XIV, § 1 (emphasis added).”<br />
<br />
But ACLL offers no evidence because “other amicus briefs are developing this point in more detail” so ACLL will only observe that the question has “gained considerable attention” and “has also been debated in conservative academic circles.” Well, that’s news, isn’t it? Many cites are given, but no quotes or conclusions. <br />
<br />
One cite that I appreciate is <span style="color:red">“Charles I. Lugosi, Conforming to the Rule of Law: When Person and Human Being Finally Mean the Same Thing in Fourteenth Amendment Jurisprudence, 4 Geo. J. L. & Pub. Pol’y 360 (2007).”<br />
<br />
My book, “How States can Outlaw Abortion in a Way that Survives Courts”, points out that one definition of “persons” in Roe itself is “recognizably human”. No case law supports the strange notion that there are human beings who are not “persons”. <br />
<br />
An appeal is made to the beliefs about the unborn of our ancestors: <span style="color:red">“Blackstone said, ‘Natural persons are such as the God of nature formed us.’ 1 Blackstone, Commentaries *123. ‘The principle of Blackstone’s rule was that “where life can be shown to exist, legal personhood exists.’” Craddock, supra, at 554-55.12 Given that the dominant view at the Fourteenth Amendment’s passage was that life begins at conception, there is a strong case that the Fourteenth Amendment applies to unborn children.”'''<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">This is a strong attack on Roe’s logic that “the unborn have never been treated by our laws as persons in the whole sense”, and this approach invokes the legal principle that what the Constitution meant when it was enacted is what we should follow now until Americans choose to change it.<br />
<br />
Of course, whatever any culture of any past century thought about it, unborn babies are, and always have been, '''''in fact,''''' fully human beings. But this evidence of court-recognize fact finders from past centuries merits inclusion with the consensus of court-recognized fact finders over Roe's 49 bloody years, including juries, expert witnesses, state legislatures, Congress, and individual judges who took a position on "when life begins". <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">After its history lesson, ACLL concludes with another “if...then” argument: “Thus, if all people are endowed with their Creator with the unalienable gift of life, and if unborn children are people, then the States may not deny equal protection of the laws to them.”<br />
<br />
“If”? “If”? <br />
<br />
'''“Therefore, this Court should not only overrule Roe and its progeny but also hold that the Fourteenth Amendment protects unborn children from abortion. If this is too far for the Court to go in the present case, then it should at the very least refrain from foreclosing that question from being presented in the future.”''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">ACLL deserves credit for its strong, clear request for protection of the unborn: It is a “fact that Americans viewed unborn children as people when they ratified the Fourteenth Amendment. As Roe itself conceded, establishing the suggestion of personhood would make the case for abortion collapse. Roe, 410 U.S. at 156-57.”<br />
<br />
==13. National Right to Life Committee and Louisiana Right to Life Federation== <br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184772/20210723123330497_NRLC.Dobbs%20Amici%20Brief.pdf Filed July 23, 2021]<br />
<br />
“b. States may assert an interest in protecting preborn, individual human life, including against pain, during all periods of pregnancy.” That was a subheading. The subject was given 152 more words which did not say babies are “human life”, or present supporting evidence, or point out that legal abortion must end when that is acknowledged. <br />
<br />
==14. Jewish Coalition For Religious Liberty==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184865/20210726093205304_19-1932%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20Jewish%20Coalition%20for%20Religious%20Liberty.pdf Filed July 26, 2021]<br />
<br />
“Given the arguments made in prior cases, JCRL is concerned that proponents of a constitutional right to abortion will assert a novel “religious-veto” view of religious <br />
liberty that, if accepted, would make it more difficult for sincere religious adherents to obtain accommodations in future cases.”<br />
<br />
'''Religious proponents of a constitutional right to abortion have previously offered a novel view under which their religious views would dictate what laws may govern every American, even those with different faiths or no faith at all. This Court should reject that novel “religious-veto” view as it would ultimately diminish religious liberty for everyone.''' <br />
<br />
2 Letter From George Washington to the Hebrew Congregation in Newport, Rhode Island, 18 August 1790, FOUNDERS ONLINE, <br />
(https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Washington/05-06-02-0135) (last visited July 13, 2020) (“[T]he Government of the United States, which gives to bigotry no <br />
sanction, to persecution no assistance requires only that they <br />
who live under its protection should demean themselves as good <br />
citizens, in giving it on all occasions their effectual support.” In <br />
this country, “every one shall sit in safety under his own vine and <br />
fig tree, and there shall be none to make him afraid.”). <br />
3 Zorach v. Clauson, 343 U.S. 306, 313 (1952) (“We make room <br />
for as wide a variety of beliefs and creeds as the spiritual needs <br />
of man deem necessary. We sponsor an attitude on the part of <br />
government that shows no partiality to any one group and that <br />
lets each flourish according to the zeal of its adherents and the <br />
appeal of its dogma.”). from targeting religious activity,4 require state actors to treat religious conduct as favorably as comparable secular conduct,5 or prevent the government from substantially burdening religious activity unless doing so is necessary to further a compelling government interest.6 These traditional Free Exercise protections require that the state accommodate religious exercise, but they do not prevent government entities from enforcing laws against Americans who lack religious objections.7 <br />
<br />
4 Church of the Lukumi Babalu Aye, Inc. v. City of Hialeah, 508 U.S. 520 (1993). <br />
<br />
5 Tandon v. Newsom, 141 S. Ct. 1294 (2021). <br />
<br />
6 Holt v. Hobbs, 574 U.S. 352 (2015). <br />
<br />
7 Wisconsin v. Yoder, 406 U.S. 205, 236 (1972) (creating a religious accommodation to exempt Amish parents from having to send their children to formal high-school while confirming that, “[n]othing we hold is intended to undermine the general applicability of the State's compulsory school-attendance statutes … .”). <br />
<br />
Such protections help ensure that religious adherents can fully participate in civil society without having to abandon their faith.8 Importantly, they protect religious adherents without requiring that the rest of society follow their faith.9 <br />
<br />
8 Sherbert v. Verner, 374 U.S. 398, 404 (1963) (finding it unconstitutional for the government to force a religious adherent to “choose between following the precepts of her religion and forfeiting benefits, on the one hand, and abandoning one of the precepts of her religion '''in order to accept work''', on the other hand.”); Braunfeld v. Brown, 366 U.S. 599, 616 (1961) (Stewart, J. dissenting) ('''“Pennsylvania has passed a law which compels an Orthodox Jew to choose between his religious faith and his economic survival. That is a cruel choice. It is a choice which I think no State can constitutionally demand.”''') <br />
<br />
9 Fulton v. City of Philadelphia, Pa., No. 19-123, 2021 WL 2459253, at *9 (U.S. June 17, 2021) (“CSS seeks only an accommodation that will allow it to continue serving the children of Philadelphia in a manner consistent with its religious beliefs; it does not seek to impose those beliefs on anyone else”); id. at *20 (Alito, J. concurring) (“the text of the Free Exercise Clause gives a specific group of people (those who wish to engage in the ‘exercise of religion’) the right to do so without hindrance”). 10 See e.g., Brief for American Jewish Congress, et. al., as Amici Curiae at 4, Webster v. Reprod. Health Servs., No. 88-605, 492 U.S. 490 (1989) (“given the dramatically contrasting religious views about whether and when abortion is permitted or required, state statutes drastically curtailing access to abortion <br />
<br />
In the past, religious supporters of a right to abortion have advocated for a novel conception of religious liberty that is incompatible with this traditional understanding. In their view, the fact that some religions may allow or even require women to obtain abortions should cause this Court to recognize a general constitutional right to abortion. <span style="color:red">See Brief for 178 Organizations as Amici Curiae in Support of Respondents at app. a, Planned Parenthood of Se. Pa. v. Casey, Nos. 91-744, 91-902, 505 U.S. 833 (1992) (“in the face of the great moral and religious diversity in American society over abortion and in the light of Jewish traditions which in some cases command abortion, and in many others permit it, the existing constitutional rules, set down by Roe v. Wade, should be maintained ... .”) (citation omitted). The “right” that such advocates propose would not be limited to protecting the religious exercise of objectors. Instead, it would prohibit states from pursuing their interest in protecting the lives of unborn children, even in instances that would not impact adherents’ exercise of their faith.10 The proponents of such a right thus do not seek to ensure that they can fully participate in society without compromising their religious exercise; they seek to yoke the rest of society to their theological preferences. <br />
<br />
This novel “religious-veto” view of religious liberty is inconsistent with this Court’s precedents and, if given credence, would make it more difficult to protect religious liberty in the future. <br />
<br />
'''At first glance, a doctrine that would allow religious adherents to entirely block the state from pursuing goals with which they disagree—extending beyond protecting their own free exercise—might seem appealing to religious liberty advocates. However, such a novel and imperious regime would quickly prove untenable, especially in a large and religiously diverse country. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Under the religious-veto view of the Free Exercise Clause, every decision in favor of a religious adherent would entirely foreclose the state from pursuing its chosen interests. Such paralysis is not desirable, nor should it be the goal of those who seek to foster a religiously free and diverse nation. <br />
<br />
In the long term, the novel “religious-veto” view would diminish protections for religious exercise. <br />
<br />
[In other words, PP was not just demanding “free exercise of religion” for believers, but “free exercise of religion” to murder unbelieving babies, undercutting the value of any “compelling government interest” in saving lives, and the fundamental right to life of human babies.]<br />
<br />
'''In Employment Division, Department of Human Resources of Oregon v. Smith, this Court worried that applying the then existing system of religious accommodations might be “courting anarchy.” 494 U.S. 872, 888 (1990). Amicus vigorously disagrees that granting religious accommodations poses such a risk and believes the Court should overrule Smith. In fact, this Court has recently loosened Smith’s strictures, and has signaled that it may reconsider them entirely. However, the novel religious-veto rule proposed by supporters of a right to abortion would legitimize Smith’s concerns.''' <br />
<br />
Granting every religious person in America an absolute veto over any law that burdens his faith might in fact be “courting anarchy.” In order to avoid the negative consequences that would predictably follow from accepting a religious-veto theory of religious liberty, courts would likely either double-down on Smith’s restrictive reading of the First Amendment or adopt a new and even less favorable framework for granting relief to religious adherents. Fortunately, religious vetoes are not what the First Amendment or this Court’s precedents require. <br />
<br />
Even if courts continued to apply something resembling the current standards, religious liberty proponents would be less likely to prevail under the religious-veto approach than they are under the existing religious-accommodation approach. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Currently, the government can only burden an adherent’s religious exercise if it can show that “the asserted harm of granting specific exemptions to particular religious claimants” is of the highest magnitude.11 That analysis, which is favorable to religious objectors, only makes sense so long as the remedy is an individual exemption. '''Under the religious-veto approach, courts would have to analyze the harm of completely negating a law because exemptions would no longer be limited to the specific objectors. In other words, courts would have to determine whether the government has a compelling interest in enforcing a law at a societal rather than to any one person at an individual level.''' Such an analysis is far less favorable to religious adherents than the current test.<br />
<br />
==15. Catholic Medical Association, National Association of Catholic Nurses-USA, Idaho Chooses Life and Texas Alliance for Life==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184905/20210726125612491_19-1932%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20The%20Catholic%20Medical%20Association%20et%20al..pdf Filed July 26, 2021]<br />
<br />
This entire brief attacks the subjectivity of Roe’s “viability” standard. The lower courts had overruled Mississippi’s 15 week abortion ban on the ground that 15 weeks is before “viability”, and states have no legitimate interest in regulating abortion before viability. <br />
<br />
The CMA conclusion: “...It is an illusory distinction without legal or practical significance. Roe has pretended to be what it is not for long enough. It should be overturned so that states once again may provide legal protection for unborn human life.” <br />
<br />
No evidence is offered to prove the unborn are human to judges who profess not to be able to “speculate” about such deep subjects. <br />
<br />
One point I found interesting: “The Court [in Roe] provided no explanation as to why the state’s interest in protecting human life should grow substantially as the unborn child grows and develops during the pregnancy. Nor did the Court attempt to explain why the state’s interest in protecting unborn human life just prior to viability should be nonexistent and then suddenly appear just after viability.” Respect for human life of course accords all human life “equal protection of the laws”. Without that uniquely American, uniquely Biblical respect, prejudice, dehumanization, and slavery face no restraint.<br />
<br />
==16. African-American, Hispanic, Roman Catholic and Protestant Religious and Civil Rights Organizations and Leaders==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184908/20210726131118652_19-1392_Amici%20Brief%20In%20Support%20of%20Petitioners.pdf Filed July 26, 2021] by Mathew D. Staver, Liberty Counsel<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">This brief associates abortion, abortionists, and abortion-supporting courts, with the Eugenics movement “THAT ELIMINATES “LESS DESIRABLE” RACES AND CERTAIN CLASSES OF PEOPLE TO EVOLVE A SUPERIOR HUMAN POPULATION.” It starts off with a shot at the district judge who insulted Mississippi’s motives as part of a long string of racist denials of rights; this Liberty Counsel brief accuses the whole abortion movement, inclu<span style="color:red">ding Roe, Doe, Casey, etc. as the gold standard of racism. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“The sinister goal of the eugenics movement was to eliminate ‘unfit’ and ‘undesirable’ people—those with mental and physical disabilities as well as certain races.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">LC points out the rest of the title of Darwin’s racist “Origin of Species” which today’s atheists normally leave out of their proud citations: “or, the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life”! Many quotes are given from Darwin’s 1871 book, “The Descent of Man”, which must be terribly embarrassing for any atheist or evolutionist. He makes a Ku Klux Klan Grand Wizard look like a paragon of intelligence and tolerance. <br />
<br />
You’ve just got to go to this link and read it. This guy’s tirades are a sight to behold! <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Then it’s Margaret Sanger’s turn. Wow! The district judge had derided Mississippi which “sterilized six out of ten black women” at a local county hospital “against their will.” Well, LC points out that was the doings of Margaret Sanger, the heroine of that district judge. <br />
<br />
Then it was the Supreme Court’s turn! <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“In Buck, the Court approved the compulsory sterilization of an allegedly ‘feeble minded’ woman who had been falsely adjudged ‘the probable potential parent of socially inadequate offspring.’ Buck, 274 U.S. at 205, 207. In a short opinion, Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., joined by seven other Justices, ‘offered a full-throated defense of forced sterilization...as a means to ‘prevent’ society from being ‘swamped with incompetence’” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">6 out of 10 sterilized at one hospital, the district judge says? That’s nothing: “between 1907 and 1983, more than 60,000 people were involuntarily sterilized” with a boost from the Supreme Court’s 1927 ruling! <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">What an admission from Justice Ginsberg: “And as the late Justice Ginsburg once observed: ‘[A]t the time Roe was decided, there was concern about population growth and particularly growth in '''populations that we don’t want to have too many of'''. So that Roe was going to be then set up for Medicaid funding of abortion.’”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Now the tie-in to abortion today: The racism, the extermination of blacks especially, is not just in the past. It’s now. “In Mississippi, 3,005 abortions were reported in 2018. Of those abortions, 72% were performed on black women, compared to just 24% on White women and 4% on women of other races.” There are ''pages'' of stats like that. “The racial disparity in abortions is largely intentional: A study based on 2010 Census data shows that nearly eight out of ten Planned Parenthood abortion clinics are within walking distance of predominantly Black or Hispanic neighborhoods. More specifically, Planned Parenthood intentionally located 86 percent of its abortion facilities in or near minority neighborhoods in the 25 U.S. counties with the most abortions. These 25 counties contain 19 percent of the U.S. population, including 28 percent of the Black population and 37 percent of the Hispanic/Latino population.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The relevance to the case before us: “states have a compelling interesting in ‘preventing abortion from becoming a tool of modern-day eugenics.’ Id. at 1783. And that interest far outweighs this Court’s judicially fashioned distortion of the Constitution.”<br />
<br />
So LC concludes, “The Court should condemn the district court’s disparaging rhetoric, reverse the decision below, and finally overrule Roe v. Wade and its progeny.”<br />
<br />
==17. Senators Josh Hawley, Mike Lee, and Ted Cruz==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184947/20210726160225898_2021-07-26%20Hawley%20Amicus%20Brief%20FINAL%20-%20PDFA.pdf Filed July 26, 2021]<br />
<br />
Roe should be overturned, not because it legalizes murder of baby human beings, but because it is “unworkable”. That is, states have no idea what to expect of courts before they pass a law. <br />
<br />
No evidence is offered that babies of people are people. No medical evidence, no mention of the unanimous establishment that “life begins” at the beginning, by every court-recognized fact-finder that has taken a position: juries, expert witnesses, state legislatures, congress, individual judges. The protection of babies, by legal recognition that they are fully human so ''no'' state can keep abortion legal, is not requested or, apparently, even thought of. <br />
<br />
However, it may be that this brief, more than any other, strummed the heart-strings of the Dobbs justices to overturn Roe, because its focus was ''not'' on the cruelty towards unseen, unheard babies, but to the inconvenience for lawyers, lawmakers, and judges. <br />
<br />
The reversal of Roe is sought. Of course if that is all that happens, without court recognition that babies are people, then abortion will still remain legal in many states. <br />
<br />
Some excerpts:<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Justice Scalia called the undue burden standard ‘ultimately standardless’ and ‘inherently manipulable,’ with the result that it ‘will prove hopelessly unworkable in practice.’” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">''“Asking whether a state interest in protecting fetal life or ensuring informed decisions about abortion outweighs any burdens on the abortion decision is like asking ‘whether a particular line is longer than a particular rock is heavy.’”'' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“When the lower courts cannot consistently apply—or even understand—a standard after nearly thirty years of development, something is wrong.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Casey’s failure to provide adequate guidance for state legislatures has led national abortion rights organizations to immediately file for an injunction any time a law protecting prenatal life is enacted—if only to ‘give it a try.’ See, e.g., Women’s Med. Prof’l Corp. v. Voinovich, 130 F.3d 187, 218–19 (6th Cir. 1997) (Boggs, J., dissenting) '''(“The post-Casey history of abortion litigation in the lower courts is reminiscent of the classic recurring football drama of Charlie Brown and Lucy in the Peanuts comic strip.”''' <br />
<br />
==18. Trinity Legal Center== <br />
<br />
[https://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184950/20210726160604723_41111%20pdf%20Schlueter.pdf Filed July 26, 2021]<br />
<br />
TLC clearly states that babies are “human life”, which is clear from ultrasound, and is affirmed by Justice Scalia. Instead of offering evidence, an appeal is made to common knowledge. TLC’s affirmation does not affect what it asks of the Court: that is, an end to all legal abortion, since they are all murder, is not requested. Not even an end to Roe is asked. Only that Mississippi’s 15 week ban be allowed to stand. <br />
<br />
Here is TLC’s affirmation of unborn life: “At the time these opinions were announced, the Justices repeatedly referred to the unborn child as ‘potential life.’ Because of advancement in medical science and technology, it is [now] known that life begins at conception. Thus, Justices O’Connor, White, and Scalia’s argument that the State has a compelling interest throughout pregnancy becomes more profound because the baby is not just a potential life, but it is the life of a whole, separate human being.<br />
<br />
“Furthermore, from a medical perspective, the unborn child is treated as a separate patient.<br />
<br />
“Justice Scalia further emphasized that the unborn child is not just potential life but human life. Thus, the State is protecting the human life of the unborn child and not just potential life. He stated: But ‘reasoned judgment’ does not begin by begging the question, as Roe and subsequent cases unquestionably did by assuming that what the State is protecting is the mere ‘potentiality of human life.’ '''The whole ''argument'' of abortion opponents''' is that what the Court calls the fetus and what others call the unborn child is a human life.”<br />
<br />
Unfortunately, even Scalia’s statement falls short of a position. He reports it only as an “argument” which courts ought to address. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">TLC says “The fourth factor focuses on changes in the facts. Since Roe, there have been many scientific and medical developments. Probably the most significant developments have been in ultrasound technology and fetal surgery. Ultrasound technology demonstrates that the unborn child is human life that is actually alive and shows the development of the baby. <br />
<br />
"This undermines Roe’s claim that the unborn child is only potential life.”<br />
<br />
The following statement seems to walk back an implication that all unborn babies are fully “human life”, but rather only those who survive to birth: “The presence of a heartbeat is a strong indicator that the child will survive to birth, therefore, debunking the idea that the unborn child is merely potential life.”<br />
<br />
==19. Thomas More Society== <br />
<br />
[https://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184897/20210726123826819_19-1932%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20The%20Thomas%20More%20Society.pdf Filed July 26, 2021]<br />
<br />
This brief makes the argument that abortion is not a right “deeply rooted in the nation’s history, legal tradition, and practices” so it does not merit “special protection”. Therefore Roe should be overruled.<br />
<br />
The Thomas Moore brief documents the regard for unborn human life over the centuries, but not to prove that the unborn are fully human so their lives must be protected by every state. The point of its history is rather to prove that Roe should be overruled because it was largely based on claims that unborn babies were never treated by our laws as “persons in the whole sense”. <br />
<br />
It is a history of abortion law going back to the common law of England. It also reviews the laws of 30 states to show that in Unborn Victims of Violence Laws, where killing a pregnant woman is counted as a double murder, there is no distinction based on “viability”, so therefore the reliance of Roe and Casey on viability is unsupported in American law. <br />
<br />
There were “scores of cases” between 1850 and 1870 where courts treated abortion as against laws “enacted with an intent to protect unborn human life.” <br />
<br />
Since I am from Iowa, it is cool to see a holding from an Iowa court from that time: “In 1868, the Iowa Supreme Court, interpreting an 1858 statute, condemned abortion as ‘an act highly dangerous to the mother, and generally fatal, and frequently designed to be fatal, to the child.’ State v. Moore, 25 Iowa 128, 136 (1868).” A 1934 Idaho Supreme Court said its law was “to discourage abortions because thereby the life of a human being, the unborn child, is taken.” <br />
<br />
To summarize, <span style="color:red">“more than sixty decisions from forty-two states have recognized that their nineteenth-century abortion statutes were enacted with an intent to protect unborn human life. Given this wealth of case authority, the Court’s conclusion in Roe that state court decisions ‘focused on the State’s interest in protecting the woman’s health rather than in preserving the embryo and fetus’...is unsupportable.” <br />
<br />
Also, contrary to Roe’s claim, there was not an exemption for mothers from prosecution: <span style="color:red">“at least nineteen states criminalized the woman’s participation in her own abortion.” In the remaining states, women were not prosecuted either because they were considered co-victims, or because the woman’s testimony against the abortionist was needed but could not be compelled if she were treated as an accomplice, and because “in most states a criminal conviction cannot be based on the uncorroborated testimony of an accomplice.”<br />
<br />
The Moore brief spends its final section attacking Roe’s “viability” rule. The brief concludes, “The court in Casey stated that ‘a decision to overrule should rest on some special reason over and above the belief that a prior case was wrongly decided.’...If so, Amicus submits that there are more than 60 million special reasons to do so. Roe v. Wade should be overruled.”<br />
<br />
Not asked for is a ruling that babies of people are people, making abortion murder, whose legality no state may permit.<br />
<br />
==20. Melinda Thybault Moral Outcry==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184968/20210726175018044_41206%20pdf%20Parker%20III%20br.pdf Filed July 26]<br />
<br />
An interesting way to establish “standing” for a petition (defined not as a legal “petition”, or brief, before a court, but the popular sense of a short statement signed by a multitude) before the Supreme Court: <br />
<br />
“Melinda Thybault and The Signers, as do all citizens, have the right to petition the United States government for redress of grievances. U.S. Constitution Amendment I. With all due respect, Amici believe the Supreme Court is the specific branch of their government which has committed this crime against humanity by forcing all states to legalize abortion. Therefore, Amici must bring their arguments to this Court, not Congress or the States.”<br />
<br />
View the petition at https://themoraloutcry.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/the-moral-outcry-petition.pdf<br />
<br />
Quoting a law school and a U.N. document, she summarizes: <span style="color:red">“A crime against humanity occurs when the government withdraws legal protection from a class of human beings resulting in severe deprivation of rights, up to and including death.” (See Crime Against Humanity at https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/crime_against_humanity and see U.N. Office, Genocide Prevention, Crimes Against Humanity https://www.un.org/en/genocideprevention/crimes-against-humanity.shtml; Treaty of Rome (1957). See also Convention on the Non-Applicability of Statutory Limitations to War )<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">She “adopted” children at the frozen embryo stage, and had them conceived through vitro fertilization, not just proving but demonstrating “living evidence that, with today’s science, viability begins at fertilization.” Unborn children literally are “viable” even from the embryo stage!!! Their sex can be determined six days after fertilization! <br />
<br />
Her ground for reversing Roe? She cites a “Law of Judicial Precedent” authored by Justices Garner, Gorsuch, Kavanaugh, and Breyer, which says one ground for reversing precedent is “The decision has been met with general dissatisfaction, protest or severe criticism.” So she got a petition signed by over half a million citizens calling abortion a “crime against humanity”, and points out: <br />
<br />
“Through The Moral Outcry Petition, over 500,000 Americans have correctly identified legalized abortion as ‘a crime against humanity’ which is very, very ‘severe criticism.’ With due respect to the Court, every single signature on the Moral Outcry Petition is, by itself, evidence under The Law of Judicial Precedent12 because each person calling abortion a crime against humanity is “severely” criticizing this Court’s abortion jurisprudence.” <br />
<br />
This only adds to “continued ‘severe criticism’ for 48 years. Most reasonable observers would agree that Roe has been met with general dissatisfaction and major protest since its inception. The Court has an ethical and moral duty to never forget past crimes against humanity, to never stand by silently while one is occurring today, and to rescue the perishing.”<br />
<br />
She updates Casey’s premise that abortion prevents “unwanted children” by pointing out that today’s “safe haven” laws have eliminated “unwanted children”. She makes the point without conceding that Casey’s excuse was ever justified: “Because of Safe Haven laws in all fifty states, [which permit mothers to easily give away their babies without being charged for neglect or abandonment] women can now have the “freedom” of Roe, and make their own decision about the ultimate direction of their life, without the crime against humanity of killing the child and injuring themselves.”<br />
<br />
Under Safe Haven laws, a mother “can transfer responsibility to the state with no questions asked, no legal procedure, and unlike abortion, at no cost.”<br />
<br />
The evidence that babies are people? She quotes a phrase from Gonzales: “Infant life” to prove “that this Court has already recognized exists in the womb when it is aborted.” <br />
<br />
(The Gonzales context of the “infant life” quote: “Respect for human life finds an ultimate expression in the bond of love the mother has for her child....Whether to have an abortion requires a difficult and painful moral decision. ...it seems unexceptionable to conclude some women come to regret their choice to abort the infant life they once created and sustained.”)<br />
<br />
More evidence that babies are people: “new science, including but not limited to DNA testing, in vitro fertilization (IVF) and sonograms, which were not available to this Court in 1973, now show what the Roe Court did not know, or even the Casey Court, that life begins at conception.” But she doesn’t populate this claim with any details or evidence, thinking the Supreme Court already concedes that babies are people: “But the Court has now correctly found in Gonzales that abortion terminates an “infant life,” at 159 at the moment of the abortion.”<br />
<br />
Roe v. Wade isn’t the Supreme Court’s first “crime against humanity”. “Abortion is a crime against humanity. Like Dred Scott v. Sanford, 60 U.S. 393 (1857), which purported to enshrine slavery in the Constitution forever. It is unjust. Dred Scott also decided unjustly that African Americans ‘had no rights which the white man was bound to respect’, at 400. The Dred Scott decision prevented national compromise from occurring and many commentators feel it eventually led to the Civil War. A crime against humanity occurs when the government withdraws legal protection from a class of human beings, as this Court did in Scott.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“...the Court has not yet fully reversed Roe, Doe, and Casey. No American citizen should have to live under, nor as history tragically demonstrates, should they stand by silently, while their government sanctions and even promotes crimes against humanity.” Another low point in the Supreme Court’s grasp of 14th Amendment equal rights, she mentions, was Plessy v. Ferguson, 163 U.S. 537 (1896) which, like Roe and Dred Scott, “denied legal protection to a class of human beings” and “ignored the plain language of the Fourteenth Amendment”. “Plessy accepted the gloss that ‘separate but equal’ was ‘equal’.” <br />
<br />
She repeats, “When the government withdraws legal protection from a class of human beings, it is the classic definition of a crime against humanity.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">All nine justices know better, she demonstrates, by quoting them all calling the decision to abort “painful” and “difficult”. Five of the nine added “moral”. What could make such an allegedly “safe” “procedure”, which isn’t even expensive compared with most surgeries, either “painful” or “difficult”? Nothing can account for it, if babies are mere tumors or animals. Take it out! It doesn’t belong there! The only thing that can make the decision “painful” or “difficult” is that it is a decision to murder a healthy beautiful baby. That also makes it a “moral” decision. Removing a tumor or an animal is not a “moral” decision. By these words, all nine justices prove they know unborn babies of people are people. <br />
<br />
And yet before this year, no state has asked the Court to outlaw abortion because it murders people. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“The Supreme Court in Gonzales unanimously came to the conclusion that abortion is a ‘difficult and painful decision,’ at 159. Gonzales stated, ‘Whether or not to have an abortion is a difficult and painful moral decision.’ The five-person majority consisted of Justices Kennedy, Roberts, Thomas, Alito and Scalia. The four Justices in dissent, Justices Ginsburg, Stevens, Souter, and Breyer, also said: ‘The Court is surely correct that, for most women, abortion is a painfully difficult decision.’ The dissent left out the word ‘moral’ as part of the difficulty. Gonzales, FN 7, at 183, per Ginsburg, dissenting. Thus, all nine justices agreed that abortion is ‘difficult’ and ‘painful.’ Why? Because at some level, most people ‘know’ or ‘sense’ that abortion kills a human life.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Even abortionists admit they know better: “Planned Parenthood has recently admitted through its chief physician in Missouri, that: “Sometimes the choice to end a pregnancy, even when it is a highly desired one, is a really difficult one for people”, Dr. Eisenberg, Planned Parenthood St. Louis Clinic Director.23 Abortionist Lisa Harris states: “I know that for every woman whose abortion I perform, I stop a developing human from being born . . . Abortion feels morally complicated because it stops a developing human being from being born, which, of course, it does.”24 (23 NBC News, nbcnews.com by Ericka Edwards and Ali Galarte, May 28, 2019. 24 “My Day as An Abortion Care Provider,” Oct. 22, 2019, New York Times OP/ED.)<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Mothers know better, although not necessarily in time. What “devastating psychological consequences” for mothers could follow successful removal of cancer?!! But Casey acknowledges they often follow an abortion, Melinda points out. “Many, many women are morally conflicted as this Court has recognized. Many women feel they have murdered their own child, with devastating consequences.” (The full sentence from Casey: “In attempting to ensure that a woman apprehend the full consequences of her decision, the State furthers the legitimate purpose of reducing the risk that a woman may elect an abortion, only to discover later, with devastating psychological consequences, that her decision was not fully informed.”)<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Even the “Roe” of “Roe v. Wade” came to know better: “The affidavit of Norma McCorvey, the ‘Roe’ of Roe v. Wade describing her experience working in the abortion industry, which changed her mind about abortion and caused her to seek reversal of her case, is still on file in McCorvey v. Hill, 385 F. 3d 846 (5th Cir. 2004) (cert. denied) (Supreme Court Docket No. 04-967).” (“Cert. denied” is the Supreme Court’s way of saying they were too busy to deal with her.)<br />
<br />
“Safe Haven” laws let a mother give her baby, no cost, no guilt, to any medical facility or fire station. Even small towns have fire stations. In Mississippi a mother has three days to do that. Rules vary with the states; in North Dakota, mothers have up to a year after birth. Mothers have nine months to decide. Mississippi Medicaid covers all prenatal costs for low income mothers. Contrasted with the high pressure abortion decisions, the high cost of abortion, the limited availability of killing centers, and the guilt. <br />
<br />
Safe Haven babies don’t languish in foster care for years. A footnote to a news article: “Thousands line up to adopt Safe Haven baby”.<br />
<br />
Why are Safe Haven laws a reason to reverse Roe?<br />
<br />
“The burden of an ‘unwanted’ child was a large factor in the Court’s analysis in Roe itself and Casey. ‘Maternity or additional offspring, may force upon the woman a distressful life and future. Psychological harm may be imminent. Mental and physical health may be taxed by child care. There is also the distress, for all concerned, associated with the unwanted child, and there is the problem of bringing a child into a family already unable, psychologically and otherwise, to care for it.’ Roe, 410 U.S. 113 at 153.” <br />
<br />
Viola, these needs are now met by Safe Haven laws, without cost, the inconvenience of long distance travel, guilt, or murder. There are no unwanted children. “This is a major, substantial change in circumstances that has never existed before in American history.”<br />
<br />
“As a fourth major ‘change in circumstances,’ at least two million Americans every year are now waiting to adopt newborn children. Far more people are waiting to adopt newborns than the number of aborted children per year.37 This development satisfies Casey’s stare decisis reliance test because there is no longer a need for abortion to give freedom from unwanted children to women.”<br />
<br />
(37 www.AmericanAdoptions.com/pregnant/waiting_adoptive_families)<br />
<br />
“Fifth, Today Science Clearly Demonstrates That Life Begins At Conception. New Scientific Advances Justify Changing Prior Precedent Under Stare Decisis.” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Supreme Court opinions [that are based on old science] should change when science advances. No society or court should be stuck in 1970’s science. One simple example is that DNA testing was not even used in the courts until the mid-1980’s. Anonymous DNA testing of the “infant life” in the womb and a DNA sample from the mother now shows that two separate humans exist. Sonograms, another example which started after Roe, convinced Dr. Bernard Nathanson, the founder of NARAL, as it should this Court, that he was wrong to kill innocent human life.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Court recognition of Life: “The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals has already upheld South Dakota’s law requiring abortionists (against their will and financial self-interest) to tell a woman that ‘abortion will terminate the life of a whole, separate, unique, living human being,’ defined as a member of the human species (Homo sapiens). Planned Parenthood v. Rounds, 530 F. 3d 724 (8th Cir. 2008) (en banc). The Eighth Circuit reviewed the voluminous evidence and determined there was adequate scientific evidence to uphold the law, which was “act based, not opinion or ideology, just as this Court has courageously done in recognizing the child in the womb as ‘infant life’ in Gonzales. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Several quotes from federal appeals courts about the need to reconsider Roe concluded with this zinger: “In sum, if courts were to delve into the facts underlying Roe’s balancing scheme with present day knowledge, they might conclude that the woman’s ‘choice’ is far more risky and less beneficial, and the child’s sentience far more advanced than the Roe Court knew.’ McCorvey v. Hill 385 F.3d 846 page 11 (5th Cir. 2004) (cert. denied)”<br />
<br />
What an understatement: “In the case of a crime against humanity, it is the duty of the Court to correct its own error. All judges should be open in appropriate cases, to considering evidence that killing ‘infant life’ in the womb is wrong, and that changes in circumstances have produced sound and necessary reasons for reversal.”<br />
<br />
Although Melinda’s evidence and argument supports asking the Court to outlaw all abortion across America, her conclusion only asks that Mississippi be allowed to keep its 15 week ban, and that Roe be overruled (leaving individual states to decide whether to keep abortion legal). <br />
<br />
<br />
==21. The Becket Fund for Religious Liberty==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185042/20210727133310143_19-1392%20Becket%20Amicus%20Brief%20Dobbs%20FINAL.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
Becket's question for SCOTUS: "Whether the Roe/Casey framework should be replaced in order to reduce the number and intensity of religious liberty conflicts".<br />
<br />
Examples of "religious liberty conflicts": "Surely the federal government has many ways to distribute contraceptives to American women without dragooning the Little Sisters of the Poor [an adoption agency] or other religious nonprofits....And surely state governments have many ways to ensure access to abortion without involving churches. But the shadow of ''Roe'' and ''Casey'' prompted these governments to deny exemptions to religious groups, or to eliminate religious exemptions that had existed for decades. <br />
<br />
"Another area where abortion proponents have attacked religious exercise is pharmacy regulations. In some states, government officials have sought to force pharmacists to dispense Plan B and Ella despite—'''or even because of'''—their religious objections. <br />
For example, Washington State, acting at the behest of abortion advocates, required religious objectors to dispense Plan B and Ella despite the fact that the State allowed pharmacies not to stock or dispense these drugs for “‘an almost unlimited variety of secular reasons[.]’” <br />
<br />
After reviewing these conflicts, Becket said these conflicts would go away if SCOTUS would simply pull back its nose out of America's consciences: "But it does not have to be this way. It is possible to address abortion through ordinary politics, free from the systemic deformations and misincentives generated by the Roe/Casey regime. '''This is the American experience related to abortion before the Court departed from the Constitution’s text, structure, history and tradition in Roe/Casey.''' And it is the American experience with a variety of other contested issues related to human life and religious liberty, and the experience of many European countries today."<br />
<br />
==22. U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and Other Religious Organization==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185030/20210727130348783_13-1932.Dobbs.final.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
Neither Constitutional Text Nor History Supports a Right to Take the Life of an Unborn Child at Any Stage of Pregnancy. Neither Constitutional Text Nor History Supports a Right to Take the Life of an Unborn Child at Any Stage of Pregnancy <br />
<br />
Conclusion: Ultimately these cases, with all the problems they entail for lower courts, land on this Court’s doorstep. And under the current jurisprudence, it will never stop. This should not be. The way to prevent it is to return the issue to the states, where it properly belongs. (paragraph preceding “conclusion”)<br />
<br />
Circuit judges have been skeptical that preenforcement challenges should be allowed at all in the abortion context because such challenges do not allow the plaintiff’s predictions about the challenged law’s effect to be tested. Some appellate courts have concluded outright that it is an abuse of discretion for a trial judge to issue a pre-enforcement injunction since the effect of such an abortion law is open to debate.27 This Court too has indicated that as-applied challenges are to be favored over facial challenges in abortion cases. Gonzales, 550 U.S. at 167 (stating that a facial challenge in that case “should not have been entertained in the first instance”). And yet, the practice of bringing pre-enforcement facial challenges to abortion legislation continues, leading inevitably to (a) judgments based on speculative evidence, (b) a blurring of the distinction between facial and as applied challenges, and (c) court decisions based often on factors for which the government itself is not even responsible (such as the number and location of abortion clinics in a given state). This impossible state of affairs would correct itself if the Court were to follow Justice Scalia’s suggestion to, in his words, “get out of this area, where we have no right to be, and where we do neither ourselves nor the country any good by remaining.” Casey, 505 U.S. at 1002 (Scalia, J., concurring in the judgment in part, dissenting in part). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Roe also attempted, based on prior decisions of this Court that had declared protection under the Due Process Clause for rights deeply rooted in the Nation’s 6 history and tradition, to locate an abortion right in history. The attempt was seriously flawed. “[S]ubsequent scholarship has demonstrated conclusively that acceptance of abortion is not in any sense deeply rooted in the Nation’s history and traditions. The opposite is true: it is the prohibition of abortion that has deep roots in English and American history.” Institutional Integrity and Respect for Precedent, supra at 553-54. An exhaustive study of the issue concludes that “[t]he tradition of treating abortion as a crime was unbroken through nearly 800 years of English and American history until the ‘reform’ movement of the later twentieth century.” Joseph W. Dellapenna, DISPELLING THE MYTHS OF ABORTION HISTORY xii (2006).2 <br />
<br />
See Michael Stokes Paulsen, The Worst Constitutional Decision of All Time, 78 NOTRE DAME L. REV. 995, 1007 (2003) (“I know of no serious scholar, judge, or lawyer who attempts to defend Roe’s analysis on textual or historical grounds.”); Richard S. Myers, Lower Court “Dissent” from Roe and Casey, 18 AVE MARIA L. REV. 1, 6 (2020) (noting that “no one defends the Court’s opinion in Roe”). ...<br />
<br />
D. Multiple State Interests Justify Prohibitions on Abortion Before Viability. There is an unfortunate tendency in abortion cases to become lost in minutiae. The factual record in individual cases can be lengthy and complex, the case law complicated and difficult to apply. But these case-specific features cannot disguise <span style="color:red">the tragedy that is the common denominator in these cases: the intentional destruction, on an unprecedented scale, of the most innocent and defenseless of the human family. In the truest sense, they are our family, our brothers and sisters. Like all members of the human family, they should be treasured and loved. Nothing in the Constitution requires states to stand idly by while their lives are deliberately taken. <br />
<br />
21 <span style="color:red">The Declaration of Independence places the right to life first in the list of inalienable rights. The Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments list the right to life first among those rights of which the government cannot deprive a person without due process of law. Thomas Jefferson’s March 31, 1809 letter to the Republican Citizens of Washington County, Maryland, stated: “The care of human life and happiness, and not their destruction, is the first and only legitimate object of good government.” 8 THE WRITINGS OF THOMAS JEFFERSON 165 (H.A. Washington, ed.) (1871). <br />
<br />
...“The States—indeed, all civilized nations—demonstrate their commitment to life by treating homicide as a serious crime.” Id. The same can be said for state prohibitions on assisted suicide, <br />
<br />
==23. LONANG Institute==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185037/20210727131024868_19-1392%20tsac%20Lonang%20Institute.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">[Every word in this section is from Lonang's brief, except what is in these brackets, and colored blue. They are blue, because even though I have copied so much of their brief because I see in it potential for getting baby murder outlawed in every state, Lonang argues at one point that courts should NOT do that, but should remain "neutral" about whether states can support murder.]<br />
<br />
The Declaration Of Independence Affirms That The States Enjoy Police Power Which Carries With It The Power To Prohibit Abortion ... The Fourteenth Amendment Requires Only Procedural Due Process, not Substantive Due Process ...Courts Are The Mere Instruments Of The Law, And Can Will Nothing ...... According to The Law Of Nature, Judicial Power Extends To Issuing Orders In Cases And Controversies, Not To Making Rules Of General Applicability..... Judicial Decisions Articulating Substantive Due Process Rights Are Without Constitutional Textual Support ..... ONLY THE STATES AND THE PEOPLE ENJOY THE LAWFUL AUTHORITY, TO CONSTITUTIONALIZE FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS “IMPLICIT IN LIBERTY”, OR “DEEPLY ROOTED”, OR “INHERENT IN INDIVIDUAL AUTONOMY.” .....<br />
[CONTINUED IN FIRST SECTION]<br />
<br />
The Federal Courts Possess No Article III Power To Discover Or Constitutionalize Textually Unsupported Rights Or Impose A Duty To Enforce Those Rights On The States........ <br />
the law of nature provides that a government’s judicial branches are limited to declaring what is the law, not its codification. The concept of judicial review affirms that the province of a judge is to declare the law, not to make it <br />
<br />
The Supreme Court is routinely presented with the legal arguments that certain statutory or constitutional words or phrases have no fixed meaning. The Court is then called upon to supply a new meaning other than the one stated in the text. This process adjusts the words or phrases chosen by the lawgiver, to establish as precedent the Court’s desired meaning. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Denying the textual meaning of legal words is not a novel invention of the Court. Instead, it has historical precedent going back to the first recorded case in human history. At issue in that case, In Re: Adam, Eve & the Devil, 3 Genesis 1 (0001), was the intent and meaning of a statute prohibiting consumption of fruit from a specific tree in a Garden in Eden. A statute prohibiting such consumption was at issue. Two of the parties violated the statute and entered a guilty plea. A second statute prohibited various forms of fraud and deception. A third party was charged under this statute alleging he used deception to induce co-defendants to consume the prohibited fruit. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">At trial, he argued that he was not liable on the theory that the first statute did not actually prohibit consumption—that the words in the statute did not mean what the text declared. [Plausible but not recorded interaction between God and Satan.] As such he argued that he did not engage in deceit in his statements to the other parties. The Court was unpersuaded. It rejected the argument, finding that the prohibition was clear and unambiguous, reflected the drafter’s original intent and was, therefore, enforceable as written.3 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">This Court’s fourteenth amendment substantive due process jurisprudence is based on the same argument first made in Eden—the words of the law do not mean what they say. The Court has maintained the amendment itself contains a substantive due process clause into which the Court is empowered to pour un-enumerated fundamental rights of its own divination. The Court’s atextual adjustments, purportedly limited by the outcomeflexible concept of “judicial restraint,” have been internally justified by its moral appeals to novel high-sounding phrases such as “implicit in the concept of ordered liberty,”4 or the “concept of personal liberty,”5 or “deeply rooted in this nation’s history and tradition,”6 or “inherent in the concept of individual autonomy.”7 Alas, none of these phrases have textual support in the amendment itself. Nor has the Court been granted any state legislative power in Article III to define ordered or personal liberty, individual <br />
[])<br />
4 Judicial decisions finding that a state statute violates fundamental values discovered as “implicit in the concept of ordered liberty” are without textual support. See Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479, 500 (1965) (Harlan. J., concurring) (quoting Palko v. Connecticut, 302 U. S. 319, 325 (1937) (Cardozo, J.) overruled on other grounds, Benton v. Maryland, 395 U.S. 784 (1969)). <br />
<br />
5 Judicial decisions finding that a state statute violates a woman’s right to abortion discovered in the “concept of personal liberty” are without textual support. See Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113, 153 (1973). <br />
<br />
6 Judicial decisions finding that a state statute violates rights discovered as “deeply rooted in this nation’s history and tradition” are without textual support. See Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 U.S. 702, 721 (1997) “The Due Process Clause specially protects those fundamental rights and liberties which are, objectively, deeply rooted in this Nation's history and tradition.” Palko, 302 U.S. 325. The Court looks to principles of justice “so rooted in the traditions and conscience of our people as to be ranked as fundamental’) (quoting Snyder v. Massachusetts, 291 U. S. 97, 105 (1934) overruled in part on other grounds by Malloy v. Hogan, 378 U.S. 1 (1964)). <br />
<br />
7 Judicial decisions finding that a state statute violates a fundamental right which is “inherent in the concept of individual autonomy” without regard to history or tradition is without textual support. See Obergefell v. Hodges, 576 US 644; 135 S. Ct. at 2629 (2015) <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">autonomy, or traipse through history and tradition to discover and append any un-enumerated substantive individual rights into the amendment’s textually non-existent “substantive” due process clause. Nor does the law of nature of judicial review empower this Court to write new Constitutional text. The authority of a judge is to declare what written law already exists. The standard legal maxim is, Jus dicere, et non jus dare, also known as judicis est jus dicere non dare. The province of a judge is to declare the law, not to make it.8 At what point in time and on whose authority did that rule, binding on judges in England and America for centuries, become nonbinding? Even if fundamental rights are so demonstrably “implicit, inherent and rooted” as the Court maintains, the power of judicial review, nevertheless, does not carry with it the power to insert those rights into the fourteenth amendment. Amending the Constitution is governed by Article V in which the Court plays no part. <br />
<br />
8 “When an act of Congress is appropriately challenged in the courts as not conforming to the constitutional mandate, the judicial branch of the government has only one duty; to lay the article of the Constitution which is invoked beside the statute which is challenged and to decide whether the latter squares with the former. All the court does, or can do, is to announce its considered judgment upon the question. The only power it has, if such it may be called, is the power of judgment. This court neither approves nor condemns any legislative policy. Its delicate and difficult office is to ascertain and declare whether the legislation is in accordance with, or in contravention of, the provisions of the Constitution; and, having done that, its duty ends.” United States v. Butler, 297 U.S. 1, 62-63 (1936). <br />
<br />
Even assuming arguendo that the Court’s “implicit, inherent and rooted” approach to discovering un-enumerated fundamental rights is superior to legislative debate and enactment, or preferable to the Constitution’s chosen method of amendment, or that the Court’s wisdom and judgment in divining such rights is the manifestation of jurisprudential perfection, the fact remains that such an approach is without textual Constitutional support. Whether or not un-enumerated fundamental rights are or are not “implicit, inherent and rooted” in the Constitution’s fourteenth amendment, they are not found in the text itself. As such their discovery and incorporation into the law of the land is for the States and the People to decide.9 <br />
<br />
The case now before the Court provides an opportunity to restore judicial review to declaring what the text says. It provides an opportunity to resist anew the temptation first argued at Eden to opine to the contrary. The restoration will leave the State of Mississippi free to adopt laws protecting a pregnant woman by prohibiting conduct inducing a miscarriage or procuring an abortion. Such a determination would not merely return the law of abortion to its pre-1973 status. It would return judicial review itself to pre-substantive due process status <br />
<br />
9 See U.S. Const. amend. IX, “The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.” See also U.S. Const. amend. X, “The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people. <br />
<br />
A. The Declaration Of Independence Affirms That The States Enjoy Police Power Which Carries With It The Power To Prohibit Abortion. <br />
<br />
The question posed by the Court pertains to the power of a state, in this case Mississippi. The Declaration of Independence not only declared the States to be free and independent, but also declared the legal basis and extent of their power. <span style="color:red">No understanding of state power is complete without consideration of the Declaration. The Declaration grounded civil power itself on the “laws of nature and of nature’s God.” <br />
<br />
That is what it says. It further declared this law of nature affirmed that every person may lawfully enjoy those rights which God has given. The laws of nature and its God pledges to guarantee to each person: <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among 8 these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.–That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed. . . <br />
<br />
Remember that under the Declaration, the “governments instituted among men,” whose job it is to secure the rights of the people, exclusively referred to the several state governments, as no federal or national government then existed. Accordingly, the duty to declare and secure the rights of the people belongs to the States themselves, not to any branch, department or agency of the federal government later created. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Even if this Court’s search for new fundamental un-enumerated substantive due process rights was constitutionally legitimate, it has neglected to look carefully at the “laws of nature and of nature’s God” as a source of those rights. Any legitimate search even for rights “deeply rooted” in American history and tradition would consider unalienable rights granted by the Creator as asserted in such a quintessential founding American document. In other words, the first place to look for any rights of the people would be to examine those rights granted by the Creator, not any purported rights invented by people. And if the Creator has not deemed it necessary or advisable to confer a particular right, then the logical conclusion would be that such a right does not exist. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Nevertheless the state governments’ purpose is to secure these natural and unalienable rights and 9 as we have seen, any un-enumerated rights are reserved to the People (not the judicial branch) to find, identify, and assert, and their States to enact. The People created their state governments for this purpose and their national government for a much more limited purpose. The People did not establish a national government with a judicial branch given any power to make law or discover un-enumerated rights. <br />
<br />
As to the power of the States, the Declaration declared: <br />
<br />
That these United Colonies are, and of Right ought to be, Free and Independent States; . . . and that as Free and Independent States, they have full Power to levy War, conclude Peace, contract Alliances, establish Commerce, and to do all other Acts and Things which Independent States may of right do. (emphasis added). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The States in the union have all power to do all “Acts and Things which Independent States may of right do.” The Constitution of a state may further limit this power. The United States Constitution including the fourteenth amendment also limits the power of States. But neither the framers nor text of that amendment contain any substantive due process limitation on a state’s police power. <br />
<br />
...Mississippi is such a state. It stands on equal footing with the original States. It enjoys the police power to adopt laws prohibiting abortion because the Declaration of Independence recognizes it may do such acts according to the law of nature. Nothing in the text of the Fourteenth amendment legitimately articulates a substantive due process limitation on that power. <br />
<br />
Even if a right to privacy implicit in the concept of ordered liberty translates into a right to abortion, nothing in the text of Article III, or the power of judicial review, extends to this Court a power to interlineate that right into the <br />
<br />
<br />
B. The Fourteenth Amendment Requires Only Procedural Due Process, not Substantive Due Process. The fourteenth amendment states in part: No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; . . . (emphasis added). U.S. Const., amend XIV. Due process pertains entirely to matters of procedure. “Procedural due process rules are meant to protect persons not from the deprivation, but from the mistaken or unjustified deprivation of life, liberty, or property.” Carey v. Piphus, 435 U.S. 247, 259 (1978). “[P]rocedural due process rules are shaped by the risk of error inherent in the truthfinding process as applied to the generality of cases.” Mathews v. Eldridge, 424 U.S. 319, 344 (1976) (emphasis added). The core of these requirements is notice and an opportunity to be heard (often a hearing) before an impartial tribunal. Due process may also require 13 an opportunity for confrontation and crossexamination, and for discovery; that a decision be made based on the record, and that a party be allowed to be represented by counsel. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">A review of the text of the fourteenth amendment reflects no textual support for any “substantive due process” clause. Even the term is an oxymoron. If we took the words in their ordinary meaning, “due process” merely signifies a proper procedure. The word “substantive,” on the other hand, means rights and duties as opposed to the procedural rules by which such things are established or enforced. Thus, the term “substantive due process,” in plain English, means non-procedural proper procedure. Logically, “substantive due process” is a type of “A = Not A” statement, where something is procedural and not procedural simultaneously. But unlike philosophy or mathematics, An “A = Not A” statement in a legal context is just plain illogical. Either the Court, when invoking substantive due process, is talking about procedure or it is not. If yes, then due process as a legal doctrine stands on its own and there is no need to resort to substantive due process. If no, then due process does not affect the matter, for it does not relate to procedure. This brings us back to Eden where the argument was first made that the words of the law do not mean what they say. While we acknowledge the argument has the weight of time behind it, originating in great antiquity, we respectfully urge the Court not to follow that ancient precedent. <br />
<br />
C. Courts Are The Mere Instruments Of The Law, And Can Will Nothing. <br />
Applying a dialectical interpretation to words is not an element of judicial power. Nothing in the case or controversy jurisdiction of the Supreme Court in Article III, sec. 2, extends any power to the Court to identify un-enumerated fundamental rights “implicit in the concept of ordered liberty,” or in the “concept of personal liberty,” or “deeply rooted in this nation’s history and tradition,” or “inherent in the concept of individual autonomy.”13 <br />
<br />
Alexander Hamilton affirmed this view, writing in Federalist No. 78, that the judicial branch of government is the least dangerous because it has neither force nor will, only judgment. Chief Justice Marshall agreed, noting that: ''Judicial power, as contradistinguished from the powers of the law, has no existence. Courts are the mere instruments of the law, and can will nothing.'' Osborn v. Bank of the United States, 22 U.S. (9 Wheat.) 738, 866 (1824) (Chief Justice Marshall).14 In other words, the Court <br />
<br />
14 See also United States v. Butler, 297 U.S. 1, 78-79 (1936) (“The power of courts to declare a statute unconstitutional is subject to two guiding principles of decision which ought never to be absent from judicial consciousness. One is that courts are concerned only with the power to enact statutes, not with their wisdom. The other is that while unconstitutional exercise of power by the executive and legislative branches of the government is subject to judicial restraint, the only check upon our own exercise of power is our own sense of self-restraint. For the removal of unwise laws from the statute books appeal lies not to the courts, but to the ballot and to the processes of democratic government.”) The instant case calls for self-restraint. <br />
<br />
<br />
cannot will un-enumerated fundamental rights into Constitutional existence. It has no judicial power to will rights “implicit in the concept of ordered liberty,” or in the “concept of personal liberty,” or “deeply rooted in this nation’s history and tradition,” or “inherent in the concept of individual autonomy” into textual existence. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The high watermark of the Supreme Court misuse of judicial review came in Cooper v. Aaron, 358 U.S. 1 (1958). In its opinion, the court remarked that Article VI of the Constitution makes the Constitution the “supreme Law of the Land.” So far, so good. In 1803, Chief Justice Marshall, speaking for a unanimous Court, calling the Constitution “the fundamental and paramount law of the nation,” declared in Marbury v. Madison, 1 Cranch 137 (1803) that “It is emphatically the province and duty of the judicial department to say what the law is.” This is a description of the legitimate power of judicial review found in Article III, Section 2. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">From this legitimate recognition of the power of judicial review, the Cooper v. Aaron Court stepped back to Eden. The Court first expanded its own opinion in Marbury asserting that Marbury actually “declared the basic principle that the federal judiciary is supreme in the exposition of the law of the Constitution.” 358 U.S. at 18 (emphasis added). Recall that Chief Justice Marshall said the judiciary has a duty to say what the law is. He said nothing, however, about the Court’s opinions as supreme. Cooper added the “supreme” element. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In its ruling, the Court in Cooper made the egregious error of misconstruing the Supremacy Clause of Art VI that “This constitution and the laws of the United States which shall be made in pursuance thereof” shall be “the supreme law of the land.” The Court, without either textual or historical support, construed “the laws of the United States” to include judicial opinions of the Court, when clearly, historically and textually, it only referred to acts of Congress which became law when made in pursuance of the Constitution. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Further, the Constitution grants no “supreme” expository power to the Court. It is not found in Articles III or VI. It is not there. What is found in Article VI is that the Constitution, laws and treaties “shall be the supreme law of the land.” Nothing is said about Supreme Court opinions being supreme law, let alone being law at all. The Constitution extends no power to the Court to claim that even its legitimate constitutionally based opinions, are the sole and exclusive meaning of the Constitution itself. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The judicial power to review cases arising under the constitution, laws and treaties is stated in Article III, section 2, but that power is not the power to rewrite the Constitution itself. It is not the power to authorize the court to sit as a perpetual constitutional convention. It is not the power for the court to write into the Constitution whatever it wants, or the power to strike from the Constitution has a duty to say what the law is. He said nothing, however, about the Court’s opinions as supreme. Cooper added the “supreme” element. In its ruling, the Court in Cooper made the egregious error of misconstruing the Supremacy Clause of Art VI that “This constitution and the laws of the United States which shall be made in pursuance thereof” shall be “the supreme law of the land.” The Court, without either textual or historical support, construed “the laws of the United States” to include judicial opinions of the Court, when clearly, historically and textually, it only referred to acts of Congress which became law when made in pursuance of the Constitution. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Further, the Constitution grants no “supreme” expository power to the Court. It is not found in Articles III or VI. It is not there. What is found in Article VI is that the Constitution, laws and treaties “shall be the supreme law of the land.” Nothing is said about Supreme Court opinions being supreme law, let alone being law at all. The Constitution extends no power to the Court to claim that even its legitimate constitutionally based opinions, are the sole and exclusive meaning of the Constitution itself. <br />
<br />
The judicial power to review cases arising under the constitution, laws and treaties is stated in Article III, section 2, but that power is not the power to rewrite the Constitution itself. It is not the power to authorize the court to sit as a perpetual constitutional convention. It is <span style="color:red">not the power for the court to write into the Constitution whatever it wants, or the power to strike from the Constitution whatever it does not want. Constitutional insertions and deletions are a power retained by the People. This textual judicial power renders the Court’s opinion in Roe without support in the fourteenth amendment. <br />
<br />
D. According to The Law Of Nature, Judicial Power Extends To Issuing Orders In Cases And Controversies, Not To Making Rules Of General Applicability. <br />
This exercise of judicial power is reflected in the difference between a “rule” and an “order.” A court cannot issue a rule under the law of nature, because the nature of any rule is that it is an action of general application. '''Rules apply not only to parties in a case, but to everyone. The court’s judgment on the other hand must be confined to an order for its contempt power to be exercised lawfully. Otherwise, a court could hold anyone in contempt for simply disagreeing with its opinion. This distinguishes judicial power from legislative power. Only the legislative power can make laws; the judiciary can merely apply pre-existing laws to the facts in a given case.''' <br />
<br />
Not only is the law of nature of judicial power responsive rather than initiative, and limited to giving orders to parties rather than rules to all persons, <span style="color:red">the law of nature of judicial power is restricted to judgment, not will. All the judge has is judgment to make known the statute or Constitution’s text. This distinguishes judicial power from executive power. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">It follows that if judges do not make law, which by definition is a “rule,” then judges cannot issue “rules,” and may only issue orders. A rule binds the people generally, and is by nature legislative, whereas an order binds only the person to whom it is directed. Thus, Article III extends the judicial power of the courts of the United States only to “cases” and “controversies.” If a judge could issue a rule which governed such disputes, the judicial power would not be limited to actual cases and controversies. [I]f the policy of the Government upon vital questions affecting the whole people is to be irrevocably fixed by decisions of the Supreme Court, the instant they are made in ordinary litigation between parties in personal actions, the people will have ceased to be their own rulers....15<br />
<span style="color:red">15 Abraham Lincoln, First Inaugural Address, March 4, 1861. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">This Court’s substantive due process jurisprudence is an example of rulemaking simply because it purports to add new text to the Constitution itself. For this reason, it is contrary to the law of nature of judicial power. The opinion in Roe v. Wade can also be examined to determine whether it was in the nature of an order or a rule. Remarkably, the Court did not issue an instruction to Texas declaring its statute unconstitutional and unenforceable. Rather, it specified a trimester formula was essentially a legislative rule purporting to bind all future statute governing abortion in every state. Yet only Texas was a party to the case. Hence, the Court’s opinion again lacked an essential element of the exercise of judicial power, that is, the issuance of an order, not a rule.16<br />
[16 For a more extensive review of the law of nature regarding <br />
judicial power and judicial review, see Herbert W. Titus & <br />
Gerald R. Thompson, America’s Heritage: Constitutional <br />
Liberty, Judicial Power And Judicial Review, The LONANG <br />
Institute (2006).]<br />
<br />
Besides the lack of concrete, textual constitutional language, the limited nature of judicial power and its lack of authority to make rules, the Court has felt constrained to adjust rather than abandon its substantive due process practice of atextual fundamental rights rulemaking. These cases reflect its “go to” linguistic justifications, all of which neither have textual support nor are found enumerated among the judicial powers in Article III. Judicial decisions finding that a state statute violates fundamental values “implicit in the concept of ordered liberty” are without textual support. See Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479, 500 (1965) (Harlan. J., concurring) (quoting Palko v. Connecticut, 302 U. S. 319, 325 (1937) (Cardozo, J.) overruled on other grounds, Benton v. Maryland, 395 U.S. 784 (1969)). A judicial decision finding that a state statute violates a woman’s right to abortion discovered in the “concept of personal liberty” is without textual support. See Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113, 153 (1973). <br />
<br />
Likewise, judicial decisions finding that a state statute violates rights “deeply rooted in this nation’s history and tradition” are without textual support. See Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 U.S. 702, 721 (1997). “The Due Process Clause specially protects those fundamental rights and liberties which are, objectively, deeply rooted in this Nation's history and tradition.” Palko, 302 U.S. at 325. The Court looks to principles of justice “so rooted in the traditions and conscience of our people as to be ranked as fundamental”) (quoting Snyder v. Massachusetts, 291 U. S. 97, 105 (1934) overruled in part on other grounds by Malloy v. Hogan, 378 U.S. 1 (1964)). <br />
So too, a judicial decision finding that a state statute violates a fundamental right which is “inherent in the concept of individual autonomy” without regard to history or tradition, is equally without textual support. See Obergefell v. Hodges, 576 U.S. 644; 135 S. Ct. at 2629 (2015).17 <br />
<br />
[17 Chief Justice Roberts, with whom Justice Scalia and Justice <br />
Thomas joined in dissent, further underscored the lack of any <br />
textual support for the court’s decision. <br />
<br />
The majority purports to identify four <br />
“principles and traditions” in this Court’s due <br />
process precedents that support a fundamental <br />
right for same-sex couples to marry. Ante, at 12. <br />
In reality, however, the majority’s approach has <br />
no basis in principle or tradition, except for the <br />
unprincipled tradition of judicial policymaking]<br />
that characterized discredited decisions such as <br />
Lochner v. New York, 198 U.S. 45. Stripped of <br />
its shiny rhetorical gloss, the majority’s <br />
argument is that the Due Process Clause gives <br />
same-sex couples a fundamental right to marry <br />
because it will be good for them and for society. <br />
If I were a legislator, I would certainly consider <br />
that view as a matter of social policy. But as a <br />
judge, I find the majority’s position indefensible <br />
as a matter of constitutional law.<br />
<br />
The same reasoning applies with equal force and effect <br />
to Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479, 500 (1965); Palko v. <br />
Connecticut, 302 U. S. 319, 325 (1937) (overruled on other <br />
grounds, Benton v. Maryland, 395 U.S. 784 (1969)); Roe v. <br />
Wade, 410 U.S. 113, 153 (1973), Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 <br />
U.S. 702, 721 (1997) and Snyder v. Massachusetts, 291 U. S. 97, <br />
105 (1934) (overruled in part on other grounds by Malloy v. <br />
Hogan, 378 U.S. 1 (1964))<br />
<br />
Let us be clear here. What we mean when we say the Court is utilizing doctrines or rules of interpretation which have no textual support, is that the Court is just declaring its own majoritarian judicial will as the Supreme Law of the Land without regard to the Constitution’s text, form of government, separation of powers, or any known legal doctrine except the arbitrary will of a Despot. Rather than celebrating and continuing this “long train of abuses and usurpations pursuing invariably the same object, a design to reduce” the People “under absolute Despotism,” there is still a window of time in which to quash this judicial abuse and usurpation. <br />
<br />
Finally, Amicus would be remiss in failing to address <span style="color:red">a future judicial decision which would discover a fundamental “right to life” “implicit in the Concept of ordered liberty”, or in the “concept of personal liberty,” or “deeply rooted in this nation’s history and tradition” or “inherent in the concept of individual autonomy,” or existing in any other linguistic contrivance yet to be animated from the spirit of the original argument in Eden (that the words do not mean what they say). Such a decision would also lack textual support in the non-existent substantive due process clause. Its advocates would perpetuate judicial Despotism and continue to wrongly nationalize, state jurisdiction. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">[Wait a minute. I have copied so much of Lonang's brief because I perceive its usefulness towards the goal of outlawing abortion in EVERY state, as required by the Constitution, especially the 14th Amendment. Yet in this unfortunate paragraph, Lonang argues that courts should NOT outlaw genocide universally! It is this kind of argument that elevates the "scrupulous neutrality" about whether murder is good, of which Justice Kavanaugh brags!<br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">[The error of Lonang and Kavanaugh, as I perceive it, is to miss the points raised by Justice Thomas about basing the definition of Constitutional Rights on what is specifically listed in the Constitution, which is the original meaning of "privileges and immunities" in the 14th Amendment. By that measure, "Life" is specifically protected by the Constitution, while "Murder" is not. This demands of courts that they outlaw baby murder in every state.] <br />
<br />
A right to life needs no between-the-lines authorization. The Amendment plainly identifies what makes a state law unconstitutional.]<br />
<br />
...Objecting to the Court’s holding in Obergefell v. Hodges, 576 U.S. 644; 135 S. Ct. at 2629 (2015) Justice Scalia, with whom Justice Thomas joined in dissenting observed: “This is a naked judicial claim to legislative—indeed, super-legislative—power; a claim fundamentally at odds with our system of government. Except as limited by a constitutional prohibition agreed to by the People, the States are free to adopt whatever laws they like, even those that offend the esteemed Justices’ “reasoned judgment.” ....<br />
<br />
...” The power and process of amending the national Constitution is well <br />
provided for in Article V. That Article assigns no place for the federal judiciary in its text.1<br />
<br />
The powers reserved to the States and people include the power to decide if they shall constitutionalize or not, fundamental rights “implicit in the concept of ordered liberty,” or within the “concept of personal liberty,” or “deeply rooted in this nation’s history and tradition,” or “inherent in the concept of individual autonomy.” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">[But not to the destruction of enumerated rights like Life.]<br />
<br />
...., the Court trampled down the separation of powers. It also exceeded the law of nature of judicial power, because it does not declare the written law, but rather says what the law should be. That goes beyond judicial review. ....<br />
<br />
Justice Curtis provided insight into the phenomenon when he observed: Political reasons have not the requisite certainty to afford rules of juridical interpretation. They are different in different men. They are different in the same men at different times. And when a strict interpretation of the Constitution, according to the fixed rules which govern the interpretation of laws, is abandoned, and the theoretical opinions of individuals are allowed to control its meaning, we have no longer a Constitution; we are under the government of individual men who, for the time being, have power to declare what the Constitution is according to their own views of what it ought to mean.” [ Dred Scott v. Sandford, 60 U.S. 393, 620-621 (1856) (J. <br />
Curtis, dissenting). <br />
<br />
He concluded that: “When such a method of <br />
interpretation of the Constitution obtains, in place of a <br />
republican Government, with limited and defined powers, we <br />
have a Government which is merely an exponent of the will of <br />
Congress; or, what in my opinion, would not be preferable, an <br />
exponent of the individual political opinions of the members of <br />
this court.” Id]<br />
<br />
==24 Claremont Institute's Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185038/20210727131748801_19-1392%20tsac%20CCJ.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment protects against deprivation “life, liberty, or property.” In the abortion rights cases, this Court has focused on “liberty.” [of moms.] The real issue, however, is life. [of babes.] Life is a natural right endowed by our Creator and is the first unalienable right recognized in the Declaration of Independence. ...The duty of government to protect life is at the center of the nation’s first legal document. <br />
<br />
==25 22 State Policy Organizations==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185004/20210727112957999_Dobbs%20Amici%20brief_FPC_%207.23.21.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
22 State Policy Organizations <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The positivistic [materialistic – only physical things are real] reduction of persons represented by the Court’s abortion decisions has leavened the law in a way that curtails historic State policies grounded in deference to a given human nature and the common law rights that correspond to that nature. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">By purporting to leave the question of the meaning of persons in the Fourteenth Amendment unanswered, this Court’s holdings requiring States to abandon common and natural law commitments have effectively ratified a diminished view of the human person in law. These holdings have foisted upon the States a denatured anthropological model that prohibits them from ascribing objective meaning, dignity, and value to vulnerable persons. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The severe distortion of the human person in constitutional caselaw invites systemic effects well beyond the troubled context of abortion. If constitutional precept commands States to treat nascent human life as vacant of meaning and value apart from subjective individual determination or Court authorization, concurrently placed in doubt is the historic understanding of law as constrained by a reality prior to and beyond its coercive impositions. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">A national abortion-enablement policy is mournful in itself, but does not keep to itself. It corrodes the law altogether. [http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185004/20210727112957999_Dobbs Amici brief_FPC_ 7.23.21.pdf] <br />
<br />
==26 Connie Weiskopf and Kristine L. Brown==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185063/20210727174713396_FINAL_Brown_Weiskopf_Dobbs_Amicus.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The sophistry at the heart of Roe is that the beginning of human life was ever a subject for speculation ...There was no doubt at the time of the Fourteenth Amendment as to whether the common definition of “person” included preborn persons. One-hundred and fifty years since, medical science has overwhelmingly confirmed this commonly understood inclusion of preborn persons in legal personhood. ...no other so-called constitutional right involves the “the purposeful termination of a potential life.” Yet even in Harris, we see the poison of Roe in the qualifier “potential.” ...By choosing Levy v. Louisiana, 391 U.S. 68 (1968) as the test for legal personhood, this Court can reach a new milestone in the advancement of human rights. ...The Court started from the premise that “illegitimate children are not ‘nonpersons,’” insofar as they are “humans, live, and have their being.” Levy 391 U.S. at 70 (emphasis added). Thus all children who 1)are human, 2) are living, and 3) are in being, are “clearly” persons under the Equal Protection Clause. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">As Justice Gorsuch wrote in his Ramos concurrence, “stare decisis isn’t supposed to be the art of methodically ignoring what everyone knows to be true.” Ramos v. Louisiana, 590 U.S. __, __ (2020) (slip op. at 23). [http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185063/20210727174713396_FINAL_Brown_Weiskopf_Dobbs_Amicus.pdf]<br />
<br />
==27 Professor Kurt T. Lash==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185028/20210727125456897_19-1392%20tsac%20Lash.pdf Filed July 27, 2021] ZZZZZZZZZZZZZ<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113 (1973), the Supreme Court ruled that...“We feel...This right of privacy...[is] founded in the Fourteenth Amendment’s concept of personal liberty and restrictions upon state action [while] the District Court determined [it is founded] in the Ninth Amendment’s reservation of rights to the people....” . In Planned Parenthood v. Casey, 505 U.S. 883 (1992), a plurality...once again cit[ed] the Fourteenth Amendment and the Ninth Amendment...s. The Ninth Amendment, both at the time of its adoption and now, preserves the people’s retained right to local self-government. It cannot properly be read as a source of authority to deny the rights of local self-government. The Fourteenth Amendment protects substantive rights against the states, '''but only those previously enumerated, thus leaving all unenumerated rights under the authority of the people of the several states''' as a matter of constitutional right. This includes the non-enumerated subject of abortion.<br />
<br />
[Substantive definition: it exists independently, not subordinate to anything; for example not owing its existence to any law or constitution. Enumerated definition: rights named in the Constitution, like freedom of speech and religion.]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....In sum, at the threshold of the Civil War, moderate Republicans (who, according to Foner, “held the balance of power within the Republican Party,” Foner, FREE SOIL, at 205) had no intention of abandoning constitutional federalism or reinterpreting the Ninth and Tenth Amendments. These Republicans believed that the slave holding southern states had fallen away from the original federalist principles of the Constitution and had continuously violated the personal rights enumerated in the Bill of Rights. See Michael Kent Curtis, FREE SPEECH, “THE PEOPLE’S DARLING PRIVILEGE”: STRUGGLES FOR FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION IN AMERICAN HISTORY 266-70 (2000). The Republicans who framed and advanced the Fourteenth Amendment sought only to enforce those original rights while maintaining the basic principles of constitutional federalism announced in provisions like the Ninth and Tenth Amendments. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">...II. The Fourteenth Amendment neither enforces unenumerated substantive rights against the states nor alters the federalist meaning of the Ninth Amendment.<br />
A. John Bingham, primary draftsman of Section One of the Fourteenth Amendment, sought to apply enumerated constitutional rights against the states while preserving the structural principles of constitutional federalism declared in the Ninth and Tenth Amendments.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">...Consistent with his continued belief in the reserved rights of the states over all unenumerated subjects, Bingham proposed a constitutional amendment that would enforce the first eight amendments in the Bill of Rights against the states but leave the substance of all unenumerated rights under the control of the people in the States.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....None of Bingham’s Republican colleagues in the Thirty-Ninth Congress objected to the idea of enforcing the Bill of Rights against the states. Some members, however, worried that the wording in Bingham’s initial draft might empower Congress to define what counted as federally enforceable “privileges and immunities.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Republican Giles Hotchkiss suggested he would support an amendment that clearly announced “a constitutional right that cannot be wrested from any class of citizens, or from the citizens of any State by mere legislation. But this amendment proposes to leave it to the caprice of Congress.” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....As Bingham explained three years after the ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment: Mr. Speaker, that the scope and meaning of the limitations imposed by the first section, fourteenth amendment of the Constitution may be more fully understood, permit me to say that the privileges and immunities of citizens of the United States, as contradistinguished from citizens of a State, are chiefly defined in the first eight amendments to the Constitution of the United States. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">...John Bingham’s fellow member on Joint Committee on Reconstruction, Michigan Senator Jacob Howard, also described Bingham’s Privileges or Immunities Clause in terms that involve only constitutionally enumerated rights. See Speech of Jacob Howard, May 23, 1866, in 2 Reconstruction Amendments, at 187-88.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In his speech introducing the Fourteenth Amendment to the Senate, Howard explained that the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States included the right of traveling citizens to receive equal treatment enumerated in Article IV’s Comity Clause (and described in antebellum cases like Corfield v. Coryell, 6 Fed. Cas. 546 (C.C.E.D. Pa. 1823)) as well as those rights “secured by the first eight amendments of the Constitution.” Id. at 188. Every single privilege or immunity listed by Howard in his extended speech involved a guarantee enumerated in the original Constitution. Howard’s speech is important: It was so widely read and republished that during the ratification debates speakers often referred to the proposed Fourteenth Amendment as “the Howard Amendment.” See, e.g., North Carolina House of Representatives, July 2, 1868 (“Mr. Seymour introduced the following resolution, ratifying the fourteenth article of the Constitution of the United States, the article known as the Howard Amendment.”), <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....C. The ratifying public was well informed of<br />
the speeches of John Bingham and Jacob<br />
Howard.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Unlike the secret proceedings of Philadelphia<br />
Constitutional Convention, the proceedings of the<br />
Thirty-Ninth Congress were public. Newspapers<br />
reported on the speeches and debates, often with<br />
verbatim transcripts, on a daily basis. See Introduction<br />
to the Collection, 1 Reconstruction Amendments, at ix.<br />
Bingham’s speeches of February 1866 were published<br />
in the New York Times,11 The New York Herald,12 The<br />
Vermont Watchman and State Journal,13 The<br />
Philadelphia Inquirer,14 and Philadelphia’s Illustrated<br />
New Age.15 Bingham himself published his February<br />
28, 1866 speech separately and distributed it as a<br />
campaign document. <br />
<br />
....In the<br />
Thirty-Ninth Congress, Pennsylvania Democrat<br />
Benjamin M. Boyer quoted the Ninth and Tenth<br />
Amendments as evidence that Congress had no right to<br />
“disfranchise the majority of the citizens of any State<br />
on account of their past participation in the rebellion.”17<br />
One finds similar Democrat references to the Ninth<br />
and Tenth Amendments throughout the Reconstruction<br />
debates. See, e.g., CONG. GLOBE, 41st Cong., 2d Sess.<br />
app. at 354 (1870) (remarks of Sen. William T.<br />
Hamilton) (quoting the Ninth and Tenth Amendments<br />
in support of a narrow reading of federal power).<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....As noted<br />
above, both John Bingham and Jacob Howard omitted<br />
the Ninth and Tenth Amendments from their list of<br />
constitutional rights protected by the Privileges or<br />
Immunities Clause, and instead expressly named the<br />
rights enumerated in the first eight amendments. As<br />
Bingham explained, “these eight articles I have shown<br />
never were limitations upon the power of the States,<br />
until made so by the fourteenth amendment.”<br />
<br />
....in the common<br />
Reconstruction-era understanding that the last two<br />
amendments in the Bill of Rights were distinguishable<br />
from the personal rights protected in the first eight.<br />
....y, there is no<br />
historical evidence that between the time of the<br />
<br />
18 Nor does it mean that states are not bound to respect the<br />
federalism principles of the Ninth and Tenth Amendments. See,<br />
e.g., New York v. United States, 488 U.S. 1041 (1992) (rejecting the<br />
idea that states can waive the Constitution’s federalist separation<br />
of powers represented by the Tenth Amendment). <br />
24<br />
Founding and Reconstruction a new consensus<br />
understanding of the Ninth Amendment had emerged<br />
which viewed the provision as a font of unenumerated<br />
personal rights that could be applied against the states.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....McDonald v. Chicago, 561 U.S. 742, 811, (2010)<br />
(Thomas, J., concurring in part and concurring in<br />
judgment) (“the Court has determined that the Due<br />
Process Clause applies rights against the States that<br />
are not mentioned in the Constitution at all, even<br />
without seriously arguing that the Clause was<br />
originally understood to protect such rights. See, e.g.,<br />
Lochner v. New York; Roe v. Wade.”) (cleaned up). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Nor could it. At the time of the Fourteenth<br />
Amendment, the term “due process of law” was<br />
“universally understood to guarantee individual rights<br />
of legal process that only courts could provide.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....In 1859,<br />
for example, John Bingham “invit[ed] attention to the<br />
significant fact that natural or inherent rights, which<br />
belong to all men irrespective of all conventional<br />
regulations, are by this constitution guaranteed by the<br />
broad and comprehensive word ‘person,’ as<br />
contradistinguished from the limited term citizen— as<br />
in the fifth article of amendments, guarding those<br />
sacred rights which are as universal and indestructible<br />
as the human race, that ‘no person shall be deprived of<br />
life, liberty, or property but by due process of law.’”<br />
Bingham, 1 Reconstruction Amendments, at 153-54.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">This made slavery the ultimate denial of Due Process<br />
as it deprived persons of life, liberty and property<br />
without any procedural protections whatsoever. <br />
.... McDonald v.<span style="color:red"><br />
Chicago, 561 U.S. 742, 811 (2010) (Thomas, J.,<br />
concurring in part and concurring in judgment) (This<br />
Court created the right to abortion based on an<br />
amorphous, unwritten right to privacy, which it<br />
grounded in the “legal fiction” of substantive due<br />
process.”). The Due Process Clause requires states to<br />
provide all persons critically important procedural<br />
rights [equal rights in court], but nothing more.<br />
....In The Slaughterhouse Cases, 83 U.S. 36 (1873), the<br />
Supreme Court rejected a claim by Louisiana butchers<br />
that a state-enacted monopoly violated, among other<br />
things, the Privileges or Immunities Clause of the<br />
Fourteenth Amendment....Since the right to pursue a local trade was neither an<br />
enumerated federal responsibility or enumerated<br />
federal right, the subject remained under the<br />
regulatory control of the people in the several states.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In support of his reading of the Fourteenth<br />
Amendment, Justice Miller relied on the basic<br />
principles of constitutional federalism. According to<br />
Miller, interpreting the Privileges or Immunities<br />
Clause as somehow nationalizing the unenumerated<br />
subjects of municipal regulation, especially when<br />
combined with the congressional enforcement powers<br />
granted by Section Five of the Fourteenth Amendment,<br />
would obliterate the federalist structure of the<br />
Constitution. Miller was unwilling to accept an<br />
interpretation that “radically changes the whole theory<br />
of the relations of the State and Federal governments<br />
to each other and of both these governments to the<br />
people . . . in the absence of language which expresses<br />
such a purpose too clearly to admit of doubt.”<br />
Slaughterhouse, 83 U.S. at 78.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In<br />
his 1871 Speech on the Enforcement Act, in words that<br />
anticipate Miller’s later opinion in Slaughterhouse,<br />
Bingham explained:<br />
Is it not clear that other and different privileges<br />
and immunities than those to which a citizen of<br />
a State was entitled are secured by the provision<br />
30<br />
of the fourteenth article, that no state shall<br />
abridge the privileges and immunities of citizens<br />
of the United States, which are defined in the<br />
eight articles of amendment, and which were not<br />
limitations on the power of the States before the<br />
fourteenth amendment made them limitations?<br />
Bingham, March 31, 1871, in 2 Reconstruction<br />
Amendments at 626.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Justice Miller also was correct to insist that the<br />
Fourteenth Amendment be interpreted in a manner<br />
consistent with the traditional understanding of<br />
constitutional federalism. Bingham himself had no<br />
intention to obliterate constitutional federalism and he<br />
insisted that his proposal imposed no rights upon<br />
states which they were not already constitutionally<br />
oath-bound to protect. Like other moderate<br />
Republicans in the Reconstruction Congress, Bingham<br />
valued constitutional federalism, describing it as “our<br />
dual system of Government by which our own<br />
American nationality and liberty have been established<br />
and maintained. I have always believed that the<br />
protection in time of peace within the States of all the<br />
rights of person and citizen was of the powers reserved<br />
to the States. And so I still believe.” Bingham, March<br />
9, 1866, in 2 Reconstruction Amendments at 140. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Finally, Miller was right to limit the privileges or<br />
immunities of citizens of the United States to those<br />
rights actually enumerated in one form or another in<br />
the federal Constitution. It had long been settled law<br />
that no state was permitted to make or enforce any law<br />
that conflicted or interfered with a proper exercise of<br />
enumerated federal power. See McCulloch v. Maryland,<br />
31<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">17 U.S. 316 (1819). The problem in the 1860s was the<br />
lack of federal power to enforce enumerated federal<br />
rights. As Bingham explained early in the debates of<br />
the Thirty-Ninth Congress, “it has been the want of the<br />
Republic that there was not an express grant of power<br />
in the Constitution to enable the whole people of every<br />
State, by congressional enactment, to enforce obedience<br />
to these requirements of the Constitution.” Bingham,<br />
February 26, 1866, in 2 Reconstruction Amendments at<br />
100. '''Although Miller does not expressly declare that<br />
the Privileges or Immunities Clause applied the first<br />
eight amendments against the states, Miller does name<br />
enumerated First Amendment rights as protected<br />
“privileges or immunities.” Nothing in his opinion<br />
closes the door on incorporation of the Bill of Rights.'''<br />
See, Lash, THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT, at 252-65.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">'''That door was erroneously closed in a later case,<br />
Cruikshank v. United States''', 92 U.S. 542 (1876). Id. at<br />
265; see also McDonald v. Chicago, 561 U.S. 742, 808<br />
(2010) (Thomas, J. concurring).<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">United States, by the consent of the people of the<br />
United States, with the power to enforce the bill of<br />
32<br />
rights as it stands in the Constitution today.” Bingham,<br />
in 2 Reconstruction Amendments at 109.<br />
No moderate Republican in or out of Congress in the<br />
1860s would have approved of a constitutional<br />
amendment that bound the states to enforce an<br />
undefined set of substantive rights and gave Congress<br />
the power the nationalize the same. This includes the<br />
otherwise unenumerated “right to abortion.”<br />
<br />
==28 Robin Pierucci, M.D., and Life Legal Defense Foundation==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185034/20210727130751481_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20Robin%20Pierucci%20MD%20and%20Life%20Legal%20Defense%20Foundation.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
A very different “logical and biological” <br />
conclusion about constitutional rights could be <br />
drawn from the definition of viability: <br />
After viability, when a human being is <br />
capable of meaningful life outside the <br />
mother’s womb, the State must, consistent <br />
with its obligations under the Fourteenth <br />
Amendment, protect this human from being <br />
deliberately killed to the same extent it <br />
protects older human beings. <br />
<br />
Such a conclusion is at least as, and likely more, <br />
plausible than Roe’s declaration that only after the <br />
unborn child could survive outside the womb, a <br />
state may, or may not, prohibit his or her <br />
deliberate destruction, subject to broad exceptions <br />
effectively gutting even this limited permission. <br />
<br />
....These scholars recognize that establishing <br />
the principle of Fourteenth Amendment personhood <br />
for the unborn does not dictate a single, judicially#imposed result for all states, all statutes, or all <br />
pregnancies. Paulsen, at 70 (“That the word <br />
‘person,’ as used in the Constitution in the Fifth <br />
and Fourteenth Amendments, is broad enough to <br />
embrace living but unborn humans does not itself <br />
say anything specific about what the precise legal <br />
regime must be with respect to abortion”); Finnis, <br />
Born and Unborn: Answering Objections to <br />
Constitutional Personhood, First Things, April 9, <br />
<br />
....Whatever abortion restrictions may (or may <br />
not) exist on paper, because of the flexibility of this <br />
Court’s jurisprudence, abortion providers across the <br />
country advertise their services for later abortions: <br />
beyond 20 weeks, beyond 24 weeks, beyond 28 <br />
weeks, beyond 32 weeks. See Appendix. The <br />
audience for these advertisements and websites is <br />
not doctors who have unexpectedly diagnosed a <br />
dangerous condition in a pregnant woman. These <br />
advertisements are direct-to-consumer marketing <br />
of Roe- and Casey-sanctioned abortions <br />
indistinguishable from infanticide.<br />
<br />
e. Additionally, the <br />
viability threshold for a compelling state interest in <br />
preserving human life, created by this Court in <br />
1973, should be abandoned in favor of the medically <br />
updated and philosophically consistent standard of <br />
an “unqualified” interest in protecting life that this <br />
Court upheld in the 1990 case of Cruzan<br />
<br />
==29 Priests for Life==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185032/20210727130517073_19-1392%20tsac%20Priests%20for%20Life.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
Indeed, Priests for Life urges the Court to use this opportunity to end the charade that Roe v. Wade was correctly decided. This fateful decision has no legitimate foundation in law, it continues to tear at the fabric of our nation, and it has corrupted our judicial system. It is time for it to go ....<br />
<br />
In 1868, when the<br />
Fourteenth Amendment was ratified, a majority<br />
of the States and numerous Territories had laws<br />
on the books that limited (and in many cases<br />
nearly prohibited) abortion. See id., at 175, n.1. <br />
<br />
It would no doubt shock the public at that time<br />
to learn that one of the new constitutional<br />
Amendments contained hidden within the<br />
interstices of its text a right to abortion. <span style="color:red">The<br />
fact that it took this Court over a century to find<br />
that right all but proves that it was more than<br />
hidden—it simply was not (and is not) there.<br />
June Med. Servs. L.L.C. v. Russo, 140 S. Ct. 2103,<br />
2142, 2151 (2020) (Thomas, J., dissenting).<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">When deciding Roe v. Wade, this Court infamously<br />
stated:<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">We need not resolve the difficult question of<br />
when life begins. When those trained in the<br />
respective disciplines of medicine, philosophy,<br />
and theology are unable to arrive at any<br />
consensus, the judiciary, at this point in the<br />
development of man’s knowledge, is not in a<br />
position to speculate as to the answer.<br />
5<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113, 159 (1973). Consistent with<br />
this veiled philosophical pronouncement—a<br />
pronouncement grounded in secular positivism—a<br />
majority of the justices concluded that the U.S.<br />
Constitution “does not define ‘person,’” leading the<br />
Court to ultimately conclude that “the word ‘person,’ as<br />
used in the Fourteenth Amendment, does not include<br />
the unborn.” Id. at 158. <br />
<br />
Remarkably, the Court dismissed the life of the<br />
unborn based on its conclusion that there is no direct<br />
textual support to conclude that this “person” is<br />
protected by the Fourteenth Amendment. Yet, this<br />
same Court created a right to abortion “out of whole<br />
cloth, without a shred of support from the<br />
Constitution’s text.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Court’s ruling in Roe v. Wade is similar to how<br />
the Court had previously concluded in the infamous<br />
Dred Scott decision (Dred Scott v. Sandford, 60 US 393<br />
(1857)) that people of color were not legal “persons” as<br />
a matter of federal constitutional law. Unfortunately,<br />
it took a civil war to correct this injustice.<br />
<br />
[Actually Dred Scott called slaves a “class of persons”, but persons without rights. And although they are persons, they are not “people of the United States”: <br />
“The words "people of the United States" and "citizens" are synonymous terms, and mean the same thing. They both describe the political body who, according to our republican institutions, form the sovereignty and who hold the power and conduct the Government through their representatives. They are what we familiarly call the "sovereign people," and every citizen is one of this people, and a constituent member of this sovereignty. The question before us is whether the class of persons described in the plea in abatement compose a portion of this people, and are constituent members of this sovereignty? We think they are not,”<br />
<br />
...6. The only two clauses in the Constitution which point to this race treat them as persons whom it was morally lawfully to deal in as articles of property and to hold as slaves.<br />
<br />
...8. A State, by its laws passed since the adoption of the Constitution, may put a foreigner or any other description of persons upon a footing with its own citizens as to all the rights and privileges enjoyed by them within its dominion and by its laws. But that will not make him a citizen of the United States, nor entitle him to sue in its courts, nor to any of the privileges and immunities of a citizen in another State.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">...It is very true that, in that portion of the Union where the labor of the negro race was found to be unsuited to the climate and unprofitable to the master, but few slaves were held at the time of the Declaration of Independence, and when the Constitution was adopted, it had entirely worn out in one of them, and measures had been taken for its gradual abolition in several others. But this change had not been produced by any change of opinion in relation to this race, but because it was discovered from experience that slave labor was unsuited to the climate and productions of these States, for some of the States where it had ceased or nearly ceased to exist were actively engaged in the slave trade, procuring cargoes on the coast of Africa and transporting them for sale to those parts of the Union where their labor was found to be profitable and suited to the climate and productions.]<br />
<br />
==30 Hannah S., John S. and Marlene S==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185061/20210727165822368_41029%20pdf%20Parker%20II.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
The story of this “adoption” and this Amici Curiae Brief will reveal that Roe’s measuring line for viability has now been moved all the way back to fertilization by the modern scientific advancement called in vitro fertilization. Roe, at 160, has this viability definition: “ ‘viable,’ . . . potentially able to live outside the mother’s <br />
womb, albeit with artificial aid.”<br />
<br />
Advances in science have eliminated the distinction between previability and viability. Previability prohibitions on elective abortions should be constitutional because viability occurs at fertilization, as proven through in vitro fertilization techniques. <br />
<br />
==31 Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185155/20210728163153060_Amici%20Brief%20of%20CMP-Daleiden.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Federal law recognizes human infants in utero, and premature infants born alive, as persons under the law at any gestational age. The federal Unborn Victims of Violence Act recognizes the “child in utero” as “a member of the species homo sapiens, at any stage of development, who is carried in the womb” whose death or injury in the course of a federal crime is subject to prosecution the same as that of any born child or adult individual. 18 U.S.C. § 1841(d), (a)(1). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The federal Born Alive Infants Protection Act establishes even more broadly that, for purposes of “any Act of Congress” and “any ruling, regulation, or interpretation of the various administrative bureaus and agencies of the United States,” “the words ‘person’, ‘human being’, ‘child’, and ‘individual’, shall include every infant member of the species homo sapiens who is born alive at any stage of development.” 1 U.S.C. § 8 (a).<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Even prior to the ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment, this Court acknowledged that the word “person” in law was a term designed to include all of humanity. In United States v. Palmer, 16 U.S. 610 (1818), Chief Justice Marshall explained that “every human being” and “the whole human race” was included in the words “person or persons” in federal law. Id. at 631–32. And in Levy v. Louisiana, 391 U.S. 68 (1968), this Court articulated a simple test for ensuring equal protection for marginalized persons, reasoning that so-called “illegitimate” children were not “non-persons” as they were “humans, live, and have their being,” and therefore, “clearly ‘persons’ within the meaning of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.” Id. at 70. <br />
<br />
==32 European Legal Scholars in support of neither party==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185153/2021072 8162714090_European%20Legal%20Scholars%20Amici%20Brief.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
The European Court allows States a wide margin <br />
of appreciation to determine the starting point of the <br />
right to life in their domestic law and to formulate <br />
their laws on abortion. Consistent with this, the <br />
European Court has held that the Convention does not <br />
confer a right to abortion and has recognized as <br />
compatible with a Member State’s obligations under <br />
the Convention even very restrictive abortion laws. <br />
However, in several cases the European Court has <br />
found violations of the Convention in respect of <br />
individual applicants as a result of procedural <br />
deficiencies in the way national abortion laws have <br />
been given effect.<br />
<br />
.....The Court previously has considered European law when interpreting the Constitution. See, e.g., Roper v. Simmons, 543 U.S. 551, 575 (2005) (considering certain foreign law “instructive” when interpreting the Eighth Amendment); Lawrence v. Texas, 539 U.S. 558, 560 (2003) (discussing the European Court’s reasoning when interpreting the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment); Atkins v. Virginia, 536 U.S. 304, 316 n.21 (2002) (resorting to other countries’ views on capital punishment for the mentally ill). To be sure, the propriety of doing so is disputed. See, e.g., Roper, 543 U.S. at 627–28 (Scalia, J., dissenting); Lawrence, 539 U.S. at 598 (Scalia, J., dissenting); Atkins, 536 U.S. at 322–28 (Rehnquist, C.J., dissenting). But the fact that the very same source of European law this Court previously invoked also allows prohibitions on abortion admits of no serious dispute. Roper, 543 U.S. at 563; Atkins, 536 U.S. at 313–14. <br />
<br />
....Amici, accordingly, wish to highlight relevant abortion jurisprudence from the European Court that may prove helpful to this Court. Specifically, the European Court has a body of case law weighing abortion laws against human rights standards. This case law addresses issues comparable to those faced by the Court, including the scope of the right to privacy and the interests and rights that may legitimately be balanced against such a right by the state when regulating or restricting abortion.<br />
<br />
1.Member States may protect human life before birth through national law. The European Court has identified several rights and interests justifying such laws. These include protecting the right to life of the unborn, the legitimate interest of society in limiting the number of abortions, and the interests of society to protect morals. 2.The European Court has held that the Convention does not confer a right to abortion. 3.The compatibility with the Convention of Member States’ laws on abortion is primarily assessed by reference to Article 2 (“Right to life”) and Article 8 (“Right to respect for private and family life”) of the Convention. 4.The European Court has not determined whether the unborn child is a person for the purposes of Article 2 of the Convention. The European Court has not interpreted Article 2 as prohibiting States from making abortion legal; it instead interprets Article 2 as allowing States a margin of appreciation to determine the starting point of the right to life in their domestic law. 5.Legislation regulating the termination of pregnancy touches upon the sphere of a woman’s private life and thus may come within the scope of Article 8. But the European Court has also consistently recognized that Member States have a wide margin of appreciation under the Convention with respect to the regulation of abortion. <br />
<br />
6.Consistent with the foregoing, the European Court has recognized as compatible with a Member State’s obligations under the Convention even very restrictive abortion laws, including a national law prohibiting abortion at all stages of pregnancy and for any reason other than where there was a risk to the life (including by way of suicide) of the expectant mother. <br />
<br />
7.While acknowledging that it is the task of an individual Member State to frame its own abortion law, the European Court has found that it follows from its responsibility under Article 19 of the Convention to supervise whether any such law constitutes a proportionate balancing of the competing interests involved. <br />
<br />
8.The European Court has not relied upon any concept of the viability of the “foetus”3 as a basis for assessing the compatibility of Member States’ abortion laws with the Convention. <br />
9.In several cases, the European Court has found that Member States have violated the Article 8 rights of claimants seeking to access abortion services permitted under national law as a result of deficiencies in the way the national law has been given effect. These have included deficiencies in the arrangements for conscientious objection by healthcare providers or deficiencies in the processes for establishing whether the conditions under national 3 The European Court uses the terms “foetus” and “unborn child” interchangeably. See Vo v. France, 2004-VIII Eur. Ct. H.R. 67, 109; A, B & C v. Ireland, 2010-VI Eur. Ct. H.R. 185, 261. (“ABC”). 6 law for a lawful abortion have been satisfied by a claimant in a particular case. <br />
<br />
==33 396 State Legislators from 41 States==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185121/20210728125120809_Dobbs%20Amici%20brief_State%20Legislators_07272021.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
[This brief tackles 2 issues: power of ''Congress'' to correct state slights to the people’s rights. Second, the power of ''states'' to protect rights. It addresses a Problem, when an ''un''enumerated [not specified in the Constitution] right, abortion, is at the expense of an ''enumerated'' right, Life. <br />
<br />
[This brief shows Section 5 authority embedded in natural law way before 1868. Not just Congress but states. Courts have zero jurisdiction to enforce unenumerated rights like abortion, but full authority and inescapable responsibility to enforce enumerated rights like Life. Couldn’t a red state sue a blue state for slaughtering its people?] <br />
<br />
9 The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.[7] <br />
Wikipedia: addresses rights, retained by the people, that are not specifically enumerated in the Constitution. <br />
<br />
10 The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.[6]<br />
<br />
<br />
[Even if Section 5 of the 14th Amendment DIDN'T give Congress authority to define and enforce rights:]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red"> State legislators have the constitutional duty, and therefore the power, to protect the fundamental, civil rights of persons. The fundamental law in which those fundamental rights are found is the common law, which consists of both natural duties and those ancient, customary rights and immunities that are foundational to ordered liberty. Thus, a state legislature must declare and secure to all persons within the protection of its laws the rights that those persons have by natural and customary law. Cf. Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 U.S. 702, 721-22 (1997) (upholding state legislation that prohibited assisted suicide and reasoning that the Fourteenth Amendment’s “Due Process Clause specially protects those fundamental rights and liberties which are, objectively, ‘deeply rooted in this Nation’s history and tradition’.” (quoting Moore v. E. Cleveland, 431 U. S. 494, 503 (1977)). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England (1765): “Hence,” he said, “it follows, that the first and primary end of human laws is to '''maintain and regulate these absolute rights of individuals.'''” Id. Blackstone taught that the legislative power is to declare existing common-law rights and duties and to remedy any defects in the legal security for those rights. Id. at *42-43, 52-58, 86-87 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Founders echoed this view in the Declaration of Independence, declaring that '''governments are instituted among men in order to secure the inalienable rights with which human beings are endowed by nature and nature’s God.''' They also accused the crown and Parliament of infringing the rights of “our constitution,” which in 1776 could only have been a reference to the common-law constitution of British North America. This view predicated the Constitution of the United States, which expressly secures natural rights, such as life and religious liberty, and common-law rights, such as jury trials and freedom from the quartering of soldiers in one’s home, and expressly disclaims any intent to disparage the other rights of the fundamental law. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Indeed, '''the point of having legislatures, executives, and courts is to secure the rights that Americans already have.''' Neither state legislatures nor the Constitution of the United States create those rights. See District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570, 592 (2008) (stating that “it has always been widely understood that <span style="color:red">the Second Amendment, like the First and Fourth Amendments, codified a preexisting right,” that it “is not a right granted by the Constitution,” and is not “in any manner dependent upon that instrument for its existence.”). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Some, but not all, of the rights of natural persons are enumerated [listed] in the Constitution''' of the United States and its amendments. U.S. Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 8.; art. IV, §2; amends. I-VIII. '''Others are enumerated in state constitutions.''' See e.g., Soc’y for the Propagation of the Gospel v. Wheeler, 22 F. Cas. 756, 766 (No. 13,156) (C.C.D.N.H. 1814). Still others are declared in American constitutions but not enumerated. U.S. Const. amend. IX (“The enumeration of certain rights herein shall not be construed to deny or disparage other rights retained by the people.”) (emphasis added). '''State legislatures have a duty to declare and secure all fundamental rights, both enumerated and unenumerated.''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Fundamental rights are those that persons enjoy by fundamental law—natural law and common law— with or without any written constitution. Because the common law includes natural rights, to understand the fundamental rights declared and secured by the Constitution, it is sufficient to look to the common law, especially as explained by William Blackstone. Established common-law doctrines constitute the best evidence of the existence and meaning of both enumerated and unenumerated, fundamental rights. Jeffrey D. Jackson, Blackstone’s Ninth Amendment: A Historical Common Law Baseline for the Interpretation of Unenumerated Rights, 62 Okla. L. Rev. 167 (2010) (explaining why the unenumerated rights referred to in the Ninth Amendment should be understood with reference to a common law baseline, especially as specified in Blackstone’s Commentaries); Adam J. MacLeod, Our Universal and Particular Constitution, Public Discourse, https://www.thepublicdiscourse.com/2018/10/43788/ (October 4, 2018). <span style="color:red">“The interpretation of the Constitution of the United States is necessarily influenced by the fact that its provisions are framed in the language of the English common law, and are to be read in the light of its history.” Smith v. Alabama, 124 U.S. 465, 478 (1888). The terms and concepts of the common law provided the “the nomenclature of which the framers of the Constitution were familiar.” Minor v. Happersett, 88 U.S. (21 Wall) 162, 167 (1875). Accord James R. Stoner, Jr., Common-Law Liberty: Rethinking American Constitutionalism 9-29 (2003). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">American constitutional rights are not philosophical abstractions. They are described in detail in common law treatises, such as those by Coke and Hale, and especially Blackstone’s Commentaries. The framers crafted American constitutions—state and federal—in common law terms. And Blackstone was their teacher and lexicographer. <br />
<br />
Morris L. Cohen, Thomas Jefferson Recommends a Course of Law Study, 1119 U. Pa. L. Rev. 823 (1971); Robert A. Ferguson, Law and Letters in American Culture 11 (1984); Albert W. Alschuler, Rediscovering Blackstone, 145 U. Pa. L. Rev. 1 (1996); R.H. Helmholz, Natural Law in Court: A History of Legal Theory in Practice 131–41 (2015). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">As this Court has rightly acknowledged, Blackstone’s “works constituted the preeminent authority on English law for the founding generation.” Alden v. Maine, 527 U.S. 706, 715 (1999). Blackstone retained his influence through the adoption of the Civil War Amendments. James M. Ogden, Lincoln’s Early Impressions of the Law in Indiana, 7 Notre Dame L. Rev. 325, 328 (1932). And this Court continues to turn to Blackstone today. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">[2 A few examples from recent years include Gamble v. United States, __ U.S. __, 139 S. Ct. 1960 (2019) (the Court’s opinion, the concurrence, and one dissent citing Blackstone multiple times to determine the meaning of the phrase “the same offense” in the Fifth Amendment’s double jeopardy clause); Department of Homeland Security v. Thuraissigiam, __ U.S. __, 140 S. Ct. 1959, 1969 (2020) (calling Blackstone’s Commentaries a “satisfactory exposition of the common law of England”); Ramos v. Louisiana, __ U.S. __, 140 S. Ct. 1390, 1395 (2020) (citing Blackstone in explanation of the holding that the requirement of juror unanimity is “a vital right protected by the common law” and therefore the Constitution’s jury trial guarantee); Torres v. Madrid, __ U.S. __, 141 S. Ct. 989, 996, 997, 998, 1000 (2021) (citing Blackstone multiple times to determine meaning of Fourth Amendment “seizure”). ]<br />
<br />
...emphasis added). The legislature’s particular duty to declare and secure the natural and customary rights of America’s fundamental common law can be seen clearly by reading together the Ninth, Tenth, and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution of the United States. The Bill of Rights marks off certain rights as beyond the competence of Congress (and now, by incorporation, the states) to alter or abolish. It immunizes those rights by enumerating them and by stating in particular terms the official duties with which they correlate. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">But as the Ninth Amendment makes clear, the enumeration of certain common-law rights does not deny or disparage all the other rights that the American people enjoy by virtue of natural law and their ancient customs. The Ninth Amendment expressly reserves to the people those civil and fundamental rights that they enjoyed prior to ratification, which are their natural rights, other common-law rights and liberties, and some privileges enumerated in state constitutions. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Because many states refused to remedy infringements of fundamental rights [for blacks] prior to the Civil War, the Fourteenth Amendment was necessary to ensure to all persons due process of law and the equal protection of the laws, and to empower Congress to remedy infringements of those rights. It bears emphasis that <span style="color:red">the Fourteenth Amendment was necessary to recall state legislatures to their original task. '''Far from repealing the people’s retention of fundamental rights declared by the Ninth Amendment, the Fourteenth Amendment strengthened it'''. And far from abrogating the duty of state legislatures to declare and secure unenumerated rights, the Fourteenth Amendment reinforced that duty. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">[That is, the rights retained by the people but not protected by their state, such as the right of Blacks to liberty, was strengthened – at the expense of the freedom of the legislature to torpedo those rights. And the 14th Amendment did not supplant the duty of legislatures to protect rights, by courts, but rather that duty became enforceable by Congress.]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Legislatures are equipped to deliberate about and secure the rights of all persons as they identify and specify the boundaries between rights. <br />
<br />
See Grégoire Webber et al, Legislated Rights: Securing Human Rights through Legislation (2018). Many of the great civil rights achievements in American history have been legislative achievements. See, e.g., the Civil Rights Act of 1866, Civil Rights Act of 1875, and the Civil Rights Act of 1964. And these include state statutes that declare and secure common law rights against unreasonable discrimination. ....<br />
<br />
This Court has never denied that state legislatures have the power and duty to declare and specify the boundaries of fundamental rights in the abortion context. To the contrary, this Court has ratified the legislative province to identify, specify, and secure the rights of our fundamental law. Often using the term “interests” or “state interests,” ....<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In many respects, legislatures are better equipped for this task than courts, whose job is to secure the rights of the litigants who happen to appear in any case or controversy. The job of a court is to specify a right in a legal judgment resolving a dispute between two parties. To generalize that particular judgment, to make that right universal and absolute for all persons, carries the risk that the tribunal will unintentionally invite infringement of the rights of persons who are not parties to the litigation. Significantly, most constitutional abortion cases proceed without any involvement of the persons who are most interested in, and affected by, the outcome: expectant mothers, fathers, grandparents, physicians and other health care professionals who are called to deal with the fallout of abortions, and, critically, unborn human beings. By contrast, legislatures hear evidence and find facts about the rights of all interested persons <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Furthermore, a lawmaker must fashion remedies and sanctions for rights infringements that are commensurate and responsive to the particular wrong. Because not all persons who contribute to a person’s death are equally culpable, legislatures justly distinguish between them. The sanction for reckless acts that cause death need not be as severe as the sanction for intentional homicide. Legislatures also reasonably take into account the circumstances of the person whose life is lost. For example, remedies for wrongful death may take into account a person’s stage of development and relationship to any dependents. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....For example, the right to life remains inviolable and absolute though a legislature may choose to sanction those who are most culpable for its deprivation and not others <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Similarly, state legislatures have long recognized that abortionists are the true, culpable parties in an abortion. Mothers are often victims of coercion. And mothers suffer the consequences of the abortion procedure itself. For these and other reasons, legislatures may choose not to impose legal sanctions on them, notwithstanding that their unborn children have a right to live. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Roe Court failed to understand this. The Court looked to state laws that impose criminal sanctions on abortionists, rather than on the mothers themselves, and then erroneously inferred that the law is indifferent to the lives of the unborn. Roe, 410 U.S. at 157 n.54. ...<br />
<br />
[Many prolifers similarly misunderstood]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">That a right is absolute means simply that it is vested—in jurisprudential terms, that it has built into it an immunity from retrospective or retroactive abrogation—so that governments are powerless to deprive any person of the right unless and until the person has been proven to have forfeited the right by committing some wrong, and that the wrong has been established in some proceeding that satisfies the requirements of due process, or until the person dies a natural death. Id. at *125, 128-30. <br />
<br />
,,,,the right to life is a right not to be intentionally killed. It is not a guarantee against death ‘<br />
<br />
==34 141 International Legal Scholars==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185170/20210729071535904_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20141%20International%20Legal%20Scholars.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Not even foreign legal authorities support any right to abortion. 141 International Legal Scholars submitted an amicus brief in the Dobbs v. Jackson case declaring that “Whatever role international law plays in evaluating abortion regulations in the United States, it offers no basis for the existence of a human right to abortion.” (http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185170/20210729071535904_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20141%20International%20Legal%20Scholars.pdf) “The minority of States that choose to allow elective abortion impose a standard gestational limit of twelve weeks, which is more restrictive than Mississippi’s Gestational Age Act.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“If the Court chooses to consult international law in this case, it will find there is no treaty that recognizes a so-called human right to abortion, nor has such a right been established through customary law. To the contrary, the practice across all regions demonstrates a consistent State prerogative to protect unborn life. Nor has any international court declared the existence of an international right to abortion, even in regions with the most permissive abortion regimes. Thirdparty actors seeking to invent a new right to abortion err when interpreting key international instruments, such as the Convention on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women, the Rome Statute, and the International Conference on Population and Development. The clear language in those documents defies any attempt to repurpose them to create an international human right to abortion. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“On the other hand, provisions recognizing the unborn child as a rights-holder can be found in many international human rights instruments, including the American Convention on Human Rights, the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. Most States choose to exercise the prerogative to protect unborn life by regulating abortion much more strictly than in the United States. Even in the minority of States that permit elective abortions, most specify a gestational limit of twelve weeks. That limit is more restrictive than Mississippi’s Gestational Age Act, which allows elective abortion until fifteen weeks’ gestation, and then permits abortion only for medical emergencies or severe fetal abnormality.”<br />
<br />
<br />
==35 Prolife Center at the University of St. Thomas==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185177/20210729085125572_DOCKET%2019-1392%20BRIEF%20AMICUS%20CURIAE%20OF%20THE%20PROLIFE%20CENTER%20AT%20THE%20UNIVERISTY%20OF%20ST.%20THOMAS%20IN%20SUPPORT%20OF%20PETITIONERS.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
The Court should make clear that the States are not required to permit abortions for reasons relating to the mental or psychological health of the pregnant woman, or for undefined reasons of health, either of which would lead the Court, and the country, back to a regime of abortion–on–demand.<br />
<br />
==36 Mary Kay Bacallao Advocating for Unborn Children==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185109/20210728121621904_19-1392%20Brief%20Amicus%20Curiae.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">It is time to extend to unborn children the equal protection and due process rights they enjoyed in Mississippi until the Roe Court made an elementary grammar error, using a phrase that conferred citizenship in one clause to define personhood for other clauses. It is time to correct the Roe Court’s error in refusing to determine when life began and in the same stroke of the pen stripping the unborn of their personhood, citing the very amendment that codified the right of all persons, born and unborn, to equal protection and due process. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">THE ROE COURT MISINTERPRETED THE MEANING OF THE WORD “PERSON” AS FOUND IN THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT. The Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution3 includes the following three references to persons: <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">[1.] “All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.” <br />
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<span style="color:red">[2.] “No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law;” <br />
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<span style="color:red">[3.] “nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Here, in looking at statutory construction cannons such as noscitur a sociis, which means, “it is known by its companions,” the meaning of the word “persons” can only be ascertained by its associates. In the first instance, “persons” is being modified by “born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">3 U.S. Const. amend. XIV (adopted July 9, 1868) Text: All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">jurisdiction thereof…” Here, “persons” is a general term that is being limited at least by two conditions, either “born” or “naturalized.” In this instance, the Fourteenth Amendment limits the type of persons who can be citizens to those either born or naturalized in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof. <br />
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<span style="color:red">In the second instance, no “person” shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law, where “person” is used generally, unmodified by “born” or “naturalized, etc.” Here “citizens” as defined in the first instance is separate and distinct from “person” found in the second part of the sentence. The second use of “person” is unmodified. These persons are not necessarily citizens, nor does it follow that they must necessarily be “born.” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In the third instance, “any person” is also unmodified by either “born” or “naturalized, etc.” In other words, “person” is not limited to a person “born” or “naturalized in the United States,” rather, the term “person” is again unmodified and used in the general sense. Thus, where the second use of the term “person” prohibits a State from depriving a person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law, “person” is used generally rather than in the context of being “born.” Additionally, where the third use of the term “person” does not allow a State to deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws, again, “person” is unmodified. This does not limit protection to “persons born or naturalized in the United States…” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">To assert that one word, such as “born,” that is used in a single line to limit a general term, such as “person,” in one provision also limits that same general term, in this case “person,” each time it occurs 5 is linguistically incorrect. It is the same as saying that because one line refers to a black cat, all other times the word cat appears it can only refer to cats that are black. This is not the way language works. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">There is no evidence that the original meaning of person was limited to those who were born. Rather, the corpus evidence found in COHA, the Hansard Corpus, and the Corpus of U.S. Supreme Opinions point to the unborn as persons, legally able to inherit property and in need of protection. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Roe court did not resolve the question of when life begins, “We need not resolve the difficult question of when life begins. When those trained in the respective disciplines of medicine, philosophy, and theology are unable to arrive at any consensus, the judiciary, at this point in the development of man’s knowledge, is not in a position to speculate as to the answer.”4 However, the Roe Court maintained that “… the word ‘person,’ as used in the Fourteenth Amendment, does not include the unborn.”5 The Roe Court used faulty linguistics in determining that someone unborn was not a ‘person’ as used in second and third parts of the Fourteenth Amendment. In the first use of person, ‘born’ modifies or limits the meaning of ‘person,’ not the other way around. The Roe Court did not use proper linguistic interpretation of the text of the Fourteenth Amendment when limiting its interpretation of the second and third references to persons as those who were born. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The second reference to person in the Fourteenth Amendment, stating that a State may not deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law applies to persons both born and unborn. The third reference to person in the Fourteenth Amendment, where a State may not deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws also applies to persons both born and unborn. Simple linguistics, applied to these provisions in the U.S. Constitution, where the word person is unmodified by the word “born” confirms that a person is a person no matter how small. <br />
<br />
In the 1850’s, there is “love of an unborn child.”18 There is also mention of the absurdity of a “price for an unborn infant”19 and making “slaves of the unborn”20 in an argument against slavery in the New England Yale Review. In the “other” category there is a reference to the divine “I AM” as unborn21 in Rational Cosmology. In the 1860’s, a popular magazine called The Atlantic deals with the “crime, so common among church going ladies and others, of murdering their unborn offspring!”22 The same magazine asks a question about, “those who provide women with [th’] means of killing their unborn children, - a double crime, murder and suicide?”23 The Atlantic also mentions the “murder of unborn offspring” in the context of a “Church powerful enough to guard the issues of life.”24 In the 1870’s, the English Constitution mentions unborn children in the context of persons: “An Act of Parliament is at least as complex as a marriage settlement; and it is made much as a settlement would be if it were left to the vote and settled by the major part of persons concerned, including the unborn children. There is an advocate for every interest, and every interest clamours for every advantage.”25 <br />
<br />
==37 Professor Randy Beck==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185118/20210728124300921_19-1392tsacProfessorRandyBeck.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
Professor Tribe’s Justification Falls Short Because a Pregnant Woman Cannot Transfer a Viable Fetus to Other Caretakers ... 20 V. Viability Is an Arbitrary Line for Measuring Abortion Rights ...................... 22 VI. Stare Decisis Should Not Preserve an Arbitrary Rule Without Constitutional Warrant ..<br />
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==38 Christian Legal Society and Robertson Center for Constitutional Law==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185104/20210728115957257_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20%20Christian%20Legal%20Society%20et%20al.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
The Court cannot serve the rule of law by preserving decisions that subvert the rule of law <br />
A Proper Conception Of Substantive Due Process Does Not Support Existing Abortion Jurisprudence ....<br />
<br />
<blockquote> <span style="color:red">Some of this Court’s most ignominious decisions emerged from expansive and unchecked conceptions of substantive due process. The “most salient instance . . . was, of course, the case that the [Fourteenth] Amendment would in due course overturn, Dred Scott v. Sandford.” Glucksberg, 521 U.S. at 758 (Souter, J., concurring in the judgment). A half-century later, Lochner v. New York inspired a line of “deviant economic due process cases” that “harbored the spirit of Dred Scott in their absolutist implementation of” substantive due process. Id. at 761. Roe fares no better under a proper constitutional analysis. </span><br />
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==39 Center for Religious Expression==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185542/20210802162418144_19-1932%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20Center%20for%20Religious%20Expression.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
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<span style="color:red">The Roe Court demurred on the central inquiry. When the case was decided, the presence of a life inside a mother’s womb was a debatable topic, largely informed by religious and philosophical perspectives. 410 U.S. at 159-60 (passing on “the difficult question of when life begins,” referencing differing belief systems).2 Wary of decreeing the precise moment of life, whether at conception, birth, or some time in between, the Roe Court rejected life as a marker and settled on viability as way to denote the State’s interest.</span><br />
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==40 Center for Family and Human Rights==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185123/20210728132729071_CFam%20Amicus%20Brief%20Filed.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The 2018 Mississippi Gestational Age Act banning most abortions after the 15th week of pregnancy, when the child in utero is known to suffer pain from common abortion procedures, is fully consistent with International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights ratified by the United States, which presumptively protects the right to life of children in the womb (hereinafter, the “Covenant”), International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, Dec. 16, 1966, S. EXEC. DOC. E, 95-2 (1978), 999 U.N.T.S. 171 (entered into force Mar. 23, 1976), as well as other human rights commitments and obligations of the United States. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">A careful reading of the text and history of the Covenant reveals that children in the womb were never excluded from the right to life, and that, more broadly, international law does not establish a human right to abortion in any circumstance, either through treaty obligation or by custom....<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Treaty law is the supreme Law of the Land and the Court has a constitutional responsibility to declare what the law is. The Court should make a finding of law that children in the womb are not excluded from the right to life under the Covenant, given the plain meaning of the text of the Covenant when it was ratified by the U.S., the interpretation of the Covenant by the Executive branch, and its implementation by other States who are party to the treaty, therefore, laws to protect children in the womb from being arbitrarily deprived of their right to life, regardless of viability, are consistent with the international human rights obligations of the United States. <br />
<br />
The Court should nonetheless say something substantive on the topic of the status of the unborn in international human rights law without upsetting honest political debates that are legitimately carried out through democratic institutions. The Court should do this for prudential reasons, including that of shielding itself from accusations that it is avoiding foundational human rights questions and to preempt interference from international actors and foreign powers in U.S. domestic legal and political disputes.<br />
<br />
==41 Concerned Women for America==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185093/20210728111520674_No19-1392_CWA_Diaz_Amicusbrief.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
Mississippi Should Be Free To Make Reasonable Determinations About Abortion Policy That Place A Higher Value On The Life Of Mothers And Their Unborn Children ............................................................ 4 II. <br />
<br />
The Court Has Undervalued The State’s Interest In Women’s Health By Failing To Give Proper Weight To The Physical, Psychological, And Emotional Harms Abortion Can Have On Women’s Lives .. <br />
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e. The states should have broad discretion in addressing the interests at play in the abortion context. Neither viability nor any other framework should constrain the state’s ability to address the ever-changing concerns associated with abortion.<br />
<br />
==42 Foundation for Moral Law, Lutherans for Life==<br />
<br />
[https://storage.googleapis.com/msgsndr/JTZoYWv3fly6hFemb8mU/media/63b73813b7386028645df690.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
neither abortion nor privacy are mentioned in the Constitution, but Justice Blackmun said the right is found in a "penumbra" formed from "emanations" from certain rights in the Bill of Rights. Thomas Jefferson's warning that "The Constitution ... is a 3 mere thing of wax in the hands of the judiciary, which they may twist and shape into any form they please"2 takes on special significance, because a jurisprudence of "penumbras" and "emanations" is entirely subjective and removes the Constitution from any kind of objective scholarship. It is also dangerous, because the same Court that can read into the Constitution rights that simply are not there, can also read out of the Constitution rights that are there, by reading into the Constitution powers that are not there....'''The viability test has no foundation in law, science, history, Biblical or church tradition.''' <br />
<br />
When Justice Blackmun used the viability test in Roe, he presented very little historical, legal, or medical support for that position, because very little support for that position exists. ...<br />
<br />
In fact, throughout history viability has seldom if ever been considered the beginning of human life. <span style="color:red">Much of our Western legal tradition has been shaped by the Bible. On October 4, 1982, Congress passed Public Law 97-280, declaring 1983 the “Year of the Bible,” and the President signed the bill into law. The opening clause of the bill is: “Whereas Biblical teachings inspired concepts of civil government that are contained in our Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of the United States; . . .” Joshua Berman, Senior Editor at Bar-Ilan University, in his 2008 book Created Equal: How the Bible Broke with Ancient Political Thought, contends that the Pentateuch is the world's first model of a society in which politics and economics embrace egalitarian ideals. Berman states flatly: If there was one truth the ancients held to be self-evident it was that all men were not created equal. If we maintain today that, in fact, they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights, then it is because we have inherited as part of our cultural heritage notions of equality that were deeply entrenched in the ancient passages of the Pentateuch.6 <br />
<br />
6 Joshua Berman, Created Equal: How the Bible Broke with Ancient Political Thought (Oxford 2008) 175, See also John Marshall Gest, The Influence of Biblical Texts Upon English Law, an address delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa and Sigma xi Societies of the University of Pennsylvania June 14, 1910, https://scholarship.law.upenn.edu quoting Sir Francis Bacon: “The law of England is not taken out of Amadis de Gaul, nor the Book of Palmerin, but out of the Scripture, of the laws of the Romans and the Grecians.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">A. The Bible on Pre-born Children <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Bible treats the preborn child as a living human being. When Elizabeth, the mother of John the Baptist, came into the presence of Mary who was carrying Jesus in her womb, Elizabeth declared that “the babe leaped in my womb for joy” (Luke 1:44). That doesn’t sound like a fetus or fertilized egg; that sounds like a child! It reminds us of Rebekah, of whom we read, “And the children struggled within her . . . .” (Genesis 25:21-26). These preborn children displayed traits that would follow them most of their lives. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The original languages used in these accounts make no distinction between born and preborn children. Of all of the Greek words used for child, brephos connotes a baby or very small child. That’s the word attributed to Elizabeth: “The brephos leaped in my womb for joy.” We see the same word in the next chapter: “Ye shall find the brephos wrapped in swaddling clothes, lying in a manger.” And in II Timothy 3:15 Paul uses the same word: “From a brephos thou hast known the holy Scriptures . . . .” The same word is used for a child in the womb, a child newly born, and a child sometime after birth. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Another Greek word used for “son” is huios. In Luke 1:36 the angel tells Mary, “And, behold, thy cousin, Elizabeth, she hath also conceived a huios.” And the angel tells Mary in Luke 1:31, “Thou shat conceive in thy womb, and bring forth a huios.” Two verbs, “conceive” and “bring forth,” with the same direct object, a “son” or huios. And years later, when Jesus is a young man, God the Father says to Him, “Thou art my beloved huios” (Luke 5:22). Again, the same Greek word used for a preborn child, a newborn child, and a young man. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The same is true of the Old Testament Hebrew. The same word used for the preborn children in Rebekah’s womb, bne, is also used for Ishmael when he is 13 years old (Genesis 17:25) and for Noah’s adult sons (Genesis 9:19). And Job says in his anguish, “Let the day perish wherein I was born, and the night in which it was said, There is a man child (gehver) conceived” (Job 3:3). The Old Testament uses gehver 65 times, and usually it is simply translated “man.” Job 3:3 could be accurately translated, “There is a man conceived.” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The biblical authors identify themselves with the preborn child. In Psalm 139:13 David says, “Thou hast covered me in my mother’s womb.” Isaiah says, “The Lord hath called me from the womb” (49:1), and in Jeremiah 1:5 we read, “before thou camest forth out of the womb I sanctified thee, and I ordained thee a prophet unto the nations.” They don’t say “the fetus that became me;” that person in the womb is “me.” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Job wishes he could have died before he was born: “Wherefore then hast thou brought me forth out of the womb? Oh that I had given up the ghost, and no eye had seen me!” (10:18) How can the preborn child die if he or she is not alive? <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">And David says, “Behold, I was shapen in iniquity, and in sin did my mother conceive me.” (Psalm 51:5) There was nothing sinful about the act of David’s conception; this passage establishes that the preborn child has a sinful nature. How can a non-person have a sinful nature? And while other verses establish the child’s personhood before birth, this passage shows his or her humanity all the way back to conception! <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Clearly the Bible, especially in its original languages, treats the preborn child the same as a child already born. The Bible knows nothing about “potential human beings;” to the authors of Scripture, there are only human beings with potential. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Some will argue that, because Genesis 2:7 says, “God breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul,” man doesn’t really become human until he takes that first breath. Amici believe this is a mistaken interpretation of Scripture.''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">(1) Genesis 2:7 is not normative about how and when human life begins. Adam was never a preborn child; he was formed out of the dust of the ground as a mature adult human being. No one else was formed out of the dust of the ground; even Eve was formed out of Adam’s rib, and we never read that God breathed the breath of life into her nostrils or those of anyone else. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">(2) Even if we were to conclude that without the “breath of life” we are not fully human, the preborn child takes in oxygen through a placenta. Birth constitutes a dramatic change of environment coupled with the ability to breathe for oneself; other than that birth is simply one more step on the road to maturity. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">So the Bible, taken as a whole, teaches that the preborn child is a living human being. Viability does not even enter the picture in determining the beginning of personhood. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">B. . Church Tradition on Pre-Born Children <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Church tradition has also been instrumental in the formation of Western law.7 For this reason, and because Justice Blackmun in Roe, 410 U.S. at 130, and Justice Stevens in his Webster dissent, 492 U.S. at 567-69, cited Catholic Church teaching to justify Roe v. Wade, Amici will briefly survey church history and its effect on Western law. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Didache, or Teaching of the Twelve Apostles, a manual of instruction dating possibly as early as 50 A.D. or possibly in the second or third centuries,8 commanded, "You shall not murder a child by abortion nor kill that which is born."9 The Church Father Tertullian, writing around 197 A.D., cited <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">7 Harold J. Berman, Law and Revolution: The Formation of the Western Legal Tradition (Cambridge, MA, 1983); John Eidsmoe, Historical and Theological Foundations of Law, 3 Vols. (Nordskog 2017) 8 Early Christian Writings, "Didache," www.earlychristianwritings. com/ didache.html. 9 Id., Roberts-Donaldson English Translation.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">extensively from Old Testament and New Testament Scriptures.10 He also noted that Hippocrates, Asciepiades, Erasistratus, Herophius, and Soranos, "all of them certain that a living being had been conceived and so deploring the most unhappy infancy of one of this kind who had first to be killed list a live woman being rent apart.”11 St. Hippolytus, writing around 228 A.D., condemned those who resorted to drugs " so to expel what was being conceived on account of their not wishing to have a child," declaring them guilty of "adultery and murder at the same time."12 And St. Basil wrote in his First Canonical Letter, <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The woman who purposely destroys her unborn child is guilty of murder. With us there is no nice enquiry as to its being formed or unformed. In this case it is not only the being about to be born who is vindicated, but the woman in her attack upon herself, because in most cases women who make such attempts die. the destruction of the embryo is an additional crime, a second murder, at all events, if we regard it as done with intent.13<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">10 Scriptures cited by Tertullian include Jeremiah 1:5; Psalm 139:15; Luke 1:41-42. 11 He declared firmly, “It is not permissible for us to destroy the seed by means of illicit manslaughter once it has been conceived in the womb, so long as blood remains in the person.” 12 Hyppolytus, circa 228. A.D.; quoted in The Ante-Nicene Fathers: The Writings of the Fathers Down to A.D. 325, ed. Alexander Roberts, Sir James Donaldson, (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1903) V:131. 13 10 Basil (c. 330-379 A.D.), reprinted in A Select Library of Post-Nicene Fathers of the Christian Church, Second Series, ed. Philip Schaff and Henry Wace (New York: The Christian Literature Company, 1895) VIII:225. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Canon Law of the Roman Catholic Church provides , "A person who procures a completed abortion incurs a latae sententiae [automatic] excommunication."14 The Canon Law developed in the early centuries of the Christian Church out of early Church documents such as the Didache and was based on and interacted with the Scriptures, Roman and Greek Law, Byzantine Law, the Justinian Code, the decrees of emperors, and other sacred and secular legal documents.15 The above citation from the Didache is evidence that the prohibition against abortion was part of the Canon Law from the beginning and consistently thereafter. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">No wonder Orthodox scholar Fr. Alexander F.C. Webster wrote that abortion “is one of only several moral issues on which not one dissenting opinion has ever been expressed by the Church Fathers.”16 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">14 Code of Canon Law, Title VI, Delicts Against Human Life and Freedom, Canon 1398, www.vatican.va/archive/ENG1104/_P57.HTM. 15 Kenneth Pennington, A Short History of the Canon Law from Apostolic Times to 1917, http://faculty.cua.edu/pennington /Canon%20Law/ ShortHistoryCanonLaw.htm, pp. 2, 3, 7, 10, 16, 19, 21, 25-26, 32, 33-37, 41, 44, 59, 61. Although, as Pennington notes at 74, Martin Luther initially rejected the Canon Law, as his thinking developed he came to appreciate the value of Roman Catholic Canon Law legal scholarship and concluded that that scholarship should be applied to the civil law and the common law; see John Witte, Jr., Law and Protestantism: The Legal Teachings of the Lutheran Reformation 55-85 (Cambridge University Press, 2002); John Eidsmoe, Historical & Theological Foundations of Law (American Vision 2012) III:983-84. 16 Dr. James Lamb, Abortion and the Message of the Church: Sin or Salvation? June 30, 2004, http://www.lutheransforlife.org/article/ abortion-and-the#message-of-the-church-sin-or-salvation/ (quoting “An Orthodox Word on Abortion” at 8-9 (Paper delivered at the Consultation on The Church and Abortion, Princeton, 1992)). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Nor was this view limited to the Church Fathers or to the Roman Catholic Tradition. Martin Luther stated his position forcefully: “For those who have no regard for pregnant women and who do not spare the tender fruit are murderers and infanticides.”17 John Calvin was just as clear: “If it seems more horrible to kill a man in his own house than in a field, because a man’s house is his most secure refuge, it ought surely to be deemed more atrocious to destroy the unborn in the womb before it has come to light.”18 And Pennington notes that when King Henry VIII (1491 - 1547 A.D.) separated the Church of England from the Roman Catholic Church, he proclaimed that "he, not the pope, was the source of all canon law henceforward."19 Pennington adds, "Consequently, the Anglican Church preserved the entire body of medieval canon law and converted it into a national legal system."20 <br />
<br />
C. Common Law on Preborn Children <br />
As the common law developed, "quickening" became the test for homicide prosecutions. <br />
<br />
17 Lamb, supra note 11 (quoting What Luther Says: An anthology, compiled by Ewald M. Plass (St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1959), Vol. 2, NO. 2826 at 905). 18 Lamb, supra note 11 (quoting Commentaries on the Four Last Books of Moses at 41-42 (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1950)). 19 Pennington, supra note 12, at 64. 20 Id. <br />
Quickening is different from viability; quickening is the time when the mother first feels the child move within her. One could be convicted of homicide for the killing of an unborn child, only if quickening had already taken place. <br />
<br />
But this common law rule did not mean that the child became a person only at quickening or that there was a right to abortion before quickening. Rather, it was a procedural matter of proof. '''One can be guilty of homicide only if the homicide victim was alive at the time of the alleged killing, and at that stage in the development of the common law, medical science had no way of proving the child was alive until the mother had felt the child move within her.'''21 <br />
<br />
For nearly half a century, this nation has been saddled with an abortion jurisprudence that has no foundation in the Constitution, no foundation in medical science, and no foundation in American or Biblical history and tradition, a jurisprudence that has resulted in an estimated 62,994,587 abortions since 1973 <br />
<br />
See www.abortioncounters.com and Steven Ertelt 62,502,904 Babies Have Been Killed by Abortion Since Roe v. Wade in 1973 (2021) available at https://www.lifenews.com/2021/01/22/62502904<br />
<br />
==43 Americans United for Life==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185211/20210729102214787_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20Americans%20United%20for%20Life.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
(Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey are not "settled precedents" worthy of being retained under the doctrine of "Stare Decisis".)<br />
<br />
Roe is radically unsettled for additional reasons. It has not received the acquiescence of Justices or lower court judges. Roe was wrongly decided and poorly reasoned. Numerous adjudicative errors during the original deliberations—especially the absence of any evidentiary record—have contributed to making Roe unworkable. It has been the subject of persistent judicial and scholarly criticism. There is a constant search for a constitutional rationale for Roe, and the Court has yet to give a reasoned justification for the viability rule. See Randy Beck, Gonzales, Casey and the Viability Rule, 103 Nw. U. L. Rev. 249 (2009). 3 <br />
<br />
Casey is unsettled by its failure to ground the abortion right in the Constitution, by an ambiguous standard of review that is unworkable, by conflicting precedents that have “defied consistent application” by the lower courts, and by persistent judicial and scholarly criticism. Payne v. Tennessee, 501 U.S. 808, 828–830 (1991). Politics aside, reconsidering Roe and Casey does not involve uprooting a stable, settled feature of the legal landscape. Because they are radically unsettled, Roe and Casey contradict the stare decisis values of consistency, dependability, and predictability and are entitled to minimal stare decisis respect. <br />
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==44 Ethics and Public Policy Center==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185234/20210729114228086_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20Ethics%20and%20Public%20Policy%20Center.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
C. Factual Developments Have Also Undermined Roe and Casey’s Reasoning. Apart from these legal developments, “facts have so changed, or come to be seen so differently” since Roe and Casey were decided as to have significantly sapped those decisions of whatever residual force they might be thought to have. Casey, 505 U.S. at 855. <br />
Roe recognized that whether “life begins at conception and is present throughout pregnancy” was of pivotal importance, but it asserted that “at this point 19 in the development of man’s knowledge” medical science had been “unable to arrive at any consensus” on the issue. 410 U.S. at 159. Roe thus proceeded on the assumption that life “as we recognize it” “does not begin until live birth.” Id. at 160-61. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">This “unsupported empirical assumption” has been significantly undermined by subsequent developments. See Janus, 138 S. Ct. at 2483. It is now clear that an unborn fetus is not merely “potential life,” but is a “a living organism while within the womb, whether or not it is viable outside the womb.” Gonzales, 550 U.S. at 147. As a recent, exhaustive review of the scientific literature concludes, “[t]he scientific evidence clearly indicates that a one-cell human organism, the zygote, forms immediately at fusion of sperm and egg. From a scientific perspective, this single cell is inarguably a complete and living organism; i.e. a member of the human species at the earliest stage of natural development.” Maureen L. Condic, When Does Human Life Begin? The Scientific Evidence and Terminology Revisited, 8 U. ST. THOMAS J.L. & PUB. POL’Y 44, 70 (2013); see also Hana R. Marsden et al., Model systems for membrane fusion, 40 CHEM. SOC’Y REV. 1572, 1572 (2011) (“The fusion of sperm and egg membranes initiates the life of a sexually reproducing organism.”); Enrica Bianchi et al., Juno is the egg Izumo receptor and is essential for mammalian fertilization, 24 NATURE 483, 483 (2014) (“Fertilization occurs when sperm and egg recognize each other and fuse to form a new, genetically distinct organism.”). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Further, in 1973—and, to some extent, even in 1992—it was widely assumed that an unborn human being had no ability to sense and experience pain. Stuart W.G. Derbyshire & John C. Bockmann, Reconsidering fetal pain, 46 J. MED. ETHICS 3, 3 (2020). Today, by contrast, there is a growing scientific consensus that the unborn can feel pain as early as 12 weeks gestation. Id. at 6; see also American College of Pediatricians, Fetal Pain: What is the Scientific Evidence? at 1, 7 (2021), https://acpeds.org/assets/Fetal-Pain-Position-Statement-(2).pdf (concluding that “a large body of scientific evidence demonstrates that painful or noxious stimulation adversely affects immature human beings, both before and after birth,” “as early as 12 weeks gestation (and possibly earlier)”). These scientific advances further undermine Roe’s underpinnings.<br />
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==45 Pennsylvania Pro-Life Federation==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185227/20210729111948208_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20the%20Pennsylvania%20Pro-Life%20Federation.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
Some of the subjects covered: <br />
I. THERE ARE TWO PATIENTS THAT MUST BE CARED FOR IN MODERN OBSTETRICAL PRACTICE, AND IT IS RARE THAT AN ABORTION WOULD BE NEEDED TO MANAGE A PREGNANCY SUCCESSFULLY <br />
<br />
II. II. CLAIMS THAT ELECTIVE ABORTIONS MUST BE ALLOWED BECAUSE ABORTION IS STATISTICALLY SAFER THAN CHILDBIRTH SHOULD BE REJECTED<br />
<br />
III. A. The Risk of Dying from Abortion or Childbirth Is Negligible<br />
<br />
IV. B. Although Abortion Is a Medical Procedure, It Is Rarely a Medical Decision<br />
<br />
V. C. Discussing Maternal Mortality Rates in Relation to Elective Abortion Has No Practical Relevance<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In modern obstetrical practice, the physician treats two patients—the mother and her unborn baby—and strives to maximize and protect the health and well-being of both. Good medical practice requires this. It is rare that the interests of one of these patients, from a medical standpoint, conflicts with the other. Even in those instances where the mother’s condition may place her physical health at greater risk, the pregnancy can generally be managed satisfactorily with a successful outcome for both the mother and baby. In those very rare circumstances when this cannot be done, laws like Mississippi’s allow pregnancy terminations to take place in order to protect the mother. <br />
<br />
Claims that abortion must be allowed on demand because abortion is statistically safer than childbirth should be rejected. The relative risk of death is negligible in both abortion and childbirth. Moreover, although abortion is a medical procedure, it is rarely a medical decision. In the vast majority of cases, abortions are sought for socio-economic reasons; not for medical reasons. Therefore, discussing maternal mortality in relation to elective abortion simply is not relevant in any practical or meaningful sense. <br />
<br />
Contrary to what some suggest, Roe was not a significant cause of reduced maternal mortality and morbidity from abortion. Such reductions correspond more closely with medical advances such as the development of effective antibiotics to manage infections and advances in medical technology allowing for blood transfusions and better administration of anesthesia. <br />
<br />
These medical advances were unrelated to the legalization of abortion, having occurred well before Roe was handed down. So, overturning Roe will not 3 affect those advances, nor will it preclude the application of future medical advances in the treatment of pregnant women and an overall reduction in maternal mortality from all causes. <br />
<br />
Roe was a radical decision that overrode the legislative judgments of all 50 states. It was based on a flawed understanding of the humanity of the unborn child and views of obstetrical practice that are outdated because they fail to treat unborn children as second patients in pregnancy. Additionally, it may have been based on false claims regarding the number of women supposedly dying from illegal abortion. It should be overturned. <br />
<br />
The impression frequently was given (and still is) that childbirth is extremely risky and that women need abortion because it is much safer than childbirth. Likewise, based on made up and grossly inflated numbers of maternal deaths prior to Roe, it has been erroneously suggested that Roe was the reason for a dramatic reduction in maternal mortality from abortion, and that its overturn would return the country to a time when “thousands” of women died from “back-alley” abortions. None of this is true. <br />
<br />
I. THERE ARE TWO PATIENTS THAT MUST BE CARED FOR IN MODERN OBSTETRICAL PRACTICE, AND IT IS RARE THAT AN ABORTION WOULD BE NEEDED TO MANAGE A PREGNANCY SUCCESSFULLY. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">1. Basic medical texts, for decades, have made it clear that there are two patients that must be cared for in modern obstetrical practice. For example, in explaining the need for significant revisions to the 1980 edition of Williams Obstetrics, the authors stated: <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Happily, we have entered an era in which the fetus can be rightfully considered and treated as our second patient. . . Fetal diagnosis and therapy have now emerged as legitimate tools the obstetrician must possess. Moreover, the number of tools the obstetrician can employ to address the needs of the fetus increases each year. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Jack A. Pritchard & Paul C. MacDonald, Williams Obstetrics, vii (16th Ed. 1980) (emphasis supplied). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">A later edition made it even more obvious that obstetricians must be cognizant of the unborn baby as a separate entity when managing a pregnancy. It stated: Obstetrics is an unusual specialty of medicine. Practitioners of this art and science must be concerned simultaneously with the lives and well-being of two persons; indeed, the lives of two who are interwoven. F. Gary Cunningham, et al., Williams Obstetrics, vii (18th ed. 1989). In a chapter entitled “Techniques to Evaluate Fetal Health,” it was stated: <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Until relatively recently, the intrauterine sanctuary of the fetus was held to be inviolate. The mother was the patient to be cared for; the fetus was but another albeit transient, maternal organ. . . Indeed, the fetus is no longer regarded as a maternal appendage. . . . Instead, the fetus has achieved the status of the second patient, a patient who usually faces much greater risks of serious morbidity and mortality than does the mother. <br />
*** <br />
<span style="color:red">The many advances in diagnosis and treatment that now clearly establish the fetus as a patient have also contributed remarkably to legal considerations involving the fetus. Fetal legal rights are emerging; for example, in some courts, the fetus has been allowed to file suit. Id at 277. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Obstetric ultrasound technology was in its infancy at the time of Roe, and was not widely used in the United States until well into the 1970’s. Malcolm Nicolson & John E.E. Fleming, Imaging and Imagining the Fetus 233 (2013). It has since given rise to whole new fields of medicine and top pediatric hospitals across the country regularly perform surgery on this second patient.2 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Abortion proponents disregard these basic facts when they ignore the existence of the second patient within the womb and suggest that unborn children are just appendages of the mother to be discarded upon her request. In so doing, they suggest a return to an outmoded and discredited approach to pregnancy and obstetrical practice. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">2. It is rare that the interests of one of these patients, from a medical standpoint, conflicts with the other. And, on those rare occasions when it does, the pregnancy can generally be successfully managed. So, medically speaking, abortion is almost never needed to manage a pregnancy. Honest abortion proponents long ago admitted to the overall safety of pregnancy and the lack of a need for abortion for medical reasons. <br />
<br />
In 1956, when maternal mortality rates were much higher than today,3 the namesake of Planned <br />
<br />
2 See e.g., the website of Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia: “Today, fetal therapy is recognized as one of the most promising fields in pediatric medicine, and prenatal surgery is becoming an option for a growing number of babies with birth defects.” Fetal Surgery, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia., https://www.chop.edu/treatments/fetal-surgery (last visited July 26, 2021). <br />
3 The maternal death rate in 1946 was 11.6/10,000 (or 116/100,000) and, by 1956, had declined to 4.0/10,000 (or <br />
<br />
Parenthood’s Guttmacher Institute highlighted the overall safety of pregnancy and childbirth. He stated that in more than 30 years of obstetrical practice, during which he had delivered about 6,000 babies, he had seen only 3 patients die—two from cancer and one from a blood clot. He stated that “[p]regnancy and labor have little to do with any of the three.” A.F. Guttmacher, Pregnancy and Birth 271 (1956). <br />
<br />
Likewise, in a paper published in 1960, Dr. Mary Calderone, then Medical Director of Planned Parenthood Federation of America, admitted: “medically speaking, that is, from the point of view of diseases of the various systems, cardiac, genitourinary, and so on, it is hardly ever necessary today to consider the life a mother as threatened by pregnancy.” Mary S. Calderone, Illegal Abortion as a Public Health Problem, 50 Am. J. Pub. Health 948 (1960) (“Illegal Abortion”). <br />
<br />
Obstetrics texts from the seventies also confirm the safety of pregnancy and childbirth and the ability to manage it successfully without abortion. One such textbook states: “abortion for purely medical reasons, i.e., vascular, renal or heart disease and so forth is rarely indicated in current medical practice.” Duncan E. Reid, et al., Principles in <br />
<br />
40/100,000). Milton C. Klein & Jacob Clahr, Factors in the Decline of Maternal Mortality, 168 JAMA 237 (1958) (“Factors”). <br />
<br />
Management of Human Reproduction 274 (1972). See also, J.P. Greenhill & Emanuel A. Friedman, Biological Principles in Modern Practice of Obstetrics 385 (1974) (noting that the number of induced abortions “on demand” had been rising astronomically, “while medical reasons appear to be almost vanishing” due to improved medical therapies). <br />
<br />
A. The Risk of Dying from Abortion or Childbirth Is Negligible. Claiming that abortion is statistically safer than childbirth makes a point. But, it is a point that has no practical significance. Assuming, arguendo, that the data upon which these claims rely is accurate, the risk of dying from either abortion or childbirth is still negligible. For example, comparing the worst-case scenario for childbirth (about 20/100,0000) and the best-case scenario for abortion (about 1/100,000), the risk of dying in childbirth is (.00020 or (.02%)) and the risk of dying in abortion is (.00001 or (.001%). In other words, your chance of surviving childbirth is 99.99980% and your chance of surviving abortion is 99.99999%. In either case, it is just the difference of a fraction of a fraction of 1 percent and is akin to comparing a 0% risk of dying with a 0% risk of dying. <br />
<br />
….Since very few women decide to have abortions because they wish to avoid risks to their physical health, it is disingenuous to suggest that abortion must be kept available on demand because it is statistically “safer” for women. This simply is not a consideration that informs their decisions. Nor should it be, given the exceedingly low rate of mortality from either course of action. <br />
<br />
….Roe was a radical decision that overrode the considered judgments of the legislatures in all 50 states. It was based on outmoded views of the humanity of the unborn child, outdated views of obstetrical practice (which failed to treat the baby within the womb as a second patient) and, arguably, on false claims regarding the number of women supposedly dying from illegal abortion.<br />
<br />
==46 Family Research Council==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185324/20210729150133457_Dobbs%20Amicus%20Proofs_THB%20Clean.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
The viability rule also removes states’ ability to adapt abortion regulations to advances in science and medicine. See MKB Mgmt. Corp. v. Stenehjem, 795 F.3d 768, 774 (8th Cir. 2015) (Shepherd, J.) (“By taking this decision away from the states, the Court has also removed the states’ ability to account for advances in medical and scientific technology [that] have greatly expanded our knowledge of prenatal life.”) (internal citations omitted). Courts are not “suited to make the necessary factual judgments” about viability and the “medical” practice of abortion. Akron I, 462 U.S. at 458 (O’Connor, J., dissenting). <br />
<br />
That is because <span style="color:red">“science … progress[es] even though [this] Court averts its eyes,” and legislatures are most capable of debating and responding to that progress. McCorvey v. Hill, 385 F.3d 846, 853-54 (2004) (Jones, J., concurring). The viability rule, however, forces courts to “pretend to act as science review boards,” removing the regulation of abortion from the democratic process. Akron I, 462 U.S. at 458 (O’Connor, J., dissenting). This rule has “rendered basic abortion policy beyond the power of our … representative government [which] may not meaningfully debate” abortion-related scientific and medical advances. McCorvey, 385 F.3d at 852. The “perverse result” of the “constitutional adjudication of] this fundamental social policy … is that … facts no longer matter.” Id. That cannot be the rule. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Similarly, in tort law, courts in thirty states have either “expressly or impliedly rejected viability as an appropriate cutoff point for determining liability for nonfatal prenatal injuries.” Linton, supra, 146. For wrongful death, forty-three states “now allow recovery … for prenatal injuries resulting in stillbirth … [and] the modern trend, supported by legislative reform, is toward abolishing any viability (or other gestational) requirement.” Id. at 323-24. <br />
<br />
See also W. Page Keeton et al., Prosser and Keeton on the Law of Torts § 55, at 369 (5th ed. 1984) (stating viability is “arbitrary” because it “of course does not affect the question of the legal existence of the unborn, and therefore of the defendant’s duty, and it is a most unsatisfactory criterion, since it is a relative matter.”). <br />
<br />
Paul Benjamin Linton, The Legal Status of the Unborn Child Under State Law, 6 U. St. Thomas J.L. & Pub. Pol’y 323-24 (2011) <br />
<br />
Petitioners ask the Court to overrule Roe and Casey because it cannot reconcile those cases with more recent precedent and with scientific advancements showing a compelling state interest in fetal life far earlier than those cases suggest <br />
<br />
The viability line therefore tends to afford greater protection to unborn children of the wealthy. See Beck, Gonzales at 259. Those unborn children whose parents are either closer to advanced medical technology or can afford to travel to receive high�quality medical care would be protected from abortion sooner than those children from poorer families. If, however, viability is based on the best technology currently in use, but unavailable to any particular woman, then “the [viability] rule is unprincipled for a different reason[,]” namely “caus[ing] the constitutional status of some fetuses to turn on unattainable hypothetical conditions, rather than real-world prospects for survival.” Id. Neither is a workable line. <br />
<br />
Finally, viability varies based on the competence and optimism of the doctor responsible for the evaluation. An incompetent doctor may place viability too late (or early). An overly pessimistic or otherwise ideological doctor may set the threshold too high. The 32 average patient hardly has the ability to question these determinations. Moreover, this deference to “disputable medical judgments becomes particularly problematic when the doctor has financial, legal, or ideological interests at stake in the determination.” Id. at 260. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">These factors cannot be “the sole criterion for deciding whether [a] child will live or die.” Box, 139 S. Ct. at 1783 (Thomas, J., concurring). <br />
<br />
In short, the viability rule is and always has been arbitrary and unworkable. The Court should no longer retain it <br />
<br />
==47 Human Coalition Action and Students for Life of America==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185195/20210729093947083_Amicus%20Brief%20of%20Human%20Coalition%20Action%20and%20Students%20for%20Life%20of%20America%20in%20Support%20of%20Petitioners%20File.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
The Supreme Court’s venerable duty to faithfully uphold the Constitution requires abrogating errant precedents, rather than reaffirming or extending them<br />
<br />
Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania v. Casey categorically fall under the weakest echelon of stare decisis. <br />
<br />
Developments have eroded the Court’s assumptions and the decisions which rested on them—the considerable cost to following them far outweighs the benefit.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Scientific and technological developments in the last 50 years reveal Roe and Casey’s fundamental error, warranting full reconsideration.<br />
<br />
Roe and Casey initiated considerable undesirable consequences in all facets of society, unmasking the decisions as egregiously wrong.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Abortion’s human death toll causes unsustainable population decline.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Abortion continues to fulfill eugenicists’ goals by eliminating disproportional amounts of minority populations <br />
<br />
Abortion is fraught with abuse by criminal actors. <br />
<br />
The unregulated abortion industry benefits from exemptions not provided to others, leading to continual scandal, malpractice, and abuse.<br />
<br />
Abortion commodifies humans—pregnant mothers and their unborn children. <br />
<br />
Continued fidelity to Roe and Casey is extraordinarily disruptive to a functioning and healthy society. <br />
<br />
Purported reliance interests on abortion are unnecessary <br />
<br />
The ever-increasing knowledge we have about the development of the child in the womb, its humanity, and life affirm Roe/Casey were decided on erroneous grounds. <span style="color:red">Abortion is always fraught with moral and ethical concerns as it always ends a vulnerable innocent human life, at any phase of development.33 The following scientific facts were equally true in 1973 and 1992 as in 2021 but were unknown or ignored by the Court. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Since Roe and Casey, medical and technological developments, including the developments of the sonogram and in vitro fertilization, reinforced the conclusion that the life of an individual human being begins at conception.34 The widespread clinical use of ultrasound, a technological development that the Roe Court could not anticipate, came to the commercial market after Roe and substantially affected medical practice and public opinion.35 Recently, biologists reached the consensus that human life begins at conception—95% of biologists agree.36 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">We now know that from the moment of conception, unborn children possess the seven characteristics that define life: responsiveness to the environment, growth and change, the ability to reproduce, a regulated metabolism and oxygen flow, maintaining homeostasis (the ability to regulate internal bodily functions in response to external changes), composed of cells, and the capacity to pass traits onto offspring—in this case, human offspring.37 The Department of Genetics at Mayo Clinic confirmed, “[b]y all the criteria of modern molecular biology, life is present from the moment of conception.”38 <br />
<br />
<small><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;35 Id. at 213; Malcolm Nicolson & John Fleming, Imaging and Imagining The Fetus: The Development of Obstetric Ultrasound 1–7 (2013) (“Ultrasonic imaging has also had a momentous social impact because it can visualize the fetus. Fifty years ago, the unborn human being was hidden, enveloped within the female abdomen, away from the medical gaze . . . . [T]he scanner had become widely deployed within the British hospital system by 1975 . . . . By the late 1970s, the ultrasound scanner had become a medical white good, a standardized commodity in a mass marketplace.”). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;36 Jacobs, S. A., Biologists’ Consensus on ‘When Life Begins’, U. OF C. DEP’T OF COMP. HUMAN DEVELOP. (2018). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;37 Wilkin, Douglas, and Niamh Gray-Wilson, Characteristics of Life, CK-12 Foundation. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;38 Liberty University, The Genetic Code; Principles and Choices, When Does Human Life Begin?, available at www.principlesandchoices.com/quick-code-library/pcs344 (current as of July 27, 2021). </small><br />
<br />
Similarly, the Unborn Victims of Violence Act of 1999 treats injury or death to an unborn child caused by a third party while committing a federal offense against the mother as a separate federal crime.44 <br />
<br />
These developments are emblematic of what the Court failed to acknowledge 48 years ago, a fetus in the womb is a distinct living human person—simply a very small one. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Court relied on central medical and scientific fallacies when rendering Roe and Casey. Texas’ brief presented medically accurate and detailed information about the developing child in the womb, including the humanity and rights of the unborn child.45 But Roe’s decision ignored Texas’ arguments, refusing to “resolve the difficult question of when life begins.”46 Instead, the Roe and Casey Courts inaccurately referred to unborn in the womb as “a fetus that may become a child,” and “potential life”.47<br />
<br />
<small><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;44 National Conference of State Legislatures, State Laws on Fetal Homicide and Penalty-Enhancement for Crimes Against Pregnant Women, available at www.ncsl.org/research/health/fetal-homicide-state-laws.aspx (current as of July 27, 2021). <br />
<span style="color:red"><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;45 Roe v. Henry Wade Dist. Atty. of Dallas Co., Texas, 1971 WL 134281 (U.S.), 29 (U.S., 2004)(arguing “The fetus implanted in the uterine wall deserves respect as a human life….It is alive because it has the ability to reproduce dying cells. It is human because it can be distinguished from other non-human species, and once implanted in the uterine wall it requires only nutrition and time to develop into one of us.”). </span><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;46 Roe, 410 U.S. at 159. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;47 Id. at 113; Casey, 505 U.S. at 875 and 876 </small><br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Both principal holdings hinged on refusing to acknowledge the significance of the interests of human life in the womb.48 This was an egregious error. The matter of when life begins is no longer a philosophic discussion “depending on one’s beliefs”49 but is instead a scientific fact.50 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Significant developments about the humanity of the child in the womb warrant reconsideration of fateful abortion decisions and their underpinnings. Unlike Roe and Casey, Dobbs presents this Court with the opportunity to consider the full scientific and factual spectrum about the most overlooked abortion participant—the human child.<br />
<br />
<small><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;48 Shah, Mamta K., Inconsistencies in the Legal Status of an Unborn Child: Recognition of a Fetus as Potential Life, 29 HOFSTRA LAW REVIEW 3, 93.1-93.2 (2001). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;49 Casey, 505 U.S. at 852. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;50 See Jacobs, Biologists’ Consensus on ‘When Life Begins’. </small><br />
<br />
iii. Abortion is fraught with abuse by criminal actors. <br />
<br />
Further, abortion is fraught with abuse by criminal actors. <span style="color:red">The human trafficking industry requires abortion to carry out its horrific activities and hold hundreds of thousands of victims enslaved and working.67 Women report being coerced through emotional and physical duress to have abortions 64% of the time.68 <br />
<br />
Another undesirable consequence of this Court’s abortion doctrine is the negative impact on women’s physical security in childbearing. <span style="color:red">Pregnant women experience an increased rate of assault and battery from unmarried partners.69 Women who pursue <br />
<br />
<small><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;64Congressional Findings, available at https://docs.house.gov/meetings/JU/JU10/20171101/106562/HH RG-115-JU10-Wstate-ParkerS-20171101-SD001.pdf (current as of July 27, 2021). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;65 Id. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;66 Id. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;67 Laura J. Lederer and Christopher A. Wetzel, The Health Consequences of Sex Trafficking and Their Implications for Identifying Victims in Healthcare Facilities, 23 THE ANNALS OF HEALTH LAW 1 (2014). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;68 The Elliot Institute, Forced Abortion in America (2014). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;69 Clarke D. Forsythe & Stephen B. Presser, The Tragic Failure of Roe v. Wade: Why Abortion Should Be Returned to the States, 10 TEX. REV. L. & POL’Y at 100 (2005). 21 </small><br />
<br />
surrogacy have been subjected to contracts that require them to abort and, or to demands to abort.70 A growing body of international medical data from dozens of countries established long-term risks to women from abortion.71<br />
<br />
==48 Lee J. Strang==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185338/20210729155700355_Dobbs%20Amicus.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
[This excerpt is included in my book as presented below, with my explanations and summary, even though I am not highlighting any of it in red; almost all of it, except for my own text, would be red.]<br />
<br />
The 14th Amendment: “...nor shall any State deprive any '''person''' of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws....”<br />
<br />
Lee J. Strang, in the Amicus Brief he filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'', explains how the correct meaning of “person” in the 14th Amendment is the “natural” one. That is, the meaning that all of us non-lawyers attach to the word. A human being. <br />
<br />
A baby. <br />
<br />
Plural: people. <br />
<br />
The ''normal'' meaning.<br />
<br />
He explains how Justice Blackmun, author of Roe v. Wade, was wrong to assume a legalistic meaning that doesn’t necessarily include ''unborn'' people. But not just ''that'' Blackmun was wrong, but ''how'' he got wrong. <br />
<br />
And not just Blackmun, but even Justice Scalia, the hero of conservatives. <br />
<br />
And even Judge Bork, the famous “originalist” nominated to the Supreme Court by President Reagan in 1987 but crucified by the Democrat-controlled Senate to the degree that his name was added to dictionaries. (https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/bork transitive verb - US politics, informal: to attack or defeat (a nominee or candidate for public office) unfairly through an organized campaign of harsh public criticism or vilification. “In any event, seeing one of their own being borked may itself energize the conservative base, even beyond what a conservative nomination would do.” — <br />
<br />
Mark Tushnet. “In 1987, conservative judge Robert Bork endured such virulent criticism … that to this day, a nominee sidelined by activists is said to have been ‘borked.’ ”— <br />
Claire Suddath )<br />
<br />
You ask, “What other definition matters, but this ‘natural’ meaning?”<br />
If you have to ask, you obviously are not a lawyer.<br />
<br />
Lawyers understand that when ''Roe v. Wade'' said “if Texas’ suggestion of personhood is ever established”, Roe meant, not established by evidence of the fact that babies of humans are humans by modern medicine or by court-recognized fact-finders, but evidence that the meaning of the word “persons” in the 14th Amendment, as understood by those who ratified it, was the way we “naturally” (normally) define “people” as opposed to treating “persons” as a technical legal term for lawyers to load with their own special courtroom meanings.<br />
<br />
According to this thinking, whether we adopt the “natural” or the legalistic meaning depends on which meaning was adopted by lawyers and legislatures when the 14th Amendment was ratified. The fact that some states – including the states that ratified the 14th Amendment – didn’t outlaw abortion from conception until several years ''after'' they ratified the Amendment is taken by this thinking to prove they understood it used the word “person” to mean only those whom ''voters'' chose to treat as human. <br />
<br />
Lee Strang points out logical inconsistencies with this approach, and shows how the “natural” meaning of “persons”, among states back then, better fits the historical record. He says the delay of states in outlawing abortion from conception is accounted for by the delay of the medical profession in understanding early pregnancy, and in explaining its discoveries to the general public. <br />
<br />
My own argument in this book assumes what Strang calls the “natural” meaning of “person”. I point out that any meaning ''but'' “all humans” leaves the Amendment with zero effect. If voters can decide not to include a whole class of people as “persons”, voters in the South would have restored slavery. This “legalistic” interpretation would thus lead to an “absurd result”, a sensible courtroom reason to reject an idiotic interpretation. <br />
<br />
I also point out that ''Roe'' treated “”if Texas’ suggestion of personhood is ever established” as a ''fact'' inquiry, since ''Roe'' later said if doctors and preachers can’t agree, “the judiciary, at this point in the development of man’s knowledge, is unable to speculate” about “when life begins”. By elevating doctors and preachers above themselves as experts on the meaning of “when life begins”, and by anticipating the possibility of later correction by “the development of man’s knowledge”, ''Roe'' rejected treating “when life begins” “as a matter of law” or of special technical courtroom applications, and treated the question as a ''fact'' question. <br />
<br />
Although ''Roe'' treated the question as a technical legalistic inquiry by exploring how past legislatures treated abortion, Roe treated it as a fact question by deferring to the superior expertise of doctors and preachers.<br />
<br />
In case you are screaming “stop talking about ''Roe''! It’s been overturned!” I must remind you that ''Roe’s'' ignorance-necessitated neutrality about “when life begins” is elevated to “scrupulous neutrality” in ''Dobbs''. At least ''Roe'' acknowledged the existence of the question and said it mattered; in fact, that it is dispositive. <br />
<br />
Strang’s study is hardly irrelevant with the passage of ''Dobbs''. We need it now more than ever. We need voters to realize if they think they can vote on who gets to be counted as human, the very right to vote is the least of the rights they will lose! <br />
<br />
Strang’s study is valuable for its ability to reach well meaning legal scholars struggling to honor the Constitution by establishing its “original meaning” but who are confused about what “original meaning” means. <br />
<br />
With that summary, we now go to Strang’s study:<br />
<br />
<blockquote>QUESTION PRESENTED Whether the original meaning of “person” in the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment includes unborn human beings <br />
My view has long been that the strongest originalist reason that supported Justice Blackmun’s conclusion that unborn human beings are not constitutional persons was the historical evidence that some states in 1868 allowed abortion in some instances, because that would mean that state law authorized actions fundamentally inconsistent with the full constitutional personhood of unborn human beings at the same time the [very same] states adopted the Fourteenth Amendment. </blockquote><br />
<br />
<blockquote>Indeed, this reason was cited by Justice Scalia to support his view that all abortion decisions remained with the states. “[S]ome states prohibited [abortion], some states didn’t . . . . It was one of those many things . . . left to democratic choice.”....<br />
See, e.g., Bork, supra (“It is impossible to suppose that the states ratified an Amendment they understood to outlaw all abortions but simultaneously left in place their laws permitting some abortions.”). </blockquote><br />
<br />
<blockquote>Below I describe an alternative view of this historical evidence...the progressive changes in abortion law toward fully protecting unborn human beings were in response to new medical information that caused lawmakers to continually re-align state law to better fit with their (explicit and implicit) natural kind original meaning of “person.” ….This account also explains how abortion law in 1868, which limited but did not eliminate abortion, fits the natural kind meaning of “person” because lawmakers’ knowledge of the status of unborn human beings had not yet informed (all of) them that unborn humans are, in fact, human from conception.</blockquote> <br />
<br />
Strang gives a history of “originalism”, which means “a legal philosophy that the words in documents and especially the U.S. Constitution should be interpreted as they were understood at the time they were written...the constitution does not ‘evolve’. ” <br />
<br />
[The whole rest of this footnote is quotes from Strang’s Amicus, although I am not indenting it.]<br />
...<br />
<br />
Strang says “Originalism in its modern theoretical form first appeared in the early 1970s. At this stage, originalism unselfconsciously focused on the intended meaning and goals of the Constitution’s framers....Many jurists and scholars criticized this early version of originalism. Three criticisms relevant to my argument, which many originalists took on board, include the claims that the framers intent is not the law, [Anton Scalia]..., there was not a single intended framer meaning, [Ronald Dworkin...], and that it was impractical for the legal system to try to uncover intended framer meaning (even if it, in theory, existed). [Paul Brest].... <br />
<br />
In response, most originalist scholars re-articulated originalism as public meaning originalism. [What the provisions of the Constitution meant to the public] Public meaning was a real fact of the world….and the evidence for it was relatively widely available. ...<br />
One [way to interpret words] is general public meaning and another is legal meaning. General public meaning is the meaning of the Constitution’s text that is widely available to and utilized by Americans at the time of ratification. ….<br />
Legal meaning...arises out of legal practice. Lawyers and legal practice are a linguistic subcommunity, and words and phrases have particular meanings and nuances of meaning within legal practice....<br />
<br />
….By contrast with the fundamentally conventional general and legal public meanings just discussed, natural kind meaning corresponds to natural reality, independent of human convention. It is the view that linguistic meaning is attached to something factually true. [In other words, the application of the word “person” to babies changes only as we better understand babies.]<br />
<br />
B. The original meaning of “person” in the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses was the natural kind of human being. <br />
<br />
….both the status quo of abortion law in 1868 and continual changes to that law support the natural kind interpretation. ….<br />
<br />
The Constitution’s text suggests that “person” was the natural kind of human being. [The Constitution used the word “person” as normal people normally define the word.] The text of the Fourteenth Amendment describes a being who [1] can be a citizen, who [2] can have his or her life deprived by the government, and who [3] can be harmed by private violence. U.S. CONST., amend. XIV, § 1. Two of these characteristics occur to human beings both pre- and postnatally; but the important point is that all of these are characteristics of human beings, and unborn human beings are the kind of beings who possess the capacities for those characteristics and will possess the actual characteristics themselves at some point in their lives (assuming normal development).<br />
<br />
The intended meaning of framers and ratifiers of constitutional text is also evidence of the Constitution’s original meaning. This is especially true when the framers and ratifiers publicly state their intentions so that they become aspects of the publicly available context. As many scholars have noted, there is no direct legislative history of the Fourteenth Amendment’s drafters and ratifiers discussing the Amendment’s relationship with abortion. ...However, [they made] numerous statements that the Amendment protects all human beings, regardless of their characteristics, and this supports the natural kind original meaning of “person.” <br />
<br />
For example, Senate Judiciary Committee chairman, Lyman Trumbull, spoke to the Senate about the Thirteenth Amendment and legislation for the Freedmen’s Bureau that he planned to introduce, and tied the Constitution’s protection to all human beings: “any legislation or any public sentiment which deprives any human being in the land of those great rights of liberty will be in defiance of the Constitution.” Cong. Globe, 39th Cong., 1st Sess. 77 (Dec. 19, 1865) (Lymann Trumbull). <br />
<br />
Similarly, a leading Senate sponsor of the Fourteenth Amendment, Jacob Howard, explained the broad scope of the Equal Protection Clause: “It establishes equality before the law, and it gives to the humblest, the poorest, the most despised of the [human] race the same rights and the same protection.” Cong. Globe, 39th Cong., 1st Sess. 2766 (May 23, 1866) (Jacob Howard). <br />
<br />
The “Father” of the Fourteenth Amendment, Representative John Bingham of Ohio, stated in 1867 to the House regarding the word “person” in the Fifth Amendment (whose text he copied for the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process Clause), that “[b]y that great law of ours it is not to be inquired whether a man is ‘free’ . . . ; it is only to be inquired is he a man, and therefore free by the law of that creative energy which breathed into his nostrils the breath of life, and he became a living soul, endowed with the rights of life and liberty.” Cong. Globe, 40th Cong., 1st Sess. 541 (July 9, 1867) (John Bingham). <br />
Like Trumbull and Howard, Bingham equated “person” with “human being.” It is worth noting before proceeding that there is no evidence from the framing and ratification process limiting “person” to born human beings. <br />
<br />
Dictionaries of the time period defined person as the natural kind of human being. For instance, Noah Webster’s American Dictionary of the English Language (1864), defined person as “a living human being; a man, woman, or child; an individual of the human race.” 1 NOAH WEBSTER ET AL., AMERICAN DICTIONARY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE 974 (1864). <br />
<br />
...the strongest argument [against] unborn personhood was the history of abortion regulation, and in particular the fact that some states permitted abortion in some contexts in 1868. [But] Scholars today agree that abortion law changed over time from a position of less-protective to more�protective of unborn human beings.... the basic pattern is widely recognized....<br />
<br />
The common law viewed unborn human beings as human beings and treated abortion upon quickening as a misdemeanor. Sir William Blackstone stated that “[l]ife is an immediate gift of God, a right inherent by nature in every individual and it begins in contemplation of the law as soon as an infant is able to stir in the mother’s womb.” 1 SIR WILLIAM BLACKSTONE, COMMENTARIES ON THE LAWS OF ENGLAND *126 (1776); see also 1 id. *119 (“Natural persons are such as the God of nature formed us.”). Blackstone’s description of unborn humans is as fully human. Blackstone explained that “[t]o kill a child in its mother’s womb, is now no murder, but a great misprison [a serious misdemeanor]: but if the child be born alive, and dieth by reason of the potion or bruises it received in the womb, it is murder.” 4 Id. *198. It is widely agreed by scholars that this protection after quickening in some instances, and after birth in others, was the product of evidentiary concerns over whether a woman was indeed pregnant and the unborn victim was indeed alive at the time of the crime. <br />
<br />
…. Crucial to [proving that] the natural kind meaning of “person” [is its meaning in the 14th Amendment,] state lawmakers progressively restricted abortion because new medical knowledge enabled them with greater clarity to see that unborn human beings were indeed human beings and extended the law’s protection to them. DELLAPENNA, supra at 313. As summarized 19 by the leading historian, Professor Joseph Dellapenna, this period saw “dramatic changes in scientific theories about the nature of conception and the emergence of a new consensus on when a distinct human being began that were built upon the scientific discoveries of the early nineteenth century.” Id. at 282. contemplation of the law as soon as an infant is able to stir in the mother’s womb.” 1 SIR WILLIAM BLACKSTONE, COMMENTARIES ON THE LAWS OF ENGLAND *126 (1776); see also 1 id. *119 (“Natural persons are such as the God of nature formed us.”).... <br />
<br />
By 1868, ...Thirty of the thirty-�seven states in the Union had enacted statutes that restricted abortion. Witherspoon, supra at 33. Of these thirty, twenty-seven state statutes restricted abortion prior to the common law line of quickening. ...<br />
Evidence of this can be seen from many sources. State law itself reflected this understanding because twenty-eight of the thirty jurisdictions that statutorily restricted abortion placed their restrictions under the label “offenses against the person,” and twenty-three states labeled unborn human beings “children”. Witherspoon, supra at 48. States imposed significant punishments for abortion, reflecting the humanity of unborn human beings. Id. at 52-54. State judiciaries similarly modified the common law to expand protection for unborn humans, for instance, by moving earlier than the common law quickening line. Craddock, supra at 555. <br />
<br />
The legal system’s shift was supported by and in response to information provided to lawmakers from the medical profession. DELLAPENNA, supra at 298. One of the most influential books on medical ethics leading up to this period, THOMAS PERCIVAL, MEDICAL ETHICS 135-36 (1827), by a noted English physician, stated that “to extinguish the first spark of life is a crime of the same nature, both against our maker and society, as to destroy an infant, a child, or a man.” <br />
<br />
Percival treated abortion as ethically indistinguishable from killing born human beings because all human beings are the same type of being. Percival’s view was influential in the United States and was adopted by the American Medical Association, which stated in 1859 that unborn human beings should be protected because of the “independent and actual existence of the child before birth, as a living being.” The Report on Criminal Abortion, 12 TRANS. OF THE AM. MED. ASS’N 76 (1859). <br />
<br />
The Report went on to advocate state legislative reform to better protect unborn human beings. Id. While the states were considering ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment, New York’s influential Medical Society stated that all abortions are “murder.” Byrne, supra at 836. <br />
<br />
Legislators changed both the common law and their own earlier statutes in response to this better information about the nature of unborn human beings. As legislators learned that quickening and other lines were irrelevant to the development of human beings, they discarded them and legislated greater protection. <br />
<br />
This is exactly what Ohio did. See Witherspoon, supra at 61-64 (describing this process). The Ohio legislature modified Ohio’s 1834 abortion law in early 1867. The Ohio Senate Report relied on the fact that “[p]hysicians have now arrived at a unanimous opinion that the foetus in utero is alive from the very moment of conception.” 1867 Ohio S.J. App. 233. Informed by the new medical information, including Dr. Percival’s statements, the Report condemned the “class of quacks who make child-murder a trade.” Id. The legislature therefore changed the law and eliminated the quickening line to take better account of these newly known facts. “[N]o opinion could be more erroneous [than] that the life of the foetus commences only with quickening [and] to destroy the embryo before that period is not child-murder.” Id. <br />
<br />
“[T]he legislative histories of the statutes of other states show that these statutes were often enacted pursuant to a request of state medical societies.” Witherspoon, supra at 65. For example, New York’s General Assembly, following the recommendation of its medical society that, “from the first moment of conception, there is a living creature in process of development to full maturity,” modified its 1845 abortion law to prohibit abortion throughout pregnancy. DELLAPENNA, supra at 323-28 <br />
<br />
C. The natural kind original meaning of “person” in the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses included unborn human beings <br />
<br />
Still, ...by 1868, ...some state legislation was not fully protective of unborn human beings. Id. at 316-17. As I noted earlier, this is the most powerful originalist argument against the constitutional personhood of unborn human beings. ...under the conventional� legal meaning approach, [the approach in Dobbs that protectable rights are “those rooted in our nation’s history”] that would be evidence that the original meaning of “person” did not include unborn human beings, or at least not all of them. [Because] if unborn human beings were constitutional persons in 1868, then many of the states that ratified the Fourteenth Amendment were violating the Amendment they adopted. So argued Blackmun, Scalia, Bork, and many others. <br />
<br />
[But] the reasons these states gave for changing their laws are precisely the reasons a rational legislator would give if the meaning of “person” was a natural kind [and in response to growing medical understanding of babies from conception].<br />
<br />
[Roe v. Wade claimed that] the Constitution’s use of “person” showed that it was limited to born human beings. Roe, 410 U.S. at 157. ...But...it does not logically follow from the multiple born uses of “person” that the uses of “person” in the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses are similarly limited....[Roe says] “in nearly all these instances, the use of the word [in the Constitution] is such that it has application only postnatally. None indicates, with any assurance, that it has any possible prenatal application.” <br />
...He admits that in some instances... “person” may apply to unborn human beings. Those instances clearly include the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses because there is nothing in their text to prohibit such application, unlike, for instance, the Citizenship Clause. Those instances also likely include Article I, Section 9, Clause 1 (“The Migration or Importation of such Persons as any of the States now existing shall think proper to admit . . . .”), Article IV, Section 2, Clause 3 (“No Person held to Service or Labour in one State, under the Laws thereof, escaping into another . . . .”), and the Fourth Amendment (“The right of the people to be secure in their persons . . . .”). <br />
<br />
Many of the instances of solely post-natal application are so only because their context and function limit them. For instance, the presidency is limited to “No Person except a natural born Citizen.” U.S. CONST., art. II, § 1, cl. 5. The Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses lack such limiting text or function; the Clauses are not limited to born persons or even natural persons. Moreover, the fact that “person” in the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses is not limited to some classes of humans, such as “born” or “natural persons” or “such persons,” suggests that it includes all persons. See Gorby, supra (providing a variety of critiques of Justice Blackmun’s intratextualism). <br />
[In other words “person” doesn’t mean ALL born persons, any more than it means all UNborn persons; the context tells us which persons are meant. In the “citizenship clause”, the first clause of the 14th Amendment, we know only born babies can be citizens because the Clause explicitly says so. The remaining clauses do not say so, nor does reason or common sense require that limit, so when the Amendment says “no person shall be deprived of life without due process of law”, we have no ground for making it mean something else. No one did then; no one should now.]<br />
<br />
CONCLUSION: the original meaning of “person” in the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses was the natural kind of human being. This natural kind interpretation of “person” was able to account for the status quo of American abortion law in 1868 as well as the fact that abortion law was progressively becoming more protective of all human life. <br />
<br />
==49 Biologists in Support of Neither Party==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185346/20210729162737297_19-1392%20BRIEF%20OF%20BIOLOGISTS%20AS%20AMICI%20CURIAE%20IN%20SUPPORT%20OF%20NEITHER%20PARTY.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
Amici curiae are biologists who work at colleges, universities, and other institutions in 15 countries around the world. On average, they have 10 years of undergraduate and graduate training, they have 27 years of experience working in academia, and overall they have dedicated 37 years to the study of life and to promoting science awareness. <br />
Their expertise bears directly on the question presented in this case. The Court will assess the constitutionality of Roe v. Wade’s viability standard, which was used as a proxy by the Court, in 1973, after it could not determine when a human’s life begins because it could not find a consensus view among experts. Today, amici provide the Court with evidence that shows most biologists affirm fertilization as the leading biological view. <br />
<br />
….This viability standard, which the Court ultimately claimed had biological justifications4 , was established after the Court could not find a consensus of relevant experts who agreed on when a human’s life begins5 . The Court considered Texas’s fertilization standard, but after Texas’s assistant attorneys general created doubt on the fertilization view—in both the oral argument6 and the oral <br />
<br />
<br />
6. After Justice Thurgood Marshall questioned Floyd about<br />
the scientific basis for Texas’s stance on when a human’s life begins,<br />
Floyd eventually relented: “Mr. Justice, there are un-answerable<br />
questions in this field.” Transcript of Oral Argument, Roe v. Wade,<br />
1971, at 45.<br />
<br />
reargument7 sessions—the Court rejected the standard by claiming that the fertilization view was merely “one theory of life”8 . The Court also claimed that the fertilization view had “[s]ubstantial problems”9 because embryological data had raised questions on whether fertilization was a process or event. <br />
<br />
Despite the Court’s use of fetal viability as a proxy for when a human’s life begins, which it described as the point that a fetus “has the capability of meaningful life outside the mother’s womb”10, the majority opinion stated that the Court was “not in a position to speculate” on the “difficult question of when life begins… at [that] point in the development of man’s knowledge.”11 However, no current member of the Court would have to speculate, today. The fertilization view is widely recognized—in the literature and by biologists—as the leading biological view on when a human’s life begins <br />
<br />
7. Justice Blackmun also questioned Floyd’s replacement, Texas Assistant Attorney General Robert C. Flowers, on when a human’s life begins during the Roe reargument session, but he also cast doubt on the fertilization view: “QUESTION:... Is it not true, or is it true that the medical profession itself is not in agreement as to when life begins?... MR. FLOWERS: I think that’s true, sir. But from a layman’s standpoint, medically speaking, we would say that at the moment of conception from the chromosomes, every potential that anybody in this room has is present, from the moment of conception…. QUESTION: But then you’re speaking of potential of life... MR. FLOWERS: Yes, sir.” Transcript of Oral Reargument of Roe v. Wade, 1972, at 23. <br />
<br />
The fertilization view was first discovered in the early 1800s. (See infra at Argument III.A). However, it was such a self-evident fact that little work was done to study or communicate that consensus since it was difficult for scientists to imagine that it could ever be challenged or if there would ever be a time the view would not be common knowledge.12 Since the Roe Court issued its decision in 1973, the scientific consensus13 on the fertilization view has been established. <br />
p. 4<br />
<br />
Recent surveys have shown that biologists are viewed as objective experts in the study of life and as the experts most qualified to determine when a human’s life begins (See infra at Argument I). The fertilization view on when a human’s life begins has been shown to be the leading biological view, and it can only be supplanted by an alternative view if there are paradigmatic shifts to axiomatic concepts within biology (See infra at Argument II). This is made clear by a review of: (1) the biological and life sciences literature, as peer-reviewed articles represent the fertilization view as a fact of biology that requires no explanation or citation (See infra at Argument III.B), (2) legislative testimony from scientists that suggests there is no alternative view in the scientific literature (See infra at Argument III.C), (3) an international survey of academic biologists’ views on when a human’s life begins that reported 96% of 5,577 participants affirmed the fertilization view (See infra at Argument III.D), and (4) statements by prominent abortion doctors and abortion advocates who affirm the fertilization view (See infra at Argument III.E) .<br />
Thus, amici respectfully offer the Court this brief to provide information on the biological perspective on when a human’s life begins: fertilization, generally, marks the beginning of a sexually reproducing organism’s life and, specifically, marks the beginning of a human’s life, as it is the point at which a human first comes into physical existence as an organism that is biologically classified as a member of the Homo sapiens species <br />
<br />
In the oral reargument session for Roe, Justice Potter Stewart signaled the importance of resolving who should determine when a human’s life begins: “Now, how should that question be decided, is it a legal question, a constitutional question, a medical question, a philosophical question, or a religious question, or what is it?”16 The majority opinion in Roe similarly suggested there are multiple dimensions to the question: “When those trained in the respective disciplines of medicine, philosophy, and theology are unable to arrive at any consensus, the judiciary, at this point in the development of man’s knowledge, is not in a position to speculate as to the answer.”1 <br />
<br />
<br />
Some support the view that a human’s life begins at birth or first breath. 12% of biologists (343 out of 2794) represented the birth view in response to an essay question on when a human’s life begins [Were law bent to this view] t it would make obsolete any biological basis for providing independent care to a fetus, as a patient, or performing fetal surgery27; it would also remove the biological basis of fetal homicide laws28, as a state could not rightfully convict someone for the homicide of a fetus since one would no longer be properly classified as a human.2 <br />
<br />
10% of biologists (284 out of 2794) represented the viability view in response to an essay question on when a human’s life begins. [Were law bent to this view] A human’s life could be biologically determined to begin at a different point for a fetus in Mt. Sinai Hospital in New York than in a medical clinic in a rural area, as the leading physicians of the former might be able to help a 22-week premature infant survive while physicians at the latter might not be able to. Further, one would have to say that a 27-week-old fetus in 1973 was not a human—as 28 weeks was the viability line at the time since that was when technology was capable of supporting life outside of the womb—but that a younger 24-week-old fetus, today, is a human. This standard could even one day be set at fertilization if an artificial womb is developed.31 Finally, it is important to note that, today, human embryos survive outside of the womb for years32 before being transferred and implanted. In fact, a human zygote is viable for a short period after fertilization, then loses the ability to survive outside of the womb and regains it sometime soon after the 20th week of his or her life.33 <br />
<br />
If this is used as an ability-based standard, by which human organisms without this ability are not classified as humans, it could also create a case in which a human who is temporarily on life support would cease to be biologically classified as a human since he or she is not then capable of meaningful life <br />
<br />
Some support the view that a human’s life begins at the first heartbeat, brainwave, or moment of pain capability. 10% of biologists (268 out of 2794) represented one of these views in response to an essay question on when a human’s life begins. [Were law bent to this view] <br />
<br />
If these ability-based standards are used as requirements for one to be biologically classified as a human, it would mean that those who were born without the capacity to feel pain, those whose hearts temporarily stop, and those who might one day undergo a brain transplant are not biological humans. <br />
<br />
Most biologists affirm that a human’s life begins at the start of the human life cycle. 68% of biologists (1898 out of 2794) represented the fertilization view in response to an essay question on when a human’s life begins.40 A review of recent discoveries and the development of scientific literature since Roe reveals a strong consensus that agrees fertilization—a process which starts with sperm-egg binding and is completed by sperm-egg pronuclear fusion41—is the starting point <br />
<br />
; a human zygote is, from a biological perspective, a human organism43 classified as a member of the Homo sapiens in the same way44 as an infant, a teenager,45 or an adult; a human zygote is simply a human being in the first stage of a human’s development, whether fertilization be deemed a process or an event.4 <br />
<br />
THE FERTILIZATION VIEW IS THE LEADING BIOLOGICAL VIEW ON WHEN A HUMAN’S LIFE BEGINS AND HAS BEEN SINCE THE 19TH CENTURY. A. The discovery of fertilization took place over a century ago. <br />
<br />
In 1827, Karl Ernst von Baer was the first scientist to record an observation of a mammalian egg; <br />
<br />
The early discoveries on the fertilization process, by which spermatozoa enter eggs, took place between 1843 until 1880: <br />
<br />
y, in 1876, Oscar Hertwig has been said to have first established the fertilization view when he described the fusion of the nuclei of a male’s spermatozoa and a female’s ovum <br />
<br />
Peer-reviewed journals present the fertilization view on when a human’s life begins as a fact that requires no explanation or citation <br />
<br />
During hearings conducted by the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Senate Bill 158, the “Human Life Bill,” numerous scientific experts testified on the question of when a human’s life begins. After hours of testimony by scientists and medical doctors, the Official Senate Report reached the following conclusion: “Physicians, biologists, and other scientists agree that conception marks the beginning of the life of a human being—of a being that is alive and is a member of the human species. There is overwhelming agreement on this point in countless medical, biological, and scientific writings.”<br />
<br />
<br />
This view is not merely shared by academics in the literature; it is also the view that college and medical students are taught in their biological and medical textbooks. <br />
<br />
French geneticist Dr. Jerome Lejeune testified that “[l]ife has a very, very long history, but each individual has a very neat beginning––the moment of its conception” because “[t]o accept the fact that after fertilization has taken place a new human has come into being is no longer a matter of taste or of opinion . . . it is plain experimental evidence.”72 Dr. Hymie Gordon, professor of medical genetics and physician at the Mayo Clinic, testified that “now we can say, unequivocally, that the question of when life begins––is no longer a question for theological or philosophical dispute. It is an established scientific fact. Theologians and philosophers may go on to debate the meaning of life or the purpose of life, but it is an established fact that all life, including human life, begins at the moment of conception.”73 Experts also testified that there are no alternative theories on when a human’s life begins in the scientific literature <br />
<br />
Dr. Gordon claimed: “I have never encountered in my reading of the scientific literature—long before I became concerned with abortion, euthanasia, and so on—anyone who has argued that life did not begin at the moment of conception, or that it was not a human conception if it resulted from the fertilization of a human egg by a human sperm. As far as I know, there has been no argument about these matters.”74 This lack of any alternative biological views in the literature was also attested to by Dr. Micheline Matthew-Roth, who worked as a principal <br />
<br />
<br />
96% of 5,577 biologists from 1,058 academic institutions affirmed that a human’s life begins at fertilization. 1. The survey questions solely focused on the biological perspective on when a human’s life begins <br />
<br />
<br />
96% of 5,577 biologists from 1,058 academic institutions affirmed that a human’s life begins at fertilization. 1. The survey questions solely focused on the biological perspective on when a human’s life begins <br />
<br />
Participation in the survey was sought from members of biology departments around the world. Of the participants who provided analyzable data, 5,577 biologists from 1,058 institutions provided analyzable data on operative questions. Most of the biologists in the sample identified as male (63%), non-religious (63%) and the majority held a Ph.D. (95%). Ideologically, most of the sample identified as liberal (89%) and pro-choice (85%). The sample was comprised of biologists from 86 countries. See supra n.17 at 239. 2 <br />
<br />
fertilization view. Participants were asked to affirm or reject the statements, and they were then presented an open-ended essay question on the biological perspective on when a human’s life begins (Q6)85: Question 1: The end product of mammalian fertilization is a fertilized egg (‘zygote’), a new mammalian organism in the first stage of its species’ life cycle with its species’ genome. Question 2: The development of a mammal begins with fertilization, a process by which the spermatozoon from the male and the oocyte from the female unite to give rise to a new organism, the zygote. Question 3: A mammal’s life begins at fertilization, the process during which a male gamete unites with a female gamete to form a single cell called a zygote. Question 4: In developmental biology, fertilization marks the beginning of a human’s life since that process produces an organism with a human genome that has begun to develop in the first stage of the human life cycle. Question 5: From a biological perspective, a zygote that has a human genome is a human because it is a human organism developing in the earliest stage of the human life cycle. <br />
<br />
<br />
Question 6: From a biological perspective, how would you answer the question “When does a human’s life begin?” <br />
<br />
The statement in Q1 was affirmed by 91% of participants (4555 out of 4993). The statement in Q2 was affirmed by 88% of participants (3984 out of 4510). The statement in Q3 was affirmed by 77% of participants (3153 out of 4078). The statement in Q4 was affirmed by 75% of participants (2500 out of 3334). The statement in Q5 was affirmed by 69% of participants (2744 out of 3980).86 Of those who assessed at least one of the five statements, 96% of participants affirmed at least one (5337 out of 5577) and 4% did not (240 out of 5577). <br />
<br />
Similarly, of those who assessed multiple statements, 96% affirmed at least one (4463 out of 4650) while 4% affirmed none (187 of 4650), and 85% affirmed at least half of the statements they assessed (3936 out of 4650).87 Consistent with their affirmation rates of the fertilization view in Q1-Q5, 68% of biologists represented the fertilization view (1898 out of 2794) in response to the open-ended essay question on when a human’s life begins (Q6). 10% represented some point between fertilization and the moment a fetus is viable (268 out of 2794), 10% represented the viability view (284 out of 2794), and 12% represented the view that a human’s life begins at birth (343 out of 2794).88 The strictest measure of biologists’ views assessed the responses of participants who answered each question consistently—those who either affirmed each statement (Q1-Q5) and represented the fertilization view in response to the essay question (Q6) or rejected each statement and represented some later point. There was a greater number of participants who consistently affirmed the fertilization view (97%; 1011 out of 1044) than the number of participants who consistently did not affirm the fertilization view (3%; 33 out of 1044).89 <br />
<br />
Abortion advocates and abortion doctors affirm that a human’s life begins at fertilization. Ethicist Peter Singer supports abortion rights and has promoted the fertilization view: “Whether a being is a member of a given species is something that can be determined scientifically, by an examination of the nature of the chromosomes in the cells of living organisms,” because “there is no doubt that from the first moments of its existence an embryo conceived from human sperm and eggs is a human being.”90 <br />
(Yet he argues for aborting up to 2 years old)<br />
<br />
The fertilization view is as subject to change due to new information as is the number of hydrogen atoms in a molecule of water: the number might not be two if scientists abandon the modern understanding of hydrogen, oxygen, atoms, molecules, and water—just as a human’s life might no longer be deemed to begin at fertilization if scientists abandon the modern understanding of fertilization, the human life cycle, and the genetics-based method of biologically classifying organisms. <br />
<br />
==50 Professors Mary Ann Glendon and O. Carter Snead==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185180/20210729085701253_19-1392%20Amici%20Brief.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
Abortion rulings have no support from the Constitution's text, history, or tradition.<br />
<br />
Roe and Doe are unconstitutional.<br />
<br />
Later precedents are even farther from the Constitution, offering nothing but confusion.<br />
<br />
Stare Decisis principles support overturning them.<br />
<br />
The Court’s Abortion Jurisprudence Grafts On to American Law a Constitutionally Unwarranted, False, and Destructive Account of Human Identity and Flourishing.<br />
<br />
The current law of abortion . . . frames the public question as a zero-sum conflict between isolated strangers, one of whom is recognized as a person, with the other deemed a sub-personal being whose moral and legal status is contingent upon the private judgment of others. It offers no com�prehensive support for the vulnerable persons in�volved, including especially the unborn child and her mother. . . .<br />
<br />
In response to the bodily, psychic, and financial burdens of unwanted pregnancy and parenthood, American abortion jurisprudence offers nothing more than the license to terminate the developing human life in utero . . . . These are the rights and privileges suited to atomized individual wills who inhabit a world of strife. They are limited weapons <br />
and tools of rational mastery fit for a lonely, disembodied self to defend and pursue its interests.<br />
<br />
American abortion jurisprudence offers nothing more than the license to terminate the developing human life in utero . . . . They are not well-designed to address the complex needs and wants of a community of embodied, vulnerable, and interdependent human persons.<br />
<br />
...it biases the Court’s analysis to craft a solution for the abortion issue that is more suitable for an individual seeking to repel a stranger from intruding into her interests, namely, by conferring a right to use lethal violence. This may be suitable for adversarial strangers in a world of strife. Not for a mother and a child in crisis.<br />
<br />
...The Court has no business in this space....<br />
<br />
==51 Monique Wubbenhorst, M.D., M.P.H., Grazie Christie, M.D., Colleen Malloy, M.D., and the Catholic Association Foundation==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185351/20210729163513970_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20in%20Support%20of%20Petitioners.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
Roe and Casey’s Viability Standard Is Incomplete and Outdated According to Current <br />
Science. “Viability” no longer means what it did at the time of Roe and Casey. Ultrasound technology has dramatically improved and provides a clear window into the womb to witness the humanity of the unborn child. Improved imaging has provided greater information about fetal development. <br />
<br />
Advancements in technology have led to recognition of the fetus as a patient by <br />
mainstream medicine. Current science shows that the fetus is pain-capable much earlier than previously thought. <br />
<br />
Casey Is Unworkable and Should Be Overruled. Casey does not allow for restrictions based <br />
on increased knowledge of how the brutal abortion procedure affects the unborn <br />
child.<br />
<br />
Casey is inconsistent with the Court’s recognition of other State interests that <br />
justify abortion restrictions. Casey’s standard is arbitrary and has had <br />
damaging effects.<br />
<br />
<br />
The dilation and evacuation (D&E) procedure currently used after 15 weeks’ gestation was not used for second-trimester abortions at the time of Roe. ''City of Akron v. Akron Ctr. for Reprod. Health, Inc''., 462 U.S. 416, 436 & n.23 (1983); ...The Supreme Court described the D&E procedure in gruesome “technical detail” in Stenberg v. Carhart, acknowledging that its description “may seem clinically cold or callous to some, perhaps horrifying to others.” <br />
<br />
As the Supreme Court explained, abortion doctors use D&E in the second trimester because at that stage of fetal development, “the fetus is larger”—“particularly the head”—and the “bones are more rigid,” meaning “dismemberment or other destructive procedures” are required. . . . A physician extracts from the womb what moments before had been a living <br />
“unborn child”—using forceps, scissors, or a sim�ilar instrument that “slices, crushes, or grasps” fetal body parts one at a time. Piece by piece. Arm by arm. Leg by leg. And as the abortion doctor “cut[s] or rip[s] the piece from the body”—a torso, a spine, a rib cage—he places each body part on a tray (or in a dish) to keep inventory and ensure that nothing is left behind. Sometimes the heart is still beating on the tray. The fetus dies just as an <br />
adult experiencing corporal dismemberment would—by bleeding to death as his or her body is <br />
torn apart.<br />
<br />
Whole Woman’s Health, 978 F.3d at 913 (Willett, J., dissenting) (emphasis added) (citations omitted).88 “As one bioethicist testified, it’s ‘self-evident that it’s brutal and <br />
inhumane to tear a living organism limb from limb alive.’” Id. at 930. And “[n]o one would dispute that, for many, D&E is a procedure itself laden with the power to devalue human life.” Gonzales, 550 U.S. at 158.<br />
<br />
...the D&E procedure is inherently brutal and inhumane regardless of whether the fetus can feel it. We would never countenance dismembering a person (or even an animal) as a means of causing death, even if the person were anesthetized first.<br />
<br />
...“[t]he notion that anything in the Constitution prevents States from passing laws prohibiting the dismembering of a living child is implausible.” ''Harris v. W. Alabama Women’s Ctr.,'' 139 S. Ct. 2606, 2607 (2019) (Thomas, J., concurring). <br />
<br />
Casey is also out-of-step with the Court’s own recognition of other state interests justifying regulation of previability abortion. Some examples: preventing the coarsening of society to the humanity of newborns, Gonzales, 550 U.S. at 157; the integrity and ethics of the medical profession, who must simultaneously treat the unborn child as a patient in <br />
some contexts and as mere “tissue” in others,94 id.; protection of minors, Casey, 505 U.S. at 899–900; and maternal health, Roe, 410 U.S. at 154.<br />
<br />
Box v. Planned Parenthood of Ind. & Ky., 139 S. Ct. 1780, 1784 (2019) (Thomas, J., concurring). Thus, there is a “compelling interest in preventing abortion from becoming a tool of modern-day eugenics.” Id. at 1783 & n.2 (Thomas, J., concurring). But Casey does not permit those interests to be considered in limiting abortion.<br />
<br />
...The Court’s foray into medical regulation may not merely be stagnating the legal standard despite advancing science—it may be impeding science. Researchers fear that acknowledging science on fetal pain may lead to restriction on abortion. ACOG’s clinging to decade-old research illustrates this point. It also illustrates how ACOG’s views are based less on science and more on the politics of protecting Roe and Casey. It is unconscionable to think that the “medical” community shapes “the science” to fit its political goals. But this is the division the Court’s abortion jurisprudence inflames.<br />
<br />
==52 Commissioner Andy Gipson, Former Representative and Chair of Mississippi House Judiciary B Committee==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185353/20210729163718064_Amicus%20Brief.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
It is often overlooked that even in Roe, the Supreme Court acknowledged that the states “have an important and legitimate interest . . . in protecting the potentiality of human life.” 410 U.S. 113, 162 (1973). However, “the Court’s precedents after Roe … ‘undervalue[d] the State’s interest in potential life.” Gonzales, 550 U.S. at 157 (quoting Casey, 505 U.S. at 873 (plurality opinion)). Then, in Casey, the Court stated flatly “the State has legitimate interests from the outset of the pregnancy in protecting the health of the woman and the life of the fetus that may become a child,” 505 U.S. at 846, and Gonzales agreed that “[t]he government may use its voice and its regulatory authority to show its profound respect for the life within the woman.” Gonzales, 550 U.S. at 157.<br />
<br />
The Mississippi Legislature values life before and after birth, provides assistance for mothers and families from conception onward, provides support for children starting at <br />
birth, and has an interest in protecting unborn life, protecting women from the health risks associated with abortions after 15 weeks’ gestational age, and in protecting the integrity of the medical profession.<br />
<br />
==53 Care Net, a National Affiliation Organization of 1,200 Pregnancy Help Centers, and Alpha Center, a South Dakota Registered Pregnancy Help Center==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185348/20210729163211251_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
An Abortion is the Employment of a Medical Procedure to Achieve a Non-Medical Objective: The Termination of the Pregnant Mother’s Constitutionally Protected Relationship with Her Child,<br />
By Terminating the Life of a Whole, Separate, Unique, Living Human Being.<br />
<br />
An Abortion is Not the Exercise of a Right; It is the Waiver, Surrender and Termination of One of the Most Important Fundamental Intrinsic Rights a Mother Has in All of Life; Roe and <br />
Casey Have Operated to Destroy that Right.<br />
<br />
The Pregnant Mother has a Fundamental, Intrinsic Right to Maintain Her Relationship with Her Child. But Because Roe and Casey have Prohibited the States from Providing Meaningful Protections for the Pregnant Mother’s Right to Her Relationship, Mothers are Losing Their Children Against Their Will. Pregnant Mothers are Routinely Coerced and Pressured into <br />
Abortions, and the Derelict Practices of Abortion Clinics Exacerbate the Coercion. Mothers' Due Process and Equal Protection Rights Are Being Violated.<br />
<br />
Pregnant mothers are routinely coerced or pressured into abortions they do not want. P.P. v. Noem, Declarations of B.H., ECF 206; Weston, ECF 207; Alyssa Carlson, ECF 209; S.C., 208; Amrutha Bindu Mekala, ECF 217; Ayers, ECF 218; Deere, ECF 353; Roden, ECF 219; Corbett, ECF 220; Watson, ECF 221; Miller, ECF 222; Bowlin, ECF 223; McAdams, ECF 224; Steen, ECF 225; Cota, ECF 226; Hurguy, ECF 227; Szmeit, ECF 228; Kiefer, ECF 239; and Florczak-Seeman, ECF 238.<br />
<br />
Pregnant mothers are routinely coerced into abortions at abortion clinics, P.P. v. Noem; Bindu Mekala, ECF 217; Ayers, ECF 218; Roden, ECF 219; Corbett, ECF 220; Watson, ECF 221; Miller, ECF 222. Pregnant mothers are routinely pressured into abortions by the abortion clinic staff. P.P. v. Noem; Huffstetler, ECF 229; Holcomb Misely, ECF 268; Bowlin, ECF 223; McAdams, ECF 224; Ruch, ECF 230; Steen, ECF 225; Cota, ECF 226; Hartman ECF 231; Hurguy, ECF 227; Szmeit, ECF 228; Coleman, ECF 257, ¶32 ID 4203; Hartmann, ECF 269 ¶79, ID 5306.<br />
<br />
Some pregnant mothers coerced into abortions are so traumatized they commit suicide. P.P. v. Noem, Declaration of George Zallie (who found his 21-year-old daughter hanging from her bedroom fan at the family’s home), ECF 233. Women pressured to have an abortion after a forcible rape, testify that the abortion was like a second rape, only far worse than the first. Id. Lisa Hartman, ECF 231, ¶10, ID 3504.<br />
<br />
Studies show a leading cause of death among pregnant mothers is murder, and most of those murders are performed by their male partners. P.P. v. Noem, Coleman, ECF 257, ¶35, ID 4204-5; see, 79 documented cases of pregnant mothers murdered because they refused to have<br />
an abortion, Coleman, Exhibit D. In an exhaustive survey of 987 post-abortive women, over half stated their abortions were coerced or pressured, 34% stated that abortion clinic personnel pressured them to have an abortion, and 84.6% wished that just one person<br />
offered the support they needed to carry to term. P.P. v. Noem, Coleman, ECF 257 ¶61, ID 4218.<br />
<br />
In 2013, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists issued Committee Opinion 554, “Reproductive and Sexual Coercion,” stating that “pregnancy coercion” is a serious cultural problem which includes threats or acts of violence to compel women to terminate a pregnancy. Declarations of Coleman, ECF 257,¶38, ID 4205-6; Hartmann, ECF 321, ¶114, ID 5326-7.<br />
<br />
Coerced abortions are so widespread that in 2009 the Center Against Forced Abortions (“CAFA”) was created, and CAFA’s national network of attorneys provide pro bono legal services for pregnant mothers who seek help because they are being coerced into an abortion. CAFA has saved between 10,000 to 20,000 pregnant mothers from coerced abortions. Id., Parker, ECF 248, ¶¶2-12, ID 3922-3927<br />
<br />
Pregnancy help centers throughout the nation counsel large numbers of women victimized by coerced abortions. Id., Declarations of Florczak-Seeman, ECF 238; Kiefer, ECF 239; Corbett, ECF 220; Cota, ECF 226; Collins, ECF 240; Hjemfelt, ECF 242; Martinez, ECF 241; Wollman,<br />
ECF 243; Unruh, 5/1/2020, ECF 264; Unruh, 7/1/2011, ECF 263; Erica Miller, ECF 237; Travis Lasseter, ECF 265.<br />
<br />
Good Counsel, Inc., which provides free maternity housing, has counseled thousands of post-abortive women, a significant percentage of whom were coerced or pressured into abortions. Almost all of the mothers Good Counsel houses are homeless because they were forced out of their homes for refusing to have an abortion. Id. Bell, ECF 261,¶4, ID 4537-8. Many other shelters provide living arrangements for pregnant mothers because they are being coerced to have abortions. Id., Sandra Ramos, ECF 259.<br />
<br />
Dorothy Wallis has worked with many hundreds of pregnancy help centers, where post-abortive women report that: they were coerced by threats of violence; abortion clinic personnel pressured them into an abortion; or no one would help them keep their babies. Id., Wallis, <br />
ECF 258, Ex. A, p.10-11, ID 4505-6.<br />
<br />
In addition to the testimony of the women, former abortion clinic doctors and clinic managers have verified the negligence and dereliction of abortion clinics. Id., Declarations of Giebink, M.D., ECF 232; Thayer, ECF 210; Johnson, ECF 211; Lancaster, ECF 212;, Trevino, ECF 213; Padilla, ECF 214; Everett, ECF 215; Behrhorst, ECF 216. Surgery is scheduled over the phone, it is assumed that the mother decided to have an abortion before she arrives, consent is taken for surgery, payment is made without any counseling and no regard is given to the mother’s interest in her relationship with her child. Id., Declarations of Giebink, M.D., ECF 232; Thayer ECF210; Johnson, ECF 211; Lancaster, ECF 212; Trevino, ECF 213; Padilla, ECF 214; Everett ECF 215;Behrhorst ECF 216.<br />
<br />
Thus there is no physician-patient relationship at abortion clinics (Id. Thayer, ECF 201, ¶14, ID 3305; Id.Giebink, M.D., ECF 232 ¶28, ID 3517) and clinics perform unethical itinerant surgery. Id. Ridder, M.D., ECF 246, ¶¶35-38, ID 3747-3749; Id. Hartmann, M.D., ECF 269,¶66, ID 5298-9.<br />
<br />
In addition to the testimony of the women, former abortion clinic doctors and clinic managers have verified the negligence and dereliction of abortion clinics. Id., Declarations of Giebink, M.D., ECF 232; Thayer, ECF 210; Johnson, ECF 211; Lancaster, ECF 212;, Trevino, ECF 213; Padilla, ECF 214; Everett, ECF 215; Behrhorst, ECF 216. Surgery is scheduled over the phone, it is assumed that the mother decided to have an abortion before she arrives, consent is taken for surgery, payment is made without any counseling and no regard is given to the mother’s interest in her relationship with her child. Id., Declarations of Giebink, M.D., ECF 232; Thayer ECF 210; Johnson, ECF 211; Lancaster, ECF 212; Trevino, ECF 213; Padilla, ECF 214; Everett ECF 215;Behrhorst ECF 216.<br />
<br />
Thus there is no physician-patient relationship at abortion clinics (Id. Thayer, ECF 201, ¶14, ID 3305; Id. Giebink, M.D., ECF 232 ¶28, ID 3517) and clinics perform unethical itinerant surgery. Id. Ridder, M.D., ECF 246, ¶¶35-38, ID 3747-3749; Id. Hartmann, M.D., ECF 269, ¶66, ID 5298-9.<br />
<br />
Planned Parenthood and other clinics pressure their staffs to “sell” abortions, and steer, mislead, and pressure ambivalent pregnant mothers to have abortions. Id. Giebink, M.D., ECF 232 ¶¶22,23, ID 3515-16; Thayer ECF 210 ¶¶11-16, ID 3303-3306; Johnson, ECF 211 ¶¶16-24, <br />
ID 3326-3330; Lancaster, ECF 212, ¶¶12-16, ID 3336-38; Trevino, ECF 213, ¶¶5-15, ID 3341-46; Padilla, ECF 214, ¶¶16-19, ID 3352-32; Everett, ECF 215, ¶¶3-9, ID 3357-3373; Behrhorst, ECF 216, ¶¶7-11, ID 3411-3412. B.H., ECF 206; Weston, ECF 207; Ayers, ECF 218; S.C., ECF 208.<br />
<br />
It is so common for abortion clinics to perform abortions on mothers who are ambivalent that pregnant mothers seek help to stop medical abortions after they are started. A national network of physicians arose to help these women stop medical abortions and to give birth to children they want. Id., Davenport, MD, ECF 260. Even when it is obvious that a pregnant mother is being pressured or coerced into an abortion, the clinics still push<br />
her to an abortion. Id., Declarations of Thayer, ECF 201, ¶24, ID 3309; Johnson, ECF 211, ¶¶16-22, ID 3326-3329; Lancaster, ECF 212 ¶¶13-15, ID 3336-3337;Weston, ECF 207; B.H, ECF 206.; Vixie Miller, ECF 222.<br />
<br />
==54 Reason for Life==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185298/20210729143402297_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20for%20Reason%20for%20Life.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Roe errantly evaluated a state’s interest in “potential” life instead of “actual” life.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">...Many good reasons exist to prohibit abortion. Protecting life is chief among them. Yet in proclaiming a newfound abortion right, Roe failed to consider the state’s interest in protecting human life. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">For the Roe Court, the fact that “a new human life is present from the moment of conception” was nothing but a “theory.” Roe, 410 U.S. at 150. So rather than delve into a realm that it thought may implicate “theology” and “philosophy,” it chose to consider a state’s interest in “potential life” instead of actual life. Id. at 150, 159, 163.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Roe thought this approach was adequate because <br />
a state’s interest in mere “potential life” qualifies as <br />
a “legitimate state interest.” Id. at 150 (“[A] <br />
legitimate state interest . . . need not stand or fall on <br />
acceptance of the belief that life begins at <br />
conception . . . .”). However, a state’s interest is <br />
stronger when actual—not simply potential—life is <br />
involved. By concluding that it “need not resolve the <br />
difficult question of when life begins” and only <br />
evaluating the state’s interest in “potential life,” Roe<br />
overlooked the true magnitude of the state’s interest. Id. at 159, 163. That doomed Roe’s efforts to rule <br />
“consistent with the relative weights of the <br />
respective interests involved.” Id. at 165; see also S. <br />
Subcomm. on Separation of Powers Rep. on the <br />
Human Life B., at 5 (97th Cong., 1st Sess.) <br />
[hereinafter S. Rep.], [https://www.google.com/books/edition/The_Human_Life_Bill_S_158/QXZKAQAAMAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=the%20human%20life%20bill%20s%20158%20report&pg=PA1&printsec=frontcover The Human Life Bill] (“Because <br />
it did not resolve whether unborn children are <br />
human beings, the Court could not make an <br />
informed decision . . . .”).<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">But determining when human life begins does <br />
not require theorizing. Science answers the question: <br />
“the life of a human being begins at conception, the <br />
time when the process of fertilization is complete.” S. <br />
Rep., supra, at 7; see also id. at 9 (quoting a genetics <br />
professor and Mayo Clinic physician’s testimony that <br />
“[t]heologians and philosophers may go on to debate <br />
the meaning of life or the purpose of life, but it is an <br />
established fact that all life, including human life, <br />
begins at the moment of conception” (citation <br />
omitted)). Because of this scientific understanding, <br />
even federal law recognizes the humanity of unborn <br />
children and punishes those who murder them <br />
outside the abortion context. See 18 U.S.C. § 1841 <br />
(noting circumstances in which one who <br />
“intentionally kills or attempts to kill [an] unborn <br />
child” shall be punished “for intentionally killing or <br />
attempting to kill a human being”).<br />
<br />
==55 Illinois Right to Life==<br />
<br />
==74. American College of Pediatricians==<br />
<br />
(This entire excerpt is copied into Footnote #2 of Statement #4) <br />
<br />
[http://supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185265/20210729133245734_Dobbs%20Amicus.pdf Filed in Dobbs]<br />
<br />
<blockquote>2. What we know today—as uncontroverted scientific fact—is that the child develops much more quickly than the Court in Roe presumed. The Court then was told that “in early pregnancy . . . embryonic development has scarcely begun.” Brief for Appellant at 20, Roe, 410 U.S. 113 (No. 70-18), 1971 WL 128054. But that is wrong. From conception, the unborn child is a unique human being who rapidly develops the functions and form of a child long before viability. (page 2-3)</blockquote><br />
<blockquote>At five weeks’ gestation (just three weeks after conception),1 the unborn child’s heart starts beating. By six weeks, brain waves are detectable, and the nervous system is steadily developing. By seven weeks, the child can move and starts to develop sensory receptors. By nine weeks, the child’s eyes, ears, and teeth are visible. By ten weeks, multiple organs begin to function, and the child has the neural circuitry for spinal reflex, an early response to pain. By twelve weeks, the child can open and close fingers and sense stimulation from the outside world. By fifteen weeks—when Mississippi’s law limits abortions—the child can smile and is likely sensitive to pain. Medical interventions after this stage (other than abortion) use analgesia to prevent suffering. And by eighteen weeks, pain induces hormonal responses in the child. All this happens long before viability. Reflecting these advances in medical knowledge, ultrasound imagery available at the time of Roe looks much different from the imagery available today: (Image not shown here)</blockquote><br />
<blockquote>Page 11-12: During the fifth week, “[t]he cardiovascular system is the first major system to function in the embryo,” with the heart and vascular system appearing in the middle of the week.33 By the end of the fifth week, “blood is circulating and the heart begins to beat on the 21st or 22nd day” after conception.34 </blockquote><br />
<blockquote>By six weeks, “[t]he embryonic heartbeat can be detected.”35 Technological advances permit not only imaging detection at this early stage, but also videography of the unborn child, including footage of the child’s heartbeat.36 </blockquote><br />
<blockquote>After detection of a fetal heartbeat—and absent an abortion—the overwhelming majority of unborn children will now survive to birth.37 “[O]nce a fetus possesses cardiac activity, its chances of surviving to full term are between 95%–98%.”38</blockquote> <br />
<blockquote>Also during the sixth week, the child’s nervous system is developing, with the brain already “patterned” at this early stage.39 The earliest neurons are generated in the region of the brain responsible for thinking, memory, and other higher functions.40 And</blockquote> <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnotes for Page 12:<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;34 Id. at 2662. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;35 Id. at 2755. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;36 See, e.g., Endowment for Hum. Dev., The Heart in Action: 4 Weeks, 4 Days, available athttps://www.ehd.org/movies/21/The#Heart-in-Action [https://perma.cc/GQN4-Q8QS] (last visited July 28, 2021) (showing footage of a heartbeat at six weeks); see also, e.g., Endowment for Hum. Dev., Your Life Before Birth (Mar. 18, <br />
2019), available at https://vimeo.com/325006095 [https://perma.cc/6QBT-UWLK] (last visited July 28, 2021) (displaying video footage of a child’s development). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;37 Joe Leigh Simpson, Low Fetal Loss Rates After Ultrasound Proved-Viability in First Trimester, 258 J. Am. Med. Ass’n 2555, 2555–57 (1987). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;38 Forte, supra note 11, at 140 & nn.121–22 (footnote omitted) (collecting post-Casey medical research). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;39 Thomas W. Sadler, Langman’s Medical Embryology 72 (14th ed. 2019); see generally id. at 59–95. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;40 See, e.g., Irina Bystron et al., Tangential Networks of Precocious Neurons and Early Axonal Outgrowth in the Embryonic Human Forebrain, 25 J. Neuroscience 2781, 2788 (2005). <br />
<blockquote>(Page 13) the child’s face is developing, with cheeks, chin, and jaw starting to form.41 At seven weeks, cutaneous sensory receptors, which permit prenatal pain perception, begin to develop.42 The unborn child also starts to move.43 During the seventh week, “the growth of the head exceeds that of other regions” largely because of “the rapid development of the brain” and facial features.44 At eight weeks, essential organs and systems have started to form, including the child’s kidneys, liver, and lungs.45 The upper lip and nose can be seen.46 At nine weeks, the child’s ears, eyes, teeth, and external genitalia are forming.47</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnotes for page 13:<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;41 See Sadler, supra note 39, at 72–95. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;42 Kanwaljeet S. Anand & Paul R. Hickey, Special Article, Pain and Its Effects in the Human Neonate and Fetus, 317 New Eng. J. Med. 1321, 1322 (1987). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;43 Alessandra Pionetelli, Development of Normal Fetal Movements: The First 25 Weeks of Gestation 98, 110 (2010). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;44 Keith L. Moore et al., The Developing Human: Clinically Oriented Embryology 65–84.e1 (11th ed. 2020). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;45 See Sadler, supra note 39, at 72–95. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;46 Moore et al., supra note 44, 1–9.e1. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;47 See Sadler, supra note 39, at 72–95; see also App. 66a. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;48 Pionetelli, supra note 43, at 65 (2010). <br />
<blockquote>Page 14: At ten weeks, vital organs begin to function, and the child’s hair and nails begin to form.49 By this point, the neural circuitry has formed for spinal reflex, or “nociception,” which is the fetus’s early response to pain.50 Starting around ten weeks, the earliest connections between neurons constituting the subcortical-frontal pathways—the circuitry of the brain that is involved in a wide range of psychological and emotional experiences, including pain perception—are established.51 At the time of Roe, “the medical consensus was that babies do not feel pain.”52 Only during the late 1980s and early 1990s did any of the initial scientific evidence for prenatal pain begin to emerge.53 Today, the “evidence for the subconscious incorporation of pain into neurological development and plasticity is incontrovertible.”54 Every modern review of prenatal </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnotes for page 14:<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;49 See Sadler, supra note 39, at 106–127; Moore et al., supra note 44, at 65–84.e1; Johns Hopkins Med., The First Trimester, available at https://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/health/wellness#and-prevention/the-first-trimester[https://perma.cc/8N6H#M6CN] (last visited July 28, 2021); see also App. 66a. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;50 See, e.g., Int’l Ass’n for the Study of Pain, IASP Terminology (last updated Dec. 14, 2017), available at https://www.iasp#pain.org/Education/Content.aspx?ItemNumber=1698#Nociception [https://perma.cc/5PV5-5T9H] (last visited July 28, 2021); see also App. 80a. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;51 Lana Vasung et al., Development of Axonal Pathways in the Human Fetal Fronto-Limbic Brain: Histochemical Characterization and Diffusion Tensor Imaging, 217 J. Anatomy 400, 400–03 (2010). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;52 Am. Coll. of Pediatricians, Fetal Pain: What is the Scientific Evidence? (Jan. 2021), available at https://acpeds.org/position#statements/fetal-pain [https://perma.cc/JM3T-XQV8] (last visited July 28, 2021). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;53 Ibid.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;54 Curtis L. Lowery et al., Neurodevelopmental Changes of Fetal Pain, 31 Seminars Perinatology 275, 275 (2007).<br />
<blockquote>Page 15: pain consistently issues the same interpretation of the data: by ten to twelve weeks, a fetus develops neural circuitry capable of detecting and responding to pain.55 Even more sophisticated reactions occur as the unborn child develops further.56 And new developments have provided still more evidence strengthening the conclusion that fetuses are capable of experiencing pain in the womb.57</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnotes for page 15:<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;55 See, e.g., Carlo V. Bellieni & Giuseppe Buonocore, Is Fetal Pain a Real Evidence?, 25 J. Maternal-Fetal & Neonatal Med. 1203, 1203–08 (2012); Richard Rokyta, Fetal Pain, 29 Neuroendocrinology Letters 807, 807–14 (2008). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;56 See Royal Coll. of Obstetricians & Gynaecologists, Fetal Awareness: Review of Research and Recommendations for Practice 5, 7 (Mar. 2010), available at https://www.rcog.org.uk/globalassets/documents/guidelines/rcogfetalawarenesswpr0610.pdf [https://perma.cc/4V84-TEMC] (last visited July 28, 2021); Susan J. Lee et al., Fetal Pain: A Systematic Multidisciplinary Review of the Evidence, 294 J. Am. Med. Ass’n 947, 948–49 (2005); see also App. 76a, 84a–85a. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;57 See Lisandra Stein Bernardes et al., Acute Pain Facial Expressions in 23-Week Fetus, Ultrasound Obstetrics & Gynecology (June 2021), available at https://obgyn.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/uog.23709?af=R [https://perma.cc/V8BU-PZK4] (last visited July 28, 2021)<br />
<blockquote>Page 17: Moreover, by twelve weeks, the parts of the central nervous system leading from peripheral nerves to the brain are sufficiently connected to permit the peripheral pain receptors to detect painful stimuli.68 Thus, the unborn “baby develops sensitivity to external stimuli and to pain much earlier than was believed” when Roe and Casey were decided. MKB Mgmt. Corp. v. Stenehjem, 795 F.3d 768, 774 (8th Cir. 2015) (cleaned up).</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnote for page 17: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;68 Sekulic et al., supra note 65, at 1034–35. <br />
<blockquote>Page 21: By eighteen weeks, the child can hear his or her mother’s voice, and the child can yawn.87 The nervous system in the brain is also developing the circuitry for all the senses: taste, touch, smell, sight, and hearing.</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnote for page 21: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;87 Ibid.; see also Cleveland Clinic, Fetal Development: Stages of Growth (last updated Apr. 16, 2020), available at https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/articles/7247-fetal#development-stages-of-growth [https://perma.cc/YG92-KRH4] (last visited July 28, 2021). <br />
<blockquote>Page 25: Around twenty-six weeks, the child’s eyes open, and he or she can fully see what is going on around him or her.106 Brain wave activity increases throughout this period. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnote: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;106 Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hosp., A Week-by-Week Pregnancy Calendar: Week 26, available at https://www.hopkinsallchildrens.org/Patients-Families/Health-Library/HealthDocNew/Week-26?id=13484 [https://perma.cc/A8QG#XBPA] (last visited July 28, 2021).<br />
<br />
==79. World Faith Foundation and Institute for Faith and Family==<br />
<br />
(This entire excerpt is copied into Footnote #2 of Statement #4)<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185238/20210729120554370_19-1392%20tsac%20IFF.pdf Filed in Dobbs] <br />
<br />
<blockquote>The viability line is arbitrary, lacks constitutional support, and conflicts with legal principles in other contexts. Developments in medical technology expose the reality of a child in the womb worthy of legal protection. “Emerging science never shows the unborn to be less than human; rather, each advancement further reveals the humanity of the developing child in all its wonder”—even at 15 weeks, the developing child has “fully formed eyebrows, noses, and lips,” and “the baby’s fully formed heart pumps about 26 quarts of blood per day.”3</blockquote><br />
<blockquote>Yet this Court has stubbornly maintained the viability line, reaffirming Roe’s “recognition of the right of the woman” to choose abortion “before viability . . . without undue interference from the State.” Casey, 505 U.S. at 846. Gonzales began by presuming the same principle and timeline (Gonzales, 550 U.S. at 146)—but on the next page described the unborn child as “a living organism within the womb, whether or not it is viable outside the womb” (id. at 147, emphasis added).</blockquote> <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Footnote: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; https://lozierinstitute.org/cli-experts-urge-scotus-to-catch-up-to#science-in-mississippi-abortion-case/; https://lozierinstitute.org/new-paper-coauthored-by-cli-scholars-examines-treating-the-patient#within-the-patient/. These articles described in further detail the baby’s fetal development at 15 weeks.<br />
<blockquote>Page 13: Another critical development is the ability to detect a child’s heartbeat in the womb. Several years ago, the Eighth Circuit considered whether the state could prohibit abortions of “unborn children who possess detectable heartbeats.” MKB, 795 F.3d at 770. Experts testified that “fetal cardiac activity is detectable by about 6 weeks” although viability does not occur “until about 24 weeks.” Id. at 771. Sadly, the court concluded that Roe dictated the outcome but suggested that “good reasons exist for [this] Court to reevaluate its jurisprudence.” Id. at 774. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Ironically, no discussion or evidence of infant heartbeats is given in the amicus by Heartbeat International. [http://www.supremecourt.gov /DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185354/20210729164709878_Dobbs%20Amicus%20Brief%20-%20FINAL.pdf]. The word “heart” comes up 39 times, but only to state the organization’s name.<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
conclusion doesn’t ask that acknowledgment that babies are people, <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red"><br />
<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red"></div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=The_140_Amicus_Briefs_filed_in_Dobbs_v._Jackson&diff=50390The 140 Amicus Briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson2024-01-21T04:48:04Z<p>DaveLeach: /* 53 Care Net, a National Affiliation Organization of 1,200 Pregnancy Help Centers, and Alpha Center, a South Dakota Registered Pregnancy Help Center */</p>
<hr />
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<span style="color:#0000FF">This forum was created by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 13:35, 2 October 2023 (UTC) to mine the gold from the 140 "Amicus" Briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'', June 24, 2022, the ruling that overturned ''Roe v. Wade'' (1973) and ''Planned Parenthood v. Casey'' (1992), returning the decision whether to continue the slaughter to voters state by state. The search here is for nuggets that can help end the slaughter in ''every'' state. I am mining these nuggets for my book, [[Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases]].<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
<span style="color:#0DA">Register (see [[Begin!]]) and join the discussion. [http://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/wiki/Template#Vote Vote]. Improve it. Critique it. Sign your name with 4 tildes (<nowiki>(~~~~)</nowiki>).</span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
Below are the titles, dates filed, and links to, the 140 Amicus Briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' (2022), and excerpts from them, and my comments. I indicate which of them I include in my book, [[Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases]]. They are numbered in the order they were filed.<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
==1. Roman Catholic Diocese of Jackson and Roman Catholic Diocese of Biloxi== <br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/147736/20200714142159951_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20Roman%20Catholic%20Diocese%20of%20Jackson.pdf July 14, 2021 filed]. Summary: this Court should find that the state’s interest in protecting unborn children who have the capacity to feel pain is sufficiently compelling to support a limited prohibition on abortion.<br />
<br />
===Excerpts===<br />
<br />
"The purpose of H.B.1510 is to protect those unborn children who, at 15 weeks gestation, have the capacity to feel pain. ...The government supplied expert testimony on this point" (which was excluded by the district court). <br />
<br />
The main argument seems to be that banning abortions at 15 weeks is not a "substantial" obstacle to abortion, so it doesn't violate Casey, 1992, which prohibits a "substantial" obstacle. While it enhances "respect for life", which Gonzales, 2003, endorses. "Respect for life is clearly shown in Gonzales to be a sufficient governmental interest in abortion regulations." <br />
<br />
States have an "important interest regarding the sanctity of life." Quoted from Carhart, 2000.<br />
<br />
Justice Thomas was quoted saying SCOTUS has “struggle[d] to find a guiding principle to distinguish fundamental rights that warrant protection from nonfundamental rights that do not", and then it is asked, "Does an unborn child have a fundamental right to be free from pain in the womb?"<br />
<br />
[COMMENT: what an understatement! No mention of the right to live? Actually being dead is an effective way to be free from pain. Life involves pain, and every day of life is a gift.]<br />
<br />
The district court shouldn't have forbidden expert testimony about babies feeling pain as they are being murdered. "Whether an unborn child can feel pain when a doctor...kills it, it is clearly relevant to a law which forbids abortions at a time when the unborn child can feel pain." <br />
<br />
"Consider how the Supreme Court has construed the Cruel and Unusual Punishments Clause of the Eighth Amendment to forbid executions of convicted murderers that involve unnecessary pain." Judge Ho added, "If courts grant convicted murderers the right to discovery to mitigate pain from executions, there's no reason they shouldn't be even more solicitous of unborn babies."<br />
<br />
"Should Lady Justice turn a blind eye to the cry of the unborn child, sucking its thumb, hidden in the sacred dark refuge of his or her mother's womb, only to have that womb become a tomb? Justice should not abandon the unborn child. One of the most important roles of law is to fight for those that cannot fight for themselves."<br />
<br />
"...the most fundamental of all rights - life. The right to life is, according to the Declaration of Independence, 'self-evident'. It is the sacred duty of our government to protect and respect this right...." "...a human being must be recognized as having the rights of a person - among which is the inviolable right of every innocent being to life." That's a quote from the Catholic catechism. Paragraph 2270. <br />
<br />
"Before I formed you in the womb, I knew you. Jeremiah 1:5."<br />
<br />
[COMMENT: It is stated that babies are people, yet far less is asked than the outlawing of murdering them in every state, which that fact demands. Not even the overturning of Roe and Casey are asked, but merely the survival of Mississippi's 15 week aborticide ban. Only one Bible verse in support of that fact is given. No evidence that babies are people is offered. The testimony of court-recognized fact finders is absent. <br />
<br />
[The comparison with pain studies for the benefit of convicted murderers being executed is a very strong point. But I am suspicious of the theory that babies much younger ''can't'' feel pain. A worm on a fish hook obviously feels pain. And a human baby, at the same size, can't?]<br />
<br />
==2. American Center for Law & Justice==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/148010/20200717125225969_Dobbs%20v.%20JWHO%20ACLJ%20amicus%20in%20support%20of%20cert.pdf Filed July 14, 2021]. Stare decisis cannot trump adherence to the Constitution as the supreme law of the land.<br />
<br />
===Excerpts===<br />
<br />
"Stare Decisis...cannot exalt knowingly incorrect supreme court decisions over the Constitution itself." "...the justices must prefer a a faithful reading of the Constitution to an acknowledged false reading."<br />
<br />
The "Supremacy Clause" of the Constitution, declaring the Constitution "the supreme law of the land", does not include "decisions of the United States Supreme Court". Judges take an oath to uphold the Constitution. <br />
<br />
"Abortion advocates, recognizing the doctrinal flimisness of this court's abortion jurisprudence, invoke the doctrine of stare decisis as counseling adherence to Roe and Casey even though they were wrongly decided." <br />
<br />
[COMMENT: The brevity of this brief is itself a strong statement, along with its only court cites being about judges not putting themselves above the Constitution. I think it is less than half the length allowed by the Court for an amicus brief. As if to say "Look, you know how wrong Roe and Casey are. Just, STOP!"<br />
<br />
[Nothing is explicitly said about a right to life for babies, to counter all the arguments from Hell for murdering them. But the nose-thumbing at all the arguments from Hell is breathtaking.]<br />
<br />
==3. 375 WOMEN INJURED BY SECOND AND THIRD TRIMESTER LATE TERM ABORTIONS AND ABORTION RECOVERY LEADERS==<br />
<br />
[https://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184712/20210722163259351_41205%20pdf%20Parker%20I%20br.pdf Filed July 20, 2021] “The Dignity Of Infant Life In The Womb” is appealed to.<br />
<br />
The brief says “Amici Women who actually experienced this gruesome<br />
reality request this Court to consider the effect on the woman who has felt her baby moving alive in her body, then realizing the baby is dead and not moving, for two days, before removal. This overall description is clinical gruesomeness at its most wretched level.”<br />
<br />
[COMMENT: Dignity of infant life. It was not pointed out that their “dignity” is made possible only by realization that they are human beings. We eat animals, and do not talk about their “dignity” as we slaughter them. Oh wait, I'm wrong. Democrats regard animal slaughter as way more violative of "dignity" than human slaughter. So maybe it is a more powerful argument in court to DENY that babies of humans are humans? They are animals, which merit greater protection? <br />
<br />
The sentence following: “Especially if one inserts the term ‘baby’ which is the term most women use instead of the clinical term ‘fetus.’”<br />
<br />
“Late term abortions are also a crime against humanity, which occurs when the government withdraws legal protection from a class of human beings.”<br />
<br />
[COMMENT: Three things are missing from making this a powerful argument against legal abortion: (1) ''evidence'' that babies are “human beings”, to trigger what Roe said would “of course...collapse” legal abortion, (2) a request of the Court to end legal abortion, without which there is little pressure on the Court to address this evidence, and (3) citing the fact that babies are human beings - not just the fact that some mothers are grossed out - as the reason legal abortion should end.] <br />
<br />
The only “remedies” requested by the “amici women” brief are: the right to “Protect Women’s Psychological Well-Being (Health), The Dignity<br />
Of “Infant Life” In The Womb, And The Integrity Of The Medical Profession And Society”. Amici women never ask for the end of all legal abortions, but only for an end to abortions after 15 weeks as the Mississippi law targets, because “Late Term Abortion Severely Injures Significant Numbers Of Women”. It causes “Grief More Anguished and Sorrow More Profound” and “Devastating Psychological Consequences”. (For some mothers, that is.) <br />
<br />
The murder of babies, though alleged, is not presented as a reason for the Court to do anything. The fact that only abortions past 15 weeks, which are only 4.5% of abortions, are the target, is consistent with the primary concern being for mothers, since concern for babies would call for outlawing all abortions. <br />
<br />
This analysis should not be taken to imply that the lawyers and women involved don’t care primarily for the slaughtered, dismembered babies! Of course that is their primary concern! But I marvel that they don’t say so in their brief, citing the overwhelming, irrefutable evidence of unborn personhood by the consensus of every court-recognized finder of fact that has taken a position on “when life begins”. <br />
<br />
==4. The States of Texas Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas Georgia Idaho Indiana Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Missouri Nebraska Ohio Oklahoma South Carolina Tennessee West Virginia==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/148156/20200720160750082_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief.pdf Filed July 20, 2021]<br />
<br />
Summary: Changed circumstances require the Court to reevaluate its viability precedent.<br />
<br />
==5. Illinois Right to Life==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/148202/20200720191618686_19-1392%20BRIEF%20FOR%20AMICUS%20CURIAE%20ILLINOIS%20RIGHT%20TO%20LIFE%20IN%20SUPPORT%20OF%20PETITIONERS.pdf Filed July 20, 2021] Our Declaration of Independence guarantees the “right to life.” This Court is the guardian of the Constitution and thus should take cognizance of the changes in culture, science, and law since Roe. The Court should revise its abortion jurisprudence to allow Mississippi and other states to enact laws to protect and further the inalienable and constitutional rights of preborn human beings. A consensus of biologists now acknowledges that a human fetus is, biologically speaking, a human being.<br />
<br />
Footnote 10 a. The scientific literature has established that fertilization initiates a new human being. . An overwhelming majority of biologists recognize that a human’s life begins at fertilization . . . . . . . . . . <br />
<br />
Footnote 13 c. Legislative hearings on when life begins marshalled scientific evidence that life begins at fertilization . Even doctors who perform abortions and proponents of abortion rights admit fetuses are human beings Views opposing the position that human life starts at fertilization are unscientific and ideological . Changes in the law have further e r o de d t he u nde r pi n n i ng s Roe. Those changes recognize the human fetus as a human being . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . <br />
<br />
Footnote 17 a. Enactment of fetal homicide laws in almost 80% of states demonstrates that, outside of the abortion context, a human fetus is legally recognized as a human being St at es a re i ncrea si ngly proposing and enacting laws protective of unborn human beings even when abortion is curtailed as a result . . . . . . . . . .<br />
<br />
Footnote 18 4. P r ot e c t i ve le g i s l at ion h a s ameliorated many detriments associated with pregnancy The Court should not continue to follow Roe’s viability standard since it ignores the fact that a human fetus is a biological human being and legal person at all stages of the human life cycle . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 II. SINCE A HU M A N FET US IS A HUMAN BEING, H.B. 1510 SHOULD BE SUSTAINED AS A REASONABLE PRO T EC T ION OF A PR EBOR N PERSON UNDER THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT <br />
The Fourteenth Amendment covers all human beings, including preborn humans, and guarantees the due process right to life and equal protection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 1. The Fourteenth Amendment was intended to protect every human being within the jurisdiction of the U.S. Over whelming evidence now exists that human fetuses are human beings and therefore protected by the Fourteenth Amendment The Court has a constitutional duty to recognize the right of human fetuses to legal protections as persons, and to begin to build a consensus favoring protection of fetuses under law . . . . . . . . . . . . <br />
<br />
23 B. Mississippi is entitled to pass legislation that protects prenatal humans from abortion <br />
<br />
The question of when a human’s life begins is now recognized to be biologically determinable, and '''an overwhelming scientific consensus confirms the view that a human’s life begins at fertilization.''' (See infra at Argument I.C.2.a-c). This growing scientific consensus has prompted '''38 states to enact changes in fetal homicide laws that recognize the humanity of preborn humans in non-abortive contexts, and other laws are being passed to protect preborn humans even though abortion restrictions are a consequence ...RECENT DEVELOPMENTS ESTABLISH PREVIABLE FETUSES ARE HUMAN PERSONS, RENDERING ROE AND ITS PROGENY OBSOLETE.''' A. State interest in protecting life is the most fundamental and important government duty. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In Roe, the Court based its “viability” standard on: (a) lack of a scientific consensus on when human life begins, </span> (b) absence of uniform legal protection of fetuses, and (c) maternal burdens of pregnancy and child-rearing. <br />
<br />
....” Roe, 410 U.S. at 153. The Court rejected that argument. Id. <span style="color:red">It recognized that if a human fetus is a “person” under the Fourteenth Amendment, the case for unrestricted abortion would be untenable “for the fetus’ right to life would then be guaranteed specifically by the Amendment.” Id. at 157. </span><br />
<br />
The Court acknowledged that the state may assert a “legitimate interest in protecting the potentiality of human life.” Id. at 154, 162. But the Court ultimately determined that the '''evidentiary record was insufficient to establish in science or in law when a human’s life begins'''. ...Thus, <span style="color:red">in Roe, the Court’s decision was based on its stated inability to locate in the record a scientific or legal basis for the humanity or personhood of the fetus, and the detriments posed by pregnancy and child-rearing. However, these conditions no longer prevail,12 </span> so the Court is obliged to reconsider Roe in light of these changed circumstances. C. Scientific, legal, and social developments have robbed Roe’s viability standard of its original justification p. 8 <br />
...Casey: “[I]n constitutional adjudication as elsewhere in life, changed circumstances may impose new obligations.” Id. at 864 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">...Roe’s recognition of a right to abort a previable pregnancy rests on the belief that the termination would not extinguish the life of a human person. That belief is no longer factually tenable given the current state of scientific knowledge concerning the origin and development of the human fetus. Roe also rests on a determination that the humanity and personhood of a human fetus was not generally recognized in law. That legal context has changed as well. Among other changes in the law, fetuses are now protected as human beings under laws prohibiting fetal homicide. Other laws, such as “heartbeat” laws and laws protecting against fetal pain, which are increasingly being enacted by the states, demonstrate their interest in protecting the youngest and most vulnerable humans. Finally, changes in the laws and the availability of social services that support and protect pregnant women have ameliorated the plight of pregnancy and lessened the burden of child-rearing. All of these changes rob Roe of its factual and legal underpinnings </span>and require the Court to revisit and overrule it or, at a minimum, to recalibrate the viability standard in Roe and Casey, to reflect the current state of scientific understanding and the legal realities of today. 2. A consensus of biologists now acknowledges that a human fetus is, biologically speaking, a human being. a. T he scienti f ic lit er atu re ha s established that fertilization initiates a new human being. <br />
<br />
A review of recent discoveries13 and the development of scientific literature since Roe reveal a strong consensus that sperm-egg plasma membrane fusion (fertilization) is the starting point of the life of a human organism (a human being).14 Dr. Maureen Condic, who is a member <br />
<br />
Footnote 13. The Virtual Human Embryo (VHE), a 14,250-page illustrated atlas of human embryology, describes the stages of human development called the Carnegie Stages of Embryonic Development. Mark A. Hill, Embryology Carnegie Stages, University of New South Wales, Dec. 24, 2019, https://perma. cc/QX4R-UZXM; see also: Conception to birth -- visualized | Alexander Tsiaras TED Talk, YouTube, https://perma.cc/VL9ZRQB5, and 9 Months In The Womb: A Remarkable Look At Fetal Development Through Ultrasound By PregnancyChat.com, YouTube, https://perma.cc/ZNJ3-T4GU. <br />
<br />
Footnote 14. Maureen L. Condic, When Does Human Life Begin? The Scientific Evidence and Terminology Revisited, 8 U. St. Thomas J.L. & Pub. Pol’y, 2013, https://perma.cc/JP33-Y8BH; Rita L. Gitchell, Should Legal Precedent Based on Old, Flawed, Scientific Analysis Regarding When Life Begins, Continue To Apply to Parental Disputes over the Fate of Frozen Embryos, When There Are Now Scientifically Known and Observed Facts Proving Life Begins at Fertilization?, 20 DePaul J. Health Care L. 1, at 8-9. (2018). <br />
<br />
Footnote 18. <span style="color:red">Dr. Alfred Bongiovanni, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, in his testimony in connection with the 1981 hearing on Senate Bill 158, the “Human Life Bill, see infra at 15-16, concluded, “I am no more prepared to say that these early stages [of development in the womb] represent an incomplete human being than I would be to say that the child prior to the dramatic effects of puberty . . . is not a human being. This is human life at every stage.” Cited in House Resolution No. 214, https://perma. cc/6XRG-L2C8. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">b. An overwhelming majority of biologists recognize that a human’s life begins at fertilization. A recent international study involving 5,577 biologists from 86 countries who work at 1,061 top-ranked academic institutions22 confirmed the scientific consensus on when life begins.23 The study asked biologists to confirm or reject five statements that represent the view that a human’s life begins at fertilization. The majority of the biologists in the study identified as liberal (89%), prochoice (85%), and non-religious (63%). 5,337 biologists (96%) affirmed at least one of the statements and only 240 participants declined to affirm any statements (4%). The study participants were also asked to answer an essay question: “From a biological perspective, how would you answer the question, ‘When does a human’s life begin?’” Most biologists (68%) indicated fertilization. Thus, while in Roe, the Court found that experts could not arrive at any consensus at that point in the development of man’s knowledge, that is no longer the case. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">c. Legislative hearings on when life begins marshalled scientific evidence that life begins at fertilization. During hearings conducted by the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Senate Bill 158, the “Human Life Bill”, numerous scientific experts testified regarding when life begins. The Official Senate Report concluded that: “Physicians, biologists, and other scientists agree that conception marks the beginning of the life of a human being - a being that is alive and is a member of the human species. There is overwhelming agreement on this point in countless medical, biological, and scientific writings.”24 In the hearings, Dr. Jerome Lejeune testified that “[l]ife has a very, very long history, but each individual has a very neat beginning – the moment of its conception” because “[t]o accept the fact that after fertilization has taken place a new human has come into being is no longer a matter of taste or opinion ... it is plain experimental evidence.” S-158 Hearings, April 23, 1981 transcript, 18.25 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Experts from leading institutions have testified that there are no alternative theories on when a human’s life...<br />
<br />
Footnote 24. Report, Subcommittee on Separation of Powers to Senate JudFootnote iciary Committee S-158, 97th Congress, 1st Session 1981, 7; similarly, in 2006, the legislature in South Dakota heard expert medical testimony on when human life begins and concluded that “abortion terminates the life of a unique, whole, living human being”. Report of The South Dakota Task Force to Study Abortion, Submitted to the Governor and Legislature of South Dakota, Dec. 2005, https://perma.cc/4WF8-TNM3. <br />
<br />
Footnote 25. S-158 Hearings, April 23, 1981 Transcript, https://perma. cc/6DCT-UT4P. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">begins in the scientific literature. Dr. Hymie Gordon, Professor of Medical Genetics and physician at the Mayo Clinic, testified: “I have never ever seen in my own scientific reading, long before I became concerned with issues of life of this nature, that anyone has ever argued that life did not begin at the moment of conception and that it was a human conception if it resulted from the fertilization of the human egg by a human sperm. As far as I know, these have never been argued against.” Id. at 52. This lack of any published, let alone generally accepted, alternative scientific theories was also attested to by Dr. Micheline Matthew-Roth, a principal research associate in the Department of Medicine at the Harvard Medical School. Id. at 41-42. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">d. Even doctors who perform abortions and proponents of abortion rights admit fetuses are human beings. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Many practitioners of abortion and supporters of abortion rights acknowledge human life begins at conception.26 For example, when abortion doctor Dr. Curtis Boyd was interviewed, he acknowledged with respect to abortion: “Am I killing? Yes, I am. I know that.”27 Abortion rights supporter and ethicist Peter Singer has written that being “a member of a given species is something that <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Footnote 26. Derek Smith, Pro-Choice Concedes: Prominent Abortion Proponents Concede The Barbarity Of Abortion, Human Defense Initiative, Nov. 7, 2018, https://perma.cc/GXH8-MAUU. See also, A New Ethic for Medicine and Society, California Medicine, Sep. 1970. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Footnote 27. KVUE Austin Interview of Dr. Curtis Boyd, at 0:23, YouTube, Nov. 6, 2009, https://perma.cc/GYB2-3YFY. <br />
<br />
Page 16 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">can be determined scientifically, by an examination of the nature of the chromosomes in the cells of living organisms. In this sense there is no doubt that from the first moments of its existence an embryo conceived from human sperm and eggs is a human being.”28 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">e. Views opposing the position that human life starts at fertilization are unscientific and ideological. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">While some oppose the consensus view that human life begins at fertilization, the few counter-arguments made are philosophical or ideological, rather than scientific or fact-driven. In point of fact, no viable alternative to the consensus view has been propounded.29 <br />
<br />
One opposing argument is that biological principles are incapable of classifying humans30 despite the fact that scientists have done so for countless other animal species on Earth. Other opponents suggest that a human zygote cannot be considered a human individual because it is physiologically dependent on another human. Setting aside the fact that infants are also wholly dependent on other humans for survival, this ableist distinction rejects the humanity of conjoined twins who are physiologically dependent on each other’s bodies for survival. It is also sometimes claimed that a human zygote is not yet a human <br />
<br />
Footnote 28. Peter Singer, Practical Ethics, 2nd ed., Cambridge University Press, 85-86, 1993. <br />
<br />
Footnote 29. See supra, p. 15. <br />
<br />
Footnote 30. Richard J. Paulson, The unscientific nature of the concept that “human life begins at fertilization,” and why it matters, Fertility and Sterility, Volume 107, Issue 3, Mar. 2017, https:// perma.cc/QDE5-C5C4. <br />
<br />
Page 17 <br />
<br />
being because many fetuses fail to survive pregnancy and childbirth. But this view is fallacious because whether a human being is able to continue in life is not a condition of his or her status as a human being. A human life is always a life with potential, which may or may not be realized. <br />
<br />
'''Ultimately, opposing arguments to the scientific consensus that a human’s life begins at fertilization are fallacious or focus on aspects of biology that are not relevant to the biological classification of human beings. '''<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">3. Changes in the law have further eroded the underpinnings Roe. Those changes recognize the human fetus as a human being. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">a. Enactment of fetal homicide laws in almost 80% of states demonstrates that, outside of the abortion context, a human fetus is legally recognized as a human being. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In its 1973 Roe decision, the Court stated, “the unborn have never been recognized in the law as persons in the whole sense.” Roe, 410 U.S. at 162. This has changed markedly since that time. Legislators in 38 of 50 states have enacted laws that criminalize the intentional killing of a human fetus. These “fetal homicide” laws, which only apply to non-abortive killings, recognize that preborn human fetuses are human beings entitled to protection under the law. In this context, a majority of states today recognize a human fetus as a human person from the moment of fertilization.31 <br />
<br />
'''Footnote 31. A listing of the states with fetal homicide laws can be found at: State Laws on Fetal Homicide and Penalty-enhancement''' <br />
<br />
Page 18 <br />
<br />
'''Fetuses are recognized as human persons in numerous contexts: (1) laws that restrict abortion at some point in fetal development, (2) fetal homicide laws, (3) prohibitions against capital punishment imposed upon pregnant women, (4) recovery for fetal deaths under wrongful death statutes, (5) the rights of preborn children under property law, (6) legal guardianship of prenatal humans,32 (7) the rights of preborn children to a deceased parent’s Social Security and Disability benefits33, and (8) the rights of inheritance of posthumously born children.34 Despite the plethora of contexts in which fetuses are recognized as persons under the law, this Court has yet to recognize the personhood of preborn humans.''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">b. States are increasingly proposing and enacting laws protective of unborn human beings even when abortion is curtailed as a result. <br />
<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Today, 43 states have enacted laws protecting prenatal humans although abortion is thereby restricted. All but one restrict abortion access at the earliest point <br />
<br />
for Crimes Against Pregnant Women, National Conference of State Legislatures, May 1, 2018, https://perma.cc/3XTG-WDLB. <br />
<br />
'''Footnote 32. See Paul Benjamin Linton, The Legal Status of the Unborn Child Under State Law, 6 U. St. Thomas J.L. & Pub. Pol’y, 2011, https://perma.cc/XB8E-G375. <br />
<br />
Footnote 33. SSR 68-22: SECTION 216(h)(3)(C). – Relationship – Status of Illegitimate Posthumous Child, Social Security Administration, https://perma.cc/W3TR-89L9. <br />
<br />
Footnote 34. Alea Roberts, Where’s My Share?: Inheritance Rights of Posthumous Children, American Bar Association, Jun. 13, 2019, https://perma.cc/36VN-HZZ8''' <br />
<br />
Page 19 <br />
<br />
'''permissible by Roe (viability), and states have recently more emphatically asserted a state interest in the lives of previable human beings by seeking to protect them: (1) after the sixth week since that is known to be the point at which a fetus’ heart first beats (AL HB314; IA SF359) and (2) after the twentieth week since that has been found to be the point at which a fetus can first feel pain (OH SB 127).''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Altogether, given the Court’s willingness to permit states to protect prenatal humans from harm and states’ desire to do so, it is clear that our nation prizes the protection of humans over the right to abortion. However, in the present case, the District and Circuit courts enjoined Mississippi’s law because this Court has yet to recognize that previable human fetuses are humans. <br />
<br />
'''4. Protective legislation has ameliorated many detriments associated with pregnancy. <br />
<br />
In deciding Roe in 1973, the Court considered the burdens upon women associated with child-rearing such as “a distressful life and future,” “[m]ental and physical health may be taxed by child care,” and “additional difficulties and continuing stigma of unwed motherhood may be involved.” Roe, 410 U.S. at 153. These considerations have since been significantly ameliorated through legislation including: Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972,35 the Pregnancy Discrimination Act,36 the Family <br />
<br />
Footnote 35. 20 U.S.C. §1681 et seq. <br />
<br />
Footnote 36. The Pregnancy Discrimination Act of 1978, U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, https://perma.cc/MH3SMLFE''' <br />
<br />
<br />
Page 20 <br />
<br />
'''and Medical Leave Act (“FMLA”),37 the Women, Infants, and Children program (“WIC”),38 and the Pregnancy Assistance Fund (“PAF”).39 <br />
<br />
D. The Court should not continue to follow Roe’s viability standard since it ignores the fact that a human fetus is a biological human being and legal person at all stages of the human life cycle. <br />
<br />
Roe’s recognition of a right to abort a previable pregnancy rested on the belief that termination would not extinguish the life of a human being. Developments in science and law since Roe reveal that belief to be erroneous. An abortion does take a human’s life. Given these changes, the Court should reassess Roe. ....'''<br />
<br />
==6. American Association of Pro-Life Obstetricians & Gynecologists==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/148145/20200720153839672_19-1392%20Amici%20Brief%20AAPLOG.pdf Filed July 20, 2021]<br />
<br />
THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT DOES NOT INCLUDE A LIBERTY INTEREST TO ABORT ALL PRE-VIABILITY UNBORN CHILDREN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 A. Historical Evidence Demonstrates that the Constitution Does Not Require a Ban Against All State Regulation of Previability Abortion.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Mississippi’s law is partially based on legislative findings pertaining to the advanced development and humanity of pre-born children at the gestational age of fifteen to twenty weeks. Pet. at 7-9. At twenty two days, the child’s heart begins to beat. https://www.ehd.org/your-life-before-birth-video/ (last visited July 15, 2020). At six weeks, the child begins moving. Id. At seven weeks, scientists can detect a child’s brainwaves, and the child can move his or her head and hands. Id. The child displays leg movements and the startle response. Id. At eight weeks, the child’s brain exhibits complex development. Id (Page 18)<br />
<br />
==7. Inner Life Fund and Institute for Faith and Family==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/148139/20200720153319734_19-1392 Amici Brief Inner Life Fund.pdf Filed July 20, 2021]<br />
<br />
SCOTUS should grant Missippi's petition. The time has come to expose the “social equality fallacy” that demeans the ability and contributions of women by presupposing they can only achieve equality through the “right” to abortion. Great progress has been made toward the goal of gender equality in the decades since Roe and Casey — independent of access to abortion or contraception.<br />
<br />
==8. Robin Pierucci, M.D., and Life Legal Defense Foundation==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/148122/20200720132309321_19-1392 Dobbs v. JWHO petition AC LLDF.pdf Filed July 20, 2021]<br />
<br />
“viability threshold for a compelling state interest in preserving human life, created by this Court in 1973, should be abandoned in favor of the medically updated and philosophically consistent standard of an “unqualified” interest in protecting life...” <br />
<br />
In Roe, this Court determined that the state’s interest in the protection of human life <br />
became compelling at viability, relying on the fetus’ “capability of meaningful life outside the mother's womb.” Id. at 163. <br />
<br />
By contrast, '''in Cruzan this Court rejected the idea of “meaningful life,” holding that “a State may properly decline to make judgments about the ‘quality’ of life that a particular individual may enjoy, and simply assert an unqualified interest in the preservation of human life to be weighed against the constitutionally protected interests of the individual.”''' Cruzan, 497 U.S. at 282; Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 U.S. 702, 729 (1997) (quoting Cruzan and holding that the state “has an unqualified interest in the preservation of human life”) (emphasis added). See also Britell v. United States, 372 F.3d 1370, 1383 (Fed. Cir. 2004) (“It is not the role of the courts to draw lines as to which fetal abnormalities or birth defects are so severe as to negate the state's otherwise legitimate interest in the fetus' potential life.”); State v. Final Exit Network, Inc., 889 N.W.2d 296, 305-06 (Minn. Ct. App. 2016) (“The state has a compelling interest in the preservation of D.D.’s life, and the prevention of her suicide, regardless of her incurable [non-viable] condition.”) <br />
<br />
Limiting a state’s ability to protect human lives directly to only those lives deemed <br />
“meaningful” because the arbitrary benchmark of viability has been reached is in direct conflict with this Court’s 1990 holding in Cruzan, that a state need not qualify its interest in the preservation of human life before acting. This Court should grant the petition to resolve the conflict between its abortion jurisprudence and its decisions in Cruzan and Glucksberg allowing states to protect human life regardless of the meaningfulness” of that life as measured by the uncertain yardstick of viability. <br />
<br />
==9. Cleveland Lawyers for Life==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184253/20210719151428392_19-1392 TSAC Cleveland Lawyers for Life.pdf filed July 19, 2021]<br />
<br />
The viability standard should be jettisoned in favor of the point at which the physical humanity of the fetus has become biologically manifest. Mississippi has met that burden of proof.” (15 week development is described. The cutoff for legal abortion should be when there are “biological markers” rather than when babies can survive outside wombs.)<br />
<br />
==10. David Boyle==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184456/20210720221629952_19-1392_tsac_DavidBoyle.pdf Filed July 20, 2021]<br />
<br />
This is an attempt at a “neutral” plea for compromise. It promises respect for both sides. The index doesn’t indicate that the humanity of the unborn is remotely addressed. <br />
<br />
==11. Jewish Pro-life Foundation==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184580/20210721170924501_41204%20pdf%20Parker.pdf Filed July 21, 2021]<br />
<br />
The Coalition for Jewish Values, Rabbi Yacov David Cohen, Rabbi Chananya Weissman, and Bonnie Chernin (President, Jewish Life League) <br />
<br />
Glory to God! This is largely '''a Bible study that addresses Deuteronomy 30:19, Exodus 21:22-25, Exodus 23:7, Genesis 9:6-7, Isaiah 49:1, Jeremiah 1:5, Jeremiah 22:3, Jeremiah 29:6, Jeremiah 29:11, Leviticus 18:21, Leviticus 19:16, Proverbs 24:11-12, Proverbs 31:8, Psalm 139:13-16, Psalm 106:35-38.'''<br />
<br />
This brief doesn’t say so, but Roe “opened the door” to the relevance of a Bible study by saying the alleged failure of doctors and preachers “to arrive at any consensus” about “when life begins” was Roe’s principal reason why “the judiciary, at this point in the development of man’s knowledge, is unable to speculate” about whether babies are people. Roe thus treated theology as highly relevant, and yet Roe analyzed no Scripture. This cries out for correction and updating. <br />
<br />
This pleading to the Court is Amici’s attempt to rescue innocent children in the womb from execution, as commanded in our Bible, Proverbs 24:11-12: “Rescue those being led away to death; hold back those staggering toward slaughter. If you say, ‘But we knew nothing about this’, does not He who weighs the heart perceive it? Does not He who guards your life know it? Will He not repay everyone for what they have done?”<br />
<br />
'''This brief begins by asking for more than just to outlaw abortions after 15 weeks:''' “The Mississippi law in this case seeks to protect the God-given right to life for babies of 15 weeks gestation and beyond. Yet, most significant developmental milestones occur during the first eight weeks following conception. A baby’s heart beats at 22 days, and her brainwaves can be measured at 6 weeks. At 9 weeks all internal organs are present and the baby is sensitive to touch. As early as 8 weeks, the ‘infant’ feels real physical pain during an abortion.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">'''“.... Jeremiah 22:3 admonishes us to avoid causing pain and death to the powerless: Do what is right and just; rescue the wronged from their oppressors; do nothing wrong or violent to the stranger, orphan or widow; don’t shed innocent blood in this place.’”'''<br />
<br />
The brief asks nothing less than overturning of Roe, Doe, and Casey. Not explicitly asked for but strongly implied is also ''protection'' of the unborn, meaning not allowing ''any'' state to keep abortion legal: <span style="color:red">'''“Amici implore the Court to study our arguments in this filing and thereby find the moral authority and conviction to overturn Roe, Doe and Casey. Indeed, to apply the protective elements of the 14th Amendment of the Constitution to all children.”'''<br />
<br />
The brief makes a claim for Judiasm which is even more so a claim for its Bible, which of course is shared with Christians. It is a claim about what the Bible did first. But stating what the Bible pioneered actually understates its uniqueness, because ''to this day'' no other religion, except to the extent it was influenced by the Bible, supports these rights and freedoms: <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Judaism Is The Original Pro-Life Religion. It Was The First Religion In Human History To Sanctify Human Life From Conception To Natural Death And To Prohibit Child Sacrifice.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Judaism has a strong legal tradition of protecting human life and prohibiting the murder of innocents. Jewish law and tradition emphasize and support the moral right to life for all human beings at every stage of development based on the understanding that all people are created in the image of God; therefore, each of us has intrinsic value and worth with a destiny to fulfill God’s vision for humanity on Earth.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Psalm 139:13-16 reveals this: ‘For you created my inmost being: you knit me together in my mother’s womb. I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made . . .My frame was not hidden from you when I was made in the secret place. When I was woven together in the depths of the earth, your eyes saw my unformed body. All the days ordained for me were written in your book before one of them came to me.’” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">…. “All of us who are able to do so have the duty to enforce this right of the child in the womb: Leviticus 19:16: ‘Do not stand idly by when your neighbor’s life is at stake.’” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">…. “The Almighty gives clear instructions on the life issue in Deuteronomy 30:19: ‘This day I call the heavens and the earth as witnesses against you that I have set before you life and death, blessings and curses. Now choose life, so that you and your children may live.’”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">…. “Maimonides, declared in his compilation of Jewish law, the Mishneh Torah: ‘The definition of murder according to the Noahide Laws includes a person “who kills even one unborn in the womb of its mother,” and adds that such a person is liable for the death penalty.’” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“The Talmud (Sanhedrin 57b) says that an unborn child is included in the Noahide prohibition of bloodshed that is learned from Genesis 9:6-7: (from a direct translation of the original text), ‘He who spills the blood of man within man shall have his blood spilt for in the image of God made He man. And you, be fruitful, and multiply; swarm in the earth, and multiply therein.’ The Talmud interprets ‘the blood of man in man” to include a fetus, which is the blood of man in man.’”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">…. “Clearly, the Jewish religion prohibits child sacrifice, the modern day version being abortion, as stated in the Torah: Leviticus 18:21: ‘Do not give any of your children to be sacrificed to Molek, for you must not profane the name of your God. I am the Lord.’ Psalm 106:35-38: ‘They mingled with the nations and adopted their customs. They worshiped their idols, which became a snare to them. They sacrificed their sons and their daughters to false gods. They shed innocent blood, the blood of their sons and daughters, whom they sacrificed to the idols of Canaan, and the land was desecrated by their blood.’”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Rabbinical opinion prohibits even helping non-Jews abort – even for “physical abnormalities”.''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Rabbi Chananya Weissman: “It should not need to be debated that unborn children have the right to be born, and the lives of the elderly and infirm are no less precious than the lives of society’s most fortunate. The rich and powerful do not have the right to decide the value of anyone’s life, nor when someone has ‘already lived their life’ and it’s time for them to go. That is strictly the purview of God, who forbids us to make such distinctions or calculations, even for the alleged ‘greater good.’ It is always for the greater evil. It is always to displace God. The Torah teaches that every life is a unique world, and every moment of every life is infused with the potential to<br />
achieve great spiritual heights.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Rabbi Pinchas Teitz: (Commenting on Deuteronomy 21:7): “Shedding innocent blood in Jewish life is so reprehensible that at times even those not responsible for the act of murder who hear of such an incident must dissociate themselves from it. This is expressed by the recitation of the elders of the city in whose proximity a dead man is found. In the eglo arufo ceremony that the Torah mandates, they must wash their hands, saying: ‘Our hands did not shed this blood,’ even though there is no reason to assume that they were directly involved in the death. How, then, are we to respond with less than shock to the killing of 100,000 fetuses through abortion in Israel, year after year? This is certainly a sin against Torah . . . It is a crime against Jewry, against mankind, and even against the Land itself—for the Torah clearly warns that the Land, in its sensitivity to corruption, can tolerate no bloodshed.”''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In Jewish law the only time abortion is permitted is to save the life of the mother. The brief doesn’t give a reference from the Bible, but a footnote explains, “One who is ‘pursuing’ another to murder him or her. According to Jewish law, such a person must be killed by any bystander after being warned to stop and refusing.” This describes a kind of self defense or defense of others. Scriptures I think of are: 2 Samuel 2:18-23, where Abner begged Asahel not to attack him, but Asahel refused so Abner killed him. Or Exodus 22:2 which excuses a homeowner for killing a thief who breaks in at night. <br />
<br />
I particularly appreciate the brief’s analysis of Exodus 21:22-25, the ONLY citation of the Bible included in Roe v. Wade, in a footnote. The brief says: <span style="color:red">“A note about Exodus 21:22-25, the mistranslation of which has led many to conclude that Judaism condones the mass slaughter of infant life.''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“This conclusion is entirely false. The verse describes a case in which fighting men in close proximity to a pregnant woman inadvertently cause a miscarriage. The Torah specifies that the guilty party would be prosecuted for involuntary manslaughter only if the pregnant woman herself dies. If the infant in the womb dies, they must pay only a monetary fine. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Long used by abortion advocates to reframe abortion as legal in Judaism, this text is not a license to abort infant life; rather, it is a reference to involuntary manslaughter requiring an adjudicated fine. It is not a capital crime.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“...This verse must be carefully understood. Many translations read ‘and a miscarriage occurs’ rather than as ‘a premature birth results’ as I have it here. The passage, in my opinion, is to ‘a premature birth’ when the context is considered. The text actually says that if the child ‘departs’ [“yasa”] the womb and no other damage ensues from the event. In other words, if because of the struggle the baby is born early but is otherwise fine, then the men may be required to pay damages for their carelessness but no more. ‘But if other damage ensues,’ i.e. the baby is born with some deformity or born dead, then the standard penalties will apply, ‘an eye for eye, tooth for tooth’. If the child dies as a result, the men are guilty of the murder, a life for a life. The text makes no sense any other way. The Hebrew term shachol references an abortion or miscarriage. That word is not used here. There is conclusive evidence that both Torah and Rabbinic halacha regarding the pre-birth child as fully human and subject to the same protections and respect as all other people.”''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">(I will further note that the penalty is to be decided by a jury. I take this as so the jury can take into account eyewitness testimony about how deliberately the woman was struck. Did a man deliberately aim his fist at her? Did she insert herself into the dispute so much as to make her injury unavoidable?)<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">More Scripture: “Our tradition teaches us to advocate for vulnerable and victimized targets of abuse and murder. Proverbs 31:8 demands, ‘Speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves.’ We acknowledge the harms done by abortion and speak out to prevent them.”<br />
<br />
The brief is the only one to note fornication as another deadly (spiritually and physically) consequence of abortion: “Abortion has become an accepted means of birth control, encouraging irresponsible, dangerous sexual activity leading to an explosion of sexually transmitted disease. Women die from legal abortion.”<br />
<br />
Scripture is cited in sympathy for the loss to men of abortion:<span style="color:red"> “It is now confirmed that men grieve lost fatherhood, resulting in broken relationships and dysfunctional family life. We heed Jeremiah 29:6, emphasizing the importance of the family even in difficult times: ‘Marry and have sons and daughters; find wives for your sons and give your daughters in marriage, so that they too may have sons and daughters. Increase in number there; do not decrease.’” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Judaism’s biblical tradition identifies the child in the womb as precious, valuable and unique. Isaiah 49:1: ‘Before I was born the Lord called me; from my mother’s womb he has spoken my name.’ And Jeremiah 1:5: ‘Before I formed you in the womb I knew you, before you were born I set you apart, I appointed you as a prophet of nations.’” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Evidence of the regard for unborn human life in Jewish law: “when human life is endangered, a Jew is required to violate any Sabbath law that stands in the way of saving that person. The concept of life being in danger is interpreted broadly; for example, it is mandated that one violate the Sabbath to take a woman in active labor to a hospital. Jewish law also not merely permits, but demands, that the Sabbath be violated in order to save infant life in the womb. As lifesaving activity is the only situation in which a Sabbath violation is permitted, were the infant child not deemed alive by the Torah, this behavior would be entirely prohibited.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Abortion industry practices dramatically contrast with Jewish ethics and moral guidelines in business, cleanliness, sexual propriety, responsibility to protect friends and neighbors from harm, honesty, and women’s safety. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Exodus 23:7 admonishes us: ‘Keep away from fraud, and do not cause the death of the innocent and righteous; for I will not justify the wicked.’ <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Abortion providers have long been exempted from standard medical practices and regulatory oversight. They perpetuate sex crimes by routinely failing to report evidence of sexual assault and sex trafficking. They fail to provide informed consent to patients and fail to counsel patients on alternatives to the abortion procedure or possible immediate and long-term negative consequences of the procedure.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">…. “Judaism prohibits desecrating the human body, but abortion destroys a human body, and the harvesting of baby parts for profit defies Jewish respect for the dead.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Today, the Justices have all the information needed to fully understand and acknowledge the status of the infant life, and have done so in Gonzales, at 159, 160. From conception onward, children in their mother’s womb manifest humanity to such an extent that only a decision that protects their lives and futures is humane and just.”<br />
<br />
The rest of the brief reports striking parallels between the Jew-dehumanizing rhetoric of Nazi Germany and the baby-dehumanizing rhetoric of American abortionists. Except that “only” 6 million Jews were slaughtered in Germany, compared with 60 million babies in America.<br />
<br />
I didn’t know the abortion pill, RU486, is actually the same chemical Hitler used to gas Jews, when it was called Zyklon B! “The Population Council brought the abortion pill to the United States in 1994. Originally called Zyklon B, Nazi scientists developed it in gaseous form to kill Jews in concentration camp ‘showers.’62 RU 486 is now used in 40% of all abortions due to inflated pricing and low overhead costs.” https://www.lifenews.com/2014/02/23/company-that-madezyklon-b-for-nazi-holocaust-made-ru-486-for-abortions/ <br />
<br />
“In a 1999 speech in Washington, D.C., Mr. Ellie Wiesel stressed our obligation to defend the defenseless. ‘We must always take sides. Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the victim. Silence encourages the tormentor, never the tormented.’”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The conclusion is the most magnificent I have read, which it would not have been without quoting God: “We must end abortion, an appalling crime against humanity. To begin the process of reconciliation with our Creator, to restore the dignity of those who have perished, and to return our country to a life affirming nation. Amici ask the Court to rise above political concerns and to contemplate the Divine promise bestowed upon every human being as pledged in Jeremiah 29:11: ‘For I know the plans I have for you, declares the LORD, plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.’”<br />
<br />
----<br />
(My online account is out of red ink, but the entire section from here to the end is included in Statement of Fact #4, Footnote #2)<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<u>Jewish Prolife Foundation</u> [http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184580/20210721170924501_41204%20pdf%20Parker.pdf] <br />
<blockquote>This tragic human rights violation must be remedied. The Mississippi law in this case seeks to protect the God-given right to life for babies of 15 weeks gestation and beyond. Yet, most significant developmental milestones occur during the first eight weeks following conception. A baby’s heart beats at 22 days, and her brainwaves can be measured at 6 weeks. At 9 weeks all internal organs are present and the baby is sensitive to touch.4 As early as 8 weeks, the “infant”5 feels real physical pain during an abortion.6 This is much sooner than the 15-week issue before the Court, a gestational age when the pain felt by the baby must surely be considered. Jeremiah 22:3 admonishes us to avoid causing pain and death to the powerless: “Do what is right and just; rescue the wronged from their oppressors; do nothing wrong or violent to the stranger, orphan or widow; don’t shed innocent blood in this place.”</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnotes: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 Endowment for Human Development. Prenatal Summary. https://www.ehd.org/prenatal-summary.php<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 Gonzales 159, 160<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 5 Gonzales 159, 160. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 Expert Tells Congress Unborn Babies Can Feel Pain Starting at 8 Weeks. Ertelt, Steven. May 23, 2013. LifeNews. https://www.lifenews.com/2013/05/23/expert-tells-congress-unborn-babies#can-feel-pain-starting-at-8-weeks/<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<u>Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide</u> www.supremecourt.gov /DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185155/20210728163153060_Amici%20Brief%20of%20CMP-Daleiden.pdf]<br />
<blockquote>1. By 15 weeks’ gestation, the human infant in the womb unmistakably manifests “the human form” identical to any other member of our community. Gonzales v. Carhart, 550 U.S. 124, 160 (2007). Ironically, it is precisely from this point when the fetus becomes most recognizably a fellow human being, that the fetuses vulnerable to abortion become most useful as an experimental biologic “resource.” Even though four-month-old infants in the womb move, kick, suck their thumbs, hiccup, and demonstrate a readily discernable heartbeat and brainwaves, App. 65a,4 and even though the Constitution guarantees that “neither slavery nor involuntary servitude” shall exist in America nor that any person be deprived of life without due process of law, U.S. Const., amends. XIII § 1, XIV § 1, these same children can be routinely killed through livedismemberment abortions or trafficked and sold for experimental use. (Page 3)</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnote: 4 Katrina Furth, Fetal EEGs: Signals from the Dawn of Life, ON POINT SERIES 28 (Nov. 2018), https://lozierinstitute.org/fetal#eegs-signals-from-the-dawn-of-life/; Winslow J. Borkowski & Richard L. Bernstine, Electroencephalography of the Fetus, 5(5) NEUROLOGY 362–65 (May 1, 1955)<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<u>National Catholic Bioethics Center, et al.</u> [www.supremecourt.gov/ DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185239/20210729121001402_19-1392%20tsac%20National%20Catholic%20Bioethics%20Center.pdf]<br />
<blockquote>Mississippi’s law is partially based on legislative findings pertaining to the advanced development and obvious humanity of pre-born children at the gestational age of fifteen to twenty weeks. Pet. at 7-9. At twenty-two days, the child’s heart begins to beat. https://www.ehd.org/your-life-before-birth-video/ (last visited July 15, 2020). At six weeks, the child begins moving. Id. At seven weeks, scientists can detect a child’s brainwaves, and the child can move his or her own head and hands. Id. The child also displays leg movements and the startle response by that time. Id. At eight weeks, the child’s brain exhibits complex development. Id. (p. 14)</blockquote><br />
<br />
==12. Alabama Center for Law and Liberty== <br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184666/20210722141347032_Dobbs%20ACLL%20Amicus.pdf Filed July 23, 2021]<br />
<br />
“ACLL believes that life begins at the moment of fertilization and that unborn children are people entitled to equal protection of the law.” This statement falls short of claiming unborn “personhood” is an objective fact. It also falls short of ''proving'' it is an objective fact. This phrasing treats it as ACLL’s subjective “belief”. <br />
<br />
Supposing ACLL’ “belief” to be true, then murdering the unborn violates the 14th Amendment: “The Framers of the Fourteenth Amendment believed that God gave every person the natural right to life and that unborn children were ‘people’ entitled to the Amendment’s protection. Consequently, laws that protect everyone from murder except unborn children violate the Equal Protection Clause.”<br />
<br />
ACLL asks that abortions after 15 weeks be outlawed. That requires the Court to overturn Roe’s claim that a state can’t protect babies before “viability”. <br />
<br />
ACLL therefore points out '''something illogical about the “viability” standard: “if a person’s right to life is dependent on his ability to survive without the help of others, then most people would not have a right to life. Most of us wake up each day in a dwelling that was built by someone else, eat food that was grown by someone else, drink water that was sent to our house by someone else, go to work in a car that was built by someone else, and provide goods or services to someone else in exchange for payment...”'''<br />
<br />
ACLL notes “we know far more about prenatal life now than we did when Roe and Casey were decided”, but none of what we now know is offered as evidence proving the veracity of ACLL’s “belief” that “life begins at the moment of fertilization and that unborn children are people entitled to equal protection of the law.”<br />
<br />
Inconsistency in law through abortion precedents is given as a reason to overturn Roe: “criminal law, tort law, guardianship law, health care law, property law, and family law often treat the unborn as persons, leaving abortion as an outlier.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">ACLL asks more than any other brief: not just that Roe be overturned, but that all unborn babies be protected, which means no state could keep abortion legal: “C. The Court Should Not Only Overrule Roe but Also Hold That the Constitution Protects the Child’s Right to Life.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Why should the Court do that? ACLL offers another “if...then” argument: “Roe itself conceded that if an unborn child is a person, the case for abortion collapses, because the child’s right to life would be specifically guaranteed by the Amendment. Roe, 410 U.S. at 156-57. The Court was correct in that regard.”<br />
<br />
Well, yes, Roe was right, but Roe didn’t, 50 years ago, think an unborn child being a “person” was “established”. Is it established now? Surely it is now that every court-recognized fact-finder that has taken a position has ruled unanimously, but ACLL didn’t mention that evidence, or any other evidence over the past 50 years. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">ACLL continues: “The Fourteenth Amendment states, in relevant part: “nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.” U.S. Const., amend. XIV, § 1 (emphasis added).”<br />
<br />
But ACLL offers no evidence because “other amicus briefs are developing this point in more detail” so ACLL will only observe that the question has “gained considerable attention” and “has also been debated in conservative academic circles.” Well, that’s news, isn’t it? Many cites are given, but no quotes or conclusions. <br />
<br />
One cite that I appreciate is <span style="color:red">“Charles I. Lugosi, Conforming to the Rule of Law: When Person and Human Being Finally Mean the Same Thing in Fourteenth Amendment Jurisprudence, 4 Geo. J. L. & Pub. Pol’y 360 (2007).”<br />
<br />
My book, “How States can Outlaw Abortion in a Way that Survives Courts”, points out that one definition of “persons” in Roe itself is “recognizably human”. No case law supports the strange notion that there are human beings who are not “persons”. <br />
<br />
An appeal is made to the beliefs about the unborn of our ancestors: <span style="color:red">“Blackstone said, ‘Natural persons are such as the God of nature formed us.’ 1 Blackstone, Commentaries *123. ‘The principle of Blackstone’s rule was that “where life can be shown to exist, legal personhood exists.’” Craddock, supra, at 554-55.12 Given that the dominant view at the Fourteenth Amendment’s passage was that life begins at conception, there is a strong case that the Fourteenth Amendment applies to unborn children.”'''<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">This is a strong attack on Roe’s logic that “the unborn have never been treated by our laws as persons in the whole sense”, and this approach invokes the legal principle that what the Constitution meant when it was enacted is what we should follow now until Americans choose to change it.<br />
<br />
Of course, whatever any culture of any past century thought about it, unborn babies are, and always have been, '''''in fact,''''' fully human beings. But this evidence of court-recognize fact finders from past centuries merits inclusion with the consensus of court-recognized fact finders over Roe's 49 bloody years, including juries, expert witnesses, state legislatures, Congress, and individual judges who took a position on "when life begins". <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">After its history lesson, ACLL concludes with another “if...then” argument: “Thus, if all people are endowed with their Creator with the unalienable gift of life, and if unborn children are people, then the States may not deny equal protection of the laws to them.”<br />
<br />
“If”? “If”? <br />
<br />
'''“Therefore, this Court should not only overrule Roe and its progeny but also hold that the Fourteenth Amendment protects unborn children from abortion. If this is too far for the Court to go in the present case, then it should at the very least refrain from foreclosing that question from being presented in the future.”''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">ACLL deserves credit for its strong, clear request for protection of the unborn: It is a “fact that Americans viewed unborn children as people when they ratified the Fourteenth Amendment. As Roe itself conceded, establishing the suggestion of personhood would make the case for abortion collapse. Roe, 410 U.S. at 156-57.”<br />
<br />
==13. National Right to Life Committee and Louisiana Right to Life Federation== <br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184772/20210723123330497_NRLC.Dobbs%20Amici%20Brief.pdf Filed July 23, 2021]<br />
<br />
“b. States may assert an interest in protecting preborn, individual human life, including against pain, during all periods of pregnancy.” That was a subheading. The subject was given 152 more words which did not say babies are “human life”, or present supporting evidence, or point out that legal abortion must end when that is acknowledged. <br />
<br />
==14. Jewish Coalition For Religious Liberty==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184865/20210726093205304_19-1932%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20Jewish%20Coalition%20for%20Religious%20Liberty.pdf Filed July 26, 2021]<br />
<br />
“Given the arguments made in prior cases, JCRL is concerned that proponents of a constitutional right to abortion will assert a novel “religious-veto” view of religious <br />
liberty that, if accepted, would make it more difficult for sincere religious adherents to obtain accommodations in future cases.”<br />
<br />
'''Religious proponents of a constitutional right to abortion have previously offered a novel view under which their religious views would dictate what laws may govern every American, even those with different faiths or no faith at all. This Court should reject that novel “religious-veto” view as it would ultimately diminish religious liberty for everyone.''' <br />
<br />
2 Letter From George Washington to the Hebrew Congregation in Newport, Rhode Island, 18 August 1790, FOUNDERS ONLINE, <br />
(https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Washington/05-06-02-0135) (last visited July 13, 2020) (“[T]he Government of the United States, which gives to bigotry no <br />
sanction, to persecution no assistance requires only that they <br />
who live under its protection should demean themselves as good <br />
citizens, in giving it on all occasions their effectual support.” In <br />
this country, “every one shall sit in safety under his own vine and <br />
fig tree, and there shall be none to make him afraid.”). <br />
3 Zorach v. Clauson, 343 U.S. 306, 313 (1952) (“We make room <br />
for as wide a variety of beliefs and creeds as the spiritual needs <br />
of man deem necessary. We sponsor an attitude on the part of <br />
government that shows no partiality to any one group and that <br />
lets each flourish according to the zeal of its adherents and the <br />
appeal of its dogma.”). from targeting religious activity,4 require state actors to treat religious conduct as favorably as comparable secular conduct,5 or prevent the government from substantially burdening religious activity unless doing so is necessary to further a compelling government interest.6 These traditional Free Exercise protections require that the state accommodate religious exercise, but they do not prevent government entities from enforcing laws against Americans who lack religious objections.7 <br />
<br />
4 Church of the Lukumi Babalu Aye, Inc. v. City of Hialeah, 508 U.S. 520 (1993). <br />
<br />
5 Tandon v. Newsom, 141 S. Ct. 1294 (2021). <br />
<br />
6 Holt v. Hobbs, 574 U.S. 352 (2015). <br />
<br />
7 Wisconsin v. Yoder, 406 U.S. 205, 236 (1972) (creating a religious accommodation to exempt Amish parents from having to send their children to formal high-school while confirming that, “[n]othing we hold is intended to undermine the general applicability of the State's compulsory school-attendance statutes … .”). <br />
<br />
Such protections help ensure that religious adherents can fully participate in civil society without having to abandon their faith.8 Importantly, they protect religious adherents without requiring that the rest of society follow their faith.9 <br />
<br />
8 Sherbert v. Verner, 374 U.S. 398, 404 (1963) (finding it unconstitutional for the government to force a religious adherent to “choose between following the precepts of her religion and forfeiting benefits, on the one hand, and abandoning one of the precepts of her religion '''in order to accept work''', on the other hand.”); Braunfeld v. Brown, 366 U.S. 599, 616 (1961) (Stewart, J. dissenting) ('''“Pennsylvania has passed a law which compels an Orthodox Jew to choose between his religious faith and his economic survival. That is a cruel choice. It is a choice which I think no State can constitutionally demand.”''') <br />
<br />
9 Fulton v. City of Philadelphia, Pa., No. 19-123, 2021 WL 2459253, at *9 (U.S. June 17, 2021) (“CSS seeks only an accommodation that will allow it to continue serving the children of Philadelphia in a manner consistent with its religious beliefs; it does not seek to impose those beliefs on anyone else”); id. at *20 (Alito, J. concurring) (“the text of the Free Exercise Clause gives a specific group of people (those who wish to engage in the ‘exercise of religion’) the right to do so without hindrance”). 10 See e.g., Brief for American Jewish Congress, et. al., as Amici Curiae at 4, Webster v. Reprod. Health Servs., No. 88-605, 492 U.S. 490 (1989) (“given the dramatically contrasting religious views about whether and when abortion is permitted or required, state statutes drastically curtailing access to abortion <br />
<br />
In the past, religious supporters of a right to abortion have advocated for a novel conception of religious liberty that is incompatible with this traditional understanding. In their view, the fact that some religions may allow or even require women to obtain abortions should cause this Court to recognize a general constitutional right to abortion. <span style="color:red">See Brief for 178 Organizations as Amici Curiae in Support of Respondents at app. a, Planned Parenthood of Se. Pa. v. Casey, Nos. 91-744, 91-902, 505 U.S. 833 (1992) (“in the face of the great moral and religious diversity in American society over abortion and in the light of Jewish traditions which in some cases command abortion, and in many others permit it, the existing constitutional rules, set down by Roe v. Wade, should be maintained ... .”) (citation omitted). The “right” that such advocates propose would not be limited to protecting the religious exercise of objectors. Instead, it would prohibit states from pursuing their interest in protecting the lives of unborn children, even in instances that would not impact adherents’ exercise of their faith.10 The proponents of such a right thus do not seek to ensure that they can fully participate in society without compromising their religious exercise; they seek to yoke the rest of society to their theological preferences. <br />
<br />
This novel “religious-veto” view of religious liberty is inconsistent with this Court’s precedents and, if given credence, would make it more difficult to protect religious liberty in the future. <br />
<br />
'''At first glance, a doctrine that would allow religious adherents to entirely block the state from pursuing goals with which they disagree—extending beyond protecting their own free exercise—might seem appealing to religious liberty advocates. However, such a novel and imperious regime would quickly prove untenable, especially in a large and religiously diverse country. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Under the religious-veto view of the Free Exercise Clause, every decision in favor of a religious adherent would entirely foreclose the state from pursuing its chosen interests. Such paralysis is not desirable, nor should it be the goal of those who seek to foster a religiously free and diverse nation. <br />
<br />
In the long term, the novel “religious-veto” view would diminish protections for religious exercise. <br />
<br />
[In other words, PP was not just demanding “free exercise of religion” for believers, but “free exercise of religion” to murder unbelieving babies, undercutting the value of any “compelling government interest” in saving lives, and the fundamental right to life of human babies.]<br />
<br />
'''In Employment Division, Department of Human Resources of Oregon v. Smith, this Court worried that applying the then existing system of religious accommodations might be “courting anarchy.” 494 U.S. 872, 888 (1990). Amicus vigorously disagrees that granting religious accommodations poses such a risk and believes the Court should overrule Smith. In fact, this Court has recently loosened Smith’s strictures, and has signaled that it may reconsider them entirely. However, the novel religious-veto rule proposed by supporters of a right to abortion would legitimize Smith’s concerns.''' <br />
<br />
Granting every religious person in America an absolute veto over any law that burdens his faith might in fact be “courting anarchy.” In order to avoid the negative consequences that would predictably follow from accepting a religious-veto theory of religious liberty, courts would likely either double-down on Smith’s restrictive reading of the First Amendment or adopt a new and even less favorable framework for granting relief to religious adherents. Fortunately, religious vetoes are not what the First Amendment or this Court’s precedents require. <br />
<br />
Even if courts continued to apply something resembling the current standards, religious liberty proponents would be less likely to prevail under the religious-veto approach than they are under the existing religious-accommodation approach. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Currently, the government can only burden an adherent’s religious exercise if it can show that “the asserted harm of granting specific exemptions to particular religious claimants” is of the highest magnitude.11 That analysis, which is favorable to religious objectors, only makes sense so long as the remedy is an individual exemption. '''Under the religious-veto approach, courts would have to analyze the harm of completely negating a law because exemptions would no longer be limited to the specific objectors. In other words, courts would have to determine whether the government has a compelling interest in enforcing a law at a societal rather than to any one person at an individual level.''' Such an analysis is far less favorable to religious adherents than the current test.<br />
<br />
==15. Catholic Medical Association, National Association of Catholic Nurses-USA, Idaho Chooses Life and Texas Alliance for Life==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184905/20210726125612491_19-1932%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20The%20Catholic%20Medical%20Association%20et%20al..pdf Filed July 26, 2021]<br />
<br />
This entire brief attacks the subjectivity of Roe’s “viability” standard. The lower courts had overruled Mississippi’s 15 week abortion ban on the ground that 15 weeks is before “viability”, and states have no legitimate interest in regulating abortion before viability. <br />
<br />
The CMA conclusion: “...It is an illusory distinction without legal or practical significance. Roe has pretended to be what it is not for long enough. It should be overturned so that states once again may provide legal protection for unborn human life.” <br />
<br />
No evidence is offered to prove the unborn are human to judges who profess not to be able to “speculate” about such deep subjects. <br />
<br />
One point I found interesting: “The Court [in Roe] provided no explanation as to why the state’s interest in protecting human life should grow substantially as the unborn child grows and develops during the pregnancy. Nor did the Court attempt to explain why the state’s interest in protecting unborn human life just prior to viability should be nonexistent and then suddenly appear just after viability.” Respect for human life of course accords all human life “equal protection of the laws”. Without that uniquely American, uniquely Biblical respect, prejudice, dehumanization, and slavery face no restraint.<br />
<br />
==16. African-American, Hispanic, Roman Catholic and Protestant Religious and Civil Rights Organizations and Leaders==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184908/20210726131118652_19-1392_Amici%20Brief%20In%20Support%20of%20Petitioners.pdf Filed July 26, 2021] by Mathew D. Staver, Liberty Counsel<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">This brief associates abortion, abortionists, and abortion-supporting courts, with the Eugenics movement “THAT ELIMINATES “LESS DESIRABLE” RACES AND CERTAIN CLASSES OF PEOPLE TO EVOLVE A SUPERIOR HUMAN POPULATION.” It starts off with a shot at the district judge who insulted Mississippi’s motives as part of a long string of racist denials of rights; this Liberty Counsel brief accuses the whole abortion movement, inclu<span style="color:red">ding Roe, Doe, Casey, etc. as the gold standard of racism. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“The sinister goal of the eugenics movement was to eliminate ‘unfit’ and ‘undesirable’ people—those with mental and physical disabilities as well as certain races.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">LC points out the rest of the title of Darwin’s racist “Origin of Species” which today’s atheists normally leave out of their proud citations: “or, the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life”! Many quotes are given from Darwin’s 1871 book, “The Descent of Man”, which must be terribly embarrassing for any atheist or evolutionist. He makes a Ku Klux Klan Grand Wizard look like a paragon of intelligence and tolerance. <br />
<br />
You’ve just got to go to this link and read it. This guy’s tirades are a sight to behold! <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Then it’s Margaret Sanger’s turn. Wow! The district judge had derided Mississippi which “sterilized six out of ten black women” at a local county hospital “against their will.” Well, LC points out that was the doings of Margaret Sanger, the heroine of that district judge. <br />
<br />
Then it was the Supreme Court’s turn! <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“In Buck, the Court approved the compulsory sterilization of an allegedly ‘feeble minded’ woman who had been falsely adjudged ‘the probable potential parent of socially inadequate offspring.’ Buck, 274 U.S. at 205, 207. In a short opinion, Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., joined by seven other Justices, ‘offered a full-throated defense of forced sterilization...as a means to ‘prevent’ society from being ‘swamped with incompetence’” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">6 out of 10 sterilized at one hospital, the district judge says? That’s nothing: “between 1907 and 1983, more than 60,000 people were involuntarily sterilized” with a boost from the Supreme Court’s 1927 ruling! <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">What an admission from Justice Ginsberg: “And as the late Justice Ginsburg once observed: ‘[A]t the time Roe was decided, there was concern about population growth and particularly growth in '''populations that we don’t want to have too many of'''. So that Roe was going to be then set up for Medicaid funding of abortion.’”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Now the tie-in to abortion today: The racism, the extermination of blacks especially, is not just in the past. It’s now. “In Mississippi, 3,005 abortions were reported in 2018. Of those abortions, 72% were performed on black women, compared to just 24% on White women and 4% on women of other races.” There are ''pages'' of stats like that. “The racial disparity in abortions is largely intentional: A study based on 2010 Census data shows that nearly eight out of ten Planned Parenthood abortion clinics are within walking distance of predominantly Black or Hispanic neighborhoods. More specifically, Planned Parenthood intentionally located 86 percent of its abortion facilities in or near minority neighborhoods in the 25 U.S. counties with the most abortions. These 25 counties contain 19 percent of the U.S. population, including 28 percent of the Black population and 37 percent of the Hispanic/Latino population.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The relevance to the case before us: “states have a compelling interesting in ‘preventing abortion from becoming a tool of modern-day eugenics.’ Id. at 1783. And that interest far outweighs this Court’s judicially fashioned distortion of the Constitution.”<br />
<br />
So LC concludes, “The Court should condemn the district court’s disparaging rhetoric, reverse the decision below, and finally overrule Roe v. Wade and its progeny.”<br />
<br />
==17. Senators Josh Hawley, Mike Lee, and Ted Cruz==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184947/20210726160225898_2021-07-26%20Hawley%20Amicus%20Brief%20FINAL%20-%20PDFA.pdf Filed July 26, 2021]<br />
<br />
Roe should be overturned, not because it legalizes murder of baby human beings, but because it is “unworkable”. That is, states have no idea what to expect of courts before they pass a law. <br />
<br />
No evidence is offered that babies of people are people. No medical evidence, no mention of the unanimous establishment that “life begins” at the beginning, by every court-recognized fact-finder that has taken a position: juries, expert witnesses, state legislatures, congress, individual judges. The protection of babies, by legal recognition that they are fully human so ''no'' state can keep abortion legal, is not requested or, apparently, even thought of. <br />
<br />
However, it may be that this brief, more than any other, strummed the heart-strings of the Dobbs justices to overturn Roe, because its focus was ''not'' on the cruelty towards unseen, unheard babies, but to the inconvenience for lawyers, lawmakers, and judges. <br />
<br />
The reversal of Roe is sought. Of course if that is all that happens, without court recognition that babies are people, then abortion will still remain legal in many states. <br />
<br />
Some excerpts:<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Justice Scalia called the undue burden standard ‘ultimately standardless’ and ‘inherently manipulable,’ with the result that it ‘will prove hopelessly unworkable in practice.’” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">''“Asking whether a state interest in protecting fetal life or ensuring informed decisions about abortion outweighs any burdens on the abortion decision is like asking ‘whether a particular line is longer than a particular rock is heavy.’”'' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“When the lower courts cannot consistently apply—or even understand—a standard after nearly thirty years of development, something is wrong.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Casey’s failure to provide adequate guidance for state legislatures has led national abortion rights organizations to immediately file for an injunction any time a law protecting prenatal life is enacted—if only to ‘give it a try.’ See, e.g., Women’s Med. Prof’l Corp. v. Voinovich, 130 F.3d 187, 218–19 (6th Cir. 1997) (Boggs, J., dissenting) '''(“The post-Casey history of abortion litigation in the lower courts is reminiscent of the classic recurring football drama of Charlie Brown and Lucy in the Peanuts comic strip.”''' <br />
<br />
==18. Trinity Legal Center== <br />
<br />
[https://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184950/20210726160604723_41111%20pdf%20Schlueter.pdf Filed July 26, 2021]<br />
<br />
TLC clearly states that babies are “human life”, which is clear from ultrasound, and is affirmed by Justice Scalia. Instead of offering evidence, an appeal is made to common knowledge. TLC’s affirmation does not affect what it asks of the Court: that is, an end to all legal abortion, since they are all murder, is not requested. Not even an end to Roe is asked. Only that Mississippi’s 15 week ban be allowed to stand. <br />
<br />
Here is TLC’s affirmation of unborn life: “At the time these opinions were announced, the Justices repeatedly referred to the unborn child as ‘potential life.’ Because of advancement in medical science and technology, it is [now] known that life begins at conception. Thus, Justices O’Connor, White, and Scalia’s argument that the State has a compelling interest throughout pregnancy becomes more profound because the baby is not just a potential life, but it is the life of a whole, separate human being.<br />
<br />
“Furthermore, from a medical perspective, the unborn child is treated as a separate patient.<br />
<br />
“Justice Scalia further emphasized that the unborn child is not just potential life but human life. Thus, the State is protecting the human life of the unborn child and not just potential life. He stated: But ‘reasoned judgment’ does not begin by begging the question, as Roe and subsequent cases unquestionably did by assuming that what the State is protecting is the mere ‘potentiality of human life.’ '''The whole ''argument'' of abortion opponents''' is that what the Court calls the fetus and what others call the unborn child is a human life.”<br />
<br />
Unfortunately, even Scalia’s statement falls short of a position. He reports it only as an “argument” which courts ought to address. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">TLC says “The fourth factor focuses on changes in the facts. Since Roe, there have been many scientific and medical developments. Probably the most significant developments have been in ultrasound technology and fetal surgery. Ultrasound technology demonstrates that the unborn child is human life that is actually alive and shows the development of the baby. <br />
<br />
"This undermines Roe’s claim that the unborn child is only potential life.”<br />
<br />
The following statement seems to walk back an implication that all unborn babies are fully “human life”, but rather only those who survive to birth: “The presence of a heartbeat is a strong indicator that the child will survive to birth, therefore, debunking the idea that the unborn child is merely potential life.”<br />
<br />
==19. Thomas More Society== <br />
<br />
[https://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184897/20210726123826819_19-1932%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20The%20Thomas%20More%20Society.pdf Filed July 26, 2021]<br />
<br />
This brief makes the argument that abortion is not a right “deeply rooted in the nation’s history, legal tradition, and practices” so it does not merit “special protection”. Therefore Roe should be overruled.<br />
<br />
The Thomas Moore brief documents the regard for unborn human life over the centuries, but not to prove that the unborn are fully human so their lives must be protected by every state. The point of its history is rather to prove that Roe should be overruled because it was largely based on claims that unborn babies were never treated by our laws as “persons in the whole sense”. <br />
<br />
It is a history of abortion law going back to the common law of England. It also reviews the laws of 30 states to show that in Unborn Victims of Violence Laws, where killing a pregnant woman is counted as a double murder, there is no distinction based on “viability”, so therefore the reliance of Roe and Casey on viability is unsupported in American law. <br />
<br />
There were “scores of cases” between 1850 and 1870 where courts treated abortion as against laws “enacted with an intent to protect unborn human life.” <br />
<br />
Since I am from Iowa, it is cool to see a holding from an Iowa court from that time: “In 1868, the Iowa Supreme Court, interpreting an 1858 statute, condemned abortion as ‘an act highly dangerous to the mother, and generally fatal, and frequently designed to be fatal, to the child.’ State v. Moore, 25 Iowa 128, 136 (1868).” A 1934 Idaho Supreme Court said its law was “to discourage abortions because thereby the life of a human being, the unborn child, is taken.” <br />
<br />
To summarize, <span style="color:red">“more than sixty decisions from forty-two states have recognized that their nineteenth-century abortion statutes were enacted with an intent to protect unborn human life. Given this wealth of case authority, the Court’s conclusion in Roe that state court decisions ‘focused on the State’s interest in protecting the woman’s health rather than in preserving the embryo and fetus’...is unsupportable.” <br />
<br />
Also, contrary to Roe’s claim, there was not an exemption for mothers from prosecution: <span style="color:red">“at least nineteen states criminalized the woman’s participation in her own abortion.” In the remaining states, women were not prosecuted either because they were considered co-victims, or because the woman’s testimony against the abortionist was needed but could not be compelled if she were treated as an accomplice, and because “in most states a criminal conviction cannot be based on the uncorroborated testimony of an accomplice.”<br />
<br />
The Moore brief spends its final section attacking Roe’s “viability” rule. The brief concludes, “The court in Casey stated that ‘a decision to overrule should rest on some special reason over and above the belief that a prior case was wrongly decided.’...If so, Amicus submits that there are more than 60 million special reasons to do so. Roe v. Wade should be overruled.”<br />
<br />
Not asked for is a ruling that babies of people are people, making abortion murder, whose legality no state may permit.<br />
<br />
==20. Melinda Thybault Moral Outcry==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184968/20210726175018044_41206%20pdf%20Parker%20III%20br.pdf Filed July 26]<br />
<br />
An interesting way to establish “standing” for a petition (defined not as a legal “petition”, or brief, before a court, but the popular sense of a short statement signed by a multitude) before the Supreme Court: <br />
<br />
“Melinda Thybault and The Signers, as do all citizens, have the right to petition the United States government for redress of grievances. U.S. Constitution Amendment I. With all due respect, Amici believe the Supreme Court is the specific branch of their government which has committed this crime against humanity by forcing all states to legalize abortion. Therefore, Amici must bring their arguments to this Court, not Congress or the States.”<br />
<br />
View the petition at https://themoraloutcry.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/the-moral-outcry-petition.pdf<br />
<br />
Quoting a law school and a U.N. document, she summarizes: <span style="color:red">“A crime against humanity occurs when the government withdraws legal protection from a class of human beings resulting in severe deprivation of rights, up to and including death.” (See Crime Against Humanity at https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/crime_against_humanity and see U.N. Office, Genocide Prevention, Crimes Against Humanity https://www.un.org/en/genocideprevention/crimes-against-humanity.shtml; Treaty of Rome (1957). See also Convention on the Non-Applicability of Statutory Limitations to War )<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">She “adopted” children at the frozen embryo stage, and had them conceived through vitro fertilization, not just proving but demonstrating “living evidence that, with today’s science, viability begins at fertilization.” Unborn children literally are “viable” even from the embryo stage!!! Their sex can be determined six days after fertilization! <br />
<br />
Her ground for reversing Roe? She cites a “Law of Judicial Precedent” authored by Justices Garner, Gorsuch, Kavanaugh, and Breyer, which says one ground for reversing precedent is “The decision has been met with general dissatisfaction, protest or severe criticism.” So she got a petition signed by over half a million citizens calling abortion a “crime against humanity”, and points out: <br />
<br />
“Through The Moral Outcry Petition, over 500,000 Americans have correctly identified legalized abortion as ‘a crime against humanity’ which is very, very ‘severe criticism.’ With due respect to the Court, every single signature on the Moral Outcry Petition is, by itself, evidence under The Law of Judicial Precedent12 because each person calling abortion a crime against humanity is “severely” criticizing this Court’s abortion jurisprudence.” <br />
<br />
This only adds to “continued ‘severe criticism’ for 48 years. Most reasonable observers would agree that Roe has been met with general dissatisfaction and major protest since its inception. The Court has an ethical and moral duty to never forget past crimes against humanity, to never stand by silently while one is occurring today, and to rescue the perishing.”<br />
<br />
She updates Casey’s premise that abortion prevents “unwanted children” by pointing out that today’s “safe haven” laws have eliminated “unwanted children”. She makes the point without conceding that Casey’s excuse was ever justified: “Because of Safe Haven laws in all fifty states, [which permit mothers to easily give away their babies without being charged for neglect or abandonment] women can now have the “freedom” of Roe, and make their own decision about the ultimate direction of their life, without the crime against humanity of killing the child and injuring themselves.”<br />
<br />
Under Safe Haven laws, a mother “can transfer responsibility to the state with no questions asked, no legal procedure, and unlike abortion, at no cost.”<br />
<br />
The evidence that babies are people? She quotes a phrase from Gonzales: “Infant life” to prove “that this Court has already recognized exists in the womb when it is aborted.” <br />
<br />
(The Gonzales context of the “infant life” quote: “Respect for human life finds an ultimate expression in the bond of love the mother has for her child....Whether to have an abortion requires a difficult and painful moral decision. ...it seems unexceptionable to conclude some women come to regret their choice to abort the infant life they once created and sustained.”)<br />
<br />
More evidence that babies are people: “new science, including but not limited to DNA testing, in vitro fertilization (IVF) and sonograms, which were not available to this Court in 1973, now show what the Roe Court did not know, or even the Casey Court, that life begins at conception.” But she doesn’t populate this claim with any details or evidence, thinking the Supreme Court already concedes that babies are people: “But the Court has now correctly found in Gonzales that abortion terminates an “infant life,” at 159 at the moment of the abortion.”<br />
<br />
Roe v. Wade isn’t the Supreme Court’s first “crime against humanity”. “Abortion is a crime against humanity. Like Dred Scott v. Sanford, 60 U.S. 393 (1857), which purported to enshrine slavery in the Constitution forever. It is unjust. Dred Scott also decided unjustly that African Americans ‘had no rights which the white man was bound to respect’, at 400. The Dred Scott decision prevented national compromise from occurring and many commentators feel it eventually led to the Civil War. A crime against humanity occurs when the government withdraws legal protection from a class of human beings, as this Court did in Scott.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“...the Court has not yet fully reversed Roe, Doe, and Casey. No American citizen should have to live under, nor as history tragically demonstrates, should they stand by silently, while their government sanctions and even promotes crimes against humanity.” Another low point in the Supreme Court’s grasp of 14th Amendment equal rights, she mentions, was Plessy v. Ferguson, 163 U.S. 537 (1896) which, like Roe and Dred Scott, “denied legal protection to a class of human beings” and “ignored the plain language of the Fourteenth Amendment”. “Plessy accepted the gloss that ‘separate but equal’ was ‘equal’.” <br />
<br />
She repeats, “When the government withdraws legal protection from a class of human beings, it is the classic definition of a crime against humanity.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">All nine justices know better, she demonstrates, by quoting them all calling the decision to abort “painful” and “difficult”. Five of the nine added “moral”. What could make such an allegedly “safe” “procedure”, which isn’t even expensive compared with most surgeries, either “painful” or “difficult”? Nothing can account for it, if babies are mere tumors or animals. Take it out! It doesn’t belong there! The only thing that can make the decision “painful” or “difficult” is that it is a decision to murder a healthy beautiful baby. That also makes it a “moral” decision. Removing a tumor or an animal is not a “moral” decision. By these words, all nine justices prove they know unborn babies of people are people. <br />
<br />
And yet before this year, no state has asked the Court to outlaw abortion because it murders people. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“The Supreme Court in Gonzales unanimously came to the conclusion that abortion is a ‘difficult and painful decision,’ at 159. Gonzales stated, ‘Whether or not to have an abortion is a difficult and painful moral decision.’ The five-person majority consisted of Justices Kennedy, Roberts, Thomas, Alito and Scalia. The four Justices in dissent, Justices Ginsburg, Stevens, Souter, and Breyer, also said: ‘The Court is surely correct that, for most women, abortion is a painfully difficult decision.’ The dissent left out the word ‘moral’ as part of the difficulty. Gonzales, FN 7, at 183, per Ginsburg, dissenting. Thus, all nine justices agreed that abortion is ‘difficult’ and ‘painful.’ Why? Because at some level, most people ‘know’ or ‘sense’ that abortion kills a human life.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Even abortionists admit they know better: “Planned Parenthood has recently admitted through its chief physician in Missouri, that: “Sometimes the choice to end a pregnancy, even when it is a highly desired one, is a really difficult one for people”, Dr. Eisenberg, Planned Parenthood St. Louis Clinic Director.23 Abortionist Lisa Harris states: “I know that for every woman whose abortion I perform, I stop a developing human from being born . . . Abortion feels morally complicated because it stops a developing human being from being born, which, of course, it does.”24 (23 NBC News, nbcnews.com by Ericka Edwards and Ali Galarte, May 28, 2019. 24 “My Day as An Abortion Care Provider,” Oct. 22, 2019, New York Times OP/ED.)<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Mothers know better, although not necessarily in time. What “devastating psychological consequences” for mothers could follow successful removal of cancer?!! But Casey acknowledges they often follow an abortion, Melinda points out. “Many, many women are morally conflicted as this Court has recognized. Many women feel they have murdered their own child, with devastating consequences.” (The full sentence from Casey: “In attempting to ensure that a woman apprehend the full consequences of her decision, the State furthers the legitimate purpose of reducing the risk that a woman may elect an abortion, only to discover later, with devastating psychological consequences, that her decision was not fully informed.”)<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Even the “Roe” of “Roe v. Wade” came to know better: “The affidavit of Norma McCorvey, the ‘Roe’ of Roe v. Wade describing her experience working in the abortion industry, which changed her mind about abortion and caused her to seek reversal of her case, is still on file in McCorvey v. Hill, 385 F. 3d 846 (5th Cir. 2004) (cert. denied) (Supreme Court Docket No. 04-967).” (“Cert. denied” is the Supreme Court’s way of saying they were too busy to deal with her.)<br />
<br />
“Safe Haven” laws let a mother give her baby, no cost, no guilt, to any medical facility or fire station. Even small towns have fire stations. In Mississippi a mother has three days to do that. Rules vary with the states; in North Dakota, mothers have up to a year after birth. Mothers have nine months to decide. Mississippi Medicaid covers all prenatal costs for low income mothers. Contrasted with the high pressure abortion decisions, the high cost of abortion, the limited availability of killing centers, and the guilt. <br />
<br />
Safe Haven babies don’t languish in foster care for years. A footnote to a news article: “Thousands line up to adopt Safe Haven baby”.<br />
<br />
Why are Safe Haven laws a reason to reverse Roe?<br />
<br />
“The burden of an ‘unwanted’ child was a large factor in the Court’s analysis in Roe itself and Casey. ‘Maternity or additional offspring, may force upon the woman a distressful life and future. Psychological harm may be imminent. Mental and physical health may be taxed by child care. There is also the distress, for all concerned, associated with the unwanted child, and there is the problem of bringing a child into a family already unable, psychologically and otherwise, to care for it.’ Roe, 410 U.S. 113 at 153.” <br />
<br />
Viola, these needs are now met by Safe Haven laws, without cost, the inconvenience of long distance travel, guilt, or murder. There are no unwanted children. “This is a major, substantial change in circumstances that has never existed before in American history.”<br />
<br />
“As a fourth major ‘change in circumstances,’ at least two million Americans every year are now waiting to adopt newborn children. Far more people are waiting to adopt newborns than the number of aborted children per year.37 This development satisfies Casey’s stare decisis reliance test because there is no longer a need for abortion to give freedom from unwanted children to women.”<br />
<br />
(37 www.AmericanAdoptions.com/pregnant/waiting_adoptive_families)<br />
<br />
“Fifth, Today Science Clearly Demonstrates That Life Begins At Conception. New Scientific Advances Justify Changing Prior Precedent Under Stare Decisis.” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Supreme Court opinions [that are based on old science] should change when science advances. No society or court should be stuck in 1970’s science. One simple example is that DNA testing was not even used in the courts until the mid-1980’s. Anonymous DNA testing of the “infant life” in the womb and a DNA sample from the mother now shows that two separate humans exist. Sonograms, another example which started after Roe, convinced Dr. Bernard Nathanson, the founder of NARAL, as it should this Court, that he was wrong to kill innocent human life.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Court recognition of Life: “The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals has already upheld South Dakota’s law requiring abortionists (against their will and financial self-interest) to tell a woman that ‘abortion will terminate the life of a whole, separate, unique, living human being,’ defined as a member of the human species (Homo sapiens). Planned Parenthood v. Rounds, 530 F. 3d 724 (8th Cir. 2008) (en banc). The Eighth Circuit reviewed the voluminous evidence and determined there was adequate scientific evidence to uphold the law, which was “act based, not opinion or ideology, just as this Court has courageously done in recognizing the child in the womb as ‘infant life’ in Gonzales. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Several quotes from federal appeals courts about the need to reconsider Roe concluded with this zinger: “In sum, if courts were to delve into the facts underlying Roe’s balancing scheme with present day knowledge, they might conclude that the woman’s ‘choice’ is far more risky and less beneficial, and the child’s sentience far more advanced than the Roe Court knew.’ McCorvey v. Hill 385 F.3d 846 page 11 (5th Cir. 2004) (cert. denied)”<br />
<br />
What an understatement: “In the case of a crime against humanity, it is the duty of the Court to correct its own error. All judges should be open in appropriate cases, to considering evidence that killing ‘infant life’ in the womb is wrong, and that changes in circumstances have produced sound and necessary reasons for reversal.”<br />
<br />
Although Melinda’s evidence and argument supports asking the Court to outlaw all abortion across America, her conclusion only asks that Mississippi be allowed to keep its 15 week ban, and that Roe be overruled (leaving individual states to decide whether to keep abortion legal). <br />
<br />
<br />
==21. The Becket Fund for Religious Liberty==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185042/20210727133310143_19-1392%20Becket%20Amicus%20Brief%20Dobbs%20FINAL.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
Becket's question for SCOTUS: "Whether the Roe/Casey framework should be replaced in order to reduce the number and intensity of religious liberty conflicts".<br />
<br />
Examples of "religious liberty conflicts": "Surely the federal government has many ways to distribute contraceptives to American women without dragooning the Little Sisters of the Poor [an adoption agency] or other religious nonprofits....And surely state governments have many ways to ensure access to abortion without involving churches. But the shadow of ''Roe'' and ''Casey'' prompted these governments to deny exemptions to religious groups, or to eliminate religious exemptions that had existed for decades. <br />
<br />
"Another area where abortion proponents have attacked religious exercise is pharmacy regulations. In some states, government officials have sought to force pharmacists to dispense Plan B and Ella despite—'''or even because of'''—their religious objections. <br />
For example, Washington State, acting at the behest of abortion advocates, required religious objectors to dispense Plan B and Ella despite the fact that the State allowed pharmacies not to stock or dispense these drugs for “‘an almost unlimited variety of secular reasons[.]’” <br />
<br />
After reviewing these conflicts, Becket said these conflicts would go away if SCOTUS would simply pull back its nose out of America's consciences: "But it does not have to be this way. It is possible to address abortion through ordinary politics, free from the systemic deformations and misincentives generated by the Roe/Casey regime. '''This is the American experience related to abortion before the Court departed from the Constitution’s text, structure, history and tradition in Roe/Casey.''' And it is the American experience with a variety of other contested issues related to human life and religious liberty, and the experience of many European countries today."<br />
<br />
==22. U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and Other Religious Organization==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185030/20210727130348783_13-1932.Dobbs.final.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
Neither Constitutional Text Nor History Supports a Right to Take the Life of an Unborn Child at Any Stage of Pregnancy. Neither Constitutional Text Nor History Supports a Right to Take the Life of an Unborn Child at Any Stage of Pregnancy <br />
<br />
Conclusion: Ultimately these cases, with all the problems they entail for lower courts, land on this Court’s doorstep. And under the current jurisprudence, it will never stop. This should not be. The way to prevent it is to return the issue to the states, where it properly belongs. (paragraph preceding “conclusion”)<br />
<br />
Circuit judges have been skeptical that preenforcement challenges should be allowed at all in the abortion context because such challenges do not allow the plaintiff’s predictions about the challenged law’s effect to be tested. Some appellate courts have concluded outright that it is an abuse of discretion for a trial judge to issue a pre-enforcement injunction since the effect of such an abortion law is open to debate.27 This Court too has indicated that as-applied challenges are to be favored over facial challenges in abortion cases. Gonzales, 550 U.S. at 167 (stating that a facial challenge in that case “should not have been entertained in the first instance”). And yet, the practice of bringing pre-enforcement facial challenges to abortion legislation continues, leading inevitably to (a) judgments based on speculative evidence, (b) a blurring of the distinction between facial and as applied challenges, and (c) court decisions based often on factors for which the government itself is not even responsible (such as the number and location of abortion clinics in a given state). This impossible state of affairs would correct itself if the Court were to follow Justice Scalia’s suggestion to, in his words, “get out of this area, where we have no right to be, and where we do neither ourselves nor the country any good by remaining.” Casey, 505 U.S. at 1002 (Scalia, J., concurring in the judgment in part, dissenting in part). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Roe also attempted, based on prior decisions of this Court that had declared protection under the Due Process Clause for rights deeply rooted in the Nation’s 6 history and tradition, to locate an abortion right in history. The attempt was seriously flawed. “[S]ubsequent scholarship has demonstrated conclusively that acceptance of abortion is not in any sense deeply rooted in the Nation’s history and traditions. The opposite is true: it is the prohibition of abortion that has deep roots in English and American history.” Institutional Integrity and Respect for Precedent, supra at 553-54. An exhaustive study of the issue concludes that “[t]he tradition of treating abortion as a crime was unbroken through nearly 800 years of English and American history until the ‘reform’ movement of the later twentieth century.” Joseph W. Dellapenna, DISPELLING THE MYTHS OF ABORTION HISTORY xii (2006).2 <br />
<br />
See Michael Stokes Paulsen, The Worst Constitutional Decision of All Time, 78 NOTRE DAME L. REV. 995, 1007 (2003) (“I know of no serious scholar, judge, or lawyer who attempts to defend Roe’s analysis on textual or historical grounds.”); Richard S. Myers, Lower Court “Dissent” from Roe and Casey, 18 AVE MARIA L. REV. 1, 6 (2020) (noting that “no one defends the Court’s opinion in Roe”). ...<br />
<br />
D. Multiple State Interests Justify Prohibitions on Abortion Before Viability. There is an unfortunate tendency in abortion cases to become lost in minutiae. The factual record in individual cases can be lengthy and complex, the case law complicated and difficult to apply. But these case-specific features cannot disguise <span style="color:red">the tragedy that is the common denominator in these cases: the intentional destruction, on an unprecedented scale, of the most innocent and defenseless of the human family. In the truest sense, they are our family, our brothers and sisters. Like all members of the human family, they should be treasured and loved. Nothing in the Constitution requires states to stand idly by while their lives are deliberately taken. <br />
<br />
21 <span style="color:red">The Declaration of Independence places the right to life first in the list of inalienable rights. The Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments list the right to life first among those rights of which the government cannot deprive a person without due process of law. Thomas Jefferson’s March 31, 1809 letter to the Republican Citizens of Washington County, Maryland, stated: “The care of human life and happiness, and not their destruction, is the first and only legitimate object of good government.” 8 THE WRITINGS OF THOMAS JEFFERSON 165 (H.A. Washington, ed.) (1871). <br />
<br />
...“The States—indeed, all civilized nations—demonstrate their commitment to life by treating homicide as a serious crime.” Id. The same can be said for state prohibitions on assisted suicide, <br />
<br />
==23. LONANG Institute==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185037/20210727131024868_19-1392%20tsac%20Lonang%20Institute.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">[Every word in this section is from Lonang's brief, except what is in these brackets, and colored blue. They are blue, because even though I have copied so much of their brief because I see in it potential for getting baby murder outlawed in every state, Lonang argues at one point that courts should NOT do that, but should remain "neutral" about whether states can support murder.]<br />
<br />
The Declaration Of Independence Affirms That The States Enjoy Police Power Which Carries With It The Power To Prohibit Abortion ... The Fourteenth Amendment Requires Only Procedural Due Process, not Substantive Due Process ...Courts Are The Mere Instruments Of The Law, And Can Will Nothing ...... According to The Law Of Nature, Judicial Power Extends To Issuing Orders In Cases And Controversies, Not To Making Rules Of General Applicability..... Judicial Decisions Articulating Substantive Due Process Rights Are Without Constitutional Textual Support ..... ONLY THE STATES AND THE PEOPLE ENJOY THE LAWFUL AUTHORITY, TO CONSTITUTIONALIZE FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS “IMPLICIT IN LIBERTY”, OR “DEEPLY ROOTED”, OR “INHERENT IN INDIVIDUAL AUTONOMY.” .....<br />
[CONTINUED IN FIRST SECTION]<br />
<br />
The Federal Courts Possess No Article III Power To Discover Or Constitutionalize Textually Unsupported Rights Or Impose A Duty To Enforce Those Rights On The States........ <br />
the law of nature provides that a government’s judicial branches are limited to declaring what is the law, not its codification. The concept of judicial review affirms that the province of a judge is to declare the law, not to make it <br />
<br />
The Supreme Court is routinely presented with the legal arguments that certain statutory or constitutional words or phrases have no fixed meaning. The Court is then called upon to supply a new meaning other than the one stated in the text. This process adjusts the words or phrases chosen by the lawgiver, to establish as precedent the Court’s desired meaning. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Denying the textual meaning of legal words is not a novel invention of the Court. Instead, it has historical precedent going back to the first recorded case in human history. At issue in that case, In Re: Adam, Eve & the Devil, 3 Genesis 1 (0001), was the intent and meaning of a statute prohibiting consumption of fruit from a specific tree in a Garden in Eden. A statute prohibiting such consumption was at issue. Two of the parties violated the statute and entered a guilty plea. A second statute prohibited various forms of fraud and deception. A third party was charged under this statute alleging he used deception to induce co-defendants to consume the prohibited fruit. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">At trial, he argued that he was not liable on the theory that the first statute did not actually prohibit consumption—that the words in the statute did not mean what the text declared. [Plausible but not recorded interaction between God and Satan.] As such he argued that he did not engage in deceit in his statements to the other parties. The Court was unpersuaded. It rejected the argument, finding that the prohibition was clear and unambiguous, reflected the drafter’s original intent and was, therefore, enforceable as written.3 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">This Court’s fourteenth amendment substantive due process jurisprudence is based on the same argument first made in Eden—the words of the law do not mean what they say. The Court has maintained the amendment itself contains a substantive due process clause into which the Court is empowered to pour un-enumerated fundamental rights of its own divination. The Court’s atextual adjustments, purportedly limited by the outcomeflexible concept of “judicial restraint,” have been internally justified by its moral appeals to novel high-sounding phrases such as “implicit in the concept of ordered liberty,”4 or the “concept of personal liberty,”5 or “deeply rooted in this nation’s history and tradition,”6 or “inherent in the concept of individual autonomy.”7 Alas, none of these phrases have textual support in the amendment itself. Nor has the Court been granted any state legislative power in Article III to define ordered or personal liberty, individual <br />
[])<br />
4 Judicial decisions finding that a state statute violates fundamental values discovered as “implicit in the concept of ordered liberty” are without textual support. See Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479, 500 (1965) (Harlan. J., concurring) (quoting Palko v. Connecticut, 302 U. S. 319, 325 (1937) (Cardozo, J.) overruled on other grounds, Benton v. Maryland, 395 U.S. 784 (1969)). <br />
<br />
5 Judicial decisions finding that a state statute violates a woman’s right to abortion discovered in the “concept of personal liberty” are without textual support. See Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113, 153 (1973). <br />
<br />
6 Judicial decisions finding that a state statute violates rights discovered as “deeply rooted in this nation’s history and tradition” are without textual support. See Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 U.S. 702, 721 (1997) “The Due Process Clause specially protects those fundamental rights and liberties which are, objectively, deeply rooted in this Nation's history and tradition.” Palko, 302 U.S. 325. The Court looks to principles of justice “so rooted in the traditions and conscience of our people as to be ranked as fundamental’) (quoting Snyder v. Massachusetts, 291 U. S. 97, 105 (1934) overruled in part on other grounds by Malloy v. Hogan, 378 U.S. 1 (1964)). <br />
<br />
7 Judicial decisions finding that a state statute violates a fundamental right which is “inherent in the concept of individual autonomy” without regard to history or tradition is without textual support. See Obergefell v. Hodges, 576 US 644; 135 S. Ct. at 2629 (2015) <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">autonomy, or traipse through history and tradition to discover and append any un-enumerated substantive individual rights into the amendment’s textually non-existent “substantive” due process clause. Nor does the law of nature of judicial review empower this Court to write new Constitutional text. The authority of a judge is to declare what written law already exists. The standard legal maxim is, Jus dicere, et non jus dare, also known as judicis est jus dicere non dare. The province of a judge is to declare the law, not to make it.8 At what point in time and on whose authority did that rule, binding on judges in England and America for centuries, become nonbinding? Even if fundamental rights are so demonstrably “implicit, inherent and rooted” as the Court maintains, the power of judicial review, nevertheless, does not carry with it the power to insert those rights into the fourteenth amendment. Amending the Constitution is governed by Article V in which the Court plays no part. <br />
<br />
8 “When an act of Congress is appropriately challenged in the courts as not conforming to the constitutional mandate, the judicial branch of the government has only one duty; to lay the article of the Constitution which is invoked beside the statute which is challenged and to decide whether the latter squares with the former. All the court does, or can do, is to announce its considered judgment upon the question. The only power it has, if such it may be called, is the power of judgment. This court neither approves nor condemns any legislative policy. Its delicate and difficult office is to ascertain and declare whether the legislation is in accordance with, or in contravention of, the provisions of the Constitution; and, having done that, its duty ends.” United States v. Butler, 297 U.S. 1, 62-63 (1936). <br />
<br />
Even assuming arguendo that the Court’s “implicit, inherent and rooted” approach to discovering un-enumerated fundamental rights is superior to legislative debate and enactment, or preferable to the Constitution’s chosen method of amendment, or that the Court’s wisdom and judgment in divining such rights is the manifestation of jurisprudential perfection, the fact remains that such an approach is without textual Constitutional support. Whether or not un-enumerated fundamental rights are or are not “implicit, inherent and rooted” in the Constitution’s fourteenth amendment, they are not found in the text itself. As such their discovery and incorporation into the law of the land is for the States and the People to decide.9 <br />
<br />
The case now before the Court provides an opportunity to restore judicial review to declaring what the text says. It provides an opportunity to resist anew the temptation first argued at Eden to opine to the contrary. The restoration will leave the State of Mississippi free to adopt laws protecting a pregnant woman by prohibiting conduct inducing a miscarriage or procuring an abortion. Such a determination would not merely return the law of abortion to its pre-1973 status. It would return judicial review itself to pre-substantive due process status <br />
<br />
9 See U.S. Const. amend. IX, “The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.” See also U.S. Const. amend. X, “The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people. <br />
<br />
A. The Declaration Of Independence Affirms That The States Enjoy Police Power Which Carries With It The Power To Prohibit Abortion. <br />
<br />
The question posed by the Court pertains to the power of a state, in this case Mississippi. The Declaration of Independence not only declared the States to be free and independent, but also declared the legal basis and extent of their power. <span style="color:red">No understanding of state power is complete without consideration of the Declaration. The Declaration grounded civil power itself on the “laws of nature and of nature’s God.” <br />
<br />
That is what it says. It further declared this law of nature affirmed that every person may lawfully enjoy those rights which God has given. The laws of nature and its God pledges to guarantee to each person: <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among 8 these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.–That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed. . . <br />
<br />
Remember that under the Declaration, the “governments instituted among men,” whose job it is to secure the rights of the people, exclusively referred to the several state governments, as no federal or national government then existed. Accordingly, the duty to declare and secure the rights of the people belongs to the States themselves, not to any branch, department or agency of the federal government later created. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Even if this Court’s search for new fundamental un-enumerated substantive due process rights was constitutionally legitimate, it has neglected to look carefully at the “laws of nature and of nature’s God” as a source of those rights. Any legitimate search even for rights “deeply rooted” in American history and tradition would consider unalienable rights granted by the Creator as asserted in such a quintessential founding American document. In other words, the first place to look for any rights of the people would be to examine those rights granted by the Creator, not any purported rights invented by people. And if the Creator has not deemed it necessary or advisable to confer a particular right, then the logical conclusion would be that such a right does not exist. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Nevertheless the state governments’ purpose is to secure these natural and unalienable rights and 9 as we have seen, any un-enumerated rights are reserved to the People (not the judicial branch) to find, identify, and assert, and their States to enact. The People created their state governments for this purpose and their national government for a much more limited purpose. The People did not establish a national government with a judicial branch given any power to make law or discover un-enumerated rights. <br />
<br />
As to the power of the States, the Declaration declared: <br />
<br />
That these United Colonies are, and of Right ought to be, Free and Independent States; . . . and that as Free and Independent States, they have full Power to levy War, conclude Peace, contract Alliances, establish Commerce, and to do all other Acts and Things which Independent States may of right do. (emphasis added). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The States in the union have all power to do all “Acts and Things which Independent States may of right do.” The Constitution of a state may further limit this power. The United States Constitution including the fourteenth amendment also limits the power of States. But neither the framers nor text of that amendment contain any substantive due process limitation on a state’s police power. <br />
<br />
...Mississippi is such a state. It stands on equal footing with the original States. It enjoys the police power to adopt laws prohibiting abortion because the Declaration of Independence recognizes it may do such acts according to the law of nature. Nothing in the text of the Fourteenth amendment legitimately articulates a substantive due process limitation on that power. <br />
<br />
Even if a right to privacy implicit in the concept of ordered liberty translates into a right to abortion, nothing in the text of Article III, or the power of judicial review, extends to this Court a power to interlineate that right into the <br />
<br />
<br />
B. The Fourteenth Amendment Requires Only Procedural Due Process, not Substantive Due Process. The fourteenth amendment states in part: No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; . . . (emphasis added). U.S. Const., amend XIV. Due process pertains entirely to matters of procedure. “Procedural due process rules are meant to protect persons not from the deprivation, but from the mistaken or unjustified deprivation of life, liberty, or property.” Carey v. Piphus, 435 U.S. 247, 259 (1978). “[P]rocedural due process rules are shaped by the risk of error inherent in the truthfinding process as applied to the generality of cases.” Mathews v. Eldridge, 424 U.S. 319, 344 (1976) (emphasis added). The core of these requirements is notice and an opportunity to be heard (often a hearing) before an impartial tribunal. Due process may also require 13 an opportunity for confrontation and crossexamination, and for discovery; that a decision be made based on the record, and that a party be allowed to be represented by counsel. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">A review of the text of the fourteenth amendment reflects no textual support for any “substantive due process” clause. Even the term is an oxymoron. If we took the words in their ordinary meaning, “due process” merely signifies a proper procedure. The word “substantive,” on the other hand, means rights and duties as opposed to the procedural rules by which such things are established or enforced. Thus, the term “substantive due process,” in plain English, means non-procedural proper procedure. Logically, “substantive due process” is a type of “A = Not A” statement, where something is procedural and not procedural simultaneously. But unlike philosophy or mathematics, An “A = Not A” statement in a legal context is just plain illogical. Either the Court, when invoking substantive due process, is talking about procedure or it is not. If yes, then due process as a legal doctrine stands on its own and there is no need to resort to substantive due process. If no, then due process does not affect the matter, for it does not relate to procedure. This brings us back to Eden where the argument was first made that the words of the law do not mean what they say. While we acknowledge the argument has the weight of time behind it, originating in great antiquity, we respectfully urge the Court not to follow that ancient precedent. <br />
<br />
C. Courts Are The Mere Instruments Of The Law, And Can Will Nothing. <br />
Applying a dialectical interpretation to words is not an element of judicial power. Nothing in the case or controversy jurisdiction of the Supreme Court in Article III, sec. 2, extends any power to the Court to identify un-enumerated fundamental rights “implicit in the concept of ordered liberty,” or in the “concept of personal liberty,” or “deeply rooted in this nation’s history and tradition,” or “inherent in the concept of individual autonomy.”13 <br />
<br />
Alexander Hamilton affirmed this view, writing in Federalist No. 78, that the judicial branch of government is the least dangerous because it has neither force nor will, only judgment. Chief Justice Marshall agreed, noting that: ''Judicial power, as contradistinguished from the powers of the law, has no existence. Courts are the mere instruments of the law, and can will nothing.'' Osborn v. Bank of the United States, 22 U.S. (9 Wheat.) 738, 866 (1824) (Chief Justice Marshall).14 In other words, the Court <br />
<br />
14 See also United States v. Butler, 297 U.S. 1, 78-79 (1936) (“The power of courts to declare a statute unconstitutional is subject to two guiding principles of decision which ought never to be absent from judicial consciousness. One is that courts are concerned only with the power to enact statutes, not with their wisdom. The other is that while unconstitutional exercise of power by the executive and legislative branches of the government is subject to judicial restraint, the only check upon our own exercise of power is our own sense of self-restraint. For the removal of unwise laws from the statute books appeal lies not to the courts, but to the ballot and to the processes of democratic government.”) The instant case calls for self-restraint. <br />
<br />
<br />
cannot will un-enumerated fundamental rights into Constitutional existence. It has no judicial power to will rights “implicit in the concept of ordered liberty,” or in the “concept of personal liberty,” or “deeply rooted in this nation’s history and tradition,” or “inherent in the concept of individual autonomy” into textual existence. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The high watermark of the Supreme Court misuse of judicial review came in Cooper v. Aaron, 358 U.S. 1 (1958). In its opinion, the court remarked that Article VI of the Constitution makes the Constitution the “supreme Law of the Land.” So far, so good. In 1803, Chief Justice Marshall, speaking for a unanimous Court, calling the Constitution “the fundamental and paramount law of the nation,” declared in Marbury v. Madison, 1 Cranch 137 (1803) that “It is emphatically the province and duty of the judicial department to say what the law is.” This is a description of the legitimate power of judicial review found in Article III, Section 2. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">From this legitimate recognition of the power of judicial review, the Cooper v. Aaron Court stepped back to Eden. The Court first expanded its own opinion in Marbury asserting that Marbury actually “declared the basic principle that the federal judiciary is supreme in the exposition of the law of the Constitution.” 358 U.S. at 18 (emphasis added). Recall that Chief Justice Marshall said the judiciary has a duty to say what the law is. He said nothing, however, about the Court’s opinions as supreme. Cooper added the “supreme” element. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In its ruling, the Court in Cooper made the egregious error of misconstruing the Supremacy Clause of Art VI that “This constitution and the laws of the United States which shall be made in pursuance thereof” shall be “the supreme law of the land.” The Court, without either textual or historical support, construed “the laws of the United States” to include judicial opinions of the Court, when clearly, historically and textually, it only referred to acts of Congress which became law when made in pursuance of the Constitution. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Further, the Constitution grants no “supreme” expository power to the Court. It is not found in Articles III or VI. It is not there. What is found in Article VI is that the Constitution, laws and treaties “shall be the supreme law of the land.” Nothing is said about Supreme Court opinions being supreme law, let alone being law at all. The Constitution extends no power to the Court to claim that even its legitimate constitutionally based opinions, are the sole and exclusive meaning of the Constitution itself. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The judicial power to review cases arising under the constitution, laws and treaties is stated in Article III, section 2, but that power is not the power to rewrite the Constitution itself. It is not the power to authorize the court to sit as a perpetual constitutional convention. It is not the power for the court to write into the Constitution whatever it wants, or the power to strike from the Constitution has a duty to say what the law is. He said nothing, however, about the Court’s opinions as supreme. Cooper added the “supreme” element. In its ruling, the Court in Cooper made the egregious error of misconstruing the Supremacy Clause of Art VI that “This constitution and the laws of the United States which shall be made in pursuance thereof” shall be “the supreme law of the land.” The Court, without either textual or historical support, construed “the laws of the United States” to include judicial opinions of the Court, when clearly, historically and textually, it only referred to acts of Congress which became law when made in pursuance of the Constitution. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Further, the Constitution grants no “supreme” expository power to the Court. It is not found in Articles III or VI. It is not there. What is found in Article VI is that the Constitution, laws and treaties “shall be the supreme law of the land.” Nothing is said about Supreme Court opinions being supreme law, let alone being law at all. The Constitution extends no power to the Court to claim that even its legitimate constitutionally based opinions, are the sole and exclusive meaning of the Constitution itself. <br />
<br />
The judicial power to review cases arising under the constitution, laws and treaties is stated in Article III, section 2, but that power is not the power to rewrite the Constitution itself. It is not the power to authorize the court to sit as a perpetual constitutional convention. It is <span style="color:red">not the power for the court to write into the Constitution whatever it wants, or the power to strike from the Constitution whatever it does not want. Constitutional insertions and deletions are a power retained by the People. This textual judicial power renders the Court’s opinion in Roe without support in the fourteenth amendment. <br />
<br />
D. According to The Law Of Nature, Judicial Power Extends To Issuing Orders In Cases And Controversies, Not To Making Rules Of General Applicability. <br />
This exercise of judicial power is reflected in the difference between a “rule” and an “order.” A court cannot issue a rule under the law of nature, because the nature of any rule is that it is an action of general application. '''Rules apply not only to parties in a case, but to everyone. The court’s judgment on the other hand must be confined to an order for its contempt power to be exercised lawfully. Otherwise, a court could hold anyone in contempt for simply disagreeing with its opinion. This distinguishes judicial power from legislative power. Only the legislative power can make laws; the judiciary can merely apply pre-existing laws to the facts in a given case.''' <br />
<br />
Not only is the law of nature of judicial power responsive rather than initiative, and limited to giving orders to parties rather than rules to all persons, <span style="color:red">the law of nature of judicial power is restricted to judgment, not will. All the judge has is judgment to make known the statute or Constitution’s text. This distinguishes judicial power from executive power. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">It follows that if judges do not make law, which by definition is a “rule,” then judges cannot issue “rules,” and may only issue orders. A rule binds the people generally, and is by nature legislative, whereas an order binds only the person to whom it is directed. Thus, Article III extends the judicial power of the courts of the United States only to “cases” and “controversies.” If a judge could issue a rule which governed such disputes, the judicial power would not be limited to actual cases and controversies. [I]f the policy of the Government upon vital questions affecting the whole people is to be irrevocably fixed by decisions of the Supreme Court, the instant they are made in ordinary litigation between parties in personal actions, the people will have ceased to be their own rulers....15<br />
<span style="color:red">15 Abraham Lincoln, First Inaugural Address, March 4, 1861. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">This Court’s substantive due process jurisprudence is an example of rulemaking simply because it purports to add new text to the Constitution itself. For this reason, it is contrary to the law of nature of judicial power. The opinion in Roe v. Wade can also be examined to determine whether it was in the nature of an order or a rule. Remarkably, the Court did not issue an instruction to Texas declaring its statute unconstitutional and unenforceable. Rather, it specified a trimester formula was essentially a legislative rule purporting to bind all future statute governing abortion in every state. Yet only Texas was a party to the case. Hence, the Court’s opinion again lacked an essential element of the exercise of judicial power, that is, the issuance of an order, not a rule.16<br />
[16 For a more extensive review of the law of nature regarding <br />
judicial power and judicial review, see Herbert W. Titus & <br />
Gerald R. Thompson, America’s Heritage: Constitutional <br />
Liberty, Judicial Power And Judicial Review, The LONANG <br />
Institute (2006).]<br />
<br />
Besides the lack of concrete, textual constitutional language, the limited nature of judicial power and its lack of authority to make rules, the Court has felt constrained to adjust rather than abandon its substantive due process practice of atextual fundamental rights rulemaking. These cases reflect its “go to” linguistic justifications, all of which neither have textual support nor are found enumerated among the judicial powers in Article III. Judicial decisions finding that a state statute violates fundamental values “implicit in the concept of ordered liberty” are without textual support. See Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479, 500 (1965) (Harlan. J., concurring) (quoting Palko v. Connecticut, 302 U. S. 319, 325 (1937) (Cardozo, J.) overruled on other grounds, Benton v. Maryland, 395 U.S. 784 (1969)). A judicial decision finding that a state statute violates a woman’s right to abortion discovered in the “concept of personal liberty” is without textual support. See Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113, 153 (1973). <br />
<br />
Likewise, judicial decisions finding that a state statute violates rights “deeply rooted in this nation’s history and tradition” are without textual support. See Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 U.S. 702, 721 (1997). “The Due Process Clause specially protects those fundamental rights and liberties which are, objectively, deeply rooted in this Nation's history and tradition.” Palko, 302 U.S. at 325. The Court looks to principles of justice “so rooted in the traditions and conscience of our people as to be ranked as fundamental”) (quoting Snyder v. Massachusetts, 291 U. S. 97, 105 (1934) overruled in part on other grounds by Malloy v. Hogan, 378 U.S. 1 (1964)). <br />
So too, a judicial decision finding that a state statute violates a fundamental right which is “inherent in the concept of individual autonomy” without regard to history or tradition, is equally without textual support. See Obergefell v. Hodges, 576 U.S. 644; 135 S. Ct. at 2629 (2015).17 <br />
<br />
[17 Chief Justice Roberts, with whom Justice Scalia and Justice <br />
Thomas joined in dissent, further underscored the lack of any <br />
textual support for the court’s decision. <br />
<br />
The majority purports to identify four <br />
“principles and traditions” in this Court’s due <br />
process precedents that support a fundamental <br />
right for same-sex couples to marry. Ante, at 12. <br />
In reality, however, the majority’s approach has <br />
no basis in principle or tradition, except for the <br />
unprincipled tradition of judicial policymaking]<br />
that characterized discredited decisions such as <br />
Lochner v. New York, 198 U.S. 45. Stripped of <br />
its shiny rhetorical gloss, the majority’s <br />
argument is that the Due Process Clause gives <br />
same-sex couples a fundamental right to marry <br />
because it will be good for them and for society. <br />
If I were a legislator, I would certainly consider <br />
that view as a matter of social policy. But as a <br />
judge, I find the majority’s position indefensible <br />
as a matter of constitutional law.<br />
<br />
The same reasoning applies with equal force and effect <br />
to Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479, 500 (1965); Palko v. <br />
Connecticut, 302 U. S. 319, 325 (1937) (overruled on other <br />
grounds, Benton v. Maryland, 395 U.S. 784 (1969)); Roe v. <br />
Wade, 410 U.S. 113, 153 (1973), Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 <br />
U.S. 702, 721 (1997) and Snyder v. Massachusetts, 291 U. S. 97, <br />
105 (1934) (overruled in part on other grounds by Malloy v. <br />
Hogan, 378 U.S. 1 (1964))<br />
<br />
Let us be clear here. What we mean when we say the Court is utilizing doctrines or rules of interpretation which have no textual support, is that the Court is just declaring its own majoritarian judicial will as the Supreme Law of the Land without regard to the Constitution’s text, form of government, separation of powers, or any known legal doctrine except the arbitrary will of a Despot. Rather than celebrating and continuing this “long train of abuses and usurpations pursuing invariably the same object, a design to reduce” the People “under absolute Despotism,” there is still a window of time in which to quash this judicial abuse and usurpation. <br />
<br />
Finally, Amicus would be remiss in failing to address <span style="color:red">a future judicial decision which would discover a fundamental “right to life” “implicit in the Concept of ordered liberty”, or in the “concept of personal liberty,” or “deeply rooted in this nation’s history and tradition” or “inherent in the concept of individual autonomy,” or existing in any other linguistic contrivance yet to be animated from the spirit of the original argument in Eden (that the words do not mean what they say). Such a decision would also lack textual support in the non-existent substantive due process clause. Its advocates would perpetuate judicial Despotism and continue to wrongly nationalize, state jurisdiction. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">[Wait a minute. I have copied so much of Lonang's brief because I perceive its usefulness towards the goal of outlawing abortion in EVERY state, as required by the Constitution, especially the 14th Amendment. Yet in this unfortunate paragraph, Lonang argues that courts should NOT outlaw genocide universally! It is this kind of argument that elevates the "scrupulous neutrality" about whether murder is good, of which Justice Kavanaugh brags!<br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">[The error of Lonang and Kavanaugh, as I perceive it, is to miss the points raised by Justice Thomas about basing the definition of Constitutional Rights on what is specifically listed in the Constitution, which is the original meaning of "privileges and immunities" in the 14th Amendment. By that measure, "Life" is specifically protected by the Constitution, while "Murder" is not. This demands of courts that they outlaw baby murder in every state.] <br />
<br />
A right to life needs no between-the-lines authorization. The Amendment plainly identifies what makes a state law unconstitutional.]<br />
<br />
...Objecting to the Court’s holding in Obergefell v. Hodges, 576 U.S. 644; 135 S. Ct. at 2629 (2015) Justice Scalia, with whom Justice Thomas joined in dissenting observed: “This is a naked judicial claim to legislative—indeed, super-legislative—power; a claim fundamentally at odds with our system of government. Except as limited by a constitutional prohibition agreed to by the People, the States are free to adopt whatever laws they like, even those that offend the esteemed Justices’ “reasoned judgment.” ....<br />
<br />
...” The power and process of amending the national Constitution is well <br />
provided for in Article V. That Article assigns no place for the federal judiciary in its text.1<br />
<br />
The powers reserved to the States and people include the power to decide if they shall constitutionalize or not, fundamental rights “implicit in the concept of ordered liberty,” or within the “concept of personal liberty,” or “deeply rooted in this nation’s history and tradition,” or “inherent in the concept of individual autonomy.” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">[But not to the destruction of enumerated rights like Life.]<br />
<br />
...., the Court trampled down the separation of powers. It also exceeded the law of nature of judicial power, because it does not declare the written law, but rather says what the law should be. That goes beyond judicial review. ....<br />
<br />
Justice Curtis provided insight into the phenomenon when he observed: Political reasons have not the requisite certainty to afford rules of juridical interpretation. They are different in different men. They are different in the same men at different times. And when a strict interpretation of the Constitution, according to the fixed rules which govern the interpretation of laws, is abandoned, and the theoretical opinions of individuals are allowed to control its meaning, we have no longer a Constitution; we are under the government of individual men who, for the time being, have power to declare what the Constitution is according to their own views of what it ought to mean.” [ Dred Scott v. Sandford, 60 U.S. 393, 620-621 (1856) (J. <br />
Curtis, dissenting). <br />
<br />
He concluded that: “When such a method of <br />
interpretation of the Constitution obtains, in place of a <br />
republican Government, with limited and defined powers, we <br />
have a Government which is merely an exponent of the will of <br />
Congress; or, what in my opinion, would not be preferable, an <br />
exponent of the individual political opinions of the members of <br />
this court.” Id]<br />
<br />
==24 Claremont Institute's Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185038/20210727131748801_19-1392%20tsac%20CCJ.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment protects against deprivation “life, liberty, or property.” In the abortion rights cases, this Court has focused on “liberty.” [of moms.] The real issue, however, is life. [of babes.] Life is a natural right endowed by our Creator and is the first unalienable right recognized in the Declaration of Independence. ...The duty of government to protect life is at the center of the nation’s first legal document. <br />
<br />
==25 22 State Policy Organizations==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185004/20210727112957999_Dobbs%20Amici%20brief_FPC_%207.23.21.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
22 State Policy Organizations <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The positivistic [materialistic – only physical things are real] reduction of persons represented by the Court’s abortion decisions has leavened the law in a way that curtails historic State policies grounded in deference to a given human nature and the common law rights that correspond to that nature. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">By purporting to leave the question of the meaning of persons in the Fourteenth Amendment unanswered, this Court’s holdings requiring States to abandon common and natural law commitments have effectively ratified a diminished view of the human person in law. These holdings have foisted upon the States a denatured anthropological model that prohibits them from ascribing objective meaning, dignity, and value to vulnerable persons. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The severe distortion of the human person in constitutional caselaw invites systemic effects well beyond the troubled context of abortion. If constitutional precept commands States to treat nascent human life as vacant of meaning and value apart from subjective individual determination or Court authorization, concurrently placed in doubt is the historic understanding of law as constrained by a reality prior to and beyond its coercive impositions. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">A national abortion-enablement policy is mournful in itself, but does not keep to itself. It corrodes the law altogether. [http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185004/20210727112957999_Dobbs Amici brief_FPC_ 7.23.21.pdf] <br />
<br />
==26 Connie Weiskopf and Kristine L. Brown==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185063/20210727174713396_FINAL_Brown_Weiskopf_Dobbs_Amicus.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The sophistry at the heart of Roe is that the beginning of human life was ever a subject for speculation ...There was no doubt at the time of the Fourteenth Amendment as to whether the common definition of “person” included preborn persons. One-hundred and fifty years since, medical science has overwhelmingly confirmed this commonly understood inclusion of preborn persons in legal personhood. ...no other so-called constitutional right involves the “the purposeful termination of a potential life.” Yet even in Harris, we see the poison of Roe in the qualifier “potential.” ...By choosing Levy v. Louisiana, 391 U.S. 68 (1968) as the test for legal personhood, this Court can reach a new milestone in the advancement of human rights. ...The Court started from the premise that “illegitimate children are not ‘nonpersons,’” insofar as they are “humans, live, and have their being.” Levy 391 U.S. at 70 (emphasis added). Thus all children who 1)are human, 2) are living, and 3) are in being, are “clearly” persons under the Equal Protection Clause. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">As Justice Gorsuch wrote in his Ramos concurrence, “stare decisis isn’t supposed to be the art of methodically ignoring what everyone knows to be true.” Ramos v. Louisiana, 590 U.S. __, __ (2020) (slip op. at 23). [http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185063/20210727174713396_FINAL_Brown_Weiskopf_Dobbs_Amicus.pdf]<br />
<br />
==27 Professor Kurt T. Lash==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185028/20210727125456897_19-1392%20tsac%20Lash.pdf Filed July 27, 2021] ZZZZZZZZZZZZZ<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113 (1973), the Supreme Court ruled that...“We feel...This right of privacy...[is] founded in the Fourteenth Amendment’s concept of personal liberty and restrictions upon state action [while] the District Court determined [it is founded] in the Ninth Amendment’s reservation of rights to the people....” . In Planned Parenthood v. Casey, 505 U.S. 883 (1992), a plurality...once again cit[ed] the Fourteenth Amendment and the Ninth Amendment...s. The Ninth Amendment, both at the time of its adoption and now, preserves the people’s retained right to local self-government. It cannot properly be read as a source of authority to deny the rights of local self-government. The Fourteenth Amendment protects substantive rights against the states, '''but only those previously enumerated, thus leaving all unenumerated rights under the authority of the people of the several states''' as a matter of constitutional right. This includes the non-enumerated subject of abortion.<br />
<br />
[Substantive definition: it exists independently, not subordinate to anything; for example not owing its existence to any law or constitution. Enumerated definition: rights named in the Constitution, like freedom of speech and religion.]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....In sum, at the threshold of the Civil War, moderate Republicans (who, according to Foner, “held the balance of power within the Republican Party,” Foner, FREE SOIL, at 205) had no intention of abandoning constitutional federalism or reinterpreting the Ninth and Tenth Amendments. These Republicans believed that the slave holding southern states had fallen away from the original federalist principles of the Constitution and had continuously violated the personal rights enumerated in the Bill of Rights. See Michael Kent Curtis, FREE SPEECH, “THE PEOPLE’S DARLING PRIVILEGE”: STRUGGLES FOR FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION IN AMERICAN HISTORY 266-70 (2000). The Republicans who framed and advanced the Fourteenth Amendment sought only to enforce those original rights while maintaining the basic principles of constitutional federalism announced in provisions like the Ninth and Tenth Amendments. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">...II. The Fourteenth Amendment neither enforces unenumerated substantive rights against the states nor alters the federalist meaning of the Ninth Amendment.<br />
A. John Bingham, primary draftsman of Section One of the Fourteenth Amendment, sought to apply enumerated constitutional rights against the states while preserving the structural principles of constitutional federalism declared in the Ninth and Tenth Amendments.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">...Consistent with his continued belief in the reserved rights of the states over all unenumerated subjects, Bingham proposed a constitutional amendment that would enforce the first eight amendments in the Bill of Rights against the states but leave the substance of all unenumerated rights under the control of the people in the States.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....None of Bingham’s Republican colleagues in the Thirty-Ninth Congress objected to the idea of enforcing the Bill of Rights against the states. Some members, however, worried that the wording in Bingham’s initial draft might empower Congress to define what counted as federally enforceable “privileges and immunities.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Republican Giles Hotchkiss suggested he would support an amendment that clearly announced “a constitutional right that cannot be wrested from any class of citizens, or from the citizens of any State by mere legislation. But this amendment proposes to leave it to the caprice of Congress.” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....As Bingham explained three years after the ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment: Mr. Speaker, that the scope and meaning of the limitations imposed by the first section, fourteenth amendment of the Constitution may be more fully understood, permit me to say that the privileges and immunities of citizens of the United States, as contradistinguished from citizens of a State, are chiefly defined in the first eight amendments to the Constitution of the United States. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">...John Bingham’s fellow member on Joint Committee on Reconstruction, Michigan Senator Jacob Howard, also described Bingham’s Privileges or Immunities Clause in terms that involve only constitutionally enumerated rights. See Speech of Jacob Howard, May 23, 1866, in 2 Reconstruction Amendments, at 187-88.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In his speech introducing the Fourteenth Amendment to the Senate, Howard explained that the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States included the right of traveling citizens to receive equal treatment enumerated in Article IV’s Comity Clause (and described in antebellum cases like Corfield v. Coryell, 6 Fed. Cas. 546 (C.C.E.D. Pa. 1823)) as well as those rights “secured by the first eight amendments of the Constitution.” Id. at 188. Every single privilege or immunity listed by Howard in his extended speech involved a guarantee enumerated in the original Constitution. Howard’s speech is important: It was so widely read and republished that during the ratification debates speakers often referred to the proposed Fourteenth Amendment as “the Howard Amendment.” See, e.g., North Carolina House of Representatives, July 2, 1868 (“Mr. Seymour introduced the following resolution, ratifying the fourteenth article of the Constitution of the United States, the article known as the Howard Amendment.”), <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....C. The ratifying public was well informed of<br />
the speeches of John Bingham and Jacob<br />
Howard.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Unlike the secret proceedings of Philadelphia<br />
Constitutional Convention, the proceedings of the<br />
Thirty-Ninth Congress were public. Newspapers<br />
reported on the speeches and debates, often with<br />
verbatim transcripts, on a daily basis. See Introduction<br />
to the Collection, 1 Reconstruction Amendments, at ix.<br />
Bingham’s speeches of February 1866 were published<br />
in the New York Times,11 The New York Herald,12 The<br />
Vermont Watchman and State Journal,13 The<br />
Philadelphia Inquirer,14 and Philadelphia’s Illustrated<br />
New Age.15 Bingham himself published his February<br />
28, 1866 speech separately and distributed it as a<br />
campaign document. <br />
<br />
....In the<br />
Thirty-Ninth Congress, Pennsylvania Democrat<br />
Benjamin M. Boyer quoted the Ninth and Tenth<br />
Amendments as evidence that Congress had no right to<br />
“disfranchise the majority of the citizens of any State<br />
on account of their past participation in the rebellion.”17<br />
One finds similar Democrat references to the Ninth<br />
and Tenth Amendments throughout the Reconstruction<br />
debates. See, e.g., CONG. GLOBE, 41st Cong., 2d Sess.<br />
app. at 354 (1870) (remarks of Sen. William T.<br />
Hamilton) (quoting the Ninth and Tenth Amendments<br />
in support of a narrow reading of federal power).<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....As noted<br />
above, both John Bingham and Jacob Howard omitted<br />
the Ninth and Tenth Amendments from their list of<br />
constitutional rights protected by the Privileges or<br />
Immunities Clause, and instead expressly named the<br />
rights enumerated in the first eight amendments. As<br />
Bingham explained, “these eight articles I have shown<br />
never were limitations upon the power of the States,<br />
until made so by the fourteenth amendment.”<br />
<br />
....in the common<br />
Reconstruction-era understanding that the last two<br />
amendments in the Bill of Rights were distinguishable<br />
from the personal rights protected in the first eight.<br />
....y, there is no<br />
historical evidence that between the time of the<br />
<br />
18 Nor does it mean that states are not bound to respect the<br />
federalism principles of the Ninth and Tenth Amendments. See,<br />
e.g., New York v. United States, 488 U.S. 1041 (1992) (rejecting the<br />
idea that states can waive the Constitution’s federalist separation<br />
of powers represented by the Tenth Amendment). <br />
24<br />
Founding and Reconstruction a new consensus<br />
understanding of the Ninth Amendment had emerged<br />
which viewed the provision as a font of unenumerated<br />
personal rights that could be applied against the states.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....McDonald v. Chicago, 561 U.S. 742, 811, (2010)<br />
(Thomas, J., concurring in part and concurring in<br />
judgment) (“the Court has determined that the Due<br />
Process Clause applies rights against the States that<br />
are not mentioned in the Constitution at all, even<br />
without seriously arguing that the Clause was<br />
originally understood to protect such rights. See, e.g.,<br />
Lochner v. New York; Roe v. Wade.”) (cleaned up). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Nor could it. At the time of the Fourteenth<br />
Amendment, the term “due process of law” was<br />
“universally understood to guarantee individual rights<br />
of legal process that only courts could provide.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....In 1859,<br />
for example, John Bingham “invit[ed] attention to the<br />
significant fact that natural or inherent rights, which<br />
belong to all men irrespective of all conventional<br />
regulations, are by this constitution guaranteed by the<br />
broad and comprehensive word ‘person,’ as<br />
contradistinguished from the limited term citizen— as<br />
in the fifth article of amendments, guarding those<br />
sacred rights which are as universal and indestructible<br />
as the human race, that ‘no person shall be deprived of<br />
life, liberty, or property but by due process of law.’”<br />
Bingham, 1 Reconstruction Amendments, at 153-54.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">This made slavery the ultimate denial of Due Process<br />
as it deprived persons of life, liberty and property<br />
without any procedural protections whatsoever. <br />
.... McDonald v.<span style="color:red"><br />
Chicago, 561 U.S. 742, 811 (2010) (Thomas, J.,<br />
concurring in part and concurring in judgment) (This<br />
Court created the right to abortion based on an<br />
amorphous, unwritten right to privacy, which it<br />
grounded in the “legal fiction” of substantive due<br />
process.”). The Due Process Clause requires states to<br />
provide all persons critically important procedural<br />
rights [equal rights in court], but nothing more.<br />
....In The Slaughterhouse Cases, 83 U.S. 36 (1873), the<br />
Supreme Court rejected a claim by Louisiana butchers<br />
that a state-enacted monopoly violated, among other<br />
things, the Privileges or Immunities Clause of the<br />
Fourteenth Amendment....Since the right to pursue a local trade was neither an<br />
enumerated federal responsibility or enumerated<br />
federal right, the subject remained under the<br />
regulatory control of the people in the several states.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In support of his reading of the Fourteenth<br />
Amendment, Justice Miller relied on the basic<br />
principles of constitutional federalism. According to<br />
Miller, interpreting the Privileges or Immunities<br />
Clause as somehow nationalizing the unenumerated<br />
subjects of municipal regulation, especially when<br />
combined with the congressional enforcement powers<br />
granted by Section Five of the Fourteenth Amendment,<br />
would obliterate the federalist structure of the<br />
Constitution. Miller was unwilling to accept an<br />
interpretation that “radically changes the whole theory<br />
of the relations of the State and Federal governments<br />
to each other and of both these governments to the<br />
people . . . in the absence of language which expresses<br />
such a purpose too clearly to admit of doubt.”<br />
Slaughterhouse, 83 U.S. at 78.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In<br />
his 1871 Speech on the Enforcement Act, in words that<br />
anticipate Miller’s later opinion in Slaughterhouse,<br />
Bingham explained:<br />
Is it not clear that other and different privileges<br />
and immunities than those to which a citizen of<br />
a State was entitled are secured by the provision<br />
30<br />
of the fourteenth article, that no state shall<br />
abridge the privileges and immunities of citizens<br />
of the United States, which are defined in the<br />
eight articles of amendment, and which were not<br />
limitations on the power of the States before the<br />
fourteenth amendment made them limitations?<br />
Bingham, March 31, 1871, in 2 Reconstruction<br />
Amendments at 626.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Justice Miller also was correct to insist that the<br />
Fourteenth Amendment be interpreted in a manner<br />
consistent with the traditional understanding of<br />
constitutional federalism. Bingham himself had no<br />
intention to obliterate constitutional federalism and he<br />
insisted that his proposal imposed no rights upon<br />
states which they were not already constitutionally<br />
oath-bound to protect. Like other moderate<br />
Republicans in the Reconstruction Congress, Bingham<br />
valued constitutional federalism, describing it as “our<br />
dual system of Government by which our own<br />
American nationality and liberty have been established<br />
and maintained. I have always believed that the<br />
protection in time of peace within the States of all the<br />
rights of person and citizen was of the powers reserved<br />
to the States. And so I still believe.” Bingham, March<br />
9, 1866, in 2 Reconstruction Amendments at 140. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Finally, Miller was right to limit the privileges or<br />
immunities of citizens of the United States to those<br />
rights actually enumerated in one form or another in<br />
the federal Constitution. It had long been settled law<br />
that no state was permitted to make or enforce any law<br />
that conflicted or interfered with a proper exercise of<br />
enumerated federal power. See McCulloch v. Maryland,<br />
31<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">17 U.S. 316 (1819). The problem in the 1860s was the<br />
lack of federal power to enforce enumerated federal<br />
rights. As Bingham explained early in the debates of<br />
the Thirty-Ninth Congress, “it has been the want of the<br />
Republic that there was not an express grant of power<br />
in the Constitution to enable the whole people of every<br />
State, by congressional enactment, to enforce obedience<br />
to these requirements of the Constitution.” Bingham,<br />
February 26, 1866, in 2 Reconstruction Amendments at<br />
100. '''Although Miller does not expressly declare that<br />
the Privileges or Immunities Clause applied the first<br />
eight amendments against the states, Miller does name<br />
enumerated First Amendment rights as protected<br />
“privileges or immunities.” Nothing in his opinion<br />
closes the door on incorporation of the Bill of Rights.'''<br />
See, Lash, THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT, at 252-65.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">'''That door was erroneously closed in a later case,<br />
Cruikshank v. United States''', 92 U.S. 542 (1876). Id. at<br />
265; see also McDonald v. Chicago, 561 U.S. 742, 808<br />
(2010) (Thomas, J. concurring).<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">United States, by the consent of the people of the<br />
United States, with the power to enforce the bill of<br />
32<br />
rights as it stands in the Constitution today.” Bingham,<br />
in 2 Reconstruction Amendments at 109.<br />
No moderate Republican in or out of Congress in the<br />
1860s would have approved of a constitutional<br />
amendment that bound the states to enforce an<br />
undefined set of substantive rights and gave Congress<br />
the power the nationalize the same. This includes the<br />
otherwise unenumerated “right to abortion.”<br />
<br />
==28 Robin Pierucci, M.D., and Life Legal Defense Foundation==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185034/20210727130751481_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20Robin%20Pierucci%20MD%20and%20Life%20Legal%20Defense%20Foundation.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
A very different “logical and biological” <br />
conclusion about constitutional rights could be <br />
drawn from the definition of viability: <br />
After viability, when a human being is <br />
capable of meaningful life outside the <br />
mother’s womb, the State must, consistent <br />
with its obligations under the Fourteenth <br />
Amendment, protect this human from being <br />
deliberately killed to the same extent it <br />
protects older human beings. <br />
<br />
Such a conclusion is at least as, and likely more, <br />
plausible than Roe’s declaration that only after the <br />
unborn child could survive outside the womb, a <br />
state may, or may not, prohibit his or her <br />
deliberate destruction, subject to broad exceptions <br />
effectively gutting even this limited permission. <br />
<br />
....These scholars recognize that establishing <br />
the principle of Fourteenth Amendment personhood <br />
for the unborn does not dictate a single, judicially#imposed result for all states, all statutes, or all <br />
pregnancies. Paulsen, at 70 (“That the word <br />
‘person,’ as used in the Constitution in the Fifth <br />
and Fourteenth Amendments, is broad enough to <br />
embrace living but unborn humans does not itself <br />
say anything specific about what the precise legal <br />
regime must be with respect to abortion”); Finnis, <br />
Born and Unborn: Answering Objections to <br />
Constitutional Personhood, First Things, April 9, <br />
<br />
....Whatever abortion restrictions may (or may <br />
not) exist on paper, because of the flexibility of this <br />
Court’s jurisprudence, abortion providers across the <br />
country advertise their services for later abortions: <br />
beyond 20 weeks, beyond 24 weeks, beyond 28 <br />
weeks, beyond 32 weeks. See Appendix. The <br />
audience for these advertisements and websites is <br />
not doctors who have unexpectedly diagnosed a <br />
dangerous condition in a pregnant woman. These <br />
advertisements are direct-to-consumer marketing <br />
of Roe- and Casey-sanctioned abortions <br />
indistinguishable from infanticide.<br />
<br />
e. Additionally, the <br />
viability threshold for a compelling state interest in <br />
preserving human life, created by this Court in <br />
1973, should be abandoned in favor of the medically <br />
updated and philosophically consistent standard of <br />
an “unqualified” interest in protecting life that this <br />
Court upheld in the 1990 case of Cruzan<br />
<br />
==29 Priests for Life==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185032/20210727130517073_19-1392%20tsac%20Priests%20for%20Life.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
Indeed, Priests for Life urges the Court to use this opportunity to end the charade that Roe v. Wade was correctly decided. This fateful decision has no legitimate foundation in law, it continues to tear at the fabric of our nation, and it has corrupted our judicial system. It is time for it to go ....<br />
<br />
In 1868, when the<br />
Fourteenth Amendment was ratified, a majority<br />
of the States and numerous Territories had laws<br />
on the books that limited (and in many cases<br />
nearly prohibited) abortion. See id., at 175, n.1. <br />
<br />
It would no doubt shock the public at that time<br />
to learn that one of the new constitutional<br />
Amendments contained hidden within the<br />
interstices of its text a right to abortion. <span style="color:red">The<br />
fact that it took this Court over a century to find<br />
that right all but proves that it was more than<br />
hidden—it simply was not (and is not) there.<br />
June Med. Servs. L.L.C. v. Russo, 140 S. Ct. 2103,<br />
2142, 2151 (2020) (Thomas, J., dissenting).<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">When deciding Roe v. Wade, this Court infamously<br />
stated:<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">We need not resolve the difficult question of<br />
when life begins. When those trained in the<br />
respective disciplines of medicine, philosophy,<br />
and theology are unable to arrive at any<br />
consensus, the judiciary, at this point in the<br />
development of man’s knowledge, is not in a<br />
position to speculate as to the answer.<br />
5<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113, 159 (1973). Consistent with<br />
this veiled philosophical pronouncement—a<br />
pronouncement grounded in secular positivism—a<br />
majority of the justices concluded that the U.S.<br />
Constitution “does not define ‘person,’” leading the<br />
Court to ultimately conclude that “the word ‘person,’ as<br />
used in the Fourteenth Amendment, does not include<br />
the unborn.” Id. at 158. <br />
<br />
Remarkably, the Court dismissed the life of the<br />
unborn based on its conclusion that there is no direct<br />
textual support to conclude that this “person” is<br />
protected by the Fourteenth Amendment. Yet, this<br />
same Court created a right to abortion “out of whole<br />
cloth, without a shred of support from the<br />
Constitution’s text.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Court’s ruling in Roe v. Wade is similar to how<br />
the Court had previously concluded in the infamous<br />
Dred Scott decision (Dred Scott v. Sandford, 60 US 393<br />
(1857)) that people of color were not legal “persons” as<br />
a matter of federal constitutional law. Unfortunately,<br />
it took a civil war to correct this injustice.<br />
<br />
[Actually Dred Scott called slaves a “class of persons”, but persons without rights. And although they are persons, they are not “people of the United States”: <br />
“The words "people of the United States" and "citizens" are synonymous terms, and mean the same thing. They both describe the political body who, according to our republican institutions, form the sovereignty and who hold the power and conduct the Government through their representatives. They are what we familiarly call the "sovereign people," and every citizen is one of this people, and a constituent member of this sovereignty. The question before us is whether the class of persons described in the plea in abatement compose a portion of this people, and are constituent members of this sovereignty? We think they are not,”<br />
<br />
...6. The only two clauses in the Constitution which point to this race treat them as persons whom it was morally lawfully to deal in as articles of property and to hold as slaves.<br />
<br />
...8. A State, by its laws passed since the adoption of the Constitution, may put a foreigner or any other description of persons upon a footing with its own citizens as to all the rights and privileges enjoyed by them within its dominion and by its laws. But that will not make him a citizen of the United States, nor entitle him to sue in its courts, nor to any of the privileges and immunities of a citizen in another State.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">...It is very true that, in that portion of the Union where the labor of the negro race was found to be unsuited to the climate and unprofitable to the master, but few slaves were held at the time of the Declaration of Independence, and when the Constitution was adopted, it had entirely worn out in one of them, and measures had been taken for its gradual abolition in several others. But this change had not been produced by any change of opinion in relation to this race, but because it was discovered from experience that slave labor was unsuited to the climate and productions of these States, for some of the States where it had ceased or nearly ceased to exist were actively engaged in the slave trade, procuring cargoes on the coast of Africa and transporting them for sale to those parts of the Union where their labor was found to be profitable and suited to the climate and productions.]<br />
<br />
==30 Hannah S., John S. and Marlene S==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185061/20210727165822368_41029%20pdf%20Parker%20II.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
The story of this “adoption” and this Amici Curiae Brief will reveal that Roe’s measuring line for viability has now been moved all the way back to fertilization by the modern scientific advancement called in vitro fertilization. Roe, at 160, has this viability definition: “ ‘viable,’ . . . potentially able to live outside the mother’s <br />
womb, albeit with artificial aid.”<br />
<br />
Advances in science have eliminated the distinction between previability and viability. Previability prohibitions on elective abortions should be constitutional because viability occurs at fertilization, as proven through in vitro fertilization techniques. <br />
<br />
==31 Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185155/20210728163153060_Amici%20Brief%20of%20CMP-Daleiden.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Federal law recognizes human infants in utero, and premature infants born alive, as persons under the law at any gestational age. The federal Unborn Victims of Violence Act recognizes the “child in utero” as “a member of the species homo sapiens, at any stage of development, who is carried in the womb” whose death or injury in the course of a federal crime is subject to prosecution the same as that of any born child or adult individual. 18 U.S.C. § 1841(d), (a)(1). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The federal Born Alive Infants Protection Act establishes even more broadly that, for purposes of “any Act of Congress” and “any ruling, regulation, or interpretation of the various administrative bureaus and agencies of the United States,” “the words ‘person’, ‘human being’, ‘child’, and ‘individual’, shall include every infant member of the species homo sapiens who is born alive at any stage of development.” 1 U.S.C. § 8 (a).<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Even prior to the ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment, this Court acknowledged that the word “person” in law was a term designed to include all of humanity. In United States v. Palmer, 16 U.S. 610 (1818), Chief Justice Marshall explained that “every human being” and “the whole human race” was included in the words “person or persons” in federal law. Id. at 631–32. And in Levy v. Louisiana, 391 U.S. 68 (1968), this Court articulated a simple test for ensuring equal protection for marginalized persons, reasoning that so-called “illegitimate” children were not “non-persons” as they were “humans, live, and have their being,” and therefore, “clearly ‘persons’ within the meaning of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.” Id. at 70. <br />
<br />
==32 European Legal Scholars in support of neither party==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185153/2021072 8162714090_European%20Legal%20Scholars%20Amici%20Brief.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
The European Court allows States a wide margin <br />
of appreciation to determine the starting point of the <br />
right to life in their domestic law and to formulate <br />
their laws on abortion. Consistent with this, the <br />
European Court has held that the Convention does not <br />
confer a right to abortion and has recognized as <br />
compatible with a Member State’s obligations under <br />
the Convention even very restrictive abortion laws. <br />
However, in several cases the European Court has <br />
found violations of the Convention in respect of <br />
individual applicants as a result of procedural <br />
deficiencies in the way national abortion laws have <br />
been given effect.<br />
<br />
.....The Court previously has considered European law when interpreting the Constitution. See, e.g., Roper v. Simmons, 543 U.S. 551, 575 (2005) (considering certain foreign law “instructive” when interpreting the Eighth Amendment); Lawrence v. Texas, 539 U.S. 558, 560 (2003) (discussing the European Court’s reasoning when interpreting the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment); Atkins v. Virginia, 536 U.S. 304, 316 n.21 (2002) (resorting to other countries’ views on capital punishment for the mentally ill). To be sure, the propriety of doing so is disputed. See, e.g., Roper, 543 U.S. at 627–28 (Scalia, J., dissenting); Lawrence, 539 U.S. at 598 (Scalia, J., dissenting); Atkins, 536 U.S. at 322–28 (Rehnquist, C.J., dissenting). But the fact that the very same source of European law this Court previously invoked also allows prohibitions on abortion admits of no serious dispute. Roper, 543 U.S. at 563; Atkins, 536 U.S. at 313–14. <br />
<br />
....Amici, accordingly, wish to highlight relevant abortion jurisprudence from the European Court that may prove helpful to this Court. Specifically, the European Court has a body of case law weighing abortion laws against human rights standards. This case law addresses issues comparable to those faced by the Court, including the scope of the right to privacy and the interests and rights that may legitimately be balanced against such a right by the state when regulating or restricting abortion.<br />
<br />
1.Member States may protect human life before birth through national law. The European Court has identified several rights and interests justifying such laws. These include protecting the right to life of the unborn, the legitimate interest of society in limiting the number of abortions, and the interests of society to protect morals. 2.The European Court has held that the Convention does not confer a right to abortion. 3.The compatibility with the Convention of Member States’ laws on abortion is primarily assessed by reference to Article 2 (“Right to life”) and Article 8 (“Right to respect for private and family life”) of the Convention. 4.The European Court has not determined whether the unborn child is a person for the purposes of Article 2 of the Convention. The European Court has not interpreted Article 2 as prohibiting States from making abortion legal; it instead interprets Article 2 as allowing States a margin of appreciation to determine the starting point of the right to life in their domestic law. 5.Legislation regulating the termination of pregnancy touches upon the sphere of a woman’s private life and thus may come within the scope of Article 8. But the European Court has also consistently recognized that Member States have a wide margin of appreciation under the Convention with respect to the regulation of abortion. <br />
<br />
6.Consistent with the foregoing, the European Court has recognized as compatible with a Member State’s obligations under the Convention even very restrictive abortion laws, including a national law prohibiting abortion at all stages of pregnancy and for any reason other than where there was a risk to the life (including by way of suicide) of the expectant mother. <br />
<br />
7.While acknowledging that it is the task of an individual Member State to frame its own abortion law, the European Court has found that it follows from its responsibility under Article 19 of the Convention to supervise whether any such law constitutes a proportionate balancing of the competing interests involved. <br />
<br />
8.The European Court has not relied upon any concept of the viability of the “foetus”3 as a basis for assessing the compatibility of Member States’ abortion laws with the Convention. <br />
9.In several cases, the European Court has found that Member States have violated the Article 8 rights of claimants seeking to access abortion services permitted under national law as a result of deficiencies in the way the national law has been given effect. These have included deficiencies in the arrangements for conscientious objection by healthcare providers or deficiencies in the processes for establishing whether the conditions under national 3 The European Court uses the terms “foetus” and “unborn child” interchangeably. See Vo v. France, 2004-VIII Eur. Ct. H.R. 67, 109; A, B & C v. Ireland, 2010-VI Eur. Ct. H.R. 185, 261. (“ABC”). 6 law for a lawful abortion have been satisfied by a claimant in a particular case. <br />
<br />
==33 396 State Legislators from 41 States==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185121/20210728125120809_Dobbs%20Amici%20brief_State%20Legislators_07272021.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
[This brief tackles 2 issues: power of ''Congress'' to correct state slights to the people’s rights. Second, the power of ''states'' to protect rights. It addresses a Problem, when an ''un''enumerated [not specified in the Constitution] right, abortion, is at the expense of an ''enumerated'' right, Life. <br />
<br />
[This brief shows Section 5 authority embedded in natural law way before 1868. Not just Congress but states. Courts have zero jurisdiction to enforce unenumerated rights like abortion, but full authority and inescapable responsibility to enforce enumerated rights like Life. Couldn’t a red state sue a blue state for slaughtering its people?] <br />
<br />
9 The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.[7] <br />
Wikipedia: addresses rights, retained by the people, that are not specifically enumerated in the Constitution. <br />
<br />
10 The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.[6]<br />
<br />
<br />
[Even if Section 5 of the 14th Amendment DIDN'T give Congress authority to define and enforce rights:]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red"> State legislators have the constitutional duty, and therefore the power, to protect the fundamental, civil rights of persons. The fundamental law in which those fundamental rights are found is the common law, which consists of both natural duties and those ancient, customary rights and immunities that are foundational to ordered liberty. Thus, a state legislature must declare and secure to all persons within the protection of its laws the rights that those persons have by natural and customary law. Cf. Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 U.S. 702, 721-22 (1997) (upholding state legislation that prohibited assisted suicide and reasoning that the Fourteenth Amendment’s “Due Process Clause specially protects those fundamental rights and liberties which are, objectively, ‘deeply rooted in this Nation’s history and tradition’.” (quoting Moore v. E. Cleveland, 431 U. S. 494, 503 (1977)). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England (1765): “Hence,” he said, “it follows, that the first and primary end of human laws is to '''maintain and regulate these absolute rights of individuals.'''” Id. Blackstone taught that the legislative power is to declare existing common-law rights and duties and to remedy any defects in the legal security for those rights. Id. at *42-43, 52-58, 86-87 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Founders echoed this view in the Declaration of Independence, declaring that '''governments are instituted among men in order to secure the inalienable rights with which human beings are endowed by nature and nature’s God.''' They also accused the crown and Parliament of infringing the rights of “our constitution,” which in 1776 could only have been a reference to the common-law constitution of British North America. This view predicated the Constitution of the United States, which expressly secures natural rights, such as life and religious liberty, and common-law rights, such as jury trials and freedom from the quartering of soldiers in one’s home, and expressly disclaims any intent to disparage the other rights of the fundamental law. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Indeed, '''the point of having legislatures, executives, and courts is to secure the rights that Americans already have.''' Neither state legislatures nor the Constitution of the United States create those rights. See District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570, 592 (2008) (stating that “it has always been widely understood that <span style="color:red">the Second Amendment, like the First and Fourth Amendments, codified a preexisting right,” that it “is not a right granted by the Constitution,” and is not “in any manner dependent upon that instrument for its existence.”). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Some, but not all, of the rights of natural persons are enumerated [listed] in the Constitution''' of the United States and its amendments. U.S. Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 8.; art. IV, §2; amends. I-VIII. '''Others are enumerated in state constitutions.''' See e.g., Soc’y for the Propagation of the Gospel v. Wheeler, 22 F. Cas. 756, 766 (No. 13,156) (C.C.D.N.H. 1814). Still others are declared in American constitutions but not enumerated. U.S. Const. amend. IX (“The enumeration of certain rights herein shall not be construed to deny or disparage other rights retained by the people.”) (emphasis added). '''State legislatures have a duty to declare and secure all fundamental rights, both enumerated and unenumerated.''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Fundamental rights are those that persons enjoy by fundamental law—natural law and common law— with or without any written constitution. Because the common law includes natural rights, to understand the fundamental rights declared and secured by the Constitution, it is sufficient to look to the common law, especially as explained by William Blackstone. Established common-law doctrines constitute the best evidence of the existence and meaning of both enumerated and unenumerated, fundamental rights. Jeffrey D. Jackson, Blackstone’s Ninth Amendment: A Historical Common Law Baseline for the Interpretation of Unenumerated Rights, 62 Okla. L. Rev. 167 (2010) (explaining why the unenumerated rights referred to in the Ninth Amendment should be understood with reference to a common law baseline, especially as specified in Blackstone’s Commentaries); Adam J. MacLeod, Our Universal and Particular Constitution, Public Discourse, https://www.thepublicdiscourse.com/2018/10/43788/ (October 4, 2018). <span style="color:red">“The interpretation of the Constitution of the United States is necessarily influenced by the fact that its provisions are framed in the language of the English common law, and are to be read in the light of its history.” Smith v. Alabama, 124 U.S. 465, 478 (1888). The terms and concepts of the common law provided the “the nomenclature of which the framers of the Constitution were familiar.” Minor v. Happersett, 88 U.S. (21 Wall) 162, 167 (1875). Accord James R. Stoner, Jr., Common-Law Liberty: Rethinking American Constitutionalism 9-29 (2003). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">American constitutional rights are not philosophical abstractions. They are described in detail in common law treatises, such as those by Coke and Hale, and especially Blackstone’s Commentaries. The framers crafted American constitutions—state and federal—in common law terms. And Blackstone was their teacher and lexicographer. <br />
<br />
Morris L. Cohen, Thomas Jefferson Recommends a Course of Law Study, 1119 U. Pa. L. Rev. 823 (1971); Robert A. Ferguson, Law and Letters in American Culture 11 (1984); Albert W. Alschuler, Rediscovering Blackstone, 145 U. Pa. L. Rev. 1 (1996); R.H. Helmholz, Natural Law in Court: A History of Legal Theory in Practice 131–41 (2015). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">As this Court has rightly acknowledged, Blackstone’s “works constituted the preeminent authority on English law for the founding generation.” Alden v. Maine, 527 U.S. 706, 715 (1999). Blackstone retained his influence through the adoption of the Civil War Amendments. James M. Ogden, Lincoln’s Early Impressions of the Law in Indiana, 7 Notre Dame L. Rev. 325, 328 (1932). And this Court continues to turn to Blackstone today. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">[2 A few examples from recent years include Gamble v. United States, __ U.S. __, 139 S. Ct. 1960 (2019) (the Court’s opinion, the concurrence, and one dissent citing Blackstone multiple times to determine the meaning of the phrase “the same offense” in the Fifth Amendment’s double jeopardy clause); Department of Homeland Security v. Thuraissigiam, __ U.S. __, 140 S. Ct. 1959, 1969 (2020) (calling Blackstone’s Commentaries a “satisfactory exposition of the common law of England”); Ramos v. Louisiana, __ U.S. __, 140 S. Ct. 1390, 1395 (2020) (citing Blackstone in explanation of the holding that the requirement of juror unanimity is “a vital right protected by the common law” and therefore the Constitution’s jury trial guarantee); Torres v. Madrid, __ U.S. __, 141 S. Ct. 989, 996, 997, 998, 1000 (2021) (citing Blackstone multiple times to determine meaning of Fourth Amendment “seizure”). ]<br />
<br />
...emphasis added). The legislature’s particular duty to declare and secure the natural and customary rights of America’s fundamental common law can be seen clearly by reading together the Ninth, Tenth, and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution of the United States. The Bill of Rights marks off certain rights as beyond the competence of Congress (and now, by incorporation, the states) to alter or abolish. It immunizes those rights by enumerating them and by stating in particular terms the official duties with which they correlate. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">But as the Ninth Amendment makes clear, the enumeration of certain common-law rights does not deny or disparage all the other rights that the American people enjoy by virtue of natural law and their ancient customs. The Ninth Amendment expressly reserves to the people those civil and fundamental rights that they enjoyed prior to ratification, which are their natural rights, other common-law rights and liberties, and some privileges enumerated in state constitutions. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Because many states refused to remedy infringements of fundamental rights [for blacks] prior to the Civil War, the Fourteenth Amendment was necessary to ensure to all persons due process of law and the equal protection of the laws, and to empower Congress to remedy infringements of those rights. It bears emphasis that <span style="color:red">the Fourteenth Amendment was necessary to recall state legislatures to their original task. '''Far from repealing the people’s retention of fundamental rights declared by the Ninth Amendment, the Fourteenth Amendment strengthened it'''. And far from abrogating the duty of state legislatures to declare and secure unenumerated rights, the Fourteenth Amendment reinforced that duty. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">[That is, the rights retained by the people but not protected by their state, such as the right of Blacks to liberty, was strengthened – at the expense of the freedom of the legislature to torpedo those rights. And the 14th Amendment did not supplant the duty of legislatures to protect rights, by courts, but rather that duty became enforceable by Congress.]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Legislatures are equipped to deliberate about and secure the rights of all persons as they identify and specify the boundaries between rights. <br />
<br />
See Grégoire Webber et al, Legislated Rights: Securing Human Rights through Legislation (2018). Many of the great civil rights achievements in American history have been legislative achievements. See, e.g., the Civil Rights Act of 1866, Civil Rights Act of 1875, and the Civil Rights Act of 1964. And these include state statutes that declare and secure common law rights against unreasonable discrimination. ....<br />
<br />
This Court has never denied that state legislatures have the power and duty to declare and specify the boundaries of fundamental rights in the abortion context. To the contrary, this Court has ratified the legislative province to identify, specify, and secure the rights of our fundamental law. Often using the term “interests” or “state interests,” ....<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In many respects, legislatures are better equipped for this task than courts, whose job is to secure the rights of the litigants who happen to appear in any case or controversy. The job of a court is to specify a right in a legal judgment resolving a dispute between two parties. To generalize that particular judgment, to make that right universal and absolute for all persons, carries the risk that the tribunal will unintentionally invite infringement of the rights of persons who are not parties to the litigation. Significantly, most constitutional abortion cases proceed without any involvement of the persons who are most interested in, and affected by, the outcome: expectant mothers, fathers, grandparents, physicians and other health care professionals who are called to deal with the fallout of abortions, and, critically, unborn human beings. By contrast, legislatures hear evidence and find facts about the rights of all interested persons <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Furthermore, a lawmaker must fashion remedies and sanctions for rights infringements that are commensurate and responsive to the particular wrong. Because not all persons who contribute to a person’s death are equally culpable, legislatures justly distinguish between them. The sanction for reckless acts that cause death need not be as severe as the sanction for intentional homicide. Legislatures also reasonably take into account the circumstances of the person whose life is lost. For example, remedies for wrongful death may take into account a person’s stage of development and relationship to any dependents. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....For example, the right to life remains inviolable and absolute though a legislature may choose to sanction those who are most culpable for its deprivation and not others <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Similarly, state legislatures have long recognized that abortionists are the true, culpable parties in an abortion. Mothers are often victims of coercion. And mothers suffer the consequences of the abortion procedure itself. For these and other reasons, legislatures may choose not to impose legal sanctions on them, notwithstanding that their unborn children have a right to live. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Roe Court failed to understand this. The Court looked to state laws that impose criminal sanctions on abortionists, rather than on the mothers themselves, and then erroneously inferred that the law is indifferent to the lives of the unborn. Roe, 410 U.S. at 157 n.54. ...<br />
<br />
[Many prolifers similarly misunderstood]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">That a right is absolute means simply that it is vested—in jurisprudential terms, that it has built into it an immunity from retrospective or retroactive abrogation—so that governments are powerless to deprive any person of the right unless and until the person has been proven to have forfeited the right by committing some wrong, and that the wrong has been established in some proceeding that satisfies the requirements of due process, or until the person dies a natural death. Id. at *125, 128-30. <br />
<br />
,,,,the right to life is a right not to be intentionally killed. It is not a guarantee against death ‘<br />
<br />
==34 141 International Legal Scholars==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185170/20210729071535904_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20141%20International%20Legal%20Scholars.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Not even foreign legal authorities support any right to abortion. 141 International Legal Scholars submitted an amicus brief in the Dobbs v. Jackson case declaring that “Whatever role international law plays in evaluating abortion regulations in the United States, it offers no basis for the existence of a human right to abortion.” (http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185170/20210729071535904_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20141%20International%20Legal%20Scholars.pdf) “The minority of States that choose to allow elective abortion impose a standard gestational limit of twelve weeks, which is more restrictive than Mississippi’s Gestational Age Act.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“If the Court chooses to consult international law in this case, it will find there is no treaty that recognizes a so-called human right to abortion, nor has such a right been established through customary law. To the contrary, the practice across all regions demonstrates a consistent State prerogative to protect unborn life. Nor has any international court declared the existence of an international right to abortion, even in regions with the most permissive abortion regimes. Thirdparty actors seeking to invent a new right to abortion err when interpreting key international instruments, such as the Convention on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women, the Rome Statute, and the International Conference on Population and Development. The clear language in those documents defies any attempt to repurpose them to create an international human right to abortion. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“On the other hand, provisions recognizing the unborn child as a rights-holder can be found in many international human rights instruments, including the American Convention on Human Rights, the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. Most States choose to exercise the prerogative to protect unborn life by regulating abortion much more strictly than in the United States. Even in the minority of States that permit elective abortions, most specify a gestational limit of twelve weeks. That limit is more restrictive than Mississippi’s Gestational Age Act, which allows elective abortion until fifteen weeks’ gestation, and then permits abortion only for medical emergencies or severe fetal abnormality.”<br />
<br />
<br />
==35 Prolife Center at the University of St. Thomas==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185177/20210729085125572_DOCKET%2019-1392%20BRIEF%20AMICUS%20CURIAE%20OF%20THE%20PROLIFE%20CENTER%20AT%20THE%20UNIVERISTY%20OF%20ST.%20THOMAS%20IN%20SUPPORT%20OF%20PETITIONERS.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
The Court should make clear that the States are not required to permit abortions for reasons relating to the mental or psychological health of the pregnant woman, or for undefined reasons of health, either of which would lead the Court, and the country, back to a regime of abortion–on–demand.<br />
<br />
==36 Mary Kay Bacallao Advocating for Unborn Children==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185109/20210728121621904_19-1392%20Brief%20Amicus%20Curiae.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">It is time to extend to unborn children the equal protection and due process rights they enjoyed in Mississippi until the Roe Court made an elementary grammar error, using a phrase that conferred citizenship in one clause to define personhood for other clauses. It is time to correct the Roe Court’s error in refusing to determine when life began and in the same stroke of the pen stripping the unborn of their personhood, citing the very amendment that codified the right of all persons, born and unborn, to equal protection and due process. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">THE ROE COURT MISINTERPRETED THE MEANING OF THE WORD “PERSON” AS FOUND IN THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT. The Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution3 includes the following three references to persons: <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">[1.] “All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">[2.] “No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law;” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">[3.] “nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Here, in looking at statutory construction cannons such as noscitur a sociis, which means, “it is known by its companions,” the meaning of the word “persons” can only be ascertained by its associates. In the first instance, “persons” is being modified by “born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">3 U.S. Const. amend. XIV (adopted July 9, 1868) Text: All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">jurisdiction thereof…” Here, “persons” is a general term that is being limited at least by two conditions, either “born” or “naturalized.” In this instance, the Fourteenth Amendment limits the type of persons who can be citizens to those either born or naturalized in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In the second instance, no “person” shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law, where “person” is used generally, unmodified by “born” or “naturalized, etc.” Here “citizens” as defined in the first instance is separate and distinct from “person” found in the second part of the sentence. The second use of “person” is unmodified. These persons are not necessarily citizens, nor does it follow that they must necessarily be “born.” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In the third instance, “any person” is also unmodified by either “born” or “naturalized, etc.” In other words, “person” is not limited to a person “born” or “naturalized in the United States,” rather, the term “person” is again unmodified and used in the general sense. Thus, where the second use of the term “person” prohibits a State from depriving a person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law, “person” is used generally rather than in the context of being “born.” Additionally, where the third use of the term “person” does not allow a State to deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws, again, “person” is unmodified. This does not limit protection to “persons born or naturalized in the United States…” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">To assert that one word, such as “born,” that is used in a single line to limit a general term, such as “person,” in one provision also limits that same general term, in this case “person,” each time it occurs 5 is linguistically incorrect. It is the same as saying that because one line refers to a black cat, all other times the word cat appears it can only refer to cats that are black. This is not the way language works. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">There is no evidence that the original meaning of person was limited to those who were born. Rather, the corpus evidence found in COHA, the Hansard Corpus, and the Corpus of U.S. Supreme Opinions point to the unborn as persons, legally able to inherit property and in need of protection. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Roe court did not resolve the question of when life begins, “We need not resolve the difficult question of when life begins. When those trained in the respective disciplines of medicine, philosophy, and theology are unable to arrive at any consensus, the judiciary, at this point in the development of man’s knowledge, is not in a position to speculate as to the answer.”4 However, the Roe Court maintained that “… the word ‘person,’ as used in the Fourteenth Amendment, does not include the unborn.”5 The Roe Court used faulty linguistics in determining that someone unborn was not a ‘person’ as used in second and third parts of the Fourteenth Amendment. In the first use of person, ‘born’ modifies or limits the meaning of ‘person,’ not the other way around. The Roe Court did not use proper linguistic interpretation of the text of the Fourteenth Amendment when limiting its interpretation of the second and third references to persons as those who were born. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The second reference to person in the Fourteenth Amendment, stating that a State may not deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law applies to persons both born and unborn. The third reference to person in the Fourteenth Amendment, where a State may not deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws also applies to persons both born and unborn. Simple linguistics, applied to these provisions in the U.S. Constitution, where the word person is unmodified by the word “born” confirms that a person is a person no matter how small. <br />
<br />
In the 1850’s, there is “love of an unborn child.”18 There is also mention of the absurdity of a “price for an unborn infant”19 and making “slaves of the unborn”20 in an argument against slavery in the New England Yale Review. In the “other” category there is a reference to the divine “I AM” as unborn21 in Rational Cosmology. In the 1860’s, a popular magazine called The Atlantic deals with the “crime, so common among church going ladies and others, of murdering their unborn offspring!”22 The same magazine asks a question about, “those who provide women with [th’] means of killing their unborn children, - a double crime, murder and suicide?”23 The Atlantic also mentions the “murder of unborn offspring” in the context of a “Church powerful enough to guard the issues of life.”24 In the 1870’s, the English Constitution mentions unborn children in the context of persons: “An Act of Parliament is at least as complex as a marriage settlement; and it is made much as a settlement would be if it were left to the vote and settled by the major part of persons concerned, including the unborn children. There is an advocate for every interest, and every interest clamours for every advantage.”25 <br />
<br />
==37 Professor Randy Beck==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185118/20210728124300921_19-1392tsacProfessorRandyBeck.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
Professor Tribe’s Justification Falls Short Because a Pregnant Woman Cannot Transfer a Viable Fetus to Other Caretakers ... 20 V. Viability Is an Arbitrary Line for Measuring Abortion Rights ...................... 22 VI. Stare Decisis Should Not Preserve an Arbitrary Rule Without Constitutional Warrant ..<br />
<br />
==38 Christian Legal Society and Robertson Center for Constitutional Law==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185104/20210728115957257_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20%20Christian%20Legal%20Society%20et%20al.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
The Court cannot serve the rule of law by preserving decisions that subvert the rule of law <br />
A Proper Conception Of Substantive Due Process Does Not Support Existing Abortion Jurisprudence ....<br />
<br />
<blockquote> <span style="color:red">Some of this Court’s most ignominious decisions emerged from expansive and unchecked conceptions of substantive due process. The “most salient instance . . . was, of course, the case that the [Fourteenth] Amendment would in due course overturn, Dred Scott v. Sandford.” Glucksberg, 521 U.S. at 758 (Souter, J., concurring in the judgment). A half-century later, Lochner v. New York inspired a line of “deviant economic due process cases” that “harbored the spirit of Dred Scott in their absolutist implementation of” substantive due process. Id. at 761. Roe fares no better under a proper constitutional analysis. </span><br />
<br />
==39 Center for Religious Expression==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185542/20210802162418144_19-1932%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20Center%20for%20Religious%20Expression.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Roe Court demurred on the central inquiry. When the case was decided, the presence of a life inside a mother’s womb was a debatable topic, largely informed by religious and philosophical perspectives. 410 U.S. at 159-60 (passing on “the difficult question of when life begins,” referencing differing belief systems).2 Wary of decreeing the precise moment of life, whether at conception, birth, or some time in between, the Roe Court rejected life as a marker and settled on viability as way to denote the State’s interest.</span><br />
<br />
==40 Center for Family and Human Rights==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185123/20210728132729071_CFam%20Amicus%20Brief%20Filed.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The 2018 Mississippi Gestational Age Act banning most abortions after the 15th week of pregnancy, when the child in utero is known to suffer pain from common abortion procedures, is fully consistent with International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights ratified by the United States, which presumptively protects the right to life of children in the womb (hereinafter, the “Covenant”), International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, Dec. 16, 1966, S. EXEC. DOC. E, 95-2 (1978), 999 U.N.T.S. 171 (entered into force Mar. 23, 1976), as well as other human rights commitments and obligations of the United States. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">A careful reading of the text and history of the Covenant reveals that children in the womb were never excluded from the right to life, and that, more broadly, international law does not establish a human right to abortion in any circumstance, either through treaty obligation or by custom....<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Treaty law is the supreme Law of the Land and the Court has a constitutional responsibility to declare what the law is. The Court should make a finding of law that children in the womb are not excluded from the right to life under the Covenant, given the plain meaning of the text of the Covenant when it was ratified by the U.S., the interpretation of the Covenant by the Executive branch, and its implementation by other States who are party to the treaty, therefore, laws to protect children in the womb from being arbitrarily deprived of their right to life, regardless of viability, are consistent with the international human rights obligations of the United States. <br />
<br />
The Court should nonetheless say something substantive on the topic of the status of the unborn in international human rights law without upsetting honest political debates that are legitimately carried out through democratic institutions. The Court should do this for prudential reasons, including that of shielding itself from accusations that it is avoiding foundational human rights questions and to preempt interference from international actors and foreign powers in U.S. domestic legal and political disputes.<br />
<br />
==41 Concerned Women for America==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185093/20210728111520674_No19-1392_CWA_Diaz_Amicusbrief.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
Mississippi Should Be Free To Make Reasonable Determinations About Abortion Policy That Place A Higher Value On The Life Of Mothers And Their Unborn Children ............................................................ 4 II. <br />
<br />
The Court Has Undervalued The State’s Interest In Women’s Health By Failing To Give Proper Weight To The Physical, Psychological, And Emotional Harms Abortion Can Have On Women’s Lives .. <br />
<br />
e. The states should have broad discretion in addressing the interests at play in the abortion context. Neither viability nor any other framework should constrain the state’s ability to address the ever-changing concerns associated with abortion.<br />
<br />
==42 Foundation for Moral Law, Lutherans for Life==<br />
<br />
[https://storage.googleapis.com/msgsndr/JTZoYWv3fly6hFemb8mU/media/63b73813b7386028645df690.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
neither abortion nor privacy are mentioned in the Constitution, but Justice Blackmun said the right is found in a "penumbra" formed from "emanations" from certain rights in the Bill of Rights. Thomas Jefferson's warning that "The Constitution ... is a 3 mere thing of wax in the hands of the judiciary, which they may twist and shape into any form they please"2 takes on special significance, because a jurisprudence of "penumbras" and "emanations" is entirely subjective and removes the Constitution from any kind of objective scholarship. It is also dangerous, because the same Court that can read into the Constitution rights that simply are not there, can also read out of the Constitution rights that are there, by reading into the Constitution powers that are not there....'''The viability test has no foundation in law, science, history, Biblical or church tradition.''' <br />
<br />
When Justice Blackmun used the viability test in Roe, he presented very little historical, legal, or medical support for that position, because very little support for that position exists. ...<br />
<br />
In fact, throughout history viability has seldom if ever been considered the beginning of human life. <span style="color:red">Much of our Western legal tradition has been shaped by the Bible. On October 4, 1982, Congress passed Public Law 97-280, declaring 1983 the “Year of the Bible,” and the President signed the bill into law. The opening clause of the bill is: “Whereas Biblical teachings inspired concepts of civil government that are contained in our Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of the United States; . . .” Joshua Berman, Senior Editor at Bar-Ilan University, in his 2008 book Created Equal: How the Bible Broke with Ancient Political Thought, contends that the Pentateuch is the world's first model of a society in which politics and economics embrace egalitarian ideals. Berman states flatly: If there was one truth the ancients held to be self-evident it was that all men were not created equal. If we maintain today that, in fact, they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights, then it is because we have inherited as part of our cultural heritage notions of equality that were deeply entrenched in the ancient passages of the Pentateuch.6 <br />
<br />
6 Joshua Berman, Created Equal: How the Bible Broke with Ancient Political Thought (Oxford 2008) 175, See also John Marshall Gest, The Influence of Biblical Texts Upon English Law, an address delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa and Sigma xi Societies of the University of Pennsylvania June 14, 1910, https://scholarship.law.upenn.edu quoting Sir Francis Bacon: “The law of England is not taken out of Amadis de Gaul, nor the Book of Palmerin, but out of the Scripture, of the laws of the Romans and the Grecians.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">A. The Bible on Pre-born Children <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Bible treats the preborn child as a living human being. When Elizabeth, the mother of John the Baptist, came into the presence of Mary who was carrying Jesus in her womb, Elizabeth declared that “the babe leaped in my womb for joy” (Luke 1:44). That doesn’t sound like a fetus or fertilized egg; that sounds like a child! It reminds us of Rebekah, of whom we read, “And the children struggled within her . . . .” (Genesis 25:21-26). These preborn children displayed traits that would follow them most of their lives. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The original languages used in these accounts make no distinction between born and preborn children. Of all of the Greek words used for child, brephos connotes a baby or very small child. That’s the word attributed to Elizabeth: “The brephos leaped in my womb for joy.” We see the same word in the next chapter: “Ye shall find the brephos wrapped in swaddling clothes, lying in a manger.” And in II Timothy 3:15 Paul uses the same word: “From a brephos thou hast known the holy Scriptures . . . .” The same word is used for a child in the womb, a child newly born, and a child sometime after birth. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Another Greek word used for “son” is huios. In Luke 1:36 the angel tells Mary, “And, behold, thy cousin, Elizabeth, she hath also conceived a huios.” And the angel tells Mary in Luke 1:31, “Thou shat conceive in thy womb, and bring forth a huios.” Two verbs, “conceive” and “bring forth,” with the same direct object, a “son” or huios. And years later, when Jesus is a young man, God the Father says to Him, “Thou art my beloved huios” (Luke 5:22). Again, the same Greek word used for a preborn child, a newborn child, and a young man. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The same is true of the Old Testament Hebrew. The same word used for the preborn children in Rebekah’s womb, bne, is also used for Ishmael when he is 13 years old (Genesis 17:25) and for Noah’s adult sons (Genesis 9:19). And Job says in his anguish, “Let the day perish wherein I was born, and the night in which it was said, There is a man child (gehver) conceived” (Job 3:3). The Old Testament uses gehver 65 times, and usually it is simply translated “man.” Job 3:3 could be accurately translated, “There is a man conceived.” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The biblical authors identify themselves with the preborn child. In Psalm 139:13 David says, “Thou hast covered me in my mother’s womb.” Isaiah says, “The Lord hath called me from the womb” (49:1), and in Jeremiah 1:5 we read, “before thou camest forth out of the womb I sanctified thee, and I ordained thee a prophet unto the nations.” They don’t say “the fetus that became me;” that person in the womb is “me.” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Job wishes he could have died before he was born: “Wherefore then hast thou brought me forth out of the womb? Oh that I had given up the ghost, and no eye had seen me!” (10:18) How can the preborn child die if he or she is not alive? <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">And David says, “Behold, I was shapen in iniquity, and in sin did my mother conceive me.” (Psalm 51:5) There was nothing sinful about the act of David’s conception; this passage establishes that the preborn child has a sinful nature. How can a non-person have a sinful nature? And while other verses establish the child’s personhood before birth, this passage shows his or her humanity all the way back to conception! <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Clearly the Bible, especially in its original languages, treats the preborn child the same as a child already born. The Bible knows nothing about “potential human beings;” to the authors of Scripture, there are only human beings with potential. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Some will argue that, because Genesis 2:7 says, “God breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul,” man doesn’t really become human until he takes that first breath. Amici believe this is a mistaken interpretation of Scripture.''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">(1) Genesis 2:7 is not normative about how and when human life begins. Adam was never a preborn child; he was formed out of the dust of the ground as a mature adult human being. No one else was formed out of the dust of the ground; even Eve was formed out of Adam’s rib, and we never read that God breathed the breath of life into her nostrils or those of anyone else. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">(2) Even if we were to conclude that without the “breath of life” we are not fully human, the preborn child takes in oxygen through a placenta. Birth constitutes a dramatic change of environment coupled with the ability to breathe for oneself; other than that birth is simply one more step on the road to maturity. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">So the Bible, taken as a whole, teaches that the preborn child is a living human being. Viability does not even enter the picture in determining the beginning of personhood. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">B. . Church Tradition on Pre-Born Children <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Church tradition has also been instrumental in the formation of Western law.7 For this reason, and because Justice Blackmun in Roe, 410 U.S. at 130, and Justice Stevens in his Webster dissent, 492 U.S. at 567-69, cited Catholic Church teaching to justify Roe v. Wade, Amici will briefly survey church history and its effect on Western law. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Didache, or Teaching of the Twelve Apostles, a manual of instruction dating possibly as early as 50 A.D. or possibly in the second or third centuries,8 commanded, "You shall not murder a child by abortion nor kill that which is born."9 The Church Father Tertullian, writing around 197 A.D., cited <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">7 Harold J. Berman, Law and Revolution: The Formation of the Western Legal Tradition (Cambridge, MA, 1983); John Eidsmoe, Historical and Theological Foundations of Law, 3 Vols. (Nordskog 2017) 8 Early Christian Writings, "Didache," www.earlychristianwritings. com/ didache.html. 9 Id., Roberts-Donaldson English Translation.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">extensively from Old Testament and New Testament Scriptures.10 He also noted that Hippocrates, Asciepiades, Erasistratus, Herophius, and Soranos, "all of them certain that a living being had been conceived and so deploring the most unhappy infancy of one of this kind who had first to be killed list a live woman being rent apart.”11 St. Hippolytus, writing around 228 A.D., condemned those who resorted to drugs " so to expel what was being conceived on account of their not wishing to have a child," declaring them guilty of "adultery and murder at the same time."12 And St. Basil wrote in his First Canonical Letter, <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The woman who purposely destroys her unborn child is guilty of murder. With us there is no nice enquiry as to its being formed or unformed. In this case it is not only the being about to be born who is vindicated, but the woman in her attack upon herself, because in most cases women who make such attempts die. the destruction of the embryo is an additional crime, a second murder, at all events, if we regard it as done with intent.13<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">10 Scriptures cited by Tertullian include Jeremiah 1:5; Psalm 139:15; Luke 1:41-42. 11 He declared firmly, “It is not permissible for us to destroy the seed by means of illicit manslaughter once it has been conceived in the womb, so long as blood remains in the person.” 12 Hyppolytus, circa 228. A.D.; quoted in The Ante-Nicene Fathers: The Writings of the Fathers Down to A.D. 325, ed. Alexander Roberts, Sir James Donaldson, (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1903) V:131. 13 10 Basil (c. 330-379 A.D.), reprinted in A Select Library of Post-Nicene Fathers of the Christian Church, Second Series, ed. Philip Schaff and Henry Wace (New York: The Christian Literature Company, 1895) VIII:225. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Canon Law of the Roman Catholic Church provides , "A person who procures a completed abortion incurs a latae sententiae [automatic] excommunication."14 The Canon Law developed in the early centuries of the Christian Church out of early Church documents such as the Didache and was based on and interacted with the Scriptures, Roman and Greek Law, Byzantine Law, the Justinian Code, the decrees of emperors, and other sacred and secular legal documents.15 The above citation from the Didache is evidence that the prohibition against abortion was part of the Canon Law from the beginning and consistently thereafter. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">No wonder Orthodox scholar Fr. Alexander F.C. Webster wrote that abortion “is one of only several moral issues on which not one dissenting opinion has ever been expressed by the Church Fathers.”16 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">14 Code of Canon Law, Title VI, Delicts Against Human Life and Freedom, Canon 1398, www.vatican.va/archive/ENG1104/_P57.HTM. 15 Kenneth Pennington, A Short History of the Canon Law from Apostolic Times to 1917, http://faculty.cua.edu/pennington /Canon%20Law/ ShortHistoryCanonLaw.htm, pp. 2, 3, 7, 10, 16, 19, 21, 25-26, 32, 33-37, 41, 44, 59, 61. Although, as Pennington notes at 74, Martin Luther initially rejected the Canon Law, as his thinking developed he came to appreciate the value of Roman Catholic Canon Law legal scholarship and concluded that that scholarship should be applied to the civil law and the common law; see John Witte, Jr., Law and Protestantism: The Legal Teachings of the Lutheran Reformation 55-85 (Cambridge University Press, 2002); John Eidsmoe, Historical & Theological Foundations of Law (American Vision 2012) III:983-84. 16 Dr. James Lamb, Abortion and the Message of the Church: Sin or Salvation? June 30, 2004, http://www.lutheransforlife.org/article/ abortion-and-the#message-of-the-church-sin-or-salvation/ (quoting “An Orthodox Word on Abortion” at 8-9 (Paper delivered at the Consultation on The Church and Abortion, Princeton, 1992)). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Nor was this view limited to the Church Fathers or to the Roman Catholic Tradition. Martin Luther stated his position forcefully: “For those who have no regard for pregnant women and who do not spare the tender fruit are murderers and infanticides.”17 John Calvin was just as clear: “If it seems more horrible to kill a man in his own house than in a field, because a man’s house is his most secure refuge, it ought surely to be deemed more atrocious to destroy the unborn in the womb before it has come to light.”18 And Pennington notes that when King Henry VIII (1491 - 1547 A.D.) separated the Church of England from the Roman Catholic Church, he proclaimed that "he, not the pope, was the source of all canon law henceforward."19 Pennington adds, "Consequently, the Anglican Church preserved the entire body of medieval canon law and converted it into a national legal system."20 <br />
<br />
C. Common Law on Preborn Children <br />
As the common law developed, "quickening" became the test for homicide prosecutions. <br />
<br />
17 Lamb, supra note 11 (quoting What Luther Says: An anthology, compiled by Ewald M. Plass (St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1959), Vol. 2, NO. 2826 at 905). 18 Lamb, supra note 11 (quoting Commentaries on the Four Last Books of Moses at 41-42 (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1950)). 19 Pennington, supra note 12, at 64. 20 Id. <br />
Quickening is different from viability; quickening is the time when the mother first feels the child move within her. One could be convicted of homicide for the killing of an unborn child, only if quickening had already taken place. <br />
<br />
But this common law rule did not mean that the child became a person only at quickening or that there was a right to abortion before quickening. Rather, it was a procedural matter of proof. '''One can be guilty of homicide only if the homicide victim was alive at the time of the alleged killing, and at that stage in the development of the common law, medical science had no way of proving the child was alive until the mother had felt the child move within her.'''21 <br />
<br />
For nearly half a century, this nation has been saddled with an abortion jurisprudence that has no foundation in the Constitution, no foundation in medical science, and no foundation in American or Biblical history and tradition, a jurisprudence that has resulted in an estimated 62,994,587 abortions since 1973 <br />
<br />
See www.abortioncounters.com and Steven Ertelt 62,502,904 Babies Have Been Killed by Abortion Since Roe v. Wade in 1973 (2021) available at https://www.lifenews.com/2021/01/22/62502904<br />
<br />
==43 Americans United for Life==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185211/20210729102214787_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20Americans%20United%20for%20Life.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
(Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey are not "settled precedents" worthy of being retained under the doctrine of "Stare Decisis".)<br />
<br />
Roe is radically unsettled for additional reasons. It has not received the acquiescence of Justices or lower court judges. Roe was wrongly decided and poorly reasoned. Numerous adjudicative errors during the original deliberations—especially the absence of any evidentiary record—have contributed to making Roe unworkable. It has been the subject of persistent judicial and scholarly criticism. There is a constant search for a constitutional rationale for Roe, and the Court has yet to give a reasoned justification for the viability rule. See Randy Beck, Gonzales, Casey and the Viability Rule, 103 Nw. U. L. Rev. 249 (2009). 3 <br />
<br />
Casey is unsettled by its failure to ground the abortion right in the Constitution, by an ambiguous standard of review that is unworkable, by conflicting precedents that have “defied consistent application” by the lower courts, and by persistent judicial and scholarly criticism. Payne v. Tennessee, 501 U.S. 808, 828–830 (1991). Politics aside, reconsidering Roe and Casey does not involve uprooting a stable, settled feature of the legal landscape. Because they are radically unsettled, Roe and Casey contradict the stare decisis values of consistency, dependability, and predictability and are entitled to minimal stare decisis respect. <br />
<br />
==44 Ethics and Public Policy Center==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185234/20210729114228086_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20Ethics%20and%20Public%20Policy%20Center.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
C. Factual Developments Have Also Undermined Roe and Casey’s Reasoning. Apart from these legal developments, “facts have so changed, or come to be seen so differently” since Roe and Casey were decided as to have significantly sapped those decisions of whatever residual force they might be thought to have. Casey, 505 U.S. at 855. <br />
Roe recognized that whether “life begins at conception and is present throughout pregnancy” was of pivotal importance, but it asserted that “at this point 19 in the development of man’s knowledge” medical science had been “unable to arrive at any consensus” on the issue. 410 U.S. at 159. Roe thus proceeded on the assumption that life “as we recognize it” “does not begin until live birth.” Id. at 160-61. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">This “unsupported empirical assumption” has been significantly undermined by subsequent developments. See Janus, 138 S. Ct. at 2483. It is now clear that an unborn fetus is not merely “potential life,” but is a “a living organism while within the womb, whether or not it is viable outside the womb.” Gonzales, 550 U.S. at 147. As a recent, exhaustive review of the scientific literature concludes, “[t]he scientific evidence clearly indicates that a one-cell human organism, the zygote, forms immediately at fusion of sperm and egg. From a scientific perspective, this single cell is inarguably a complete and living organism; i.e. a member of the human species at the earliest stage of natural development.” Maureen L. Condic, When Does Human Life Begin? The Scientific Evidence and Terminology Revisited, 8 U. ST. THOMAS J.L. & PUB. POL’Y 44, 70 (2013); see also Hana R. Marsden et al., Model systems for membrane fusion, 40 CHEM. SOC’Y REV. 1572, 1572 (2011) (“The fusion of sperm and egg membranes initiates the life of a sexually reproducing organism.”); Enrica Bianchi et al., Juno is the egg Izumo receptor and is essential for mammalian fertilization, 24 NATURE 483, 483 (2014) (“Fertilization occurs when sperm and egg recognize each other and fuse to form a new, genetically distinct organism.”). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Further, in 1973—and, to some extent, even in 1992—it was widely assumed that an unborn human being had no ability to sense and experience pain. Stuart W.G. Derbyshire & John C. Bockmann, Reconsidering fetal pain, 46 J. MED. ETHICS 3, 3 (2020). Today, by contrast, there is a growing scientific consensus that the unborn can feel pain as early as 12 weeks gestation. Id. at 6; see also American College of Pediatricians, Fetal Pain: What is the Scientific Evidence? at 1, 7 (2021), https://acpeds.org/assets/Fetal-Pain-Position-Statement-(2).pdf (concluding that “a large body of scientific evidence demonstrates that painful or noxious stimulation adversely affects immature human beings, both before and after birth,” “as early as 12 weeks gestation (and possibly earlier)”). These scientific advances further undermine Roe’s underpinnings.<br />
<br />
==45 Pennsylvania Pro-Life Federation==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185227/20210729111948208_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20the%20Pennsylvania%20Pro-Life%20Federation.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
Some of the subjects covered: <br />
I. THERE ARE TWO PATIENTS THAT MUST BE CARED FOR IN MODERN OBSTETRICAL PRACTICE, AND IT IS RARE THAT AN ABORTION WOULD BE NEEDED TO MANAGE A PREGNANCY SUCCESSFULLY <br />
<br />
II. II. CLAIMS THAT ELECTIVE ABORTIONS MUST BE ALLOWED BECAUSE ABORTION IS STATISTICALLY SAFER THAN CHILDBIRTH SHOULD BE REJECTED<br />
<br />
III. A. The Risk of Dying from Abortion or Childbirth Is Negligible<br />
<br />
IV. B. Although Abortion Is a Medical Procedure, It Is Rarely a Medical Decision<br />
<br />
V. C. Discussing Maternal Mortality Rates in Relation to Elective Abortion Has No Practical Relevance<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In modern obstetrical practice, the physician treats two patients—the mother and her unborn baby—and strives to maximize and protect the health and well-being of both. Good medical practice requires this. It is rare that the interests of one of these patients, from a medical standpoint, conflicts with the other. Even in those instances where the mother’s condition may place her physical health at greater risk, the pregnancy can generally be managed satisfactorily with a successful outcome for both the mother and baby. In those very rare circumstances when this cannot be done, laws like Mississippi’s allow pregnancy terminations to take place in order to protect the mother. <br />
<br />
Claims that abortion must be allowed on demand because abortion is statistically safer than childbirth should be rejected. The relative risk of death is negligible in both abortion and childbirth. Moreover, although abortion is a medical procedure, it is rarely a medical decision. In the vast majority of cases, abortions are sought for socio-economic reasons; not for medical reasons. Therefore, discussing maternal mortality in relation to elective abortion simply is not relevant in any practical or meaningful sense. <br />
<br />
Contrary to what some suggest, Roe was not a significant cause of reduced maternal mortality and morbidity from abortion. Such reductions correspond more closely with medical advances such as the development of effective antibiotics to manage infections and advances in medical technology allowing for blood transfusions and better administration of anesthesia. <br />
<br />
These medical advances were unrelated to the legalization of abortion, having occurred well before Roe was handed down. So, overturning Roe will not 3 affect those advances, nor will it preclude the application of future medical advances in the treatment of pregnant women and an overall reduction in maternal mortality from all causes. <br />
<br />
Roe was a radical decision that overrode the legislative judgments of all 50 states. It was based on a flawed understanding of the humanity of the unborn child and views of obstetrical practice that are outdated because they fail to treat unborn children as second patients in pregnancy. Additionally, it may have been based on false claims regarding the number of women supposedly dying from illegal abortion. It should be overturned. <br />
<br />
The impression frequently was given (and still is) that childbirth is extremely risky and that women need abortion because it is much safer than childbirth. Likewise, based on made up and grossly inflated numbers of maternal deaths prior to Roe, it has been erroneously suggested that Roe was the reason for a dramatic reduction in maternal mortality from abortion, and that its overturn would return the country to a time when “thousands” of women died from “back-alley” abortions. None of this is true. <br />
<br />
I. THERE ARE TWO PATIENTS THAT MUST BE CARED FOR IN MODERN OBSTETRICAL PRACTICE, AND IT IS RARE THAT AN ABORTION WOULD BE NEEDED TO MANAGE A PREGNANCY SUCCESSFULLY. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">1. Basic medical texts, for decades, have made it clear that there are two patients that must be cared for in modern obstetrical practice. For example, in explaining the need for significant revisions to the 1980 edition of Williams Obstetrics, the authors stated: <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Happily, we have entered an era in which the fetus can be rightfully considered and treated as our second patient. . . Fetal diagnosis and therapy have now emerged as legitimate tools the obstetrician must possess. Moreover, the number of tools the obstetrician can employ to address the needs of the fetus increases each year. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Jack A. Pritchard & Paul C. MacDonald, Williams Obstetrics, vii (16th Ed. 1980) (emphasis supplied). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">A later edition made it even more obvious that obstetricians must be cognizant of the unborn baby as a separate entity when managing a pregnancy. It stated: Obstetrics is an unusual specialty of medicine. Practitioners of this art and science must be concerned simultaneously with the lives and well-being of two persons; indeed, the lives of two who are interwoven. F. Gary Cunningham, et al., Williams Obstetrics, vii (18th ed. 1989). In a chapter entitled “Techniques to Evaluate Fetal Health,” it was stated: <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Until relatively recently, the intrauterine sanctuary of the fetus was held to be inviolate. The mother was the patient to be cared for; the fetus was but another albeit transient, maternal organ. . . Indeed, the fetus is no longer regarded as a maternal appendage. . . . Instead, the fetus has achieved the status of the second patient, a patient who usually faces much greater risks of serious morbidity and mortality than does the mother. <br />
*** <br />
<span style="color:red">The many advances in diagnosis and treatment that now clearly establish the fetus as a patient have also contributed remarkably to legal considerations involving the fetus. Fetal legal rights are emerging; for example, in some courts, the fetus has been allowed to file suit. Id at 277. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Obstetric ultrasound technology was in its infancy at the time of Roe, and was not widely used in the United States until well into the 1970’s. Malcolm Nicolson & John E.E. Fleming, Imaging and Imagining the Fetus 233 (2013). It has since given rise to whole new fields of medicine and top pediatric hospitals across the country regularly perform surgery on this second patient.2 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Abortion proponents disregard these basic facts when they ignore the existence of the second patient within the womb and suggest that unborn children are just appendages of the mother to be discarded upon her request. In so doing, they suggest a return to an outmoded and discredited approach to pregnancy and obstetrical practice. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">2. It is rare that the interests of one of these patients, from a medical standpoint, conflicts with the other. And, on those rare occasions when it does, the pregnancy can generally be successfully managed. So, medically speaking, abortion is almost never needed to manage a pregnancy. Honest abortion proponents long ago admitted to the overall safety of pregnancy and the lack of a need for abortion for medical reasons. <br />
<br />
In 1956, when maternal mortality rates were much higher than today,3 the namesake of Planned <br />
<br />
2 See e.g., the website of Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia: “Today, fetal therapy is recognized as one of the most promising fields in pediatric medicine, and prenatal surgery is becoming an option for a growing number of babies with birth defects.” Fetal Surgery, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia., https://www.chop.edu/treatments/fetal-surgery (last visited July 26, 2021). <br />
3 The maternal death rate in 1946 was 11.6/10,000 (or 116/100,000) and, by 1956, had declined to 4.0/10,000 (or <br />
<br />
Parenthood’s Guttmacher Institute highlighted the overall safety of pregnancy and childbirth. He stated that in more than 30 years of obstetrical practice, during which he had delivered about 6,000 babies, he had seen only 3 patients die—two from cancer and one from a blood clot. He stated that “[p]regnancy and labor have little to do with any of the three.” A.F. Guttmacher, Pregnancy and Birth 271 (1956). <br />
<br />
Likewise, in a paper published in 1960, Dr. Mary Calderone, then Medical Director of Planned Parenthood Federation of America, admitted: “medically speaking, that is, from the point of view of diseases of the various systems, cardiac, genitourinary, and so on, it is hardly ever necessary today to consider the life a mother as threatened by pregnancy.” Mary S. Calderone, Illegal Abortion as a Public Health Problem, 50 Am. J. Pub. Health 948 (1960) (“Illegal Abortion”). <br />
<br />
Obstetrics texts from the seventies also confirm the safety of pregnancy and childbirth and the ability to manage it successfully without abortion. One such textbook states: “abortion for purely medical reasons, i.e., vascular, renal or heart disease and so forth is rarely indicated in current medical practice.” Duncan E. Reid, et al., Principles in <br />
<br />
40/100,000). Milton C. Klein & Jacob Clahr, Factors in the Decline of Maternal Mortality, 168 JAMA 237 (1958) (“Factors”). <br />
<br />
Management of Human Reproduction 274 (1972). See also, J.P. Greenhill & Emanuel A. Friedman, Biological Principles in Modern Practice of Obstetrics 385 (1974) (noting that the number of induced abortions “on demand” had been rising astronomically, “while medical reasons appear to be almost vanishing” due to improved medical therapies). <br />
<br />
A. The Risk of Dying from Abortion or Childbirth Is Negligible. Claiming that abortion is statistically safer than childbirth makes a point. But, it is a point that has no practical significance. Assuming, arguendo, that the data upon which these claims rely is accurate, the risk of dying from either abortion or childbirth is still negligible. For example, comparing the worst-case scenario for childbirth (about 20/100,0000) and the best-case scenario for abortion (about 1/100,000), the risk of dying in childbirth is (.00020 or (.02%)) and the risk of dying in abortion is (.00001 or (.001%). In other words, your chance of surviving childbirth is 99.99980% and your chance of surviving abortion is 99.99999%. In either case, it is just the difference of a fraction of a fraction of 1 percent and is akin to comparing a 0% risk of dying with a 0% risk of dying. <br />
<br />
….Since very few women decide to have abortions because they wish to avoid risks to their physical health, it is disingenuous to suggest that abortion must be kept available on demand because it is statistically “safer” for women. This simply is not a consideration that informs their decisions. Nor should it be, given the exceedingly low rate of mortality from either course of action. <br />
<br />
….Roe was a radical decision that overrode the considered judgments of the legislatures in all 50 states. It was based on outmoded views of the humanity of the unborn child, outdated views of obstetrical practice (which failed to treat the baby within the womb as a second patient) and, arguably, on false claims regarding the number of women supposedly dying from illegal abortion.<br />
<br />
==46 Family Research Council==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185324/20210729150133457_Dobbs%20Amicus%20Proofs_THB%20Clean.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
The viability rule also removes states’ ability to adapt abortion regulations to advances in science and medicine. See MKB Mgmt. Corp. v. Stenehjem, 795 F.3d 768, 774 (8th Cir. 2015) (Shepherd, J.) (“By taking this decision away from the states, the Court has also removed the states’ ability to account for advances in medical and scientific technology [that] have greatly expanded our knowledge of prenatal life.”) (internal citations omitted). Courts are not “suited to make the necessary factual judgments” about viability and the “medical” practice of abortion. Akron I, 462 U.S. at 458 (O’Connor, J., dissenting). <br />
<br />
That is because <span style="color:red">“science … progress[es] even though [this] Court averts its eyes,” and legislatures are most capable of debating and responding to that progress. McCorvey v. Hill, 385 F.3d 846, 853-54 (2004) (Jones, J., concurring). The viability rule, however, forces courts to “pretend to act as science review boards,” removing the regulation of abortion from the democratic process. Akron I, 462 U.S. at 458 (O’Connor, J., dissenting). This rule has “rendered basic abortion policy beyond the power of our … representative government [which] may not meaningfully debate” abortion-related scientific and medical advances. McCorvey, 385 F.3d at 852. The “perverse result” of the “constitutional adjudication of] this fundamental social policy … is that … facts no longer matter.” Id. That cannot be the rule. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Similarly, in tort law, courts in thirty states have either “expressly or impliedly rejected viability as an appropriate cutoff point for determining liability for nonfatal prenatal injuries.” Linton, supra, 146. For wrongful death, forty-three states “now allow recovery … for prenatal injuries resulting in stillbirth … [and] the modern trend, supported by legislative reform, is toward abolishing any viability (or other gestational) requirement.” Id. at 323-24. <br />
<br />
See also W. Page Keeton et al., Prosser and Keeton on the Law of Torts § 55, at 369 (5th ed. 1984) (stating viability is “arbitrary” because it “of course does not affect the question of the legal existence of the unborn, and therefore of the defendant’s duty, and it is a most unsatisfactory criterion, since it is a relative matter.”). <br />
<br />
Paul Benjamin Linton, The Legal Status of the Unborn Child Under State Law, 6 U. St. Thomas J.L. & Pub. Pol’y 323-24 (2011) <br />
<br />
Petitioners ask the Court to overrule Roe and Casey because it cannot reconcile those cases with more recent precedent and with scientific advancements showing a compelling state interest in fetal life far earlier than those cases suggest <br />
<br />
The viability line therefore tends to afford greater protection to unborn children of the wealthy. See Beck, Gonzales at 259. Those unborn children whose parents are either closer to advanced medical technology or can afford to travel to receive high�quality medical care would be protected from abortion sooner than those children from poorer families. If, however, viability is based on the best technology currently in use, but unavailable to any particular woman, then “the [viability] rule is unprincipled for a different reason[,]” namely “caus[ing] the constitutional status of some fetuses to turn on unattainable hypothetical conditions, rather than real-world prospects for survival.” Id. Neither is a workable line. <br />
<br />
Finally, viability varies based on the competence and optimism of the doctor responsible for the evaluation. An incompetent doctor may place viability too late (or early). An overly pessimistic or otherwise ideological doctor may set the threshold too high. The 32 average patient hardly has the ability to question these determinations. Moreover, this deference to “disputable medical judgments becomes particularly problematic when the doctor has financial, legal, or ideological interests at stake in the determination.” Id. at 260. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">These factors cannot be “the sole criterion for deciding whether [a] child will live or die.” Box, 139 S. Ct. at 1783 (Thomas, J., concurring). <br />
<br />
In short, the viability rule is and always has been arbitrary and unworkable. The Court should no longer retain it <br />
<br />
==47 Human Coalition Action and Students for Life of America==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185195/20210729093947083_Amicus%20Brief%20of%20Human%20Coalition%20Action%20and%20Students%20for%20Life%20of%20America%20in%20Support%20of%20Petitioners%20File.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
The Supreme Court’s venerable duty to faithfully uphold the Constitution requires abrogating errant precedents, rather than reaffirming or extending them<br />
<br />
Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania v. Casey categorically fall under the weakest echelon of stare decisis. <br />
<br />
Developments have eroded the Court’s assumptions and the decisions which rested on them—the considerable cost to following them far outweighs the benefit.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Scientific and technological developments in the last 50 years reveal Roe and Casey’s fundamental error, warranting full reconsideration.<br />
<br />
Roe and Casey initiated considerable undesirable consequences in all facets of society, unmasking the decisions as egregiously wrong.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Abortion’s human death toll causes unsustainable population decline.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Abortion continues to fulfill eugenicists’ goals by eliminating disproportional amounts of minority populations <br />
<br />
Abortion is fraught with abuse by criminal actors. <br />
<br />
The unregulated abortion industry benefits from exemptions not provided to others, leading to continual scandal, malpractice, and abuse.<br />
<br />
Abortion commodifies humans—pregnant mothers and their unborn children. <br />
<br />
Continued fidelity to Roe and Casey is extraordinarily disruptive to a functioning and healthy society. <br />
<br />
Purported reliance interests on abortion are unnecessary <br />
<br />
The ever-increasing knowledge we have about the development of the child in the womb, its humanity, and life affirm Roe/Casey were decided on erroneous grounds. <span style="color:red">Abortion is always fraught with moral and ethical concerns as it always ends a vulnerable innocent human life, at any phase of development.33 The following scientific facts were equally true in 1973 and 1992 as in 2021 but were unknown or ignored by the Court. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Since Roe and Casey, medical and technological developments, including the developments of the sonogram and in vitro fertilization, reinforced the conclusion that the life of an individual human being begins at conception.34 The widespread clinical use of ultrasound, a technological development that the Roe Court could not anticipate, came to the commercial market after Roe and substantially affected medical practice and public opinion.35 Recently, biologists reached the consensus that human life begins at conception—95% of biologists agree.36 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">We now know that from the moment of conception, unborn children possess the seven characteristics that define life: responsiveness to the environment, growth and change, the ability to reproduce, a regulated metabolism and oxygen flow, maintaining homeostasis (the ability to regulate internal bodily functions in response to external changes), composed of cells, and the capacity to pass traits onto offspring—in this case, human offspring.37 The Department of Genetics at Mayo Clinic confirmed, “[b]y all the criteria of modern molecular biology, life is present from the moment of conception.”38 <br />
<br />
<small><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;35 Id. at 213; Malcolm Nicolson & John Fleming, Imaging and Imagining The Fetus: The Development of Obstetric Ultrasound 1–7 (2013) (“Ultrasonic imaging has also had a momentous social impact because it can visualize the fetus. Fifty years ago, the unborn human being was hidden, enveloped within the female abdomen, away from the medical gaze . . . . [T]he scanner had become widely deployed within the British hospital system by 1975 . . . . By the late 1970s, the ultrasound scanner had become a medical white good, a standardized commodity in a mass marketplace.”). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;36 Jacobs, S. A., Biologists’ Consensus on ‘When Life Begins’, U. OF C. DEP’T OF COMP. HUMAN DEVELOP. (2018). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;37 Wilkin, Douglas, and Niamh Gray-Wilson, Characteristics of Life, CK-12 Foundation. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;38 Liberty University, The Genetic Code; Principles and Choices, When Does Human Life Begin?, available at www.principlesandchoices.com/quick-code-library/pcs344 (current as of July 27, 2021). </small><br />
<br />
Similarly, the Unborn Victims of Violence Act of 1999 treats injury or death to an unborn child caused by a third party while committing a federal offense against the mother as a separate federal crime.44 <br />
<br />
These developments are emblematic of what the Court failed to acknowledge 48 years ago, a fetus in the womb is a distinct living human person—simply a very small one. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Court relied on central medical and scientific fallacies when rendering Roe and Casey. Texas’ brief presented medically accurate and detailed information about the developing child in the womb, including the humanity and rights of the unborn child.45 But Roe’s decision ignored Texas’ arguments, refusing to “resolve the difficult question of when life begins.”46 Instead, the Roe and Casey Courts inaccurately referred to unborn in the womb as “a fetus that may become a child,” and “potential life”.47<br />
<br />
<small><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;44 National Conference of State Legislatures, State Laws on Fetal Homicide and Penalty-Enhancement for Crimes Against Pregnant Women, available at www.ncsl.org/research/health/fetal-homicide-state-laws.aspx (current as of July 27, 2021). <br />
<span style="color:red"><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;45 Roe v. Henry Wade Dist. Atty. of Dallas Co., Texas, 1971 WL 134281 (U.S.), 29 (U.S., 2004)(arguing “The fetus implanted in the uterine wall deserves respect as a human life….It is alive because it has the ability to reproduce dying cells. It is human because it can be distinguished from other non-human species, and once implanted in the uterine wall it requires only nutrition and time to develop into one of us.”). </span><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;46 Roe, 410 U.S. at 159. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;47 Id. at 113; Casey, 505 U.S. at 875 and 876 </small><br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Both principal holdings hinged on refusing to acknowledge the significance of the interests of human life in the womb.48 This was an egregious error. The matter of when life begins is no longer a philosophic discussion “depending on one’s beliefs”49 but is instead a scientific fact.50 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Significant developments about the humanity of the child in the womb warrant reconsideration of fateful abortion decisions and their underpinnings. Unlike Roe and Casey, Dobbs presents this Court with the opportunity to consider the full scientific and factual spectrum about the most overlooked abortion participant—the human child.<br />
<br />
<small><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;48 Shah, Mamta K., Inconsistencies in the Legal Status of an Unborn Child: Recognition of a Fetus as Potential Life, 29 HOFSTRA LAW REVIEW 3, 93.1-93.2 (2001). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;49 Casey, 505 U.S. at 852. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;50 See Jacobs, Biologists’ Consensus on ‘When Life Begins’. </small><br />
<br />
iii. Abortion is fraught with abuse by criminal actors. <br />
<br />
Further, abortion is fraught with abuse by criminal actors. <span style="color:red">The human trafficking industry requires abortion to carry out its horrific activities and hold hundreds of thousands of victims enslaved and working.67 Women report being coerced through emotional and physical duress to have abortions 64% of the time.68 <br />
<br />
Another undesirable consequence of this Court’s abortion doctrine is the negative impact on women’s physical security in childbearing. <span style="color:red">Pregnant women experience an increased rate of assault and battery from unmarried partners.69 Women who pursue <br />
<br />
<small><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;64Congressional Findings, available at https://docs.house.gov/meetings/JU/JU10/20171101/106562/HH RG-115-JU10-Wstate-ParkerS-20171101-SD001.pdf (current as of July 27, 2021). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;65 Id. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;66 Id. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;67 Laura J. Lederer and Christopher A. Wetzel, The Health Consequences of Sex Trafficking and Their Implications for Identifying Victims in Healthcare Facilities, 23 THE ANNALS OF HEALTH LAW 1 (2014). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;68 The Elliot Institute, Forced Abortion in America (2014). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;69 Clarke D. Forsythe & Stephen B. Presser, The Tragic Failure of Roe v. Wade: Why Abortion Should Be Returned to the States, 10 TEX. REV. L. & POL’Y at 100 (2005). 21 </small><br />
<br />
surrogacy have been subjected to contracts that require them to abort and, or to demands to abort.70 A growing body of international medical data from dozens of countries established long-term risks to women from abortion.71<br />
<br />
==48 Lee J. Strang==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185338/20210729155700355_Dobbs%20Amicus.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
[This excerpt is included in my book as presented below, with my explanations and summary, even though I am not highlighting any of it in red; almost all of it, except for my own text, would be red.]<br />
<br />
The 14th Amendment: “...nor shall any State deprive any '''person''' of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws....”<br />
<br />
Lee J. Strang, in the Amicus Brief he filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'', explains how the correct meaning of “person” in the 14th Amendment is the “natural” one. That is, the meaning that all of us non-lawyers attach to the word. A human being. <br />
<br />
A baby. <br />
<br />
Plural: people. <br />
<br />
The ''normal'' meaning.<br />
<br />
He explains how Justice Blackmun, author of Roe v. Wade, was wrong to assume a legalistic meaning that doesn’t necessarily include ''unborn'' people. But not just ''that'' Blackmun was wrong, but ''how'' he got wrong. <br />
<br />
And not just Blackmun, but even Justice Scalia, the hero of conservatives. <br />
<br />
And even Judge Bork, the famous “originalist” nominated to the Supreme Court by President Reagan in 1987 but crucified by the Democrat-controlled Senate to the degree that his name was added to dictionaries. (https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/bork transitive verb - US politics, informal: to attack or defeat (a nominee or candidate for public office) unfairly through an organized campaign of harsh public criticism or vilification. “In any event, seeing one of their own being borked may itself energize the conservative base, even beyond what a conservative nomination would do.” — <br />
<br />
Mark Tushnet. “In 1987, conservative judge Robert Bork endured such virulent criticism … that to this day, a nominee sidelined by activists is said to have been ‘borked.’ ”— <br />
Claire Suddath )<br />
<br />
You ask, “What other definition matters, but this ‘natural’ meaning?”<br />
If you have to ask, you obviously are not a lawyer.<br />
<br />
Lawyers understand that when ''Roe v. Wade'' said “if Texas’ suggestion of personhood is ever established”, Roe meant, not established by evidence of the fact that babies of humans are humans by modern medicine or by court-recognized fact-finders, but evidence that the meaning of the word “persons” in the 14th Amendment, as understood by those who ratified it, was the way we “naturally” (normally) define “people” as opposed to treating “persons” as a technical legal term for lawyers to load with their own special courtroom meanings.<br />
<br />
According to this thinking, whether we adopt the “natural” or the legalistic meaning depends on which meaning was adopted by lawyers and legislatures when the 14th Amendment was ratified. The fact that some states – including the states that ratified the 14th Amendment – didn’t outlaw abortion from conception until several years ''after'' they ratified the Amendment is taken by this thinking to prove they understood it used the word “person” to mean only those whom ''voters'' chose to treat as human. <br />
<br />
Lee Strang points out logical inconsistencies with this approach, and shows how the “natural” meaning of “persons”, among states back then, better fits the historical record. He says the delay of states in outlawing abortion from conception is accounted for by the delay of the medical profession in understanding early pregnancy, and in explaining its discoveries to the general public. <br />
<br />
My own argument in this book assumes what Strang calls the “natural” meaning of “person”. I point out that any meaning ''but'' “all humans” leaves the Amendment with zero effect. If voters can decide not to include a whole class of people as “persons”, voters in the South would have restored slavery. This “legalistic” interpretation would thus lead to an “absurd result”, a sensible courtroom reason to reject an idiotic interpretation. <br />
<br />
I also point out that ''Roe'' treated “”if Texas’ suggestion of personhood is ever established” as a ''fact'' inquiry, since ''Roe'' later said if doctors and preachers can’t agree, “the judiciary, at this point in the development of man’s knowledge, is unable to speculate” about “when life begins”. By elevating doctors and preachers above themselves as experts on the meaning of “when life begins”, and by anticipating the possibility of later correction by “the development of man’s knowledge”, ''Roe'' rejected treating “when life begins” “as a matter of law” or of special technical courtroom applications, and treated the question as a ''fact'' question. <br />
<br />
Although ''Roe'' treated the question as a technical legalistic inquiry by exploring how past legislatures treated abortion, Roe treated it as a fact question by deferring to the superior expertise of doctors and preachers.<br />
<br />
In case you are screaming “stop talking about ''Roe''! It’s been overturned!” I must remind you that ''Roe’s'' ignorance-necessitated neutrality about “when life begins” is elevated to “scrupulous neutrality” in ''Dobbs''. At least ''Roe'' acknowledged the existence of the question and said it mattered; in fact, that it is dispositive. <br />
<br />
Strang’s study is hardly irrelevant with the passage of ''Dobbs''. We need it now more than ever. We need voters to realize if they think they can vote on who gets to be counted as human, the very right to vote is the least of the rights they will lose! <br />
<br />
Strang’s study is valuable for its ability to reach well meaning legal scholars struggling to honor the Constitution by establishing its “original meaning” but who are confused about what “original meaning” means. <br />
<br />
With that summary, we now go to Strang’s study:<br />
<br />
<blockquote>QUESTION PRESENTED Whether the original meaning of “person” in the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment includes unborn human beings <br />
My view has long been that the strongest originalist reason that supported Justice Blackmun’s conclusion that unborn human beings are not constitutional persons was the historical evidence that some states in 1868 allowed abortion in some instances, because that would mean that state law authorized actions fundamentally inconsistent with the full constitutional personhood of unborn human beings at the same time the [very same] states adopted the Fourteenth Amendment. </blockquote><br />
<br />
<blockquote>Indeed, this reason was cited by Justice Scalia to support his view that all abortion decisions remained with the states. “[S]ome states prohibited [abortion], some states didn’t . . . . It was one of those many things . . . left to democratic choice.”....<br />
See, e.g., Bork, supra (“It is impossible to suppose that the states ratified an Amendment they understood to outlaw all abortions but simultaneously left in place their laws permitting some abortions.”). </blockquote><br />
<br />
<blockquote>Below I describe an alternative view of this historical evidence...the progressive changes in abortion law toward fully protecting unborn human beings were in response to new medical information that caused lawmakers to continually re-align state law to better fit with their (explicit and implicit) natural kind original meaning of “person.” ….This account also explains how abortion law in 1868, which limited but did not eliminate abortion, fits the natural kind meaning of “person” because lawmakers’ knowledge of the status of unborn human beings had not yet informed (all of) them that unborn humans are, in fact, human from conception.</blockquote> <br />
<br />
Strang gives a history of “originalism”, which means “a legal philosophy that the words in documents and especially the U.S. Constitution should be interpreted as they were understood at the time they were written...the constitution does not ‘evolve’. ” <br />
<br />
[The whole rest of this footnote is quotes from Strang’s Amicus, although I am not indenting it.]<br />
...<br />
<br />
Strang says “Originalism in its modern theoretical form first appeared in the early 1970s. At this stage, originalism unselfconsciously focused on the intended meaning and goals of the Constitution’s framers....Many jurists and scholars criticized this early version of originalism. Three criticisms relevant to my argument, which many originalists took on board, include the claims that the framers intent is not the law, [Anton Scalia]..., there was not a single intended framer meaning, [Ronald Dworkin...], and that it was impractical for the legal system to try to uncover intended framer meaning (even if it, in theory, existed). [Paul Brest].... <br />
<br />
In response, most originalist scholars re-articulated originalism as public meaning originalism. [What the provisions of the Constitution meant to the public] Public meaning was a real fact of the world….and the evidence for it was relatively widely available. ...<br />
One [way to interpret words] is general public meaning and another is legal meaning. General public meaning is the meaning of the Constitution’s text that is widely available to and utilized by Americans at the time of ratification. ….<br />
Legal meaning...arises out of legal practice. Lawyers and legal practice are a linguistic subcommunity, and words and phrases have particular meanings and nuances of meaning within legal practice....<br />
<br />
….By contrast with the fundamentally conventional general and legal public meanings just discussed, natural kind meaning corresponds to natural reality, independent of human convention. It is the view that linguistic meaning is attached to something factually true. [In other words, the application of the word “person” to babies changes only as we better understand babies.]<br />
<br />
B. The original meaning of “person” in the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses was the natural kind of human being. <br />
<br />
….both the status quo of abortion law in 1868 and continual changes to that law support the natural kind interpretation. ….<br />
<br />
The Constitution’s text suggests that “person” was the natural kind of human being. [The Constitution used the word “person” as normal people normally define the word.] The text of the Fourteenth Amendment describes a being who [1] can be a citizen, who [2] can have his or her life deprived by the government, and who [3] can be harmed by private violence. U.S. CONST., amend. XIV, § 1. Two of these characteristics occur to human beings both pre- and postnatally; but the important point is that all of these are characteristics of human beings, and unborn human beings are the kind of beings who possess the capacities for those characteristics and will possess the actual characteristics themselves at some point in their lives (assuming normal development).<br />
<br />
The intended meaning of framers and ratifiers of constitutional text is also evidence of the Constitution’s original meaning. This is especially true when the framers and ratifiers publicly state their intentions so that they become aspects of the publicly available context. As many scholars have noted, there is no direct legislative history of the Fourteenth Amendment’s drafters and ratifiers discussing the Amendment’s relationship with abortion. ...However, [they made] numerous statements that the Amendment protects all human beings, regardless of their characteristics, and this supports the natural kind original meaning of “person.” <br />
<br />
For example, Senate Judiciary Committee chairman, Lyman Trumbull, spoke to the Senate about the Thirteenth Amendment and legislation for the Freedmen’s Bureau that he planned to introduce, and tied the Constitution’s protection to all human beings: “any legislation or any public sentiment which deprives any human being in the land of those great rights of liberty will be in defiance of the Constitution.” Cong. Globe, 39th Cong., 1st Sess. 77 (Dec. 19, 1865) (Lymann Trumbull). <br />
<br />
Similarly, a leading Senate sponsor of the Fourteenth Amendment, Jacob Howard, explained the broad scope of the Equal Protection Clause: “It establishes equality before the law, and it gives to the humblest, the poorest, the most despised of the [human] race the same rights and the same protection.” Cong. Globe, 39th Cong., 1st Sess. 2766 (May 23, 1866) (Jacob Howard). <br />
<br />
The “Father” of the Fourteenth Amendment, Representative John Bingham of Ohio, stated in 1867 to the House regarding the word “person” in the Fifth Amendment (whose text he copied for the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process Clause), that “[b]y that great law of ours it is not to be inquired whether a man is ‘free’ . . . ; it is only to be inquired is he a man, and therefore free by the law of that creative energy which breathed into his nostrils the breath of life, and he became a living soul, endowed with the rights of life and liberty.” Cong. Globe, 40th Cong., 1st Sess. 541 (July 9, 1867) (John Bingham). <br />
Like Trumbull and Howard, Bingham equated “person” with “human being.” It is worth noting before proceeding that there is no evidence from the framing and ratification process limiting “person” to born human beings. <br />
<br />
Dictionaries of the time period defined person as the natural kind of human being. For instance, Noah Webster’s American Dictionary of the English Language (1864), defined person as “a living human being; a man, woman, or child; an individual of the human race.” 1 NOAH WEBSTER ET AL., AMERICAN DICTIONARY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE 974 (1864). <br />
<br />
...the strongest argument [against] unborn personhood was the history of abortion regulation, and in particular the fact that some states permitted abortion in some contexts in 1868. [But] Scholars today agree that abortion law changed over time from a position of less-protective to more�protective of unborn human beings.... the basic pattern is widely recognized....<br />
<br />
The common law viewed unborn human beings as human beings and treated abortion upon quickening as a misdemeanor. Sir William Blackstone stated that “[l]ife is an immediate gift of God, a right inherent by nature in every individual and it begins in contemplation of the law as soon as an infant is able to stir in the mother’s womb.” 1 SIR WILLIAM BLACKSTONE, COMMENTARIES ON THE LAWS OF ENGLAND *126 (1776); see also 1 id. *119 (“Natural persons are such as the God of nature formed us.”). Blackstone’s description of unborn humans is as fully human. Blackstone explained that “[t]o kill a child in its mother’s womb, is now no murder, but a great misprison [a serious misdemeanor]: but if the child be born alive, and dieth by reason of the potion or bruises it received in the womb, it is murder.” 4 Id. *198. It is widely agreed by scholars that this protection after quickening in some instances, and after birth in others, was the product of evidentiary concerns over whether a woman was indeed pregnant and the unborn victim was indeed alive at the time of the crime. <br />
<br />
…. Crucial to [proving that] the natural kind meaning of “person” [is its meaning in the 14th Amendment,] state lawmakers progressively restricted abortion because new medical knowledge enabled them with greater clarity to see that unborn human beings were indeed human beings and extended the law’s protection to them. DELLAPENNA, supra at 313. As summarized 19 by the leading historian, Professor Joseph Dellapenna, this period saw “dramatic changes in scientific theories about the nature of conception and the emergence of a new consensus on when a distinct human being began that were built upon the scientific discoveries of the early nineteenth century.” Id. at 282. contemplation of the law as soon as an infant is able to stir in the mother’s womb.” 1 SIR WILLIAM BLACKSTONE, COMMENTARIES ON THE LAWS OF ENGLAND *126 (1776); see also 1 id. *119 (“Natural persons are such as the God of nature formed us.”).... <br />
<br />
By 1868, ...Thirty of the thirty-�seven states in the Union had enacted statutes that restricted abortion. Witherspoon, supra at 33. Of these thirty, twenty-seven state statutes restricted abortion prior to the common law line of quickening. ...<br />
Evidence of this can be seen from many sources. State law itself reflected this understanding because twenty-eight of the thirty jurisdictions that statutorily restricted abortion placed their restrictions under the label “offenses against the person,” and twenty-three states labeled unborn human beings “children”. Witherspoon, supra at 48. States imposed significant punishments for abortion, reflecting the humanity of unborn human beings. Id. at 52-54. State judiciaries similarly modified the common law to expand protection for unborn humans, for instance, by moving earlier than the common law quickening line. Craddock, supra at 555. <br />
<br />
The legal system’s shift was supported by and in response to information provided to lawmakers from the medical profession. DELLAPENNA, supra at 298. One of the most influential books on medical ethics leading up to this period, THOMAS PERCIVAL, MEDICAL ETHICS 135-36 (1827), by a noted English physician, stated that “to extinguish the first spark of life is a crime of the same nature, both against our maker and society, as to destroy an infant, a child, or a man.” <br />
<br />
Percival treated abortion as ethically indistinguishable from killing born human beings because all human beings are the same type of being. Percival’s view was influential in the United States and was adopted by the American Medical Association, which stated in 1859 that unborn human beings should be protected because of the “independent and actual existence of the child before birth, as a living being.” The Report on Criminal Abortion, 12 TRANS. OF THE AM. MED. ASS’N 76 (1859). <br />
<br />
The Report went on to advocate state legislative reform to better protect unborn human beings. Id. While the states were considering ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment, New York’s influential Medical Society stated that all abortions are “murder.” Byrne, supra at 836. <br />
<br />
Legislators changed both the common law and their own earlier statutes in response to this better information about the nature of unborn human beings. As legislators learned that quickening and other lines were irrelevant to the development of human beings, they discarded them and legislated greater protection. <br />
<br />
This is exactly what Ohio did. See Witherspoon, supra at 61-64 (describing this process). The Ohio legislature modified Ohio’s 1834 abortion law in early 1867. The Ohio Senate Report relied on the fact that “[p]hysicians have now arrived at a unanimous opinion that the foetus in utero is alive from the very moment of conception.” 1867 Ohio S.J. App. 233. Informed by the new medical information, including Dr. Percival’s statements, the Report condemned the “class of quacks who make child-murder a trade.” Id. The legislature therefore changed the law and eliminated the quickening line to take better account of these newly known facts. “[N]o opinion could be more erroneous [than] that the life of the foetus commences only with quickening [and] to destroy the embryo before that period is not child-murder.” Id. <br />
<br />
“[T]he legislative histories of the statutes of other states show that these statutes were often enacted pursuant to a request of state medical societies.” Witherspoon, supra at 65. For example, New York’s General Assembly, following the recommendation of its medical society that, “from the first moment of conception, there is a living creature in process of development to full maturity,” modified its 1845 abortion law to prohibit abortion throughout pregnancy. DELLAPENNA, supra at 323-28 <br />
<br />
C. The natural kind original meaning of “person” in the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses included unborn human beings <br />
<br />
Still, ...by 1868, ...some state legislation was not fully protective of unborn human beings. Id. at 316-17. As I noted earlier, this is the most powerful originalist argument against the constitutional personhood of unborn human beings. ...under the conventional� legal meaning approach, [the approach in Dobbs that protectable rights are “those rooted in our nation’s history”] that would be evidence that the original meaning of “person” did not include unborn human beings, or at least not all of them. [Because] if unborn human beings were constitutional persons in 1868, then many of the states that ratified the Fourteenth Amendment were violating the Amendment they adopted. So argued Blackmun, Scalia, Bork, and many others. <br />
<br />
[But] the reasons these states gave for changing their laws are precisely the reasons a rational legislator would give if the meaning of “person” was a natural kind [and in response to growing medical understanding of babies from conception].<br />
<br />
[Roe v. Wade claimed that] the Constitution’s use of “person” showed that it was limited to born human beings. Roe, 410 U.S. at 157. ...But...it does not logically follow from the multiple born uses of “person” that the uses of “person” in the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses are similarly limited....[Roe says] “in nearly all these instances, the use of the word [in the Constitution] is such that it has application only postnatally. None indicates, with any assurance, that it has any possible prenatal application.” <br />
...He admits that in some instances... “person” may apply to unborn human beings. Those instances clearly include the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses because there is nothing in their text to prohibit such application, unlike, for instance, the Citizenship Clause. Those instances also likely include Article I, Section 9, Clause 1 (“The Migration or Importation of such Persons as any of the States now existing shall think proper to admit . . . .”), Article IV, Section 2, Clause 3 (“No Person held to Service or Labour in one State, under the Laws thereof, escaping into another . . . .”), and the Fourth Amendment (“The right of the people to be secure in their persons . . . .”). <br />
<br />
Many of the instances of solely post-natal application are so only because their context and function limit them. For instance, the presidency is limited to “No Person except a natural born Citizen.” U.S. CONST., art. II, § 1, cl. 5. The Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses lack such limiting text or function; the Clauses are not limited to born persons or even natural persons. Moreover, the fact that “person” in the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses is not limited to some classes of humans, such as “born” or “natural persons” or “such persons,” suggests that it includes all persons. See Gorby, supra (providing a variety of critiques of Justice Blackmun’s intratextualism). <br />
[In other words “person” doesn’t mean ALL born persons, any more than it means all UNborn persons; the context tells us which persons are meant. In the “citizenship clause”, the first clause of the 14th Amendment, we know only born babies can be citizens because the Clause explicitly says so. The remaining clauses do not say so, nor does reason or common sense require that limit, so when the Amendment says “no person shall be deprived of life without due process of law”, we have no ground for making it mean something else. No one did then; no one should now.]<br />
<br />
CONCLUSION: the original meaning of “person” in the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses was the natural kind of human being. This natural kind interpretation of “person” was able to account for the status quo of American abortion law in 1868 as well as the fact that abortion law was progressively becoming more protective of all human life. <br />
<br />
==49 Biologists in Support of Neither Party==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185346/20210729162737297_19-1392%20BRIEF%20OF%20BIOLOGISTS%20AS%20AMICI%20CURIAE%20IN%20SUPPORT%20OF%20NEITHER%20PARTY.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
Amici curiae are biologists who work at colleges, universities, and other institutions in 15 countries around the world. On average, they have 10 years of undergraduate and graduate training, they have 27 years of experience working in academia, and overall they have dedicated 37 years to the study of life and to promoting science awareness. <br />
Their expertise bears directly on the question presented in this case. The Court will assess the constitutionality of Roe v. Wade’s viability standard, which was used as a proxy by the Court, in 1973, after it could not determine when a human’s life begins because it could not find a consensus view among experts. Today, amici provide the Court with evidence that shows most biologists affirm fertilization as the leading biological view. <br />
<br />
….This viability standard, which the Court ultimately claimed had biological justifications4 , was established after the Court could not find a consensus of relevant experts who agreed on when a human’s life begins5 . The Court considered Texas’s fertilization standard, but after Texas’s assistant attorneys general created doubt on the fertilization view—in both the oral argument6 and the oral <br />
<br />
<br />
6. After Justice Thurgood Marshall questioned Floyd about<br />
the scientific basis for Texas’s stance on when a human’s life begins,<br />
Floyd eventually relented: “Mr. Justice, there are un-answerable<br />
questions in this field.” Transcript of Oral Argument, Roe v. Wade,<br />
1971, at 45.<br />
<br />
reargument7 sessions—the Court rejected the standard by claiming that the fertilization view was merely “one theory of life”8 . The Court also claimed that the fertilization view had “[s]ubstantial problems”9 because embryological data had raised questions on whether fertilization was a process or event. <br />
<br />
Despite the Court’s use of fetal viability as a proxy for when a human’s life begins, which it described as the point that a fetus “has the capability of meaningful life outside the mother’s womb”10, the majority opinion stated that the Court was “not in a position to speculate” on the “difficult question of when life begins… at [that] point in the development of man’s knowledge.”11 However, no current member of the Court would have to speculate, today. The fertilization view is widely recognized—in the literature and by biologists—as the leading biological view on when a human’s life begins <br />
<br />
7. Justice Blackmun also questioned Floyd’s replacement, Texas Assistant Attorney General Robert C. Flowers, on when a human’s life begins during the Roe reargument session, but he also cast doubt on the fertilization view: “QUESTION:... Is it not true, or is it true that the medical profession itself is not in agreement as to when life begins?... MR. FLOWERS: I think that’s true, sir. But from a layman’s standpoint, medically speaking, we would say that at the moment of conception from the chromosomes, every potential that anybody in this room has is present, from the moment of conception…. QUESTION: But then you’re speaking of potential of life... MR. FLOWERS: Yes, sir.” Transcript of Oral Reargument of Roe v. Wade, 1972, at 23. <br />
<br />
The fertilization view was first discovered in the early 1800s. (See infra at Argument III.A). However, it was such a self-evident fact that little work was done to study or communicate that consensus since it was difficult for scientists to imagine that it could ever be challenged or if there would ever be a time the view would not be common knowledge.12 Since the Roe Court issued its decision in 1973, the scientific consensus13 on the fertilization view has been established. <br />
p. 4<br />
<br />
Recent surveys have shown that biologists are viewed as objective experts in the study of life and as the experts most qualified to determine when a human’s life begins (See infra at Argument I). The fertilization view on when a human’s life begins has been shown to be the leading biological view, and it can only be supplanted by an alternative view if there are paradigmatic shifts to axiomatic concepts within biology (See infra at Argument II). This is made clear by a review of: (1) the biological and life sciences literature, as peer-reviewed articles represent the fertilization view as a fact of biology that requires no explanation or citation (See infra at Argument III.B), (2) legislative testimony from scientists that suggests there is no alternative view in the scientific literature (See infra at Argument III.C), (3) an international survey of academic biologists’ views on when a human’s life begins that reported 96% of 5,577 participants affirmed the fertilization view (See infra at Argument III.D), and (4) statements by prominent abortion doctors and abortion advocates who affirm the fertilization view (See infra at Argument III.E) .<br />
Thus, amici respectfully offer the Court this brief to provide information on the biological perspective on when a human’s life begins: fertilization, generally, marks the beginning of a sexually reproducing organism’s life and, specifically, marks the beginning of a human’s life, as it is the point at which a human first comes into physical existence as an organism that is biologically classified as a member of the Homo sapiens species <br />
<br />
In the oral reargument session for Roe, Justice Potter Stewart signaled the importance of resolving who should determine when a human’s life begins: “Now, how should that question be decided, is it a legal question, a constitutional question, a medical question, a philosophical question, or a religious question, or what is it?”16 The majority opinion in Roe similarly suggested there are multiple dimensions to the question: “When those trained in the respective disciplines of medicine, philosophy, and theology are unable to arrive at any consensus, the judiciary, at this point in the development of man’s knowledge, is not in a position to speculate as to the answer.”1 <br />
<br />
<br />
Some support the view that a human’s life begins at birth or first breath. 12% of biologists (343 out of 2794) represented the birth view in response to an essay question on when a human’s life begins [Were law bent to this view] t it would make obsolete any biological basis for providing independent care to a fetus, as a patient, or performing fetal surgery27; it would also remove the biological basis of fetal homicide laws28, as a state could not rightfully convict someone for the homicide of a fetus since one would no longer be properly classified as a human.2 <br />
<br />
10% of biologists (284 out of 2794) represented the viability view in response to an essay question on when a human’s life begins. [Were law bent to this view] A human’s life could be biologically determined to begin at a different point for a fetus in Mt. Sinai Hospital in New York than in a medical clinic in a rural area, as the leading physicians of the former might be able to help a 22-week premature infant survive while physicians at the latter might not be able to. Further, one would have to say that a 27-week-old fetus in 1973 was not a human—as 28 weeks was the viability line at the time since that was when technology was capable of supporting life outside of the womb—but that a younger 24-week-old fetus, today, is a human. This standard could even one day be set at fertilization if an artificial womb is developed.31 Finally, it is important to note that, today, human embryos survive outside of the womb for years32 before being transferred and implanted. In fact, a human zygote is viable for a short period after fertilization, then loses the ability to survive outside of the womb and regains it sometime soon after the 20th week of his or her life.33 <br />
<br />
If this is used as an ability-based standard, by which human organisms without this ability are not classified as humans, it could also create a case in which a human who is temporarily on life support would cease to be biologically classified as a human since he or she is not then capable of meaningful life <br />
<br />
Some support the view that a human’s life begins at the first heartbeat, brainwave, or moment of pain capability. 10% of biologists (268 out of 2794) represented one of these views in response to an essay question on when a human’s life begins. [Were law bent to this view] <br />
<br />
If these ability-based standards are used as requirements for one to be biologically classified as a human, it would mean that those who were born without the capacity to feel pain, those whose hearts temporarily stop, and those who might one day undergo a brain transplant are not biological humans. <br />
<br />
Most biologists affirm that a human’s life begins at the start of the human life cycle. 68% of biologists (1898 out of 2794) represented the fertilization view in response to an essay question on when a human’s life begins.40 A review of recent discoveries and the development of scientific literature since Roe reveals a strong consensus that agrees fertilization—a process which starts with sperm-egg binding and is completed by sperm-egg pronuclear fusion41—is the starting point <br />
<br />
; a human zygote is, from a biological perspective, a human organism43 classified as a member of the Homo sapiens in the same way44 as an infant, a teenager,45 or an adult; a human zygote is simply a human being in the first stage of a human’s development, whether fertilization be deemed a process or an event.4 <br />
<br />
THE FERTILIZATION VIEW IS THE LEADING BIOLOGICAL VIEW ON WHEN A HUMAN’S LIFE BEGINS AND HAS BEEN SINCE THE 19TH CENTURY. A. The discovery of fertilization took place over a century ago. <br />
<br />
In 1827, Karl Ernst von Baer was the first scientist to record an observation of a mammalian egg; <br />
<br />
The early discoveries on the fertilization process, by which spermatozoa enter eggs, took place between 1843 until 1880: <br />
<br />
y, in 1876, Oscar Hertwig has been said to have first established the fertilization view when he described the fusion of the nuclei of a male’s spermatozoa and a female’s ovum <br />
<br />
Peer-reviewed journals present the fertilization view on when a human’s life begins as a fact that requires no explanation or citation <br />
<br />
During hearings conducted by the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Senate Bill 158, the “Human Life Bill,” numerous scientific experts testified on the question of when a human’s life begins. After hours of testimony by scientists and medical doctors, the Official Senate Report reached the following conclusion: “Physicians, biologists, and other scientists agree that conception marks the beginning of the life of a human being—of a being that is alive and is a member of the human species. There is overwhelming agreement on this point in countless medical, biological, and scientific writings.”<br />
<br />
<br />
This view is not merely shared by academics in the literature; it is also the view that college and medical students are taught in their biological and medical textbooks. <br />
<br />
French geneticist Dr. Jerome Lejeune testified that “[l]ife has a very, very long history, but each individual has a very neat beginning––the moment of its conception” because “[t]o accept the fact that after fertilization has taken place a new human has come into being is no longer a matter of taste or of opinion . . . it is plain experimental evidence.”72 Dr. Hymie Gordon, professor of medical genetics and physician at the Mayo Clinic, testified that “now we can say, unequivocally, that the question of when life begins––is no longer a question for theological or philosophical dispute. It is an established scientific fact. Theologians and philosophers may go on to debate the meaning of life or the purpose of life, but it is an established fact that all life, including human life, begins at the moment of conception.”73 Experts also testified that there are no alternative theories on when a human’s life begins in the scientific literature <br />
<br />
Dr. Gordon claimed: “I have never encountered in my reading of the scientific literature—long before I became concerned with abortion, euthanasia, and so on—anyone who has argued that life did not begin at the moment of conception, or that it was not a human conception if it resulted from the fertilization of a human egg by a human sperm. As far as I know, there has been no argument about these matters.”74 This lack of any alternative biological views in the literature was also attested to by Dr. Micheline Matthew-Roth, who worked as a principal <br />
<br />
<br />
96% of 5,577 biologists from 1,058 academic institutions affirmed that a human’s life begins at fertilization. 1. The survey questions solely focused on the biological perspective on when a human’s life begins <br />
<br />
<br />
96% of 5,577 biologists from 1,058 academic institutions affirmed that a human’s life begins at fertilization. 1. The survey questions solely focused on the biological perspective on when a human’s life begins <br />
<br />
Participation in the survey was sought from members of biology departments around the world. Of the participants who provided analyzable data, 5,577 biologists from 1,058 institutions provided analyzable data on operative questions. Most of the biologists in the sample identified as male (63%), non-religious (63%) and the majority held a Ph.D. (95%). Ideologically, most of the sample identified as liberal (89%) and pro-choice (85%). The sample was comprised of biologists from 86 countries. See supra n.17 at 239. 2 <br />
<br />
fertilization view. Participants were asked to affirm or reject the statements, and they were then presented an open-ended essay question on the biological perspective on when a human’s life begins (Q6)85: Question 1: The end product of mammalian fertilization is a fertilized egg (‘zygote’), a new mammalian organism in the first stage of its species’ life cycle with its species’ genome. Question 2: The development of a mammal begins with fertilization, a process by which the spermatozoon from the male and the oocyte from the female unite to give rise to a new organism, the zygote. Question 3: A mammal’s life begins at fertilization, the process during which a male gamete unites with a female gamete to form a single cell called a zygote. Question 4: In developmental biology, fertilization marks the beginning of a human’s life since that process produces an organism with a human genome that has begun to develop in the first stage of the human life cycle. Question 5: From a biological perspective, a zygote that has a human genome is a human because it is a human organism developing in the earliest stage of the human life cycle. <br />
<br />
<br />
Question 6: From a biological perspective, how would you answer the question “When does a human’s life begin?” <br />
<br />
The statement in Q1 was affirmed by 91% of participants (4555 out of 4993). The statement in Q2 was affirmed by 88% of participants (3984 out of 4510). The statement in Q3 was affirmed by 77% of participants (3153 out of 4078). The statement in Q4 was affirmed by 75% of participants (2500 out of 3334). The statement in Q5 was affirmed by 69% of participants (2744 out of 3980).86 Of those who assessed at least one of the five statements, 96% of participants affirmed at least one (5337 out of 5577) and 4% did not (240 out of 5577). <br />
<br />
Similarly, of those who assessed multiple statements, 96% affirmed at least one (4463 out of 4650) while 4% affirmed none (187 of 4650), and 85% affirmed at least half of the statements they assessed (3936 out of 4650).87 Consistent with their affirmation rates of the fertilization view in Q1-Q5, 68% of biologists represented the fertilization view (1898 out of 2794) in response to the open-ended essay question on when a human’s life begins (Q6). 10% represented some point between fertilization and the moment a fetus is viable (268 out of 2794), 10% represented the viability view (284 out of 2794), and 12% represented the view that a human’s life begins at birth (343 out of 2794).88 The strictest measure of biologists’ views assessed the responses of participants who answered each question consistently—those who either affirmed each statement (Q1-Q5) and represented the fertilization view in response to the essay question (Q6) or rejected each statement and represented some later point. There was a greater number of participants who consistently affirmed the fertilization view (97%; 1011 out of 1044) than the number of participants who consistently did not affirm the fertilization view (3%; 33 out of 1044).89 <br />
<br />
Abortion advocates and abortion doctors affirm that a human’s life begins at fertilization. Ethicist Peter Singer supports abortion rights and has promoted the fertilization view: “Whether a being is a member of a given species is something that can be determined scientifically, by an examination of the nature of the chromosomes in the cells of living organisms,” because “there is no doubt that from the first moments of its existence an embryo conceived from human sperm and eggs is a human being.”90 <br />
(Yet he argues for aborting up to 2 years old)<br />
<br />
The fertilization view is as subject to change due to new information as is the number of hydrogen atoms in a molecule of water: the number might not be two if scientists abandon the modern understanding of hydrogen, oxygen, atoms, molecules, and water—just as a human’s life might no longer be deemed to begin at fertilization if scientists abandon the modern understanding of fertilization, the human life cycle, and the genetics-based method of biologically classifying organisms. <br />
<br />
==50 Professors Mary Ann Glendon and O. Carter Snead==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185180/20210729085701253_19-1392%20Amici%20Brief.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
Abortion rulings have no support from the Constitution's text, history, or tradition.<br />
<br />
Roe and Doe are unconstitutional.<br />
<br />
Later precedents are even farther from the Constitution, offering nothing but confusion.<br />
<br />
Stare Decisis principles support overturning them.<br />
<br />
The Court’s Abortion Jurisprudence Grafts On to American Law a Constitutionally Unwarranted, False, and Destructive Account of Human Identity and Flourishing.<br />
<br />
The current law of abortion . . . frames the public question as a zero-sum conflict between isolated strangers, one of whom is recognized as a person, with the other deemed a sub-personal being whose moral and legal status is contingent upon the private judgment of others. It offers no com�prehensive support for the vulnerable persons in�volved, including especially the unborn child and her mother. . . .<br />
<br />
In response to the bodily, psychic, and financial burdens of unwanted pregnancy and parenthood, American abortion jurisprudence offers nothing more than the license to terminate the developing human life in utero . . . . These are the rights and privileges suited to atomized individual wills who inhabit a world of strife. They are limited weapons <br />
and tools of rational mastery fit for a lonely, disembodied self to defend and pursue its interests.<br />
<br />
American abortion jurisprudence offers nothing more than the license to terminate the developing human life in utero . . . . They are not well-designed to address the complex needs and wants of a community of embodied, vulnerable, and interdependent human persons.<br />
<br />
...it biases the Court’s analysis to craft a solution for the abortion issue that is more suitable for an individual seeking to repel a stranger from intruding into her interests, namely, by conferring a right to use lethal violence. This may be suitable for adversarial strangers in a world of strife. Not for a mother and a child in crisis.<br />
<br />
...The Court has no business in this space....<br />
<br />
==51 Monique Wubbenhorst, M.D., M.P.H., Grazie Christie, M.D., Colleen Malloy, M.D., and the Catholic Association Foundation==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185351/20210729163513970_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20in%20Support%20of%20Petitioners.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
Roe and Casey’s Viability Standard Is Incomplete and Outdated According to Current <br />
Science. “Viability” no longer means what it did at the time of Roe and Casey. Ultrasound technology has dramatically improved and provides a clear window into the womb to witness the humanity of the unborn child. Improved imaging has provided greater information about fetal development. <br />
<br />
Advancements in technology have led to recognition of the fetus as a patient by <br />
mainstream medicine. Current science shows that the fetus is pain-capable much earlier than previously thought. <br />
<br />
Casey Is Unworkable and Should Be Overruled. Casey does not allow for restrictions based <br />
on increased knowledge of how the brutal abortion procedure affects the unborn <br />
child.<br />
<br />
Casey is inconsistent with the Court’s recognition of other State interests that <br />
justify abortion restrictions. Casey’s standard is arbitrary and has had <br />
damaging effects.<br />
<br />
<br />
The dilation and evacuation (D&E) procedure currently used after 15 weeks’ gestation was not used for second-trimester abortions at the time of Roe. ''City of Akron v. Akron Ctr. for Reprod. Health, Inc''., 462 U.S. 416, 436 & n.23 (1983); ...The Supreme Court described the D&E procedure in gruesome “technical detail” in Stenberg v. Carhart, acknowledging that its description “may seem clinically cold or callous to some, perhaps horrifying to others.” <br />
<br />
As the Supreme Court explained, abortion doctors use D&E in the second trimester because at that stage of fetal development, “the fetus is larger”—“particularly the head”—and the “bones are more rigid,” meaning “dismemberment or other destructive procedures” are required. . . . A physician extracts from the womb what moments before had been a living <br />
“unborn child”—using forceps, scissors, or a sim�ilar instrument that “slices, crushes, or grasps” fetal body parts one at a time. Piece by piece. Arm by arm. Leg by leg. And as the abortion doctor “cut[s] or rip[s] the piece from the body”—a torso, a spine, a rib cage—he places each body part on a tray (or in a dish) to keep inventory and ensure that nothing is left behind. Sometimes the heart is still beating on the tray. The fetus dies just as an <br />
adult experiencing corporal dismemberment would—by bleeding to death as his or her body is <br />
torn apart.<br />
<br />
Whole Woman’s Health, 978 F.3d at 913 (Willett, J., dissenting) (emphasis added) (citations omitted).88 “As one bioethicist testified, it’s ‘self-evident that it’s brutal and <br />
inhumane to tear a living organism limb from limb alive.’” Id. at 930. And “[n]o one would dispute that, for many, D&E is a procedure itself laden with the power to devalue human life.” Gonzales, 550 U.S. at 158.<br />
<br />
...the D&E procedure is inherently brutal and inhumane regardless of whether the fetus can feel it. We would never countenance dismembering a person (or even an animal) as a means of causing death, even if the person were anesthetized first.<br />
<br />
...“[t]he notion that anything in the Constitution prevents States from passing laws prohibiting the dismembering of a living child is implausible.” ''Harris v. W. Alabama Women’s Ctr.,'' 139 S. Ct. 2606, 2607 (2019) (Thomas, J., concurring). <br />
<br />
Casey is also out-of-step with the Court’s own recognition of other state interests justifying regulation of previability abortion. Some examples: preventing the coarsening of society to the humanity of newborns, Gonzales, 550 U.S. at 157; the integrity and ethics of the medical profession, who must simultaneously treat the unborn child as a patient in <br />
some contexts and as mere “tissue” in others,94 id.; protection of minors, Casey, 505 U.S. at 899–900; and maternal health, Roe, 410 U.S. at 154.<br />
<br />
Box v. Planned Parenthood of Ind. & Ky., 139 S. Ct. 1780, 1784 (2019) (Thomas, J., concurring). Thus, there is a “compelling interest in preventing abortion from becoming a tool of modern-day eugenics.” Id. at 1783 & n.2 (Thomas, J., concurring). But Casey does not permit those interests to be considered in limiting abortion.<br />
<br />
...The Court’s foray into medical regulation may not merely be stagnating the legal standard despite advancing science—it may be impeding science. Researchers fear that acknowledging science on fetal pain may lead to restriction on abortion. ACOG’s clinging to decade-old research illustrates this point. It also illustrates how ACOG’s views are based less on science and more on the politics of protecting Roe and Casey. It is unconscionable to think that the “medical” community shapes “the science” to fit its political goals. But this is the division the Court’s abortion jurisprudence inflames.<br />
<br />
==52 Commissioner Andy Gipson, Former Representative and Chair of Mississippi House Judiciary B Committee==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185353/20210729163718064_Amicus%20Brief.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
It is often overlooked that even in Roe, the Supreme Court acknowledged that the states “have an important and legitimate interest . . . in protecting the potentiality of human life.” 410 U.S. 113, 162 (1973). However, “the Court’s precedents after Roe … ‘undervalue[d] the State’s interest in potential life.” Gonzales, 550 U.S. at 157 (quoting Casey, 505 U.S. at 873 (plurality opinion)). Then, in Casey, the Court stated flatly “the State has legitimate interests from the outset of the pregnancy in protecting the health of the woman and the life of the fetus that may become a child,” 505 U.S. at 846, and Gonzales agreed that “[t]he government may use its voice and its regulatory authority to show its profound respect for the life within the woman.” Gonzales, 550 U.S. at 157.<br />
<br />
The Mississippi Legislature values life before and after birth, provides assistance for mothers and families from conception onward, provides support for children starting at <br />
birth, and has an interest in protecting unborn life, protecting women from the health risks associated with abortions after 15 weeks’ gestational age, and in protecting the integrity of the medical profession.<br />
<br />
==53 Care Net, a National Affiliation Organization of 1,200 Pregnancy Help Centers, and Alpha Center, a South Dakota Registered Pregnancy Help Center==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185348/20210729163211251_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
An Abortion is the Employment of a Medical Procedure to Achieve a Non-Medical Objective: The Termination of the Pregnant Mother’s Constitutionally Protected Relationship with Her Child,<br />
By Terminating the Life of a Whole, Separate, Unique, Living Human Being.<br />
<br />
An Abortion is Not the Exercise of a Right; It is the Waiver, Surrender and Termination of One of the Most Important Fundamental Intrinsic Rights a Mother Has in All of Life; Roe and <br />
Casey Have Operated to Destroy that Right.<br />
<br />
The Pregnant Mother has a Fundamental, Intrinsic Right to Maintain Her Relationship with Her Child. But Because Roe and Casey have Prohibited the States from Providing Meaningful Protections for the Pregnant Mother’s Right to Her Relationship, Mothers are Losing Their Children Against Their Will. Pregnant Mothers are Routinely Coerced and Pressured into <br />
Abortions, and the Derelict Practices of Abortion Clinics Exacerbate the Coercion. Mothers' Due Process and Equal Protection Rights Are Being Violated.<br />
<br />
Pregnant mothers are routinely coerced or pressured into abortions they do not want. P.P. v. Noem, Declarations of B.H., ECF 206; Weston, ECF 207; Alyssa Carlson, ECF 209; S.C., 208; Amrutha Bindu Mekala, ECF 217; Ayers, ECF 218; Deere, ECF 353; Roden, ECF 219; Corbett, ECF 220; Watson, ECF 221; Miller, ECF 222; Bowlin, ECF 223; McAdams, ECF 224; Steen, ECF 225; Cota, ECF 226; Hurguy, ECF 227; Szmeit, ECF 228; Kiefer, ECF 239; and Florczak-Seeman, ECF 238.<br />
<br />
Pregnant mothers are routinely coerced into abortions at abortion clinics, P.P. v. Noem; Bindu Mekala, ECF 217; Ayers, ECF 218; Roden, ECF 219; Corbett, ECF 220; Watson, ECF 221; Miller, ECF 222. Pregnant mothers are routinely pressured into abortions by the abortion clinic staff. P.P. v. Noem; Huffstetler, ECF 229; Holcomb Misely, ECF 268; Bowlin, ECF 223; McAdams, ECF 224; Ruch, ECF 230; Steen, ECF 225; Cota, ECF 226; Hartman ECF 231; Hurguy, ECF 227; Szmeit, ECF 228; Coleman, ECF 257, ¶32 ID 4203; Hartmann, ECF 269 ¶79, ID 5306.<br />
<br />
Some pregnant mothers coerced into abortions are so traumatized they commit suicide. P.P. v. Noem, Declaration of George Zallie (who found his 21-year-old daughter hanging from her bedroom fan at the family’s home), ECF 233. Women pressured to have an abortion after a forcible rape, testify that the abortion was like a second rape, only far worse than the first. Id. Lisa Hartman, ECF 231, ¶10, ID 3504.<br />
<br />
Studies show a leading cause of death among pregnant mothers is murder, and most of those murders are performed by their male partners. P.P. v. Noem, Coleman, ECF 257, ¶35, ID 4204-5; see, 79 documented cases of pregnant mothers murdered because they refused to have<br />
an abortion, Coleman, Exhibit D. In an exhaustive survey of 987 post-abortive women, over half stated their abortions were coerced or pressured, 34% stated that abortion clinic personnel pressured them to have an abortion, and 84.6% wished that just one person<br />
offered the support they needed to carry to term. P.P. v. Noem, Coleman, ECF 257 ¶61, ID 4218.<br />
<br />
In 2013, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists issued Committee Opinion 554, “Reproductive and Sexual Coercion,” stating that “pregnancy coercion” is a serious cultural problem which includes threats or acts of violence to compel women to terminate a pregnancy. Declarations of Coleman, ECF 257,¶38, ID 4205-6; Hartmann, ECF 321, ¶114, ID 5326-7.<br />
<br />
Coerced abortions are so widespread that in 2009 the Center Against Forced Abortions (“CAFA”) was created, and CAFA’s national network of attorneys provide pro bono legal services for pregnant mothers who seek help because they are being coerced into an abortion. CAFA has saved between 10,000 to 20,000 pregnant mothers from coerced abortions. Id., Parker, ECF 248, ¶¶2-12, ID 3922-3927<br />
<br />
Pregnancy help centers throughout the nation counsel large numbers of women victimized by coerced abortions. Id., Declarations of Florczak-Seeman, ECF 238; Kiefer, ECF 239; Corbett, ECF 220; Cota, ECF 226; Collins, ECF 240; Hjemfelt, ECF 242; Martinez, ECF 241; Wollman,<br />
ECF 243; Unruh, 5/1/2020, ECF 264; Unruh, 7/1/2011, ECF 263; Erica Miller, ECF 237; Travis Lasseter, ECF 265.<br />
<br />
Good Counsel, Inc., which provides free maternity housing, has counseled thousands of post-abortive women, a significant percentage of whom were coerced or pressured into abortions. Almost all of the mothers Good Counsel houses are homeless because they were forced out of their homes for refusing to have an abortion. Id. Bell, ECF 261,¶4, ID 4537-8. Many other shelters provide living arrangements for pregnant mothers because they are being coerced to have abortions. Id., Sandra Ramos, ECF 259.<br />
<br />
Dorothy Wallis has worked with many hundreds of pregnancy help centers, where post-abortive women report that: they were coerced by threats of violence; abortion clinic personnel pressured them into an abortion; or no one would help them keep their babies. Id., Wallis, <br />
ECF 258, Ex. A, p.10-11, ID 4505-6.<br />
<br />
In addition to the testimony of the women, former abortion clinic doctors and clinic managers have verified the negligence and dereliction of abortion clinics. Id., Declarations of Giebink, M.D., ECF 232; Thayer, ECF 210; Johnson, ECF 211; Lancaster, ECF 212;, Trevino, ECF 213; Padilla, ECF 214; Everett, ECF 215; Behrhorst, ECF 216. Surgery is scheduled over the phone, it is assumed that the mother decided to have an abortion before she arrives, consent is taken for surgery, payment is made without any counseling and no regard is given to the mother’s interest in her relationship with her child. Id., Declarations of Giebink, M.D., ECF 232; Thayer ECF210; Johnson, ECF 211; Lancaster, ECF 212; Trevino, ECF 213; Padilla, ECF 214; Everett ECF 215;Behrhorst ECF 216.<br />
<br />
Thus there is no physician-patient relationship at abortion clinics (Id. Thayer, ECF 201, ¶14, ID 3305; Id.Giebink, M.D., ECF 232 ¶28, ID 3517) and clinics perform unethical itinerant surgery. Id. Ridder, M.D., ECF 246, ¶¶35-38, ID 3747-3749; Id. Hartmann, M.D., ECF 269,¶66, ID 5298-9.<br />
<br />
In addition to the testimony of the women, former abortion clinic doctors and clinic managers have verified the negligence and dereliction of abortion clinics. Id., Declarations of Giebink, M.D., ECF 232; Thayer, ECF 210; Johnson, ECF 211; Lancaster, ECF 212;, Trevino, ECF 213; Padilla, ECF 214; Everett, ECF 215; Behrhorst, ECF 216. Surgery is scheduled over the phone, it is assumed that the mother decided to have an abortion before she arrives, consent is taken for surgery, payment is made without any counseling and no regard is given to the mother’s interest in her relationship with her child. Id., Declarations of Giebink, M.D., ECF 232; Thayer ECF 210; Johnson, ECF 211; Lancaster, ECF 212; Trevino, ECF 213; Padilla, ECF 214; Everett ECF 215;Behrhorst ECF 216.<br />
<br />
Thus there is no physician-patient relationship at abortion clinics (Id. Thayer, ECF 201, ¶14, ID 3305; Id. Giebink, M.D., ECF 232 ¶28, ID 3517) and clinics perform unethical itinerant surgery. Id. Ridder, M.D., ECF 246, ¶¶35-38, ID 3747-3749; Id. Hartmann, M.D., ECF 269, ¶66, ID 5298-9.<br />
<br />
Planned Parenthood and other clinics pressure their staffs to “sell” abortions, and steer, mislead, and pressure ambivalent pregnant mothers to have abortions. Id. Giebink, M.D., ECF 232 ¶¶22,23, ID 3515-16; Thayer ECF 210 ¶¶11-16, ID 3303-3306; Johnson, ECF 211 ¶¶16-24, <br />
ID 3326-3330; Lancaster, ECF 212, ¶¶12-16, ID 3336-38; Trevino, ECF 213, ¶¶5-15, ID 3341-46; Padilla, ECF 214, ¶¶16-19, ID 3352-32; Everett, ECF 215, ¶¶3-9, ID 3357-3373; Behrhorst, ECF 216, ¶¶7-11, ID 3411-3412. B.H., ECF 206; Weston, ECF 207; Ayers, ECF 218; S.C., ECF 208.<br />
<br />
It is so common for abortion clinics to perform abortions on mothers who are ambivalent that pregnant mothers seek help to stop medical abortions after they are started. A national network of physicians arose to help these women stop medical abortions and to give birth to children they want. Id., Davenport, MD, ECF 260. Even when it is obvious that a pregnant mother is being pressured or coerced into an abortion, the clinics still push<br />
her to an abortion. Id., Declarations of Thayer, ECF 201, ¶24, ID 3309; Johnson, ECF 211, ¶¶16-22, ID 3326-3329; Lancaster, ECF 212 ¶¶13-15, ID 3336-3337;Weston, ECF 207; B.H, ECF 206.; Vixie Miller, ECF 222.<br />
<br />
==54 Reason for Life==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185298/20210729143402297_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20for%20Reason%20for%20Life.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
Roe errantly evaluated a state’s interest in “potential” life instead of “actual” life.<br />
<br />
...Many good reasons exist to prohibit abortion. Protecting life is chief among them. Yet in proclaiming a newfound abortion right, Roe failed to consider the state’s interest in protecting human life. <br />
<br />
For the Roe Court, the fact that “a new human life is present from the moment of conception” was nothing but a “theory.” Roe, 410 U.S. at 150. So rather than delve into a realm that it thought may implicate “theology” and “philosophy,” it chose to consider a state’s interest in “potential life” instead of actual life. Id. at 150, 159, 163.<br />
<br />
Roe thought this approach was adequate because <br />
a state’s interest in mere “potential life” qualifies as <br />
a “legitimate state interest.” Id. at 150 (“[A] <br />
legitimate state interest . . . need not stand or fall on <br />
acceptance of the belief that life begins at <br />
conception . . . .”). However, a state’s interest is <br />
stronger when actual—not simply potential—life is <br />
involved. By concluding that it “need not resolve the <br />
difficult question of when life begins” and only <br />
evaluating the state’s interest in “potential life,” Roe<br />
overlooked the true magnitude of the state’s interest. Id. at 159, 163. That doomed Roe’s efforts to rule <br />
“consistent with the relative weights of the <br />
respective interests involved.” Id. at 165; see also S. <br />
Subcomm. on Separation of Powers Rep. on the <br />
Human Life B., at 5 (97th Cong., 1st Sess.) <br />
[hereinafter S. Rep.], [https://www.google.com/books/edition/The_Human_Life_Bill_S_158/QXZKAQAAMAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=the%20human%20life%20bill%20s%20158%20report&pg=PA1&printsec=frontcover The Human Life Bill] (“Because <br />
it did not resolve whether unborn children are <br />
human beings, the Court could not make an <br />
informed decision . . . .”).<br />
<br />
But determining when human life begins does <br />
not require theorizing. Science answers the question: <br />
“the life of a human being begins at conception, the <br />
time when the process of fertilization is complete.” S. <br />
Rep., supra, at 7; see also id. at 9 (quoting a genetics <br />
professor and Mayo Clinic physician’s testimony that <br />
“[t]heologians and philosophers may go on to debate <br />
the meaning of life or the purpose of life, but it is an <br />
established fact that all life, including human life, <br />
begins at the moment of conception” (citation <br />
omitted)). Because of this scientific understanding, <br />
even federal law recognizes the humanity of unborn <br />
children and punishes those who murder them <br />
outside the abortion context. See 18 U.S.C. § 1841 <br />
(noting circumstances in which one who <br />
“intentionally kills or attempts to kill [an] unborn <br />
child” shall be punished “for intentionally killing or <br />
attempting to kill a human being”). <br />
<br />
==55 Illinois Right to Life==<br />
<br />
==74. American College of Pediatricians==<br />
<br />
(This entire excerpt is copied into Footnote #2 of Statement #4) <br />
<br />
[http://supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185265/20210729133245734_Dobbs%20Amicus.pdf Filed in Dobbs]<br />
<br />
<blockquote>2. What we know today—as uncontroverted scientific fact—is that the child develops much more quickly than the Court in Roe presumed. The Court then was told that “in early pregnancy . . . embryonic development has scarcely begun.” Brief for Appellant at 20, Roe, 410 U.S. 113 (No. 70-18), 1971 WL 128054. But that is wrong. From conception, the unborn child is a unique human being who rapidly develops the functions and form of a child long before viability. (page 2-3)</blockquote><br />
<blockquote>At five weeks’ gestation (just three weeks after conception),1 the unborn child’s heart starts beating. By six weeks, brain waves are detectable, and the nervous system is steadily developing. By seven weeks, the child can move and starts to develop sensory receptors. By nine weeks, the child’s eyes, ears, and teeth are visible. By ten weeks, multiple organs begin to function, and the child has the neural circuitry for spinal reflex, an early response to pain. By twelve weeks, the child can open and close fingers and sense stimulation from the outside world. By fifteen weeks—when Mississippi’s law limits abortions—the child can smile and is likely sensitive to pain. Medical interventions after this stage (other than abortion) use analgesia to prevent suffering. And by eighteen weeks, pain induces hormonal responses in the child. All this happens long before viability. Reflecting these advances in medical knowledge, ultrasound imagery available at the time of Roe looks much different from the imagery available today: (Image not shown here)</blockquote><br />
<blockquote>Page 11-12: During the fifth week, “[t]he cardiovascular system is the first major system to function in the embryo,” with the heart and vascular system appearing in the middle of the week.33 By the end of the fifth week, “blood is circulating and the heart begins to beat on the 21st or 22nd day” after conception.34 </blockquote><br />
<blockquote>By six weeks, “[t]he embryonic heartbeat can be detected.”35 Technological advances permit not only imaging detection at this early stage, but also videography of the unborn child, including footage of the child’s heartbeat.36 </blockquote><br />
<blockquote>After detection of a fetal heartbeat—and absent an abortion—the overwhelming majority of unborn children will now survive to birth.37 “[O]nce a fetus possesses cardiac activity, its chances of surviving to full term are between 95%–98%.”38</blockquote> <br />
<blockquote>Also during the sixth week, the child’s nervous system is developing, with the brain already “patterned” at this early stage.39 The earliest neurons are generated in the region of the brain responsible for thinking, memory, and other higher functions.40 And</blockquote> <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnotes for Page 12:<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;34 Id. at 2662. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;35 Id. at 2755. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;36 See, e.g., Endowment for Hum. Dev., The Heart in Action: 4 Weeks, 4 Days, available athttps://www.ehd.org/movies/21/The#Heart-in-Action [https://perma.cc/GQN4-Q8QS] (last visited July 28, 2021) (showing footage of a heartbeat at six weeks); see also, e.g., Endowment for Hum. Dev., Your Life Before Birth (Mar. 18, <br />
2019), available at https://vimeo.com/325006095 [https://perma.cc/6QBT-UWLK] (last visited July 28, 2021) (displaying video footage of a child’s development). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;37 Joe Leigh Simpson, Low Fetal Loss Rates After Ultrasound Proved-Viability in First Trimester, 258 J. Am. Med. Ass’n 2555, 2555–57 (1987). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;38 Forte, supra note 11, at 140 & nn.121–22 (footnote omitted) (collecting post-Casey medical research). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;39 Thomas W. Sadler, Langman’s Medical Embryology 72 (14th ed. 2019); see generally id. at 59–95. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;40 See, e.g., Irina Bystron et al., Tangential Networks of Precocious Neurons and Early Axonal Outgrowth in the Embryonic Human Forebrain, 25 J. Neuroscience 2781, 2788 (2005). <br />
<blockquote>(Page 13) the child’s face is developing, with cheeks, chin, and jaw starting to form.41 At seven weeks, cutaneous sensory receptors, which permit prenatal pain perception, begin to develop.42 The unborn child also starts to move.43 During the seventh week, “the growth of the head exceeds that of other regions” largely because of “the rapid development of the brain” and facial features.44 At eight weeks, essential organs and systems have started to form, including the child’s kidneys, liver, and lungs.45 The upper lip and nose can be seen.46 At nine weeks, the child’s ears, eyes, teeth, and external genitalia are forming.47</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnotes for page 13:<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;41 See Sadler, supra note 39, at 72–95. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;42 Kanwaljeet S. Anand & Paul R. Hickey, Special Article, Pain and Its Effects in the Human Neonate and Fetus, 317 New Eng. J. Med. 1321, 1322 (1987). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;43 Alessandra Pionetelli, Development of Normal Fetal Movements: The First 25 Weeks of Gestation 98, 110 (2010). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;44 Keith L. Moore et al., The Developing Human: Clinically Oriented Embryology 65–84.e1 (11th ed. 2020). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;45 See Sadler, supra note 39, at 72–95. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;46 Moore et al., supra note 44, 1–9.e1. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;47 See Sadler, supra note 39, at 72–95; see also App. 66a. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;48 Pionetelli, supra note 43, at 65 (2010). <br />
<blockquote>Page 14: At ten weeks, vital organs begin to function, and the child’s hair and nails begin to form.49 By this point, the neural circuitry has formed for spinal reflex, or “nociception,” which is the fetus’s early response to pain.50 Starting around ten weeks, the earliest connections between neurons constituting the subcortical-frontal pathways—the circuitry of the brain that is involved in a wide range of psychological and emotional experiences, including pain perception—are established.51 At the time of Roe, “the medical consensus was that babies do not feel pain.”52 Only during the late 1980s and early 1990s did any of the initial scientific evidence for prenatal pain begin to emerge.53 Today, the “evidence for the subconscious incorporation of pain into neurological development and plasticity is incontrovertible.”54 Every modern review of prenatal </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnotes for page 14:<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;49 See Sadler, supra note 39, at 106–127; Moore et al., supra note 44, at 65–84.e1; Johns Hopkins Med., The First Trimester, available at https://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/health/wellness#and-prevention/the-first-trimester[https://perma.cc/8N6H#M6CN] (last visited July 28, 2021); see also App. 66a. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;50 See, e.g., Int’l Ass’n for the Study of Pain, IASP Terminology (last updated Dec. 14, 2017), available at https://www.iasp#pain.org/Education/Content.aspx?ItemNumber=1698#Nociception [https://perma.cc/5PV5-5T9H] (last visited July 28, 2021); see also App. 80a. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;51 Lana Vasung et al., Development of Axonal Pathways in the Human Fetal Fronto-Limbic Brain: Histochemical Characterization and Diffusion Tensor Imaging, 217 J. Anatomy 400, 400–03 (2010). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;52 Am. Coll. of Pediatricians, Fetal Pain: What is the Scientific Evidence? (Jan. 2021), available at https://acpeds.org/position#statements/fetal-pain [https://perma.cc/JM3T-XQV8] (last visited July 28, 2021). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;53 Ibid.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;54 Curtis L. Lowery et al., Neurodevelopmental Changes of Fetal Pain, 31 Seminars Perinatology 275, 275 (2007).<br />
<blockquote>Page 15: pain consistently issues the same interpretation of the data: by ten to twelve weeks, a fetus develops neural circuitry capable of detecting and responding to pain.55 Even more sophisticated reactions occur as the unborn child develops further.56 And new developments have provided still more evidence strengthening the conclusion that fetuses are capable of experiencing pain in the womb.57</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnotes for page 15:<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;55 See, e.g., Carlo V. Bellieni & Giuseppe Buonocore, Is Fetal Pain a Real Evidence?, 25 J. Maternal-Fetal & Neonatal Med. 1203, 1203–08 (2012); Richard Rokyta, Fetal Pain, 29 Neuroendocrinology Letters 807, 807–14 (2008). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;56 See Royal Coll. of Obstetricians & Gynaecologists, Fetal Awareness: Review of Research and Recommendations for Practice 5, 7 (Mar. 2010), available at https://www.rcog.org.uk/globalassets/documents/guidelines/rcogfetalawarenesswpr0610.pdf [https://perma.cc/4V84-TEMC] (last visited July 28, 2021); Susan J. Lee et al., Fetal Pain: A Systematic Multidisciplinary Review of the Evidence, 294 J. Am. Med. Ass’n 947, 948–49 (2005); see also App. 76a, 84a–85a. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;57 See Lisandra Stein Bernardes et al., Acute Pain Facial Expressions in 23-Week Fetus, Ultrasound Obstetrics & Gynecology (June 2021), available at https://obgyn.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/uog.23709?af=R [https://perma.cc/V8BU-PZK4] (last visited July 28, 2021)<br />
<blockquote>Page 17: Moreover, by twelve weeks, the parts of the central nervous system leading from peripheral nerves to the brain are sufficiently connected to permit the peripheral pain receptors to detect painful stimuli.68 Thus, the unborn “baby develops sensitivity to external stimuli and to pain much earlier than was believed” when Roe and Casey were decided. MKB Mgmt. Corp. v. Stenehjem, 795 F.3d 768, 774 (8th Cir. 2015) (cleaned up).</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnote for page 17: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;68 Sekulic et al., supra note 65, at 1034–35. <br />
<blockquote>Page 21: By eighteen weeks, the child can hear his or her mother’s voice, and the child can yawn.87 The nervous system in the brain is also developing the circuitry for all the senses: taste, touch, smell, sight, and hearing.</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnote for page 21: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;87 Ibid.; see also Cleveland Clinic, Fetal Development: Stages of Growth (last updated Apr. 16, 2020), available at https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/articles/7247-fetal#development-stages-of-growth [https://perma.cc/YG92-KRH4] (last visited July 28, 2021). <br />
<blockquote>Page 25: Around twenty-six weeks, the child’s eyes open, and he or she can fully see what is going on around him or her.106 Brain wave activity increases throughout this period. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnote: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;106 Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hosp., A Week-by-Week Pregnancy Calendar: Week 26, available at https://www.hopkinsallchildrens.org/Patients-Families/Health-Library/HealthDocNew/Week-26?id=13484 [https://perma.cc/A8QG#XBPA] (last visited July 28, 2021).<br />
<br />
==79. World Faith Foundation and Institute for Faith and Family==<br />
<br />
(This entire excerpt is copied into Footnote #2 of Statement #4)<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185238/20210729120554370_19-1392%20tsac%20IFF.pdf Filed in Dobbs] <br />
<br />
<blockquote>The viability line is arbitrary, lacks constitutional support, and conflicts with legal principles in other contexts. Developments in medical technology expose the reality of a child in the womb worthy of legal protection. “Emerging science never shows the unborn to be less than human; rather, each advancement further reveals the humanity of the developing child in all its wonder”—even at 15 weeks, the developing child has “fully formed eyebrows, noses, and lips,” and “the baby’s fully formed heart pumps about 26 quarts of blood per day.”3</blockquote><br />
<blockquote>Yet this Court has stubbornly maintained the viability line, reaffirming Roe’s “recognition of the right of the woman” to choose abortion “before viability . . . without undue interference from the State.” Casey, 505 U.S. at 846. Gonzales began by presuming the same principle and timeline (Gonzales, 550 U.S. at 146)—but on the next page described the unborn child as “a living organism within the womb, whether or not it is viable outside the womb” (id. at 147, emphasis added).</blockquote> <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Footnote: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; https://lozierinstitute.org/cli-experts-urge-scotus-to-catch-up-to#science-in-mississippi-abortion-case/; https://lozierinstitute.org/new-paper-coauthored-by-cli-scholars-examines-treating-the-patient#within-the-patient/. These articles described in further detail the baby’s fetal development at 15 weeks.<br />
<blockquote>Page 13: Another critical development is the ability to detect a child’s heartbeat in the womb. Several years ago, the Eighth Circuit considered whether the state could prohibit abortions of “unborn children who possess detectable heartbeats.” MKB, 795 F.3d at 770. Experts testified that “fetal cardiac activity is detectable by about 6 weeks” although viability does not occur “until about 24 weeks.” Id. at 771. Sadly, the court concluded that Roe dictated the outcome but suggested that “good reasons exist for [this] Court to reevaluate its jurisprudence.” Id. at 774. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Ironically, no discussion or evidence of infant heartbeats is given in the amicus by Heartbeat International. [http://www.supremecourt.gov /DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185354/20210729164709878_Dobbs%20Amicus%20Brief%20-%20FINAL.pdf]. The word “heart” comes up 39 times, but only to state the organization’s name.<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
conclusion doesn’t ask that acknowledgment that babies are people, <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red"><br />
<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red"></div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=The_140_Amicus_Briefs_filed_in_Dobbs_v._Jackson&diff=50389The 140 Amicus Briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson2024-01-21T04:08:20Z<p>DaveLeach: /* 52 Commissioner Andy Gipson, Former Representative and Chair of Mississippi House Judiciary B Committee */</p>
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<span style="color:#0000FF">This forum was created by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 13:35, 2 October 2023 (UTC) to mine the gold from the 140 "Amicus" Briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'', June 24, 2022, the ruling that overturned ''Roe v. Wade'' (1973) and ''Planned Parenthood v. Casey'' (1992), returning the decision whether to continue the slaughter to voters state by state. The search here is for nuggets that can help end the slaughter in ''every'' state. I am mining these nuggets for my book, [[Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases]].<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
<span style="color:#0DA">Register (see [[Begin!]]) and join the discussion. [http://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/wiki/Template#Vote Vote]. Improve it. Critique it. Sign your name with 4 tildes (<nowiki>(~~~~)</nowiki>).</span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
Below are the titles, dates filed, and links to, the 140 Amicus Briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' (2022), and excerpts from them, and my comments. I indicate which of them I include in my book, [[Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases]]. They are numbered in the order they were filed.<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
==1. Roman Catholic Diocese of Jackson and Roman Catholic Diocese of Biloxi== <br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/147736/20200714142159951_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20Roman%20Catholic%20Diocese%20of%20Jackson.pdf July 14, 2021 filed]. Summary: this Court should find that the state’s interest in protecting unborn children who have the capacity to feel pain is sufficiently compelling to support a limited prohibition on abortion.<br />
<br />
===Excerpts===<br />
<br />
"The purpose of H.B.1510 is to protect those unborn children who, at 15 weeks gestation, have the capacity to feel pain. ...The government supplied expert testimony on this point" (which was excluded by the district court). <br />
<br />
The main argument seems to be that banning abortions at 15 weeks is not a "substantial" obstacle to abortion, so it doesn't violate Casey, 1992, which prohibits a "substantial" obstacle. While it enhances "respect for life", which Gonzales, 2003, endorses. "Respect for life is clearly shown in Gonzales to be a sufficient governmental interest in abortion regulations." <br />
<br />
States have an "important interest regarding the sanctity of life." Quoted from Carhart, 2000.<br />
<br />
Justice Thomas was quoted saying SCOTUS has “struggle[d] to find a guiding principle to distinguish fundamental rights that warrant protection from nonfundamental rights that do not", and then it is asked, "Does an unborn child have a fundamental right to be free from pain in the womb?"<br />
<br />
[COMMENT: what an understatement! No mention of the right to live? Actually being dead is an effective way to be free from pain. Life involves pain, and every day of life is a gift.]<br />
<br />
The district court shouldn't have forbidden expert testimony about babies feeling pain as they are being murdered. "Whether an unborn child can feel pain when a doctor...kills it, it is clearly relevant to a law which forbids abortions at a time when the unborn child can feel pain." <br />
<br />
"Consider how the Supreme Court has construed the Cruel and Unusual Punishments Clause of the Eighth Amendment to forbid executions of convicted murderers that involve unnecessary pain." Judge Ho added, "If courts grant convicted murderers the right to discovery to mitigate pain from executions, there's no reason they shouldn't be even more solicitous of unborn babies."<br />
<br />
"Should Lady Justice turn a blind eye to the cry of the unborn child, sucking its thumb, hidden in the sacred dark refuge of his or her mother's womb, only to have that womb become a tomb? Justice should not abandon the unborn child. One of the most important roles of law is to fight for those that cannot fight for themselves."<br />
<br />
"...the most fundamental of all rights - life. The right to life is, according to the Declaration of Independence, 'self-evident'. It is the sacred duty of our government to protect and respect this right...." "...a human being must be recognized as having the rights of a person - among which is the inviolable right of every innocent being to life." That's a quote from the Catholic catechism. Paragraph 2270. <br />
<br />
"Before I formed you in the womb, I knew you. Jeremiah 1:5."<br />
<br />
[COMMENT: It is stated that babies are people, yet far less is asked than the outlawing of murdering them in every state, which that fact demands. Not even the overturning of Roe and Casey are asked, but merely the survival of Mississippi's 15 week aborticide ban. Only one Bible verse in support of that fact is given. No evidence that babies are people is offered. The testimony of court-recognized fact finders is absent. <br />
<br />
[The comparison with pain studies for the benefit of convicted murderers being executed is a very strong point. But I am suspicious of the theory that babies much younger ''can't'' feel pain. A worm on a fish hook obviously feels pain. And a human baby, at the same size, can't?]<br />
<br />
==2. American Center for Law & Justice==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/148010/20200717125225969_Dobbs%20v.%20JWHO%20ACLJ%20amicus%20in%20support%20of%20cert.pdf Filed July 14, 2021]. Stare decisis cannot trump adherence to the Constitution as the supreme law of the land.<br />
<br />
===Excerpts===<br />
<br />
"Stare Decisis...cannot exalt knowingly incorrect supreme court decisions over the Constitution itself." "...the justices must prefer a a faithful reading of the Constitution to an acknowledged false reading."<br />
<br />
The "Supremacy Clause" of the Constitution, declaring the Constitution "the supreme law of the land", does not include "decisions of the United States Supreme Court". Judges take an oath to uphold the Constitution. <br />
<br />
"Abortion advocates, recognizing the doctrinal flimisness of this court's abortion jurisprudence, invoke the doctrine of stare decisis as counseling adherence to Roe and Casey even though they were wrongly decided." <br />
<br />
[COMMENT: The brevity of this brief is itself a strong statement, along with its only court cites being about judges not putting themselves above the Constitution. I think it is less than half the length allowed by the Court for an amicus brief. As if to say "Look, you know how wrong Roe and Casey are. Just, STOP!"<br />
<br />
[Nothing is explicitly said about a right to life for babies, to counter all the arguments from Hell for murdering them. But the nose-thumbing at all the arguments from Hell is breathtaking.]<br />
<br />
==3. 375 WOMEN INJURED BY SECOND AND THIRD TRIMESTER LATE TERM ABORTIONS AND ABORTION RECOVERY LEADERS==<br />
<br />
[https://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184712/20210722163259351_41205%20pdf%20Parker%20I%20br.pdf Filed July 20, 2021] “The Dignity Of Infant Life In The Womb” is appealed to.<br />
<br />
The brief says “Amici Women who actually experienced this gruesome<br />
reality request this Court to consider the effect on the woman who has felt her baby moving alive in her body, then realizing the baby is dead and not moving, for two days, before removal. This overall description is clinical gruesomeness at its most wretched level.”<br />
<br />
[COMMENT: Dignity of infant life. It was not pointed out that their “dignity” is made possible only by realization that they are human beings. We eat animals, and do not talk about their “dignity” as we slaughter them. Oh wait, I'm wrong. Democrats regard animal slaughter as way more violative of "dignity" than human slaughter. So maybe it is a more powerful argument in court to DENY that babies of humans are humans? They are animals, which merit greater protection? <br />
<br />
The sentence following: “Especially if one inserts the term ‘baby’ which is the term most women use instead of the clinical term ‘fetus.’”<br />
<br />
“Late term abortions are also a crime against humanity, which occurs when the government withdraws legal protection from a class of human beings.”<br />
<br />
[COMMENT: Three things are missing from making this a powerful argument against legal abortion: (1) ''evidence'' that babies are “human beings”, to trigger what Roe said would “of course...collapse” legal abortion, (2) a request of the Court to end legal abortion, without which there is little pressure on the Court to address this evidence, and (3) citing the fact that babies are human beings - not just the fact that some mothers are grossed out - as the reason legal abortion should end.] <br />
<br />
The only “remedies” requested by the “amici women” brief are: the right to “Protect Women’s Psychological Well-Being (Health), The Dignity<br />
Of “Infant Life” In The Womb, And The Integrity Of The Medical Profession And Society”. Amici women never ask for the end of all legal abortions, but only for an end to abortions after 15 weeks as the Mississippi law targets, because “Late Term Abortion Severely Injures Significant Numbers Of Women”. It causes “Grief More Anguished and Sorrow More Profound” and “Devastating Psychological Consequences”. (For some mothers, that is.) <br />
<br />
The murder of babies, though alleged, is not presented as a reason for the Court to do anything. The fact that only abortions past 15 weeks, which are only 4.5% of abortions, are the target, is consistent with the primary concern being for mothers, since concern for babies would call for outlawing all abortions. <br />
<br />
This analysis should not be taken to imply that the lawyers and women involved don’t care primarily for the slaughtered, dismembered babies! Of course that is their primary concern! But I marvel that they don’t say so in their brief, citing the overwhelming, irrefutable evidence of unborn personhood by the consensus of every court-recognized finder of fact that has taken a position on “when life begins”. <br />
<br />
==4. The States of Texas Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas Georgia Idaho Indiana Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Missouri Nebraska Ohio Oklahoma South Carolina Tennessee West Virginia==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/148156/20200720160750082_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief.pdf Filed July 20, 2021]<br />
<br />
Summary: Changed circumstances require the Court to reevaluate its viability precedent.<br />
<br />
==5. Illinois Right to Life==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/148202/20200720191618686_19-1392%20BRIEF%20FOR%20AMICUS%20CURIAE%20ILLINOIS%20RIGHT%20TO%20LIFE%20IN%20SUPPORT%20OF%20PETITIONERS.pdf Filed July 20, 2021] Our Declaration of Independence guarantees the “right to life.” This Court is the guardian of the Constitution and thus should take cognizance of the changes in culture, science, and law since Roe. The Court should revise its abortion jurisprudence to allow Mississippi and other states to enact laws to protect and further the inalienable and constitutional rights of preborn human beings. A consensus of biologists now acknowledges that a human fetus is, biologically speaking, a human being.<br />
<br />
Footnote 10 a. The scientific literature has established that fertilization initiates a new human being. . An overwhelming majority of biologists recognize that a human’s life begins at fertilization . . . . . . . . . . <br />
<br />
Footnote 13 c. Legislative hearings on when life begins marshalled scientific evidence that life begins at fertilization . Even doctors who perform abortions and proponents of abortion rights admit fetuses are human beings Views opposing the position that human life starts at fertilization are unscientific and ideological . Changes in the law have further e r o de d t he u nde r pi n n i ng s Roe. Those changes recognize the human fetus as a human being . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . <br />
<br />
Footnote 17 a. Enactment of fetal homicide laws in almost 80% of states demonstrates that, outside of the abortion context, a human fetus is legally recognized as a human being St at es a re i ncrea si ngly proposing and enacting laws protective of unborn human beings even when abortion is curtailed as a result . . . . . . . . . .<br />
<br />
Footnote 18 4. P r ot e c t i ve le g i s l at ion h a s ameliorated many detriments associated with pregnancy The Court should not continue to follow Roe’s viability standard since it ignores the fact that a human fetus is a biological human being and legal person at all stages of the human life cycle . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 II. SINCE A HU M A N FET US IS A HUMAN BEING, H.B. 1510 SHOULD BE SUSTAINED AS A REASONABLE PRO T EC T ION OF A PR EBOR N PERSON UNDER THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT <br />
The Fourteenth Amendment covers all human beings, including preborn humans, and guarantees the due process right to life and equal protection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 1. The Fourteenth Amendment was intended to protect every human being within the jurisdiction of the U.S. Over whelming evidence now exists that human fetuses are human beings and therefore protected by the Fourteenth Amendment The Court has a constitutional duty to recognize the right of human fetuses to legal protections as persons, and to begin to build a consensus favoring protection of fetuses under law . . . . . . . . . . . . <br />
<br />
23 B. Mississippi is entitled to pass legislation that protects prenatal humans from abortion <br />
<br />
The question of when a human’s life begins is now recognized to be biologically determinable, and '''an overwhelming scientific consensus confirms the view that a human’s life begins at fertilization.''' (See infra at Argument I.C.2.a-c). This growing scientific consensus has prompted '''38 states to enact changes in fetal homicide laws that recognize the humanity of preborn humans in non-abortive contexts, and other laws are being passed to protect preborn humans even though abortion restrictions are a consequence ...RECENT DEVELOPMENTS ESTABLISH PREVIABLE FETUSES ARE HUMAN PERSONS, RENDERING ROE AND ITS PROGENY OBSOLETE.''' A. State interest in protecting life is the most fundamental and important government duty. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In Roe, the Court based its “viability” standard on: (a) lack of a scientific consensus on when human life begins, </span> (b) absence of uniform legal protection of fetuses, and (c) maternal burdens of pregnancy and child-rearing. <br />
<br />
....” Roe, 410 U.S. at 153. The Court rejected that argument. Id. <span style="color:red">It recognized that if a human fetus is a “person” under the Fourteenth Amendment, the case for unrestricted abortion would be untenable “for the fetus’ right to life would then be guaranteed specifically by the Amendment.” Id. at 157. </span><br />
<br />
The Court acknowledged that the state may assert a “legitimate interest in protecting the potentiality of human life.” Id. at 154, 162. But the Court ultimately determined that the '''evidentiary record was insufficient to establish in science or in law when a human’s life begins'''. ...Thus, <span style="color:red">in Roe, the Court’s decision was based on its stated inability to locate in the record a scientific or legal basis for the humanity or personhood of the fetus, and the detriments posed by pregnancy and child-rearing. However, these conditions no longer prevail,12 </span> so the Court is obliged to reconsider Roe in light of these changed circumstances. C. Scientific, legal, and social developments have robbed Roe’s viability standard of its original justification p. 8 <br />
...Casey: “[I]n constitutional adjudication as elsewhere in life, changed circumstances may impose new obligations.” Id. at 864 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">...Roe’s recognition of a right to abort a previable pregnancy rests on the belief that the termination would not extinguish the life of a human person. That belief is no longer factually tenable given the current state of scientific knowledge concerning the origin and development of the human fetus. Roe also rests on a determination that the humanity and personhood of a human fetus was not generally recognized in law. That legal context has changed as well. Among other changes in the law, fetuses are now protected as human beings under laws prohibiting fetal homicide. Other laws, such as “heartbeat” laws and laws protecting against fetal pain, which are increasingly being enacted by the states, demonstrate their interest in protecting the youngest and most vulnerable humans. Finally, changes in the laws and the availability of social services that support and protect pregnant women have ameliorated the plight of pregnancy and lessened the burden of child-rearing. All of these changes rob Roe of its factual and legal underpinnings </span>and require the Court to revisit and overrule it or, at a minimum, to recalibrate the viability standard in Roe and Casey, to reflect the current state of scientific understanding and the legal realities of today. 2. A consensus of biologists now acknowledges that a human fetus is, biologically speaking, a human being. a. T he scienti f ic lit er atu re ha s established that fertilization initiates a new human being. <br />
<br />
A review of recent discoveries13 and the development of scientific literature since Roe reveal a strong consensus that sperm-egg plasma membrane fusion (fertilization) is the starting point of the life of a human organism (a human being).14 Dr. Maureen Condic, who is a member <br />
<br />
Footnote 13. The Virtual Human Embryo (VHE), a 14,250-page illustrated atlas of human embryology, describes the stages of human development called the Carnegie Stages of Embryonic Development. Mark A. Hill, Embryology Carnegie Stages, University of New South Wales, Dec. 24, 2019, https://perma. cc/QX4R-UZXM; see also: Conception to birth -- visualized | Alexander Tsiaras TED Talk, YouTube, https://perma.cc/VL9ZRQB5, and 9 Months In The Womb: A Remarkable Look At Fetal Development Through Ultrasound By PregnancyChat.com, YouTube, https://perma.cc/ZNJ3-T4GU. <br />
<br />
Footnote 14. Maureen L. Condic, When Does Human Life Begin? The Scientific Evidence and Terminology Revisited, 8 U. St. Thomas J.L. & Pub. Pol’y, 2013, https://perma.cc/JP33-Y8BH; Rita L. Gitchell, Should Legal Precedent Based on Old, Flawed, Scientific Analysis Regarding When Life Begins, Continue To Apply to Parental Disputes over the Fate of Frozen Embryos, When There Are Now Scientifically Known and Observed Facts Proving Life Begins at Fertilization?, 20 DePaul J. Health Care L. 1, at 8-9. (2018). <br />
<br />
Footnote 18. <span style="color:red">Dr. Alfred Bongiovanni, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, in his testimony in connection with the 1981 hearing on Senate Bill 158, the “Human Life Bill, see infra at 15-16, concluded, “I am no more prepared to say that these early stages [of development in the womb] represent an incomplete human being than I would be to say that the child prior to the dramatic effects of puberty . . . is not a human being. This is human life at every stage.” Cited in House Resolution No. 214, https://perma. cc/6XRG-L2C8. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">b. An overwhelming majority of biologists recognize that a human’s life begins at fertilization. A recent international study involving 5,577 biologists from 86 countries who work at 1,061 top-ranked academic institutions22 confirmed the scientific consensus on when life begins.23 The study asked biologists to confirm or reject five statements that represent the view that a human’s life begins at fertilization. The majority of the biologists in the study identified as liberal (89%), prochoice (85%), and non-religious (63%). 5,337 biologists (96%) affirmed at least one of the statements and only 240 participants declined to affirm any statements (4%). The study participants were also asked to answer an essay question: “From a biological perspective, how would you answer the question, ‘When does a human’s life begin?’” Most biologists (68%) indicated fertilization. Thus, while in Roe, the Court found that experts could not arrive at any consensus at that point in the development of man’s knowledge, that is no longer the case. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">c. Legislative hearings on when life begins marshalled scientific evidence that life begins at fertilization. During hearings conducted by the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Senate Bill 158, the “Human Life Bill”, numerous scientific experts testified regarding when life begins. The Official Senate Report concluded that: “Physicians, biologists, and other scientists agree that conception marks the beginning of the life of a human being - a being that is alive and is a member of the human species. There is overwhelming agreement on this point in countless medical, biological, and scientific writings.”24 In the hearings, Dr. Jerome Lejeune testified that “[l]ife has a very, very long history, but each individual has a very neat beginning – the moment of its conception” because “[t]o accept the fact that after fertilization has taken place a new human has come into being is no longer a matter of taste or opinion ... it is plain experimental evidence.” S-158 Hearings, April 23, 1981 transcript, 18.25 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Experts from leading institutions have testified that there are no alternative theories on when a human’s life...<br />
<br />
Footnote 24. Report, Subcommittee on Separation of Powers to Senate JudFootnote iciary Committee S-158, 97th Congress, 1st Session 1981, 7; similarly, in 2006, the legislature in South Dakota heard expert medical testimony on when human life begins and concluded that “abortion terminates the life of a unique, whole, living human being”. Report of The South Dakota Task Force to Study Abortion, Submitted to the Governor and Legislature of South Dakota, Dec. 2005, https://perma.cc/4WF8-TNM3. <br />
<br />
Footnote 25. S-158 Hearings, April 23, 1981 Transcript, https://perma. cc/6DCT-UT4P. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">begins in the scientific literature. Dr. Hymie Gordon, Professor of Medical Genetics and physician at the Mayo Clinic, testified: “I have never ever seen in my own scientific reading, long before I became concerned with issues of life of this nature, that anyone has ever argued that life did not begin at the moment of conception and that it was a human conception if it resulted from the fertilization of the human egg by a human sperm. As far as I know, these have never been argued against.” Id. at 52. This lack of any published, let alone generally accepted, alternative scientific theories was also attested to by Dr. Micheline Matthew-Roth, a principal research associate in the Department of Medicine at the Harvard Medical School. Id. at 41-42. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">d. Even doctors who perform abortions and proponents of abortion rights admit fetuses are human beings. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Many practitioners of abortion and supporters of abortion rights acknowledge human life begins at conception.26 For example, when abortion doctor Dr. Curtis Boyd was interviewed, he acknowledged with respect to abortion: “Am I killing? Yes, I am. I know that.”27 Abortion rights supporter and ethicist Peter Singer has written that being “a member of a given species is something that <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Footnote 26. Derek Smith, Pro-Choice Concedes: Prominent Abortion Proponents Concede The Barbarity Of Abortion, Human Defense Initiative, Nov. 7, 2018, https://perma.cc/GXH8-MAUU. See also, A New Ethic for Medicine and Society, California Medicine, Sep. 1970. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Footnote 27. KVUE Austin Interview of Dr. Curtis Boyd, at 0:23, YouTube, Nov. 6, 2009, https://perma.cc/GYB2-3YFY. <br />
<br />
Page 16 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">can be determined scientifically, by an examination of the nature of the chromosomes in the cells of living organisms. In this sense there is no doubt that from the first moments of its existence an embryo conceived from human sperm and eggs is a human being.”28 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">e. Views opposing the position that human life starts at fertilization are unscientific and ideological. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">While some oppose the consensus view that human life begins at fertilization, the few counter-arguments made are philosophical or ideological, rather than scientific or fact-driven. In point of fact, no viable alternative to the consensus view has been propounded.29 <br />
<br />
One opposing argument is that biological principles are incapable of classifying humans30 despite the fact that scientists have done so for countless other animal species on Earth. Other opponents suggest that a human zygote cannot be considered a human individual because it is physiologically dependent on another human. Setting aside the fact that infants are also wholly dependent on other humans for survival, this ableist distinction rejects the humanity of conjoined twins who are physiologically dependent on each other’s bodies for survival. It is also sometimes claimed that a human zygote is not yet a human <br />
<br />
Footnote 28. Peter Singer, Practical Ethics, 2nd ed., Cambridge University Press, 85-86, 1993. <br />
<br />
Footnote 29. See supra, p. 15. <br />
<br />
Footnote 30. Richard J. Paulson, The unscientific nature of the concept that “human life begins at fertilization,” and why it matters, Fertility and Sterility, Volume 107, Issue 3, Mar. 2017, https:// perma.cc/QDE5-C5C4. <br />
<br />
Page 17 <br />
<br />
being because many fetuses fail to survive pregnancy and childbirth. But this view is fallacious because whether a human being is able to continue in life is not a condition of his or her status as a human being. A human life is always a life with potential, which may or may not be realized. <br />
<br />
'''Ultimately, opposing arguments to the scientific consensus that a human’s life begins at fertilization are fallacious or focus on aspects of biology that are not relevant to the biological classification of human beings. '''<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">3. Changes in the law have further eroded the underpinnings Roe. Those changes recognize the human fetus as a human being. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">a. Enactment of fetal homicide laws in almost 80% of states demonstrates that, outside of the abortion context, a human fetus is legally recognized as a human being. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In its 1973 Roe decision, the Court stated, “the unborn have never been recognized in the law as persons in the whole sense.” Roe, 410 U.S. at 162. This has changed markedly since that time. Legislators in 38 of 50 states have enacted laws that criminalize the intentional killing of a human fetus. These “fetal homicide” laws, which only apply to non-abortive killings, recognize that preborn human fetuses are human beings entitled to protection under the law. In this context, a majority of states today recognize a human fetus as a human person from the moment of fertilization.31 <br />
<br />
'''Footnote 31. A listing of the states with fetal homicide laws can be found at: State Laws on Fetal Homicide and Penalty-enhancement''' <br />
<br />
Page 18 <br />
<br />
'''Fetuses are recognized as human persons in numerous contexts: (1) laws that restrict abortion at some point in fetal development, (2) fetal homicide laws, (3) prohibitions against capital punishment imposed upon pregnant women, (4) recovery for fetal deaths under wrongful death statutes, (5) the rights of preborn children under property law, (6) legal guardianship of prenatal humans,32 (7) the rights of preborn children to a deceased parent’s Social Security and Disability benefits33, and (8) the rights of inheritance of posthumously born children.34 Despite the plethora of contexts in which fetuses are recognized as persons under the law, this Court has yet to recognize the personhood of preborn humans.''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">b. States are increasingly proposing and enacting laws protective of unborn human beings even when abortion is curtailed as a result. <br />
<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Today, 43 states have enacted laws protecting prenatal humans although abortion is thereby restricted. All but one restrict abortion access at the earliest point <br />
<br />
for Crimes Against Pregnant Women, National Conference of State Legislatures, May 1, 2018, https://perma.cc/3XTG-WDLB. <br />
<br />
'''Footnote 32. See Paul Benjamin Linton, The Legal Status of the Unborn Child Under State Law, 6 U. St. Thomas J.L. & Pub. Pol’y, 2011, https://perma.cc/XB8E-G375. <br />
<br />
Footnote 33. SSR 68-22: SECTION 216(h)(3)(C). – Relationship – Status of Illegitimate Posthumous Child, Social Security Administration, https://perma.cc/W3TR-89L9. <br />
<br />
Footnote 34. Alea Roberts, Where’s My Share?: Inheritance Rights of Posthumous Children, American Bar Association, Jun. 13, 2019, https://perma.cc/36VN-HZZ8''' <br />
<br />
Page 19 <br />
<br />
'''permissible by Roe (viability), and states have recently more emphatically asserted a state interest in the lives of previable human beings by seeking to protect them: (1) after the sixth week since that is known to be the point at which a fetus’ heart first beats (AL HB314; IA SF359) and (2) after the twentieth week since that has been found to be the point at which a fetus can first feel pain (OH SB 127).''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Altogether, given the Court’s willingness to permit states to protect prenatal humans from harm and states’ desire to do so, it is clear that our nation prizes the protection of humans over the right to abortion. However, in the present case, the District and Circuit courts enjoined Mississippi’s law because this Court has yet to recognize that previable human fetuses are humans. <br />
<br />
'''4. Protective legislation has ameliorated many detriments associated with pregnancy. <br />
<br />
In deciding Roe in 1973, the Court considered the burdens upon women associated with child-rearing such as “a distressful life and future,” “[m]ental and physical health may be taxed by child care,” and “additional difficulties and continuing stigma of unwed motherhood may be involved.” Roe, 410 U.S. at 153. These considerations have since been significantly ameliorated through legislation including: Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972,35 the Pregnancy Discrimination Act,36 the Family <br />
<br />
Footnote 35. 20 U.S.C. §1681 et seq. <br />
<br />
Footnote 36. The Pregnancy Discrimination Act of 1978, U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, https://perma.cc/MH3SMLFE''' <br />
<br />
<br />
Page 20 <br />
<br />
'''and Medical Leave Act (“FMLA”),37 the Women, Infants, and Children program (“WIC”),38 and the Pregnancy Assistance Fund (“PAF”).39 <br />
<br />
D. The Court should not continue to follow Roe’s viability standard since it ignores the fact that a human fetus is a biological human being and legal person at all stages of the human life cycle. <br />
<br />
Roe’s recognition of a right to abort a previable pregnancy rested on the belief that termination would not extinguish the life of a human being. Developments in science and law since Roe reveal that belief to be erroneous. An abortion does take a human’s life. Given these changes, the Court should reassess Roe. ....'''<br />
<br />
==6. American Association of Pro-Life Obstetricians & Gynecologists==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/148145/20200720153839672_19-1392%20Amici%20Brief%20AAPLOG.pdf Filed July 20, 2021]<br />
<br />
THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT DOES NOT INCLUDE A LIBERTY INTEREST TO ABORT ALL PRE-VIABILITY UNBORN CHILDREN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 A. Historical Evidence Demonstrates that the Constitution Does Not Require a Ban Against All State Regulation of Previability Abortion.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Mississippi’s law is partially based on legislative findings pertaining to the advanced development and humanity of pre-born children at the gestational age of fifteen to twenty weeks. Pet. at 7-9. At twenty two days, the child’s heart begins to beat. https://www.ehd.org/your-life-before-birth-video/ (last visited July 15, 2020). At six weeks, the child begins moving. Id. At seven weeks, scientists can detect a child’s brainwaves, and the child can move his or her head and hands. Id. The child displays leg movements and the startle response. Id. At eight weeks, the child’s brain exhibits complex development. Id (Page 18)<br />
<br />
==7. Inner Life Fund and Institute for Faith and Family==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/148139/20200720153319734_19-1392 Amici Brief Inner Life Fund.pdf Filed July 20, 2021]<br />
<br />
SCOTUS should grant Missippi's petition. The time has come to expose the “social equality fallacy” that demeans the ability and contributions of women by presupposing they can only achieve equality through the “right” to abortion. Great progress has been made toward the goal of gender equality in the decades since Roe and Casey — independent of access to abortion or contraception.<br />
<br />
==8. Robin Pierucci, M.D., and Life Legal Defense Foundation==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/148122/20200720132309321_19-1392 Dobbs v. JWHO petition AC LLDF.pdf Filed July 20, 2021]<br />
<br />
“viability threshold for a compelling state interest in preserving human life, created by this Court in 1973, should be abandoned in favor of the medically updated and philosophically consistent standard of an “unqualified” interest in protecting life...” <br />
<br />
In Roe, this Court determined that the state’s interest in the protection of human life <br />
became compelling at viability, relying on the fetus’ “capability of meaningful life outside the mother's womb.” Id. at 163. <br />
<br />
By contrast, '''in Cruzan this Court rejected the idea of “meaningful life,” holding that “a State may properly decline to make judgments about the ‘quality’ of life that a particular individual may enjoy, and simply assert an unqualified interest in the preservation of human life to be weighed against the constitutionally protected interests of the individual.”''' Cruzan, 497 U.S. at 282; Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 U.S. 702, 729 (1997) (quoting Cruzan and holding that the state “has an unqualified interest in the preservation of human life”) (emphasis added). See also Britell v. United States, 372 F.3d 1370, 1383 (Fed. Cir. 2004) (“It is not the role of the courts to draw lines as to which fetal abnormalities or birth defects are so severe as to negate the state's otherwise legitimate interest in the fetus' potential life.”); State v. Final Exit Network, Inc., 889 N.W.2d 296, 305-06 (Minn. Ct. App. 2016) (“The state has a compelling interest in the preservation of D.D.’s life, and the prevention of her suicide, regardless of her incurable [non-viable] condition.”) <br />
<br />
Limiting a state’s ability to protect human lives directly to only those lives deemed <br />
“meaningful” because the arbitrary benchmark of viability has been reached is in direct conflict with this Court’s 1990 holding in Cruzan, that a state need not qualify its interest in the preservation of human life before acting. This Court should grant the petition to resolve the conflict between its abortion jurisprudence and its decisions in Cruzan and Glucksberg allowing states to protect human life regardless of the meaningfulness” of that life as measured by the uncertain yardstick of viability. <br />
<br />
==9. Cleveland Lawyers for Life==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184253/20210719151428392_19-1392 TSAC Cleveland Lawyers for Life.pdf filed July 19, 2021]<br />
<br />
The viability standard should be jettisoned in favor of the point at which the physical humanity of the fetus has become biologically manifest. Mississippi has met that burden of proof.” (15 week development is described. The cutoff for legal abortion should be when there are “biological markers” rather than when babies can survive outside wombs.)<br />
<br />
==10. David Boyle==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184456/20210720221629952_19-1392_tsac_DavidBoyle.pdf Filed July 20, 2021]<br />
<br />
This is an attempt at a “neutral” plea for compromise. It promises respect for both sides. The index doesn’t indicate that the humanity of the unborn is remotely addressed. <br />
<br />
==11. Jewish Pro-life Foundation==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184580/20210721170924501_41204%20pdf%20Parker.pdf Filed July 21, 2021]<br />
<br />
The Coalition for Jewish Values, Rabbi Yacov David Cohen, Rabbi Chananya Weissman, and Bonnie Chernin (President, Jewish Life League) <br />
<br />
Glory to God! This is largely '''a Bible study that addresses Deuteronomy 30:19, Exodus 21:22-25, Exodus 23:7, Genesis 9:6-7, Isaiah 49:1, Jeremiah 1:5, Jeremiah 22:3, Jeremiah 29:6, Jeremiah 29:11, Leviticus 18:21, Leviticus 19:16, Proverbs 24:11-12, Proverbs 31:8, Psalm 139:13-16, Psalm 106:35-38.'''<br />
<br />
This brief doesn’t say so, but Roe “opened the door” to the relevance of a Bible study by saying the alleged failure of doctors and preachers “to arrive at any consensus” about “when life begins” was Roe’s principal reason why “the judiciary, at this point in the development of man’s knowledge, is unable to speculate” about whether babies are people. Roe thus treated theology as highly relevant, and yet Roe analyzed no Scripture. This cries out for correction and updating. <br />
<br />
This pleading to the Court is Amici’s attempt to rescue innocent children in the womb from execution, as commanded in our Bible, Proverbs 24:11-12: “Rescue those being led away to death; hold back those staggering toward slaughter. If you say, ‘But we knew nothing about this’, does not He who weighs the heart perceive it? Does not He who guards your life know it? Will He not repay everyone for what they have done?”<br />
<br />
'''This brief begins by asking for more than just to outlaw abortions after 15 weeks:''' “The Mississippi law in this case seeks to protect the God-given right to life for babies of 15 weeks gestation and beyond. Yet, most significant developmental milestones occur during the first eight weeks following conception. A baby’s heart beats at 22 days, and her brainwaves can be measured at 6 weeks. At 9 weeks all internal organs are present and the baby is sensitive to touch. As early as 8 weeks, the ‘infant’ feels real physical pain during an abortion.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">'''“.... Jeremiah 22:3 admonishes us to avoid causing pain and death to the powerless: Do what is right and just; rescue the wronged from their oppressors; do nothing wrong or violent to the stranger, orphan or widow; don’t shed innocent blood in this place.’”'''<br />
<br />
The brief asks nothing less than overturning of Roe, Doe, and Casey. Not explicitly asked for but strongly implied is also ''protection'' of the unborn, meaning not allowing ''any'' state to keep abortion legal: <span style="color:red">'''“Amici implore the Court to study our arguments in this filing and thereby find the moral authority and conviction to overturn Roe, Doe and Casey. Indeed, to apply the protective elements of the 14th Amendment of the Constitution to all children.”'''<br />
<br />
The brief makes a claim for Judiasm which is even more so a claim for its Bible, which of course is shared with Christians. It is a claim about what the Bible did first. But stating what the Bible pioneered actually understates its uniqueness, because ''to this day'' no other religion, except to the extent it was influenced by the Bible, supports these rights and freedoms: <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Judaism Is The Original Pro-Life Religion. It Was The First Religion In Human History To Sanctify Human Life From Conception To Natural Death And To Prohibit Child Sacrifice.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Judaism has a strong legal tradition of protecting human life and prohibiting the murder of innocents. Jewish law and tradition emphasize and support the moral right to life for all human beings at every stage of development based on the understanding that all people are created in the image of God; therefore, each of us has intrinsic value and worth with a destiny to fulfill God’s vision for humanity on Earth.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Psalm 139:13-16 reveals this: ‘For you created my inmost being: you knit me together in my mother’s womb. I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made . . .My frame was not hidden from you when I was made in the secret place. When I was woven together in the depths of the earth, your eyes saw my unformed body. All the days ordained for me were written in your book before one of them came to me.’” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">…. “All of us who are able to do so have the duty to enforce this right of the child in the womb: Leviticus 19:16: ‘Do not stand idly by when your neighbor’s life is at stake.’” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">…. “The Almighty gives clear instructions on the life issue in Deuteronomy 30:19: ‘This day I call the heavens and the earth as witnesses against you that I have set before you life and death, blessings and curses. Now choose life, so that you and your children may live.’”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">…. “Maimonides, declared in his compilation of Jewish law, the Mishneh Torah: ‘The definition of murder according to the Noahide Laws includes a person “who kills even one unborn in the womb of its mother,” and adds that such a person is liable for the death penalty.’” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“The Talmud (Sanhedrin 57b) says that an unborn child is included in the Noahide prohibition of bloodshed that is learned from Genesis 9:6-7: (from a direct translation of the original text), ‘He who spills the blood of man within man shall have his blood spilt for in the image of God made He man. And you, be fruitful, and multiply; swarm in the earth, and multiply therein.’ The Talmud interprets ‘the blood of man in man” to include a fetus, which is the blood of man in man.’”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">…. “Clearly, the Jewish religion prohibits child sacrifice, the modern day version being abortion, as stated in the Torah: Leviticus 18:21: ‘Do not give any of your children to be sacrificed to Molek, for you must not profane the name of your God. I am the Lord.’ Psalm 106:35-38: ‘They mingled with the nations and adopted their customs. They worshiped their idols, which became a snare to them. They sacrificed their sons and their daughters to false gods. They shed innocent blood, the blood of their sons and daughters, whom they sacrificed to the idols of Canaan, and the land was desecrated by their blood.’”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Rabbinical opinion prohibits even helping non-Jews abort – even for “physical abnormalities”.''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Rabbi Chananya Weissman: “It should not need to be debated that unborn children have the right to be born, and the lives of the elderly and infirm are no less precious than the lives of society’s most fortunate. The rich and powerful do not have the right to decide the value of anyone’s life, nor when someone has ‘already lived their life’ and it’s time for them to go. That is strictly the purview of God, who forbids us to make such distinctions or calculations, even for the alleged ‘greater good.’ It is always for the greater evil. It is always to displace God. The Torah teaches that every life is a unique world, and every moment of every life is infused with the potential to<br />
achieve great spiritual heights.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Rabbi Pinchas Teitz: (Commenting on Deuteronomy 21:7): “Shedding innocent blood in Jewish life is so reprehensible that at times even those not responsible for the act of murder who hear of such an incident must dissociate themselves from it. This is expressed by the recitation of the elders of the city in whose proximity a dead man is found. In the eglo arufo ceremony that the Torah mandates, they must wash their hands, saying: ‘Our hands did not shed this blood,’ even though there is no reason to assume that they were directly involved in the death. How, then, are we to respond with less than shock to the killing of 100,000 fetuses through abortion in Israel, year after year? This is certainly a sin against Torah . . . It is a crime against Jewry, against mankind, and even against the Land itself—for the Torah clearly warns that the Land, in its sensitivity to corruption, can tolerate no bloodshed.”''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In Jewish law the only time abortion is permitted is to save the life of the mother. The brief doesn’t give a reference from the Bible, but a footnote explains, “One who is ‘pursuing’ another to murder him or her. According to Jewish law, such a person must be killed by any bystander after being warned to stop and refusing.” This describes a kind of self defense or defense of others. Scriptures I think of are: 2 Samuel 2:18-23, where Abner begged Asahel not to attack him, but Asahel refused so Abner killed him. Or Exodus 22:2 which excuses a homeowner for killing a thief who breaks in at night. <br />
<br />
I particularly appreciate the brief’s analysis of Exodus 21:22-25, the ONLY citation of the Bible included in Roe v. Wade, in a footnote. The brief says: <span style="color:red">“A note about Exodus 21:22-25, the mistranslation of which has led many to conclude that Judaism condones the mass slaughter of infant life.''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“This conclusion is entirely false. The verse describes a case in which fighting men in close proximity to a pregnant woman inadvertently cause a miscarriage. The Torah specifies that the guilty party would be prosecuted for involuntary manslaughter only if the pregnant woman herself dies. If the infant in the womb dies, they must pay only a monetary fine. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Long used by abortion advocates to reframe abortion as legal in Judaism, this text is not a license to abort infant life; rather, it is a reference to involuntary manslaughter requiring an adjudicated fine. It is not a capital crime.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“...This verse must be carefully understood. Many translations read ‘and a miscarriage occurs’ rather than as ‘a premature birth results’ as I have it here. The passage, in my opinion, is to ‘a premature birth’ when the context is considered. The text actually says that if the child ‘departs’ [“yasa”] the womb and no other damage ensues from the event. In other words, if because of the struggle the baby is born early but is otherwise fine, then the men may be required to pay damages for their carelessness but no more. ‘But if other damage ensues,’ i.e. the baby is born with some deformity or born dead, then the standard penalties will apply, ‘an eye for eye, tooth for tooth’. If the child dies as a result, the men are guilty of the murder, a life for a life. The text makes no sense any other way. The Hebrew term shachol references an abortion or miscarriage. That word is not used here. There is conclusive evidence that both Torah and Rabbinic halacha regarding the pre-birth child as fully human and subject to the same protections and respect as all other people.”''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">(I will further note that the penalty is to be decided by a jury. I take this as so the jury can take into account eyewitness testimony about how deliberately the woman was struck. Did a man deliberately aim his fist at her? Did she insert herself into the dispute so much as to make her injury unavoidable?)<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">More Scripture: “Our tradition teaches us to advocate for vulnerable and victimized targets of abuse and murder. Proverbs 31:8 demands, ‘Speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves.’ We acknowledge the harms done by abortion and speak out to prevent them.”<br />
<br />
The brief is the only one to note fornication as another deadly (spiritually and physically) consequence of abortion: “Abortion has become an accepted means of birth control, encouraging irresponsible, dangerous sexual activity leading to an explosion of sexually transmitted disease. Women die from legal abortion.”<br />
<br />
Scripture is cited in sympathy for the loss to men of abortion:<span style="color:red"> “It is now confirmed that men grieve lost fatherhood, resulting in broken relationships and dysfunctional family life. We heed Jeremiah 29:6, emphasizing the importance of the family even in difficult times: ‘Marry and have sons and daughters; find wives for your sons and give your daughters in marriage, so that they too may have sons and daughters. Increase in number there; do not decrease.’” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Judaism’s biblical tradition identifies the child in the womb as precious, valuable and unique. Isaiah 49:1: ‘Before I was born the Lord called me; from my mother’s womb he has spoken my name.’ And Jeremiah 1:5: ‘Before I formed you in the womb I knew you, before you were born I set you apart, I appointed you as a prophet of nations.’” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Evidence of the regard for unborn human life in Jewish law: “when human life is endangered, a Jew is required to violate any Sabbath law that stands in the way of saving that person. The concept of life being in danger is interpreted broadly; for example, it is mandated that one violate the Sabbath to take a woman in active labor to a hospital. Jewish law also not merely permits, but demands, that the Sabbath be violated in order to save infant life in the womb. As lifesaving activity is the only situation in which a Sabbath violation is permitted, were the infant child not deemed alive by the Torah, this behavior would be entirely prohibited.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Abortion industry practices dramatically contrast with Jewish ethics and moral guidelines in business, cleanliness, sexual propriety, responsibility to protect friends and neighbors from harm, honesty, and women’s safety. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Exodus 23:7 admonishes us: ‘Keep away from fraud, and do not cause the death of the innocent and righteous; for I will not justify the wicked.’ <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Abortion providers have long been exempted from standard medical practices and regulatory oversight. They perpetuate sex crimes by routinely failing to report evidence of sexual assault and sex trafficking. They fail to provide informed consent to patients and fail to counsel patients on alternatives to the abortion procedure or possible immediate and long-term negative consequences of the procedure.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">…. “Judaism prohibits desecrating the human body, but abortion destroys a human body, and the harvesting of baby parts for profit defies Jewish respect for the dead.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Today, the Justices have all the information needed to fully understand and acknowledge the status of the infant life, and have done so in Gonzales, at 159, 160. From conception onward, children in their mother’s womb manifest humanity to such an extent that only a decision that protects their lives and futures is humane and just.”<br />
<br />
The rest of the brief reports striking parallels between the Jew-dehumanizing rhetoric of Nazi Germany and the baby-dehumanizing rhetoric of American abortionists. Except that “only” 6 million Jews were slaughtered in Germany, compared with 60 million babies in America.<br />
<br />
I didn’t know the abortion pill, RU486, is actually the same chemical Hitler used to gas Jews, when it was called Zyklon B! “The Population Council brought the abortion pill to the United States in 1994. Originally called Zyklon B, Nazi scientists developed it in gaseous form to kill Jews in concentration camp ‘showers.’62 RU 486 is now used in 40% of all abortions due to inflated pricing and low overhead costs.” https://www.lifenews.com/2014/02/23/company-that-madezyklon-b-for-nazi-holocaust-made-ru-486-for-abortions/ <br />
<br />
“In a 1999 speech in Washington, D.C., Mr. Ellie Wiesel stressed our obligation to defend the defenseless. ‘We must always take sides. Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the victim. Silence encourages the tormentor, never the tormented.’”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The conclusion is the most magnificent I have read, which it would not have been without quoting God: “We must end abortion, an appalling crime against humanity. To begin the process of reconciliation with our Creator, to restore the dignity of those who have perished, and to return our country to a life affirming nation. Amici ask the Court to rise above political concerns and to contemplate the Divine promise bestowed upon every human being as pledged in Jeremiah 29:11: ‘For I know the plans I have for you, declares the LORD, plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.’”<br />
<br />
----<br />
(My online account is out of red ink, but the entire section from here to the end is included in Statement of Fact #4, Footnote #2)<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<u>Jewish Prolife Foundation</u> [http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184580/20210721170924501_41204%20pdf%20Parker.pdf] <br />
<blockquote>This tragic human rights violation must be remedied. The Mississippi law in this case seeks to protect the God-given right to life for babies of 15 weeks gestation and beyond. Yet, most significant developmental milestones occur during the first eight weeks following conception. A baby’s heart beats at 22 days, and her brainwaves can be measured at 6 weeks. At 9 weeks all internal organs are present and the baby is sensitive to touch.4 As early as 8 weeks, the “infant”5 feels real physical pain during an abortion.6 This is much sooner than the 15-week issue before the Court, a gestational age when the pain felt by the baby must surely be considered. Jeremiah 22:3 admonishes us to avoid causing pain and death to the powerless: “Do what is right and just; rescue the wronged from their oppressors; do nothing wrong or violent to the stranger, orphan or widow; don’t shed innocent blood in this place.”</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnotes: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 Endowment for Human Development. Prenatal Summary. https://www.ehd.org/prenatal-summary.php<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 Gonzales 159, 160<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 5 Gonzales 159, 160. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 Expert Tells Congress Unborn Babies Can Feel Pain Starting at 8 Weeks. Ertelt, Steven. May 23, 2013. LifeNews. https://www.lifenews.com/2013/05/23/expert-tells-congress-unborn-babies#can-feel-pain-starting-at-8-weeks/<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<u>Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide</u> www.supremecourt.gov /DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185155/20210728163153060_Amici%20Brief%20of%20CMP-Daleiden.pdf]<br />
<blockquote>1. By 15 weeks’ gestation, the human infant in the womb unmistakably manifests “the human form” identical to any other member of our community. Gonzales v. Carhart, 550 U.S. 124, 160 (2007). Ironically, it is precisely from this point when the fetus becomes most recognizably a fellow human being, that the fetuses vulnerable to abortion become most useful as an experimental biologic “resource.” Even though four-month-old infants in the womb move, kick, suck their thumbs, hiccup, and demonstrate a readily discernable heartbeat and brainwaves, App. 65a,4 and even though the Constitution guarantees that “neither slavery nor involuntary servitude” shall exist in America nor that any person be deprived of life without due process of law, U.S. Const., amends. XIII § 1, XIV § 1, these same children can be routinely killed through livedismemberment abortions or trafficked and sold for experimental use. (Page 3)</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnote: 4 Katrina Furth, Fetal EEGs: Signals from the Dawn of Life, ON POINT SERIES 28 (Nov. 2018), https://lozierinstitute.org/fetal#eegs-signals-from-the-dawn-of-life/; Winslow J. Borkowski & Richard L. Bernstine, Electroencephalography of the Fetus, 5(5) NEUROLOGY 362–65 (May 1, 1955)<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<u>National Catholic Bioethics Center, et al.</u> [www.supremecourt.gov/ DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185239/20210729121001402_19-1392%20tsac%20National%20Catholic%20Bioethics%20Center.pdf]<br />
<blockquote>Mississippi’s law is partially based on legislative findings pertaining to the advanced development and obvious humanity of pre-born children at the gestational age of fifteen to twenty weeks. Pet. at 7-9. At twenty-two days, the child’s heart begins to beat. https://www.ehd.org/your-life-before-birth-video/ (last visited July 15, 2020). At six weeks, the child begins moving. Id. At seven weeks, scientists can detect a child’s brainwaves, and the child can move his or her own head and hands. Id. The child also displays leg movements and the startle response by that time. Id. At eight weeks, the child’s brain exhibits complex development. Id. (p. 14)</blockquote><br />
<br />
==12. Alabama Center for Law and Liberty== <br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184666/20210722141347032_Dobbs%20ACLL%20Amicus.pdf Filed July 23, 2021]<br />
<br />
“ACLL believes that life begins at the moment of fertilization and that unborn children are people entitled to equal protection of the law.” This statement falls short of claiming unborn “personhood” is an objective fact. It also falls short of ''proving'' it is an objective fact. This phrasing treats it as ACLL’s subjective “belief”. <br />
<br />
Supposing ACLL’ “belief” to be true, then murdering the unborn violates the 14th Amendment: “The Framers of the Fourteenth Amendment believed that God gave every person the natural right to life and that unborn children were ‘people’ entitled to the Amendment’s protection. Consequently, laws that protect everyone from murder except unborn children violate the Equal Protection Clause.”<br />
<br />
ACLL asks that abortions after 15 weeks be outlawed. That requires the Court to overturn Roe’s claim that a state can’t protect babies before “viability”. <br />
<br />
ACLL therefore points out '''something illogical about the “viability” standard: “if a person’s right to life is dependent on his ability to survive without the help of others, then most people would not have a right to life. Most of us wake up each day in a dwelling that was built by someone else, eat food that was grown by someone else, drink water that was sent to our house by someone else, go to work in a car that was built by someone else, and provide goods or services to someone else in exchange for payment...”'''<br />
<br />
ACLL notes “we know far more about prenatal life now than we did when Roe and Casey were decided”, but none of what we now know is offered as evidence proving the veracity of ACLL’s “belief” that “life begins at the moment of fertilization and that unborn children are people entitled to equal protection of the law.”<br />
<br />
Inconsistency in law through abortion precedents is given as a reason to overturn Roe: “criminal law, tort law, guardianship law, health care law, property law, and family law often treat the unborn as persons, leaving abortion as an outlier.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">ACLL asks more than any other brief: not just that Roe be overturned, but that all unborn babies be protected, which means no state could keep abortion legal: “C. The Court Should Not Only Overrule Roe but Also Hold That the Constitution Protects the Child’s Right to Life.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Why should the Court do that? ACLL offers another “if...then” argument: “Roe itself conceded that if an unborn child is a person, the case for abortion collapses, because the child’s right to life would be specifically guaranteed by the Amendment. Roe, 410 U.S. at 156-57. The Court was correct in that regard.”<br />
<br />
Well, yes, Roe was right, but Roe didn’t, 50 years ago, think an unborn child being a “person” was “established”. Is it established now? Surely it is now that every court-recognized fact-finder that has taken a position has ruled unanimously, but ACLL didn’t mention that evidence, or any other evidence over the past 50 years. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">ACLL continues: “The Fourteenth Amendment states, in relevant part: “nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.” U.S. Const., amend. XIV, § 1 (emphasis added).”<br />
<br />
But ACLL offers no evidence because “other amicus briefs are developing this point in more detail” so ACLL will only observe that the question has “gained considerable attention” and “has also been debated in conservative academic circles.” Well, that’s news, isn’t it? Many cites are given, but no quotes or conclusions. <br />
<br />
One cite that I appreciate is <span style="color:red">“Charles I. Lugosi, Conforming to the Rule of Law: When Person and Human Being Finally Mean the Same Thing in Fourteenth Amendment Jurisprudence, 4 Geo. J. L. & Pub. Pol’y 360 (2007).”<br />
<br />
My book, “How States can Outlaw Abortion in a Way that Survives Courts”, points out that one definition of “persons” in Roe itself is “recognizably human”. No case law supports the strange notion that there are human beings who are not “persons”. <br />
<br />
An appeal is made to the beliefs about the unborn of our ancestors: <span style="color:red">“Blackstone said, ‘Natural persons are such as the God of nature formed us.’ 1 Blackstone, Commentaries *123. ‘The principle of Blackstone’s rule was that “where life can be shown to exist, legal personhood exists.’” Craddock, supra, at 554-55.12 Given that the dominant view at the Fourteenth Amendment’s passage was that life begins at conception, there is a strong case that the Fourteenth Amendment applies to unborn children.”'''<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">This is a strong attack on Roe’s logic that “the unborn have never been treated by our laws as persons in the whole sense”, and this approach invokes the legal principle that what the Constitution meant when it was enacted is what we should follow now until Americans choose to change it.<br />
<br />
Of course, whatever any culture of any past century thought about it, unborn babies are, and always have been, '''''in fact,''''' fully human beings. But this evidence of court-recognize fact finders from past centuries merits inclusion with the consensus of court-recognized fact finders over Roe's 49 bloody years, including juries, expert witnesses, state legislatures, Congress, and individual judges who took a position on "when life begins". <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">After its history lesson, ACLL concludes with another “if...then” argument: “Thus, if all people are endowed with their Creator with the unalienable gift of life, and if unborn children are people, then the States may not deny equal protection of the laws to them.”<br />
<br />
“If”? “If”? <br />
<br />
'''“Therefore, this Court should not only overrule Roe and its progeny but also hold that the Fourteenth Amendment protects unborn children from abortion. If this is too far for the Court to go in the present case, then it should at the very least refrain from foreclosing that question from being presented in the future.”''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">ACLL deserves credit for its strong, clear request for protection of the unborn: It is a “fact that Americans viewed unborn children as people when they ratified the Fourteenth Amendment. As Roe itself conceded, establishing the suggestion of personhood would make the case for abortion collapse. Roe, 410 U.S. at 156-57.”<br />
<br />
==13. National Right to Life Committee and Louisiana Right to Life Federation== <br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184772/20210723123330497_NRLC.Dobbs%20Amici%20Brief.pdf Filed July 23, 2021]<br />
<br />
“b. States may assert an interest in protecting preborn, individual human life, including against pain, during all periods of pregnancy.” That was a subheading. The subject was given 152 more words which did not say babies are “human life”, or present supporting evidence, or point out that legal abortion must end when that is acknowledged. <br />
<br />
==14. Jewish Coalition For Religious Liberty==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184865/20210726093205304_19-1932%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20Jewish%20Coalition%20for%20Religious%20Liberty.pdf Filed July 26, 2021]<br />
<br />
“Given the arguments made in prior cases, JCRL is concerned that proponents of a constitutional right to abortion will assert a novel “religious-veto” view of religious <br />
liberty that, if accepted, would make it more difficult for sincere religious adherents to obtain accommodations in future cases.”<br />
<br />
'''Religious proponents of a constitutional right to abortion have previously offered a novel view under which their religious views would dictate what laws may govern every American, even those with different faiths or no faith at all. This Court should reject that novel “religious-veto” view as it would ultimately diminish religious liberty for everyone.''' <br />
<br />
2 Letter From George Washington to the Hebrew Congregation in Newport, Rhode Island, 18 August 1790, FOUNDERS ONLINE, <br />
(https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Washington/05-06-02-0135) (last visited July 13, 2020) (“[T]he Government of the United States, which gives to bigotry no <br />
sanction, to persecution no assistance requires only that they <br />
who live under its protection should demean themselves as good <br />
citizens, in giving it on all occasions their effectual support.” In <br />
this country, “every one shall sit in safety under his own vine and <br />
fig tree, and there shall be none to make him afraid.”). <br />
3 Zorach v. Clauson, 343 U.S. 306, 313 (1952) (“We make room <br />
for as wide a variety of beliefs and creeds as the spiritual needs <br />
of man deem necessary. We sponsor an attitude on the part of <br />
government that shows no partiality to any one group and that <br />
lets each flourish according to the zeal of its adherents and the <br />
appeal of its dogma.”). from targeting religious activity,4 require state actors to treat religious conduct as favorably as comparable secular conduct,5 or prevent the government from substantially burdening religious activity unless doing so is necessary to further a compelling government interest.6 These traditional Free Exercise protections require that the state accommodate religious exercise, but they do not prevent government entities from enforcing laws against Americans who lack religious objections.7 <br />
<br />
4 Church of the Lukumi Babalu Aye, Inc. v. City of Hialeah, 508 U.S. 520 (1993). <br />
<br />
5 Tandon v. Newsom, 141 S. Ct. 1294 (2021). <br />
<br />
6 Holt v. Hobbs, 574 U.S. 352 (2015). <br />
<br />
7 Wisconsin v. Yoder, 406 U.S. 205, 236 (1972) (creating a religious accommodation to exempt Amish parents from having to send their children to formal high-school while confirming that, “[n]othing we hold is intended to undermine the general applicability of the State's compulsory school-attendance statutes … .”). <br />
<br />
Such protections help ensure that religious adherents can fully participate in civil society without having to abandon their faith.8 Importantly, they protect religious adherents without requiring that the rest of society follow their faith.9 <br />
<br />
8 Sherbert v. Verner, 374 U.S. 398, 404 (1963) (finding it unconstitutional for the government to force a religious adherent to “choose between following the precepts of her religion and forfeiting benefits, on the one hand, and abandoning one of the precepts of her religion '''in order to accept work''', on the other hand.”); Braunfeld v. Brown, 366 U.S. 599, 616 (1961) (Stewart, J. dissenting) ('''“Pennsylvania has passed a law which compels an Orthodox Jew to choose between his religious faith and his economic survival. That is a cruel choice. It is a choice which I think no State can constitutionally demand.”''') <br />
<br />
9 Fulton v. City of Philadelphia, Pa., No. 19-123, 2021 WL 2459253, at *9 (U.S. June 17, 2021) (“CSS seeks only an accommodation that will allow it to continue serving the children of Philadelphia in a manner consistent with its religious beliefs; it does not seek to impose those beliefs on anyone else”); id. at *20 (Alito, J. concurring) (“the text of the Free Exercise Clause gives a specific group of people (those who wish to engage in the ‘exercise of religion’) the right to do so without hindrance”). 10 See e.g., Brief for American Jewish Congress, et. al., as Amici Curiae at 4, Webster v. Reprod. Health Servs., No. 88-605, 492 U.S. 490 (1989) (“given the dramatically contrasting religious views about whether and when abortion is permitted or required, state statutes drastically curtailing access to abortion <br />
<br />
In the past, religious supporters of a right to abortion have advocated for a novel conception of religious liberty that is incompatible with this traditional understanding. In their view, the fact that some religions may allow or even require women to obtain abortions should cause this Court to recognize a general constitutional right to abortion. <span style="color:red">See Brief for 178 Organizations as Amici Curiae in Support of Respondents at app. a, Planned Parenthood of Se. Pa. v. Casey, Nos. 91-744, 91-902, 505 U.S. 833 (1992) (“in the face of the great moral and religious diversity in American society over abortion and in the light of Jewish traditions which in some cases command abortion, and in many others permit it, the existing constitutional rules, set down by Roe v. Wade, should be maintained ... .”) (citation omitted). The “right” that such advocates propose would not be limited to protecting the religious exercise of objectors. Instead, it would prohibit states from pursuing their interest in protecting the lives of unborn children, even in instances that would not impact adherents’ exercise of their faith.10 The proponents of such a right thus do not seek to ensure that they can fully participate in society without compromising their religious exercise; they seek to yoke the rest of society to their theological preferences. <br />
<br />
This novel “religious-veto” view of religious liberty is inconsistent with this Court’s precedents and, if given credence, would make it more difficult to protect religious liberty in the future. <br />
<br />
'''At first glance, a doctrine that would allow religious adherents to entirely block the state from pursuing goals with which they disagree—extending beyond protecting their own free exercise—might seem appealing to religious liberty advocates. However, such a novel and imperious regime would quickly prove untenable, especially in a large and religiously diverse country. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Under the religious-veto view of the Free Exercise Clause, every decision in favor of a religious adherent would entirely foreclose the state from pursuing its chosen interests. Such paralysis is not desirable, nor should it be the goal of those who seek to foster a religiously free and diverse nation. <br />
<br />
In the long term, the novel “religious-veto” view would diminish protections for religious exercise. <br />
<br />
[In other words, PP was not just demanding “free exercise of religion” for believers, but “free exercise of religion” to murder unbelieving babies, undercutting the value of any “compelling government interest” in saving lives, and the fundamental right to life of human babies.]<br />
<br />
'''In Employment Division, Department of Human Resources of Oregon v. Smith, this Court worried that applying the then existing system of religious accommodations might be “courting anarchy.” 494 U.S. 872, 888 (1990). Amicus vigorously disagrees that granting religious accommodations poses such a risk and believes the Court should overrule Smith. In fact, this Court has recently loosened Smith’s strictures, and has signaled that it may reconsider them entirely. However, the novel religious-veto rule proposed by supporters of a right to abortion would legitimize Smith’s concerns.''' <br />
<br />
Granting every religious person in America an absolute veto over any law that burdens his faith might in fact be “courting anarchy.” In order to avoid the negative consequences that would predictably follow from accepting a religious-veto theory of religious liberty, courts would likely either double-down on Smith’s restrictive reading of the First Amendment or adopt a new and even less favorable framework for granting relief to religious adherents. Fortunately, religious vetoes are not what the First Amendment or this Court’s precedents require. <br />
<br />
Even if courts continued to apply something resembling the current standards, religious liberty proponents would be less likely to prevail under the religious-veto approach than they are under the existing religious-accommodation approach. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Currently, the government can only burden an adherent’s religious exercise if it can show that “the asserted harm of granting specific exemptions to particular religious claimants” is of the highest magnitude.11 That analysis, which is favorable to religious objectors, only makes sense so long as the remedy is an individual exemption. '''Under the religious-veto approach, courts would have to analyze the harm of completely negating a law because exemptions would no longer be limited to the specific objectors. In other words, courts would have to determine whether the government has a compelling interest in enforcing a law at a societal rather than to any one person at an individual level.''' Such an analysis is far less favorable to religious adherents than the current test.<br />
<br />
==15. Catholic Medical Association, National Association of Catholic Nurses-USA, Idaho Chooses Life and Texas Alliance for Life==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184905/20210726125612491_19-1932%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20The%20Catholic%20Medical%20Association%20et%20al..pdf Filed July 26, 2021]<br />
<br />
This entire brief attacks the subjectivity of Roe’s “viability” standard. The lower courts had overruled Mississippi’s 15 week abortion ban on the ground that 15 weeks is before “viability”, and states have no legitimate interest in regulating abortion before viability. <br />
<br />
The CMA conclusion: “...It is an illusory distinction without legal or practical significance. Roe has pretended to be what it is not for long enough. It should be overturned so that states once again may provide legal protection for unborn human life.” <br />
<br />
No evidence is offered to prove the unborn are human to judges who profess not to be able to “speculate” about such deep subjects. <br />
<br />
One point I found interesting: “The Court [in Roe] provided no explanation as to why the state’s interest in protecting human life should grow substantially as the unborn child grows and develops during the pregnancy. Nor did the Court attempt to explain why the state’s interest in protecting unborn human life just prior to viability should be nonexistent and then suddenly appear just after viability.” Respect for human life of course accords all human life “equal protection of the laws”. Without that uniquely American, uniquely Biblical respect, prejudice, dehumanization, and slavery face no restraint.<br />
<br />
==16. African-American, Hispanic, Roman Catholic and Protestant Religious and Civil Rights Organizations and Leaders==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184908/20210726131118652_19-1392_Amici%20Brief%20In%20Support%20of%20Petitioners.pdf Filed July 26, 2021] by Mathew D. Staver, Liberty Counsel<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">This brief associates abortion, abortionists, and abortion-supporting courts, with the Eugenics movement “THAT ELIMINATES “LESS DESIRABLE” RACES AND CERTAIN CLASSES OF PEOPLE TO EVOLVE A SUPERIOR HUMAN POPULATION.” It starts off with a shot at the district judge who insulted Mississippi’s motives as part of a long string of racist denials of rights; this Liberty Counsel brief accuses the whole abortion movement, inclu<span style="color:red">ding Roe, Doe, Casey, etc. as the gold standard of racism. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“The sinister goal of the eugenics movement was to eliminate ‘unfit’ and ‘undesirable’ people—those with mental and physical disabilities as well as certain races.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">LC points out the rest of the title of Darwin’s racist “Origin of Species” which today’s atheists normally leave out of their proud citations: “or, the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life”! Many quotes are given from Darwin’s 1871 book, “The Descent of Man”, which must be terribly embarrassing for any atheist or evolutionist. He makes a Ku Klux Klan Grand Wizard look like a paragon of intelligence and tolerance. <br />
<br />
You’ve just got to go to this link and read it. This guy’s tirades are a sight to behold! <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Then it’s Margaret Sanger’s turn. Wow! The district judge had derided Mississippi which “sterilized six out of ten black women” at a local county hospital “against their will.” Well, LC points out that was the doings of Margaret Sanger, the heroine of that district judge. <br />
<br />
Then it was the Supreme Court’s turn! <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“In Buck, the Court approved the compulsory sterilization of an allegedly ‘feeble minded’ woman who had been falsely adjudged ‘the probable potential parent of socially inadequate offspring.’ Buck, 274 U.S. at 205, 207. In a short opinion, Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., joined by seven other Justices, ‘offered a full-throated defense of forced sterilization...as a means to ‘prevent’ society from being ‘swamped with incompetence’” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">6 out of 10 sterilized at one hospital, the district judge says? That’s nothing: “between 1907 and 1983, more than 60,000 people were involuntarily sterilized” with a boost from the Supreme Court’s 1927 ruling! <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">What an admission from Justice Ginsberg: “And as the late Justice Ginsburg once observed: ‘[A]t the time Roe was decided, there was concern about population growth and particularly growth in '''populations that we don’t want to have too many of'''. So that Roe was going to be then set up for Medicaid funding of abortion.’”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Now the tie-in to abortion today: The racism, the extermination of blacks especially, is not just in the past. It’s now. “In Mississippi, 3,005 abortions were reported in 2018. Of those abortions, 72% were performed on black women, compared to just 24% on White women and 4% on women of other races.” There are ''pages'' of stats like that. “The racial disparity in abortions is largely intentional: A study based on 2010 Census data shows that nearly eight out of ten Planned Parenthood abortion clinics are within walking distance of predominantly Black or Hispanic neighborhoods. More specifically, Planned Parenthood intentionally located 86 percent of its abortion facilities in or near minority neighborhoods in the 25 U.S. counties with the most abortions. These 25 counties contain 19 percent of the U.S. population, including 28 percent of the Black population and 37 percent of the Hispanic/Latino population.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The relevance to the case before us: “states have a compelling interesting in ‘preventing abortion from becoming a tool of modern-day eugenics.’ Id. at 1783. And that interest far outweighs this Court’s judicially fashioned distortion of the Constitution.”<br />
<br />
So LC concludes, “The Court should condemn the district court’s disparaging rhetoric, reverse the decision below, and finally overrule Roe v. Wade and its progeny.”<br />
<br />
==17. Senators Josh Hawley, Mike Lee, and Ted Cruz==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184947/20210726160225898_2021-07-26%20Hawley%20Amicus%20Brief%20FINAL%20-%20PDFA.pdf Filed July 26, 2021]<br />
<br />
Roe should be overturned, not because it legalizes murder of baby human beings, but because it is “unworkable”. That is, states have no idea what to expect of courts before they pass a law. <br />
<br />
No evidence is offered that babies of people are people. No medical evidence, no mention of the unanimous establishment that “life begins” at the beginning, by every court-recognized fact-finder that has taken a position: juries, expert witnesses, state legislatures, congress, individual judges. The protection of babies, by legal recognition that they are fully human so ''no'' state can keep abortion legal, is not requested or, apparently, even thought of. <br />
<br />
However, it may be that this brief, more than any other, strummed the heart-strings of the Dobbs justices to overturn Roe, because its focus was ''not'' on the cruelty towards unseen, unheard babies, but to the inconvenience for lawyers, lawmakers, and judges. <br />
<br />
The reversal of Roe is sought. Of course if that is all that happens, without court recognition that babies are people, then abortion will still remain legal in many states. <br />
<br />
Some excerpts:<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Justice Scalia called the undue burden standard ‘ultimately standardless’ and ‘inherently manipulable,’ with the result that it ‘will prove hopelessly unworkable in practice.’” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">''“Asking whether a state interest in protecting fetal life or ensuring informed decisions about abortion outweighs any burdens on the abortion decision is like asking ‘whether a particular line is longer than a particular rock is heavy.’”'' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“When the lower courts cannot consistently apply—or even understand—a standard after nearly thirty years of development, something is wrong.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Casey’s failure to provide adequate guidance for state legislatures has led national abortion rights organizations to immediately file for an injunction any time a law protecting prenatal life is enacted—if only to ‘give it a try.’ See, e.g., Women’s Med. Prof’l Corp. v. Voinovich, 130 F.3d 187, 218–19 (6th Cir. 1997) (Boggs, J., dissenting) '''(“The post-Casey history of abortion litigation in the lower courts is reminiscent of the classic recurring football drama of Charlie Brown and Lucy in the Peanuts comic strip.”''' <br />
<br />
==18. Trinity Legal Center== <br />
<br />
[https://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184950/20210726160604723_41111%20pdf%20Schlueter.pdf Filed July 26, 2021]<br />
<br />
TLC clearly states that babies are “human life”, which is clear from ultrasound, and is affirmed by Justice Scalia. Instead of offering evidence, an appeal is made to common knowledge. TLC’s affirmation does not affect what it asks of the Court: that is, an end to all legal abortion, since they are all murder, is not requested. Not even an end to Roe is asked. Only that Mississippi’s 15 week ban be allowed to stand. <br />
<br />
Here is TLC’s affirmation of unborn life: “At the time these opinions were announced, the Justices repeatedly referred to the unborn child as ‘potential life.’ Because of advancement in medical science and technology, it is [now] known that life begins at conception. Thus, Justices O’Connor, White, and Scalia’s argument that the State has a compelling interest throughout pregnancy becomes more profound because the baby is not just a potential life, but it is the life of a whole, separate human being.<br />
<br />
“Furthermore, from a medical perspective, the unborn child is treated as a separate patient.<br />
<br />
“Justice Scalia further emphasized that the unborn child is not just potential life but human life. Thus, the State is protecting the human life of the unborn child and not just potential life. He stated: But ‘reasoned judgment’ does not begin by begging the question, as Roe and subsequent cases unquestionably did by assuming that what the State is protecting is the mere ‘potentiality of human life.’ '''The whole ''argument'' of abortion opponents''' is that what the Court calls the fetus and what others call the unborn child is a human life.”<br />
<br />
Unfortunately, even Scalia’s statement falls short of a position. He reports it only as an “argument” which courts ought to address. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">TLC says “The fourth factor focuses on changes in the facts. Since Roe, there have been many scientific and medical developments. Probably the most significant developments have been in ultrasound technology and fetal surgery. Ultrasound technology demonstrates that the unborn child is human life that is actually alive and shows the development of the baby. <br />
<br />
"This undermines Roe’s claim that the unborn child is only potential life.”<br />
<br />
The following statement seems to walk back an implication that all unborn babies are fully “human life”, but rather only those who survive to birth: “The presence of a heartbeat is a strong indicator that the child will survive to birth, therefore, debunking the idea that the unborn child is merely potential life.”<br />
<br />
==19. Thomas More Society== <br />
<br />
[https://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184897/20210726123826819_19-1932%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20The%20Thomas%20More%20Society.pdf Filed July 26, 2021]<br />
<br />
This brief makes the argument that abortion is not a right “deeply rooted in the nation’s history, legal tradition, and practices” so it does not merit “special protection”. Therefore Roe should be overruled.<br />
<br />
The Thomas Moore brief documents the regard for unborn human life over the centuries, but not to prove that the unborn are fully human so their lives must be protected by every state. The point of its history is rather to prove that Roe should be overruled because it was largely based on claims that unborn babies were never treated by our laws as “persons in the whole sense”. <br />
<br />
It is a history of abortion law going back to the common law of England. It also reviews the laws of 30 states to show that in Unborn Victims of Violence Laws, where killing a pregnant woman is counted as a double murder, there is no distinction based on “viability”, so therefore the reliance of Roe and Casey on viability is unsupported in American law. <br />
<br />
There were “scores of cases” between 1850 and 1870 where courts treated abortion as against laws “enacted with an intent to protect unborn human life.” <br />
<br />
Since I am from Iowa, it is cool to see a holding from an Iowa court from that time: “In 1868, the Iowa Supreme Court, interpreting an 1858 statute, condemned abortion as ‘an act highly dangerous to the mother, and generally fatal, and frequently designed to be fatal, to the child.’ State v. Moore, 25 Iowa 128, 136 (1868).” A 1934 Idaho Supreme Court said its law was “to discourage abortions because thereby the life of a human being, the unborn child, is taken.” <br />
<br />
To summarize, <span style="color:red">“more than sixty decisions from forty-two states have recognized that their nineteenth-century abortion statutes were enacted with an intent to protect unborn human life. Given this wealth of case authority, the Court’s conclusion in Roe that state court decisions ‘focused on the State’s interest in protecting the woman’s health rather than in preserving the embryo and fetus’...is unsupportable.” <br />
<br />
Also, contrary to Roe’s claim, there was not an exemption for mothers from prosecution: <span style="color:red">“at least nineteen states criminalized the woman’s participation in her own abortion.” In the remaining states, women were not prosecuted either because they were considered co-victims, or because the woman’s testimony against the abortionist was needed but could not be compelled if she were treated as an accomplice, and because “in most states a criminal conviction cannot be based on the uncorroborated testimony of an accomplice.”<br />
<br />
The Moore brief spends its final section attacking Roe’s “viability” rule. The brief concludes, “The court in Casey stated that ‘a decision to overrule should rest on some special reason over and above the belief that a prior case was wrongly decided.’...If so, Amicus submits that there are more than 60 million special reasons to do so. Roe v. Wade should be overruled.”<br />
<br />
Not asked for is a ruling that babies of people are people, making abortion murder, whose legality no state may permit.<br />
<br />
==20. Melinda Thybault Moral Outcry==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184968/20210726175018044_41206%20pdf%20Parker%20III%20br.pdf Filed July 26]<br />
<br />
An interesting way to establish “standing” for a petition (defined not as a legal “petition”, or brief, before a court, but the popular sense of a short statement signed by a multitude) before the Supreme Court: <br />
<br />
“Melinda Thybault and The Signers, as do all citizens, have the right to petition the United States government for redress of grievances. U.S. Constitution Amendment I. With all due respect, Amici believe the Supreme Court is the specific branch of their government which has committed this crime against humanity by forcing all states to legalize abortion. Therefore, Amici must bring their arguments to this Court, not Congress or the States.”<br />
<br />
View the petition at https://themoraloutcry.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/the-moral-outcry-petition.pdf<br />
<br />
Quoting a law school and a U.N. document, she summarizes: <span style="color:red">“A crime against humanity occurs when the government withdraws legal protection from a class of human beings resulting in severe deprivation of rights, up to and including death.” (See Crime Against Humanity at https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/crime_against_humanity and see U.N. Office, Genocide Prevention, Crimes Against Humanity https://www.un.org/en/genocideprevention/crimes-against-humanity.shtml; Treaty of Rome (1957). See also Convention on the Non-Applicability of Statutory Limitations to War )<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">She “adopted” children at the frozen embryo stage, and had them conceived through vitro fertilization, not just proving but demonstrating “living evidence that, with today’s science, viability begins at fertilization.” Unborn children literally are “viable” even from the embryo stage!!! Their sex can be determined six days after fertilization! <br />
<br />
Her ground for reversing Roe? She cites a “Law of Judicial Precedent” authored by Justices Garner, Gorsuch, Kavanaugh, and Breyer, which says one ground for reversing precedent is “The decision has been met with general dissatisfaction, protest or severe criticism.” So she got a petition signed by over half a million citizens calling abortion a “crime against humanity”, and points out: <br />
<br />
“Through The Moral Outcry Petition, over 500,000 Americans have correctly identified legalized abortion as ‘a crime against humanity’ which is very, very ‘severe criticism.’ With due respect to the Court, every single signature on the Moral Outcry Petition is, by itself, evidence under The Law of Judicial Precedent12 because each person calling abortion a crime against humanity is “severely” criticizing this Court’s abortion jurisprudence.” <br />
<br />
This only adds to “continued ‘severe criticism’ for 48 years. Most reasonable observers would agree that Roe has been met with general dissatisfaction and major protest since its inception. The Court has an ethical and moral duty to never forget past crimes against humanity, to never stand by silently while one is occurring today, and to rescue the perishing.”<br />
<br />
She updates Casey’s premise that abortion prevents “unwanted children” by pointing out that today’s “safe haven” laws have eliminated “unwanted children”. She makes the point without conceding that Casey’s excuse was ever justified: “Because of Safe Haven laws in all fifty states, [which permit mothers to easily give away their babies without being charged for neglect or abandonment] women can now have the “freedom” of Roe, and make their own decision about the ultimate direction of their life, without the crime against humanity of killing the child and injuring themselves.”<br />
<br />
Under Safe Haven laws, a mother “can transfer responsibility to the state with no questions asked, no legal procedure, and unlike abortion, at no cost.”<br />
<br />
The evidence that babies are people? She quotes a phrase from Gonzales: “Infant life” to prove “that this Court has already recognized exists in the womb when it is aborted.” <br />
<br />
(The Gonzales context of the “infant life” quote: “Respect for human life finds an ultimate expression in the bond of love the mother has for her child....Whether to have an abortion requires a difficult and painful moral decision. ...it seems unexceptionable to conclude some women come to regret their choice to abort the infant life they once created and sustained.”)<br />
<br />
More evidence that babies are people: “new science, including but not limited to DNA testing, in vitro fertilization (IVF) and sonograms, which were not available to this Court in 1973, now show what the Roe Court did not know, or even the Casey Court, that life begins at conception.” But she doesn’t populate this claim with any details or evidence, thinking the Supreme Court already concedes that babies are people: “But the Court has now correctly found in Gonzales that abortion terminates an “infant life,” at 159 at the moment of the abortion.”<br />
<br />
Roe v. Wade isn’t the Supreme Court’s first “crime against humanity”. “Abortion is a crime against humanity. Like Dred Scott v. Sanford, 60 U.S. 393 (1857), which purported to enshrine slavery in the Constitution forever. It is unjust. Dred Scott also decided unjustly that African Americans ‘had no rights which the white man was bound to respect’, at 400. The Dred Scott decision prevented national compromise from occurring and many commentators feel it eventually led to the Civil War. A crime against humanity occurs when the government withdraws legal protection from a class of human beings, as this Court did in Scott.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“...the Court has not yet fully reversed Roe, Doe, and Casey. No American citizen should have to live under, nor as history tragically demonstrates, should they stand by silently, while their government sanctions and even promotes crimes against humanity.” Another low point in the Supreme Court’s grasp of 14th Amendment equal rights, she mentions, was Plessy v. Ferguson, 163 U.S. 537 (1896) which, like Roe and Dred Scott, “denied legal protection to a class of human beings” and “ignored the plain language of the Fourteenth Amendment”. “Plessy accepted the gloss that ‘separate but equal’ was ‘equal’.” <br />
<br />
She repeats, “When the government withdraws legal protection from a class of human beings, it is the classic definition of a crime against humanity.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">All nine justices know better, she demonstrates, by quoting them all calling the decision to abort “painful” and “difficult”. Five of the nine added “moral”. What could make such an allegedly “safe” “procedure”, which isn’t even expensive compared with most surgeries, either “painful” or “difficult”? Nothing can account for it, if babies are mere tumors or animals. Take it out! It doesn’t belong there! The only thing that can make the decision “painful” or “difficult” is that it is a decision to murder a healthy beautiful baby. That also makes it a “moral” decision. Removing a tumor or an animal is not a “moral” decision. By these words, all nine justices prove they know unborn babies of people are people. <br />
<br />
And yet before this year, no state has asked the Court to outlaw abortion because it murders people. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“The Supreme Court in Gonzales unanimously came to the conclusion that abortion is a ‘difficult and painful decision,’ at 159. Gonzales stated, ‘Whether or not to have an abortion is a difficult and painful moral decision.’ The five-person majority consisted of Justices Kennedy, Roberts, Thomas, Alito and Scalia. The four Justices in dissent, Justices Ginsburg, Stevens, Souter, and Breyer, also said: ‘The Court is surely correct that, for most women, abortion is a painfully difficult decision.’ The dissent left out the word ‘moral’ as part of the difficulty. Gonzales, FN 7, at 183, per Ginsburg, dissenting. Thus, all nine justices agreed that abortion is ‘difficult’ and ‘painful.’ Why? Because at some level, most people ‘know’ or ‘sense’ that abortion kills a human life.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Even abortionists admit they know better: “Planned Parenthood has recently admitted through its chief physician in Missouri, that: “Sometimes the choice to end a pregnancy, even when it is a highly desired one, is a really difficult one for people”, Dr. Eisenberg, Planned Parenthood St. Louis Clinic Director.23 Abortionist Lisa Harris states: “I know that for every woman whose abortion I perform, I stop a developing human from being born . . . Abortion feels morally complicated because it stops a developing human being from being born, which, of course, it does.”24 (23 NBC News, nbcnews.com by Ericka Edwards and Ali Galarte, May 28, 2019. 24 “My Day as An Abortion Care Provider,” Oct. 22, 2019, New York Times OP/ED.)<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Mothers know better, although not necessarily in time. What “devastating psychological consequences” for mothers could follow successful removal of cancer?!! But Casey acknowledges they often follow an abortion, Melinda points out. “Many, many women are morally conflicted as this Court has recognized. Many women feel they have murdered their own child, with devastating consequences.” (The full sentence from Casey: “In attempting to ensure that a woman apprehend the full consequences of her decision, the State furthers the legitimate purpose of reducing the risk that a woman may elect an abortion, only to discover later, with devastating psychological consequences, that her decision was not fully informed.”)<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Even the “Roe” of “Roe v. Wade” came to know better: “The affidavit of Norma McCorvey, the ‘Roe’ of Roe v. Wade describing her experience working in the abortion industry, which changed her mind about abortion and caused her to seek reversal of her case, is still on file in McCorvey v. Hill, 385 F. 3d 846 (5th Cir. 2004) (cert. denied) (Supreme Court Docket No. 04-967).” (“Cert. denied” is the Supreme Court’s way of saying they were too busy to deal with her.)<br />
<br />
“Safe Haven” laws let a mother give her baby, no cost, no guilt, to any medical facility or fire station. Even small towns have fire stations. In Mississippi a mother has three days to do that. Rules vary with the states; in North Dakota, mothers have up to a year after birth. Mothers have nine months to decide. Mississippi Medicaid covers all prenatal costs for low income mothers. Contrasted with the high pressure abortion decisions, the high cost of abortion, the limited availability of killing centers, and the guilt. <br />
<br />
Safe Haven babies don’t languish in foster care for years. A footnote to a news article: “Thousands line up to adopt Safe Haven baby”.<br />
<br />
Why are Safe Haven laws a reason to reverse Roe?<br />
<br />
“The burden of an ‘unwanted’ child was a large factor in the Court’s analysis in Roe itself and Casey. ‘Maternity or additional offspring, may force upon the woman a distressful life and future. Psychological harm may be imminent. Mental and physical health may be taxed by child care. There is also the distress, for all concerned, associated with the unwanted child, and there is the problem of bringing a child into a family already unable, psychologically and otherwise, to care for it.’ Roe, 410 U.S. 113 at 153.” <br />
<br />
Viola, these needs are now met by Safe Haven laws, without cost, the inconvenience of long distance travel, guilt, or murder. There are no unwanted children. “This is a major, substantial change in circumstances that has never existed before in American history.”<br />
<br />
“As a fourth major ‘change in circumstances,’ at least two million Americans every year are now waiting to adopt newborn children. Far more people are waiting to adopt newborns than the number of aborted children per year.37 This development satisfies Casey’s stare decisis reliance test because there is no longer a need for abortion to give freedom from unwanted children to women.”<br />
<br />
(37 www.AmericanAdoptions.com/pregnant/waiting_adoptive_families)<br />
<br />
“Fifth, Today Science Clearly Demonstrates That Life Begins At Conception. New Scientific Advances Justify Changing Prior Precedent Under Stare Decisis.” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Supreme Court opinions [that are based on old science] should change when science advances. No society or court should be stuck in 1970’s science. One simple example is that DNA testing was not even used in the courts until the mid-1980’s. Anonymous DNA testing of the “infant life” in the womb and a DNA sample from the mother now shows that two separate humans exist. Sonograms, another example which started after Roe, convinced Dr. Bernard Nathanson, the founder of NARAL, as it should this Court, that he was wrong to kill innocent human life.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Court recognition of Life: “The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals has already upheld South Dakota’s law requiring abortionists (against their will and financial self-interest) to tell a woman that ‘abortion will terminate the life of a whole, separate, unique, living human being,’ defined as a member of the human species (Homo sapiens). Planned Parenthood v. Rounds, 530 F. 3d 724 (8th Cir. 2008) (en banc). The Eighth Circuit reviewed the voluminous evidence and determined there was adequate scientific evidence to uphold the law, which was “act based, not opinion or ideology, just as this Court has courageously done in recognizing the child in the womb as ‘infant life’ in Gonzales. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Several quotes from federal appeals courts about the need to reconsider Roe concluded with this zinger: “In sum, if courts were to delve into the facts underlying Roe’s balancing scheme with present day knowledge, they might conclude that the woman’s ‘choice’ is far more risky and less beneficial, and the child’s sentience far more advanced than the Roe Court knew.’ McCorvey v. Hill 385 F.3d 846 page 11 (5th Cir. 2004) (cert. denied)”<br />
<br />
What an understatement: “In the case of a crime against humanity, it is the duty of the Court to correct its own error. All judges should be open in appropriate cases, to considering evidence that killing ‘infant life’ in the womb is wrong, and that changes in circumstances have produced sound and necessary reasons for reversal.”<br />
<br />
Although Melinda’s evidence and argument supports asking the Court to outlaw all abortion across America, her conclusion only asks that Mississippi be allowed to keep its 15 week ban, and that Roe be overruled (leaving individual states to decide whether to keep abortion legal). <br />
<br />
<br />
==21. The Becket Fund for Religious Liberty==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185042/20210727133310143_19-1392%20Becket%20Amicus%20Brief%20Dobbs%20FINAL.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
Becket's question for SCOTUS: "Whether the Roe/Casey framework should be replaced in order to reduce the number and intensity of religious liberty conflicts".<br />
<br />
Examples of "religious liberty conflicts": "Surely the federal government has many ways to distribute contraceptives to American women without dragooning the Little Sisters of the Poor [an adoption agency] or other religious nonprofits....And surely state governments have many ways to ensure access to abortion without involving churches. But the shadow of ''Roe'' and ''Casey'' prompted these governments to deny exemptions to religious groups, or to eliminate religious exemptions that had existed for decades. <br />
<br />
"Another area where abortion proponents have attacked religious exercise is pharmacy regulations. In some states, government officials have sought to force pharmacists to dispense Plan B and Ella despite—'''or even because of'''—their religious objections. <br />
For example, Washington State, acting at the behest of abortion advocates, required religious objectors to dispense Plan B and Ella despite the fact that the State allowed pharmacies not to stock or dispense these drugs for “‘an almost unlimited variety of secular reasons[.]’” <br />
<br />
After reviewing these conflicts, Becket said these conflicts would go away if SCOTUS would simply pull back its nose out of America's consciences: "But it does not have to be this way. It is possible to address abortion through ordinary politics, free from the systemic deformations and misincentives generated by the Roe/Casey regime. '''This is the American experience related to abortion before the Court departed from the Constitution’s text, structure, history and tradition in Roe/Casey.''' And it is the American experience with a variety of other contested issues related to human life and religious liberty, and the experience of many European countries today."<br />
<br />
==22. U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and Other Religious Organization==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185030/20210727130348783_13-1932.Dobbs.final.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
Neither Constitutional Text Nor History Supports a Right to Take the Life of an Unborn Child at Any Stage of Pregnancy. Neither Constitutional Text Nor History Supports a Right to Take the Life of an Unborn Child at Any Stage of Pregnancy <br />
<br />
Conclusion: Ultimately these cases, with all the problems they entail for lower courts, land on this Court’s doorstep. And under the current jurisprudence, it will never stop. This should not be. The way to prevent it is to return the issue to the states, where it properly belongs. (paragraph preceding “conclusion”)<br />
<br />
Circuit judges have been skeptical that preenforcement challenges should be allowed at all in the abortion context because such challenges do not allow the plaintiff’s predictions about the challenged law’s effect to be tested. Some appellate courts have concluded outright that it is an abuse of discretion for a trial judge to issue a pre-enforcement injunction since the effect of such an abortion law is open to debate.27 This Court too has indicated that as-applied challenges are to be favored over facial challenges in abortion cases. Gonzales, 550 U.S. at 167 (stating that a facial challenge in that case “should not have been entertained in the first instance”). And yet, the practice of bringing pre-enforcement facial challenges to abortion legislation continues, leading inevitably to (a) judgments based on speculative evidence, (b) a blurring of the distinction between facial and as applied challenges, and (c) court decisions based often on factors for which the government itself is not even responsible (such as the number and location of abortion clinics in a given state). This impossible state of affairs would correct itself if the Court were to follow Justice Scalia’s suggestion to, in his words, “get out of this area, where we have no right to be, and where we do neither ourselves nor the country any good by remaining.” Casey, 505 U.S. at 1002 (Scalia, J., concurring in the judgment in part, dissenting in part). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Roe also attempted, based on prior decisions of this Court that had declared protection under the Due Process Clause for rights deeply rooted in the Nation’s 6 history and tradition, to locate an abortion right in history. The attempt was seriously flawed. “[S]ubsequent scholarship has demonstrated conclusively that acceptance of abortion is not in any sense deeply rooted in the Nation’s history and traditions. The opposite is true: it is the prohibition of abortion that has deep roots in English and American history.” Institutional Integrity and Respect for Precedent, supra at 553-54. An exhaustive study of the issue concludes that “[t]he tradition of treating abortion as a crime was unbroken through nearly 800 years of English and American history until the ‘reform’ movement of the later twentieth century.” Joseph W. Dellapenna, DISPELLING THE MYTHS OF ABORTION HISTORY xii (2006).2 <br />
<br />
See Michael Stokes Paulsen, The Worst Constitutional Decision of All Time, 78 NOTRE DAME L. REV. 995, 1007 (2003) (“I know of no serious scholar, judge, or lawyer who attempts to defend Roe’s analysis on textual or historical grounds.”); Richard S. Myers, Lower Court “Dissent” from Roe and Casey, 18 AVE MARIA L. REV. 1, 6 (2020) (noting that “no one defends the Court’s opinion in Roe”). ...<br />
<br />
D. Multiple State Interests Justify Prohibitions on Abortion Before Viability. There is an unfortunate tendency in abortion cases to become lost in minutiae. The factual record in individual cases can be lengthy and complex, the case law complicated and difficult to apply. But these case-specific features cannot disguise <span style="color:red">the tragedy that is the common denominator in these cases: the intentional destruction, on an unprecedented scale, of the most innocent and defenseless of the human family. In the truest sense, they are our family, our brothers and sisters. Like all members of the human family, they should be treasured and loved. Nothing in the Constitution requires states to stand idly by while their lives are deliberately taken. <br />
<br />
21 <span style="color:red">The Declaration of Independence places the right to life first in the list of inalienable rights. The Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments list the right to life first among those rights of which the government cannot deprive a person without due process of law. Thomas Jefferson’s March 31, 1809 letter to the Republican Citizens of Washington County, Maryland, stated: “The care of human life and happiness, and not their destruction, is the first and only legitimate object of good government.” 8 THE WRITINGS OF THOMAS JEFFERSON 165 (H.A. Washington, ed.) (1871). <br />
<br />
...“The States—indeed, all civilized nations—demonstrate their commitment to life by treating homicide as a serious crime.” Id. The same can be said for state prohibitions on assisted suicide, <br />
<br />
==23. LONANG Institute==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185037/20210727131024868_19-1392%20tsac%20Lonang%20Institute.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">[Every word in this section is from Lonang's brief, except what is in these brackets, and colored blue. They are blue, because even though I have copied so much of their brief because I see in it potential for getting baby murder outlawed in every state, Lonang argues at one point that courts should NOT do that, but should remain "neutral" about whether states can support murder.]<br />
<br />
The Declaration Of Independence Affirms That The States Enjoy Police Power Which Carries With It The Power To Prohibit Abortion ... The Fourteenth Amendment Requires Only Procedural Due Process, not Substantive Due Process ...Courts Are The Mere Instruments Of The Law, And Can Will Nothing ...... According to The Law Of Nature, Judicial Power Extends To Issuing Orders In Cases And Controversies, Not To Making Rules Of General Applicability..... Judicial Decisions Articulating Substantive Due Process Rights Are Without Constitutional Textual Support ..... ONLY THE STATES AND THE PEOPLE ENJOY THE LAWFUL AUTHORITY, TO CONSTITUTIONALIZE FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS “IMPLICIT IN LIBERTY”, OR “DEEPLY ROOTED”, OR “INHERENT IN INDIVIDUAL AUTONOMY.” .....<br />
[CONTINUED IN FIRST SECTION]<br />
<br />
The Federal Courts Possess No Article III Power To Discover Or Constitutionalize Textually Unsupported Rights Or Impose A Duty To Enforce Those Rights On The States........ <br />
the law of nature provides that a government’s judicial branches are limited to declaring what is the law, not its codification. The concept of judicial review affirms that the province of a judge is to declare the law, not to make it <br />
<br />
The Supreme Court is routinely presented with the legal arguments that certain statutory or constitutional words or phrases have no fixed meaning. The Court is then called upon to supply a new meaning other than the one stated in the text. This process adjusts the words or phrases chosen by the lawgiver, to establish as precedent the Court’s desired meaning. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Denying the textual meaning of legal words is not a novel invention of the Court. Instead, it has historical precedent going back to the first recorded case in human history. At issue in that case, In Re: Adam, Eve & the Devil, 3 Genesis 1 (0001), was the intent and meaning of a statute prohibiting consumption of fruit from a specific tree in a Garden in Eden. A statute prohibiting such consumption was at issue. Two of the parties violated the statute and entered a guilty plea. A second statute prohibited various forms of fraud and deception. A third party was charged under this statute alleging he used deception to induce co-defendants to consume the prohibited fruit. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">At trial, he argued that he was not liable on the theory that the first statute did not actually prohibit consumption—that the words in the statute did not mean what the text declared. [Plausible but not recorded interaction between God and Satan.] As such he argued that he did not engage in deceit in his statements to the other parties. The Court was unpersuaded. It rejected the argument, finding that the prohibition was clear and unambiguous, reflected the drafter’s original intent and was, therefore, enforceable as written.3 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">This Court’s fourteenth amendment substantive due process jurisprudence is based on the same argument first made in Eden—the words of the law do not mean what they say. The Court has maintained the amendment itself contains a substantive due process clause into which the Court is empowered to pour un-enumerated fundamental rights of its own divination. The Court’s atextual adjustments, purportedly limited by the outcomeflexible concept of “judicial restraint,” have been internally justified by its moral appeals to novel high-sounding phrases such as “implicit in the concept of ordered liberty,”4 or the “concept of personal liberty,”5 or “deeply rooted in this nation’s history and tradition,”6 or “inherent in the concept of individual autonomy.”7 Alas, none of these phrases have textual support in the amendment itself. Nor has the Court been granted any state legislative power in Article III to define ordered or personal liberty, individual <br />
[])<br />
4 Judicial decisions finding that a state statute violates fundamental values discovered as “implicit in the concept of ordered liberty” are without textual support. See Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479, 500 (1965) (Harlan. J., concurring) (quoting Palko v. Connecticut, 302 U. S. 319, 325 (1937) (Cardozo, J.) overruled on other grounds, Benton v. Maryland, 395 U.S. 784 (1969)). <br />
<br />
5 Judicial decisions finding that a state statute violates a woman’s right to abortion discovered in the “concept of personal liberty” are without textual support. See Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113, 153 (1973). <br />
<br />
6 Judicial decisions finding that a state statute violates rights discovered as “deeply rooted in this nation’s history and tradition” are without textual support. See Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 U.S. 702, 721 (1997) “The Due Process Clause specially protects those fundamental rights and liberties which are, objectively, deeply rooted in this Nation's history and tradition.” Palko, 302 U.S. 325. The Court looks to principles of justice “so rooted in the traditions and conscience of our people as to be ranked as fundamental’) (quoting Snyder v. Massachusetts, 291 U. S. 97, 105 (1934) overruled in part on other grounds by Malloy v. Hogan, 378 U.S. 1 (1964)). <br />
<br />
7 Judicial decisions finding that a state statute violates a fundamental right which is “inherent in the concept of individual autonomy” without regard to history or tradition is without textual support. See Obergefell v. Hodges, 576 US 644; 135 S. Ct. at 2629 (2015) <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">autonomy, or traipse through history and tradition to discover and append any un-enumerated substantive individual rights into the amendment’s textually non-existent “substantive” due process clause. Nor does the law of nature of judicial review empower this Court to write new Constitutional text. The authority of a judge is to declare what written law already exists. The standard legal maxim is, Jus dicere, et non jus dare, also known as judicis est jus dicere non dare. The province of a judge is to declare the law, not to make it.8 At what point in time and on whose authority did that rule, binding on judges in England and America for centuries, become nonbinding? Even if fundamental rights are so demonstrably “implicit, inherent and rooted” as the Court maintains, the power of judicial review, nevertheless, does not carry with it the power to insert those rights into the fourteenth amendment. Amending the Constitution is governed by Article V in which the Court plays no part. <br />
<br />
8 “When an act of Congress is appropriately challenged in the courts as not conforming to the constitutional mandate, the judicial branch of the government has only one duty; to lay the article of the Constitution which is invoked beside the statute which is challenged and to decide whether the latter squares with the former. All the court does, or can do, is to announce its considered judgment upon the question. The only power it has, if such it may be called, is the power of judgment. This court neither approves nor condemns any legislative policy. Its delicate and difficult office is to ascertain and declare whether the legislation is in accordance with, or in contravention of, the provisions of the Constitution; and, having done that, its duty ends.” United States v. Butler, 297 U.S. 1, 62-63 (1936). <br />
<br />
Even assuming arguendo that the Court’s “implicit, inherent and rooted” approach to discovering un-enumerated fundamental rights is superior to legislative debate and enactment, or preferable to the Constitution’s chosen method of amendment, or that the Court’s wisdom and judgment in divining such rights is the manifestation of jurisprudential perfection, the fact remains that such an approach is without textual Constitutional support. Whether or not un-enumerated fundamental rights are or are not “implicit, inherent and rooted” in the Constitution’s fourteenth amendment, they are not found in the text itself. As such their discovery and incorporation into the law of the land is for the States and the People to decide.9 <br />
<br />
The case now before the Court provides an opportunity to restore judicial review to declaring what the text says. It provides an opportunity to resist anew the temptation first argued at Eden to opine to the contrary. The restoration will leave the State of Mississippi free to adopt laws protecting a pregnant woman by prohibiting conduct inducing a miscarriage or procuring an abortion. Such a determination would not merely return the law of abortion to its pre-1973 status. It would return judicial review itself to pre-substantive due process status <br />
<br />
9 See U.S. Const. amend. IX, “The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.” See also U.S. Const. amend. X, “The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people. <br />
<br />
A. The Declaration Of Independence Affirms That The States Enjoy Police Power Which Carries With It The Power To Prohibit Abortion. <br />
<br />
The question posed by the Court pertains to the power of a state, in this case Mississippi. The Declaration of Independence not only declared the States to be free and independent, but also declared the legal basis and extent of their power. <span style="color:red">No understanding of state power is complete without consideration of the Declaration. The Declaration grounded civil power itself on the “laws of nature and of nature’s God.” <br />
<br />
That is what it says. It further declared this law of nature affirmed that every person may lawfully enjoy those rights which God has given. The laws of nature and its God pledges to guarantee to each person: <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among 8 these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.–That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed. . . <br />
<br />
Remember that under the Declaration, the “governments instituted among men,” whose job it is to secure the rights of the people, exclusively referred to the several state governments, as no federal or national government then existed. Accordingly, the duty to declare and secure the rights of the people belongs to the States themselves, not to any branch, department or agency of the federal government later created. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Even if this Court’s search for new fundamental un-enumerated substantive due process rights was constitutionally legitimate, it has neglected to look carefully at the “laws of nature and of nature’s God” as a source of those rights. Any legitimate search even for rights “deeply rooted” in American history and tradition would consider unalienable rights granted by the Creator as asserted in such a quintessential founding American document. In other words, the first place to look for any rights of the people would be to examine those rights granted by the Creator, not any purported rights invented by people. And if the Creator has not deemed it necessary or advisable to confer a particular right, then the logical conclusion would be that such a right does not exist. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Nevertheless the state governments’ purpose is to secure these natural and unalienable rights and 9 as we have seen, any un-enumerated rights are reserved to the People (not the judicial branch) to find, identify, and assert, and their States to enact. The People created their state governments for this purpose and their national government for a much more limited purpose. The People did not establish a national government with a judicial branch given any power to make law or discover un-enumerated rights. <br />
<br />
As to the power of the States, the Declaration declared: <br />
<br />
That these United Colonies are, and of Right ought to be, Free and Independent States; . . . and that as Free and Independent States, they have full Power to levy War, conclude Peace, contract Alliances, establish Commerce, and to do all other Acts and Things which Independent States may of right do. (emphasis added). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The States in the union have all power to do all “Acts and Things which Independent States may of right do.” The Constitution of a state may further limit this power. The United States Constitution including the fourteenth amendment also limits the power of States. But neither the framers nor text of that amendment contain any substantive due process limitation on a state’s police power. <br />
<br />
...Mississippi is such a state. It stands on equal footing with the original States. It enjoys the police power to adopt laws prohibiting abortion because the Declaration of Independence recognizes it may do such acts according to the law of nature. Nothing in the text of the Fourteenth amendment legitimately articulates a substantive due process limitation on that power. <br />
<br />
Even if a right to privacy implicit in the concept of ordered liberty translates into a right to abortion, nothing in the text of Article III, or the power of judicial review, extends to this Court a power to interlineate that right into the <br />
<br />
<br />
B. The Fourteenth Amendment Requires Only Procedural Due Process, not Substantive Due Process. The fourteenth amendment states in part: No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; . . . (emphasis added). U.S. Const., amend XIV. Due process pertains entirely to matters of procedure. “Procedural due process rules are meant to protect persons not from the deprivation, but from the mistaken or unjustified deprivation of life, liberty, or property.” Carey v. Piphus, 435 U.S. 247, 259 (1978). “[P]rocedural due process rules are shaped by the risk of error inherent in the truthfinding process as applied to the generality of cases.” Mathews v. Eldridge, 424 U.S. 319, 344 (1976) (emphasis added). The core of these requirements is notice and an opportunity to be heard (often a hearing) before an impartial tribunal. Due process may also require 13 an opportunity for confrontation and crossexamination, and for discovery; that a decision be made based on the record, and that a party be allowed to be represented by counsel. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">A review of the text of the fourteenth amendment reflects no textual support for any “substantive due process” clause. Even the term is an oxymoron. If we took the words in their ordinary meaning, “due process” merely signifies a proper procedure. The word “substantive,” on the other hand, means rights and duties as opposed to the procedural rules by which such things are established or enforced. Thus, the term “substantive due process,” in plain English, means non-procedural proper procedure. Logically, “substantive due process” is a type of “A = Not A” statement, where something is procedural and not procedural simultaneously. But unlike philosophy or mathematics, An “A = Not A” statement in a legal context is just plain illogical. Either the Court, when invoking substantive due process, is talking about procedure or it is not. If yes, then due process as a legal doctrine stands on its own and there is no need to resort to substantive due process. If no, then due process does not affect the matter, for it does not relate to procedure. This brings us back to Eden where the argument was first made that the words of the law do not mean what they say. While we acknowledge the argument has the weight of time behind it, originating in great antiquity, we respectfully urge the Court not to follow that ancient precedent. <br />
<br />
C. Courts Are The Mere Instruments Of The Law, And Can Will Nothing. <br />
Applying a dialectical interpretation to words is not an element of judicial power. Nothing in the case or controversy jurisdiction of the Supreme Court in Article III, sec. 2, extends any power to the Court to identify un-enumerated fundamental rights “implicit in the concept of ordered liberty,” or in the “concept of personal liberty,” or “deeply rooted in this nation’s history and tradition,” or “inherent in the concept of individual autonomy.”13 <br />
<br />
Alexander Hamilton affirmed this view, writing in Federalist No. 78, that the judicial branch of government is the least dangerous because it has neither force nor will, only judgment. Chief Justice Marshall agreed, noting that: ''Judicial power, as contradistinguished from the powers of the law, has no existence. Courts are the mere instruments of the law, and can will nothing.'' Osborn v. Bank of the United States, 22 U.S. (9 Wheat.) 738, 866 (1824) (Chief Justice Marshall).14 In other words, the Court <br />
<br />
14 See also United States v. Butler, 297 U.S. 1, 78-79 (1936) (“The power of courts to declare a statute unconstitutional is subject to two guiding principles of decision which ought never to be absent from judicial consciousness. One is that courts are concerned only with the power to enact statutes, not with their wisdom. The other is that while unconstitutional exercise of power by the executive and legislative branches of the government is subject to judicial restraint, the only check upon our own exercise of power is our own sense of self-restraint. For the removal of unwise laws from the statute books appeal lies not to the courts, but to the ballot and to the processes of democratic government.”) The instant case calls for self-restraint. <br />
<br />
<br />
cannot will un-enumerated fundamental rights into Constitutional existence. It has no judicial power to will rights “implicit in the concept of ordered liberty,” or in the “concept of personal liberty,” or “deeply rooted in this nation’s history and tradition,” or “inherent in the concept of individual autonomy” into textual existence. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The high watermark of the Supreme Court misuse of judicial review came in Cooper v. Aaron, 358 U.S. 1 (1958). In its opinion, the court remarked that Article VI of the Constitution makes the Constitution the “supreme Law of the Land.” So far, so good. In 1803, Chief Justice Marshall, speaking for a unanimous Court, calling the Constitution “the fundamental and paramount law of the nation,” declared in Marbury v. Madison, 1 Cranch 137 (1803) that “It is emphatically the province and duty of the judicial department to say what the law is.” This is a description of the legitimate power of judicial review found in Article III, Section 2. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">From this legitimate recognition of the power of judicial review, the Cooper v. Aaron Court stepped back to Eden. The Court first expanded its own opinion in Marbury asserting that Marbury actually “declared the basic principle that the federal judiciary is supreme in the exposition of the law of the Constitution.” 358 U.S. at 18 (emphasis added). Recall that Chief Justice Marshall said the judiciary has a duty to say what the law is. He said nothing, however, about the Court’s opinions as supreme. Cooper added the “supreme” element. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In its ruling, the Court in Cooper made the egregious error of misconstruing the Supremacy Clause of Art VI that “This constitution and the laws of the United States which shall be made in pursuance thereof” shall be “the supreme law of the land.” The Court, without either textual or historical support, construed “the laws of the United States” to include judicial opinions of the Court, when clearly, historically and textually, it only referred to acts of Congress which became law when made in pursuance of the Constitution. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Further, the Constitution grants no “supreme” expository power to the Court. It is not found in Articles III or VI. It is not there. What is found in Article VI is that the Constitution, laws and treaties “shall be the supreme law of the land.” Nothing is said about Supreme Court opinions being supreme law, let alone being law at all. The Constitution extends no power to the Court to claim that even its legitimate constitutionally based opinions, are the sole and exclusive meaning of the Constitution itself. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The judicial power to review cases arising under the constitution, laws and treaties is stated in Article III, section 2, but that power is not the power to rewrite the Constitution itself. It is not the power to authorize the court to sit as a perpetual constitutional convention. It is not the power for the court to write into the Constitution whatever it wants, or the power to strike from the Constitution has a duty to say what the law is. He said nothing, however, about the Court’s opinions as supreme. Cooper added the “supreme” element. In its ruling, the Court in Cooper made the egregious error of misconstruing the Supremacy Clause of Art VI that “This constitution and the laws of the United States which shall be made in pursuance thereof” shall be “the supreme law of the land.” The Court, without either textual or historical support, construed “the laws of the United States” to include judicial opinions of the Court, when clearly, historically and textually, it only referred to acts of Congress which became law when made in pursuance of the Constitution. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Further, the Constitution grants no “supreme” expository power to the Court. It is not found in Articles III or VI. It is not there. What is found in Article VI is that the Constitution, laws and treaties “shall be the supreme law of the land.” Nothing is said about Supreme Court opinions being supreme law, let alone being law at all. The Constitution extends no power to the Court to claim that even its legitimate constitutionally based opinions, are the sole and exclusive meaning of the Constitution itself. <br />
<br />
The judicial power to review cases arising under the constitution, laws and treaties is stated in Article III, section 2, but that power is not the power to rewrite the Constitution itself. It is not the power to authorize the court to sit as a perpetual constitutional convention. It is <span style="color:red">not the power for the court to write into the Constitution whatever it wants, or the power to strike from the Constitution whatever it does not want. Constitutional insertions and deletions are a power retained by the People. This textual judicial power renders the Court’s opinion in Roe without support in the fourteenth amendment. <br />
<br />
D. According to The Law Of Nature, Judicial Power Extends To Issuing Orders In Cases And Controversies, Not To Making Rules Of General Applicability. <br />
This exercise of judicial power is reflected in the difference between a “rule” and an “order.” A court cannot issue a rule under the law of nature, because the nature of any rule is that it is an action of general application. '''Rules apply not only to parties in a case, but to everyone. The court’s judgment on the other hand must be confined to an order for its contempt power to be exercised lawfully. Otherwise, a court could hold anyone in contempt for simply disagreeing with its opinion. This distinguishes judicial power from legislative power. Only the legislative power can make laws; the judiciary can merely apply pre-existing laws to the facts in a given case.''' <br />
<br />
Not only is the law of nature of judicial power responsive rather than initiative, and limited to giving orders to parties rather than rules to all persons, <span style="color:red">the law of nature of judicial power is restricted to judgment, not will. All the judge has is judgment to make known the statute or Constitution’s text. This distinguishes judicial power from executive power. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">It follows that if judges do not make law, which by definition is a “rule,” then judges cannot issue “rules,” and may only issue orders. A rule binds the people generally, and is by nature legislative, whereas an order binds only the person to whom it is directed. Thus, Article III extends the judicial power of the courts of the United States only to “cases” and “controversies.” If a judge could issue a rule which governed such disputes, the judicial power would not be limited to actual cases and controversies. [I]f the policy of the Government upon vital questions affecting the whole people is to be irrevocably fixed by decisions of the Supreme Court, the instant they are made in ordinary litigation between parties in personal actions, the people will have ceased to be their own rulers....15<br />
<span style="color:red">15 Abraham Lincoln, First Inaugural Address, March 4, 1861. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">This Court’s substantive due process jurisprudence is an example of rulemaking simply because it purports to add new text to the Constitution itself. For this reason, it is contrary to the law of nature of judicial power. The opinion in Roe v. Wade can also be examined to determine whether it was in the nature of an order or a rule. Remarkably, the Court did not issue an instruction to Texas declaring its statute unconstitutional and unenforceable. Rather, it specified a trimester formula was essentially a legislative rule purporting to bind all future statute governing abortion in every state. Yet only Texas was a party to the case. Hence, the Court’s opinion again lacked an essential element of the exercise of judicial power, that is, the issuance of an order, not a rule.16<br />
[16 For a more extensive review of the law of nature regarding <br />
judicial power and judicial review, see Herbert W. Titus & <br />
Gerald R. Thompson, America’s Heritage: Constitutional <br />
Liberty, Judicial Power And Judicial Review, The LONANG <br />
Institute (2006).]<br />
<br />
Besides the lack of concrete, textual constitutional language, the limited nature of judicial power and its lack of authority to make rules, the Court has felt constrained to adjust rather than abandon its substantive due process practice of atextual fundamental rights rulemaking. These cases reflect its “go to” linguistic justifications, all of which neither have textual support nor are found enumerated among the judicial powers in Article III. Judicial decisions finding that a state statute violates fundamental values “implicit in the concept of ordered liberty” are without textual support. See Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479, 500 (1965) (Harlan. J., concurring) (quoting Palko v. Connecticut, 302 U. S. 319, 325 (1937) (Cardozo, J.) overruled on other grounds, Benton v. Maryland, 395 U.S. 784 (1969)). A judicial decision finding that a state statute violates a woman’s right to abortion discovered in the “concept of personal liberty” is without textual support. See Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113, 153 (1973). <br />
<br />
Likewise, judicial decisions finding that a state statute violates rights “deeply rooted in this nation’s history and tradition” are without textual support. See Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 U.S. 702, 721 (1997). “The Due Process Clause specially protects those fundamental rights and liberties which are, objectively, deeply rooted in this Nation's history and tradition.” Palko, 302 U.S. at 325. The Court looks to principles of justice “so rooted in the traditions and conscience of our people as to be ranked as fundamental”) (quoting Snyder v. Massachusetts, 291 U. S. 97, 105 (1934) overruled in part on other grounds by Malloy v. Hogan, 378 U.S. 1 (1964)). <br />
So too, a judicial decision finding that a state statute violates a fundamental right which is “inherent in the concept of individual autonomy” without regard to history or tradition, is equally without textual support. See Obergefell v. Hodges, 576 U.S. 644; 135 S. Ct. at 2629 (2015).17 <br />
<br />
[17 Chief Justice Roberts, with whom Justice Scalia and Justice <br />
Thomas joined in dissent, further underscored the lack of any <br />
textual support for the court’s decision. <br />
<br />
The majority purports to identify four <br />
“principles and traditions” in this Court’s due <br />
process precedents that support a fundamental <br />
right for same-sex couples to marry. Ante, at 12. <br />
In reality, however, the majority’s approach has <br />
no basis in principle or tradition, except for the <br />
unprincipled tradition of judicial policymaking]<br />
that characterized discredited decisions such as <br />
Lochner v. New York, 198 U.S. 45. Stripped of <br />
its shiny rhetorical gloss, the majority’s <br />
argument is that the Due Process Clause gives <br />
same-sex couples a fundamental right to marry <br />
because it will be good for them and for society. <br />
If I were a legislator, I would certainly consider <br />
that view as a matter of social policy. But as a <br />
judge, I find the majority’s position indefensible <br />
as a matter of constitutional law.<br />
<br />
The same reasoning applies with equal force and effect <br />
to Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479, 500 (1965); Palko v. <br />
Connecticut, 302 U. S. 319, 325 (1937) (overruled on other <br />
grounds, Benton v. Maryland, 395 U.S. 784 (1969)); Roe v. <br />
Wade, 410 U.S. 113, 153 (1973), Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 <br />
U.S. 702, 721 (1997) and Snyder v. Massachusetts, 291 U. S. 97, <br />
105 (1934) (overruled in part on other grounds by Malloy v. <br />
Hogan, 378 U.S. 1 (1964))<br />
<br />
Let us be clear here. What we mean when we say the Court is utilizing doctrines or rules of interpretation which have no textual support, is that the Court is just declaring its own majoritarian judicial will as the Supreme Law of the Land without regard to the Constitution’s text, form of government, separation of powers, or any known legal doctrine except the arbitrary will of a Despot. Rather than celebrating and continuing this “long train of abuses and usurpations pursuing invariably the same object, a design to reduce” the People “under absolute Despotism,” there is still a window of time in which to quash this judicial abuse and usurpation. <br />
<br />
Finally, Amicus would be remiss in failing to address <span style="color:red">a future judicial decision which would discover a fundamental “right to life” “implicit in the Concept of ordered liberty”, or in the “concept of personal liberty,” or “deeply rooted in this nation’s history and tradition” or “inherent in the concept of individual autonomy,” or existing in any other linguistic contrivance yet to be animated from the spirit of the original argument in Eden (that the words do not mean what they say). Such a decision would also lack textual support in the non-existent substantive due process clause. Its advocates would perpetuate judicial Despotism and continue to wrongly nationalize, state jurisdiction. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">[Wait a minute. I have copied so much of Lonang's brief because I perceive its usefulness towards the goal of outlawing abortion in EVERY state, as required by the Constitution, especially the 14th Amendment. Yet in this unfortunate paragraph, Lonang argues that courts should NOT outlaw genocide universally! It is this kind of argument that elevates the "scrupulous neutrality" about whether murder is good, of which Justice Kavanaugh brags!<br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">[The error of Lonang and Kavanaugh, as I perceive it, is to miss the points raised by Justice Thomas about basing the definition of Constitutional Rights on what is specifically listed in the Constitution, which is the original meaning of "privileges and immunities" in the 14th Amendment. By that measure, "Life" is specifically protected by the Constitution, while "Murder" is not. This demands of courts that they outlaw baby murder in every state.] <br />
<br />
A right to life needs no between-the-lines authorization. The Amendment plainly identifies what makes a state law unconstitutional.]<br />
<br />
...Objecting to the Court’s holding in Obergefell v. Hodges, 576 U.S. 644; 135 S. Ct. at 2629 (2015) Justice Scalia, with whom Justice Thomas joined in dissenting observed: “This is a naked judicial claim to legislative—indeed, super-legislative—power; a claim fundamentally at odds with our system of government. Except as limited by a constitutional prohibition agreed to by the People, the States are free to adopt whatever laws they like, even those that offend the esteemed Justices’ “reasoned judgment.” ....<br />
<br />
...” The power and process of amending the national Constitution is well <br />
provided for in Article V. That Article assigns no place for the federal judiciary in its text.1<br />
<br />
The powers reserved to the States and people include the power to decide if they shall constitutionalize or not, fundamental rights “implicit in the concept of ordered liberty,” or within the “concept of personal liberty,” or “deeply rooted in this nation’s history and tradition,” or “inherent in the concept of individual autonomy.” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">[But not to the destruction of enumerated rights like Life.]<br />
<br />
...., the Court trampled down the separation of powers. It also exceeded the law of nature of judicial power, because it does not declare the written law, but rather says what the law should be. That goes beyond judicial review. ....<br />
<br />
Justice Curtis provided insight into the phenomenon when he observed: Political reasons have not the requisite certainty to afford rules of juridical interpretation. They are different in different men. They are different in the same men at different times. And when a strict interpretation of the Constitution, according to the fixed rules which govern the interpretation of laws, is abandoned, and the theoretical opinions of individuals are allowed to control its meaning, we have no longer a Constitution; we are under the government of individual men who, for the time being, have power to declare what the Constitution is according to their own views of what it ought to mean.” [ Dred Scott v. Sandford, 60 U.S. 393, 620-621 (1856) (J. <br />
Curtis, dissenting). <br />
<br />
He concluded that: “When such a method of <br />
interpretation of the Constitution obtains, in place of a <br />
republican Government, with limited and defined powers, we <br />
have a Government which is merely an exponent of the will of <br />
Congress; or, what in my opinion, would not be preferable, an <br />
exponent of the individual political opinions of the members of <br />
this court.” Id]<br />
<br />
==24 Claremont Institute's Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185038/20210727131748801_19-1392%20tsac%20CCJ.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment protects against deprivation “life, liberty, or property.” In the abortion rights cases, this Court has focused on “liberty.” [of moms.] The real issue, however, is life. [of babes.] Life is a natural right endowed by our Creator and is the first unalienable right recognized in the Declaration of Independence. ...The duty of government to protect life is at the center of the nation’s first legal document. <br />
<br />
==25 22 State Policy Organizations==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185004/20210727112957999_Dobbs%20Amici%20brief_FPC_%207.23.21.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
22 State Policy Organizations <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The positivistic [materialistic – only physical things are real] reduction of persons represented by the Court’s abortion decisions has leavened the law in a way that curtails historic State policies grounded in deference to a given human nature and the common law rights that correspond to that nature. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">By purporting to leave the question of the meaning of persons in the Fourteenth Amendment unanswered, this Court’s holdings requiring States to abandon common and natural law commitments have effectively ratified a diminished view of the human person in law. These holdings have foisted upon the States a denatured anthropological model that prohibits them from ascribing objective meaning, dignity, and value to vulnerable persons. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The severe distortion of the human person in constitutional caselaw invites systemic effects well beyond the troubled context of abortion. If constitutional precept commands States to treat nascent human life as vacant of meaning and value apart from subjective individual determination or Court authorization, concurrently placed in doubt is the historic understanding of law as constrained by a reality prior to and beyond its coercive impositions. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">A national abortion-enablement policy is mournful in itself, but does not keep to itself. It corrodes the law altogether. [http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185004/20210727112957999_Dobbs Amici brief_FPC_ 7.23.21.pdf] <br />
<br />
==26 Connie Weiskopf and Kristine L. Brown==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185063/20210727174713396_FINAL_Brown_Weiskopf_Dobbs_Amicus.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The sophistry at the heart of Roe is that the beginning of human life was ever a subject for speculation ...There was no doubt at the time of the Fourteenth Amendment as to whether the common definition of “person” included preborn persons. One-hundred and fifty years since, medical science has overwhelmingly confirmed this commonly understood inclusion of preborn persons in legal personhood. ...no other so-called constitutional right involves the “the purposeful termination of a potential life.” Yet even in Harris, we see the poison of Roe in the qualifier “potential.” ...By choosing Levy v. Louisiana, 391 U.S. 68 (1968) as the test for legal personhood, this Court can reach a new milestone in the advancement of human rights. ...The Court started from the premise that “illegitimate children are not ‘nonpersons,’” insofar as they are “humans, live, and have their being.” Levy 391 U.S. at 70 (emphasis added). Thus all children who 1)are human, 2) are living, and 3) are in being, are “clearly” persons under the Equal Protection Clause. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">As Justice Gorsuch wrote in his Ramos concurrence, “stare decisis isn’t supposed to be the art of methodically ignoring what everyone knows to be true.” Ramos v. Louisiana, 590 U.S. __, __ (2020) (slip op. at 23). [http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185063/20210727174713396_FINAL_Brown_Weiskopf_Dobbs_Amicus.pdf]<br />
<br />
==27 Professor Kurt T. Lash==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185028/20210727125456897_19-1392%20tsac%20Lash.pdf Filed July 27, 2021] ZZZZZZZZZZZZZ<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113 (1973), the Supreme Court ruled that...“We feel...This right of privacy...[is] founded in the Fourteenth Amendment’s concept of personal liberty and restrictions upon state action [while] the District Court determined [it is founded] in the Ninth Amendment’s reservation of rights to the people....” . In Planned Parenthood v. Casey, 505 U.S. 883 (1992), a plurality...once again cit[ed] the Fourteenth Amendment and the Ninth Amendment...s. The Ninth Amendment, both at the time of its adoption and now, preserves the people’s retained right to local self-government. It cannot properly be read as a source of authority to deny the rights of local self-government. The Fourteenth Amendment protects substantive rights against the states, '''but only those previously enumerated, thus leaving all unenumerated rights under the authority of the people of the several states''' as a matter of constitutional right. This includes the non-enumerated subject of abortion.<br />
<br />
[Substantive definition: it exists independently, not subordinate to anything; for example not owing its existence to any law or constitution. Enumerated definition: rights named in the Constitution, like freedom of speech and religion.]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....In sum, at the threshold of the Civil War, moderate Republicans (who, according to Foner, “held the balance of power within the Republican Party,” Foner, FREE SOIL, at 205) had no intention of abandoning constitutional federalism or reinterpreting the Ninth and Tenth Amendments. These Republicans believed that the slave holding southern states had fallen away from the original federalist principles of the Constitution and had continuously violated the personal rights enumerated in the Bill of Rights. See Michael Kent Curtis, FREE SPEECH, “THE PEOPLE’S DARLING PRIVILEGE”: STRUGGLES FOR FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION IN AMERICAN HISTORY 266-70 (2000). The Republicans who framed and advanced the Fourteenth Amendment sought only to enforce those original rights while maintaining the basic principles of constitutional federalism announced in provisions like the Ninth and Tenth Amendments. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">...II. The Fourteenth Amendment neither enforces unenumerated substantive rights against the states nor alters the federalist meaning of the Ninth Amendment.<br />
A. John Bingham, primary draftsman of Section One of the Fourteenth Amendment, sought to apply enumerated constitutional rights against the states while preserving the structural principles of constitutional federalism declared in the Ninth and Tenth Amendments.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">...Consistent with his continued belief in the reserved rights of the states over all unenumerated subjects, Bingham proposed a constitutional amendment that would enforce the first eight amendments in the Bill of Rights against the states but leave the substance of all unenumerated rights under the control of the people in the States.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....None of Bingham’s Republican colleagues in the Thirty-Ninth Congress objected to the idea of enforcing the Bill of Rights against the states. Some members, however, worried that the wording in Bingham’s initial draft might empower Congress to define what counted as federally enforceable “privileges and immunities.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Republican Giles Hotchkiss suggested he would support an amendment that clearly announced “a constitutional right that cannot be wrested from any class of citizens, or from the citizens of any State by mere legislation. But this amendment proposes to leave it to the caprice of Congress.” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....As Bingham explained three years after the ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment: Mr. Speaker, that the scope and meaning of the limitations imposed by the first section, fourteenth amendment of the Constitution may be more fully understood, permit me to say that the privileges and immunities of citizens of the United States, as contradistinguished from citizens of a State, are chiefly defined in the first eight amendments to the Constitution of the United States. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">...John Bingham’s fellow member on Joint Committee on Reconstruction, Michigan Senator Jacob Howard, also described Bingham’s Privileges or Immunities Clause in terms that involve only constitutionally enumerated rights. See Speech of Jacob Howard, May 23, 1866, in 2 Reconstruction Amendments, at 187-88.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In his speech introducing the Fourteenth Amendment to the Senate, Howard explained that the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States included the right of traveling citizens to receive equal treatment enumerated in Article IV’s Comity Clause (and described in antebellum cases like Corfield v. Coryell, 6 Fed. Cas. 546 (C.C.E.D. Pa. 1823)) as well as those rights “secured by the first eight amendments of the Constitution.” Id. at 188. Every single privilege or immunity listed by Howard in his extended speech involved a guarantee enumerated in the original Constitution. Howard’s speech is important: It was so widely read and republished that during the ratification debates speakers often referred to the proposed Fourteenth Amendment as “the Howard Amendment.” See, e.g., North Carolina House of Representatives, July 2, 1868 (“Mr. Seymour introduced the following resolution, ratifying the fourteenth article of the Constitution of the United States, the article known as the Howard Amendment.”), <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....C. The ratifying public was well informed of<br />
the speeches of John Bingham and Jacob<br />
Howard.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Unlike the secret proceedings of Philadelphia<br />
Constitutional Convention, the proceedings of the<br />
Thirty-Ninth Congress were public. Newspapers<br />
reported on the speeches and debates, often with<br />
verbatim transcripts, on a daily basis. See Introduction<br />
to the Collection, 1 Reconstruction Amendments, at ix.<br />
Bingham’s speeches of February 1866 were published<br />
in the New York Times,11 The New York Herald,12 The<br />
Vermont Watchman and State Journal,13 The<br />
Philadelphia Inquirer,14 and Philadelphia’s Illustrated<br />
New Age.15 Bingham himself published his February<br />
28, 1866 speech separately and distributed it as a<br />
campaign document. <br />
<br />
....In the<br />
Thirty-Ninth Congress, Pennsylvania Democrat<br />
Benjamin M. Boyer quoted the Ninth and Tenth<br />
Amendments as evidence that Congress had no right to<br />
“disfranchise the majority of the citizens of any State<br />
on account of their past participation in the rebellion.”17<br />
One finds similar Democrat references to the Ninth<br />
and Tenth Amendments throughout the Reconstruction<br />
debates. See, e.g., CONG. GLOBE, 41st Cong., 2d Sess.<br />
app. at 354 (1870) (remarks of Sen. William T.<br />
Hamilton) (quoting the Ninth and Tenth Amendments<br />
in support of a narrow reading of federal power).<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....As noted<br />
above, both John Bingham and Jacob Howard omitted<br />
the Ninth and Tenth Amendments from their list of<br />
constitutional rights protected by the Privileges or<br />
Immunities Clause, and instead expressly named the<br />
rights enumerated in the first eight amendments. As<br />
Bingham explained, “these eight articles I have shown<br />
never were limitations upon the power of the States,<br />
until made so by the fourteenth amendment.”<br />
<br />
....in the common<br />
Reconstruction-era understanding that the last two<br />
amendments in the Bill of Rights were distinguishable<br />
from the personal rights protected in the first eight.<br />
....y, there is no<br />
historical evidence that between the time of the<br />
<br />
18 Nor does it mean that states are not bound to respect the<br />
federalism principles of the Ninth and Tenth Amendments. See,<br />
e.g., New York v. United States, 488 U.S. 1041 (1992) (rejecting the<br />
idea that states can waive the Constitution’s federalist separation<br />
of powers represented by the Tenth Amendment). <br />
24<br />
Founding and Reconstruction a new consensus<br />
understanding of the Ninth Amendment had emerged<br />
which viewed the provision as a font of unenumerated<br />
personal rights that could be applied against the states.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....McDonald v. Chicago, 561 U.S. 742, 811, (2010)<br />
(Thomas, J., concurring in part and concurring in<br />
judgment) (“the Court has determined that the Due<br />
Process Clause applies rights against the States that<br />
are not mentioned in the Constitution at all, even<br />
without seriously arguing that the Clause was<br />
originally understood to protect such rights. See, e.g.,<br />
Lochner v. New York; Roe v. Wade.”) (cleaned up). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Nor could it. At the time of the Fourteenth<br />
Amendment, the term “due process of law” was<br />
“universally understood to guarantee individual rights<br />
of legal process that only courts could provide.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....In 1859,<br />
for example, John Bingham “invit[ed] attention to the<br />
significant fact that natural or inherent rights, which<br />
belong to all men irrespective of all conventional<br />
regulations, are by this constitution guaranteed by the<br />
broad and comprehensive word ‘person,’ as<br />
contradistinguished from the limited term citizen— as<br />
in the fifth article of amendments, guarding those<br />
sacred rights which are as universal and indestructible<br />
as the human race, that ‘no person shall be deprived of<br />
life, liberty, or property but by due process of law.’”<br />
Bingham, 1 Reconstruction Amendments, at 153-54.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">This made slavery the ultimate denial of Due Process<br />
as it deprived persons of life, liberty and property<br />
without any procedural protections whatsoever. <br />
.... McDonald v.<span style="color:red"><br />
Chicago, 561 U.S. 742, 811 (2010) (Thomas, J.,<br />
concurring in part and concurring in judgment) (This<br />
Court created the right to abortion based on an<br />
amorphous, unwritten right to privacy, which it<br />
grounded in the “legal fiction” of substantive due<br />
process.”). The Due Process Clause requires states to<br />
provide all persons critically important procedural<br />
rights [equal rights in court], but nothing more.<br />
....In The Slaughterhouse Cases, 83 U.S. 36 (1873), the<br />
Supreme Court rejected a claim by Louisiana butchers<br />
that a state-enacted monopoly violated, among other<br />
things, the Privileges or Immunities Clause of the<br />
Fourteenth Amendment....Since the right to pursue a local trade was neither an<br />
enumerated federal responsibility or enumerated<br />
federal right, the subject remained under the<br />
regulatory control of the people in the several states.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In support of his reading of the Fourteenth<br />
Amendment, Justice Miller relied on the basic<br />
principles of constitutional federalism. According to<br />
Miller, interpreting the Privileges or Immunities<br />
Clause as somehow nationalizing the unenumerated<br />
subjects of municipal regulation, especially when<br />
combined with the congressional enforcement powers<br />
granted by Section Five of the Fourteenth Amendment,<br />
would obliterate the federalist structure of the<br />
Constitution. Miller was unwilling to accept an<br />
interpretation that “radically changes the whole theory<br />
of the relations of the State and Federal governments<br />
to each other and of both these governments to the<br />
people . . . in the absence of language which expresses<br />
such a purpose too clearly to admit of doubt.”<br />
Slaughterhouse, 83 U.S. at 78.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In<br />
his 1871 Speech on the Enforcement Act, in words that<br />
anticipate Miller’s later opinion in Slaughterhouse,<br />
Bingham explained:<br />
Is it not clear that other and different privileges<br />
and immunities than those to which a citizen of<br />
a State was entitled are secured by the provision<br />
30<br />
of the fourteenth article, that no state shall<br />
abridge the privileges and immunities of citizens<br />
of the United States, which are defined in the<br />
eight articles of amendment, and which were not<br />
limitations on the power of the States before the<br />
fourteenth amendment made them limitations?<br />
Bingham, March 31, 1871, in 2 Reconstruction<br />
Amendments at 626.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Justice Miller also was correct to insist that the<br />
Fourteenth Amendment be interpreted in a manner<br />
consistent with the traditional understanding of<br />
constitutional federalism. Bingham himself had no<br />
intention to obliterate constitutional federalism and he<br />
insisted that his proposal imposed no rights upon<br />
states which they were not already constitutionally<br />
oath-bound to protect. Like other moderate<br />
Republicans in the Reconstruction Congress, Bingham<br />
valued constitutional federalism, describing it as “our<br />
dual system of Government by which our own<br />
American nationality and liberty have been established<br />
and maintained. I have always believed that the<br />
protection in time of peace within the States of all the<br />
rights of person and citizen was of the powers reserved<br />
to the States. And so I still believe.” Bingham, March<br />
9, 1866, in 2 Reconstruction Amendments at 140. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Finally, Miller was right to limit the privileges or<br />
immunities of citizens of the United States to those<br />
rights actually enumerated in one form or another in<br />
the federal Constitution. It had long been settled law<br />
that no state was permitted to make or enforce any law<br />
that conflicted or interfered with a proper exercise of<br />
enumerated federal power. See McCulloch v. Maryland,<br />
31<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">17 U.S. 316 (1819). The problem in the 1860s was the<br />
lack of federal power to enforce enumerated federal<br />
rights. As Bingham explained early in the debates of<br />
the Thirty-Ninth Congress, “it has been the want of the<br />
Republic that there was not an express grant of power<br />
in the Constitution to enable the whole people of every<br />
State, by congressional enactment, to enforce obedience<br />
to these requirements of the Constitution.” Bingham,<br />
February 26, 1866, in 2 Reconstruction Amendments at<br />
100. '''Although Miller does not expressly declare that<br />
the Privileges or Immunities Clause applied the first<br />
eight amendments against the states, Miller does name<br />
enumerated First Amendment rights as protected<br />
“privileges or immunities.” Nothing in his opinion<br />
closes the door on incorporation of the Bill of Rights.'''<br />
See, Lash, THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT, at 252-65.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">'''That door was erroneously closed in a later case,<br />
Cruikshank v. United States''', 92 U.S. 542 (1876). Id. at<br />
265; see also McDonald v. Chicago, 561 U.S. 742, 808<br />
(2010) (Thomas, J. concurring).<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">United States, by the consent of the people of the<br />
United States, with the power to enforce the bill of<br />
32<br />
rights as it stands in the Constitution today.” Bingham,<br />
in 2 Reconstruction Amendments at 109.<br />
No moderate Republican in or out of Congress in the<br />
1860s would have approved of a constitutional<br />
amendment that bound the states to enforce an<br />
undefined set of substantive rights and gave Congress<br />
the power the nationalize the same. This includes the<br />
otherwise unenumerated “right to abortion.”<br />
<br />
==28 Robin Pierucci, M.D., and Life Legal Defense Foundation==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185034/20210727130751481_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20Robin%20Pierucci%20MD%20and%20Life%20Legal%20Defense%20Foundation.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
A very different “logical and biological” <br />
conclusion about constitutional rights could be <br />
drawn from the definition of viability: <br />
After viability, when a human being is <br />
capable of meaningful life outside the <br />
mother’s womb, the State must, consistent <br />
with its obligations under the Fourteenth <br />
Amendment, protect this human from being <br />
deliberately killed to the same extent it <br />
protects older human beings. <br />
<br />
Such a conclusion is at least as, and likely more, <br />
plausible than Roe’s declaration that only after the <br />
unborn child could survive outside the womb, a <br />
state may, or may not, prohibit his or her <br />
deliberate destruction, subject to broad exceptions <br />
effectively gutting even this limited permission. <br />
<br />
....These scholars recognize that establishing <br />
the principle of Fourteenth Amendment personhood <br />
for the unborn does not dictate a single, judicially#imposed result for all states, all statutes, or all <br />
pregnancies. Paulsen, at 70 (“That the word <br />
‘person,’ as used in the Constitution in the Fifth <br />
and Fourteenth Amendments, is broad enough to <br />
embrace living but unborn humans does not itself <br />
say anything specific about what the precise legal <br />
regime must be with respect to abortion”); Finnis, <br />
Born and Unborn: Answering Objections to <br />
Constitutional Personhood, First Things, April 9, <br />
<br />
....Whatever abortion restrictions may (or may <br />
not) exist on paper, because of the flexibility of this <br />
Court’s jurisprudence, abortion providers across the <br />
country advertise their services for later abortions: <br />
beyond 20 weeks, beyond 24 weeks, beyond 28 <br />
weeks, beyond 32 weeks. See Appendix. The <br />
audience for these advertisements and websites is <br />
not doctors who have unexpectedly diagnosed a <br />
dangerous condition in a pregnant woman. These <br />
advertisements are direct-to-consumer marketing <br />
of Roe- and Casey-sanctioned abortions <br />
indistinguishable from infanticide.<br />
<br />
e. Additionally, the <br />
viability threshold for a compelling state interest in <br />
preserving human life, created by this Court in <br />
1973, should be abandoned in favor of the medically <br />
updated and philosophically consistent standard of <br />
an “unqualified” interest in protecting life that this <br />
Court upheld in the 1990 case of Cruzan<br />
<br />
==29 Priests for Life==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185032/20210727130517073_19-1392%20tsac%20Priests%20for%20Life.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
Indeed, Priests for Life urges the Court to use this opportunity to end the charade that Roe v. Wade was correctly decided. This fateful decision has no legitimate foundation in law, it continues to tear at the fabric of our nation, and it has corrupted our judicial system. It is time for it to go ....<br />
<br />
In 1868, when the<br />
Fourteenth Amendment was ratified, a majority<br />
of the States and numerous Territories had laws<br />
on the books that limited (and in many cases<br />
nearly prohibited) abortion. See id., at 175, n.1. <br />
<br />
It would no doubt shock the public at that time<br />
to learn that one of the new constitutional<br />
Amendments contained hidden within the<br />
interstices of its text a right to abortion. <span style="color:red">The<br />
fact that it took this Court over a century to find<br />
that right all but proves that it was more than<br />
hidden—it simply was not (and is not) there.<br />
June Med. Servs. L.L.C. v. Russo, 140 S. Ct. 2103,<br />
2142, 2151 (2020) (Thomas, J., dissenting).<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">When deciding Roe v. Wade, this Court infamously<br />
stated:<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">We need not resolve the difficult question of<br />
when life begins. When those trained in the<br />
respective disciplines of medicine, philosophy,<br />
and theology are unable to arrive at any<br />
consensus, the judiciary, at this point in the<br />
development of man’s knowledge, is not in a<br />
position to speculate as to the answer.<br />
5<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113, 159 (1973). Consistent with<br />
this veiled philosophical pronouncement—a<br />
pronouncement grounded in secular positivism—a<br />
majority of the justices concluded that the U.S.<br />
Constitution “does not define ‘person,’” leading the<br />
Court to ultimately conclude that “the word ‘person,’ as<br />
used in the Fourteenth Amendment, does not include<br />
the unborn.” Id. at 158. <br />
<br />
Remarkably, the Court dismissed the life of the<br />
unborn based on its conclusion that there is no direct<br />
textual support to conclude that this “person” is<br />
protected by the Fourteenth Amendment. Yet, this<br />
same Court created a right to abortion “out of whole<br />
cloth, without a shred of support from the<br />
Constitution’s text.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Court’s ruling in Roe v. Wade is similar to how<br />
the Court had previously concluded in the infamous<br />
Dred Scott decision (Dred Scott v. Sandford, 60 US 393<br />
(1857)) that people of color were not legal “persons” as<br />
a matter of federal constitutional law. Unfortunately,<br />
it took a civil war to correct this injustice.<br />
<br />
[Actually Dred Scott called slaves a “class of persons”, but persons without rights. And although they are persons, they are not “people of the United States”: <br />
“The words "people of the United States" and "citizens" are synonymous terms, and mean the same thing. They both describe the political body who, according to our republican institutions, form the sovereignty and who hold the power and conduct the Government through their representatives. They are what we familiarly call the "sovereign people," and every citizen is one of this people, and a constituent member of this sovereignty. The question before us is whether the class of persons described in the plea in abatement compose a portion of this people, and are constituent members of this sovereignty? We think they are not,”<br />
<br />
...6. The only two clauses in the Constitution which point to this race treat them as persons whom it was morally lawfully to deal in as articles of property and to hold as slaves.<br />
<br />
...8. A State, by its laws passed since the adoption of the Constitution, may put a foreigner or any other description of persons upon a footing with its own citizens as to all the rights and privileges enjoyed by them within its dominion and by its laws. But that will not make him a citizen of the United States, nor entitle him to sue in its courts, nor to any of the privileges and immunities of a citizen in another State.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">...It is very true that, in that portion of the Union where the labor of the negro race was found to be unsuited to the climate and unprofitable to the master, but few slaves were held at the time of the Declaration of Independence, and when the Constitution was adopted, it had entirely worn out in one of them, and measures had been taken for its gradual abolition in several others. But this change had not been produced by any change of opinion in relation to this race, but because it was discovered from experience that slave labor was unsuited to the climate and productions of these States, for some of the States where it had ceased or nearly ceased to exist were actively engaged in the slave trade, procuring cargoes on the coast of Africa and transporting them for sale to those parts of the Union where their labor was found to be profitable and suited to the climate and productions.]<br />
<br />
==30 Hannah S., John S. and Marlene S==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185061/20210727165822368_41029%20pdf%20Parker%20II.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
The story of this “adoption” and this Amici Curiae Brief will reveal that Roe’s measuring line for viability has now been moved all the way back to fertilization by the modern scientific advancement called in vitro fertilization. Roe, at 160, has this viability definition: “ ‘viable,’ . . . potentially able to live outside the mother’s <br />
womb, albeit with artificial aid.”<br />
<br />
Advances in science have eliminated the distinction between previability and viability. Previability prohibitions on elective abortions should be constitutional because viability occurs at fertilization, as proven through in vitro fertilization techniques. <br />
<br />
==31 Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185155/20210728163153060_Amici%20Brief%20of%20CMP-Daleiden.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Federal law recognizes human infants in utero, and premature infants born alive, as persons under the law at any gestational age. The federal Unborn Victims of Violence Act recognizes the “child in utero” as “a member of the species homo sapiens, at any stage of development, who is carried in the womb” whose death or injury in the course of a federal crime is subject to prosecution the same as that of any born child or adult individual. 18 U.S.C. § 1841(d), (a)(1). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The federal Born Alive Infants Protection Act establishes even more broadly that, for purposes of “any Act of Congress” and “any ruling, regulation, or interpretation of the various administrative bureaus and agencies of the United States,” “the words ‘person’, ‘human being’, ‘child’, and ‘individual’, shall include every infant member of the species homo sapiens who is born alive at any stage of development.” 1 U.S.C. § 8 (a).<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Even prior to the ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment, this Court acknowledged that the word “person” in law was a term designed to include all of humanity. In United States v. Palmer, 16 U.S. 610 (1818), Chief Justice Marshall explained that “every human being” and “the whole human race” was included in the words “person or persons” in federal law. Id. at 631–32. And in Levy v. Louisiana, 391 U.S. 68 (1968), this Court articulated a simple test for ensuring equal protection for marginalized persons, reasoning that so-called “illegitimate” children were not “non-persons” as they were “humans, live, and have their being,” and therefore, “clearly ‘persons’ within the meaning of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.” Id. at 70. <br />
<br />
==32 European Legal Scholars in support of neither party==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185153/2021072 8162714090_European%20Legal%20Scholars%20Amici%20Brief.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
The European Court allows States a wide margin <br />
of appreciation to determine the starting point of the <br />
right to life in their domestic law and to formulate <br />
their laws on abortion. Consistent with this, the <br />
European Court has held that the Convention does not <br />
confer a right to abortion and has recognized as <br />
compatible with a Member State’s obligations under <br />
the Convention even very restrictive abortion laws. <br />
However, in several cases the European Court has <br />
found violations of the Convention in respect of <br />
individual applicants as a result of procedural <br />
deficiencies in the way national abortion laws have <br />
been given effect.<br />
<br />
.....The Court previously has considered European law when interpreting the Constitution. See, e.g., Roper v. Simmons, 543 U.S. 551, 575 (2005) (considering certain foreign law “instructive” when interpreting the Eighth Amendment); Lawrence v. Texas, 539 U.S. 558, 560 (2003) (discussing the European Court’s reasoning when interpreting the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment); Atkins v. Virginia, 536 U.S. 304, 316 n.21 (2002) (resorting to other countries’ views on capital punishment for the mentally ill). To be sure, the propriety of doing so is disputed. See, e.g., Roper, 543 U.S. at 627–28 (Scalia, J., dissenting); Lawrence, 539 U.S. at 598 (Scalia, J., dissenting); Atkins, 536 U.S. at 322–28 (Rehnquist, C.J., dissenting). But the fact that the very same source of European law this Court previously invoked also allows prohibitions on abortion admits of no serious dispute. Roper, 543 U.S. at 563; Atkins, 536 U.S. at 313–14. <br />
<br />
....Amici, accordingly, wish to highlight relevant abortion jurisprudence from the European Court that may prove helpful to this Court. Specifically, the European Court has a body of case law weighing abortion laws against human rights standards. This case law addresses issues comparable to those faced by the Court, including the scope of the right to privacy and the interests and rights that may legitimately be balanced against such a right by the state when regulating or restricting abortion.<br />
<br />
1.Member States may protect human life before birth through national law. The European Court has identified several rights and interests justifying such laws. These include protecting the right to life of the unborn, the legitimate interest of society in limiting the number of abortions, and the interests of society to protect morals. 2.The European Court has held that the Convention does not confer a right to abortion. 3.The compatibility with the Convention of Member States’ laws on abortion is primarily assessed by reference to Article 2 (“Right to life”) and Article 8 (“Right to respect for private and family life”) of the Convention. 4.The European Court has not determined whether the unborn child is a person for the purposes of Article 2 of the Convention. The European Court has not interpreted Article 2 as prohibiting States from making abortion legal; it instead interprets Article 2 as allowing States a margin of appreciation to determine the starting point of the right to life in their domestic law. 5.Legislation regulating the termination of pregnancy touches upon the sphere of a woman’s private life and thus may come within the scope of Article 8. But the European Court has also consistently recognized that Member States have a wide margin of appreciation under the Convention with respect to the regulation of abortion. <br />
<br />
6.Consistent with the foregoing, the European Court has recognized as compatible with a Member State’s obligations under the Convention even very restrictive abortion laws, including a national law prohibiting abortion at all stages of pregnancy and for any reason other than where there was a risk to the life (including by way of suicide) of the expectant mother. <br />
<br />
7.While acknowledging that it is the task of an individual Member State to frame its own abortion law, the European Court has found that it follows from its responsibility under Article 19 of the Convention to supervise whether any such law constitutes a proportionate balancing of the competing interests involved. <br />
<br />
8.The European Court has not relied upon any concept of the viability of the “foetus”3 as a basis for assessing the compatibility of Member States’ abortion laws with the Convention. <br />
9.In several cases, the European Court has found that Member States have violated the Article 8 rights of claimants seeking to access abortion services permitted under national law as a result of deficiencies in the way the national law has been given effect. These have included deficiencies in the arrangements for conscientious objection by healthcare providers or deficiencies in the processes for establishing whether the conditions under national 3 The European Court uses the terms “foetus” and “unborn child” interchangeably. See Vo v. France, 2004-VIII Eur. Ct. H.R. 67, 109; A, B & C v. Ireland, 2010-VI Eur. Ct. H.R. 185, 261. (“ABC”). 6 law for a lawful abortion have been satisfied by a claimant in a particular case. <br />
<br />
==33 396 State Legislators from 41 States==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185121/20210728125120809_Dobbs%20Amici%20brief_State%20Legislators_07272021.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
[This brief tackles 2 issues: power of ''Congress'' to correct state slights to the people’s rights. Second, the power of ''states'' to protect rights. It addresses a Problem, when an ''un''enumerated [not specified in the Constitution] right, abortion, is at the expense of an ''enumerated'' right, Life. <br />
<br />
[This brief shows Section 5 authority embedded in natural law way before 1868. Not just Congress but states. Courts have zero jurisdiction to enforce unenumerated rights like abortion, but full authority and inescapable responsibility to enforce enumerated rights like Life. Couldn’t a red state sue a blue state for slaughtering its people?] <br />
<br />
9 The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.[7] <br />
Wikipedia: addresses rights, retained by the people, that are not specifically enumerated in the Constitution. <br />
<br />
10 The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.[6]<br />
<br />
<br />
[Even if Section 5 of the 14th Amendment DIDN'T give Congress authority to define and enforce rights:]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red"> State legislators have the constitutional duty, and therefore the power, to protect the fundamental, civil rights of persons. The fundamental law in which those fundamental rights are found is the common law, which consists of both natural duties and those ancient, customary rights and immunities that are foundational to ordered liberty. Thus, a state legislature must declare and secure to all persons within the protection of its laws the rights that those persons have by natural and customary law. Cf. Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 U.S. 702, 721-22 (1997) (upholding state legislation that prohibited assisted suicide and reasoning that the Fourteenth Amendment’s “Due Process Clause specially protects those fundamental rights and liberties which are, objectively, ‘deeply rooted in this Nation’s history and tradition’.” (quoting Moore v. E. Cleveland, 431 U. S. 494, 503 (1977)). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England (1765): “Hence,” he said, “it follows, that the first and primary end of human laws is to '''maintain and regulate these absolute rights of individuals.'''” Id. Blackstone taught that the legislative power is to declare existing common-law rights and duties and to remedy any defects in the legal security for those rights. Id. at *42-43, 52-58, 86-87 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Founders echoed this view in the Declaration of Independence, declaring that '''governments are instituted among men in order to secure the inalienable rights with which human beings are endowed by nature and nature’s God.''' They also accused the crown and Parliament of infringing the rights of “our constitution,” which in 1776 could only have been a reference to the common-law constitution of British North America. This view predicated the Constitution of the United States, which expressly secures natural rights, such as life and religious liberty, and common-law rights, such as jury trials and freedom from the quartering of soldiers in one’s home, and expressly disclaims any intent to disparage the other rights of the fundamental law. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Indeed, '''the point of having legislatures, executives, and courts is to secure the rights that Americans already have.''' Neither state legislatures nor the Constitution of the United States create those rights. See District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570, 592 (2008) (stating that “it has always been widely understood that <span style="color:red">the Second Amendment, like the First and Fourth Amendments, codified a preexisting right,” that it “is not a right granted by the Constitution,” and is not “in any manner dependent upon that instrument for its existence.”). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Some, but not all, of the rights of natural persons are enumerated [listed] in the Constitution''' of the United States and its amendments. U.S. Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 8.; art. IV, §2; amends. I-VIII. '''Others are enumerated in state constitutions.''' See e.g., Soc’y for the Propagation of the Gospel v. Wheeler, 22 F. Cas. 756, 766 (No. 13,156) (C.C.D.N.H. 1814). Still others are declared in American constitutions but not enumerated. U.S. Const. amend. IX (“The enumeration of certain rights herein shall not be construed to deny or disparage other rights retained by the people.”) (emphasis added). '''State legislatures have a duty to declare and secure all fundamental rights, both enumerated and unenumerated.''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Fundamental rights are those that persons enjoy by fundamental law—natural law and common law— with or without any written constitution. Because the common law includes natural rights, to understand the fundamental rights declared and secured by the Constitution, it is sufficient to look to the common law, especially as explained by William Blackstone. Established common-law doctrines constitute the best evidence of the existence and meaning of both enumerated and unenumerated, fundamental rights. Jeffrey D. Jackson, Blackstone’s Ninth Amendment: A Historical Common Law Baseline for the Interpretation of Unenumerated Rights, 62 Okla. L. Rev. 167 (2010) (explaining why the unenumerated rights referred to in the Ninth Amendment should be understood with reference to a common law baseline, especially as specified in Blackstone’s Commentaries); Adam J. MacLeod, Our Universal and Particular Constitution, Public Discourse, https://www.thepublicdiscourse.com/2018/10/43788/ (October 4, 2018). <span style="color:red">“The interpretation of the Constitution of the United States is necessarily influenced by the fact that its provisions are framed in the language of the English common law, and are to be read in the light of its history.” Smith v. Alabama, 124 U.S. 465, 478 (1888). The terms and concepts of the common law provided the “the nomenclature of which the framers of the Constitution were familiar.” Minor v. Happersett, 88 U.S. (21 Wall) 162, 167 (1875). Accord James R. Stoner, Jr., Common-Law Liberty: Rethinking American Constitutionalism 9-29 (2003). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">American constitutional rights are not philosophical abstractions. They are described in detail in common law treatises, such as those by Coke and Hale, and especially Blackstone’s Commentaries. The framers crafted American constitutions—state and federal—in common law terms. And Blackstone was their teacher and lexicographer. <br />
<br />
Morris L. Cohen, Thomas Jefferson Recommends a Course of Law Study, 1119 U. Pa. L. Rev. 823 (1971); Robert A. Ferguson, Law and Letters in American Culture 11 (1984); Albert W. Alschuler, Rediscovering Blackstone, 145 U. Pa. L. Rev. 1 (1996); R.H. Helmholz, Natural Law in Court: A History of Legal Theory in Practice 131–41 (2015). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">As this Court has rightly acknowledged, Blackstone’s “works constituted the preeminent authority on English law for the founding generation.” Alden v. Maine, 527 U.S. 706, 715 (1999). Blackstone retained his influence through the adoption of the Civil War Amendments. James M. Ogden, Lincoln’s Early Impressions of the Law in Indiana, 7 Notre Dame L. Rev. 325, 328 (1932). And this Court continues to turn to Blackstone today. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">[2 A few examples from recent years include Gamble v. United States, __ U.S. __, 139 S. Ct. 1960 (2019) (the Court’s opinion, the concurrence, and one dissent citing Blackstone multiple times to determine the meaning of the phrase “the same offense” in the Fifth Amendment’s double jeopardy clause); Department of Homeland Security v. Thuraissigiam, __ U.S. __, 140 S. Ct. 1959, 1969 (2020) (calling Blackstone’s Commentaries a “satisfactory exposition of the common law of England”); Ramos v. Louisiana, __ U.S. __, 140 S. Ct. 1390, 1395 (2020) (citing Blackstone in explanation of the holding that the requirement of juror unanimity is “a vital right protected by the common law” and therefore the Constitution’s jury trial guarantee); Torres v. Madrid, __ U.S. __, 141 S. Ct. 989, 996, 997, 998, 1000 (2021) (citing Blackstone multiple times to determine meaning of Fourth Amendment “seizure”). ]<br />
<br />
...emphasis added). The legislature’s particular duty to declare and secure the natural and customary rights of America’s fundamental common law can be seen clearly by reading together the Ninth, Tenth, and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution of the United States. The Bill of Rights marks off certain rights as beyond the competence of Congress (and now, by incorporation, the states) to alter or abolish. It immunizes those rights by enumerating them and by stating in particular terms the official duties with which they correlate. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">But as the Ninth Amendment makes clear, the enumeration of certain common-law rights does not deny or disparage all the other rights that the American people enjoy by virtue of natural law and their ancient customs. The Ninth Amendment expressly reserves to the people those civil and fundamental rights that they enjoyed prior to ratification, which are their natural rights, other common-law rights and liberties, and some privileges enumerated in state constitutions. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Because many states refused to remedy infringements of fundamental rights [for blacks] prior to the Civil War, the Fourteenth Amendment was necessary to ensure to all persons due process of law and the equal protection of the laws, and to empower Congress to remedy infringements of those rights. It bears emphasis that <span style="color:red">the Fourteenth Amendment was necessary to recall state legislatures to their original task. '''Far from repealing the people’s retention of fundamental rights declared by the Ninth Amendment, the Fourteenth Amendment strengthened it'''. And far from abrogating the duty of state legislatures to declare and secure unenumerated rights, the Fourteenth Amendment reinforced that duty. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">[That is, the rights retained by the people but not protected by their state, such as the right of Blacks to liberty, was strengthened – at the expense of the freedom of the legislature to torpedo those rights. And the 14th Amendment did not supplant the duty of legislatures to protect rights, by courts, but rather that duty became enforceable by Congress.]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Legislatures are equipped to deliberate about and secure the rights of all persons as they identify and specify the boundaries between rights. <br />
<br />
See Grégoire Webber et al, Legislated Rights: Securing Human Rights through Legislation (2018). Many of the great civil rights achievements in American history have been legislative achievements. See, e.g., the Civil Rights Act of 1866, Civil Rights Act of 1875, and the Civil Rights Act of 1964. And these include state statutes that declare and secure common law rights against unreasonable discrimination. ....<br />
<br />
This Court has never denied that state legislatures have the power and duty to declare and specify the boundaries of fundamental rights in the abortion context. To the contrary, this Court has ratified the legislative province to identify, specify, and secure the rights of our fundamental law. Often using the term “interests” or “state interests,” ....<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In many respects, legislatures are better equipped for this task than courts, whose job is to secure the rights of the litigants who happen to appear in any case or controversy. The job of a court is to specify a right in a legal judgment resolving a dispute between two parties. To generalize that particular judgment, to make that right universal and absolute for all persons, carries the risk that the tribunal will unintentionally invite infringement of the rights of persons who are not parties to the litigation. Significantly, most constitutional abortion cases proceed without any involvement of the persons who are most interested in, and affected by, the outcome: expectant mothers, fathers, grandparents, physicians and other health care professionals who are called to deal with the fallout of abortions, and, critically, unborn human beings. By contrast, legislatures hear evidence and find facts about the rights of all interested persons <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Furthermore, a lawmaker must fashion remedies and sanctions for rights infringements that are commensurate and responsive to the particular wrong. Because not all persons who contribute to a person’s death are equally culpable, legislatures justly distinguish between them. The sanction for reckless acts that cause death need not be as severe as the sanction for intentional homicide. Legislatures also reasonably take into account the circumstances of the person whose life is lost. For example, remedies for wrongful death may take into account a person’s stage of development and relationship to any dependents. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....For example, the right to life remains inviolable and absolute though a legislature may choose to sanction those who are most culpable for its deprivation and not others <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Similarly, state legislatures have long recognized that abortionists are the true, culpable parties in an abortion. Mothers are often victims of coercion. And mothers suffer the consequences of the abortion procedure itself. For these and other reasons, legislatures may choose not to impose legal sanctions on them, notwithstanding that their unborn children have a right to live. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Roe Court failed to understand this. The Court looked to state laws that impose criminal sanctions on abortionists, rather than on the mothers themselves, and then erroneously inferred that the law is indifferent to the lives of the unborn. Roe, 410 U.S. at 157 n.54. ...<br />
<br />
[Many prolifers similarly misunderstood]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">That a right is absolute means simply that it is vested—in jurisprudential terms, that it has built into it an immunity from retrospective or retroactive abrogation—so that governments are powerless to deprive any person of the right unless and until the person has been proven to have forfeited the right by committing some wrong, and that the wrong has been established in some proceeding that satisfies the requirements of due process, or until the person dies a natural death. Id. at *125, 128-30. <br />
<br />
,,,,the right to life is a right not to be intentionally killed. It is not a guarantee against death ‘<br />
<br />
==34 141 International Legal Scholars==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185170/20210729071535904_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20141%20International%20Legal%20Scholars.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Not even foreign legal authorities support any right to abortion. 141 International Legal Scholars submitted an amicus brief in the Dobbs v. Jackson case declaring that “Whatever role international law plays in evaluating abortion regulations in the United States, it offers no basis for the existence of a human right to abortion.” (http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185170/20210729071535904_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20141%20International%20Legal%20Scholars.pdf) “The minority of States that choose to allow elective abortion impose a standard gestational limit of twelve weeks, which is more restrictive than Mississippi’s Gestational Age Act.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“If the Court chooses to consult international law in this case, it will find there is no treaty that recognizes a so-called human right to abortion, nor has such a right been established through customary law. To the contrary, the practice across all regions demonstrates a consistent State prerogative to protect unborn life. Nor has any international court declared the existence of an international right to abortion, even in regions with the most permissive abortion regimes. Thirdparty actors seeking to invent a new right to abortion err when interpreting key international instruments, such as the Convention on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women, the Rome Statute, and the International Conference on Population and Development. The clear language in those documents defies any attempt to repurpose them to create an international human right to abortion. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“On the other hand, provisions recognizing the unborn child as a rights-holder can be found in many international human rights instruments, including the American Convention on Human Rights, the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. Most States choose to exercise the prerogative to protect unborn life by regulating abortion much more strictly than in the United States. Even in the minority of States that permit elective abortions, most specify a gestational limit of twelve weeks. That limit is more restrictive than Mississippi’s Gestational Age Act, which allows elective abortion until fifteen weeks’ gestation, and then permits abortion only for medical emergencies or severe fetal abnormality.”<br />
<br />
<br />
==35 Prolife Center at the University of St. Thomas==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185177/20210729085125572_DOCKET%2019-1392%20BRIEF%20AMICUS%20CURIAE%20OF%20THE%20PROLIFE%20CENTER%20AT%20THE%20UNIVERISTY%20OF%20ST.%20THOMAS%20IN%20SUPPORT%20OF%20PETITIONERS.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
The Court should make clear that the States are not required to permit abortions for reasons relating to the mental or psychological health of the pregnant woman, or for undefined reasons of health, either of which would lead the Court, and the country, back to a regime of abortion–on–demand.<br />
<br />
==36 Mary Kay Bacallao Advocating for Unborn Children==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185109/20210728121621904_19-1392%20Brief%20Amicus%20Curiae.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">It is time to extend to unborn children the equal protection and due process rights they enjoyed in Mississippi until the Roe Court made an elementary grammar error, using a phrase that conferred citizenship in one clause to define personhood for other clauses. It is time to correct the Roe Court’s error in refusing to determine when life began and in the same stroke of the pen stripping the unborn of their personhood, citing the very amendment that codified the right of all persons, born and unborn, to equal protection and due process. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">THE ROE COURT MISINTERPRETED THE MEANING OF THE WORD “PERSON” AS FOUND IN THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT. The Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution3 includes the following three references to persons: <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">[1.] “All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">[2.] “No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law;” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">[3.] “nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Here, in looking at statutory construction cannons such as noscitur a sociis, which means, “it is known by its companions,” the meaning of the word “persons” can only be ascertained by its associates. In the first instance, “persons” is being modified by “born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">3 U.S. Const. amend. XIV (adopted July 9, 1868) Text: All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">jurisdiction thereof…” Here, “persons” is a general term that is being limited at least by two conditions, either “born” or “naturalized.” In this instance, the Fourteenth Amendment limits the type of persons who can be citizens to those either born or naturalized in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In the second instance, no “person” shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law, where “person” is used generally, unmodified by “born” or “naturalized, etc.” Here “citizens” as defined in the first instance is separate and distinct from “person” found in the second part of the sentence. The second use of “person” is unmodified. These persons are not necessarily citizens, nor does it follow that they must necessarily be “born.” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In the third instance, “any person” is also unmodified by either “born” or “naturalized, etc.” In other words, “person” is not limited to a person “born” or “naturalized in the United States,” rather, the term “person” is again unmodified and used in the general sense. Thus, where the second use of the term “person” prohibits a State from depriving a person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law, “person” is used generally rather than in the context of being “born.” Additionally, where the third use of the term “person” does not allow a State to deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws, again, “person” is unmodified. This does not limit protection to “persons born or naturalized in the United States…” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">To assert that one word, such as “born,” that is used in a single line to limit a general term, such as “person,” in one provision also limits that same general term, in this case “person,” each time it occurs 5 is linguistically incorrect. It is the same as saying that because one line refers to a black cat, all other times the word cat appears it can only refer to cats that are black. This is not the way language works. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">There is no evidence that the original meaning of person was limited to those who were born. Rather, the corpus evidence found in COHA, the Hansard Corpus, and the Corpus of U.S. Supreme Opinions point to the unborn as persons, legally able to inherit property and in need of protection. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Roe court did not resolve the question of when life begins, “We need not resolve the difficult question of when life begins. When those trained in the respective disciplines of medicine, philosophy, and theology are unable to arrive at any consensus, the judiciary, at this point in the development of man’s knowledge, is not in a position to speculate as to the answer.”4 However, the Roe Court maintained that “… the word ‘person,’ as used in the Fourteenth Amendment, does not include the unborn.”5 The Roe Court used faulty linguistics in determining that someone unborn was not a ‘person’ as used in second and third parts of the Fourteenth Amendment. In the first use of person, ‘born’ modifies or limits the meaning of ‘person,’ not the other way around. The Roe Court did not use proper linguistic interpretation of the text of the Fourteenth Amendment when limiting its interpretation of the second and third references to persons as those who were born. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The second reference to person in the Fourteenth Amendment, stating that a State may not deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law applies to persons both born and unborn. The third reference to person in the Fourteenth Amendment, where a State may not deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws also applies to persons both born and unborn. Simple linguistics, applied to these provisions in the U.S. Constitution, where the word person is unmodified by the word “born” confirms that a person is a person no matter how small. <br />
<br />
In the 1850’s, there is “love of an unborn child.”18 There is also mention of the absurdity of a “price for an unborn infant”19 and making “slaves of the unborn”20 in an argument against slavery in the New England Yale Review. In the “other” category there is a reference to the divine “I AM” as unborn21 in Rational Cosmology. In the 1860’s, a popular magazine called The Atlantic deals with the “crime, so common among church going ladies and others, of murdering their unborn offspring!”22 The same magazine asks a question about, “those who provide women with [th’] means of killing their unborn children, - a double crime, murder and suicide?”23 The Atlantic also mentions the “murder of unborn offspring” in the context of a “Church powerful enough to guard the issues of life.”24 In the 1870’s, the English Constitution mentions unborn children in the context of persons: “An Act of Parliament is at least as complex as a marriage settlement; and it is made much as a settlement would be if it were left to the vote and settled by the major part of persons concerned, including the unborn children. There is an advocate for every interest, and every interest clamours for every advantage.”25 <br />
<br />
==37 Professor Randy Beck==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185118/20210728124300921_19-1392tsacProfessorRandyBeck.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
Professor Tribe’s Justification Falls Short Because a Pregnant Woman Cannot Transfer a Viable Fetus to Other Caretakers ... 20 V. Viability Is an Arbitrary Line for Measuring Abortion Rights ...................... 22 VI. Stare Decisis Should Not Preserve an Arbitrary Rule Without Constitutional Warrant ..<br />
<br />
==38 Christian Legal Society and Robertson Center for Constitutional Law==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185104/20210728115957257_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20%20Christian%20Legal%20Society%20et%20al.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
The Court cannot serve the rule of law by preserving decisions that subvert the rule of law <br />
A Proper Conception Of Substantive Due Process Does Not Support Existing Abortion Jurisprudence ....<br />
<br />
<blockquote> <span style="color:red">Some of this Court’s most ignominious decisions emerged from expansive and unchecked conceptions of substantive due process. The “most salient instance . . . was, of course, the case that the [Fourteenth] Amendment would in due course overturn, Dred Scott v. Sandford.” Glucksberg, 521 U.S. at 758 (Souter, J., concurring in the judgment). A half-century later, Lochner v. New York inspired a line of “deviant economic due process cases” that “harbored the spirit of Dred Scott in their absolutist implementation of” substantive due process. Id. at 761. Roe fares no better under a proper constitutional analysis. </span><br />
<br />
==39 Center for Religious Expression==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185542/20210802162418144_19-1932%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20Center%20for%20Religious%20Expression.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Roe Court demurred on the central inquiry. When the case was decided, the presence of a life inside a mother’s womb was a debatable topic, largely informed by religious and philosophical perspectives. 410 U.S. at 159-60 (passing on “the difficult question of when life begins,” referencing differing belief systems).2 Wary of decreeing the precise moment of life, whether at conception, birth, or some time in between, the Roe Court rejected life as a marker and settled on viability as way to denote the State’s interest.</span><br />
<br />
==40 Center for Family and Human Rights==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185123/20210728132729071_CFam%20Amicus%20Brief%20Filed.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The 2018 Mississippi Gestational Age Act banning most abortions after the 15th week of pregnancy, when the child in utero is known to suffer pain from common abortion procedures, is fully consistent with International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights ratified by the United States, which presumptively protects the right to life of children in the womb (hereinafter, the “Covenant”), International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, Dec. 16, 1966, S. EXEC. DOC. E, 95-2 (1978), 999 U.N.T.S. 171 (entered into force Mar. 23, 1976), as well as other human rights commitments and obligations of the United States. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">A careful reading of the text and history of the Covenant reveals that children in the womb were never excluded from the right to life, and that, more broadly, international law does not establish a human right to abortion in any circumstance, either through treaty obligation or by custom....<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Treaty law is the supreme Law of the Land and the Court has a constitutional responsibility to declare what the law is. The Court should make a finding of law that children in the womb are not excluded from the right to life under the Covenant, given the plain meaning of the text of the Covenant when it was ratified by the U.S., the interpretation of the Covenant by the Executive branch, and its implementation by other States who are party to the treaty, therefore, laws to protect children in the womb from being arbitrarily deprived of their right to life, regardless of viability, are consistent with the international human rights obligations of the United States. <br />
<br />
The Court should nonetheless say something substantive on the topic of the status of the unborn in international human rights law without upsetting honest political debates that are legitimately carried out through democratic institutions. The Court should do this for prudential reasons, including that of shielding itself from accusations that it is avoiding foundational human rights questions and to preempt interference from international actors and foreign powers in U.S. domestic legal and political disputes.<br />
<br />
==41 Concerned Women for America==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185093/20210728111520674_No19-1392_CWA_Diaz_Amicusbrief.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
Mississippi Should Be Free To Make Reasonable Determinations About Abortion Policy That Place A Higher Value On The Life Of Mothers And Their Unborn Children ............................................................ 4 II. <br />
<br />
The Court Has Undervalued The State’s Interest In Women’s Health By Failing To Give Proper Weight To The Physical, Psychological, And Emotional Harms Abortion Can Have On Women’s Lives .. <br />
<br />
e. The states should have broad discretion in addressing the interests at play in the abortion context. Neither viability nor any other framework should constrain the state’s ability to address the ever-changing concerns associated with abortion.<br />
<br />
==42 Foundation for Moral Law, Lutherans for Life==<br />
<br />
[https://storage.googleapis.com/msgsndr/JTZoYWv3fly6hFemb8mU/media/63b73813b7386028645df690.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
neither abortion nor privacy are mentioned in the Constitution, but Justice Blackmun said the right is found in a "penumbra" formed from "emanations" from certain rights in the Bill of Rights. Thomas Jefferson's warning that "The Constitution ... is a 3 mere thing of wax in the hands of the judiciary, which they may twist and shape into any form they please"2 takes on special significance, because a jurisprudence of "penumbras" and "emanations" is entirely subjective and removes the Constitution from any kind of objective scholarship. It is also dangerous, because the same Court that can read into the Constitution rights that simply are not there, can also read out of the Constitution rights that are there, by reading into the Constitution powers that are not there....'''The viability test has no foundation in law, science, history, Biblical or church tradition.''' <br />
<br />
When Justice Blackmun used the viability test in Roe, he presented very little historical, legal, or medical support for that position, because very little support for that position exists. ...<br />
<br />
In fact, throughout history viability has seldom if ever been considered the beginning of human life. <span style="color:red">Much of our Western legal tradition has been shaped by the Bible. On October 4, 1982, Congress passed Public Law 97-280, declaring 1983 the “Year of the Bible,” and the President signed the bill into law. The opening clause of the bill is: “Whereas Biblical teachings inspired concepts of civil government that are contained in our Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of the United States; . . .” Joshua Berman, Senior Editor at Bar-Ilan University, in his 2008 book Created Equal: How the Bible Broke with Ancient Political Thought, contends that the Pentateuch is the world's first model of a society in which politics and economics embrace egalitarian ideals. Berman states flatly: If there was one truth the ancients held to be self-evident it was that all men were not created equal. If we maintain today that, in fact, they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights, then it is because we have inherited as part of our cultural heritage notions of equality that were deeply entrenched in the ancient passages of the Pentateuch.6 <br />
<br />
6 Joshua Berman, Created Equal: How the Bible Broke with Ancient Political Thought (Oxford 2008) 175, See also John Marshall Gest, The Influence of Biblical Texts Upon English Law, an address delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa and Sigma xi Societies of the University of Pennsylvania June 14, 1910, https://scholarship.law.upenn.edu quoting Sir Francis Bacon: “The law of England is not taken out of Amadis de Gaul, nor the Book of Palmerin, but out of the Scripture, of the laws of the Romans and the Grecians.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">A. The Bible on Pre-born Children <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Bible treats the preborn child as a living human being. When Elizabeth, the mother of John the Baptist, came into the presence of Mary who was carrying Jesus in her womb, Elizabeth declared that “the babe leaped in my womb for joy” (Luke 1:44). That doesn’t sound like a fetus or fertilized egg; that sounds like a child! It reminds us of Rebekah, of whom we read, “And the children struggled within her . . . .” (Genesis 25:21-26). These preborn children displayed traits that would follow them most of their lives. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The original languages used in these accounts make no distinction between born and preborn children. Of all of the Greek words used for child, brephos connotes a baby or very small child. That’s the word attributed to Elizabeth: “The brephos leaped in my womb for joy.” We see the same word in the next chapter: “Ye shall find the brephos wrapped in swaddling clothes, lying in a manger.” And in II Timothy 3:15 Paul uses the same word: “From a brephos thou hast known the holy Scriptures . . . .” The same word is used for a child in the womb, a child newly born, and a child sometime after birth. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Another Greek word used for “son” is huios. In Luke 1:36 the angel tells Mary, “And, behold, thy cousin, Elizabeth, she hath also conceived a huios.” And the angel tells Mary in Luke 1:31, “Thou shat conceive in thy womb, and bring forth a huios.” Two verbs, “conceive” and “bring forth,” with the same direct object, a “son” or huios. And years later, when Jesus is a young man, God the Father says to Him, “Thou art my beloved huios” (Luke 5:22). Again, the same Greek word used for a preborn child, a newborn child, and a young man. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The same is true of the Old Testament Hebrew. The same word used for the preborn children in Rebekah’s womb, bne, is also used for Ishmael when he is 13 years old (Genesis 17:25) and for Noah’s adult sons (Genesis 9:19). And Job says in his anguish, “Let the day perish wherein I was born, and the night in which it was said, There is a man child (gehver) conceived” (Job 3:3). The Old Testament uses gehver 65 times, and usually it is simply translated “man.” Job 3:3 could be accurately translated, “There is a man conceived.” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The biblical authors identify themselves with the preborn child. In Psalm 139:13 David says, “Thou hast covered me in my mother’s womb.” Isaiah says, “The Lord hath called me from the womb” (49:1), and in Jeremiah 1:5 we read, “before thou camest forth out of the womb I sanctified thee, and I ordained thee a prophet unto the nations.” They don’t say “the fetus that became me;” that person in the womb is “me.” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Job wishes he could have died before he was born: “Wherefore then hast thou brought me forth out of the womb? Oh that I had given up the ghost, and no eye had seen me!” (10:18) How can the preborn child die if he or she is not alive? <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">And David says, “Behold, I was shapen in iniquity, and in sin did my mother conceive me.” (Psalm 51:5) There was nothing sinful about the act of David’s conception; this passage establishes that the preborn child has a sinful nature. How can a non-person have a sinful nature? And while other verses establish the child’s personhood before birth, this passage shows his or her humanity all the way back to conception! <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Clearly the Bible, especially in its original languages, treats the preborn child the same as a child already born. The Bible knows nothing about “potential human beings;” to the authors of Scripture, there are only human beings with potential. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Some will argue that, because Genesis 2:7 says, “God breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul,” man doesn’t really become human until he takes that first breath. Amici believe this is a mistaken interpretation of Scripture.''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">(1) Genesis 2:7 is not normative about how and when human life begins. Adam was never a preborn child; he was formed out of the dust of the ground as a mature adult human being. No one else was formed out of the dust of the ground; even Eve was formed out of Adam’s rib, and we never read that God breathed the breath of life into her nostrils or those of anyone else. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">(2) Even if we were to conclude that without the “breath of life” we are not fully human, the preborn child takes in oxygen through a placenta. Birth constitutes a dramatic change of environment coupled with the ability to breathe for oneself; other than that birth is simply one more step on the road to maturity. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">So the Bible, taken as a whole, teaches that the preborn child is a living human being. Viability does not even enter the picture in determining the beginning of personhood. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">B. . Church Tradition on Pre-Born Children <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Church tradition has also been instrumental in the formation of Western law.7 For this reason, and because Justice Blackmun in Roe, 410 U.S. at 130, and Justice Stevens in his Webster dissent, 492 U.S. at 567-69, cited Catholic Church teaching to justify Roe v. Wade, Amici will briefly survey church history and its effect on Western law. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Didache, or Teaching of the Twelve Apostles, a manual of instruction dating possibly as early as 50 A.D. or possibly in the second or third centuries,8 commanded, "You shall not murder a child by abortion nor kill that which is born."9 The Church Father Tertullian, writing around 197 A.D., cited <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">7 Harold J. Berman, Law and Revolution: The Formation of the Western Legal Tradition (Cambridge, MA, 1983); John Eidsmoe, Historical and Theological Foundations of Law, 3 Vols. (Nordskog 2017) 8 Early Christian Writings, "Didache," www.earlychristianwritings. com/ didache.html. 9 Id., Roberts-Donaldson English Translation.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">extensively from Old Testament and New Testament Scriptures.10 He also noted that Hippocrates, Asciepiades, Erasistratus, Herophius, and Soranos, "all of them certain that a living being had been conceived and so deploring the most unhappy infancy of one of this kind who had first to be killed list a live woman being rent apart.”11 St. Hippolytus, writing around 228 A.D., condemned those who resorted to drugs " so to expel what was being conceived on account of their not wishing to have a child," declaring them guilty of "adultery and murder at the same time."12 And St. Basil wrote in his First Canonical Letter, <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The woman who purposely destroys her unborn child is guilty of murder. With us there is no nice enquiry as to its being formed or unformed. In this case it is not only the being about to be born who is vindicated, but the woman in her attack upon herself, because in most cases women who make such attempts die. the destruction of the embryo is an additional crime, a second murder, at all events, if we regard it as done with intent.13<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">10 Scriptures cited by Tertullian include Jeremiah 1:5; Psalm 139:15; Luke 1:41-42. 11 He declared firmly, “It is not permissible for us to destroy the seed by means of illicit manslaughter once it has been conceived in the womb, so long as blood remains in the person.” 12 Hyppolytus, circa 228. A.D.; quoted in The Ante-Nicene Fathers: The Writings of the Fathers Down to A.D. 325, ed. Alexander Roberts, Sir James Donaldson, (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1903) V:131. 13 10 Basil (c. 330-379 A.D.), reprinted in A Select Library of Post-Nicene Fathers of the Christian Church, Second Series, ed. Philip Schaff and Henry Wace (New York: The Christian Literature Company, 1895) VIII:225. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Canon Law of the Roman Catholic Church provides , "A person who procures a completed abortion incurs a latae sententiae [automatic] excommunication."14 The Canon Law developed in the early centuries of the Christian Church out of early Church documents such as the Didache and was based on and interacted with the Scriptures, Roman and Greek Law, Byzantine Law, the Justinian Code, the decrees of emperors, and other sacred and secular legal documents.15 The above citation from the Didache is evidence that the prohibition against abortion was part of the Canon Law from the beginning and consistently thereafter. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">No wonder Orthodox scholar Fr. Alexander F.C. Webster wrote that abortion “is one of only several moral issues on which not one dissenting opinion has ever been expressed by the Church Fathers.”16 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">14 Code of Canon Law, Title VI, Delicts Against Human Life and Freedom, Canon 1398, www.vatican.va/archive/ENG1104/_P57.HTM. 15 Kenneth Pennington, A Short History of the Canon Law from Apostolic Times to 1917, http://faculty.cua.edu/pennington /Canon%20Law/ ShortHistoryCanonLaw.htm, pp. 2, 3, 7, 10, 16, 19, 21, 25-26, 32, 33-37, 41, 44, 59, 61. Although, as Pennington notes at 74, Martin Luther initially rejected the Canon Law, as his thinking developed he came to appreciate the value of Roman Catholic Canon Law legal scholarship and concluded that that scholarship should be applied to the civil law and the common law; see John Witte, Jr., Law and Protestantism: The Legal Teachings of the Lutheran Reformation 55-85 (Cambridge University Press, 2002); John Eidsmoe, Historical & Theological Foundations of Law (American Vision 2012) III:983-84. 16 Dr. James Lamb, Abortion and the Message of the Church: Sin or Salvation? June 30, 2004, http://www.lutheransforlife.org/article/ abortion-and-the#message-of-the-church-sin-or-salvation/ (quoting “An Orthodox Word on Abortion” at 8-9 (Paper delivered at the Consultation on The Church and Abortion, Princeton, 1992)). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Nor was this view limited to the Church Fathers or to the Roman Catholic Tradition. Martin Luther stated his position forcefully: “For those who have no regard for pregnant women and who do not spare the tender fruit are murderers and infanticides.”17 John Calvin was just as clear: “If it seems more horrible to kill a man in his own house than in a field, because a man’s house is his most secure refuge, it ought surely to be deemed more atrocious to destroy the unborn in the womb before it has come to light.”18 And Pennington notes that when King Henry VIII (1491 - 1547 A.D.) separated the Church of England from the Roman Catholic Church, he proclaimed that "he, not the pope, was the source of all canon law henceforward."19 Pennington adds, "Consequently, the Anglican Church preserved the entire body of medieval canon law and converted it into a national legal system."20 <br />
<br />
C. Common Law on Preborn Children <br />
As the common law developed, "quickening" became the test for homicide prosecutions. <br />
<br />
17 Lamb, supra note 11 (quoting What Luther Says: An anthology, compiled by Ewald M. Plass (St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1959), Vol. 2, NO. 2826 at 905). 18 Lamb, supra note 11 (quoting Commentaries on the Four Last Books of Moses at 41-42 (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1950)). 19 Pennington, supra note 12, at 64. 20 Id. <br />
Quickening is different from viability; quickening is the time when the mother first feels the child move within her. One could be convicted of homicide for the killing of an unborn child, only if quickening had already taken place. <br />
<br />
But this common law rule did not mean that the child became a person only at quickening or that there was a right to abortion before quickening. Rather, it was a procedural matter of proof. '''One can be guilty of homicide only if the homicide victim was alive at the time of the alleged killing, and at that stage in the development of the common law, medical science had no way of proving the child was alive until the mother had felt the child move within her.'''21 <br />
<br />
For nearly half a century, this nation has been saddled with an abortion jurisprudence that has no foundation in the Constitution, no foundation in medical science, and no foundation in American or Biblical history and tradition, a jurisprudence that has resulted in an estimated 62,994,587 abortions since 1973 <br />
<br />
See www.abortioncounters.com and Steven Ertelt 62,502,904 Babies Have Been Killed by Abortion Since Roe v. Wade in 1973 (2021) available at https://www.lifenews.com/2021/01/22/62502904<br />
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==43 Americans United for Life==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185211/20210729102214787_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20Americans%20United%20for%20Life.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
(Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey are not "settled precedents" worthy of being retained under the doctrine of "Stare Decisis".)<br />
<br />
Roe is radically unsettled for additional reasons. It has not received the acquiescence of Justices or lower court judges. Roe was wrongly decided and poorly reasoned. Numerous adjudicative errors during the original deliberations—especially the absence of any evidentiary record—have contributed to making Roe unworkable. It has been the subject of persistent judicial and scholarly criticism. There is a constant search for a constitutional rationale for Roe, and the Court has yet to give a reasoned justification for the viability rule. See Randy Beck, Gonzales, Casey and the Viability Rule, 103 Nw. U. L. Rev. 249 (2009). 3 <br />
<br />
Casey is unsettled by its failure to ground the abortion right in the Constitution, by an ambiguous standard of review that is unworkable, by conflicting precedents that have “defied consistent application” by the lower courts, and by persistent judicial and scholarly criticism. Payne v. Tennessee, 501 U.S. 808, 828–830 (1991). Politics aside, reconsidering Roe and Casey does not involve uprooting a stable, settled feature of the legal landscape. Because they are radically unsettled, Roe and Casey contradict the stare decisis values of consistency, dependability, and predictability and are entitled to minimal stare decisis respect. <br />
<br />
==44 Ethics and Public Policy Center==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185234/20210729114228086_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20Ethics%20and%20Public%20Policy%20Center.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
C. Factual Developments Have Also Undermined Roe and Casey’s Reasoning. Apart from these legal developments, “facts have so changed, or come to be seen so differently” since Roe and Casey were decided as to have significantly sapped those decisions of whatever residual force they might be thought to have. Casey, 505 U.S. at 855. <br />
Roe recognized that whether “life begins at conception and is present throughout pregnancy” was of pivotal importance, but it asserted that “at this point 19 in the development of man’s knowledge” medical science had been “unable to arrive at any consensus” on the issue. 410 U.S. at 159. Roe thus proceeded on the assumption that life “as we recognize it” “does not begin until live birth.” Id. at 160-61. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">This “unsupported empirical assumption” has been significantly undermined by subsequent developments. See Janus, 138 S. Ct. at 2483. It is now clear that an unborn fetus is not merely “potential life,” but is a “a living organism while within the womb, whether or not it is viable outside the womb.” Gonzales, 550 U.S. at 147. As a recent, exhaustive review of the scientific literature concludes, “[t]he scientific evidence clearly indicates that a one-cell human organism, the zygote, forms immediately at fusion of sperm and egg. From a scientific perspective, this single cell is inarguably a complete and living organism; i.e. a member of the human species at the earliest stage of natural development.” Maureen L. Condic, When Does Human Life Begin? The Scientific Evidence and Terminology Revisited, 8 U. ST. THOMAS J.L. & PUB. POL’Y 44, 70 (2013); see also Hana R. Marsden et al., Model systems for membrane fusion, 40 CHEM. SOC’Y REV. 1572, 1572 (2011) (“The fusion of sperm and egg membranes initiates the life of a sexually reproducing organism.”); Enrica Bianchi et al., Juno is the egg Izumo receptor and is essential for mammalian fertilization, 24 NATURE 483, 483 (2014) (“Fertilization occurs when sperm and egg recognize each other and fuse to form a new, genetically distinct organism.”). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Further, in 1973—and, to some extent, even in 1992—it was widely assumed that an unborn human being had no ability to sense and experience pain. Stuart W.G. Derbyshire & John C. Bockmann, Reconsidering fetal pain, 46 J. MED. ETHICS 3, 3 (2020). Today, by contrast, there is a growing scientific consensus that the unborn can feel pain as early as 12 weeks gestation. Id. at 6; see also American College of Pediatricians, Fetal Pain: What is the Scientific Evidence? at 1, 7 (2021), https://acpeds.org/assets/Fetal-Pain-Position-Statement-(2).pdf (concluding that “a large body of scientific evidence demonstrates that painful or noxious stimulation adversely affects immature human beings, both before and after birth,” “as early as 12 weeks gestation (and possibly earlier)”). These scientific advances further undermine Roe’s underpinnings.<br />
<br />
==45 Pennsylvania Pro-Life Federation==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185227/20210729111948208_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20the%20Pennsylvania%20Pro-Life%20Federation.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
Some of the subjects covered: <br />
I. THERE ARE TWO PATIENTS THAT MUST BE CARED FOR IN MODERN OBSTETRICAL PRACTICE, AND IT IS RARE THAT AN ABORTION WOULD BE NEEDED TO MANAGE A PREGNANCY SUCCESSFULLY <br />
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II. II. CLAIMS THAT ELECTIVE ABORTIONS MUST BE ALLOWED BECAUSE ABORTION IS STATISTICALLY SAFER THAN CHILDBIRTH SHOULD BE REJECTED<br />
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III. A. The Risk of Dying from Abortion or Childbirth Is Negligible<br />
<br />
IV. B. Although Abortion Is a Medical Procedure, It Is Rarely a Medical Decision<br />
<br />
V. C. Discussing Maternal Mortality Rates in Relation to Elective Abortion Has No Practical Relevance<br />
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<span style="color:red">In modern obstetrical practice, the physician treats two patients—the mother and her unborn baby—and strives to maximize and protect the health and well-being of both. Good medical practice requires this. It is rare that the interests of one of these patients, from a medical standpoint, conflicts with the other. Even in those instances where the mother’s condition may place her physical health at greater risk, the pregnancy can generally be managed satisfactorily with a successful outcome for both the mother and baby. In those very rare circumstances when this cannot be done, laws like Mississippi’s allow pregnancy terminations to take place in order to protect the mother. <br />
<br />
Claims that abortion must be allowed on demand because abortion is statistically safer than childbirth should be rejected. The relative risk of death is negligible in both abortion and childbirth. Moreover, although abortion is a medical procedure, it is rarely a medical decision. In the vast majority of cases, abortions are sought for socio-economic reasons; not for medical reasons. Therefore, discussing maternal mortality in relation to elective abortion simply is not relevant in any practical or meaningful sense. <br />
<br />
Contrary to what some suggest, Roe was not a significant cause of reduced maternal mortality and morbidity from abortion. Such reductions correspond more closely with medical advances such as the development of effective antibiotics to manage infections and advances in medical technology allowing for blood transfusions and better administration of anesthesia. <br />
<br />
These medical advances were unrelated to the legalization of abortion, having occurred well before Roe was handed down. So, overturning Roe will not 3 affect those advances, nor will it preclude the application of future medical advances in the treatment of pregnant women and an overall reduction in maternal mortality from all causes. <br />
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Roe was a radical decision that overrode the legislative judgments of all 50 states. It was based on a flawed understanding of the humanity of the unborn child and views of obstetrical practice that are outdated because they fail to treat unborn children as second patients in pregnancy. Additionally, it may have been based on false claims regarding the number of women supposedly dying from illegal abortion. It should be overturned. <br />
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The impression frequently was given (and still is) that childbirth is extremely risky and that women need abortion because it is much safer than childbirth. Likewise, based on made up and grossly inflated numbers of maternal deaths prior to Roe, it has been erroneously suggested that Roe was the reason for a dramatic reduction in maternal mortality from abortion, and that its overturn would return the country to a time when “thousands” of women died from “back-alley” abortions. None of this is true. <br />
<br />
I. THERE ARE TWO PATIENTS THAT MUST BE CARED FOR IN MODERN OBSTETRICAL PRACTICE, AND IT IS RARE THAT AN ABORTION WOULD BE NEEDED TO MANAGE A PREGNANCY SUCCESSFULLY. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">1. Basic medical texts, for decades, have made it clear that there are two patients that must be cared for in modern obstetrical practice. For example, in explaining the need for significant revisions to the 1980 edition of Williams Obstetrics, the authors stated: <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Happily, we have entered an era in which the fetus can be rightfully considered and treated as our second patient. . . Fetal diagnosis and therapy have now emerged as legitimate tools the obstetrician must possess. Moreover, the number of tools the obstetrician can employ to address the needs of the fetus increases each year. <br />
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<span style="color:red">Jack A. Pritchard & Paul C. MacDonald, Williams Obstetrics, vii (16th Ed. 1980) (emphasis supplied). <br />
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<span style="color:red">A later edition made it even more obvious that obstetricians must be cognizant of the unborn baby as a separate entity when managing a pregnancy. It stated: Obstetrics is an unusual specialty of medicine. Practitioners of this art and science must be concerned simultaneously with the lives and well-being of two persons; indeed, the lives of two who are interwoven. F. Gary Cunningham, et al., Williams Obstetrics, vii (18th ed. 1989). In a chapter entitled “Techniques to Evaluate Fetal Health,” it was stated: <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Until relatively recently, the intrauterine sanctuary of the fetus was held to be inviolate. The mother was the patient to be cared for; the fetus was but another albeit transient, maternal organ. . . Indeed, the fetus is no longer regarded as a maternal appendage. . . . Instead, the fetus has achieved the status of the second patient, a patient who usually faces much greater risks of serious morbidity and mortality than does the mother. <br />
*** <br />
<span style="color:red">The many advances in diagnosis and treatment that now clearly establish the fetus as a patient have also contributed remarkably to legal considerations involving the fetus. Fetal legal rights are emerging; for example, in some courts, the fetus has been allowed to file suit. Id at 277. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Obstetric ultrasound technology was in its infancy at the time of Roe, and was not widely used in the United States until well into the 1970’s. Malcolm Nicolson & John E.E. Fleming, Imaging and Imagining the Fetus 233 (2013). It has since given rise to whole new fields of medicine and top pediatric hospitals across the country regularly perform surgery on this second patient.2 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Abortion proponents disregard these basic facts when they ignore the existence of the second patient within the womb and suggest that unborn children are just appendages of the mother to be discarded upon her request. In so doing, they suggest a return to an outmoded and discredited approach to pregnancy and obstetrical practice. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">2. It is rare that the interests of one of these patients, from a medical standpoint, conflicts with the other. And, on those rare occasions when it does, the pregnancy can generally be successfully managed. So, medically speaking, abortion is almost never needed to manage a pregnancy. Honest abortion proponents long ago admitted to the overall safety of pregnancy and the lack of a need for abortion for medical reasons. <br />
<br />
In 1956, when maternal mortality rates were much higher than today,3 the namesake of Planned <br />
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2 See e.g., the website of Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia: “Today, fetal therapy is recognized as one of the most promising fields in pediatric medicine, and prenatal surgery is becoming an option for a growing number of babies with birth defects.” Fetal Surgery, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia., https://www.chop.edu/treatments/fetal-surgery (last visited July 26, 2021). <br />
3 The maternal death rate in 1946 was 11.6/10,000 (or 116/100,000) and, by 1956, had declined to 4.0/10,000 (or <br />
<br />
Parenthood’s Guttmacher Institute highlighted the overall safety of pregnancy and childbirth. He stated that in more than 30 years of obstetrical practice, during which he had delivered about 6,000 babies, he had seen only 3 patients die—two from cancer and one from a blood clot. He stated that “[p]regnancy and labor have little to do with any of the three.” A.F. Guttmacher, Pregnancy and Birth 271 (1956). <br />
<br />
Likewise, in a paper published in 1960, Dr. Mary Calderone, then Medical Director of Planned Parenthood Federation of America, admitted: “medically speaking, that is, from the point of view of diseases of the various systems, cardiac, genitourinary, and so on, it is hardly ever necessary today to consider the life a mother as threatened by pregnancy.” Mary S. Calderone, Illegal Abortion as a Public Health Problem, 50 Am. J. Pub. Health 948 (1960) (“Illegal Abortion”). <br />
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Obstetrics texts from the seventies also confirm the safety of pregnancy and childbirth and the ability to manage it successfully without abortion. One such textbook states: “abortion for purely medical reasons, i.e., vascular, renal or heart disease and so forth is rarely indicated in current medical practice.” Duncan E. Reid, et al., Principles in <br />
<br />
40/100,000). Milton C. Klein & Jacob Clahr, Factors in the Decline of Maternal Mortality, 168 JAMA 237 (1958) (“Factors”). <br />
<br />
Management of Human Reproduction 274 (1972). See also, J.P. Greenhill & Emanuel A. Friedman, Biological Principles in Modern Practice of Obstetrics 385 (1974) (noting that the number of induced abortions “on demand” had been rising astronomically, “while medical reasons appear to be almost vanishing” due to improved medical therapies). <br />
<br />
A. The Risk of Dying from Abortion or Childbirth Is Negligible. Claiming that abortion is statistically safer than childbirth makes a point. But, it is a point that has no practical significance. Assuming, arguendo, that the data upon which these claims rely is accurate, the risk of dying from either abortion or childbirth is still negligible. For example, comparing the worst-case scenario for childbirth (about 20/100,0000) and the best-case scenario for abortion (about 1/100,000), the risk of dying in childbirth is (.00020 or (.02%)) and the risk of dying in abortion is (.00001 or (.001%). In other words, your chance of surviving childbirth is 99.99980% and your chance of surviving abortion is 99.99999%. In either case, it is just the difference of a fraction of a fraction of 1 percent and is akin to comparing a 0% risk of dying with a 0% risk of dying. <br />
<br />
….Since very few women decide to have abortions because they wish to avoid risks to their physical health, it is disingenuous to suggest that abortion must be kept available on demand because it is statistically “safer” for women. This simply is not a consideration that informs their decisions. Nor should it be, given the exceedingly low rate of mortality from either course of action. <br />
<br />
….Roe was a radical decision that overrode the considered judgments of the legislatures in all 50 states. It was based on outmoded views of the humanity of the unborn child, outdated views of obstetrical practice (which failed to treat the baby within the womb as a second patient) and, arguably, on false claims regarding the number of women supposedly dying from illegal abortion.<br />
<br />
==46 Family Research Council==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185324/20210729150133457_Dobbs%20Amicus%20Proofs_THB%20Clean.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
The viability rule also removes states’ ability to adapt abortion regulations to advances in science and medicine. See MKB Mgmt. Corp. v. Stenehjem, 795 F.3d 768, 774 (8th Cir. 2015) (Shepherd, J.) (“By taking this decision away from the states, the Court has also removed the states’ ability to account for advances in medical and scientific technology [that] have greatly expanded our knowledge of prenatal life.”) (internal citations omitted). Courts are not “suited to make the necessary factual judgments” about viability and the “medical” practice of abortion. Akron I, 462 U.S. at 458 (O’Connor, J., dissenting). <br />
<br />
That is because <span style="color:red">“science … progress[es] even though [this] Court averts its eyes,” and legislatures are most capable of debating and responding to that progress. McCorvey v. Hill, 385 F.3d 846, 853-54 (2004) (Jones, J., concurring). The viability rule, however, forces courts to “pretend to act as science review boards,” removing the regulation of abortion from the democratic process. Akron I, 462 U.S. at 458 (O’Connor, J., dissenting). This rule has “rendered basic abortion policy beyond the power of our … representative government [which] may not meaningfully debate” abortion-related scientific and medical advances. McCorvey, 385 F.3d at 852. The “perverse result” of the “constitutional adjudication of] this fundamental social policy … is that … facts no longer matter.” Id. That cannot be the rule. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Similarly, in tort law, courts in thirty states have either “expressly or impliedly rejected viability as an appropriate cutoff point for determining liability for nonfatal prenatal injuries.” Linton, supra, 146. For wrongful death, forty-three states “now allow recovery … for prenatal injuries resulting in stillbirth … [and] the modern trend, supported by legislative reform, is toward abolishing any viability (or other gestational) requirement.” Id. at 323-24. <br />
<br />
See also W. Page Keeton et al., Prosser and Keeton on the Law of Torts § 55, at 369 (5th ed. 1984) (stating viability is “arbitrary” because it “of course does not affect the question of the legal existence of the unborn, and therefore of the defendant’s duty, and it is a most unsatisfactory criterion, since it is a relative matter.”). <br />
<br />
Paul Benjamin Linton, The Legal Status of the Unborn Child Under State Law, 6 U. St. Thomas J.L. & Pub. Pol’y 323-24 (2011) <br />
<br />
Petitioners ask the Court to overrule Roe and Casey because it cannot reconcile those cases with more recent precedent and with scientific advancements showing a compelling state interest in fetal life far earlier than those cases suggest <br />
<br />
The viability line therefore tends to afford greater protection to unborn children of the wealthy. See Beck, Gonzales at 259. Those unborn children whose parents are either closer to advanced medical technology or can afford to travel to receive high�quality medical care would be protected from abortion sooner than those children from poorer families. If, however, viability is based on the best technology currently in use, but unavailable to any particular woman, then “the [viability] rule is unprincipled for a different reason[,]” namely “caus[ing] the constitutional status of some fetuses to turn on unattainable hypothetical conditions, rather than real-world prospects for survival.” Id. Neither is a workable line. <br />
<br />
Finally, viability varies based on the competence and optimism of the doctor responsible for the evaluation. An incompetent doctor may place viability too late (or early). An overly pessimistic or otherwise ideological doctor may set the threshold too high. The 32 average patient hardly has the ability to question these determinations. Moreover, this deference to “disputable medical judgments becomes particularly problematic when the doctor has financial, legal, or ideological interests at stake in the determination.” Id. at 260. <br />
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<span style="color:red">These factors cannot be “the sole criterion for deciding whether [a] child will live or die.” Box, 139 S. Ct. at 1783 (Thomas, J., concurring). <br />
<br />
In short, the viability rule is and always has been arbitrary and unworkable. The Court should no longer retain it <br />
<br />
==47 Human Coalition Action and Students for Life of America==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185195/20210729093947083_Amicus%20Brief%20of%20Human%20Coalition%20Action%20and%20Students%20for%20Life%20of%20America%20in%20Support%20of%20Petitioners%20File.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
The Supreme Court’s venerable duty to faithfully uphold the Constitution requires abrogating errant precedents, rather than reaffirming or extending them<br />
<br />
Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania v. Casey categorically fall under the weakest echelon of stare decisis. <br />
<br />
Developments have eroded the Court’s assumptions and the decisions which rested on them—the considerable cost to following them far outweighs the benefit.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Scientific and technological developments in the last 50 years reveal Roe and Casey’s fundamental error, warranting full reconsideration.<br />
<br />
Roe and Casey initiated considerable undesirable consequences in all facets of society, unmasking the decisions as egregiously wrong.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Abortion’s human death toll causes unsustainable population decline.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Abortion continues to fulfill eugenicists’ goals by eliminating disproportional amounts of minority populations <br />
<br />
Abortion is fraught with abuse by criminal actors. <br />
<br />
The unregulated abortion industry benefits from exemptions not provided to others, leading to continual scandal, malpractice, and abuse.<br />
<br />
Abortion commodifies humans—pregnant mothers and their unborn children. <br />
<br />
Continued fidelity to Roe and Casey is extraordinarily disruptive to a functioning and healthy society. <br />
<br />
Purported reliance interests on abortion are unnecessary <br />
<br />
The ever-increasing knowledge we have about the development of the child in the womb, its humanity, and life affirm Roe/Casey were decided on erroneous grounds. <span style="color:red">Abortion is always fraught with moral and ethical concerns as it always ends a vulnerable innocent human life, at any phase of development.33 The following scientific facts were equally true in 1973 and 1992 as in 2021 but were unknown or ignored by the Court. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Since Roe and Casey, medical and technological developments, including the developments of the sonogram and in vitro fertilization, reinforced the conclusion that the life of an individual human being begins at conception.34 The widespread clinical use of ultrasound, a technological development that the Roe Court could not anticipate, came to the commercial market after Roe and substantially affected medical practice and public opinion.35 Recently, biologists reached the consensus that human life begins at conception—95% of biologists agree.36 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">We now know that from the moment of conception, unborn children possess the seven characteristics that define life: responsiveness to the environment, growth and change, the ability to reproduce, a regulated metabolism and oxygen flow, maintaining homeostasis (the ability to regulate internal bodily functions in response to external changes), composed of cells, and the capacity to pass traits onto offspring—in this case, human offspring.37 The Department of Genetics at Mayo Clinic confirmed, “[b]y all the criteria of modern molecular biology, life is present from the moment of conception.”38 <br />
<br />
<small><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;35 Id. at 213; Malcolm Nicolson & John Fleming, Imaging and Imagining The Fetus: The Development of Obstetric Ultrasound 1–7 (2013) (“Ultrasonic imaging has also had a momentous social impact because it can visualize the fetus. Fifty years ago, the unborn human being was hidden, enveloped within the female abdomen, away from the medical gaze . . . . [T]he scanner had become widely deployed within the British hospital system by 1975 . . . . By the late 1970s, the ultrasound scanner had become a medical white good, a standardized commodity in a mass marketplace.”). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;36 Jacobs, S. A., Biologists’ Consensus on ‘When Life Begins’, U. OF C. DEP’T OF COMP. HUMAN DEVELOP. (2018). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;37 Wilkin, Douglas, and Niamh Gray-Wilson, Characteristics of Life, CK-12 Foundation. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;38 Liberty University, The Genetic Code; Principles and Choices, When Does Human Life Begin?, available at www.principlesandchoices.com/quick-code-library/pcs344 (current as of July 27, 2021). </small><br />
<br />
Similarly, the Unborn Victims of Violence Act of 1999 treats injury or death to an unborn child caused by a third party while committing a federal offense against the mother as a separate federal crime.44 <br />
<br />
These developments are emblematic of what the Court failed to acknowledge 48 years ago, a fetus in the womb is a distinct living human person—simply a very small one. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Court relied on central medical and scientific fallacies when rendering Roe and Casey. Texas’ brief presented medically accurate and detailed information about the developing child in the womb, including the humanity and rights of the unborn child.45 But Roe’s decision ignored Texas’ arguments, refusing to “resolve the difficult question of when life begins.”46 Instead, the Roe and Casey Courts inaccurately referred to unborn in the womb as “a fetus that may become a child,” and “potential life”.47<br />
<br />
<small><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;44 National Conference of State Legislatures, State Laws on Fetal Homicide and Penalty-Enhancement for Crimes Against Pregnant Women, available at www.ncsl.org/research/health/fetal-homicide-state-laws.aspx (current as of July 27, 2021). <br />
<span style="color:red"><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;45 Roe v. Henry Wade Dist. Atty. of Dallas Co., Texas, 1971 WL 134281 (U.S.), 29 (U.S., 2004)(arguing “The fetus implanted in the uterine wall deserves respect as a human life….It is alive because it has the ability to reproduce dying cells. It is human because it can be distinguished from other non-human species, and once implanted in the uterine wall it requires only nutrition and time to develop into one of us.”). </span><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;46 Roe, 410 U.S. at 159. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;47 Id. at 113; Casey, 505 U.S. at 875 and 876 </small><br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Both principal holdings hinged on refusing to acknowledge the significance of the interests of human life in the womb.48 This was an egregious error. The matter of when life begins is no longer a philosophic discussion “depending on one’s beliefs”49 but is instead a scientific fact.50 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Significant developments about the humanity of the child in the womb warrant reconsideration of fateful abortion decisions and their underpinnings. Unlike Roe and Casey, Dobbs presents this Court with the opportunity to consider the full scientific and factual spectrum about the most overlooked abortion participant—the human child.<br />
<br />
<small><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;48 Shah, Mamta K., Inconsistencies in the Legal Status of an Unborn Child: Recognition of a Fetus as Potential Life, 29 HOFSTRA LAW REVIEW 3, 93.1-93.2 (2001). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;49 Casey, 505 U.S. at 852. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;50 See Jacobs, Biologists’ Consensus on ‘When Life Begins’. </small><br />
<br />
iii. Abortion is fraught with abuse by criminal actors. <br />
<br />
Further, abortion is fraught with abuse by criminal actors. <span style="color:red">The human trafficking industry requires abortion to carry out its horrific activities and hold hundreds of thousands of victims enslaved and working.67 Women report being coerced through emotional and physical duress to have abortions 64% of the time.68 <br />
<br />
Another undesirable consequence of this Court’s abortion doctrine is the negative impact on women’s physical security in childbearing. <span style="color:red">Pregnant women experience an increased rate of assault and battery from unmarried partners.69 Women who pursue <br />
<br />
<small><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;64Congressional Findings, available at https://docs.house.gov/meetings/JU/JU10/20171101/106562/HH RG-115-JU10-Wstate-ParkerS-20171101-SD001.pdf (current as of July 27, 2021). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;65 Id. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;66 Id. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;67 Laura J. Lederer and Christopher A. Wetzel, The Health Consequences of Sex Trafficking and Their Implications for Identifying Victims in Healthcare Facilities, 23 THE ANNALS OF HEALTH LAW 1 (2014). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;68 The Elliot Institute, Forced Abortion in America (2014). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;69 Clarke D. Forsythe & Stephen B. Presser, The Tragic Failure of Roe v. Wade: Why Abortion Should Be Returned to the States, 10 TEX. REV. L. & POL’Y at 100 (2005). 21 </small><br />
<br />
surrogacy have been subjected to contracts that require them to abort and, or to demands to abort.70 A growing body of international medical data from dozens of countries established long-term risks to women from abortion.71<br />
<br />
==48 Lee J. Strang==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185338/20210729155700355_Dobbs%20Amicus.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
[This excerpt is included in my book as presented below, with my explanations and summary, even though I am not highlighting any of it in red; almost all of it, except for my own text, would be red.]<br />
<br />
The 14th Amendment: “...nor shall any State deprive any '''person''' of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws....”<br />
<br />
Lee J. Strang, in the Amicus Brief he filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'', explains how the correct meaning of “person” in the 14th Amendment is the “natural” one. That is, the meaning that all of us non-lawyers attach to the word. A human being. <br />
<br />
A baby. <br />
<br />
Plural: people. <br />
<br />
The ''normal'' meaning.<br />
<br />
He explains how Justice Blackmun, author of Roe v. Wade, was wrong to assume a legalistic meaning that doesn’t necessarily include ''unborn'' people. But not just ''that'' Blackmun was wrong, but ''how'' he got wrong. <br />
<br />
And not just Blackmun, but even Justice Scalia, the hero of conservatives. <br />
<br />
And even Judge Bork, the famous “originalist” nominated to the Supreme Court by President Reagan in 1987 but crucified by the Democrat-controlled Senate to the degree that his name was added to dictionaries. (https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/bork transitive verb - US politics, informal: to attack or defeat (a nominee or candidate for public office) unfairly through an organized campaign of harsh public criticism or vilification. “In any event, seeing one of their own being borked may itself energize the conservative base, even beyond what a conservative nomination would do.” — <br />
<br />
Mark Tushnet. “In 1987, conservative judge Robert Bork endured such virulent criticism … that to this day, a nominee sidelined by activists is said to have been ‘borked.’ ”— <br />
Claire Suddath )<br />
<br />
You ask, “What other definition matters, but this ‘natural’ meaning?”<br />
If you have to ask, you obviously are not a lawyer.<br />
<br />
Lawyers understand that when ''Roe v. Wade'' said “if Texas’ suggestion of personhood is ever established”, Roe meant, not established by evidence of the fact that babies of humans are humans by modern medicine or by court-recognized fact-finders, but evidence that the meaning of the word “persons” in the 14th Amendment, as understood by those who ratified it, was the way we “naturally” (normally) define “people” as opposed to treating “persons” as a technical legal term for lawyers to load with their own special courtroom meanings.<br />
<br />
According to this thinking, whether we adopt the “natural” or the legalistic meaning depends on which meaning was adopted by lawyers and legislatures when the 14th Amendment was ratified. The fact that some states – including the states that ratified the 14th Amendment – didn’t outlaw abortion from conception until several years ''after'' they ratified the Amendment is taken by this thinking to prove they understood it used the word “person” to mean only those whom ''voters'' chose to treat as human. <br />
<br />
Lee Strang points out logical inconsistencies with this approach, and shows how the “natural” meaning of “persons”, among states back then, better fits the historical record. He says the delay of states in outlawing abortion from conception is accounted for by the delay of the medical profession in understanding early pregnancy, and in explaining its discoveries to the general public. <br />
<br />
My own argument in this book assumes what Strang calls the “natural” meaning of “person”. I point out that any meaning ''but'' “all humans” leaves the Amendment with zero effect. If voters can decide not to include a whole class of people as “persons”, voters in the South would have restored slavery. This “legalistic” interpretation would thus lead to an “absurd result”, a sensible courtroom reason to reject an idiotic interpretation. <br />
<br />
I also point out that ''Roe'' treated “”if Texas’ suggestion of personhood is ever established” as a ''fact'' inquiry, since ''Roe'' later said if doctors and preachers can’t agree, “the judiciary, at this point in the development of man’s knowledge, is unable to speculate” about “when life begins”. By elevating doctors and preachers above themselves as experts on the meaning of “when life begins”, and by anticipating the possibility of later correction by “the development of man’s knowledge”, ''Roe'' rejected treating “when life begins” “as a matter of law” or of special technical courtroom applications, and treated the question as a ''fact'' question. <br />
<br />
Although ''Roe'' treated the question as a technical legalistic inquiry by exploring how past legislatures treated abortion, Roe treated it as a fact question by deferring to the superior expertise of doctors and preachers.<br />
<br />
In case you are screaming “stop talking about ''Roe''! It’s been overturned!” I must remind you that ''Roe’s'' ignorance-necessitated neutrality about “when life begins” is elevated to “scrupulous neutrality” in ''Dobbs''. At least ''Roe'' acknowledged the existence of the question and said it mattered; in fact, that it is dispositive. <br />
<br />
Strang’s study is hardly irrelevant with the passage of ''Dobbs''. We need it now more than ever. We need voters to realize if they think they can vote on who gets to be counted as human, the very right to vote is the least of the rights they will lose! <br />
<br />
Strang’s study is valuable for its ability to reach well meaning legal scholars struggling to honor the Constitution by establishing its “original meaning” but who are confused about what “original meaning” means. <br />
<br />
With that summary, we now go to Strang’s study:<br />
<br />
<blockquote>QUESTION PRESENTED Whether the original meaning of “person” in the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment includes unborn human beings <br />
My view has long been that the strongest originalist reason that supported Justice Blackmun’s conclusion that unborn human beings are not constitutional persons was the historical evidence that some states in 1868 allowed abortion in some instances, because that would mean that state law authorized actions fundamentally inconsistent with the full constitutional personhood of unborn human beings at the same time the [very same] states adopted the Fourteenth Amendment. </blockquote><br />
<br />
<blockquote>Indeed, this reason was cited by Justice Scalia to support his view that all abortion decisions remained with the states. “[S]ome states prohibited [abortion], some states didn’t . . . . It was one of those many things . . . left to democratic choice.”....<br />
See, e.g., Bork, supra (“It is impossible to suppose that the states ratified an Amendment they understood to outlaw all abortions but simultaneously left in place their laws permitting some abortions.”). </blockquote><br />
<br />
<blockquote>Below I describe an alternative view of this historical evidence...the progressive changes in abortion law toward fully protecting unborn human beings were in response to new medical information that caused lawmakers to continually re-align state law to better fit with their (explicit and implicit) natural kind original meaning of “person.” ….This account also explains how abortion law in 1868, which limited but did not eliminate abortion, fits the natural kind meaning of “person” because lawmakers’ knowledge of the status of unborn human beings had not yet informed (all of) them that unborn humans are, in fact, human from conception.</blockquote> <br />
<br />
Strang gives a history of “originalism”, which means “a legal philosophy that the words in documents and especially the U.S. Constitution should be interpreted as they were understood at the time they were written...the constitution does not ‘evolve’. ” <br />
<br />
[The whole rest of this footnote is quotes from Strang’s Amicus, although I am not indenting it.]<br />
...<br />
<br />
Strang says “Originalism in its modern theoretical form first appeared in the early 1970s. At this stage, originalism unselfconsciously focused on the intended meaning and goals of the Constitution’s framers....Many jurists and scholars criticized this early version of originalism. Three criticisms relevant to my argument, which many originalists took on board, include the claims that the framers intent is not the law, [Anton Scalia]..., there was not a single intended framer meaning, [Ronald Dworkin...], and that it was impractical for the legal system to try to uncover intended framer meaning (even if it, in theory, existed). [Paul Brest].... <br />
<br />
In response, most originalist scholars re-articulated originalism as public meaning originalism. [What the provisions of the Constitution meant to the public] Public meaning was a real fact of the world….and the evidence for it was relatively widely available. ...<br />
One [way to interpret words] is general public meaning and another is legal meaning. General public meaning is the meaning of the Constitution’s text that is widely available to and utilized by Americans at the time of ratification. ….<br />
Legal meaning...arises out of legal practice. Lawyers and legal practice are a linguistic subcommunity, and words and phrases have particular meanings and nuances of meaning within legal practice....<br />
<br />
….By contrast with the fundamentally conventional general and legal public meanings just discussed, natural kind meaning corresponds to natural reality, independent of human convention. It is the view that linguistic meaning is attached to something factually true. [In other words, the application of the word “person” to babies changes only as we better understand babies.]<br />
<br />
B. The original meaning of “person” in the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses was the natural kind of human being. <br />
<br />
….both the status quo of abortion law in 1868 and continual changes to that law support the natural kind interpretation. ….<br />
<br />
The Constitution’s text suggests that “person” was the natural kind of human being. [The Constitution used the word “person” as normal people normally define the word.] The text of the Fourteenth Amendment describes a being who [1] can be a citizen, who [2] can have his or her life deprived by the government, and who [3] can be harmed by private violence. U.S. CONST., amend. XIV, § 1. Two of these characteristics occur to human beings both pre- and postnatally; but the important point is that all of these are characteristics of human beings, and unborn human beings are the kind of beings who possess the capacities for those characteristics and will possess the actual characteristics themselves at some point in their lives (assuming normal development).<br />
<br />
The intended meaning of framers and ratifiers of constitutional text is also evidence of the Constitution’s original meaning. This is especially true when the framers and ratifiers publicly state their intentions so that they become aspects of the publicly available context. As many scholars have noted, there is no direct legislative history of the Fourteenth Amendment’s drafters and ratifiers discussing the Amendment’s relationship with abortion. ...However, [they made] numerous statements that the Amendment protects all human beings, regardless of their characteristics, and this supports the natural kind original meaning of “person.” <br />
<br />
For example, Senate Judiciary Committee chairman, Lyman Trumbull, spoke to the Senate about the Thirteenth Amendment and legislation for the Freedmen’s Bureau that he planned to introduce, and tied the Constitution’s protection to all human beings: “any legislation or any public sentiment which deprives any human being in the land of those great rights of liberty will be in defiance of the Constitution.” Cong. Globe, 39th Cong., 1st Sess. 77 (Dec. 19, 1865) (Lymann Trumbull). <br />
<br />
Similarly, a leading Senate sponsor of the Fourteenth Amendment, Jacob Howard, explained the broad scope of the Equal Protection Clause: “It establishes equality before the law, and it gives to the humblest, the poorest, the most despised of the [human] race the same rights and the same protection.” Cong. Globe, 39th Cong., 1st Sess. 2766 (May 23, 1866) (Jacob Howard). <br />
<br />
The “Father” of the Fourteenth Amendment, Representative John Bingham of Ohio, stated in 1867 to the House regarding the word “person” in the Fifth Amendment (whose text he copied for the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process Clause), that “[b]y that great law of ours it is not to be inquired whether a man is ‘free’ . . . ; it is only to be inquired is he a man, and therefore free by the law of that creative energy which breathed into his nostrils the breath of life, and he became a living soul, endowed with the rights of life and liberty.” Cong. Globe, 40th Cong., 1st Sess. 541 (July 9, 1867) (John Bingham). <br />
Like Trumbull and Howard, Bingham equated “person” with “human being.” It is worth noting before proceeding that there is no evidence from the framing and ratification process limiting “person” to born human beings. <br />
<br />
Dictionaries of the time period defined person as the natural kind of human being. For instance, Noah Webster’s American Dictionary of the English Language (1864), defined person as “a living human being; a man, woman, or child; an individual of the human race.” 1 NOAH WEBSTER ET AL., AMERICAN DICTIONARY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE 974 (1864). <br />
<br />
...the strongest argument [against] unborn personhood was the history of abortion regulation, and in particular the fact that some states permitted abortion in some contexts in 1868. [But] Scholars today agree that abortion law changed over time from a position of less-protective to more�protective of unborn human beings.... the basic pattern is widely recognized....<br />
<br />
The common law viewed unborn human beings as human beings and treated abortion upon quickening as a misdemeanor. Sir William Blackstone stated that “[l]ife is an immediate gift of God, a right inherent by nature in every individual and it begins in contemplation of the law as soon as an infant is able to stir in the mother’s womb.” 1 SIR WILLIAM BLACKSTONE, COMMENTARIES ON THE LAWS OF ENGLAND *126 (1776); see also 1 id. *119 (“Natural persons are such as the God of nature formed us.”). Blackstone’s description of unborn humans is as fully human. Blackstone explained that “[t]o kill a child in its mother’s womb, is now no murder, but a great misprison [a serious misdemeanor]: but if the child be born alive, and dieth by reason of the potion or bruises it received in the womb, it is murder.” 4 Id. *198. It is widely agreed by scholars that this protection after quickening in some instances, and after birth in others, was the product of evidentiary concerns over whether a woman was indeed pregnant and the unborn victim was indeed alive at the time of the crime. <br />
<br />
…. Crucial to [proving that] the natural kind meaning of “person” [is its meaning in the 14th Amendment,] state lawmakers progressively restricted abortion because new medical knowledge enabled them with greater clarity to see that unborn human beings were indeed human beings and extended the law’s protection to them. DELLAPENNA, supra at 313. As summarized 19 by the leading historian, Professor Joseph Dellapenna, this period saw “dramatic changes in scientific theories about the nature of conception and the emergence of a new consensus on when a distinct human being began that were built upon the scientific discoveries of the early nineteenth century.” Id. at 282. contemplation of the law as soon as an infant is able to stir in the mother’s womb.” 1 SIR WILLIAM BLACKSTONE, COMMENTARIES ON THE LAWS OF ENGLAND *126 (1776); see also 1 id. *119 (“Natural persons are such as the God of nature formed us.”).... <br />
<br />
By 1868, ...Thirty of the thirty-�seven states in the Union had enacted statutes that restricted abortion. Witherspoon, supra at 33. Of these thirty, twenty-seven state statutes restricted abortion prior to the common law line of quickening. ...<br />
Evidence of this can be seen from many sources. State law itself reflected this understanding because twenty-eight of the thirty jurisdictions that statutorily restricted abortion placed their restrictions under the label “offenses against the person,” and twenty-three states labeled unborn human beings “children”. Witherspoon, supra at 48. States imposed significant punishments for abortion, reflecting the humanity of unborn human beings. Id. at 52-54. State judiciaries similarly modified the common law to expand protection for unborn humans, for instance, by moving earlier than the common law quickening line. Craddock, supra at 555. <br />
<br />
The legal system’s shift was supported by and in response to information provided to lawmakers from the medical profession. DELLAPENNA, supra at 298. One of the most influential books on medical ethics leading up to this period, THOMAS PERCIVAL, MEDICAL ETHICS 135-36 (1827), by a noted English physician, stated that “to extinguish the first spark of life is a crime of the same nature, both against our maker and society, as to destroy an infant, a child, or a man.” <br />
<br />
Percival treated abortion as ethically indistinguishable from killing born human beings because all human beings are the same type of being. Percival’s view was influential in the United States and was adopted by the American Medical Association, which stated in 1859 that unborn human beings should be protected because of the “independent and actual existence of the child before birth, as a living being.” The Report on Criminal Abortion, 12 TRANS. OF THE AM. MED. ASS’N 76 (1859). <br />
<br />
The Report went on to advocate state legislative reform to better protect unborn human beings. Id. While the states were considering ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment, New York’s influential Medical Society stated that all abortions are “murder.” Byrne, supra at 836. <br />
<br />
Legislators changed both the common law and their own earlier statutes in response to this better information about the nature of unborn human beings. As legislators learned that quickening and other lines were irrelevant to the development of human beings, they discarded them and legislated greater protection. <br />
<br />
This is exactly what Ohio did. See Witherspoon, supra at 61-64 (describing this process). The Ohio legislature modified Ohio’s 1834 abortion law in early 1867. The Ohio Senate Report relied on the fact that “[p]hysicians have now arrived at a unanimous opinion that the foetus in utero is alive from the very moment of conception.” 1867 Ohio S.J. App. 233. Informed by the new medical information, including Dr. Percival’s statements, the Report condemned the “class of quacks who make child-murder a trade.” Id. The legislature therefore changed the law and eliminated the quickening line to take better account of these newly known facts. “[N]o opinion could be more erroneous [than] that the life of the foetus commences only with quickening [and] to destroy the embryo before that period is not child-murder.” Id. <br />
<br />
“[T]he legislative histories of the statutes of other states show that these statutes were often enacted pursuant to a request of state medical societies.” Witherspoon, supra at 65. For example, New York’s General Assembly, following the recommendation of its medical society that, “from the first moment of conception, there is a living creature in process of development to full maturity,” modified its 1845 abortion law to prohibit abortion throughout pregnancy. DELLAPENNA, supra at 323-28 <br />
<br />
C. The natural kind original meaning of “person” in the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses included unborn human beings <br />
<br />
Still, ...by 1868, ...some state legislation was not fully protective of unborn human beings. Id. at 316-17. As I noted earlier, this is the most powerful originalist argument against the constitutional personhood of unborn human beings. ...under the conventional� legal meaning approach, [the approach in Dobbs that protectable rights are “those rooted in our nation’s history”] that would be evidence that the original meaning of “person” did not include unborn human beings, or at least not all of them. [Because] if unborn human beings were constitutional persons in 1868, then many of the states that ratified the Fourteenth Amendment were violating the Amendment they adopted. So argued Blackmun, Scalia, Bork, and many others. <br />
<br />
[But] the reasons these states gave for changing their laws are precisely the reasons a rational legislator would give if the meaning of “person” was a natural kind [and in response to growing medical understanding of babies from conception].<br />
<br />
[Roe v. Wade claimed that] the Constitution’s use of “person” showed that it was limited to born human beings. Roe, 410 U.S. at 157. ...But...it does not logically follow from the multiple born uses of “person” that the uses of “person” in the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses are similarly limited....[Roe says] “in nearly all these instances, the use of the word [in the Constitution] is such that it has application only postnatally. None indicates, with any assurance, that it has any possible prenatal application.” <br />
...He admits that in some instances... “person” may apply to unborn human beings. Those instances clearly include the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses because there is nothing in their text to prohibit such application, unlike, for instance, the Citizenship Clause. Those instances also likely include Article I, Section 9, Clause 1 (“The Migration or Importation of such Persons as any of the States now existing shall think proper to admit . . . .”), Article IV, Section 2, Clause 3 (“No Person held to Service or Labour in one State, under the Laws thereof, escaping into another . . . .”), and the Fourth Amendment (“The right of the people to be secure in their persons . . . .”). <br />
<br />
Many of the instances of solely post-natal application are so only because their context and function limit them. For instance, the presidency is limited to “No Person except a natural born Citizen.” U.S. CONST., art. II, § 1, cl. 5. The Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses lack such limiting text or function; the Clauses are not limited to born persons or even natural persons. Moreover, the fact that “person” in the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses is not limited to some classes of humans, such as “born” or “natural persons” or “such persons,” suggests that it includes all persons. See Gorby, supra (providing a variety of critiques of Justice Blackmun’s intratextualism). <br />
[In other words “person” doesn’t mean ALL born persons, any more than it means all UNborn persons; the context tells us which persons are meant. In the “citizenship clause”, the first clause of the 14th Amendment, we know only born babies can be citizens because the Clause explicitly says so. The remaining clauses do not say so, nor does reason or common sense require that limit, so when the Amendment says “no person shall be deprived of life without due process of law”, we have no ground for making it mean something else. No one did then; no one should now.]<br />
<br />
CONCLUSION: the original meaning of “person” in the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses was the natural kind of human being. This natural kind interpretation of “person” was able to account for the status quo of American abortion law in 1868 as well as the fact that abortion law was progressively becoming more protective of all human life. <br />
<br />
==49 Biologists in Support of Neither Party==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185346/20210729162737297_19-1392%20BRIEF%20OF%20BIOLOGISTS%20AS%20AMICI%20CURIAE%20IN%20SUPPORT%20OF%20NEITHER%20PARTY.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
Amici curiae are biologists who work at colleges, universities, and other institutions in 15 countries around the world. On average, they have 10 years of undergraduate and graduate training, they have 27 years of experience working in academia, and overall they have dedicated 37 years to the study of life and to promoting science awareness. <br />
Their expertise bears directly on the question presented in this case. The Court will assess the constitutionality of Roe v. Wade’s viability standard, which was used as a proxy by the Court, in 1973, after it could not determine when a human’s life begins because it could not find a consensus view among experts. Today, amici provide the Court with evidence that shows most biologists affirm fertilization as the leading biological view. <br />
<br />
….This viability standard, which the Court ultimately claimed had biological justifications4 , was established after the Court could not find a consensus of relevant experts who agreed on when a human’s life begins5 . The Court considered Texas’s fertilization standard, but after Texas’s assistant attorneys general created doubt on the fertilization view—in both the oral argument6 and the oral <br />
<br />
<br />
6. After Justice Thurgood Marshall questioned Floyd about<br />
the scientific basis for Texas’s stance on when a human’s life begins,<br />
Floyd eventually relented: “Mr. Justice, there are un-answerable<br />
questions in this field.” Transcript of Oral Argument, Roe v. Wade,<br />
1971, at 45.<br />
<br />
reargument7 sessions—the Court rejected the standard by claiming that the fertilization view was merely “one theory of life”8 . The Court also claimed that the fertilization view had “[s]ubstantial problems”9 because embryological data had raised questions on whether fertilization was a process or event. <br />
<br />
Despite the Court’s use of fetal viability as a proxy for when a human’s life begins, which it described as the point that a fetus “has the capability of meaningful life outside the mother’s womb”10, the majority opinion stated that the Court was “not in a position to speculate” on the “difficult question of when life begins… at [that] point in the development of man’s knowledge.”11 However, no current member of the Court would have to speculate, today. The fertilization view is widely recognized—in the literature and by biologists—as the leading biological view on when a human’s life begins <br />
<br />
7. Justice Blackmun also questioned Floyd’s replacement, Texas Assistant Attorney General Robert C. Flowers, on when a human’s life begins during the Roe reargument session, but he also cast doubt on the fertilization view: “QUESTION:... Is it not true, or is it true that the medical profession itself is not in agreement as to when life begins?... MR. FLOWERS: I think that’s true, sir. But from a layman’s standpoint, medically speaking, we would say that at the moment of conception from the chromosomes, every potential that anybody in this room has is present, from the moment of conception…. QUESTION: But then you’re speaking of potential of life... MR. FLOWERS: Yes, sir.” Transcript of Oral Reargument of Roe v. Wade, 1972, at 23. <br />
<br />
The fertilization view was first discovered in the early 1800s. (See infra at Argument III.A). However, it was such a self-evident fact that little work was done to study or communicate that consensus since it was difficult for scientists to imagine that it could ever be challenged or if there would ever be a time the view would not be common knowledge.12 Since the Roe Court issued its decision in 1973, the scientific consensus13 on the fertilization view has been established. <br />
p. 4<br />
<br />
Recent surveys have shown that biologists are viewed as objective experts in the study of life and as the experts most qualified to determine when a human’s life begins (See infra at Argument I). The fertilization view on when a human’s life begins has been shown to be the leading biological view, and it can only be supplanted by an alternative view if there are paradigmatic shifts to axiomatic concepts within biology (See infra at Argument II). This is made clear by a review of: (1) the biological and life sciences literature, as peer-reviewed articles represent the fertilization view as a fact of biology that requires no explanation or citation (See infra at Argument III.B), (2) legislative testimony from scientists that suggests there is no alternative view in the scientific literature (See infra at Argument III.C), (3) an international survey of academic biologists’ views on when a human’s life begins that reported 96% of 5,577 participants affirmed the fertilization view (See infra at Argument III.D), and (4) statements by prominent abortion doctors and abortion advocates who affirm the fertilization view (See infra at Argument III.E) .<br />
Thus, amici respectfully offer the Court this brief to provide information on the biological perspective on when a human’s life begins: fertilization, generally, marks the beginning of a sexually reproducing organism’s life and, specifically, marks the beginning of a human’s life, as it is the point at which a human first comes into physical existence as an organism that is biologically classified as a member of the Homo sapiens species <br />
<br />
In the oral reargument session for Roe, Justice Potter Stewart signaled the importance of resolving who should determine when a human’s life begins: “Now, how should that question be decided, is it a legal question, a constitutional question, a medical question, a philosophical question, or a religious question, or what is it?”16 The majority opinion in Roe similarly suggested there are multiple dimensions to the question: “When those trained in the respective disciplines of medicine, philosophy, and theology are unable to arrive at any consensus, the judiciary, at this point in the development of man’s knowledge, is not in a position to speculate as to the answer.”1 <br />
<br />
<br />
Some support the view that a human’s life begins at birth or first breath. 12% of biologists (343 out of 2794) represented the birth view in response to an essay question on when a human’s life begins [Were law bent to this view] t it would make obsolete any biological basis for providing independent care to a fetus, as a patient, or performing fetal surgery27; it would also remove the biological basis of fetal homicide laws28, as a state could not rightfully convict someone for the homicide of a fetus since one would no longer be properly classified as a human.2 <br />
<br />
10% of biologists (284 out of 2794) represented the viability view in response to an essay question on when a human’s life begins. [Were law bent to this view] A human’s life could be biologically determined to begin at a different point for a fetus in Mt. Sinai Hospital in New York than in a medical clinic in a rural area, as the leading physicians of the former might be able to help a 22-week premature infant survive while physicians at the latter might not be able to. Further, one would have to say that a 27-week-old fetus in 1973 was not a human—as 28 weeks was the viability line at the time since that was when technology was capable of supporting life outside of the womb—but that a younger 24-week-old fetus, today, is a human. This standard could even one day be set at fertilization if an artificial womb is developed.31 Finally, it is important to note that, today, human embryos survive outside of the womb for years32 before being transferred and implanted. In fact, a human zygote is viable for a short period after fertilization, then loses the ability to survive outside of the womb and regains it sometime soon after the 20th week of his or her life.33 <br />
<br />
If this is used as an ability-based standard, by which human organisms without this ability are not classified as humans, it could also create a case in which a human who is temporarily on life support would cease to be biologically classified as a human since he or she is not then capable of meaningful life <br />
<br />
Some support the view that a human’s life begins at the first heartbeat, brainwave, or moment of pain capability. 10% of biologists (268 out of 2794) represented one of these views in response to an essay question on when a human’s life begins. [Were law bent to this view] <br />
<br />
If these ability-based standards are used as requirements for one to be biologically classified as a human, it would mean that those who were born without the capacity to feel pain, those whose hearts temporarily stop, and those who might one day undergo a brain transplant are not biological humans. <br />
<br />
Most biologists affirm that a human’s life begins at the start of the human life cycle. 68% of biologists (1898 out of 2794) represented the fertilization view in response to an essay question on when a human’s life begins.40 A review of recent discoveries and the development of scientific literature since Roe reveals a strong consensus that agrees fertilization—a process which starts with sperm-egg binding and is completed by sperm-egg pronuclear fusion41—is the starting point <br />
<br />
; a human zygote is, from a biological perspective, a human organism43 classified as a member of the Homo sapiens in the same way44 as an infant, a teenager,45 or an adult; a human zygote is simply a human being in the first stage of a human’s development, whether fertilization be deemed a process or an event.4 <br />
<br />
THE FERTILIZATION VIEW IS THE LEADING BIOLOGICAL VIEW ON WHEN A HUMAN’S LIFE BEGINS AND HAS BEEN SINCE THE 19TH CENTURY. A. The discovery of fertilization took place over a century ago. <br />
<br />
In 1827, Karl Ernst von Baer was the first scientist to record an observation of a mammalian egg; <br />
<br />
The early discoveries on the fertilization process, by which spermatozoa enter eggs, took place between 1843 until 1880: <br />
<br />
y, in 1876, Oscar Hertwig has been said to have first established the fertilization view when he described the fusion of the nuclei of a male’s spermatozoa and a female’s ovum <br />
<br />
Peer-reviewed journals present the fertilization view on when a human’s life begins as a fact that requires no explanation or citation <br />
<br />
During hearings conducted by the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Senate Bill 158, the “Human Life Bill,” numerous scientific experts testified on the question of when a human’s life begins. After hours of testimony by scientists and medical doctors, the Official Senate Report reached the following conclusion: “Physicians, biologists, and other scientists agree that conception marks the beginning of the life of a human being—of a being that is alive and is a member of the human species. There is overwhelming agreement on this point in countless medical, biological, and scientific writings.”<br />
<br />
<br />
This view is not merely shared by academics in the literature; it is also the view that college and medical students are taught in their biological and medical textbooks. <br />
<br />
French geneticist Dr. Jerome Lejeune testified that “[l]ife has a very, very long history, but each individual has a very neat beginning––the moment of its conception” because “[t]o accept the fact that after fertilization has taken place a new human has come into being is no longer a matter of taste or of opinion . . . it is plain experimental evidence.”72 Dr. Hymie Gordon, professor of medical genetics and physician at the Mayo Clinic, testified that “now we can say, unequivocally, that the question of when life begins––is no longer a question for theological or philosophical dispute. It is an established scientific fact. Theologians and philosophers may go on to debate the meaning of life or the purpose of life, but it is an established fact that all life, including human life, begins at the moment of conception.”73 Experts also testified that there are no alternative theories on when a human’s life begins in the scientific literature <br />
<br />
Dr. Gordon claimed: “I have never encountered in my reading of the scientific literature—long before I became concerned with abortion, euthanasia, and so on—anyone who has argued that life did not begin at the moment of conception, or that it was not a human conception if it resulted from the fertilization of a human egg by a human sperm. As far as I know, there has been no argument about these matters.”74 This lack of any alternative biological views in the literature was also attested to by Dr. Micheline Matthew-Roth, who worked as a principal <br />
<br />
<br />
96% of 5,577 biologists from 1,058 academic institutions affirmed that a human’s life begins at fertilization. 1. The survey questions solely focused on the biological perspective on when a human’s life begins <br />
<br />
<br />
96% of 5,577 biologists from 1,058 academic institutions affirmed that a human’s life begins at fertilization. 1. The survey questions solely focused on the biological perspective on when a human’s life begins <br />
<br />
Participation in the survey was sought from members of biology departments around the world. Of the participants who provided analyzable data, 5,577 biologists from 1,058 institutions provided analyzable data on operative questions. Most of the biologists in the sample identified as male (63%), non-religious (63%) and the majority held a Ph.D. (95%). Ideologically, most of the sample identified as liberal (89%) and pro-choice (85%). The sample was comprised of biologists from 86 countries. See supra n.17 at 239. 2 <br />
<br />
fertilization view. Participants were asked to affirm or reject the statements, and they were then presented an open-ended essay question on the biological perspective on when a human’s life begins (Q6)85: Question 1: The end product of mammalian fertilization is a fertilized egg (‘zygote’), a new mammalian organism in the first stage of its species’ life cycle with its species’ genome. Question 2: The development of a mammal begins with fertilization, a process by which the spermatozoon from the male and the oocyte from the female unite to give rise to a new organism, the zygote. Question 3: A mammal’s life begins at fertilization, the process during which a male gamete unites with a female gamete to form a single cell called a zygote. Question 4: In developmental biology, fertilization marks the beginning of a human’s life since that process produces an organism with a human genome that has begun to develop in the first stage of the human life cycle. Question 5: From a biological perspective, a zygote that has a human genome is a human because it is a human organism developing in the earliest stage of the human life cycle. <br />
<br />
<br />
Question 6: From a biological perspective, how would you answer the question “When does a human’s life begin?” <br />
<br />
The statement in Q1 was affirmed by 91% of participants (4555 out of 4993). The statement in Q2 was affirmed by 88% of participants (3984 out of 4510). The statement in Q3 was affirmed by 77% of participants (3153 out of 4078). The statement in Q4 was affirmed by 75% of participants (2500 out of 3334). The statement in Q5 was affirmed by 69% of participants (2744 out of 3980).86 Of those who assessed at least one of the five statements, 96% of participants affirmed at least one (5337 out of 5577) and 4% did not (240 out of 5577). <br />
<br />
Similarly, of those who assessed multiple statements, 96% affirmed at least one (4463 out of 4650) while 4% affirmed none (187 of 4650), and 85% affirmed at least half of the statements they assessed (3936 out of 4650).87 Consistent with their affirmation rates of the fertilization view in Q1-Q5, 68% of biologists represented the fertilization view (1898 out of 2794) in response to the open-ended essay question on when a human’s life begins (Q6). 10% represented some point between fertilization and the moment a fetus is viable (268 out of 2794), 10% represented the viability view (284 out of 2794), and 12% represented the view that a human’s life begins at birth (343 out of 2794).88 The strictest measure of biologists’ views assessed the responses of participants who answered each question consistently—those who either affirmed each statement (Q1-Q5) and represented the fertilization view in response to the essay question (Q6) or rejected each statement and represented some later point. There was a greater number of participants who consistently affirmed the fertilization view (97%; 1011 out of 1044) than the number of participants who consistently did not affirm the fertilization view (3%; 33 out of 1044).89 <br />
<br />
Abortion advocates and abortion doctors affirm that a human’s life begins at fertilization. Ethicist Peter Singer supports abortion rights and has promoted the fertilization view: “Whether a being is a member of a given species is something that can be determined scientifically, by an examination of the nature of the chromosomes in the cells of living organisms,” because “there is no doubt that from the first moments of its existence an embryo conceived from human sperm and eggs is a human being.”90 <br />
(Yet he argues for aborting up to 2 years old)<br />
<br />
The fertilization view is as subject to change due to new information as is the number of hydrogen atoms in a molecule of water: the number might not be two if scientists abandon the modern understanding of hydrogen, oxygen, atoms, molecules, and water—just as a human’s life might no longer be deemed to begin at fertilization if scientists abandon the modern understanding of fertilization, the human life cycle, and the genetics-based method of biologically classifying organisms. <br />
<br />
==50 Professors Mary Ann Glendon and O. Carter Snead==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185180/20210729085701253_19-1392%20Amici%20Brief.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
Abortion rulings have no support from the Constitution's text, history, or tradition.<br />
<br />
Roe and Doe are unconstitutional.<br />
<br />
Later precedents are even farther from the Constitution, offering nothing but confusion.<br />
<br />
Stare Decisis principles support overturning them.<br />
<br />
The Court’s Abortion Jurisprudence Grafts On to American Law a Constitutionally Unwarranted, False, and Destructive Account of Human Identity and Flourishing.<br />
<br />
The current law of abortion . . . frames the public question as a zero-sum conflict between isolated strangers, one of whom is recognized as a person, with the other deemed a sub-personal being whose moral and legal status is contingent upon the private judgment of others. It offers no com�prehensive support for the vulnerable persons in�volved, including especially the unborn child and her mother. . . .<br />
<br />
In response to the bodily, psychic, and financial burdens of unwanted pregnancy and parenthood, American abortion jurisprudence offers nothing more than the license to terminate the developing human life in utero . . . . These are the rights and privileges suited to atomized individual wills who inhabit a world of strife. They are limited weapons <br />
and tools of rational mastery fit for a lonely, disembodied self to defend and pursue its interests.<br />
<br />
American abortion jurisprudence offers nothing more than the license to terminate the developing human life in utero . . . . They are not well-designed to address the complex needs and wants of a community of embodied, vulnerable, and interdependent human persons.<br />
<br />
...it biases the Court’s analysis to craft a solution for the abortion issue that is more suitable for an individual seeking to repel a stranger from intruding into her interests, namely, by conferring a right to use lethal violence. This may be suitable for adversarial strangers in a world of strife. Not for a mother and a child in crisis.<br />
<br />
...The Court has no business in this space....<br />
<br />
==51 Monique Wubbenhorst, M.D., M.P.H., Grazie Christie, M.D., Colleen Malloy, M.D., and the Catholic Association Foundation==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185351/20210729163513970_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20in%20Support%20of%20Petitioners.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
Roe and Casey’s Viability Standard Is Incomplete and Outdated According to Current <br />
Science. “Viability” no longer means what it did at the time of Roe and Casey. Ultrasound technology has dramatically improved and provides a clear window into the womb to witness the humanity of the unborn child. Improved imaging has provided greater information about fetal development. <br />
<br />
Advancements in technology have led to recognition of the fetus as a patient by <br />
mainstream medicine. Current science shows that the fetus is pain-capable much earlier than previously thought. <br />
<br />
Casey Is Unworkable and Should Be Overruled. Casey does not allow for restrictions based <br />
on increased knowledge of how the brutal abortion procedure affects the unborn <br />
child.<br />
<br />
Casey is inconsistent with the Court’s recognition of other State interests that <br />
justify abortion restrictions. Casey’s standard is arbitrary and has had <br />
damaging effects.<br />
<br />
<br />
The dilation and evacuation (D&E) procedure currently used after 15 weeks’ gestation was not used for second-trimester abortions at the time of Roe. ''City of Akron v. Akron Ctr. for Reprod. Health, Inc''., 462 U.S. 416, 436 & n.23 (1983); ...The Supreme Court described the D&E procedure in gruesome “technical detail” in Stenberg v. Carhart, acknowledging that its description “may seem clinically cold or callous to some, perhaps horrifying to others.” <br />
<br />
As the Supreme Court explained, abortion doctors use D&E in the second trimester because at that stage of fetal development, “the fetus is larger”—“particularly the head”—and the “bones are more rigid,” meaning “dismemberment or other destructive procedures” are required. . . . A physician extracts from the womb what moments before had been a living <br />
“unborn child”—using forceps, scissors, or a sim�ilar instrument that “slices, crushes, or grasps” fetal body parts one at a time. Piece by piece. Arm by arm. Leg by leg. And as the abortion doctor “cut[s] or rip[s] the piece from the body”—a torso, a spine, a rib cage—he places each body part on a tray (or in a dish) to keep inventory and ensure that nothing is left behind. Sometimes the heart is still beating on the tray. The fetus dies just as an <br />
adult experiencing corporal dismemberment would—by bleeding to death as his or her body is <br />
torn apart.<br />
<br />
Whole Woman’s Health, 978 F.3d at 913 (Willett, J., dissenting) (emphasis added) (citations omitted).88 “As one bioethicist testified, it’s ‘self-evident that it’s brutal and <br />
inhumane to tear a living organism limb from limb alive.’” Id. at 930. And “[n]o one would dispute that, for many, D&E is a procedure itself laden with the power to devalue human life.” Gonzales, 550 U.S. at 158.<br />
<br />
...the D&E procedure is inherently brutal and inhumane regardless of whether the fetus can feel it. We would never countenance dismembering a person (or even an animal) as a means of causing death, even if the person were anesthetized first.<br />
<br />
...“[t]he notion that anything in the Constitution prevents States from passing laws prohibiting the dismembering of a living child is implausible.” ''Harris v. W. Alabama Women’s Ctr.,'' 139 S. Ct. 2606, 2607 (2019) (Thomas, J., concurring). <br />
<br />
Casey is also out-of-step with the Court’s own recognition of other state interests justifying regulation of previability abortion. Some examples: preventing the coarsening of society to the humanity of newborns, Gonzales, 550 U.S. at 157; the integrity and ethics of the medical profession, who must simultaneously treat the unborn child as a patient in <br />
some contexts and as mere “tissue” in others,94 id.; protection of minors, Casey, 505 U.S. at 899–900; and maternal health, Roe, 410 U.S. at 154.<br />
<br />
Box v. Planned Parenthood of Ind. & Ky., 139 S. Ct. 1780, 1784 (2019) (Thomas, J., concurring). Thus, there is a “compelling interest in preventing abortion from becoming a tool of modern-day eugenics.” Id. at 1783 & n.2 (Thomas, J., concurring). But Casey does not permit those interests to be considered in limiting abortion.<br />
<br />
...The Court’s foray into medical regulation may not merely be stagnating the legal standard despite advancing science—it may be impeding science. Researchers fear that acknowledging science on fetal pain may lead to restriction on abortion. ACOG’s clinging to decade-old research illustrates this point. It also illustrates how ACOG’s views are based less on science and more on the politics of protecting Roe and Casey. It is unconscionable to think that the “medical” community shapes “the science” to fit its political goals. But this is the division the Court’s abortion jurisprudence inflames.<br />
<br />
==52 Commissioner Andy Gipson, Former Representative and Chair of Mississippi House Judiciary B Committee==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185353/20210729163718064_Amicus%20Brief.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
It is often overlooked that even in Roe, the Supreme Court acknowledged that the states “have an important and legitimate interest . . . in protecting the potentiality of human life.” 410 U.S. 113, 162 (1973). However, “the Court’s precedents after Roe … ‘undervalue[d] the State’s interest in potential life.” Gonzales, 550 U.S. at 157 (quoting Casey, 505 U.S. at 873 (plurality opinion)). Then, in Casey, the Court stated flatly “the State has legitimate interests from the outset of the pregnancy in protecting the health of the woman and the life of the fetus that may become a child,” 505 U.S. at 846, and Gonzales agreed that “[t]he government may use its voice and its regulatory authority to show its profound respect for the life within the woman.” Gonzales, 550 U.S. at 157.<br />
<br />
The Mississippi Legislature values life before and after birth, provides assistance for mothers and families from conception onward, provides support for children starting at <br />
birth, and has an interest in protecting unborn life, protecting women from the health risks associated with abortions after 15 weeks’ gestational age, and in protecting the integrity of the medical profession.<br />
<br />
==53 Care Net, a National Affiliation Organization of 1,200 Pregnancy Help Centers, and Alpha Center, a South Dakota Registered Pregnancy Help Center==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185348/20210729163211251_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
==74. American College of Pediatricians==<br />
<br />
(This entire excerpt is copied into Footnote #2 of Statement #4) <br />
<br />
[http://supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185265/20210729133245734_Dobbs%20Amicus.pdf Filed in Dobbs]<br />
<br />
<blockquote>2. What we know today—as uncontroverted scientific fact—is that the child develops much more quickly than the Court in Roe presumed. The Court then was told that “in early pregnancy . . . embryonic development has scarcely begun.” Brief for Appellant at 20, Roe, 410 U.S. 113 (No. 70-18), 1971 WL 128054. But that is wrong. From conception, the unborn child is a unique human being who rapidly develops the functions and form of a child long before viability. (page 2-3)</blockquote><br />
<blockquote>At five weeks’ gestation (just three weeks after conception),1 the unborn child’s heart starts beating. By six weeks, brain waves are detectable, and the nervous system is steadily developing. By seven weeks, the child can move and starts to develop sensory receptors. By nine weeks, the child’s eyes, ears, and teeth are visible. By ten weeks, multiple organs begin to function, and the child has the neural circuitry for spinal reflex, an early response to pain. By twelve weeks, the child can open and close fingers and sense stimulation from the outside world. By fifteen weeks—when Mississippi’s law limits abortions—the child can smile and is likely sensitive to pain. Medical interventions after this stage (other than abortion) use analgesia to prevent suffering. And by eighteen weeks, pain induces hormonal responses in the child. All this happens long before viability. Reflecting these advances in medical knowledge, ultrasound imagery available at the time of Roe looks much different from the imagery available today: (Image not shown here)</blockquote><br />
<blockquote>Page 11-12: During the fifth week, “[t]he cardiovascular system is the first major system to function in the embryo,” with the heart and vascular system appearing in the middle of the week.33 By the end of the fifth week, “blood is circulating and the heart begins to beat on the 21st or 22nd day” after conception.34 </blockquote><br />
<blockquote>By six weeks, “[t]he embryonic heartbeat can be detected.”35 Technological advances permit not only imaging detection at this early stage, but also videography of the unborn child, including footage of the child’s heartbeat.36 </blockquote><br />
<blockquote>After detection of a fetal heartbeat—and absent an abortion—the overwhelming majority of unborn children will now survive to birth.37 “[O]nce a fetus possesses cardiac activity, its chances of surviving to full term are between 95%–98%.”38</blockquote> <br />
<blockquote>Also during the sixth week, the child’s nervous system is developing, with the brain already “patterned” at this early stage.39 The earliest neurons are generated in the region of the brain responsible for thinking, memory, and other higher functions.40 And</blockquote> <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnotes for Page 12:<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;34 Id. at 2662. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;35 Id. at 2755. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;36 See, e.g., Endowment for Hum. Dev., The Heart in Action: 4 Weeks, 4 Days, available athttps://www.ehd.org/movies/21/The#Heart-in-Action [https://perma.cc/GQN4-Q8QS] (last visited July 28, 2021) (showing footage of a heartbeat at six weeks); see also, e.g., Endowment for Hum. Dev., Your Life Before Birth (Mar. 18, <br />
2019), available at https://vimeo.com/325006095 [https://perma.cc/6QBT-UWLK] (last visited July 28, 2021) (displaying video footage of a child’s development). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;37 Joe Leigh Simpson, Low Fetal Loss Rates After Ultrasound Proved-Viability in First Trimester, 258 J. Am. Med. Ass’n 2555, 2555–57 (1987). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;38 Forte, supra note 11, at 140 & nn.121–22 (footnote omitted) (collecting post-Casey medical research). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;39 Thomas W. Sadler, Langman’s Medical Embryology 72 (14th ed. 2019); see generally id. at 59–95. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;40 See, e.g., Irina Bystron et al., Tangential Networks of Precocious Neurons and Early Axonal Outgrowth in the Embryonic Human Forebrain, 25 J. Neuroscience 2781, 2788 (2005). <br />
<blockquote>(Page 13) the child’s face is developing, with cheeks, chin, and jaw starting to form.41 At seven weeks, cutaneous sensory receptors, which permit prenatal pain perception, begin to develop.42 The unborn child also starts to move.43 During the seventh week, “the growth of the head exceeds that of other regions” largely because of “the rapid development of the brain” and facial features.44 At eight weeks, essential organs and systems have started to form, including the child’s kidneys, liver, and lungs.45 The upper lip and nose can be seen.46 At nine weeks, the child’s ears, eyes, teeth, and external genitalia are forming.47</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnotes for page 13:<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;41 See Sadler, supra note 39, at 72–95. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;42 Kanwaljeet S. Anand & Paul R. Hickey, Special Article, Pain and Its Effects in the Human Neonate and Fetus, 317 New Eng. J. Med. 1321, 1322 (1987). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;43 Alessandra Pionetelli, Development of Normal Fetal Movements: The First 25 Weeks of Gestation 98, 110 (2010). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;44 Keith L. Moore et al., The Developing Human: Clinically Oriented Embryology 65–84.e1 (11th ed. 2020). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;45 See Sadler, supra note 39, at 72–95. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;46 Moore et al., supra note 44, 1–9.e1. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;47 See Sadler, supra note 39, at 72–95; see also App. 66a. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;48 Pionetelli, supra note 43, at 65 (2010). <br />
<blockquote>Page 14: At ten weeks, vital organs begin to function, and the child’s hair and nails begin to form.49 By this point, the neural circuitry has formed for spinal reflex, or “nociception,” which is the fetus’s early response to pain.50 Starting around ten weeks, the earliest connections between neurons constituting the subcortical-frontal pathways—the circuitry of the brain that is involved in a wide range of psychological and emotional experiences, including pain perception—are established.51 At the time of Roe, “the medical consensus was that babies do not feel pain.”52 Only during the late 1980s and early 1990s did any of the initial scientific evidence for prenatal pain begin to emerge.53 Today, the “evidence for the subconscious incorporation of pain into neurological development and plasticity is incontrovertible.”54 Every modern review of prenatal </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnotes for page 14:<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;49 See Sadler, supra note 39, at 106–127; Moore et al., supra note 44, at 65–84.e1; Johns Hopkins Med., The First Trimester, available at https://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/health/wellness#and-prevention/the-first-trimester[https://perma.cc/8N6H#M6CN] (last visited July 28, 2021); see also App. 66a. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;50 See, e.g., Int’l Ass’n for the Study of Pain, IASP Terminology (last updated Dec. 14, 2017), available at https://www.iasp#pain.org/Education/Content.aspx?ItemNumber=1698#Nociception [https://perma.cc/5PV5-5T9H] (last visited July 28, 2021); see also App. 80a. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;51 Lana Vasung et al., Development of Axonal Pathways in the Human Fetal Fronto-Limbic Brain: Histochemical Characterization and Diffusion Tensor Imaging, 217 J. Anatomy 400, 400–03 (2010). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;52 Am. Coll. of Pediatricians, Fetal Pain: What is the Scientific Evidence? (Jan. 2021), available at https://acpeds.org/position#statements/fetal-pain [https://perma.cc/JM3T-XQV8] (last visited July 28, 2021). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;53 Ibid.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;54 Curtis L. Lowery et al., Neurodevelopmental Changes of Fetal Pain, 31 Seminars Perinatology 275, 275 (2007).<br />
<blockquote>Page 15: pain consistently issues the same interpretation of the data: by ten to twelve weeks, a fetus develops neural circuitry capable of detecting and responding to pain.55 Even more sophisticated reactions occur as the unborn child develops further.56 And new developments have provided still more evidence strengthening the conclusion that fetuses are capable of experiencing pain in the womb.57</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnotes for page 15:<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;55 See, e.g., Carlo V. Bellieni & Giuseppe Buonocore, Is Fetal Pain a Real Evidence?, 25 J. Maternal-Fetal & Neonatal Med. 1203, 1203–08 (2012); Richard Rokyta, Fetal Pain, 29 Neuroendocrinology Letters 807, 807–14 (2008). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;56 See Royal Coll. of Obstetricians & Gynaecologists, Fetal Awareness: Review of Research and Recommendations for Practice 5, 7 (Mar. 2010), available at https://www.rcog.org.uk/globalassets/documents/guidelines/rcogfetalawarenesswpr0610.pdf [https://perma.cc/4V84-TEMC] (last visited July 28, 2021); Susan J. Lee et al., Fetal Pain: A Systematic Multidisciplinary Review of the Evidence, 294 J. Am. Med. Ass’n 947, 948–49 (2005); see also App. 76a, 84a–85a. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;57 See Lisandra Stein Bernardes et al., Acute Pain Facial Expressions in 23-Week Fetus, Ultrasound Obstetrics & Gynecology (June 2021), available at https://obgyn.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/uog.23709?af=R [https://perma.cc/V8BU-PZK4] (last visited July 28, 2021)<br />
<blockquote>Page 17: Moreover, by twelve weeks, the parts of the central nervous system leading from peripheral nerves to the brain are sufficiently connected to permit the peripheral pain receptors to detect painful stimuli.68 Thus, the unborn “baby develops sensitivity to external stimuli and to pain much earlier than was believed” when Roe and Casey were decided. MKB Mgmt. Corp. v. Stenehjem, 795 F.3d 768, 774 (8th Cir. 2015) (cleaned up).</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnote for page 17: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;68 Sekulic et al., supra note 65, at 1034–35. <br />
<blockquote>Page 21: By eighteen weeks, the child can hear his or her mother’s voice, and the child can yawn.87 The nervous system in the brain is also developing the circuitry for all the senses: taste, touch, smell, sight, and hearing.</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnote for page 21: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;87 Ibid.; see also Cleveland Clinic, Fetal Development: Stages of Growth (last updated Apr. 16, 2020), available at https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/articles/7247-fetal#development-stages-of-growth [https://perma.cc/YG92-KRH4] (last visited July 28, 2021). <br />
<blockquote>Page 25: Around twenty-six weeks, the child’s eyes open, and he or she can fully see what is going on around him or her.106 Brain wave activity increases throughout this period. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnote: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;106 Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hosp., A Week-by-Week Pregnancy Calendar: Week 26, available at https://www.hopkinsallchildrens.org/Patients-Families/Health-Library/HealthDocNew/Week-26?id=13484 [https://perma.cc/A8QG#XBPA] (last visited July 28, 2021).<br />
<br />
==79. World Faith Foundation and Institute for Faith and Family==<br />
<br />
(This entire excerpt is copied into Footnote #2 of Statement #4)<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185238/20210729120554370_19-1392%20tsac%20IFF.pdf Filed in Dobbs] <br />
<br />
<blockquote>The viability line is arbitrary, lacks constitutional support, and conflicts with legal principles in other contexts. Developments in medical technology expose the reality of a child in the womb worthy of legal protection. “Emerging science never shows the unborn to be less than human; rather, each advancement further reveals the humanity of the developing child in all its wonder”—even at 15 weeks, the developing child has “fully formed eyebrows, noses, and lips,” and “the baby’s fully formed heart pumps about 26 quarts of blood per day.”3</blockquote><br />
<blockquote>Yet this Court has stubbornly maintained the viability line, reaffirming Roe’s “recognition of the right of the woman” to choose abortion “before viability . . . without undue interference from the State.” Casey, 505 U.S. at 846. Gonzales began by presuming the same principle and timeline (Gonzales, 550 U.S. at 146)—but on the next page described the unborn child as “a living organism within the womb, whether or not it is viable outside the womb” (id. at 147, emphasis added).</blockquote> <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Footnote: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; https://lozierinstitute.org/cli-experts-urge-scotus-to-catch-up-to#science-in-mississippi-abortion-case/; https://lozierinstitute.org/new-paper-coauthored-by-cli-scholars-examines-treating-the-patient#within-the-patient/. These articles described in further detail the baby’s fetal development at 15 weeks.<br />
<blockquote>Page 13: Another critical development is the ability to detect a child’s heartbeat in the womb. Several years ago, the Eighth Circuit considered whether the state could prohibit abortions of “unborn children who possess detectable heartbeats.” MKB, 795 F.3d at 770. Experts testified that “fetal cardiac activity is detectable by about 6 weeks” although viability does not occur “until about 24 weeks.” Id. at 771. Sadly, the court concluded that Roe dictated the outcome but suggested that “good reasons exist for [this] Court to reevaluate its jurisprudence.” Id. at 774. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Ironically, no discussion or evidence of infant heartbeats is given in the amicus by Heartbeat International. [http://www.supremecourt.gov /DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185354/20210729164709878_Dobbs%20Amicus%20Brief%20-%20FINAL.pdf]. The word “heart” comes up 39 times, but only to state the organization’s name.<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
conclusion doesn’t ask that acknowledgment that babies are people, <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red"><br />
<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red"></div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=The_140_Amicus_Briefs_filed_in_Dobbs_v._Jackson&diff=50388The 140 Amicus Briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson2024-01-21T03:57:43Z<p>DaveLeach: /* 51 Monique Wubbenhorst, M.D., M.P.H., Grazie Christie, M.D., Colleen Malloy, M.D., and the Catholic Association Foundation */</p>
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<span style="color:#0000FF">This forum was created by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 13:35, 2 October 2023 (UTC) to mine the gold from the 140 "Amicus" Briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'', June 24, 2022, the ruling that overturned ''Roe v. Wade'' (1973) and ''Planned Parenthood v. Casey'' (1992), returning the decision whether to continue the slaughter to voters state by state. The search here is for nuggets that can help end the slaughter in ''every'' state. I am mining these nuggets for my book, [[Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases]].<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
<span style="color:#0DA">Register (see [[Begin!]]) and join the discussion. [http://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/wiki/Template#Vote Vote]. Improve it. Critique it. Sign your name with 4 tildes (<nowiki>(~~~~)</nowiki>).</span><br />
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----<br />
<br />
Below are the titles, dates filed, and links to, the 140 Amicus Briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' (2022), and excerpts from them, and my comments. I indicate which of them I include in my book, [[Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases]]. They are numbered in the order they were filed.<br />
<br />
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<br />
==1. Roman Catholic Diocese of Jackson and Roman Catholic Diocese of Biloxi== <br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/147736/20200714142159951_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20Roman%20Catholic%20Diocese%20of%20Jackson.pdf July 14, 2021 filed]. Summary: this Court should find that the state’s interest in protecting unborn children who have the capacity to feel pain is sufficiently compelling to support a limited prohibition on abortion.<br />
<br />
===Excerpts===<br />
<br />
"The purpose of H.B.1510 is to protect those unborn children who, at 15 weeks gestation, have the capacity to feel pain. ...The government supplied expert testimony on this point" (which was excluded by the district court). <br />
<br />
The main argument seems to be that banning abortions at 15 weeks is not a "substantial" obstacle to abortion, so it doesn't violate Casey, 1992, which prohibits a "substantial" obstacle. While it enhances "respect for life", which Gonzales, 2003, endorses. "Respect for life is clearly shown in Gonzales to be a sufficient governmental interest in abortion regulations." <br />
<br />
States have an "important interest regarding the sanctity of life." Quoted from Carhart, 2000.<br />
<br />
Justice Thomas was quoted saying SCOTUS has “struggle[d] to find a guiding principle to distinguish fundamental rights that warrant protection from nonfundamental rights that do not", and then it is asked, "Does an unborn child have a fundamental right to be free from pain in the womb?"<br />
<br />
[COMMENT: what an understatement! No mention of the right to live? Actually being dead is an effective way to be free from pain. Life involves pain, and every day of life is a gift.]<br />
<br />
The district court shouldn't have forbidden expert testimony about babies feeling pain as they are being murdered. "Whether an unborn child can feel pain when a doctor...kills it, it is clearly relevant to a law which forbids abortions at a time when the unborn child can feel pain." <br />
<br />
"Consider how the Supreme Court has construed the Cruel and Unusual Punishments Clause of the Eighth Amendment to forbid executions of convicted murderers that involve unnecessary pain." Judge Ho added, "If courts grant convicted murderers the right to discovery to mitigate pain from executions, there's no reason they shouldn't be even more solicitous of unborn babies."<br />
<br />
"Should Lady Justice turn a blind eye to the cry of the unborn child, sucking its thumb, hidden in the sacred dark refuge of his or her mother's womb, only to have that womb become a tomb? Justice should not abandon the unborn child. One of the most important roles of law is to fight for those that cannot fight for themselves."<br />
<br />
"...the most fundamental of all rights - life. The right to life is, according to the Declaration of Independence, 'self-evident'. It is the sacred duty of our government to protect and respect this right...." "...a human being must be recognized as having the rights of a person - among which is the inviolable right of every innocent being to life." That's a quote from the Catholic catechism. Paragraph 2270. <br />
<br />
"Before I formed you in the womb, I knew you. Jeremiah 1:5."<br />
<br />
[COMMENT: It is stated that babies are people, yet far less is asked than the outlawing of murdering them in every state, which that fact demands. Not even the overturning of Roe and Casey are asked, but merely the survival of Mississippi's 15 week aborticide ban. Only one Bible verse in support of that fact is given. No evidence that babies are people is offered. The testimony of court-recognized fact finders is absent. <br />
<br />
[The comparison with pain studies for the benefit of convicted murderers being executed is a very strong point. But I am suspicious of the theory that babies much younger ''can't'' feel pain. A worm on a fish hook obviously feels pain. And a human baby, at the same size, can't?]<br />
<br />
==2. American Center for Law & Justice==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/148010/20200717125225969_Dobbs%20v.%20JWHO%20ACLJ%20amicus%20in%20support%20of%20cert.pdf Filed July 14, 2021]. Stare decisis cannot trump adherence to the Constitution as the supreme law of the land.<br />
<br />
===Excerpts===<br />
<br />
"Stare Decisis...cannot exalt knowingly incorrect supreme court decisions over the Constitution itself." "...the justices must prefer a a faithful reading of the Constitution to an acknowledged false reading."<br />
<br />
The "Supremacy Clause" of the Constitution, declaring the Constitution "the supreme law of the land", does not include "decisions of the United States Supreme Court". Judges take an oath to uphold the Constitution. <br />
<br />
"Abortion advocates, recognizing the doctrinal flimisness of this court's abortion jurisprudence, invoke the doctrine of stare decisis as counseling adherence to Roe and Casey even though they were wrongly decided." <br />
<br />
[COMMENT: The brevity of this brief is itself a strong statement, along with its only court cites being about judges not putting themselves above the Constitution. I think it is less than half the length allowed by the Court for an amicus brief. As if to say "Look, you know how wrong Roe and Casey are. Just, STOP!"<br />
<br />
[Nothing is explicitly said about a right to life for babies, to counter all the arguments from Hell for murdering them. But the nose-thumbing at all the arguments from Hell is breathtaking.]<br />
<br />
==3. 375 WOMEN INJURED BY SECOND AND THIRD TRIMESTER LATE TERM ABORTIONS AND ABORTION RECOVERY LEADERS==<br />
<br />
[https://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184712/20210722163259351_41205%20pdf%20Parker%20I%20br.pdf Filed July 20, 2021] “The Dignity Of Infant Life In The Womb” is appealed to.<br />
<br />
The brief says “Amici Women who actually experienced this gruesome<br />
reality request this Court to consider the effect on the woman who has felt her baby moving alive in her body, then realizing the baby is dead and not moving, for two days, before removal. This overall description is clinical gruesomeness at its most wretched level.”<br />
<br />
[COMMENT: Dignity of infant life. It was not pointed out that their “dignity” is made possible only by realization that they are human beings. We eat animals, and do not talk about their “dignity” as we slaughter them. Oh wait, I'm wrong. Democrats regard animal slaughter as way more violative of "dignity" than human slaughter. So maybe it is a more powerful argument in court to DENY that babies of humans are humans? They are animals, which merit greater protection? <br />
<br />
The sentence following: “Especially if one inserts the term ‘baby’ which is the term most women use instead of the clinical term ‘fetus.’”<br />
<br />
“Late term abortions are also a crime against humanity, which occurs when the government withdraws legal protection from a class of human beings.”<br />
<br />
[COMMENT: Three things are missing from making this a powerful argument against legal abortion: (1) ''evidence'' that babies are “human beings”, to trigger what Roe said would “of course...collapse” legal abortion, (2) a request of the Court to end legal abortion, without which there is little pressure on the Court to address this evidence, and (3) citing the fact that babies are human beings - not just the fact that some mothers are grossed out - as the reason legal abortion should end.] <br />
<br />
The only “remedies” requested by the “amici women” brief are: the right to “Protect Women’s Psychological Well-Being (Health), The Dignity<br />
Of “Infant Life” In The Womb, And The Integrity Of The Medical Profession And Society”. Amici women never ask for the end of all legal abortions, but only for an end to abortions after 15 weeks as the Mississippi law targets, because “Late Term Abortion Severely Injures Significant Numbers Of Women”. It causes “Grief More Anguished and Sorrow More Profound” and “Devastating Psychological Consequences”. (For some mothers, that is.) <br />
<br />
The murder of babies, though alleged, is not presented as a reason for the Court to do anything. The fact that only abortions past 15 weeks, which are only 4.5% of abortions, are the target, is consistent with the primary concern being for mothers, since concern for babies would call for outlawing all abortions. <br />
<br />
This analysis should not be taken to imply that the lawyers and women involved don’t care primarily for the slaughtered, dismembered babies! Of course that is their primary concern! But I marvel that they don’t say so in their brief, citing the overwhelming, irrefutable evidence of unborn personhood by the consensus of every court-recognized finder of fact that has taken a position on “when life begins”. <br />
<br />
==4. The States of Texas Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas Georgia Idaho Indiana Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Missouri Nebraska Ohio Oklahoma South Carolina Tennessee West Virginia==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/148156/20200720160750082_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief.pdf Filed July 20, 2021]<br />
<br />
Summary: Changed circumstances require the Court to reevaluate its viability precedent.<br />
<br />
==5. Illinois Right to Life==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/148202/20200720191618686_19-1392%20BRIEF%20FOR%20AMICUS%20CURIAE%20ILLINOIS%20RIGHT%20TO%20LIFE%20IN%20SUPPORT%20OF%20PETITIONERS.pdf Filed July 20, 2021] Our Declaration of Independence guarantees the “right to life.” This Court is the guardian of the Constitution and thus should take cognizance of the changes in culture, science, and law since Roe. The Court should revise its abortion jurisprudence to allow Mississippi and other states to enact laws to protect and further the inalienable and constitutional rights of preborn human beings. A consensus of biologists now acknowledges that a human fetus is, biologically speaking, a human being.<br />
<br />
Footnote 10 a. The scientific literature has established that fertilization initiates a new human being. . An overwhelming majority of biologists recognize that a human’s life begins at fertilization . . . . . . . . . . <br />
<br />
Footnote 13 c. Legislative hearings on when life begins marshalled scientific evidence that life begins at fertilization . Even doctors who perform abortions and proponents of abortion rights admit fetuses are human beings Views opposing the position that human life starts at fertilization are unscientific and ideological . Changes in the law have further e r o de d t he u nde r pi n n i ng s Roe. Those changes recognize the human fetus as a human being . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . <br />
<br />
Footnote 17 a. Enactment of fetal homicide laws in almost 80% of states demonstrates that, outside of the abortion context, a human fetus is legally recognized as a human being St at es a re i ncrea si ngly proposing and enacting laws protective of unborn human beings even when abortion is curtailed as a result . . . . . . . . . .<br />
<br />
Footnote 18 4. P r ot e c t i ve le g i s l at ion h a s ameliorated many detriments associated with pregnancy The Court should not continue to follow Roe’s viability standard since it ignores the fact that a human fetus is a biological human being and legal person at all stages of the human life cycle . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 II. SINCE A HU M A N FET US IS A HUMAN BEING, H.B. 1510 SHOULD BE SUSTAINED AS A REASONABLE PRO T EC T ION OF A PR EBOR N PERSON UNDER THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT <br />
The Fourteenth Amendment covers all human beings, including preborn humans, and guarantees the due process right to life and equal protection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 1. The Fourteenth Amendment was intended to protect every human being within the jurisdiction of the U.S. Over whelming evidence now exists that human fetuses are human beings and therefore protected by the Fourteenth Amendment The Court has a constitutional duty to recognize the right of human fetuses to legal protections as persons, and to begin to build a consensus favoring protection of fetuses under law . . . . . . . . . . . . <br />
<br />
23 B. Mississippi is entitled to pass legislation that protects prenatal humans from abortion <br />
<br />
The question of when a human’s life begins is now recognized to be biologically determinable, and '''an overwhelming scientific consensus confirms the view that a human’s life begins at fertilization.''' (See infra at Argument I.C.2.a-c). This growing scientific consensus has prompted '''38 states to enact changes in fetal homicide laws that recognize the humanity of preborn humans in non-abortive contexts, and other laws are being passed to protect preborn humans even though abortion restrictions are a consequence ...RECENT DEVELOPMENTS ESTABLISH PREVIABLE FETUSES ARE HUMAN PERSONS, RENDERING ROE AND ITS PROGENY OBSOLETE.''' A. State interest in protecting life is the most fundamental and important government duty. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In Roe, the Court based its “viability” standard on: (a) lack of a scientific consensus on when human life begins, </span> (b) absence of uniform legal protection of fetuses, and (c) maternal burdens of pregnancy and child-rearing. <br />
<br />
....” Roe, 410 U.S. at 153. The Court rejected that argument. Id. <span style="color:red">It recognized that if a human fetus is a “person” under the Fourteenth Amendment, the case for unrestricted abortion would be untenable “for the fetus’ right to life would then be guaranteed specifically by the Amendment.” Id. at 157. </span><br />
<br />
The Court acknowledged that the state may assert a “legitimate interest in protecting the potentiality of human life.” Id. at 154, 162. But the Court ultimately determined that the '''evidentiary record was insufficient to establish in science or in law when a human’s life begins'''. ...Thus, <span style="color:red">in Roe, the Court’s decision was based on its stated inability to locate in the record a scientific or legal basis for the humanity or personhood of the fetus, and the detriments posed by pregnancy and child-rearing. However, these conditions no longer prevail,12 </span> so the Court is obliged to reconsider Roe in light of these changed circumstances. C. Scientific, legal, and social developments have robbed Roe’s viability standard of its original justification p. 8 <br />
...Casey: “[I]n constitutional adjudication as elsewhere in life, changed circumstances may impose new obligations.” Id. at 864 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">...Roe’s recognition of a right to abort a previable pregnancy rests on the belief that the termination would not extinguish the life of a human person. That belief is no longer factually tenable given the current state of scientific knowledge concerning the origin and development of the human fetus. Roe also rests on a determination that the humanity and personhood of a human fetus was not generally recognized in law. That legal context has changed as well. Among other changes in the law, fetuses are now protected as human beings under laws prohibiting fetal homicide. Other laws, such as “heartbeat” laws and laws protecting against fetal pain, which are increasingly being enacted by the states, demonstrate their interest in protecting the youngest and most vulnerable humans. Finally, changes in the laws and the availability of social services that support and protect pregnant women have ameliorated the plight of pregnancy and lessened the burden of child-rearing. All of these changes rob Roe of its factual and legal underpinnings </span>and require the Court to revisit and overrule it or, at a minimum, to recalibrate the viability standard in Roe and Casey, to reflect the current state of scientific understanding and the legal realities of today. 2. A consensus of biologists now acknowledges that a human fetus is, biologically speaking, a human being. a. T he scienti f ic lit er atu re ha s established that fertilization initiates a new human being. <br />
<br />
A review of recent discoveries13 and the development of scientific literature since Roe reveal a strong consensus that sperm-egg plasma membrane fusion (fertilization) is the starting point of the life of a human organism (a human being).14 Dr. Maureen Condic, who is a member <br />
<br />
Footnote 13. The Virtual Human Embryo (VHE), a 14,250-page illustrated atlas of human embryology, describes the stages of human development called the Carnegie Stages of Embryonic Development. Mark A. Hill, Embryology Carnegie Stages, University of New South Wales, Dec. 24, 2019, https://perma. cc/QX4R-UZXM; see also: Conception to birth -- visualized | Alexander Tsiaras TED Talk, YouTube, https://perma.cc/VL9ZRQB5, and 9 Months In The Womb: A Remarkable Look At Fetal Development Through Ultrasound By PregnancyChat.com, YouTube, https://perma.cc/ZNJ3-T4GU. <br />
<br />
Footnote 14. Maureen L. Condic, When Does Human Life Begin? The Scientific Evidence and Terminology Revisited, 8 U. St. Thomas J.L. & Pub. Pol’y, 2013, https://perma.cc/JP33-Y8BH; Rita L. Gitchell, Should Legal Precedent Based on Old, Flawed, Scientific Analysis Regarding When Life Begins, Continue To Apply to Parental Disputes over the Fate of Frozen Embryos, When There Are Now Scientifically Known and Observed Facts Proving Life Begins at Fertilization?, 20 DePaul J. Health Care L. 1, at 8-9. (2018). <br />
<br />
Footnote 18. <span style="color:red">Dr. Alfred Bongiovanni, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, in his testimony in connection with the 1981 hearing on Senate Bill 158, the “Human Life Bill, see infra at 15-16, concluded, “I am no more prepared to say that these early stages [of development in the womb] represent an incomplete human being than I would be to say that the child prior to the dramatic effects of puberty . . . is not a human being. This is human life at every stage.” Cited in House Resolution No. 214, https://perma. cc/6XRG-L2C8. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">b. An overwhelming majority of biologists recognize that a human’s life begins at fertilization. A recent international study involving 5,577 biologists from 86 countries who work at 1,061 top-ranked academic institutions22 confirmed the scientific consensus on when life begins.23 The study asked biologists to confirm or reject five statements that represent the view that a human’s life begins at fertilization. The majority of the biologists in the study identified as liberal (89%), prochoice (85%), and non-religious (63%). 5,337 biologists (96%) affirmed at least one of the statements and only 240 participants declined to affirm any statements (4%). The study participants were also asked to answer an essay question: “From a biological perspective, how would you answer the question, ‘When does a human’s life begin?’” Most biologists (68%) indicated fertilization. Thus, while in Roe, the Court found that experts could not arrive at any consensus at that point in the development of man’s knowledge, that is no longer the case. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">c. Legislative hearings on when life begins marshalled scientific evidence that life begins at fertilization. During hearings conducted by the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Senate Bill 158, the “Human Life Bill”, numerous scientific experts testified regarding when life begins. The Official Senate Report concluded that: “Physicians, biologists, and other scientists agree that conception marks the beginning of the life of a human being - a being that is alive and is a member of the human species. There is overwhelming agreement on this point in countless medical, biological, and scientific writings.”24 In the hearings, Dr. Jerome Lejeune testified that “[l]ife has a very, very long history, but each individual has a very neat beginning – the moment of its conception” because “[t]o accept the fact that after fertilization has taken place a new human has come into being is no longer a matter of taste or opinion ... it is plain experimental evidence.” S-158 Hearings, April 23, 1981 transcript, 18.25 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Experts from leading institutions have testified that there are no alternative theories on when a human’s life...<br />
<br />
Footnote 24. Report, Subcommittee on Separation of Powers to Senate JudFootnote iciary Committee S-158, 97th Congress, 1st Session 1981, 7; similarly, in 2006, the legislature in South Dakota heard expert medical testimony on when human life begins and concluded that “abortion terminates the life of a unique, whole, living human being”. Report of The South Dakota Task Force to Study Abortion, Submitted to the Governor and Legislature of South Dakota, Dec. 2005, https://perma.cc/4WF8-TNM3. <br />
<br />
Footnote 25. S-158 Hearings, April 23, 1981 Transcript, https://perma. cc/6DCT-UT4P. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">begins in the scientific literature. Dr. Hymie Gordon, Professor of Medical Genetics and physician at the Mayo Clinic, testified: “I have never ever seen in my own scientific reading, long before I became concerned with issues of life of this nature, that anyone has ever argued that life did not begin at the moment of conception and that it was a human conception if it resulted from the fertilization of the human egg by a human sperm. As far as I know, these have never been argued against.” Id. at 52. This lack of any published, let alone generally accepted, alternative scientific theories was also attested to by Dr. Micheline Matthew-Roth, a principal research associate in the Department of Medicine at the Harvard Medical School. Id. at 41-42. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">d. Even doctors who perform abortions and proponents of abortion rights admit fetuses are human beings. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Many practitioners of abortion and supporters of abortion rights acknowledge human life begins at conception.26 For example, when abortion doctor Dr. Curtis Boyd was interviewed, he acknowledged with respect to abortion: “Am I killing? Yes, I am. I know that.”27 Abortion rights supporter and ethicist Peter Singer has written that being “a member of a given species is something that <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Footnote 26. Derek Smith, Pro-Choice Concedes: Prominent Abortion Proponents Concede The Barbarity Of Abortion, Human Defense Initiative, Nov. 7, 2018, https://perma.cc/GXH8-MAUU. See also, A New Ethic for Medicine and Society, California Medicine, Sep. 1970. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Footnote 27. KVUE Austin Interview of Dr. Curtis Boyd, at 0:23, YouTube, Nov. 6, 2009, https://perma.cc/GYB2-3YFY. <br />
<br />
Page 16 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">can be determined scientifically, by an examination of the nature of the chromosomes in the cells of living organisms. In this sense there is no doubt that from the first moments of its existence an embryo conceived from human sperm and eggs is a human being.”28 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">e. Views opposing the position that human life starts at fertilization are unscientific and ideological. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">While some oppose the consensus view that human life begins at fertilization, the few counter-arguments made are philosophical or ideological, rather than scientific or fact-driven. In point of fact, no viable alternative to the consensus view has been propounded.29 <br />
<br />
One opposing argument is that biological principles are incapable of classifying humans30 despite the fact that scientists have done so for countless other animal species on Earth. Other opponents suggest that a human zygote cannot be considered a human individual because it is physiologically dependent on another human. Setting aside the fact that infants are also wholly dependent on other humans for survival, this ableist distinction rejects the humanity of conjoined twins who are physiologically dependent on each other’s bodies for survival. It is also sometimes claimed that a human zygote is not yet a human <br />
<br />
Footnote 28. Peter Singer, Practical Ethics, 2nd ed., Cambridge University Press, 85-86, 1993. <br />
<br />
Footnote 29. See supra, p. 15. <br />
<br />
Footnote 30. Richard J. Paulson, The unscientific nature of the concept that “human life begins at fertilization,” and why it matters, Fertility and Sterility, Volume 107, Issue 3, Mar. 2017, https:// perma.cc/QDE5-C5C4. <br />
<br />
Page 17 <br />
<br />
being because many fetuses fail to survive pregnancy and childbirth. But this view is fallacious because whether a human being is able to continue in life is not a condition of his or her status as a human being. A human life is always a life with potential, which may or may not be realized. <br />
<br />
'''Ultimately, opposing arguments to the scientific consensus that a human’s life begins at fertilization are fallacious or focus on aspects of biology that are not relevant to the biological classification of human beings. '''<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">3. Changes in the law have further eroded the underpinnings Roe. Those changes recognize the human fetus as a human being. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">a. Enactment of fetal homicide laws in almost 80% of states demonstrates that, outside of the abortion context, a human fetus is legally recognized as a human being. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In its 1973 Roe decision, the Court stated, “the unborn have never been recognized in the law as persons in the whole sense.” Roe, 410 U.S. at 162. This has changed markedly since that time. Legislators in 38 of 50 states have enacted laws that criminalize the intentional killing of a human fetus. These “fetal homicide” laws, which only apply to non-abortive killings, recognize that preborn human fetuses are human beings entitled to protection under the law. In this context, a majority of states today recognize a human fetus as a human person from the moment of fertilization.31 <br />
<br />
'''Footnote 31. A listing of the states with fetal homicide laws can be found at: State Laws on Fetal Homicide and Penalty-enhancement''' <br />
<br />
Page 18 <br />
<br />
'''Fetuses are recognized as human persons in numerous contexts: (1) laws that restrict abortion at some point in fetal development, (2) fetal homicide laws, (3) prohibitions against capital punishment imposed upon pregnant women, (4) recovery for fetal deaths under wrongful death statutes, (5) the rights of preborn children under property law, (6) legal guardianship of prenatal humans,32 (7) the rights of preborn children to a deceased parent’s Social Security and Disability benefits33, and (8) the rights of inheritance of posthumously born children.34 Despite the plethora of contexts in which fetuses are recognized as persons under the law, this Court has yet to recognize the personhood of preborn humans.''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">b. States are increasingly proposing and enacting laws protective of unborn human beings even when abortion is curtailed as a result. <br />
<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Today, 43 states have enacted laws protecting prenatal humans although abortion is thereby restricted. All but one restrict abortion access at the earliest point <br />
<br />
for Crimes Against Pregnant Women, National Conference of State Legislatures, May 1, 2018, https://perma.cc/3XTG-WDLB. <br />
<br />
'''Footnote 32. See Paul Benjamin Linton, The Legal Status of the Unborn Child Under State Law, 6 U. St. Thomas J.L. & Pub. Pol’y, 2011, https://perma.cc/XB8E-G375. <br />
<br />
Footnote 33. SSR 68-22: SECTION 216(h)(3)(C). – Relationship – Status of Illegitimate Posthumous Child, Social Security Administration, https://perma.cc/W3TR-89L9. <br />
<br />
Footnote 34. Alea Roberts, Where’s My Share?: Inheritance Rights of Posthumous Children, American Bar Association, Jun. 13, 2019, https://perma.cc/36VN-HZZ8''' <br />
<br />
Page 19 <br />
<br />
'''permissible by Roe (viability), and states have recently more emphatically asserted a state interest in the lives of previable human beings by seeking to protect them: (1) after the sixth week since that is known to be the point at which a fetus’ heart first beats (AL HB314; IA SF359) and (2) after the twentieth week since that has been found to be the point at which a fetus can first feel pain (OH SB 127).''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Altogether, given the Court’s willingness to permit states to protect prenatal humans from harm and states’ desire to do so, it is clear that our nation prizes the protection of humans over the right to abortion. However, in the present case, the District and Circuit courts enjoined Mississippi’s law because this Court has yet to recognize that previable human fetuses are humans. <br />
<br />
'''4. Protective legislation has ameliorated many detriments associated with pregnancy. <br />
<br />
In deciding Roe in 1973, the Court considered the burdens upon women associated with child-rearing such as “a distressful life and future,” “[m]ental and physical health may be taxed by child care,” and “additional difficulties and continuing stigma of unwed motherhood may be involved.” Roe, 410 U.S. at 153. These considerations have since been significantly ameliorated through legislation including: Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972,35 the Pregnancy Discrimination Act,36 the Family <br />
<br />
Footnote 35. 20 U.S.C. §1681 et seq. <br />
<br />
Footnote 36. The Pregnancy Discrimination Act of 1978, U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, https://perma.cc/MH3SMLFE''' <br />
<br />
<br />
Page 20 <br />
<br />
'''and Medical Leave Act (“FMLA”),37 the Women, Infants, and Children program (“WIC”),38 and the Pregnancy Assistance Fund (“PAF”).39 <br />
<br />
D. The Court should not continue to follow Roe’s viability standard since it ignores the fact that a human fetus is a biological human being and legal person at all stages of the human life cycle. <br />
<br />
Roe’s recognition of a right to abort a previable pregnancy rested on the belief that termination would not extinguish the life of a human being. Developments in science and law since Roe reveal that belief to be erroneous. An abortion does take a human’s life. Given these changes, the Court should reassess Roe. ....'''<br />
<br />
==6. American Association of Pro-Life Obstetricians & Gynecologists==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/148145/20200720153839672_19-1392%20Amici%20Brief%20AAPLOG.pdf Filed July 20, 2021]<br />
<br />
THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT DOES NOT INCLUDE A LIBERTY INTEREST TO ABORT ALL PRE-VIABILITY UNBORN CHILDREN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 A. Historical Evidence Demonstrates that the Constitution Does Not Require a Ban Against All State Regulation of Previability Abortion.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Mississippi’s law is partially based on legislative findings pertaining to the advanced development and humanity of pre-born children at the gestational age of fifteen to twenty weeks. Pet. at 7-9. At twenty two days, the child’s heart begins to beat. https://www.ehd.org/your-life-before-birth-video/ (last visited July 15, 2020). At six weeks, the child begins moving. Id. At seven weeks, scientists can detect a child’s brainwaves, and the child can move his or her head and hands. Id. The child displays leg movements and the startle response. Id. At eight weeks, the child’s brain exhibits complex development. Id (Page 18)<br />
<br />
==7. Inner Life Fund and Institute for Faith and Family==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/148139/20200720153319734_19-1392 Amici Brief Inner Life Fund.pdf Filed July 20, 2021]<br />
<br />
SCOTUS should grant Missippi's petition. The time has come to expose the “social equality fallacy” that demeans the ability and contributions of women by presupposing they can only achieve equality through the “right” to abortion. Great progress has been made toward the goal of gender equality in the decades since Roe and Casey — independent of access to abortion or contraception.<br />
<br />
==8. Robin Pierucci, M.D., and Life Legal Defense Foundation==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/148122/20200720132309321_19-1392 Dobbs v. JWHO petition AC LLDF.pdf Filed July 20, 2021]<br />
<br />
“viability threshold for a compelling state interest in preserving human life, created by this Court in 1973, should be abandoned in favor of the medically updated and philosophically consistent standard of an “unqualified” interest in protecting life...” <br />
<br />
In Roe, this Court determined that the state’s interest in the protection of human life <br />
became compelling at viability, relying on the fetus’ “capability of meaningful life outside the mother's womb.” Id. at 163. <br />
<br />
By contrast, '''in Cruzan this Court rejected the idea of “meaningful life,” holding that “a State may properly decline to make judgments about the ‘quality’ of life that a particular individual may enjoy, and simply assert an unqualified interest in the preservation of human life to be weighed against the constitutionally protected interests of the individual.”''' Cruzan, 497 U.S. at 282; Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 U.S. 702, 729 (1997) (quoting Cruzan and holding that the state “has an unqualified interest in the preservation of human life”) (emphasis added). See also Britell v. United States, 372 F.3d 1370, 1383 (Fed. Cir. 2004) (“It is not the role of the courts to draw lines as to which fetal abnormalities or birth defects are so severe as to negate the state's otherwise legitimate interest in the fetus' potential life.”); State v. Final Exit Network, Inc., 889 N.W.2d 296, 305-06 (Minn. Ct. App. 2016) (“The state has a compelling interest in the preservation of D.D.’s life, and the prevention of her suicide, regardless of her incurable [non-viable] condition.”) <br />
<br />
Limiting a state’s ability to protect human lives directly to only those lives deemed <br />
“meaningful” because the arbitrary benchmark of viability has been reached is in direct conflict with this Court’s 1990 holding in Cruzan, that a state need not qualify its interest in the preservation of human life before acting. This Court should grant the petition to resolve the conflict between its abortion jurisprudence and its decisions in Cruzan and Glucksberg allowing states to protect human life regardless of the meaningfulness” of that life as measured by the uncertain yardstick of viability. <br />
<br />
==9. Cleveland Lawyers for Life==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184253/20210719151428392_19-1392 TSAC Cleveland Lawyers for Life.pdf filed July 19, 2021]<br />
<br />
The viability standard should be jettisoned in favor of the point at which the physical humanity of the fetus has become biologically manifest. Mississippi has met that burden of proof.” (15 week development is described. The cutoff for legal abortion should be when there are “biological markers” rather than when babies can survive outside wombs.)<br />
<br />
==10. David Boyle==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184456/20210720221629952_19-1392_tsac_DavidBoyle.pdf Filed July 20, 2021]<br />
<br />
This is an attempt at a “neutral” plea for compromise. It promises respect for both sides. The index doesn’t indicate that the humanity of the unborn is remotely addressed. <br />
<br />
==11. Jewish Pro-life Foundation==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184580/20210721170924501_41204%20pdf%20Parker.pdf Filed July 21, 2021]<br />
<br />
The Coalition for Jewish Values, Rabbi Yacov David Cohen, Rabbi Chananya Weissman, and Bonnie Chernin (President, Jewish Life League) <br />
<br />
Glory to God! This is largely '''a Bible study that addresses Deuteronomy 30:19, Exodus 21:22-25, Exodus 23:7, Genesis 9:6-7, Isaiah 49:1, Jeremiah 1:5, Jeremiah 22:3, Jeremiah 29:6, Jeremiah 29:11, Leviticus 18:21, Leviticus 19:16, Proverbs 24:11-12, Proverbs 31:8, Psalm 139:13-16, Psalm 106:35-38.'''<br />
<br />
This brief doesn’t say so, but Roe “opened the door” to the relevance of a Bible study by saying the alleged failure of doctors and preachers “to arrive at any consensus” about “when life begins” was Roe’s principal reason why “the judiciary, at this point in the development of man’s knowledge, is unable to speculate” about whether babies are people. Roe thus treated theology as highly relevant, and yet Roe analyzed no Scripture. This cries out for correction and updating. <br />
<br />
This pleading to the Court is Amici’s attempt to rescue innocent children in the womb from execution, as commanded in our Bible, Proverbs 24:11-12: “Rescue those being led away to death; hold back those staggering toward slaughter. If you say, ‘But we knew nothing about this’, does not He who weighs the heart perceive it? Does not He who guards your life know it? Will He not repay everyone for what they have done?”<br />
<br />
'''This brief begins by asking for more than just to outlaw abortions after 15 weeks:''' “The Mississippi law in this case seeks to protect the God-given right to life for babies of 15 weeks gestation and beyond. Yet, most significant developmental milestones occur during the first eight weeks following conception. A baby’s heart beats at 22 days, and her brainwaves can be measured at 6 weeks. At 9 weeks all internal organs are present and the baby is sensitive to touch. As early as 8 weeks, the ‘infant’ feels real physical pain during an abortion.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">'''“.... Jeremiah 22:3 admonishes us to avoid causing pain and death to the powerless: Do what is right and just; rescue the wronged from their oppressors; do nothing wrong or violent to the stranger, orphan or widow; don’t shed innocent blood in this place.’”'''<br />
<br />
The brief asks nothing less than overturning of Roe, Doe, and Casey. Not explicitly asked for but strongly implied is also ''protection'' of the unborn, meaning not allowing ''any'' state to keep abortion legal: <span style="color:red">'''“Amici implore the Court to study our arguments in this filing and thereby find the moral authority and conviction to overturn Roe, Doe and Casey. Indeed, to apply the protective elements of the 14th Amendment of the Constitution to all children.”'''<br />
<br />
The brief makes a claim for Judiasm which is even more so a claim for its Bible, which of course is shared with Christians. It is a claim about what the Bible did first. But stating what the Bible pioneered actually understates its uniqueness, because ''to this day'' no other religion, except to the extent it was influenced by the Bible, supports these rights and freedoms: <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Judaism Is The Original Pro-Life Religion. It Was The First Religion In Human History To Sanctify Human Life From Conception To Natural Death And To Prohibit Child Sacrifice.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Judaism has a strong legal tradition of protecting human life and prohibiting the murder of innocents. Jewish law and tradition emphasize and support the moral right to life for all human beings at every stage of development based on the understanding that all people are created in the image of God; therefore, each of us has intrinsic value and worth with a destiny to fulfill God’s vision for humanity on Earth.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Psalm 139:13-16 reveals this: ‘For you created my inmost being: you knit me together in my mother’s womb. I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made . . .My frame was not hidden from you when I was made in the secret place. When I was woven together in the depths of the earth, your eyes saw my unformed body. All the days ordained for me were written in your book before one of them came to me.’” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">…. “All of us who are able to do so have the duty to enforce this right of the child in the womb: Leviticus 19:16: ‘Do not stand idly by when your neighbor’s life is at stake.’” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">…. “The Almighty gives clear instructions on the life issue in Deuteronomy 30:19: ‘This day I call the heavens and the earth as witnesses against you that I have set before you life and death, blessings and curses. Now choose life, so that you and your children may live.’”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">…. “Maimonides, declared in his compilation of Jewish law, the Mishneh Torah: ‘The definition of murder according to the Noahide Laws includes a person “who kills even one unborn in the womb of its mother,” and adds that such a person is liable for the death penalty.’” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“The Talmud (Sanhedrin 57b) says that an unborn child is included in the Noahide prohibition of bloodshed that is learned from Genesis 9:6-7: (from a direct translation of the original text), ‘He who spills the blood of man within man shall have his blood spilt for in the image of God made He man. And you, be fruitful, and multiply; swarm in the earth, and multiply therein.’ The Talmud interprets ‘the blood of man in man” to include a fetus, which is the blood of man in man.’”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">…. “Clearly, the Jewish religion prohibits child sacrifice, the modern day version being abortion, as stated in the Torah: Leviticus 18:21: ‘Do not give any of your children to be sacrificed to Molek, for you must not profane the name of your God. I am the Lord.’ Psalm 106:35-38: ‘They mingled with the nations and adopted their customs. They worshiped their idols, which became a snare to them. They sacrificed their sons and their daughters to false gods. They shed innocent blood, the blood of their sons and daughters, whom they sacrificed to the idols of Canaan, and the land was desecrated by their blood.’”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Rabbinical opinion prohibits even helping non-Jews abort – even for “physical abnormalities”.''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Rabbi Chananya Weissman: “It should not need to be debated that unborn children have the right to be born, and the lives of the elderly and infirm are no less precious than the lives of society’s most fortunate. The rich and powerful do not have the right to decide the value of anyone’s life, nor when someone has ‘already lived their life’ and it’s time for them to go. That is strictly the purview of God, who forbids us to make such distinctions or calculations, even for the alleged ‘greater good.’ It is always for the greater evil. It is always to displace God. The Torah teaches that every life is a unique world, and every moment of every life is infused with the potential to<br />
achieve great spiritual heights.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Rabbi Pinchas Teitz: (Commenting on Deuteronomy 21:7): “Shedding innocent blood in Jewish life is so reprehensible that at times even those not responsible for the act of murder who hear of such an incident must dissociate themselves from it. This is expressed by the recitation of the elders of the city in whose proximity a dead man is found. In the eglo arufo ceremony that the Torah mandates, they must wash their hands, saying: ‘Our hands did not shed this blood,’ even though there is no reason to assume that they were directly involved in the death. How, then, are we to respond with less than shock to the killing of 100,000 fetuses through abortion in Israel, year after year? This is certainly a sin against Torah . . . It is a crime against Jewry, against mankind, and even against the Land itself—for the Torah clearly warns that the Land, in its sensitivity to corruption, can tolerate no bloodshed.”''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In Jewish law the only time abortion is permitted is to save the life of the mother. The brief doesn’t give a reference from the Bible, but a footnote explains, “One who is ‘pursuing’ another to murder him or her. According to Jewish law, such a person must be killed by any bystander after being warned to stop and refusing.” This describes a kind of self defense or defense of others. Scriptures I think of are: 2 Samuel 2:18-23, where Abner begged Asahel not to attack him, but Asahel refused so Abner killed him. Or Exodus 22:2 which excuses a homeowner for killing a thief who breaks in at night. <br />
<br />
I particularly appreciate the brief’s analysis of Exodus 21:22-25, the ONLY citation of the Bible included in Roe v. Wade, in a footnote. The brief says: <span style="color:red">“A note about Exodus 21:22-25, the mistranslation of which has led many to conclude that Judaism condones the mass slaughter of infant life.''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“This conclusion is entirely false. The verse describes a case in which fighting men in close proximity to a pregnant woman inadvertently cause a miscarriage. The Torah specifies that the guilty party would be prosecuted for involuntary manslaughter only if the pregnant woman herself dies. If the infant in the womb dies, they must pay only a monetary fine. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Long used by abortion advocates to reframe abortion as legal in Judaism, this text is not a license to abort infant life; rather, it is a reference to involuntary manslaughter requiring an adjudicated fine. It is not a capital crime.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“...This verse must be carefully understood. Many translations read ‘and a miscarriage occurs’ rather than as ‘a premature birth results’ as I have it here. The passage, in my opinion, is to ‘a premature birth’ when the context is considered. The text actually says that if the child ‘departs’ [“yasa”] the womb and no other damage ensues from the event. In other words, if because of the struggle the baby is born early but is otherwise fine, then the men may be required to pay damages for their carelessness but no more. ‘But if other damage ensues,’ i.e. the baby is born with some deformity or born dead, then the standard penalties will apply, ‘an eye for eye, tooth for tooth’. If the child dies as a result, the men are guilty of the murder, a life for a life. The text makes no sense any other way. The Hebrew term shachol references an abortion or miscarriage. That word is not used here. There is conclusive evidence that both Torah and Rabbinic halacha regarding the pre-birth child as fully human and subject to the same protections and respect as all other people.”''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">(I will further note that the penalty is to be decided by a jury. I take this as so the jury can take into account eyewitness testimony about how deliberately the woman was struck. Did a man deliberately aim his fist at her? Did she insert herself into the dispute so much as to make her injury unavoidable?)<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">More Scripture: “Our tradition teaches us to advocate for vulnerable and victimized targets of abuse and murder. Proverbs 31:8 demands, ‘Speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves.’ We acknowledge the harms done by abortion and speak out to prevent them.”<br />
<br />
The brief is the only one to note fornication as another deadly (spiritually and physically) consequence of abortion: “Abortion has become an accepted means of birth control, encouraging irresponsible, dangerous sexual activity leading to an explosion of sexually transmitted disease. Women die from legal abortion.”<br />
<br />
Scripture is cited in sympathy for the loss to men of abortion:<span style="color:red"> “It is now confirmed that men grieve lost fatherhood, resulting in broken relationships and dysfunctional family life. We heed Jeremiah 29:6, emphasizing the importance of the family even in difficult times: ‘Marry and have sons and daughters; find wives for your sons and give your daughters in marriage, so that they too may have sons and daughters. Increase in number there; do not decrease.’” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Judaism’s biblical tradition identifies the child in the womb as precious, valuable and unique. Isaiah 49:1: ‘Before I was born the Lord called me; from my mother’s womb he has spoken my name.’ And Jeremiah 1:5: ‘Before I formed you in the womb I knew you, before you were born I set you apart, I appointed you as a prophet of nations.’” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Evidence of the regard for unborn human life in Jewish law: “when human life is endangered, a Jew is required to violate any Sabbath law that stands in the way of saving that person. The concept of life being in danger is interpreted broadly; for example, it is mandated that one violate the Sabbath to take a woman in active labor to a hospital. Jewish law also not merely permits, but demands, that the Sabbath be violated in order to save infant life in the womb. As lifesaving activity is the only situation in which a Sabbath violation is permitted, were the infant child not deemed alive by the Torah, this behavior would be entirely prohibited.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Abortion industry practices dramatically contrast with Jewish ethics and moral guidelines in business, cleanliness, sexual propriety, responsibility to protect friends and neighbors from harm, honesty, and women’s safety. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Exodus 23:7 admonishes us: ‘Keep away from fraud, and do not cause the death of the innocent and righteous; for I will not justify the wicked.’ <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Abortion providers have long been exempted from standard medical practices and regulatory oversight. They perpetuate sex crimes by routinely failing to report evidence of sexual assault and sex trafficking. They fail to provide informed consent to patients and fail to counsel patients on alternatives to the abortion procedure or possible immediate and long-term negative consequences of the procedure.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">…. “Judaism prohibits desecrating the human body, but abortion destroys a human body, and the harvesting of baby parts for profit defies Jewish respect for the dead.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Today, the Justices have all the information needed to fully understand and acknowledge the status of the infant life, and have done so in Gonzales, at 159, 160. From conception onward, children in their mother’s womb manifest humanity to such an extent that only a decision that protects their lives and futures is humane and just.”<br />
<br />
The rest of the brief reports striking parallels between the Jew-dehumanizing rhetoric of Nazi Germany and the baby-dehumanizing rhetoric of American abortionists. Except that “only” 6 million Jews were slaughtered in Germany, compared with 60 million babies in America.<br />
<br />
I didn’t know the abortion pill, RU486, is actually the same chemical Hitler used to gas Jews, when it was called Zyklon B! “The Population Council brought the abortion pill to the United States in 1994. Originally called Zyklon B, Nazi scientists developed it in gaseous form to kill Jews in concentration camp ‘showers.’62 RU 486 is now used in 40% of all abortions due to inflated pricing and low overhead costs.” https://www.lifenews.com/2014/02/23/company-that-madezyklon-b-for-nazi-holocaust-made-ru-486-for-abortions/ <br />
<br />
“In a 1999 speech in Washington, D.C., Mr. Ellie Wiesel stressed our obligation to defend the defenseless. ‘We must always take sides. Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the victim. Silence encourages the tormentor, never the tormented.’”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The conclusion is the most magnificent I have read, which it would not have been without quoting God: “We must end abortion, an appalling crime against humanity. To begin the process of reconciliation with our Creator, to restore the dignity of those who have perished, and to return our country to a life affirming nation. Amici ask the Court to rise above political concerns and to contemplate the Divine promise bestowed upon every human being as pledged in Jeremiah 29:11: ‘For I know the plans I have for you, declares the LORD, plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.’”<br />
<br />
----<br />
(My online account is out of red ink, but the entire section from here to the end is included in Statement of Fact #4, Footnote #2)<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<u>Jewish Prolife Foundation</u> [http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184580/20210721170924501_41204%20pdf%20Parker.pdf] <br />
<blockquote>This tragic human rights violation must be remedied. The Mississippi law in this case seeks to protect the God-given right to life for babies of 15 weeks gestation and beyond. Yet, most significant developmental milestones occur during the first eight weeks following conception. A baby’s heart beats at 22 days, and her brainwaves can be measured at 6 weeks. At 9 weeks all internal organs are present and the baby is sensitive to touch.4 As early as 8 weeks, the “infant”5 feels real physical pain during an abortion.6 This is much sooner than the 15-week issue before the Court, a gestational age when the pain felt by the baby must surely be considered. Jeremiah 22:3 admonishes us to avoid causing pain and death to the powerless: “Do what is right and just; rescue the wronged from their oppressors; do nothing wrong or violent to the stranger, orphan or widow; don’t shed innocent blood in this place.”</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnotes: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 Endowment for Human Development. Prenatal Summary. https://www.ehd.org/prenatal-summary.php<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 Gonzales 159, 160<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 5 Gonzales 159, 160. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 Expert Tells Congress Unborn Babies Can Feel Pain Starting at 8 Weeks. Ertelt, Steven. May 23, 2013. LifeNews. https://www.lifenews.com/2013/05/23/expert-tells-congress-unborn-babies#can-feel-pain-starting-at-8-weeks/<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<u>Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide</u> www.supremecourt.gov /DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185155/20210728163153060_Amici%20Brief%20of%20CMP-Daleiden.pdf]<br />
<blockquote>1. By 15 weeks’ gestation, the human infant in the womb unmistakably manifests “the human form” identical to any other member of our community. Gonzales v. Carhart, 550 U.S. 124, 160 (2007). Ironically, it is precisely from this point when the fetus becomes most recognizably a fellow human being, that the fetuses vulnerable to abortion become most useful as an experimental biologic “resource.” Even though four-month-old infants in the womb move, kick, suck their thumbs, hiccup, and demonstrate a readily discernable heartbeat and brainwaves, App. 65a,4 and even though the Constitution guarantees that “neither slavery nor involuntary servitude” shall exist in America nor that any person be deprived of life without due process of law, U.S. Const., amends. XIII § 1, XIV § 1, these same children can be routinely killed through livedismemberment abortions or trafficked and sold for experimental use. (Page 3)</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnote: 4 Katrina Furth, Fetal EEGs: Signals from the Dawn of Life, ON POINT SERIES 28 (Nov. 2018), https://lozierinstitute.org/fetal#eegs-signals-from-the-dawn-of-life/; Winslow J. Borkowski & Richard L. Bernstine, Electroencephalography of the Fetus, 5(5) NEUROLOGY 362–65 (May 1, 1955)<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<u>National Catholic Bioethics Center, et al.</u> [www.supremecourt.gov/ DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185239/20210729121001402_19-1392%20tsac%20National%20Catholic%20Bioethics%20Center.pdf]<br />
<blockquote>Mississippi’s law is partially based on legislative findings pertaining to the advanced development and obvious humanity of pre-born children at the gestational age of fifteen to twenty weeks. Pet. at 7-9. At twenty-two days, the child’s heart begins to beat. https://www.ehd.org/your-life-before-birth-video/ (last visited July 15, 2020). At six weeks, the child begins moving. Id. At seven weeks, scientists can detect a child’s brainwaves, and the child can move his or her own head and hands. Id. The child also displays leg movements and the startle response by that time. Id. At eight weeks, the child’s brain exhibits complex development. Id. (p. 14)</blockquote><br />
<br />
==12. Alabama Center for Law and Liberty== <br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184666/20210722141347032_Dobbs%20ACLL%20Amicus.pdf Filed July 23, 2021]<br />
<br />
“ACLL believes that life begins at the moment of fertilization and that unborn children are people entitled to equal protection of the law.” This statement falls short of claiming unborn “personhood” is an objective fact. It also falls short of ''proving'' it is an objective fact. This phrasing treats it as ACLL’s subjective “belief”. <br />
<br />
Supposing ACLL’ “belief” to be true, then murdering the unborn violates the 14th Amendment: “The Framers of the Fourteenth Amendment believed that God gave every person the natural right to life and that unborn children were ‘people’ entitled to the Amendment’s protection. Consequently, laws that protect everyone from murder except unborn children violate the Equal Protection Clause.”<br />
<br />
ACLL asks that abortions after 15 weeks be outlawed. That requires the Court to overturn Roe’s claim that a state can’t protect babies before “viability”. <br />
<br />
ACLL therefore points out '''something illogical about the “viability” standard: “if a person’s right to life is dependent on his ability to survive without the help of others, then most people would not have a right to life. Most of us wake up each day in a dwelling that was built by someone else, eat food that was grown by someone else, drink water that was sent to our house by someone else, go to work in a car that was built by someone else, and provide goods or services to someone else in exchange for payment...”'''<br />
<br />
ACLL notes “we know far more about prenatal life now than we did when Roe and Casey were decided”, but none of what we now know is offered as evidence proving the veracity of ACLL’s “belief” that “life begins at the moment of fertilization and that unborn children are people entitled to equal protection of the law.”<br />
<br />
Inconsistency in law through abortion precedents is given as a reason to overturn Roe: “criminal law, tort law, guardianship law, health care law, property law, and family law often treat the unborn as persons, leaving abortion as an outlier.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">ACLL asks more than any other brief: not just that Roe be overturned, but that all unborn babies be protected, which means no state could keep abortion legal: “C. The Court Should Not Only Overrule Roe but Also Hold That the Constitution Protects the Child’s Right to Life.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Why should the Court do that? ACLL offers another “if...then” argument: “Roe itself conceded that if an unborn child is a person, the case for abortion collapses, because the child’s right to life would be specifically guaranteed by the Amendment. Roe, 410 U.S. at 156-57. The Court was correct in that regard.”<br />
<br />
Well, yes, Roe was right, but Roe didn’t, 50 years ago, think an unborn child being a “person” was “established”. Is it established now? Surely it is now that every court-recognized fact-finder that has taken a position has ruled unanimously, but ACLL didn’t mention that evidence, or any other evidence over the past 50 years. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">ACLL continues: “The Fourteenth Amendment states, in relevant part: “nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.” U.S. Const., amend. XIV, § 1 (emphasis added).”<br />
<br />
But ACLL offers no evidence because “other amicus briefs are developing this point in more detail” so ACLL will only observe that the question has “gained considerable attention” and “has also been debated in conservative academic circles.” Well, that’s news, isn’t it? Many cites are given, but no quotes or conclusions. <br />
<br />
One cite that I appreciate is <span style="color:red">“Charles I. Lugosi, Conforming to the Rule of Law: When Person and Human Being Finally Mean the Same Thing in Fourteenth Amendment Jurisprudence, 4 Geo. J. L. & Pub. Pol’y 360 (2007).”<br />
<br />
My book, “How States can Outlaw Abortion in a Way that Survives Courts”, points out that one definition of “persons” in Roe itself is “recognizably human”. No case law supports the strange notion that there are human beings who are not “persons”. <br />
<br />
An appeal is made to the beliefs about the unborn of our ancestors: <span style="color:red">“Blackstone said, ‘Natural persons are such as the God of nature formed us.’ 1 Blackstone, Commentaries *123. ‘The principle of Blackstone’s rule was that “where life can be shown to exist, legal personhood exists.’” Craddock, supra, at 554-55.12 Given that the dominant view at the Fourteenth Amendment’s passage was that life begins at conception, there is a strong case that the Fourteenth Amendment applies to unborn children.”'''<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">This is a strong attack on Roe’s logic that “the unborn have never been treated by our laws as persons in the whole sense”, and this approach invokes the legal principle that what the Constitution meant when it was enacted is what we should follow now until Americans choose to change it.<br />
<br />
Of course, whatever any culture of any past century thought about it, unborn babies are, and always have been, '''''in fact,''''' fully human beings. But this evidence of court-recognize fact finders from past centuries merits inclusion with the consensus of court-recognized fact finders over Roe's 49 bloody years, including juries, expert witnesses, state legislatures, Congress, and individual judges who took a position on "when life begins". <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">After its history lesson, ACLL concludes with another “if...then” argument: “Thus, if all people are endowed with their Creator with the unalienable gift of life, and if unborn children are people, then the States may not deny equal protection of the laws to them.”<br />
<br />
“If”? “If”? <br />
<br />
'''“Therefore, this Court should not only overrule Roe and its progeny but also hold that the Fourteenth Amendment protects unborn children from abortion. If this is too far for the Court to go in the present case, then it should at the very least refrain from foreclosing that question from being presented in the future.”''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">ACLL deserves credit for its strong, clear request for protection of the unborn: It is a “fact that Americans viewed unborn children as people when they ratified the Fourteenth Amendment. As Roe itself conceded, establishing the suggestion of personhood would make the case for abortion collapse. Roe, 410 U.S. at 156-57.”<br />
<br />
==13. National Right to Life Committee and Louisiana Right to Life Federation== <br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184772/20210723123330497_NRLC.Dobbs%20Amici%20Brief.pdf Filed July 23, 2021]<br />
<br />
“b. States may assert an interest in protecting preborn, individual human life, including against pain, during all periods of pregnancy.” That was a subheading. The subject was given 152 more words which did not say babies are “human life”, or present supporting evidence, or point out that legal abortion must end when that is acknowledged. <br />
<br />
==14. Jewish Coalition For Religious Liberty==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184865/20210726093205304_19-1932%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20Jewish%20Coalition%20for%20Religious%20Liberty.pdf Filed July 26, 2021]<br />
<br />
“Given the arguments made in prior cases, JCRL is concerned that proponents of a constitutional right to abortion will assert a novel “religious-veto” view of religious <br />
liberty that, if accepted, would make it more difficult for sincere religious adherents to obtain accommodations in future cases.”<br />
<br />
'''Religious proponents of a constitutional right to abortion have previously offered a novel view under which their religious views would dictate what laws may govern every American, even those with different faiths or no faith at all. This Court should reject that novel “religious-veto” view as it would ultimately diminish religious liberty for everyone.''' <br />
<br />
2 Letter From George Washington to the Hebrew Congregation in Newport, Rhode Island, 18 August 1790, FOUNDERS ONLINE, <br />
(https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Washington/05-06-02-0135) (last visited July 13, 2020) (“[T]he Government of the United States, which gives to bigotry no <br />
sanction, to persecution no assistance requires only that they <br />
who live under its protection should demean themselves as good <br />
citizens, in giving it on all occasions their effectual support.” In <br />
this country, “every one shall sit in safety under his own vine and <br />
fig tree, and there shall be none to make him afraid.”). <br />
3 Zorach v. Clauson, 343 U.S. 306, 313 (1952) (“We make room <br />
for as wide a variety of beliefs and creeds as the spiritual needs <br />
of man deem necessary. We sponsor an attitude on the part of <br />
government that shows no partiality to any one group and that <br />
lets each flourish according to the zeal of its adherents and the <br />
appeal of its dogma.”). from targeting religious activity,4 require state actors to treat religious conduct as favorably as comparable secular conduct,5 or prevent the government from substantially burdening religious activity unless doing so is necessary to further a compelling government interest.6 These traditional Free Exercise protections require that the state accommodate religious exercise, but they do not prevent government entities from enforcing laws against Americans who lack religious objections.7 <br />
<br />
4 Church of the Lukumi Babalu Aye, Inc. v. City of Hialeah, 508 U.S. 520 (1993). <br />
<br />
5 Tandon v. Newsom, 141 S. Ct. 1294 (2021). <br />
<br />
6 Holt v. Hobbs, 574 U.S. 352 (2015). <br />
<br />
7 Wisconsin v. Yoder, 406 U.S. 205, 236 (1972) (creating a religious accommodation to exempt Amish parents from having to send their children to formal high-school while confirming that, “[n]othing we hold is intended to undermine the general applicability of the State's compulsory school-attendance statutes … .”). <br />
<br />
Such protections help ensure that religious adherents can fully participate in civil society without having to abandon their faith.8 Importantly, they protect religious adherents without requiring that the rest of society follow their faith.9 <br />
<br />
8 Sherbert v. Verner, 374 U.S. 398, 404 (1963) (finding it unconstitutional for the government to force a religious adherent to “choose between following the precepts of her religion and forfeiting benefits, on the one hand, and abandoning one of the precepts of her religion '''in order to accept work''', on the other hand.”); Braunfeld v. Brown, 366 U.S. 599, 616 (1961) (Stewart, J. dissenting) ('''“Pennsylvania has passed a law which compels an Orthodox Jew to choose between his religious faith and his economic survival. That is a cruel choice. It is a choice which I think no State can constitutionally demand.”''') <br />
<br />
9 Fulton v. City of Philadelphia, Pa., No. 19-123, 2021 WL 2459253, at *9 (U.S. June 17, 2021) (“CSS seeks only an accommodation that will allow it to continue serving the children of Philadelphia in a manner consistent with its religious beliefs; it does not seek to impose those beliefs on anyone else”); id. at *20 (Alito, J. concurring) (“the text of the Free Exercise Clause gives a specific group of people (those who wish to engage in the ‘exercise of religion’) the right to do so without hindrance”). 10 See e.g., Brief for American Jewish Congress, et. al., as Amici Curiae at 4, Webster v. Reprod. Health Servs., No. 88-605, 492 U.S. 490 (1989) (“given the dramatically contrasting religious views about whether and when abortion is permitted or required, state statutes drastically curtailing access to abortion <br />
<br />
In the past, religious supporters of a right to abortion have advocated for a novel conception of religious liberty that is incompatible with this traditional understanding. In their view, the fact that some religions may allow or even require women to obtain abortions should cause this Court to recognize a general constitutional right to abortion. <span style="color:red">See Brief for 178 Organizations as Amici Curiae in Support of Respondents at app. a, Planned Parenthood of Se. Pa. v. Casey, Nos. 91-744, 91-902, 505 U.S. 833 (1992) (“in the face of the great moral and religious diversity in American society over abortion and in the light of Jewish traditions which in some cases command abortion, and in many others permit it, the existing constitutional rules, set down by Roe v. Wade, should be maintained ... .”) (citation omitted). The “right” that such advocates propose would not be limited to protecting the religious exercise of objectors. Instead, it would prohibit states from pursuing their interest in protecting the lives of unborn children, even in instances that would not impact adherents’ exercise of their faith.10 The proponents of such a right thus do not seek to ensure that they can fully participate in society without compromising their religious exercise; they seek to yoke the rest of society to their theological preferences. <br />
<br />
This novel “religious-veto” view of religious liberty is inconsistent with this Court’s precedents and, if given credence, would make it more difficult to protect religious liberty in the future. <br />
<br />
'''At first glance, a doctrine that would allow religious adherents to entirely block the state from pursuing goals with which they disagree—extending beyond protecting their own free exercise—might seem appealing to religious liberty advocates. However, such a novel and imperious regime would quickly prove untenable, especially in a large and religiously diverse country. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Under the religious-veto view of the Free Exercise Clause, every decision in favor of a religious adherent would entirely foreclose the state from pursuing its chosen interests. Such paralysis is not desirable, nor should it be the goal of those who seek to foster a religiously free and diverse nation. <br />
<br />
In the long term, the novel “religious-veto” view would diminish protections for religious exercise. <br />
<br />
[In other words, PP was not just demanding “free exercise of religion” for believers, but “free exercise of religion” to murder unbelieving babies, undercutting the value of any “compelling government interest” in saving lives, and the fundamental right to life of human babies.]<br />
<br />
'''In Employment Division, Department of Human Resources of Oregon v. Smith, this Court worried that applying the then existing system of religious accommodations might be “courting anarchy.” 494 U.S. 872, 888 (1990). Amicus vigorously disagrees that granting religious accommodations poses such a risk and believes the Court should overrule Smith. In fact, this Court has recently loosened Smith’s strictures, and has signaled that it may reconsider them entirely. However, the novel religious-veto rule proposed by supporters of a right to abortion would legitimize Smith’s concerns.''' <br />
<br />
Granting every religious person in America an absolute veto over any law that burdens his faith might in fact be “courting anarchy.” In order to avoid the negative consequences that would predictably follow from accepting a religious-veto theory of religious liberty, courts would likely either double-down on Smith’s restrictive reading of the First Amendment or adopt a new and even less favorable framework for granting relief to religious adherents. Fortunately, religious vetoes are not what the First Amendment or this Court’s precedents require. <br />
<br />
Even if courts continued to apply something resembling the current standards, religious liberty proponents would be less likely to prevail under the religious-veto approach than they are under the existing religious-accommodation approach. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Currently, the government can only burden an adherent’s religious exercise if it can show that “the asserted harm of granting specific exemptions to particular religious claimants” is of the highest magnitude.11 That analysis, which is favorable to religious objectors, only makes sense so long as the remedy is an individual exemption. '''Under the religious-veto approach, courts would have to analyze the harm of completely negating a law because exemptions would no longer be limited to the specific objectors. In other words, courts would have to determine whether the government has a compelling interest in enforcing a law at a societal rather than to any one person at an individual level.''' Such an analysis is far less favorable to religious adherents than the current test.<br />
<br />
==15. Catholic Medical Association, National Association of Catholic Nurses-USA, Idaho Chooses Life and Texas Alliance for Life==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184905/20210726125612491_19-1932%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20The%20Catholic%20Medical%20Association%20et%20al..pdf Filed July 26, 2021]<br />
<br />
This entire brief attacks the subjectivity of Roe’s “viability” standard. The lower courts had overruled Mississippi’s 15 week abortion ban on the ground that 15 weeks is before “viability”, and states have no legitimate interest in regulating abortion before viability. <br />
<br />
The CMA conclusion: “...It is an illusory distinction without legal or practical significance. Roe has pretended to be what it is not for long enough. It should be overturned so that states once again may provide legal protection for unborn human life.” <br />
<br />
No evidence is offered to prove the unborn are human to judges who profess not to be able to “speculate” about such deep subjects. <br />
<br />
One point I found interesting: “The Court [in Roe] provided no explanation as to why the state’s interest in protecting human life should grow substantially as the unborn child grows and develops during the pregnancy. Nor did the Court attempt to explain why the state’s interest in protecting unborn human life just prior to viability should be nonexistent and then suddenly appear just after viability.” Respect for human life of course accords all human life “equal protection of the laws”. Without that uniquely American, uniquely Biblical respect, prejudice, dehumanization, and slavery face no restraint.<br />
<br />
==16. African-American, Hispanic, Roman Catholic and Protestant Religious and Civil Rights Organizations and Leaders==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184908/20210726131118652_19-1392_Amici%20Brief%20In%20Support%20of%20Petitioners.pdf Filed July 26, 2021] by Mathew D. Staver, Liberty Counsel<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">This brief associates abortion, abortionists, and abortion-supporting courts, with the Eugenics movement “THAT ELIMINATES “LESS DESIRABLE” RACES AND CERTAIN CLASSES OF PEOPLE TO EVOLVE A SUPERIOR HUMAN POPULATION.” It starts off with a shot at the district judge who insulted Mississippi’s motives as part of a long string of racist denials of rights; this Liberty Counsel brief accuses the whole abortion movement, inclu<span style="color:red">ding Roe, Doe, Casey, etc. as the gold standard of racism. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“The sinister goal of the eugenics movement was to eliminate ‘unfit’ and ‘undesirable’ people—those with mental and physical disabilities as well as certain races.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">LC points out the rest of the title of Darwin’s racist “Origin of Species” which today’s atheists normally leave out of their proud citations: “or, the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life”! Many quotes are given from Darwin’s 1871 book, “The Descent of Man”, which must be terribly embarrassing for any atheist or evolutionist. He makes a Ku Klux Klan Grand Wizard look like a paragon of intelligence and tolerance. <br />
<br />
You’ve just got to go to this link and read it. This guy’s tirades are a sight to behold! <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Then it’s Margaret Sanger’s turn. Wow! The district judge had derided Mississippi which “sterilized six out of ten black women” at a local county hospital “against their will.” Well, LC points out that was the doings of Margaret Sanger, the heroine of that district judge. <br />
<br />
Then it was the Supreme Court’s turn! <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“In Buck, the Court approved the compulsory sterilization of an allegedly ‘feeble minded’ woman who had been falsely adjudged ‘the probable potential parent of socially inadequate offspring.’ Buck, 274 U.S. at 205, 207. In a short opinion, Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., joined by seven other Justices, ‘offered a full-throated defense of forced sterilization...as a means to ‘prevent’ society from being ‘swamped with incompetence’” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">6 out of 10 sterilized at one hospital, the district judge says? That’s nothing: “between 1907 and 1983, more than 60,000 people were involuntarily sterilized” with a boost from the Supreme Court’s 1927 ruling! <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">What an admission from Justice Ginsberg: “And as the late Justice Ginsburg once observed: ‘[A]t the time Roe was decided, there was concern about population growth and particularly growth in '''populations that we don’t want to have too many of'''. So that Roe was going to be then set up for Medicaid funding of abortion.’”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Now the tie-in to abortion today: The racism, the extermination of blacks especially, is not just in the past. It’s now. “In Mississippi, 3,005 abortions were reported in 2018. Of those abortions, 72% were performed on black women, compared to just 24% on White women and 4% on women of other races.” There are ''pages'' of stats like that. “The racial disparity in abortions is largely intentional: A study based on 2010 Census data shows that nearly eight out of ten Planned Parenthood abortion clinics are within walking distance of predominantly Black or Hispanic neighborhoods. More specifically, Planned Parenthood intentionally located 86 percent of its abortion facilities in or near minority neighborhoods in the 25 U.S. counties with the most abortions. These 25 counties contain 19 percent of the U.S. population, including 28 percent of the Black population and 37 percent of the Hispanic/Latino population.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The relevance to the case before us: “states have a compelling interesting in ‘preventing abortion from becoming a tool of modern-day eugenics.’ Id. at 1783. And that interest far outweighs this Court’s judicially fashioned distortion of the Constitution.”<br />
<br />
So LC concludes, “The Court should condemn the district court’s disparaging rhetoric, reverse the decision below, and finally overrule Roe v. Wade and its progeny.”<br />
<br />
==17. Senators Josh Hawley, Mike Lee, and Ted Cruz==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184947/20210726160225898_2021-07-26%20Hawley%20Amicus%20Brief%20FINAL%20-%20PDFA.pdf Filed July 26, 2021]<br />
<br />
Roe should be overturned, not because it legalizes murder of baby human beings, but because it is “unworkable”. That is, states have no idea what to expect of courts before they pass a law. <br />
<br />
No evidence is offered that babies of people are people. No medical evidence, no mention of the unanimous establishment that “life begins” at the beginning, by every court-recognized fact-finder that has taken a position: juries, expert witnesses, state legislatures, congress, individual judges. The protection of babies, by legal recognition that they are fully human so ''no'' state can keep abortion legal, is not requested or, apparently, even thought of. <br />
<br />
However, it may be that this brief, more than any other, strummed the heart-strings of the Dobbs justices to overturn Roe, because its focus was ''not'' on the cruelty towards unseen, unheard babies, but to the inconvenience for lawyers, lawmakers, and judges. <br />
<br />
The reversal of Roe is sought. Of course if that is all that happens, without court recognition that babies are people, then abortion will still remain legal in many states. <br />
<br />
Some excerpts:<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Justice Scalia called the undue burden standard ‘ultimately standardless’ and ‘inherently manipulable,’ with the result that it ‘will prove hopelessly unworkable in practice.’” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">''“Asking whether a state interest in protecting fetal life or ensuring informed decisions about abortion outweighs any burdens on the abortion decision is like asking ‘whether a particular line is longer than a particular rock is heavy.’”'' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“When the lower courts cannot consistently apply—or even understand—a standard after nearly thirty years of development, something is wrong.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Casey’s failure to provide adequate guidance for state legislatures has led national abortion rights organizations to immediately file for an injunction any time a law protecting prenatal life is enacted—if only to ‘give it a try.’ See, e.g., Women’s Med. Prof’l Corp. v. Voinovich, 130 F.3d 187, 218–19 (6th Cir. 1997) (Boggs, J., dissenting) '''(“The post-Casey history of abortion litigation in the lower courts is reminiscent of the classic recurring football drama of Charlie Brown and Lucy in the Peanuts comic strip.”''' <br />
<br />
==18. Trinity Legal Center== <br />
<br />
[https://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184950/20210726160604723_41111%20pdf%20Schlueter.pdf Filed July 26, 2021]<br />
<br />
TLC clearly states that babies are “human life”, which is clear from ultrasound, and is affirmed by Justice Scalia. Instead of offering evidence, an appeal is made to common knowledge. TLC’s affirmation does not affect what it asks of the Court: that is, an end to all legal abortion, since they are all murder, is not requested. Not even an end to Roe is asked. Only that Mississippi’s 15 week ban be allowed to stand. <br />
<br />
Here is TLC’s affirmation of unborn life: “At the time these opinions were announced, the Justices repeatedly referred to the unborn child as ‘potential life.’ Because of advancement in medical science and technology, it is [now] known that life begins at conception. Thus, Justices O’Connor, White, and Scalia’s argument that the State has a compelling interest throughout pregnancy becomes more profound because the baby is not just a potential life, but it is the life of a whole, separate human being.<br />
<br />
“Furthermore, from a medical perspective, the unborn child is treated as a separate patient.<br />
<br />
“Justice Scalia further emphasized that the unborn child is not just potential life but human life. Thus, the State is protecting the human life of the unborn child and not just potential life. He stated: But ‘reasoned judgment’ does not begin by begging the question, as Roe and subsequent cases unquestionably did by assuming that what the State is protecting is the mere ‘potentiality of human life.’ '''The whole ''argument'' of abortion opponents''' is that what the Court calls the fetus and what others call the unborn child is a human life.”<br />
<br />
Unfortunately, even Scalia’s statement falls short of a position. He reports it only as an “argument” which courts ought to address. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">TLC says “The fourth factor focuses on changes in the facts. Since Roe, there have been many scientific and medical developments. Probably the most significant developments have been in ultrasound technology and fetal surgery. Ultrasound technology demonstrates that the unborn child is human life that is actually alive and shows the development of the baby. <br />
<br />
"This undermines Roe’s claim that the unborn child is only potential life.”<br />
<br />
The following statement seems to walk back an implication that all unborn babies are fully “human life”, but rather only those who survive to birth: “The presence of a heartbeat is a strong indicator that the child will survive to birth, therefore, debunking the idea that the unborn child is merely potential life.”<br />
<br />
==19. Thomas More Society== <br />
<br />
[https://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184897/20210726123826819_19-1932%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20The%20Thomas%20More%20Society.pdf Filed July 26, 2021]<br />
<br />
This brief makes the argument that abortion is not a right “deeply rooted in the nation’s history, legal tradition, and practices” so it does not merit “special protection”. Therefore Roe should be overruled.<br />
<br />
The Thomas Moore brief documents the regard for unborn human life over the centuries, but not to prove that the unborn are fully human so their lives must be protected by every state. The point of its history is rather to prove that Roe should be overruled because it was largely based on claims that unborn babies were never treated by our laws as “persons in the whole sense”. <br />
<br />
It is a history of abortion law going back to the common law of England. It also reviews the laws of 30 states to show that in Unborn Victims of Violence Laws, where killing a pregnant woman is counted as a double murder, there is no distinction based on “viability”, so therefore the reliance of Roe and Casey on viability is unsupported in American law. <br />
<br />
There were “scores of cases” between 1850 and 1870 where courts treated abortion as against laws “enacted with an intent to protect unborn human life.” <br />
<br />
Since I am from Iowa, it is cool to see a holding from an Iowa court from that time: “In 1868, the Iowa Supreme Court, interpreting an 1858 statute, condemned abortion as ‘an act highly dangerous to the mother, and generally fatal, and frequently designed to be fatal, to the child.’ State v. Moore, 25 Iowa 128, 136 (1868).” A 1934 Idaho Supreme Court said its law was “to discourage abortions because thereby the life of a human being, the unborn child, is taken.” <br />
<br />
To summarize, <span style="color:red">“more than sixty decisions from forty-two states have recognized that their nineteenth-century abortion statutes were enacted with an intent to protect unborn human life. Given this wealth of case authority, the Court’s conclusion in Roe that state court decisions ‘focused on the State’s interest in protecting the woman’s health rather than in preserving the embryo and fetus’...is unsupportable.” <br />
<br />
Also, contrary to Roe’s claim, there was not an exemption for mothers from prosecution: <span style="color:red">“at least nineteen states criminalized the woman’s participation in her own abortion.” In the remaining states, women were not prosecuted either because they were considered co-victims, or because the woman’s testimony against the abortionist was needed but could not be compelled if she were treated as an accomplice, and because “in most states a criminal conviction cannot be based on the uncorroborated testimony of an accomplice.”<br />
<br />
The Moore brief spends its final section attacking Roe’s “viability” rule. The brief concludes, “The court in Casey stated that ‘a decision to overrule should rest on some special reason over and above the belief that a prior case was wrongly decided.’...If so, Amicus submits that there are more than 60 million special reasons to do so. Roe v. Wade should be overruled.”<br />
<br />
Not asked for is a ruling that babies of people are people, making abortion murder, whose legality no state may permit.<br />
<br />
==20. Melinda Thybault Moral Outcry==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184968/20210726175018044_41206%20pdf%20Parker%20III%20br.pdf Filed July 26]<br />
<br />
An interesting way to establish “standing” for a petition (defined not as a legal “petition”, or brief, before a court, but the popular sense of a short statement signed by a multitude) before the Supreme Court: <br />
<br />
“Melinda Thybault and The Signers, as do all citizens, have the right to petition the United States government for redress of grievances. U.S. Constitution Amendment I. With all due respect, Amici believe the Supreme Court is the specific branch of their government which has committed this crime against humanity by forcing all states to legalize abortion. Therefore, Amici must bring their arguments to this Court, not Congress or the States.”<br />
<br />
View the petition at https://themoraloutcry.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/the-moral-outcry-petition.pdf<br />
<br />
Quoting a law school and a U.N. document, she summarizes: <span style="color:red">“A crime against humanity occurs when the government withdraws legal protection from a class of human beings resulting in severe deprivation of rights, up to and including death.” (See Crime Against Humanity at https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/crime_against_humanity and see U.N. Office, Genocide Prevention, Crimes Against Humanity https://www.un.org/en/genocideprevention/crimes-against-humanity.shtml; Treaty of Rome (1957). See also Convention on the Non-Applicability of Statutory Limitations to War )<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">She “adopted” children at the frozen embryo stage, and had them conceived through vitro fertilization, not just proving but demonstrating “living evidence that, with today’s science, viability begins at fertilization.” Unborn children literally are “viable” even from the embryo stage!!! Their sex can be determined six days after fertilization! <br />
<br />
Her ground for reversing Roe? She cites a “Law of Judicial Precedent” authored by Justices Garner, Gorsuch, Kavanaugh, and Breyer, which says one ground for reversing precedent is “The decision has been met with general dissatisfaction, protest or severe criticism.” So she got a petition signed by over half a million citizens calling abortion a “crime against humanity”, and points out: <br />
<br />
“Through The Moral Outcry Petition, over 500,000 Americans have correctly identified legalized abortion as ‘a crime against humanity’ which is very, very ‘severe criticism.’ With due respect to the Court, every single signature on the Moral Outcry Petition is, by itself, evidence under The Law of Judicial Precedent12 because each person calling abortion a crime against humanity is “severely” criticizing this Court’s abortion jurisprudence.” <br />
<br />
This only adds to “continued ‘severe criticism’ for 48 years. Most reasonable observers would agree that Roe has been met with general dissatisfaction and major protest since its inception. The Court has an ethical and moral duty to never forget past crimes against humanity, to never stand by silently while one is occurring today, and to rescue the perishing.”<br />
<br />
She updates Casey’s premise that abortion prevents “unwanted children” by pointing out that today’s “safe haven” laws have eliminated “unwanted children”. She makes the point without conceding that Casey’s excuse was ever justified: “Because of Safe Haven laws in all fifty states, [which permit mothers to easily give away their babies without being charged for neglect or abandonment] women can now have the “freedom” of Roe, and make their own decision about the ultimate direction of their life, without the crime against humanity of killing the child and injuring themselves.”<br />
<br />
Under Safe Haven laws, a mother “can transfer responsibility to the state with no questions asked, no legal procedure, and unlike abortion, at no cost.”<br />
<br />
The evidence that babies are people? She quotes a phrase from Gonzales: “Infant life” to prove “that this Court has already recognized exists in the womb when it is aborted.” <br />
<br />
(The Gonzales context of the “infant life” quote: “Respect for human life finds an ultimate expression in the bond of love the mother has for her child....Whether to have an abortion requires a difficult and painful moral decision. ...it seems unexceptionable to conclude some women come to regret their choice to abort the infant life they once created and sustained.”)<br />
<br />
More evidence that babies are people: “new science, including but not limited to DNA testing, in vitro fertilization (IVF) and sonograms, which were not available to this Court in 1973, now show what the Roe Court did not know, or even the Casey Court, that life begins at conception.” But she doesn’t populate this claim with any details or evidence, thinking the Supreme Court already concedes that babies are people: “But the Court has now correctly found in Gonzales that abortion terminates an “infant life,” at 159 at the moment of the abortion.”<br />
<br />
Roe v. Wade isn’t the Supreme Court’s first “crime against humanity”. “Abortion is a crime against humanity. Like Dred Scott v. Sanford, 60 U.S. 393 (1857), which purported to enshrine slavery in the Constitution forever. It is unjust. Dred Scott also decided unjustly that African Americans ‘had no rights which the white man was bound to respect’, at 400. The Dred Scott decision prevented national compromise from occurring and many commentators feel it eventually led to the Civil War. A crime against humanity occurs when the government withdraws legal protection from a class of human beings, as this Court did in Scott.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“...the Court has not yet fully reversed Roe, Doe, and Casey. No American citizen should have to live under, nor as history tragically demonstrates, should they stand by silently, while their government sanctions and even promotes crimes against humanity.” Another low point in the Supreme Court’s grasp of 14th Amendment equal rights, she mentions, was Plessy v. Ferguson, 163 U.S. 537 (1896) which, like Roe and Dred Scott, “denied legal protection to a class of human beings” and “ignored the plain language of the Fourteenth Amendment”. “Plessy accepted the gloss that ‘separate but equal’ was ‘equal’.” <br />
<br />
She repeats, “When the government withdraws legal protection from a class of human beings, it is the classic definition of a crime against humanity.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">All nine justices know better, she demonstrates, by quoting them all calling the decision to abort “painful” and “difficult”. Five of the nine added “moral”. What could make such an allegedly “safe” “procedure”, which isn’t even expensive compared with most surgeries, either “painful” or “difficult”? Nothing can account for it, if babies are mere tumors or animals. Take it out! It doesn’t belong there! The only thing that can make the decision “painful” or “difficult” is that it is a decision to murder a healthy beautiful baby. That also makes it a “moral” decision. Removing a tumor or an animal is not a “moral” decision. By these words, all nine justices prove they know unborn babies of people are people. <br />
<br />
And yet before this year, no state has asked the Court to outlaw abortion because it murders people. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“The Supreme Court in Gonzales unanimously came to the conclusion that abortion is a ‘difficult and painful decision,’ at 159. Gonzales stated, ‘Whether or not to have an abortion is a difficult and painful moral decision.’ The five-person majority consisted of Justices Kennedy, Roberts, Thomas, Alito and Scalia. The four Justices in dissent, Justices Ginsburg, Stevens, Souter, and Breyer, also said: ‘The Court is surely correct that, for most women, abortion is a painfully difficult decision.’ The dissent left out the word ‘moral’ as part of the difficulty. Gonzales, FN 7, at 183, per Ginsburg, dissenting. Thus, all nine justices agreed that abortion is ‘difficult’ and ‘painful.’ Why? Because at some level, most people ‘know’ or ‘sense’ that abortion kills a human life.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Even abortionists admit they know better: “Planned Parenthood has recently admitted through its chief physician in Missouri, that: “Sometimes the choice to end a pregnancy, even when it is a highly desired one, is a really difficult one for people”, Dr. Eisenberg, Planned Parenthood St. Louis Clinic Director.23 Abortionist Lisa Harris states: “I know that for every woman whose abortion I perform, I stop a developing human from being born . . . Abortion feels morally complicated because it stops a developing human being from being born, which, of course, it does.”24 (23 NBC News, nbcnews.com by Ericka Edwards and Ali Galarte, May 28, 2019. 24 “My Day as An Abortion Care Provider,” Oct. 22, 2019, New York Times OP/ED.)<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Mothers know better, although not necessarily in time. What “devastating psychological consequences” for mothers could follow successful removal of cancer?!! But Casey acknowledges they often follow an abortion, Melinda points out. “Many, many women are morally conflicted as this Court has recognized. Many women feel they have murdered their own child, with devastating consequences.” (The full sentence from Casey: “In attempting to ensure that a woman apprehend the full consequences of her decision, the State furthers the legitimate purpose of reducing the risk that a woman may elect an abortion, only to discover later, with devastating psychological consequences, that her decision was not fully informed.”)<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Even the “Roe” of “Roe v. Wade” came to know better: “The affidavit of Norma McCorvey, the ‘Roe’ of Roe v. Wade describing her experience working in the abortion industry, which changed her mind about abortion and caused her to seek reversal of her case, is still on file in McCorvey v. Hill, 385 F. 3d 846 (5th Cir. 2004) (cert. denied) (Supreme Court Docket No. 04-967).” (“Cert. denied” is the Supreme Court’s way of saying they were too busy to deal with her.)<br />
<br />
“Safe Haven” laws let a mother give her baby, no cost, no guilt, to any medical facility or fire station. Even small towns have fire stations. In Mississippi a mother has three days to do that. Rules vary with the states; in North Dakota, mothers have up to a year after birth. Mothers have nine months to decide. Mississippi Medicaid covers all prenatal costs for low income mothers. Contrasted with the high pressure abortion decisions, the high cost of abortion, the limited availability of killing centers, and the guilt. <br />
<br />
Safe Haven babies don’t languish in foster care for years. A footnote to a news article: “Thousands line up to adopt Safe Haven baby”.<br />
<br />
Why are Safe Haven laws a reason to reverse Roe?<br />
<br />
“The burden of an ‘unwanted’ child was a large factor in the Court’s analysis in Roe itself and Casey. ‘Maternity or additional offspring, may force upon the woman a distressful life and future. Psychological harm may be imminent. Mental and physical health may be taxed by child care. There is also the distress, for all concerned, associated with the unwanted child, and there is the problem of bringing a child into a family already unable, psychologically and otherwise, to care for it.’ Roe, 410 U.S. 113 at 153.” <br />
<br />
Viola, these needs are now met by Safe Haven laws, without cost, the inconvenience of long distance travel, guilt, or murder. There are no unwanted children. “This is a major, substantial change in circumstances that has never existed before in American history.”<br />
<br />
“As a fourth major ‘change in circumstances,’ at least two million Americans every year are now waiting to adopt newborn children. Far more people are waiting to adopt newborns than the number of aborted children per year.37 This development satisfies Casey’s stare decisis reliance test because there is no longer a need for abortion to give freedom from unwanted children to women.”<br />
<br />
(37 www.AmericanAdoptions.com/pregnant/waiting_adoptive_families)<br />
<br />
“Fifth, Today Science Clearly Demonstrates That Life Begins At Conception. New Scientific Advances Justify Changing Prior Precedent Under Stare Decisis.” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Supreme Court opinions [that are based on old science] should change when science advances. No society or court should be stuck in 1970’s science. One simple example is that DNA testing was not even used in the courts until the mid-1980’s. Anonymous DNA testing of the “infant life” in the womb and a DNA sample from the mother now shows that two separate humans exist. Sonograms, another example which started after Roe, convinced Dr. Bernard Nathanson, the founder of NARAL, as it should this Court, that he was wrong to kill innocent human life.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Court recognition of Life: “The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals has already upheld South Dakota’s law requiring abortionists (against their will and financial self-interest) to tell a woman that ‘abortion will terminate the life of a whole, separate, unique, living human being,’ defined as a member of the human species (Homo sapiens). Planned Parenthood v. Rounds, 530 F. 3d 724 (8th Cir. 2008) (en banc). The Eighth Circuit reviewed the voluminous evidence and determined there was adequate scientific evidence to uphold the law, which was “act based, not opinion or ideology, just as this Court has courageously done in recognizing the child in the womb as ‘infant life’ in Gonzales. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Several quotes from federal appeals courts about the need to reconsider Roe concluded with this zinger: “In sum, if courts were to delve into the facts underlying Roe’s balancing scheme with present day knowledge, they might conclude that the woman’s ‘choice’ is far more risky and less beneficial, and the child’s sentience far more advanced than the Roe Court knew.’ McCorvey v. Hill 385 F.3d 846 page 11 (5th Cir. 2004) (cert. denied)”<br />
<br />
What an understatement: “In the case of a crime against humanity, it is the duty of the Court to correct its own error. All judges should be open in appropriate cases, to considering evidence that killing ‘infant life’ in the womb is wrong, and that changes in circumstances have produced sound and necessary reasons for reversal.”<br />
<br />
Although Melinda’s evidence and argument supports asking the Court to outlaw all abortion across America, her conclusion only asks that Mississippi be allowed to keep its 15 week ban, and that Roe be overruled (leaving individual states to decide whether to keep abortion legal). <br />
<br />
<br />
==21. The Becket Fund for Religious Liberty==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185042/20210727133310143_19-1392%20Becket%20Amicus%20Brief%20Dobbs%20FINAL.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
Becket's question for SCOTUS: "Whether the Roe/Casey framework should be replaced in order to reduce the number and intensity of religious liberty conflicts".<br />
<br />
Examples of "religious liberty conflicts": "Surely the federal government has many ways to distribute contraceptives to American women without dragooning the Little Sisters of the Poor [an adoption agency] or other religious nonprofits....And surely state governments have many ways to ensure access to abortion without involving churches. But the shadow of ''Roe'' and ''Casey'' prompted these governments to deny exemptions to religious groups, or to eliminate religious exemptions that had existed for decades. <br />
<br />
"Another area where abortion proponents have attacked religious exercise is pharmacy regulations. In some states, government officials have sought to force pharmacists to dispense Plan B and Ella despite—'''or even because of'''—their religious objections. <br />
For example, Washington State, acting at the behest of abortion advocates, required religious objectors to dispense Plan B and Ella despite the fact that the State allowed pharmacies not to stock or dispense these drugs for “‘an almost unlimited variety of secular reasons[.]’” <br />
<br />
After reviewing these conflicts, Becket said these conflicts would go away if SCOTUS would simply pull back its nose out of America's consciences: "But it does not have to be this way. It is possible to address abortion through ordinary politics, free from the systemic deformations and misincentives generated by the Roe/Casey regime. '''This is the American experience related to abortion before the Court departed from the Constitution’s text, structure, history and tradition in Roe/Casey.''' And it is the American experience with a variety of other contested issues related to human life and religious liberty, and the experience of many European countries today."<br />
<br />
==22. U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and Other Religious Organization==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185030/20210727130348783_13-1932.Dobbs.final.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
Neither Constitutional Text Nor History Supports a Right to Take the Life of an Unborn Child at Any Stage of Pregnancy. Neither Constitutional Text Nor History Supports a Right to Take the Life of an Unborn Child at Any Stage of Pregnancy <br />
<br />
Conclusion: Ultimately these cases, with all the problems they entail for lower courts, land on this Court’s doorstep. And under the current jurisprudence, it will never stop. This should not be. The way to prevent it is to return the issue to the states, where it properly belongs. (paragraph preceding “conclusion”)<br />
<br />
Circuit judges have been skeptical that preenforcement challenges should be allowed at all in the abortion context because such challenges do not allow the plaintiff’s predictions about the challenged law’s effect to be tested. Some appellate courts have concluded outright that it is an abuse of discretion for a trial judge to issue a pre-enforcement injunction since the effect of such an abortion law is open to debate.27 This Court too has indicated that as-applied challenges are to be favored over facial challenges in abortion cases. Gonzales, 550 U.S. at 167 (stating that a facial challenge in that case “should not have been entertained in the first instance”). And yet, the practice of bringing pre-enforcement facial challenges to abortion legislation continues, leading inevitably to (a) judgments based on speculative evidence, (b) a blurring of the distinction between facial and as applied challenges, and (c) court decisions based often on factors for which the government itself is not even responsible (such as the number and location of abortion clinics in a given state). This impossible state of affairs would correct itself if the Court were to follow Justice Scalia’s suggestion to, in his words, “get out of this area, where we have no right to be, and where we do neither ourselves nor the country any good by remaining.” Casey, 505 U.S. at 1002 (Scalia, J., concurring in the judgment in part, dissenting in part). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Roe also attempted, based on prior decisions of this Court that had declared protection under the Due Process Clause for rights deeply rooted in the Nation’s 6 history and tradition, to locate an abortion right in history. The attempt was seriously flawed. “[S]ubsequent scholarship has demonstrated conclusively that acceptance of abortion is not in any sense deeply rooted in the Nation’s history and traditions. The opposite is true: it is the prohibition of abortion that has deep roots in English and American history.” Institutional Integrity and Respect for Precedent, supra at 553-54. An exhaustive study of the issue concludes that “[t]he tradition of treating abortion as a crime was unbroken through nearly 800 years of English and American history until the ‘reform’ movement of the later twentieth century.” Joseph W. Dellapenna, DISPELLING THE MYTHS OF ABORTION HISTORY xii (2006).2 <br />
<br />
See Michael Stokes Paulsen, The Worst Constitutional Decision of All Time, 78 NOTRE DAME L. REV. 995, 1007 (2003) (“I know of no serious scholar, judge, or lawyer who attempts to defend Roe’s analysis on textual or historical grounds.”); Richard S. Myers, Lower Court “Dissent” from Roe and Casey, 18 AVE MARIA L. REV. 1, 6 (2020) (noting that “no one defends the Court’s opinion in Roe”). ...<br />
<br />
D. Multiple State Interests Justify Prohibitions on Abortion Before Viability. There is an unfortunate tendency in abortion cases to become lost in minutiae. The factual record in individual cases can be lengthy and complex, the case law complicated and difficult to apply. But these case-specific features cannot disguise <span style="color:red">the tragedy that is the common denominator in these cases: the intentional destruction, on an unprecedented scale, of the most innocent and defenseless of the human family. In the truest sense, they are our family, our brothers and sisters. Like all members of the human family, they should be treasured and loved. Nothing in the Constitution requires states to stand idly by while their lives are deliberately taken. <br />
<br />
21 <span style="color:red">The Declaration of Independence places the right to life first in the list of inalienable rights. The Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments list the right to life first among those rights of which the government cannot deprive a person without due process of law. Thomas Jefferson’s March 31, 1809 letter to the Republican Citizens of Washington County, Maryland, stated: “The care of human life and happiness, and not their destruction, is the first and only legitimate object of good government.” 8 THE WRITINGS OF THOMAS JEFFERSON 165 (H.A. Washington, ed.) (1871). <br />
<br />
...“The States—indeed, all civilized nations—demonstrate their commitment to life by treating homicide as a serious crime.” Id. The same can be said for state prohibitions on assisted suicide, <br />
<br />
==23. LONANG Institute==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185037/20210727131024868_19-1392%20tsac%20Lonang%20Institute.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">[Every word in this section is from Lonang's brief, except what is in these brackets, and colored blue. They are blue, because even though I have copied so much of their brief because I see in it potential for getting baby murder outlawed in every state, Lonang argues at one point that courts should NOT do that, but should remain "neutral" about whether states can support murder.]<br />
<br />
The Declaration Of Independence Affirms That The States Enjoy Police Power Which Carries With It The Power To Prohibit Abortion ... The Fourteenth Amendment Requires Only Procedural Due Process, not Substantive Due Process ...Courts Are The Mere Instruments Of The Law, And Can Will Nothing ...... According to The Law Of Nature, Judicial Power Extends To Issuing Orders In Cases And Controversies, Not To Making Rules Of General Applicability..... Judicial Decisions Articulating Substantive Due Process Rights Are Without Constitutional Textual Support ..... ONLY THE STATES AND THE PEOPLE ENJOY THE LAWFUL AUTHORITY, TO CONSTITUTIONALIZE FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS “IMPLICIT IN LIBERTY”, OR “DEEPLY ROOTED”, OR “INHERENT IN INDIVIDUAL AUTONOMY.” .....<br />
[CONTINUED IN FIRST SECTION]<br />
<br />
The Federal Courts Possess No Article III Power To Discover Or Constitutionalize Textually Unsupported Rights Or Impose A Duty To Enforce Those Rights On The States........ <br />
the law of nature provides that a government’s judicial branches are limited to declaring what is the law, not its codification. The concept of judicial review affirms that the province of a judge is to declare the law, not to make it <br />
<br />
The Supreme Court is routinely presented with the legal arguments that certain statutory or constitutional words or phrases have no fixed meaning. The Court is then called upon to supply a new meaning other than the one stated in the text. This process adjusts the words or phrases chosen by the lawgiver, to establish as precedent the Court’s desired meaning. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Denying the textual meaning of legal words is not a novel invention of the Court. Instead, it has historical precedent going back to the first recorded case in human history. At issue in that case, In Re: Adam, Eve & the Devil, 3 Genesis 1 (0001), was the intent and meaning of a statute prohibiting consumption of fruit from a specific tree in a Garden in Eden. A statute prohibiting such consumption was at issue. Two of the parties violated the statute and entered a guilty plea. A second statute prohibited various forms of fraud and deception. A third party was charged under this statute alleging he used deception to induce co-defendants to consume the prohibited fruit. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">At trial, he argued that he was not liable on the theory that the first statute did not actually prohibit consumption—that the words in the statute did not mean what the text declared. [Plausible but not recorded interaction between God and Satan.] As such he argued that he did not engage in deceit in his statements to the other parties. The Court was unpersuaded. It rejected the argument, finding that the prohibition was clear and unambiguous, reflected the drafter’s original intent and was, therefore, enforceable as written.3 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">This Court’s fourteenth amendment substantive due process jurisprudence is based on the same argument first made in Eden—the words of the law do not mean what they say. The Court has maintained the amendment itself contains a substantive due process clause into which the Court is empowered to pour un-enumerated fundamental rights of its own divination. The Court’s atextual adjustments, purportedly limited by the outcomeflexible concept of “judicial restraint,” have been internally justified by its moral appeals to novel high-sounding phrases such as “implicit in the concept of ordered liberty,”4 or the “concept of personal liberty,”5 or “deeply rooted in this nation’s history and tradition,”6 or “inherent in the concept of individual autonomy.”7 Alas, none of these phrases have textual support in the amendment itself. Nor has the Court been granted any state legislative power in Article III to define ordered or personal liberty, individual <br />
[])<br />
4 Judicial decisions finding that a state statute violates fundamental values discovered as “implicit in the concept of ordered liberty” are without textual support. See Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479, 500 (1965) (Harlan. J., concurring) (quoting Palko v. Connecticut, 302 U. S. 319, 325 (1937) (Cardozo, J.) overruled on other grounds, Benton v. Maryland, 395 U.S. 784 (1969)). <br />
<br />
5 Judicial decisions finding that a state statute violates a woman’s right to abortion discovered in the “concept of personal liberty” are without textual support. See Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113, 153 (1973). <br />
<br />
6 Judicial decisions finding that a state statute violates rights discovered as “deeply rooted in this nation’s history and tradition” are without textual support. See Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 U.S. 702, 721 (1997) “The Due Process Clause specially protects those fundamental rights and liberties which are, objectively, deeply rooted in this Nation's history and tradition.” Palko, 302 U.S. 325. The Court looks to principles of justice “so rooted in the traditions and conscience of our people as to be ranked as fundamental’) (quoting Snyder v. Massachusetts, 291 U. S. 97, 105 (1934) overruled in part on other grounds by Malloy v. Hogan, 378 U.S. 1 (1964)). <br />
<br />
7 Judicial decisions finding that a state statute violates a fundamental right which is “inherent in the concept of individual autonomy” without regard to history or tradition is without textual support. See Obergefell v. Hodges, 576 US 644; 135 S. Ct. at 2629 (2015) <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">autonomy, or traipse through history and tradition to discover and append any un-enumerated substantive individual rights into the amendment’s textually non-existent “substantive” due process clause. Nor does the law of nature of judicial review empower this Court to write new Constitutional text. The authority of a judge is to declare what written law already exists. The standard legal maxim is, Jus dicere, et non jus dare, also known as judicis est jus dicere non dare. The province of a judge is to declare the law, not to make it.8 At what point in time and on whose authority did that rule, binding on judges in England and America for centuries, become nonbinding? Even if fundamental rights are so demonstrably “implicit, inherent and rooted” as the Court maintains, the power of judicial review, nevertheless, does not carry with it the power to insert those rights into the fourteenth amendment. Amending the Constitution is governed by Article V in which the Court plays no part. <br />
<br />
8 “When an act of Congress is appropriately challenged in the courts as not conforming to the constitutional mandate, the judicial branch of the government has only one duty; to lay the article of the Constitution which is invoked beside the statute which is challenged and to decide whether the latter squares with the former. All the court does, or can do, is to announce its considered judgment upon the question. The only power it has, if such it may be called, is the power of judgment. This court neither approves nor condemns any legislative policy. Its delicate and difficult office is to ascertain and declare whether the legislation is in accordance with, or in contravention of, the provisions of the Constitution; and, having done that, its duty ends.” United States v. Butler, 297 U.S. 1, 62-63 (1936). <br />
<br />
Even assuming arguendo that the Court’s “implicit, inherent and rooted” approach to discovering un-enumerated fundamental rights is superior to legislative debate and enactment, or preferable to the Constitution’s chosen method of amendment, or that the Court’s wisdom and judgment in divining such rights is the manifestation of jurisprudential perfection, the fact remains that such an approach is without textual Constitutional support. Whether or not un-enumerated fundamental rights are or are not “implicit, inherent and rooted” in the Constitution’s fourteenth amendment, they are not found in the text itself. As such their discovery and incorporation into the law of the land is for the States and the People to decide.9 <br />
<br />
The case now before the Court provides an opportunity to restore judicial review to declaring what the text says. It provides an opportunity to resist anew the temptation first argued at Eden to opine to the contrary. The restoration will leave the State of Mississippi free to adopt laws protecting a pregnant woman by prohibiting conduct inducing a miscarriage or procuring an abortion. Such a determination would not merely return the law of abortion to its pre-1973 status. It would return judicial review itself to pre-substantive due process status <br />
<br />
9 See U.S. Const. amend. IX, “The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.” See also U.S. Const. amend. X, “The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people. <br />
<br />
A. The Declaration Of Independence Affirms That The States Enjoy Police Power Which Carries With It The Power To Prohibit Abortion. <br />
<br />
The question posed by the Court pertains to the power of a state, in this case Mississippi. The Declaration of Independence not only declared the States to be free and independent, but also declared the legal basis and extent of their power. <span style="color:red">No understanding of state power is complete without consideration of the Declaration. The Declaration grounded civil power itself on the “laws of nature and of nature’s God.” <br />
<br />
That is what it says. It further declared this law of nature affirmed that every person may lawfully enjoy those rights which God has given. The laws of nature and its God pledges to guarantee to each person: <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among 8 these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.–That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed. . . <br />
<br />
Remember that under the Declaration, the “governments instituted among men,” whose job it is to secure the rights of the people, exclusively referred to the several state governments, as no federal or national government then existed. Accordingly, the duty to declare and secure the rights of the people belongs to the States themselves, not to any branch, department or agency of the federal government later created. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Even if this Court’s search for new fundamental un-enumerated substantive due process rights was constitutionally legitimate, it has neglected to look carefully at the “laws of nature and of nature’s God” as a source of those rights. Any legitimate search even for rights “deeply rooted” in American history and tradition would consider unalienable rights granted by the Creator as asserted in such a quintessential founding American document. In other words, the first place to look for any rights of the people would be to examine those rights granted by the Creator, not any purported rights invented by people. And if the Creator has not deemed it necessary or advisable to confer a particular right, then the logical conclusion would be that such a right does not exist. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Nevertheless the state governments’ purpose is to secure these natural and unalienable rights and 9 as we have seen, any un-enumerated rights are reserved to the People (not the judicial branch) to find, identify, and assert, and their States to enact. The People created their state governments for this purpose and their national government for a much more limited purpose. The People did not establish a national government with a judicial branch given any power to make law or discover un-enumerated rights. <br />
<br />
As to the power of the States, the Declaration declared: <br />
<br />
That these United Colonies are, and of Right ought to be, Free and Independent States; . . . and that as Free and Independent States, they have full Power to levy War, conclude Peace, contract Alliances, establish Commerce, and to do all other Acts and Things which Independent States may of right do. (emphasis added). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The States in the union have all power to do all “Acts and Things which Independent States may of right do.” The Constitution of a state may further limit this power. The United States Constitution including the fourteenth amendment also limits the power of States. But neither the framers nor text of that amendment contain any substantive due process limitation on a state’s police power. <br />
<br />
...Mississippi is such a state. It stands on equal footing with the original States. It enjoys the police power to adopt laws prohibiting abortion because the Declaration of Independence recognizes it may do such acts according to the law of nature. Nothing in the text of the Fourteenth amendment legitimately articulates a substantive due process limitation on that power. <br />
<br />
Even if a right to privacy implicit in the concept of ordered liberty translates into a right to abortion, nothing in the text of Article III, or the power of judicial review, extends to this Court a power to interlineate that right into the <br />
<br />
<br />
B. The Fourteenth Amendment Requires Only Procedural Due Process, not Substantive Due Process. The fourteenth amendment states in part: No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; . . . (emphasis added). U.S. Const., amend XIV. Due process pertains entirely to matters of procedure. “Procedural due process rules are meant to protect persons not from the deprivation, but from the mistaken or unjustified deprivation of life, liberty, or property.” Carey v. Piphus, 435 U.S. 247, 259 (1978). “[P]rocedural due process rules are shaped by the risk of error inherent in the truthfinding process as applied to the generality of cases.” Mathews v. Eldridge, 424 U.S. 319, 344 (1976) (emphasis added). The core of these requirements is notice and an opportunity to be heard (often a hearing) before an impartial tribunal. Due process may also require 13 an opportunity for confrontation and crossexamination, and for discovery; that a decision be made based on the record, and that a party be allowed to be represented by counsel. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">A review of the text of the fourteenth amendment reflects no textual support for any “substantive due process” clause. Even the term is an oxymoron. If we took the words in their ordinary meaning, “due process” merely signifies a proper procedure. The word “substantive,” on the other hand, means rights and duties as opposed to the procedural rules by which such things are established or enforced. Thus, the term “substantive due process,” in plain English, means non-procedural proper procedure. Logically, “substantive due process” is a type of “A = Not A” statement, where something is procedural and not procedural simultaneously. But unlike philosophy or mathematics, An “A = Not A” statement in a legal context is just plain illogical. Either the Court, when invoking substantive due process, is talking about procedure or it is not. If yes, then due process as a legal doctrine stands on its own and there is no need to resort to substantive due process. If no, then due process does not affect the matter, for it does not relate to procedure. This brings us back to Eden where the argument was first made that the words of the law do not mean what they say. While we acknowledge the argument has the weight of time behind it, originating in great antiquity, we respectfully urge the Court not to follow that ancient precedent. <br />
<br />
C. Courts Are The Mere Instruments Of The Law, And Can Will Nothing. <br />
Applying a dialectical interpretation to words is not an element of judicial power. Nothing in the case or controversy jurisdiction of the Supreme Court in Article III, sec. 2, extends any power to the Court to identify un-enumerated fundamental rights “implicit in the concept of ordered liberty,” or in the “concept of personal liberty,” or “deeply rooted in this nation’s history and tradition,” or “inherent in the concept of individual autonomy.”13 <br />
<br />
Alexander Hamilton affirmed this view, writing in Federalist No. 78, that the judicial branch of government is the least dangerous because it has neither force nor will, only judgment. Chief Justice Marshall agreed, noting that: ''Judicial power, as contradistinguished from the powers of the law, has no existence. Courts are the mere instruments of the law, and can will nothing.'' Osborn v. Bank of the United States, 22 U.S. (9 Wheat.) 738, 866 (1824) (Chief Justice Marshall).14 In other words, the Court <br />
<br />
14 See also United States v. Butler, 297 U.S. 1, 78-79 (1936) (“The power of courts to declare a statute unconstitutional is subject to two guiding principles of decision which ought never to be absent from judicial consciousness. One is that courts are concerned only with the power to enact statutes, not with their wisdom. The other is that while unconstitutional exercise of power by the executive and legislative branches of the government is subject to judicial restraint, the only check upon our own exercise of power is our own sense of self-restraint. For the removal of unwise laws from the statute books appeal lies not to the courts, but to the ballot and to the processes of democratic government.”) The instant case calls for self-restraint. <br />
<br />
<br />
cannot will un-enumerated fundamental rights into Constitutional existence. It has no judicial power to will rights “implicit in the concept of ordered liberty,” or in the “concept of personal liberty,” or “deeply rooted in this nation’s history and tradition,” or “inherent in the concept of individual autonomy” into textual existence. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The high watermark of the Supreme Court misuse of judicial review came in Cooper v. Aaron, 358 U.S. 1 (1958). In its opinion, the court remarked that Article VI of the Constitution makes the Constitution the “supreme Law of the Land.” So far, so good. In 1803, Chief Justice Marshall, speaking for a unanimous Court, calling the Constitution “the fundamental and paramount law of the nation,” declared in Marbury v. Madison, 1 Cranch 137 (1803) that “It is emphatically the province and duty of the judicial department to say what the law is.” This is a description of the legitimate power of judicial review found in Article III, Section 2. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">From this legitimate recognition of the power of judicial review, the Cooper v. Aaron Court stepped back to Eden. The Court first expanded its own opinion in Marbury asserting that Marbury actually “declared the basic principle that the federal judiciary is supreme in the exposition of the law of the Constitution.” 358 U.S. at 18 (emphasis added). Recall that Chief Justice Marshall said the judiciary has a duty to say what the law is. He said nothing, however, about the Court’s opinions as supreme. Cooper added the “supreme” element. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In its ruling, the Court in Cooper made the egregious error of misconstruing the Supremacy Clause of Art VI that “This constitution and the laws of the United States which shall be made in pursuance thereof” shall be “the supreme law of the land.” The Court, without either textual or historical support, construed “the laws of the United States” to include judicial opinions of the Court, when clearly, historically and textually, it only referred to acts of Congress which became law when made in pursuance of the Constitution. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Further, the Constitution grants no “supreme” expository power to the Court. It is not found in Articles III or VI. It is not there. What is found in Article VI is that the Constitution, laws and treaties “shall be the supreme law of the land.” Nothing is said about Supreme Court opinions being supreme law, let alone being law at all. The Constitution extends no power to the Court to claim that even its legitimate constitutionally based opinions, are the sole and exclusive meaning of the Constitution itself. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The judicial power to review cases arising under the constitution, laws and treaties is stated in Article III, section 2, but that power is not the power to rewrite the Constitution itself. It is not the power to authorize the court to sit as a perpetual constitutional convention. It is not the power for the court to write into the Constitution whatever it wants, or the power to strike from the Constitution has a duty to say what the law is. He said nothing, however, about the Court’s opinions as supreme. Cooper added the “supreme” element. In its ruling, the Court in Cooper made the egregious error of misconstruing the Supremacy Clause of Art VI that “This constitution and the laws of the United States which shall be made in pursuance thereof” shall be “the supreme law of the land.” The Court, without either textual or historical support, construed “the laws of the United States” to include judicial opinions of the Court, when clearly, historically and textually, it only referred to acts of Congress which became law when made in pursuance of the Constitution. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Further, the Constitution grants no “supreme” expository power to the Court. It is not found in Articles III or VI. It is not there. What is found in Article VI is that the Constitution, laws and treaties “shall be the supreme law of the land.” Nothing is said about Supreme Court opinions being supreme law, let alone being law at all. The Constitution extends no power to the Court to claim that even its legitimate constitutionally based opinions, are the sole and exclusive meaning of the Constitution itself. <br />
<br />
The judicial power to review cases arising under the constitution, laws and treaties is stated in Article III, section 2, but that power is not the power to rewrite the Constitution itself. It is not the power to authorize the court to sit as a perpetual constitutional convention. It is <span style="color:red">not the power for the court to write into the Constitution whatever it wants, or the power to strike from the Constitution whatever it does not want. Constitutional insertions and deletions are a power retained by the People. This textual judicial power renders the Court’s opinion in Roe without support in the fourteenth amendment. <br />
<br />
D. According to The Law Of Nature, Judicial Power Extends To Issuing Orders In Cases And Controversies, Not To Making Rules Of General Applicability. <br />
This exercise of judicial power is reflected in the difference between a “rule” and an “order.” A court cannot issue a rule under the law of nature, because the nature of any rule is that it is an action of general application. '''Rules apply not only to parties in a case, but to everyone. The court’s judgment on the other hand must be confined to an order for its contempt power to be exercised lawfully. Otherwise, a court could hold anyone in contempt for simply disagreeing with its opinion. This distinguishes judicial power from legislative power. Only the legislative power can make laws; the judiciary can merely apply pre-existing laws to the facts in a given case.''' <br />
<br />
Not only is the law of nature of judicial power responsive rather than initiative, and limited to giving orders to parties rather than rules to all persons, <span style="color:red">the law of nature of judicial power is restricted to judgment, not will. All the judge has is judgment to make known the statute or Constitution’s text. This distinguishes judicial power from executive power. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">It follows that if judges do not make law, which by definition is a “rule,” then judges cannot issue “rules,” and may only issue orders. A rule binds the people generally, and is by nature legislative, whereas an order binds only the person to whom it is directed. Thus, Article III extends the judicial power of the courts of the United States only to “cases” and “controversies.” If a judge could issue a rule which governed such disputes, the judicial power would not be limited to actual cases and controversies. [I]f the policy of the Government upon vital questions affecting the whole people is to be irrevocably fixed by decisions of the Supreme Court, the instant they are made in ordinary litigation between parties in personal actions, the people will have ceased to be their own rulers....15<br />
<span style="color:red">15 Abraham Lincoln, First Inaugural Address, March 4, 1861. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">This Court’s substantive due process jurisprudence is an example of rulemaking simply because it purports to add new text to the Constitution itself. For this reason, it is contrary to the law of nature of judicial power. The opinion in Roe v. Wade can also be examined to determine whether it was in the nature of an order or a rule. Remarkably, the Court did not issue an instruction to Texas declaring its statute unconstitutional and unenforceable. Rather, it specified a trimester formula was essentially a legislative rule purporting to bind all future statute governing abortion in every state. Yet only Texas was a party to the case. Hence, the Court’s opinion again lacked an essential element of the exercise of judicial power, that is, the issuance of an order, not a rule.16<br />
[16 For a more extensive review of the law of nature regarding <br />
judicial power and judicial review, see Herbert W. Titus & <br />
Gerald R. Thompson, America’s Heritage: Constitutional <br />
Liberty, Judicial Power And Judicial Review, The LONANG <br />
Institute (2006).]<br />
<br />
Besides the lack of concrete, textual constitutional language, the limited nature of judicial power and its lack of authority to make rules, the Court has felt constrained to adjust rather than abandon its substantive due process practice of atextual fundamental rights rulemaking. These cases reflect its “go to” linguistic justifications, all of which neither have textual support nor are found enumerated among the judicial powers in Article III. Judicial decisions finding that a state statute violates fundamental values “implicit in the concept of ordered liberty” are without textual support. See Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479, 500 (1965) (Harlan. J., concurring) (quoting Palko v. Connecticut, 302 U. S. 319, 325 (1937) (Cardozo, J.) overruled on other grounds, Benton v. Maryland, 395 U.S. 784 (1969)). A judicial decision finding that a state statute violates a woman’s right to abortion discovered in the “concept of personal liberty” is without textual support. See Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113, 153 (1973). <br />
<br />
Likewise, judicial decisions finding that a state statute violates rights “deeply rooted in this nation’s history and tradition” are without textual support. See Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 U.S. 702, 721 (1997). “The Due Process Clause specially protects those fundamental rights and liberties which are, objectively, deeply rooted in this Nation's history and tradition.” Palko, 302 U.S. at 325. The Court looks to principles of justice “so rooted in the traditions and conscience of our people as to be ranked as fundamental”) (quoting Snyder v. Massachusetts, 291 U. S. 97, 105 (1934) overruled in part on other grounds by Malloy v. Hogan, 378 U.S. 1 (1964)). <br />
So too, a judicial decision finding that a state statute violates a fundamental right which is “inherent in the concept of individual autonomy” without regard to history or tradition, is equally without textual support. See Obergefell v. Hodges, 576 U.S. 644; 135 S. Ct. at 2629 (2015).17 <br />
<br />
[17 Chief Justice Roberts, with whom Justice Scalia and Justice <br />
Thomas joined in dissent, further underscored the lack of any <br />
textual support for the court’s decision. <br />
<br />
The majority purports to identify four <br />
“principles and traditions” in this Court’s due <br />
process precedents that support a fundamental <br />
right for same-sex couples to marry. Ante, at 12. <br />
In reality, however, the majority’s approach has <br />
no basis in principle or tradition, except for the <br />
unprincipled tradition of judicial policymaking]<br />
that characterized discredited decisions such as <br />
Lochner v. New York, 198 U.S. 45. Stripped of <br />
its shiny rhetorical gloss, the majority’s <br />
argument is that the Due Process Clause gives <br />
same-sex couples a fundamental right to marry <br />
because it will be good for them and for society. <br />
If I were a legislator, I would certainly consider <br />
that view as a matter of social policy. But as a <br />
judge, I find the majority’s position indefensible <br />
as a matter of constitutional law.<br />
<br />
The same reasoning applies with equal force and effect <br />
to Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479, 500 (1965); Palko v. <br />
Connecticut, 302 U. S. 319, 325 (1937) (overruled on other <br />
grounds, Benton v. Maryland, 395 U.S. 784 (1969)); Roe v. <br />
Wade, 410 U.S. 113, 153 (1973), Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 <br />
U.S. 702, 721 (1997) and Snyder v. Massachusetts, 291 U. S. 97, <br />
105 (1934) (overruled in part on other grounds by Malloy v. <br />
Hogan, 378 U.S. 1 (1964))<br />
<br />
Let us be clear here. What we mean when we say the Court is utilizing doctrines or rules of interpretation which have no textual support, is that the Court is just declaring its own majoritarian judicial will as the Supreme Law of the Land without regard to the Constitution’s text, form of government, separation of powers, or any known legal doctrine except the arbitrary will of a Despot. Rather than celebrating and continuing this “long train of abuses and usurpations pursuing invariably the same object, a design to reduce” the People “under absolute Despotism,” there is still a window of time in which to quash this judicial abuse and usurpation. <br />
<br />
Finally, Amicus would be remiss in failing to address <span style="color:red">a future judicial decision which would discover a fundamental “right to life” “implicit in the Concept of ordered liberty”, or in the “concept of personal liberty,” or “deeply rooted in this nation’s history and tradition” or “inherent in the concept of individual autonomy,” or existing in any other linguistic contrivance yet to be animated from the spirit of the original argument in Eden (that the words do not mean what they say). Such a decision would also lack textual support in the non-existent substantive due process clause. Its advocates would perpetuate judicial Despotism and continue to wrongly nationalize, state jurisdiction. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">[Wait a minute. I have copied so much of Lonang's brief because I perceive its usefulness towards the goal of outlawing abortion in EVERY state, as required by the Constitution, especially the 14th Amendment. Yet in this unfortunate paragraph, Lonang argues that courts should NOT outlaw genocide universally! It is this kind of argument that elevates the "scrupulous neutrality" about whether murder is good, of which Justice Kavanaugh brags!<br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">[The error of Lonang and Kavanaugh, as I perceive it, is to miss the points raised by Justice Thomas about basing the definition of Constitutional Rights on what is specifically listed in the Constitution, which is the original meaning of "privileges and immunities" in the 14th Amendment. By that measure, "Life" is specifically protected by the Constitution, while "Murder" is not. This demands of courts that they outlaw baby murder in every state.] <br />
<br />
A right to life needs no between-the-lines authorization. The Amendment plainly identifies what makes a state law unconstitutional.]<br />
<br />
...Objecting to the Court’s holding in Obergefell v. Hodges, 576 U.S. 644; 135 S. Ct. at 2629 (2015) Justice Scalia, with whom Justice Thomas joined in dissenting observed: “This is a naked judicial claim to legislative—indeed, super-legislative—power; a claim fundamentally at odds with our system of government. Except as limited by a constitutional prohibition agreed to by the People, the States are free to adopt whatever laws they like, even those that offend the esteemed Justices’ “reasoned judgment.” ....<br />
<br />
...” The power and process of amending the national Constitution is well <br />
provided for in Article V. That Article assigns no place for the federal judiciary in its text.1<br />
<br />
The powers reserved to the States and people include the power to decide if they shall constitutionalize or not, fundamental rights “implicit in the concept of ordered liberty,” or within the “concept of personal liberty,” or “deeply rooted in this nation’s history and tradition,” or “inherent in the concept of individual autonomy.” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">[But not to the destruction of enumerated rights like Life.]<br />
<br />
...., the Court trampled down the separation of powers. It also exceeded the law of nature of judicial power, because it does not declare the written law, but rather says what the law should be. That goes beyond judicial review. ....<br />
<br />
Justice Curtis provided insight into the phenomenon when he observed: Political reasons have not the requisite certainty to afford rules of juridical interpretation. They are different in different men. They are different in the same men at different times. And when a strict interpretation of the Constitution, according to the fixed rules which govern the interpretation of laws, is abandoned, and the theoretical opinions of individuals are allowed to control its meaning, we have no longer a Constitution; we are under the government of individual men who, for the time being, have power to declare what the Constitution is according to their own views of what it ought to mean.” [ Dred Scott v. Sandford, 60 U.S. 393, 620-621 (1856) (J. <br />
Curtis, dissenting). <br />
<br />
He concluded that: “When such a method of <br />
interpretation of the Constitution obtains, in place of a <br />
republican Government, with limited and defined powers, we <br />
have a Government which is merely an exponent of the will of <br />
Congress; or, what in my opinion, would not be preferable, an <br />
exponent of the individual political opinions of the members of <br />
this court.” Id]<br />
<br />
==24 Claremont Institute's Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185038/20210727131748801_19-1392%20tsac%20CCJ.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment protects against deprivation “life, liberty, or property.” In the abortion rights cases, this Court has focused on “liberty.” [of moms.] The real issue, however, is life. [of babes.] Life is a natural right endowed by our Creator and is the first unalienable right recognized in the Declaration of Independence. ...The duty of government to protect life is at the center of the nation’s first legal document. <br />
<br />
==25 22 State Policy Organizations==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185004/20210727112957999_Dobbs%20Amici%20brief_FPC_%207.23.21.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
22 State Policy Organizations <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The positivistic [materialistic – only physical things are real] reduction of persons represented by the Court’s abortion decisions has leavened the law in a way that curtails historic State policies grounded in deference to a given human nature and the common law rights that correspond to that nature. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">By purporting to leave the question of the meaning of persons in the Fourteenth Amendment unanswered, this Court’s holdings requiring States to abandon common and natural law commitments have effectively ratified a diminished view of the human person in law. These holdings have foisted upon the States a denatured anthropological model that prohibits them from ascribing objective meaning, dignity, and value to vulnerable persons. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The severe distortion of the human person in constitutional caselaw invites systemic effects well beyond the troubled context of abortion. If constitutional precept commands States to treat nascent human life as vacant of meaning and value apart from subjective individual determination or Court authorization, concurrently placed in doubt is the historic understanding of law as constrained by a reality prior to and beyond its coercive impositions. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">A national abortion-enablement policy is mournful in itself, but does not keep to itself. It corrodes the law altogether. [http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185004/20210727112957999_Dobbs Amici brief_FPC_ 7.23.21.pdf] <br />
<br />
==26 Connie Weiskopf and Kristine L. Brown==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185063/20210727174713396_FINAL_Brown_Weiskopf_Dobbs_Amicus.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The sophistry at the heart of Roe is that the beginning of human life was ever a subject for speculation ...There was no doubt at the time of the Fourteenth Amendment as to whether the common definition of “person” included preborn persons. One-hundred and fifty years since, medical science has overwhelmingly confirmed this commonly understood inclusion of preborn persons in legal personhood. ...no other so-called constitutional right involves the “the purposeful termination of a potential life.” Yet even in Harris, we see the poison of Roe in the qualifier “potential.” ...By choosing Levy v. Louisiana, 391 U.S. 68 (1968) as the test for legal personhood, this Court can reach a new milestone in the advancement of human rights. ...The Court started from the premise that “illegitimate children are not ‘nonpersons,’” insofar as they are “humans, live, and have their being.” Levy 391 U.S. at 70 (emphasis added). Thus all children who 1)are human, 2) are living, and 3) are in being, are “clearly” persons under the Equal Protection Clause. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">As Justice Gorsuch wrote in his Ramos concurrence, “stare decisis isn’t supposed to be the art of methodically ignoring what everyone knows to be true.” Ramos v. Louisiana, 590 U.S. __, __ (2020) (slip op. at 23). [http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185063/20210727174713396_FINAL_Brown_Weiskopf_Dobbs_Amicus.pdf]<br />
<br />
==27 Professor Kurt T. Lash==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185028/20210727125456897_19-1392%20tsac%20Lash.pdf Filed July 27, 2021] ZZZZZZZZZZZZZ<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113 (1973), the Supreme Court ruled that...“We feel...This right of privacy...[is] founded in the Fourteenth Amendment’s concept of personal liberty and restrictions upon state action [while] the District Court determined [it is founded] in the Ninth Amendment’s reservation of rights to the people....” . In Planned Parenthood v. Casey, 505 U.S. 883 (1992), a plurality...once again cit[ed] the Fourteenth Amendment and the Ninth Amendment...s. The Ninth Amendment, both at the time of its adoption and now, preserves the people’s retained right to local self-government. It cannot properly be read as a source of authority to deny the rights of local self-government. The Fourteenth Amendment protects substantive rights against the states, '''but only those previously enumerated, thus leaving all unenumerated rights under the authority of the people of the several states''' as a matter of constitutional right. This includes the non-enumerated subject of abortion.<br />
<br />
[Substantive definition: it exists independently, not subordinate to anything; for example not owing its existence to any law or constitution. Enumerated definition: rights named in the Constitution, like freedom of speech and religion.]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....In sum, at the threshold of the Civil War, moderate Republicans (who, according to Foner, “held the balance of power within the Republican Party,” Foner, FREE SOIL, at 205) had no intention of abandoning constitutional federalism or reinterpreting the Ninth and Tenth Amendments. These Republicans believed that the slave holding southern states had fallen away from the original federalist principles of the Constitution and had continuously violated the personal rights enumerated in the Bill of Rights. See Michael Kent Curtis, FREE SPEECH, “THE PEOPLE’S DARLING PRIVILEGE”: STRUGGLES FOR FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION IN AMERICAN HISTORY 266-70 (2000). The Republicans who framed and advanced the Fourteenth Amendment sought only to enforce those original rights while maintaining the basic principles of constitutional federalism announced in provisions like the Ninth and Tenth Amendments. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">...II. The Fourteenth Amendment neither enforces unenumerated substantive rights against the states nor alters the federalist meaning of the Ninth Amendment.<br />
A. John Bingham, primary draftsman of Section One of the Fourteenth Amendment, sought to apply enumerated constitutional rights against the states while preserving the structural principles of constitutional federalism declared in the Ninth and Tenth Amendments.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">...Consistent with his continued belief in the reserved rights of the states over all unenumerated subjects, Bingham proposed a constitutional amendment that would enforce the first eight amendments in the Bill of Rights against the states but leave the substance of all unenumerated rights under the control of the people in the States.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....None of Bingham’s Republican colleagues in the Thirty-Ninth Congress objected to the idea of enforcing the Bill of Rights against the states. Some members, however, worried that the wording in Bingham’s initial draft might empower Congress to define what counted as federally enforceable “privileges and immunities.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Republican Giles Hotchkiss suggested he would support an amendment that clearly announced “a constitutional right that cannot be wrested from any class of citizens, or from the citizens of any State by mere legislation. But this amendment proposes to leave it to the caprice of Congress.” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....As Bingham explained three years after the ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment: Mr. Speaker, that the scope and meaning of the limitations imposed by the first section, fourteenth amendment of the Constitution may be more fully understood, permit me to say that the privileges and immunities of citizens of the United States, as contradistinguished from citizens of a State, are chiefly defined in the first eight amendments to the Constitution of the United States. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">...John Bingham’s fellow member on Joint Committee on Reconstruction, Michigan Senator Jacob Howard, also described Bingham’s Privileges or Immunities Clause in terms that involve only constitutionally enumerated rights. See Speech of Jacob Howard, May 23, 1866, in 2 Reconstruction Amendments, at 187-88.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In his speech introducing the Fourteenth Amendment to the Senate, Howard explained that the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States included the right of traveling citizens to receive equal treatment enumerated in Article IV’s Comity Clause (and described in antebellum cases like Corfield v. Coryell, 6 Fed. Cas. 546 (C.C.E.D. Pa. 1823)) as well as those rights “secured by the first eight amendments of the Constitution.” Id. at 188. Every single privilege or immunity listed by Howard in his extended speech involved a guarantee enumerated in the original Constitution. Howard’s speech is important: It was so widely read and republished that during the ratification debates speakers often referred to the proposed Fourteenth Amendment as “the Howard Amendment.” See, e.g., North Carolina House of Representatives, July 2, 1868 (“Mr. Seymour introduced the following resolution, ratifying the fourteenth article of the Constitution of the United States, the article known as the Howard Amendment.”), <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....C. The ratifying public was well informed of<br />
the speeches of John Bingham and Jacob<br />
Howard.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Unlike the secret proceedings of Philadelphia<br />
Constitutional Convention, the proceedings of the<br />
Thirty-Ninth Congress were public. Newspapers<br />
reported on the speeches and debates, often with<br />
verbatim transcripts, on a daily basis. See Introduction<br />
to the Collection, 1 Reconstruction Amendments, at ix.<br />
Bingham’s speeches of February 1866 were published<br />
in the New York Times,11 The New York Herald,12 The<br />
Vermont Watchman and State Journal,13 The<br />
Philadelphia Inquirer,14 and Philadelphia’s Illustrated<br />
New Age.15 Bingham himself published his February<br />
28, 1866 speech separately and distributed it as a<br />
campaign document. <br />
<br />
....In the<br />
Thirty-Ninth Congress, Pennsylvania Democrat<br />
Benjamin M. Boyer quoted the Ninth and Tenth<br />
Amendments as evidence that Congress had no right to<br />
“disfranchise the majority of the citizens of any State<br />
on account of their past participation in the rebellion.”17<br />
One finds similar Democrat references to the Ninth<br />
and Tenth Amendments throughout the Reconstruction<br />
debates. See, e.g., CONG. GLOBE, 41st Cong., 2d Sess.<br />
app. at 354 (1870) (remarks of Sen. William T.<br />
Hamilton) (quoting the Ninth and Tenth Amendments<br />
in support of a narrow reading of federal power).<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....As noted<br />
above, both John Bingham and Jacob Howard omitted<br />
the Ninth and Tenth Amendments from their list of<br />
constitutional rights protected by the Privileges or<br />
Immunities Clause, and instead expressly named the<br />
rights enumerated in the first eight amendments. As<br />
Bingham explained, “these eight articles I have shown<br />
never were limitations upon the power of the States,<br />
until made so by the fourteenth amendment.”<br />
<br />
....in the common<br />
Reconstruction-era understanding that the last two<br />
amendments in the Bill of Rights were distinguishable<br />
from the personal rights protected in the first eight.<br />
....y, there is no<br />
historical evidence that between the time of the<br />
<br />
18 Nor does it mean that states are not bound to respect the<br />
federalism principles of the Ninth and Tenth Amendments. See,<br />
e.g., New York v. United States, 488 U.S. 1041 (1992) (rejecting the<br />
idea that states can waive the Constitution’s federalist separation<br />
of powers represented by the Tenth Amendment). <br />
24<br />
Founding and Reconstruction a new consensus<br />
understanding of the Ninth Amendment had emerged<br />
which viewed the provision as a font of unenumerated<br />
personal rights that could be applied against the states.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....McDonald v. Chicago, 561 U.S. 742, 811, (2010)<br />
(Thomas, J., concurring in part and concurring in<br />
judgment) (“the Court has determined that the Due<br />
Process Clause applies rights against the States that<br />
are not mentioned in the Constitution at all, even<br />
without seriously arguing that the Clause was<br />
originally understood to protect such rights. See, e.g.,<br />
Lochner v. New York; Roe v. Wade.”) (cleaned up). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Nor could it. At the time of the Fourteenth<br />
Amendment, the term “due process of law” was<br />
“universally understood to guarantee individual rights<br />
of legal process that only courts could provide.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....In 1859,<br />
for example, John Bingham “invit[ed] attention to the<br />
significant fact that natural or inherent rights, which<br />
belong to all men irrespective of all conventional<br />
regulations, are by this constitution guaranteed by the<br />
broad and comprehensive word ‘person,’ as<br />
contradistinguished from the limited term citizen— as<br />
in the fifth article of amendments, guarding those<br />
sacred rights which are as universal and indestructible<br />
as the human race, that ‘no person shall be deprived of<br />
life, liberty, or property but by due process of law.’”<br />
Bingham, 1 Reconstruction Amendments, at 153-54.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">This made slavery the ultimate denial of Due Process<br />
as it deprived persons of life, liberty and property<br />
without any procedural protections whatsoever. <br />
.... McDonald v.<span style="color:red"><br />
Chicago, 561 U.S. 742, 811 (2010) (Thomas, J.,<br />
concurring in part and concurring in judgment) (This<br />
Court created the right to abortion based on an<br />
amorphous, unwritten right to privacy, which it<br />
grounded in the “legal fiction” of substantive due<br />
process.”). The Due Process Clause requires states to<br />
provide all persons critically important procedural<br />
rights [equal rights in court], but nothing more.<br />
....In The Slaughterhouse Cases, 83 U.S. 36 (1873), the<br />
Supreme Court rejected a claim by Louisiana butchers<br />
that a state-enacted monopoly violated, among other<br />
things, the Privileges or Immunities Clause of the<br />
Fourteenth Amendment....Since the right to pursue a local trade was neither an<br />
enumerated federal responsibility or enumerated<br />
federal right, the subject remained under the<br />
regulatory control of the people in the several states.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In support of his reading of the Fourteenth<br />
Amendment, Justice Miller relied on the basic<br />
principles of constitutional federalism. According to<br />
Miller, interpreting the Privileges or Immunities<br />
Clause as somehow nationalizing the unenumerated<br />
subjects of municipal regulation, especially when<br />
combined with the congressional enforcement powers<br />
granted by Section Five of the Fourteenth Amendment,<br />
would obliterate the federalist structure of the<br />
Constitution. Miller was unwilling to accept an<br />
interpretation that “radically changes the whole theory<br />
of the relations of the State and Federal governments<br />
to each other and of both these governments to the<br />
people . . . in the absence of language which expresses<br />
such a purpose too clearly to admit of doubt.”<br />
Slaughterhouse, 83 U.S. at 78.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In<br />
his 1871 Speech on the Enforcement Act, in words that<br />
anticipate Miller’s later opinion in Slaughterhouse,<br />
Bingham explained:<br />
Is it not clear that other and different privileges<br />
and immunities than those to which a citizen of<br />
a State was entitled are secured by the provision<br />
30<br />
of the fourteenth article, that no state shall<br />
abridge the privileges and immunities of citizens<br />
of the United States, which are defined in the<br />
eight articles of amendment, and which were not<br />
limitations on the power of the States before the<br />
fourteenth amendment made them limitations?<br />
Bingham, March 31, 1871, in 2 Reconstruction<br />
Amendments at 626.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Justice Miller also was correct to insist that the<br />
Fourteenth Amendment be interpreted in a manner<br />
consistent with the traditional understanding of<br />
constitutional federalism. Bingham himself had no<br />
intention to obliterate constitutional federalism and he<br />
insisted that his proposal imposed no rights upon<br />
states which they were not already constitutionally<br />
oath-bound to protect. Like other moderate<br />
Republicans in the Reconstruction Congress, Bingham<br />
valued constitutional federalism, describing it as “our<br />
dual system of Government by which our own<br />
American nationality and liberty have been established<br />
and maintained. I have always believed that the<br />
protection in time of peace within the States of all the<br />
rights of person and citizen was of the powers reserved<br />
to the States. And so I still believe.” Bingham, March<br />
9, 1866, in 2 Reconstruction Amendments at 140. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Finally, Miller was right to limit the privileges or<br />
immunities of citizens of the United States to those<br />
rights actually enumerated in one form or another in<br />
the federal Constitution. It had long been settled law<br />
that no state was permitted to make or enforce any law<br />
that conflicted or interfered with a proper exercise of<br />
enumerated federal power. See McCulloch v. Maryland,<br />
31<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">17 U.S. 316 (1819). The problem in the 1860s was the<br />
lack of federal power to enforce enumerated federal<br />
rights. As Bingham explained early in the debates of<br />
the Thirty-Ninth Congress, “it has been the want of the<br />
Republic that there was not an express grant of power<br />
in the Constitution to enable the whole people of every<br />
State, by congressional enactment, to enforce obedience<br />
to these requirements of the Constitution.” Bingham,<br />
February 26, 1866, in 2 Reconstruction Amendments at<br />
100. '''Although Miller does not expressly declare that<br />
the Privileges or Immunities Clause applied the first<br />
eight amendments against the states, Miller does name<br />
enumerated First Amendment rights as protected<br />
“privileges or immunities.” Nothing in his opinion<br />
closes the door on incorporation of the Bill of Rights.'''<br />
See, Lash, THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT, at 252-65.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">'''That door was erroneously closed in a later case,<br />
Cruikshank v. United States''', 92 U.S. 542 (1876). Id. at<br />
265; see also McDonald v. Chicago, 561 U.S. 742, 808<br />
(2010) (Thomas, J. concurring).<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">United States, by the consent of the people of the<br />
United States, with the power to enforce the bill of<br />
32<br />
rights as it stands in the Constitution today.” Bingham,<br />
in 2 Reconstruction Amendments at 109.<br />
No moderate Republican in or out of Congress in the<br />
1860s would have approved of a constitutional<br />
amendment that bound the states to enforce an<br />
undefined set of substantive rights and gave Congress<br />
the power the nationalize the same. This includes the<br />
otherwise unenumerated “right to abortion.”<br />
<br />
==28 Robin Pierucci, M.D., and Life Legal Defense Foundation==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185034/20210727130751481_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20Robin%20Pierucci%20MD%20and%20Life%20Legal%20Defense%20Foundation.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
A very different “logical and biological” <br />
conclusion about constitutional rights could be <br />
drawn from the definition of viability: <br />
After viability, when a human being is <br />
capable of meaningful life outside the <br />
mother’s womb, the State must, consistent <br />
with its obligations under the Fourteenth <br />
Amendment, protect this human from being <br />
deliberately killed to the same extent it <br />
protects older human beings. <br />
<br />
Such a conclusion is at least as, and likely more, <br />
plausible than Roe’s declaration that only after the <br />
unborn child could survive outside the womb, a <br />
state may, or may not, prohibit his or her <br />
deliberate destruction, subject to broad exceptions <br />
effectively gutting even this limited permission. <br />
<br />
....These scholars recognize that establishing <br />
the principle of Fourteenth Amendment personhood <br />
for the unborn does not dictate a single, judicially#imposed result for all states, all statutes, or all <br />
pregnancies. Paulsen, at 70 (“That the word <br />
‘person,’ as used in the Constitution in the Fifth <br />
and Fourteenth Amendments, is broad enough to <br />
embrace living but unborn humans does not itself <br />
say anything specific about what the precise legal <br />
regime must be with respect to abortion”); Finnis, <br />
Born and Unborn: Answering Objections to <br />
Constitutional Personhood, First Things, April 9, <br />
<br />
....Whatever abortion restrictions may (or may <br />
not) exist on paper, because of the flexibility of this <br />
Court’s jurisprudence, abortion providers across the <br />
country advertise their services for later abortions: <br />
beyond 20 weeks, beyond 24 weeks, beyond 28 <br />
weeks, beyond 32 weeks. See Appendix. The <br />
audience for these advertisements and websites is <br />
not doctors who have unexpectedly diagnosed a <br />
dangerous condition in a pregnant woman. These <br />
advertisements are direct-to-consumer marketing <br />
of Roe- and Casey-sanctioned abortions <br />
indistinguishable from infanticide.<br />
<br />
e. Additionally, the <br />
viability threshold for a compelling state interest in <br />
preserving human life, created by this Court in <br />
1973, should be abandoned in favor of the medically <br />
updated and philosophically consistent standard of <br />
an “unqualified” interest in protecting life that this <br />
Court upheld in the 1990 case of Cruzan<br />
<br />
==29 Priests for Life==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185032/20210727130517073_19-1392%20tsac%20Priests%20for%20Life.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
Indeed, Priests for Life urges the Court to use this opportunity to end the charade that Roe v. Wade was correctly decided. This fateful decision has no legitimate foundation in law, it continues to tear at the fabric of our nation, and it has corrupted our judicial system. It is time for it to go ....<br />
<br />
In 1868, when the<br />
Fourteenth Amendment was ratified, a majority<br />
of the States and numerous Territories had laws<br />
on the books that limited (and in many cases<br />
nearly prohibited) abortion. See id., at 175, n.1. <br />
<br />
It would no doubt shock the public at that time<br />
to learn that one of the new constitutional<br />
Amendments contained hidden within the<br />
interstices of its text a right to abortion. <span style="color:red">The<br />
fact that it took this Court over a century to find<br />
that right all but proves that it was more than<br />
hidden—it simply was not (and is not) there.<br />
June Med. Servs. L.L.C. v. Russo, 140 S. Ct. 2103,<br />
2142, 2151 (2020) (Thomas, J., dissenting).<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">When deciding Roe v. Wade, this Court infamously<br />
stated:<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">We need not resolve the difficult question of<br />
when life begins. When those trained in the<br />
respective disciplines of medicine, philosophy,<br />
and theology are unable to arrive at any<br />
consensus, the judiciary, at this point in the<br />
development of man’s knowledge, is not in a<br />
position to speculate as to the answer.<br />
5<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113, 159 (1973). Consistent with<br />
this veiled philosophical pronouncement—a<br />
pronouncement grounded in secular positivism—a<br />
majority of the justices concluded that the U.S.<br />
Constitution “does not define ‘person,’” leading the<br />
Court to ultimately conclude that “the word ‘person,’ as<br />
used in the Fourteenth Amendment, does not include<br />
the unborn.” Id. at 158. <br />
<br />
Remarkably, the Court dismissed the life of the<br />
unborn based on its conclusion that there is no direct<br />
textual support to conclude that this “person” is<br />
protected by the Fourteenth Amendment. Yet, this<br />
same Court created a right to abortion “out of whole<br />
cloth, without a shred of support from the<br />
Constitution’s text.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Court’s ruling in Roe v. Wade is similar to how<br />
the Court had previously concluded in the infamous<br />
Dred Scott decision (Dred Scott v. Sandford, 60 US 393<br />
(1857)) that people of color were not legal “persons” as<br />
a matter of federal constitutional law. Unfortunately,<br />
it took a civil war to correct this injustice.<br />
<br />
[Actually Dred Scott called slaves a “class of persons”, but persons without rights. And although they are persons, they are not “people of the United States”: <br />
“The words "people of the United States" and "citizens" are synonymous terms, and mean the same thing. They both describe the political body who, according to our republican institutions, form the sovereignty and who hold the power and conduct the Government through their representatives. They are what we familiarly call the "sovereign people," and every citizen is one of this people, and a constituent member of this sovereignty. The question before us is whether the class of persons described in the plea in abatement compose a portion of this people, and are constituent members of this sovereignty? We think they are not,”<br />
<br />
...6. The only two clauses in the Constitution which point to this race treat them as persons whom it was morally lawfully to deal in as articles of property and to hold as slaves.<br />
<br />
...8. A State, by its laws passed since the adoption of the Constitution, may put a foreigner or any other description of persons upon a footing with its own citizens as to all the rights and privileges enjoyed by them within its dominion and by its laws. But that will not make him a citizen of the United States, nor entitle him to sue in its courts, nor to any of the privileges and immunities of a citizen in another State.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">...It is very true that, in that portion of the Union where the labor of the negro race was found to be unsuited to the climate and unprofitable to the master, but few slaves were held at the time of the Declaration of Independence, and when the Constitution was adopted, it had entirely worn out in one of them, and measures had been taken for its gradual abolition in several others. But this change had not been produced by any change of opinion in relation to this race, but because it was discovered from experience that slave labor was unsuited to the climate and productions of these States, for some of the States where it had ceased or nearly ceased to exist were actively engaged in the slave trade, procuring cargoes on the coast of Africa and transporting them for sale to those parts of the Union where their labor was found to be profitable and suited to the climate and productions.]<br />
<br />
==30 Hannah S., John S. and Marlene S==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185061/20210727165822368_41029%20pdf%20Parker%20II.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
The story of this “adoption” and this Amici Curiae Brief will reveal that Roe’s measuring line for viability has now been moved all the way back to fertilization by the modern scientific advancement called in vitro fertilization. Roe, at 160, has this viability definition: “ ‘viable,’ . . . potentially able to live outside the mother’s <br />
womb, albeit with artificial aid.”<br />
<br />
Advances in science have eliminated the distinction between previability and viability. Previability prohibitions on elective abortions should be constitutional because viability occurs at fertilization, as proven through in vitro fertilization techniques. <br />
<br />
==31 Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185155/20210728163153060_Amici%20Brief%20of%20CMP-Daleiden.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Federal law recognizes human infants in utero, and premature infants born alive, as persons under the law at any gestational age. The federal Unborn Victims of Violence Act recognizes the “child in utero” as “a member of the species homo sapiens, at any stage of development, who is carried in the womb” whose death or injury in the course of a federal crime is subject to prosecution the same as that of any born child or adult individual. 18 U.S.C. § 1841(d), (a)(1). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The federal Born Alive Infants Protection Act establishes even more broadly that, for purposes of “any Act of Congress” and “any ruling, regulation, or interpretation of the various administrative bureaus and agencies of the United States,” “the words ‘person’, ‘human being’, ‘child’, and ‘individual’, shall include every infant member of the species homo sapiens who is born alive at any stage of development.” 1 U.S.C. § 8 (a).<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Even prior to the ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment, this Court acknowledged that the word “person” in law was a term designed to include all of humanity. In United States v. Palmer, 16 U.S. 610 (1818), Chief Justice Marshall explained that “every human being” and “the whole human race” was included in the words “person or persons” in federal law. Id. at 631–32. And in Levy v. Louisiana, 391 U.S. 68 (1968), this Court articulated a simple test for ensuring equal protection for marginalized persons, reasoning that so-called “illegitimate” children were not “non-persons” as they were “humans, live, and have their being,” and therefore, “clearly ‘persons’ within the meaning of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.” Id. at 70. <br />
<br />
==32 European Legal Scholars in support of neither party==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185153/2021072 8162714090_European%20Legal%20Scholars%20Amici%20Brief.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
The European Court allows States a wide margin <br />
of appreciation to determine the starting point of the <br />
right to life in their domestic law and to formulate <br />
their laws on abortion. Consistent with this, the <br />
European Court has held that the Convention does not <br />
confer a right to abortion and has recognized as <br />
compatible with a Member State’s obligations under <br />
the Convention even very restrictive abortion laws. <br />
However, in several cases the European Court has <br />
found violations of the Convention in respect of <br />
individual applicants as a result of procedural <br />
deficiencies in the way national abortion laws have <br />
been given effect.<br />
<br />
.....The Court previously has considered European law when interpreting the Constitution. See, e.g., Roper v. Simmons, 543 U.S. 551, 575 (2005) (considering certain foreign law “instructive” when interpreting the Eighth Amendment); Lawrence v. Texas, 539 U.S. 558, 560 (2003) (discussing the European Court’s reasoning when interpreting the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment); Atkins v. Virginia, 536 U.S. 304, 316 n.21 (2002) (resorting to other countries’ views on capital punishment for the mentally ill). To be sure, the propriety of doing so is disputed. See, e.g., Roper, 543 U.S. at 627–28 (Scalia, J., dissenting); Lawrence, 539 U.S. at 598 (Scalia, J., dissenting); Atkins, 536 U.S. at 322–28 (Rehnquist, C.J., dissenting). But the fact that the very same source of European law this Court previously invoked also allows prohibitions on abortion admits of no serious dispute. Roper, 543 U.S. at 563; Atkins, 536 U.S. at 313–14. <br />
<br />
....Amici, accordingly, wish to highlight relevant abortion jurisprudence from the European Court that may prove helpful to this Court. Specifically, the European Court has a body of case law weighing abortion laws against human rights standards. This case law addresses issues comparable to those faced by the Court, including the scope of the right to privacy and the interests and rights that may legitimately be balanced against such a right by the state when regulating or restricting abortion.<br />
<br />
1.Member States may protect human life before birth through national law. The European Court has identified several rights and interests justifying such laws. These include protecting the right to life of the unborn, the legitimate interest of society in limiting the number of abortions, and the interests of society to protect morals. 2.The European Court has held that the Convention does not confer a right to abortion. 3.The compatibility with the Convention of Member States’ laws on abortion is primarily assessed by reference to Article 2 (“Right to life”) and Article 8 (“Right to respect for private and family life”) of the Convention. 4.The European Court has not determined whether the unborn child is a person for the purposes of Article 2 of the Convention. The European Court has not interpreted Article 2 as prohibiting States from making abortion legal; it instead interprets Article 2 as allowing States a margin of appreciation to determine the starting point of the right to life in their domestic law. 5.Legislation regulating the termination of pregnancy touches upon the sphere of a woman’s private life and thus may come within the scope of Article 8. But the European Court has also consistently recognized that Member States have a wide margin of appreciation under the Convention with respect to the regulation of abortion. <br />
<br />
6.Consistent with the foregoing, the European Court has recognized as compatible with a Member State’s obligations under the Convention even very restrictive abortion laws, including a national law prohibiting abortion at all stages of pregnancy and for any reason other than where there was a risk to the life (including by way of suicide) of the expectant mother. <br />
<br />
7.While acknowledging that it is the task of an individual Member State to frame its own abortion law, the European Court has found that it follows from its responsibility under Article 19 of the Convention to supervise whether any such law constitutes a proportionate balancing of the competing interests involved. <br />
<br />
8.The European Court has not relied upon any concept of the viability of the “foetus”3 as a basis for assessing the compatibility of Member States’ abortion laws with the Convention. <br />
9.In several cases, the European Court has found that Member States have violated the Article 8 rights of claimants seeking to access abortion services permitted under national law as a result of deficiencies in the way the national law has been given effect. These have included deficiencies in the arrangements for conscientious objection by healthcare providers or deficiencies in the processes for establishing whether the conditions under national 3 The European Court uses the terms “foetus” and “unborn child” interchangeably. See Vo v. France, 2004-VIII Eur. Ct. H.R. 67, 109; A, B & C v. Ireland, 2010-VI Eur. Ct. H.R. 185, 261. (“ABC”). 6 law for a lawful abortion have been satisfied by a claimant in a particular case. <br />
<br />
==33 396 State Legislators from 41 States==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185121/20210728125120809_Dobbs%20Amici%20brief_State%20Legislators_07272021.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
[This brief tackles 2 issues: power of ''Congress'' to correct state slights to the people’s rights. Second, the power of ''states'' to protect rights. It addresses a Problem, when an ''un''enumerated [not specified in the Constitution] right, abortion, is at the expense of an ''enumerated'' right, Life. <br />
<br />
[This brief shows Section 5 authority embedded in natural law way before 1868. Not just Congress but states. Courts have zero jurisdiction to enforce unenumerated rights like abortion, but full authority and inescapable responsibility to enforce enumerated rights like Life. Couldn’t a red state sue a blue state for slaughtering its people?] <br />
<br />
9 The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.[7] <br />
Wikipedia: addresses rights, retained by the people, that are not specifically enumerated in the Constitution. <br />
<br />
10 The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.[6]<br />
<br />
<br />
[Even if Section 5 of the 14th Amendment DIDN'T give Congress authority to define and enforce rights:]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red"> State legislators have the constitutional duty, and therefore the power, to protect the fundamental, civil rights of persons. The fundamental law in which those fundamental rights are found is the common law, which consists of both natural duties and those ancient, customary rights and immunities that are foundational to ordered liberty. Thus, a state legislature must declare and secure to all persons within the protection of its laws the rights that those persons have by natural and customary law. Cf. Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 U.S. 702, 721-22 (1997) (upholding state legislation that prohibited assisted suicide and reasoning that the Fourteenth Amendment’s “Due Process Clause specially protects those fundamental rights and liberties which are, objectively, ‘deeply rooted in this Nation’s history and tradition’.” (quoting Moore v. E. Cleveland, 431 U. S. 494, 503 (1977)). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England (1765): “Hence,” he said, “it follows, that the first and primary end of human laws is to '''maintain and regulate these absolute rights of individuals.'''” Id. Blackstone taught that the legislative power is to declare existing common-law rights and duties and to remedy any defects in the legal security for those rights. Id. at *42-43, 52-58, 86-87 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Founders echoed this view in the Declaration of Independence, declaring that '''governments are instituted among men in order to secure the inalienable rights with which human beings are endowed by nature and nature’s God.''' They also accused the crown and Parliament of infringing the rights of “our constitution,” which in 1776 could only have been a reference to the common-law constitution of British North America. This view predicated the Constitution of the United States, which expressly secures natural rights, such as life and religious liberty, and common-law rights, such as jury trials and freedom from the quartering of soldiers in one’s home, and expressly disclaims any intent to disparage the other rights of the fundamental law. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Indeed, '''the point of having legislatures, executives, and courts is to secure the rights that Americans already have.''' Neither state legislatures nor the Constitution of the United States create those rights. See District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570, 592 (2008) (stating that “it has always been widely understood that <span style="color:red">the Second Amendment, like the First and Fourth Amendments, codified a preexisting right,” that it “is not a right granted by the Constitution,” and is not “in any manner dependent upon that instrument for its existence.”). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Some, but not all, of the rights of natural persons are enumerated [listed] in the Constitution''' of the United States and its amendments. U.S. Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 8.; art. IV, §2; amends. I-VIII. '''Others are enumerated in state constitutions.''' See e.g., Soc’y for the Propagation of the Gospel v. Wheeler, 22 F. Cas. 756, 766 (No. 13,156) (C.C.D.N.H. 1814). Still others are declared in American constitutions but not enumerated. U.S. Const. amend. IX (“The enumeration of certain rights herein shall not be construed to deny or disparage other rights retained by the people.”) (emphasis added). '''State legislatures have a duty to declare and secure all fundamental rights, both enumerated and unenumerated.''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Fundamental rights are those that persons enjoy by fundamental law—natural law and common law— with or without any written constitution. Because the common law includes natural rights, to understand the fundamental rights declared and secured by the Constitution, it is sufficient to look to the common law, especially as explained by William Blackstone. Established common-law doctrines constitute the best evidence of the existence and meaning of both enumerated and unenumerated, fundamental rights. Jeffrey D. Jackson, Blackstone’s Ninth Amendment: A Historical Common Law Baseline for the Interpretation of Unenumerated Rights, 62 Okla. L. Rev. 167 (2010) (explaining why the unenumerated rights referred to in the Ninth Amendment should be understood with reference to a common law baseline, especially as specified in Blackstone’s Commentaries); Adam J. MacLeod, Our Universal and Particular Constitution, Public Discourse, https://www.thepublicdiscourse.com/2018/10/43788/ (October 4, 2018). <span style="color:red">“The interpretation of the Constitution of the United States is necessarily influenced by the fact that its provisions are framed in the language of the English common law, and are to be read in the light of its history.” Smith v. Alabama, 124 U.S. 465, 478 (1888). The terms and concepts of the common law provided the “the nomenclature of which the framers of the Constitution were familiar.” Minor v. Happersett, 88 U.S. (21 Wall) 162, 167 (1875). Accord James R. Stoner, Jr., Common-Law Liberty: Rethinking American Constitutionalism 9-29 (2003). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">American constitutional rights are not philosophical abstractions. They are described in detail in common law treatises, such as those by Coke and Hale, and especially Blackstone’s Commentaries. The framers crafted American constitutions—state and federal—in common law terms. And Blackstone was their teacher and lexicographer. <br />
<br />
Morris L. Cohen, Thomas Jefferson Recommends a Course of Law Study, 1119 U. Pa. L. Rev. 823 (1971); Robert A. Ferguson, Law and Letters in American Culture 11 (1984); Albert W. Alschuler, Rediscovering Blackstone, 145 U. Pa. L. Rev. 1 (1996); R.H. Helmholz, Natural Law in Court: A History of Legal Theory in Practice 131–41 (2015). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">As this Court has rightly acknowledged, Blackstone’s “works constituted the preeminent authority on English law for the founding generation.” Alden v. Maine, 527 U.S. 706, 715 (1999). Blackstone retained his influence through the adoption of the Civil War Amendments. James M. Ogden, Lincoln’s Early Impressions of the Law in Indiana, 7 Notre Dame L. Rev. 325, 328 (1932). And this Court continues to turn to Blackstone today. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">[2 A few examples from recent years include Gamble v. United States, __ U.S. __, 139 S. Ct. 1960 (2019) (the Court’s opinion, the concurrence, and one dissent citing Blackstone multiple times to determine the meaning of the phrase “the same offense” in the Fifth Amendment’s double jeopardy clause); Department of Homeland Security v. Thuraissigiam, __ U.S. __, 140 S. Ct. 1959, 1969 (2020) (calling Blackstone’s Commentaries a “satisfactory exposition of the common law of England”); Ramos v. Louisiana, __ U.S. __, 140 S. Ct. 1390, 1395 (2020) (citing Blackstone in explanation of the holding that the requirement of juror unanimity is “a vital right protected by the common law” and therefore the Constitution’s jury trial guarantee); Torres v. Madrid, __ U.S. __, 141 S. Ct. 989, 996, 997, 998, 1000 (2021) (citing Blackstone multiple times to determine meaning of Fourth Amendment “seizure”). ]<br />
<br />
...emphasis added). The legislature’s particular duty to declare and secure the natural and customary rights of America’s fundamental common law can be seen clearly by reading together the Ninth, Tenth, and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution of the United States. The Bill of Rights marks off certain rights as beyond the competence of Congress (and now, by incorporation, the states) to alter or abolish. It immunizes those rights by enumerating them and by stating in particular terms the official duties with which they correlate. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">But as the Ninth Amendment makes clear, the enumeration of certain common-law rights does not deny or disparage all the other rights that the American people enjoy by virtue of natural law and their ancient customs. The Ninth Amendment expressly reserves to the people those civil and fundamental rights that they enjoyed prior to ratification, which are their natural rights, other common-law rights and liberties, and some privileges enumerated in state constitutions. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Because many states refused to remedy infringements of fundamental rights [for blacks] prior to the Civil War, the Fourteenth Amendment was necessary to ensure to all persons due process of law and the equal protection of the laws, and to empower Congress to remedy infringements of those rights. It bears emphasis that <span style="color:red">the Fourteenth Amendment was necessary to recall state legislatures to their original task. '''Far from repealing the people’s retention of fundamental rights declared by the Ninth Amendment, the Fourteenth Amendment strengthened it'''. And far from abrogating the duty of state legislatures to declare and secure unenumerated rights, the Fourteenth Amendment reinforced that duty. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">[That is, the rights retained by the people but not protected by their state, such as the right of Blacks to liberty, was strengthened – at the expense of the freedom of the legislature to torpedo those rights. And the 14th Amendment did not supplant the duty of legislatures to protect rights, by courts, but rather that duty became enforceable by Congress.]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Legislatures are equipped to deliberate about and secure the rights of all persons as they identify and specify the boundaries between rights. <br />
<br />
See Grégoire Webber et al, Legislated Rights: Securing Human Rights through Legislation (2018). Many of the great civil rights achievements in American history have been legislative achievements. See, e.g., the Civil Rights Act of 1866, Civil Rights Act of 1875, and the Civil Rights Act of 1964. And these include state statutes that declare and secure common law rights against unreasonable discrimination. ....<br />
<br />
This Court has never denied that state legislatures have the power and duty to declare and specify the boundaries of fundamental rights in the abortion context. To the contrary, this Court has ratified the legislative province to identify, specify, and secure the rights of our fundamental law. Often using the term “interests” or “state interests,” ....<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In many respects, legislatures are better equipped for this task than courts, whose job is to secure the rights of the litigants who happen to appear in any case or controversy. The job of a court is to specify a right in a legal judgment resolving a dispute between two parties. To generalize that particular judgment, to make that right universal and absolute for all persons, carries the risk that the tribunal will unintentionally invite infringement of the rights of persons who are not parties to the litigation. Significantly, most constitutional abortion cases proceed without any involvement of the persons who are most interested in, and affected by, the outcome: expectant mothers, fathers, grandparents, physicians and other health care professionals who are called to deal with the fallout of abortions, and, critically, unborn human beings. By contrast, legislatures hear evidence and find facts about the rights of all interested persons <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Furthermore, a lawmaker must fashion remedies and sanctions for rights infringements that are commensurate and responsive to the particular wrong. Because not all persons who contribute to a person’s death are equally culpable, legislatures justly distinguish between them. The sanction for reckless acts that cause death need not be as severe as the sanction for intentional homicide. Legislatures also reasonably take into account the circumstances of the person whose life is lost. For example, remedies for wrongful death may take into account a person’s stage of development and relationship to any dependents. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....For example, the right to life remains inviolable and absolute though a legislature may choose to sanction those who are most culpable for its deprivation and not others <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Similarly, state legislatures have long recognized that abortionists are the true, culpable parties in an abortion. Mothers are often victims of coercion. And mothers suffer the consequences of the abortion procedure itself. For these and other reasons, legislatures may choose not to impose legal sanctions on them, notwithstanding that their unborn children have a right to live. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Roe Court failed to understand this. The Court looked to state laws that impose criminal sanctions on abortionists, rather than on the mothers themselves, and then erroneously inferred that the law is indifferent to the lives of the unborn. Roe, 410 U.S. at 157 n.54. ...<br />
<br />
[Many prolifers similarly misunderstood]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">That a right is absolute means simply that it is vested—in jurisprudential terms, that it has built into it an immunity from retrospective or retroactive abrogation—so that governments are powerless to deprive any person of the right unless and until the person has been proven to have forfeited the right by committing some wrong, and that the wrong has been established in some proceeding that satisfies the requirements of due process, or until the person dies a natural death. Id. at *125, 128-30. <br />
<br />
,,,,the right to life is a right not to be intentionally killed. It is not a guarantee against death ‘<br />
<br />
==34 141 International Legal Scholars==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185170/20210729071535904_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20141%20International%20Legal%20Scholars.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Not even foreign legal authorities support any right to abortion. 141 International Legal Scholars submitted an amicus brief in the Dobbs v. Jackson case declaring that “Whatever role international law plays in evaluating abortion regulations in the United States, it offers no basis for the existence of a human right to abortion.” (http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185170/20210729071535904_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20141%20International%20Legal%20Scholars.pdf) “The minority of States that choose to allow elective abortion impose a standard gestational limit of twelve weeks, which is more restrictive than Mississippi’s Gestational Age Act.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“If the Court chooses to consult international law in this case, it will find there is no treaty that recognizes a so-called human right to abortion, nor has such a right been established through customary law. To the contrary, the practice across all regions demonstrates a consistent State prerogative to protect unborn life. Nor has any international court declared the existence of an international right to abortion, even in regions with the most permissive abortion regimes. Thirdparty actors seeking to invent a new right to abortion err when interpreting key international instruments, such as the Convention on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women, the Rome Statute, and the International Conference on Population and Development. The clear language in those documents defies any attempt to repurpose them to create an international human right to abortion. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“On the other hand, provisions recognizing the unborn child as a rights-holder can be found in many international human rights instruments, including the American Convention on Human Rights, the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. Most States choose to exercise the prerogative to protect unborn life by regulating abortion much more strictly than in the United States. Even in the minority of States that permit elective abortions, most specify a gestational limit of twelve weeks. That limit is more restrictive than Mississippi’s Gestational Age Act, which allows elective abortion until fifteen weeks’ gestation, and then permits abortion only for medical emergencies or severe fetal abnormality.”<br />
<br />
<br />
==35 Prolife Center at the University of St. Thomas==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185177/20210729085125572_DOCKET%2019-1392%20BRIEF%20AMICUS%20CURIAE%20OF%20THE%20PROLIFE%20CENTER%20AT%20THE%20UNIVERISTY%20OF%20ST.%20THOMAS%20IN%20SUPPORT%20OF%20PETITIONERS.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
The Court should make clear that the States are not required to permit abortions for reasons relating to the mental or psychological health of the pregnant woman, or for undefined reasons of health, either of which would lead the Court, and the country, back to a regime of abortion–on–demand.<br />
<br />
==36 Mary Kay Bacallao Advocating for Unborn Children==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185109/20210728121621904_19-1392%20Brief%20Amicus%20Curiae.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">It is time to extend to unborn children the equal protection and due process rights they enjoyed in Mississippi until the Roe Court made an elementary grammar error, using a phrase that conferred citizenship in one clause to define personhood for other clauses. It is time to correct the Roe Court’s error in refusing to determine when life began and in the same stroke of the pen stripping the unborn of their personhood, citing the very amendment that codified the right of all persons, born and unborn, to equal protection and due process. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">THE ROE COURT MISINTERPRETED THE MEANING OF THE WORD “PERSON” AS FOUND IN THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT. The Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution3 includes the following three references to persons: <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">[1.] “All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">[2.] “No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law;” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">[3.] “nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Here, in looking at statutory construction cannons such as noscitur a sociis, which means, “it is known by its companions,” the meaning of the word “persons” can only be ascertained by its associates. In the first instance, “persons” is being modified by “born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">3 U.S. Const. amend. XIV (adopted July 9, 1868) Text: All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">jurisdiction thereof…” Here, “persons” is a general term that is being limited at least by two conditions, either “born” or “naturalized.” In this instance, the Fourteenth Amendment limits the type of persons who can be citizens to those either born or naturalized in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In the second instance, no “person” shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law, where “person” is used generally, unmodified by “born” or “naturalized, etc.” Here “citizens” as defined in the first instance is separate and distinct from “person” found in the second part of the sentence. The second use of “person” is unmodified. These persons are not necessarily citizens, nor does it follow that they must necessarily be “born.” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In the third instance, “any person” is also unmodified by either “born” or “naturalized, etc.” In other words, “person” is not limited to a person “born” or “naturalized in the United States,” rather, the term “person” is again unmodified and used in the general sense. Thus, where the second use of the term “person” prohibits a State from depriving a person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law, “person” is used generally rather than in the context of being “born.” Additionally, where the third use of the term “person” does not allow a State to deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws, again, “person” is unmodified. This does not limit protection to “persons born or naturalized in the United States…” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">To assert that one word, such as “born,” that is used in a single line to limit a general term, such as “person,” in one provision also limits that same general term, in this case “person,” each time it occurs 5 is linguistically incorrect. It is the same as saying that because one line refers to a black cat, all other times the word cat appears it can only refer to cats that are black. This is not the way language works. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">There is no evidence that the original meaning of person was limited to those who were born. Rather, the corpus evidence found in COHA, the Hansard Corpus, and the Corpus of U.S. Supreme Opinions point to the unborn as persons, legally able to inherit property and in need of protection. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Roe court did not resolve the question of when life begins, “We need not resolve the difficult question of when life begins. When those trained in the respective disciplines of medicine, philosophy, and theology are unable to arrive at any consensus, the judiciary, at this point in the development of man’s knowledge, is not in a position to speculate as to the answer.”4 However, the Roe Court maintained that “… the word ‘person,’ as used in the Fourteenth Amendment, does not include the unborn.”5 The Roe Court used faulty linguistics in determining that someone unborn was not a ‘person’ as used in second and third parts of the Fourteenth Amendment. In the first use of person, ‘born’ modifies or limits the meaning of ‘person,’ not the other way around. The Roe Court did not use proper linguistic interpretation of the text of the Fourteenth Amendment when limiting its interpretation of the second and third references to persons as those who were born. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The second reference to person in the Fourteenth Amendment, stating that a State may not deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law applies to persons both born and unborn. The third reference to person in the Fourteenth Amendment, where a State may not deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws also applies to persons both born and unborn. Simple linguistics, applied to these provisions in the U.S. Constitution, where the word person is unmodified by the word “born” confirms that a person is a person no matter how small. <br />
<br />
In the 1850’s, there is “love of an unborn child.”18 There is also mention of the absurdity of a “price for an unborn infant”19 and making “slaves of the unborn”20 in an argument against slavery in the New England Yale Review. In the “other” category there is a reference to the divine “I AM” as unborn21 in Rational Cosmology. In the 1860’s, a popular magazine called The Atlantic deals with the “crime, so common among church going ladies and others, of murdering their unborn offspring!”22 The same magazine asks a question about, “those who provide women with [th’] means of killing their unborn children, - a double crime, murder and suicide?”23 The Atlantic also mentions the “murder of unborn offspring” in the context of a “Church powerful enough to guard the issues of life.”24 In the 1870’s, the English Constitution mentions unborn children in the context of persons: “An Act of Parliament is at least as complex as a marriage settlement; and it is made much as a settlement would be if it were left to the vote and settled by the major part of persons concerned, including the unborn children. There is an advocate for every interest, and every interest clamours for every advantage.”25 <br />
<br />
==37 Professor Randy Beck==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185118/20210728124300921_19-1392tsacProfessorRandyBeck.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
Professor Tribe’s Justification Falls Short Because a Pregnant Woman Cannot Transfer a Viable Fetus to Other Caretakers ... 20 V. Viability Is an Arbitrary Line for Measuring Abortion Rights ...................... 22 VI. Stare Decisis Should Not Preserve an Arbitrary Rule Without Constitutional Warrant ..<br />
<br />
==38 Christian Legal Society and Robertson Center for Constitutional Law==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185104/20210728115957257_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20%20Christian%20Legal%20Society%20et%20al.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
The Court cannot serve the rule of law by preserving decisions that subvert the rule of law <br />
A Proper Conception Of Substantive Due Process Does Not Support Existing Abortion Jurisprudence ....<br />
<br />
<blockquote> <span style="color:red">Some of this Court’s most ignominious decisions emerged from expansive and unchecked conceptions of substantive due process. The “most salient instance . . . was, of course, the case that the [Fourteenth] Amendment would in due course overturn, Dred Scott v. Sandford.” Glucksberg, 521 U.S. at 758 (Souter, J., concurring in the judgment). A half-century later, Lochner v. New York inspired a line of “deviant economic due process cases” that “harbored the spirit of Dred Scott in their absolutist implementation of” substantive due process. Id. at 761. Roe fares no better under a proper constitutional analysis. </span><br />
<br />
==39 Center for Religious Expression==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185542/20210802162418144_19-1932%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20Center%20for%20Religious%20Expression.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Roe Court demurred on the central inquiry. When the case was decided, the presence of a life inside a mother’s womb was a debatable topic, largely informed by religious and philosophical perspectives. 410 U.S. at 159-60 (passing on “the difficult question of when life begins,” referencing differing belief systems).2 Wary of decreeing the precise moment of life, whether at conception, birth, or some time in between, the Roe Court rejected life as a marker and settled on viability as way to denote the State’s interest.</span><br />
<br />
==40 Center for Family and Human Rights==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185123/20210728132729071_CFam%20Amicus%20Brief%20Filed.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The 2018 Mississippi Gestational Age Act banning most abortions after the 15th week of pregnancy, when the child in utero is known to suffer pain from common abortion procedures, is fully consistent with International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights ratified by the United States, which presumptively protects the right to life of children in the womb (hereinafter, the “Covenant”), International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, Dec. 16, 1966, S. EXEC. DOC. E, 95-2 (1978), 999 U.N.T.S. 171 (entered into force Mar. 23, 1976), as well as other human rights commitments and obligations of the United States. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">A careful reading of the text and history of the Covenant reveals that children in the womb were never excluded from the right to life, and that, more broadly, international law does not establish a human right to abortion in any circumstance, either through treaty obligation or by custom....<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Treaty law is the supreme Law of the Land and the Court has a constitutional responsibility to declare what the law is. The Court should make a finding of law that children in the womb are not excluded from the right to life under the Covenant, given the plain meaning of the text of the Covenant when it was ratified by the U.S., the interpretation of the Covenant by the Executive branch, and its implementation by other States who are party to the treaty, therefore, laws to protect children in the womb from being arbitrarily deprived of their right to life, regardless of viability, are consistent with the international human rights obligations of the United States. <br />
<br />
The Court should nonetheless say something substantive on the topic of the status of the unborn in international human rights law without upsetting honest political debates that are legitimately carried out through democratic institutions. The Court should do this for prudential reasons, including that of shielding itself from accusations that it is avoiding foundational human rights questions and to preempt interference from international actors and foreign powers in U.S. domestic legal and political disputes.<br />
<br />
==41 Concerned Women for America==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185093/20210728111520674_No19-1392_CWA_Diaz_Amicusbrief.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
Mississippi Should Be Free To Make Reasonable Determinations About Abortion Policy That Place A Higher Value On The Life Of Mothers And Their Unborn Children ............................................................ 4 II. <br />
<br />
The Court Has Undervalued The State’s Interest In Women’s Health By Failing To Give Proper Weight To The Physical, Psychological, And Emotional Harms Abortion Can Have On Women’s Lives .. <br />
<br />
e. The states should have broad discretion in addressing the interests at play in the abortion context. Neither viability nor any other framework should constrain the state’s ability to address the ever-changing concerns associated with abortion.<br />
<br />
==42 Foundation for Moral Law, Lutherans for Life==<br />
<br />
[https://storage.googleapis.com/msgsndr/JTZoYWv3fly6hFemb8mU/media/63b73813b7386028645df690.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
neither abortion nor privacy are mentioned in the Constitution, but Justice Blackmun said the right is found in a "penumbra" formed from "emanations" from certain rights in the Bill of Rights. Thomas Jefferson's warning that "The Constitution ... is a 3 mere thing of wax in the hands of the judiciary, which they may twist and shape into any form they please"2 takes on special significance, because a jurisprudence of "penumbras" and "emanations" is entirely subjective and removes the Constitution from any kind of objective scholarship. It is also dangerous, because the same Court that can read into the Constitution rights that simply are not there, can also read out of the Constitution rights that are there, by reading into the Constitution powers that are not there....'''The viability test has no foundation in law, science, history, Biblical or church tradition.''' <br />
<br />
When Justice Blackmun used the viability test in Roe, he presented very little historical, legal, or medical support for that position, because very little support for that position exists. ...<br />
<br />
In fact, throughout history viability has seldom if ever been considered the beginning of human life. <span style="color:red">Much of our Western legal tradition has been shaped by the Bible. On October 4, 1982, Congress passed Public Law 97-280, declaring 1983 the “Year of the Bible,” and the President signed the bill into law. The opening clause of the bill is: “Whereas Biblical teachings inspired concepts of civil government that are contained in our Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of the United States; . . .” Joshua Berman, Senior Editor at Bar-Ilan University, in his 2008 book Created Equal: How the Bible Broke with Ancient Political Thought, contends that the Pentateuch is the world's first model of a society in which politics and economics embrace egalitarian ideals. Berman states flatly: If there was one truth the ancients held to be self-evident it was that all men were not created equal. If we maintain today that, in fact, they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights, then it is because we have inherited as part of our cultural heritage notions of equality that were deeply entrenched in the ancient passages of the Pentateuch.6 <br />
<br />
6 Joshua Berman, Created Equal: How the Bible Broke with Ancient Political Thought (Oxford 2008) 175, See also John Marshall Gest, The Influence of Biblical Texts Upon English Law, an address delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa and Sigma xi Societies of the University of Pennsylvania June 14, 1910, https://scholarship.law.upenn.edu quoting Sir Francis Bacon: “The law of England is not taken out of Amadis de Gaul, nor the Book of Palmerin, but out of the Scripture, of the laws of the Romans and the Grecians.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">A. The Bible on Pre-born Children <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Bible treats the preborn child as a living human being. When Elizabeth, the mother of John the Baptist, came into the presence of Mary who was carrying Jesus in her womb, Elizabeth declared that “the babe leaped in my womb for joy” (Luke 1:44). That doesn’t sound like a fetus or fertilized egg; that sounds like a child! It reminds us of Rebekah, of whom we read, “And the children struggled within her . . . .” (Genesis 25:21-26). These preborn children displayed traits that would follow them most of their lives. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The original languages used in these accounts make no distinction between born and preborn children. Of all of the Greek words used for child, brephos connotes a baby or very small child. That’s the word attributed to Elizabeth: “The brephos leaped in my womb for joy.” We see the same word in the next chapter: “Ye shall find the brephos wrapped in swaddling clothes, lying in a manger.” And in II Timothy 3:15 Paul uses the same word: “From a brephos thou hast known the holy Scriptures . . . .” The same word is used for a child in the womb, a child newly born, and a child sometime after birth. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Another Greek word used for “son” is huios. In Luke 1:36 the angel tells Mary, “And, behold, thy cousin, Elizabeth, she hath also conceived a huios.” And the angel tells Mary in Luke 1:31, “Thou shat conceive in thy womb, and bring forth a huios.” Two verbs, “conceive” and “bring forth,” with the same direct object, a “son” or huios. And years later, when Jesus is a young man, God the Father says to Him, “Thou art my beloved huios” (Luke 5:22). Again, the same Greek word used for a preborn child, a newborn child, and a young man. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The same is true of the Old Testament Hebrew. The same word used for the preborn children in Rebekah’s womb, bne, is also used for Ishmael when he is 13 years old (Genesis 17:25) and for Noah’s adult sons (Genesis 9:19). And Job says in his anguish, “Let the day perish wherein I was born, and the night in which it was said, There is a man child (gehver) conceived” (Job 3:3). The Old Testament uses gehver 65 times, and usually it is simply translated “man.” Job 3:3 could be accurately translated, “There is a man conceived.” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The biblical authors identify themselves with the preborn child. In Psalm 139:13 David says, “Thou hast covered me in my mother’s womb.” Isaiah says, “The Lord hath called me from the womb” (49:1), and in Jeremiah 1:5 we read, “before thou camest forth out of the womb I sanctified thee, and I ordained thee a prophet unto the nations.” They don’t say “the fetus that became me;” that person in the womb is “me.” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Job wishes he could have died before he was born: “Wherefore then hast thou brought me forth out of the womb? Oh that I had given up the ghost, and no eye had seen me!” (10:18) How can the preborn child die if he or she is not alive? <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">And David says, “Behold, I was shapen in iniquity, and in sin did my mother conceive me.” (Psalm 51:5) There was nothing sinful about the act of David’s conception; this passage establishes that the preborn child has a sinful nature. How can a non-person have a sinful nature? And while other verses establish the child’s personhood before birth, this passage shows his or her humanity all the way back to conception! <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Clearly the Bible, especially in its original languages, treats the preborn child the same as a child already born. The Bible knows nothing about “potential human beings;” to the authors of Scripture, there are only human beings with potential. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Some will argue that, because Genesis 2:7 says, “God breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul,” man doesn’t really become human until he takes that first breath. Amici believe this is a mistaken interpretation of Scripture.''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">(1) Genesis 2:7 is not normative about how and when human life begins. Adam was never a preborn child; he was formed out of the dust of the ground as a mature adult human being. No one else was formed out of the dust of the ground; even Eve was formed out of Adam’s rib, and we never read that God breathed the breath of life into her nostrils or those of anyone else. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">(2) Even if we were to conclude that without the “breath of life” we are not fully human, the preborn child takes in oxygen through a placenta. Birth constitutes a dramatic change of environment coupled with the ability to breathe for oneself; other than that birth is simply one more step on the road to maturity. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">So the Bible, taken as a whole, teaches that the preborn child is a living human being. Viability does not even enter the picture in determining the beginning of personhood. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">B. . Church Tradition on Pre-Born Children <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Church tradition has also been instrumental in the formation of Western law.7 For this reason, and because Justice Blackmun in Roe, 410 U.S. at 130, and Justice Stevens in his Webster dissent, 492 U.S. at 567-69, cited Catholic Church teaching to justify Roe v. Wade, Amici will briefly survey church history and its effect on Western law. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Didache, or Teaching of the Twelve Apostles, a manual of instruction dating possibly as early as 50 A.D. or possibly in the second or third centuries,8 commanded, "You shall not murder a child by abortion nor kill that which is born."9 The Church Father Tertullian, writing around 197 A.D., cited <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">7 Harold J. Berman, Law and Revolution: The Formation of the Western Legal Tradition (Cambridge, MA, 1983); John Eidsmoe, Historical and Theological Foundations of Law, 3 Vols. (Nordskog 2017) 8 Early Christian Writings, "Didache," www.earlychristianwritings. com/ didache.html. 9 Id., Roberts-Donaldson English Translation.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">extensively from Old Testament and New Testament Scriptures.10 He also noted that Hippocrates, Asciepiades, Erasistratus, Herophius, and Soranos, "all of them certain that a living being had been conceived and so deploring the most unhappy infancy of one of this kind who had first to be killed list a live woman being rent apart.”11 St. Hippolytus, writing around 228 A.D., condemned those who resorted to drugs " so to expel what was being conceived on account of their not wishing to have a child," declaring them guilty of "adultery and murder at the same time."12 And St. Basil wrote in his First Canonical Letter, <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The woman who purposely destroys her unborn child is guilty of murder. With us there is no nice enquiry as to its being formed or unformed. In this case it is not only the being about to be born who is vindicated, but the woman in her attack upon herself, because in most cases women who make such attempts die. the destruction of the embryo is an additional crime, a second murder, at all events, if we regard it as done with intent.13<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">10 Scriptures cited by Tertullian include Jeremiah 1:5; Psalm 139:15; Luke 1:41-42. 11 He declared firmly, “It is not permissible for us to destroy the seed by means of illicit manslaughter once it has been conceived in the womb, so long as blood remains in the person.” 12 Hyppolytus, circa 228. A.D.; quoted in The Ante-Nicene Fathers: The Writings of the Fathers Down to A.D. 325, ed. Alexander Roberts, Sir James Donaldson, (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1903) V:131. 13 10 Basil (c. 330-379 A.D.), reprinted in A Select Library of Post-Nicene Fathers of the Christian Church, Second Series, ed. Philip Schaff and Henry Wace (New York: The Christian Literature Company, 1895) VIII:225. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Canon Law of the Roman Catholic Church provides , "A person who procures a completed abortion incurs a latae sententiae [automatic] excommunication."14 The Canon Law developed in the early centuries of the Christian Church out of early Church documents such as the Didache and was based on and interacted with the Scriptures, Roman and Greek Law, Byzantine Law, the Justinian Code, the decrees of emperors, and other sacred and secular legal documents.15 The above citation from the Didache is evidence that the prohibition against abortion was part of the Canon Law from the beginning and consistently thereafter. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">No wonder Orthodox scholar Fr. Alexander F.C. Webster wrote that abortion “is one of only several moral issues on which not one dissenting opinion has ever been expressed by the Church Fathers.”16 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">14 Code of Canon Law, Title VI, Delicts Against Human Life and Freedom, Canon 1398, www.vatican.va/archive/ENG1104/_P57.HTM. 15 Kenneth Pennington, A Short History of the Canon Law from Apostolic Times to 1917, http://faculty.cua.edu/pennington /Canon%20Law/ ShortHistoryCanonLaw.htm, pp. 2, 3, 7, 10, 16, 19, 21, 25-26, 32, 33-37, 41, 44, 59, 61. Although, as Pennington notes at 74, Martin Luther initially rejected the Canon Law, as his thinking developed he came to appreciate the value of Roman Catholic Canon Law legal scholarship and concluded that that scholarship should be applied to the civil law and the common law; see John Witte, Jr., Law and Protestantism: The Legal Teachings of the Lutheran Reformation 55-85 (Cambridge University Press, 2002); John Eidsmoe, Historical & Theological Foundations of Law (American Vision 2012) III:983-84. 16 Dr. James Lamb, Abortion and the Message of the Church: Sin or Salvation? June 30, 2004, http://www.lutheransforlife.org/article/ abortion-and-the#message-of-the-church-sin-or-salvation/ (quoting “An Orthodox Word on Abortion” at 8-9 (Paper delivered at the Consultation on The Church and Abortion, Princeton, 1992)). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Nor was this view limited to the Church Fathers or to the Roman Catholic Tradition. Martin Luther stated his position forcefully: “For those who have no regard for pregnant women and who do not spare the tender fruit are murderers and infanticides.”17 John Calvin was just as clear: “If it seems more horrible to kill a man in his own house than in a field, because a man’s house is his most secure refuge, it ought surely to be deemed more atrocious to destroy the unborn in the womb before it has come to light.”18 And Pennington notes that when King Henry VIII (1491 - 1547 A.D.) separated the Church of England from the Roman Catholic Church, he proclaimed that "he, not the pope, was the source of all canon law henceforward."19 Pennington adds, "Consequently, the Anglican Church preserved the entire body of medieval canon law and converted it into a national legal system."20 <br />
<br />
C. Common Law on Preborn Children <br />
As the common law developed, "quickening" became the test for homicide prosecutions. <br />
<br />
17 Lamb, supra note 11 (quoting What Luther Says: An anthology, compiled by Ewald M. Plass (St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1959), Vol. 2, NO. 2826 at 905). 18 Lamb, supra note 11 (quoting Commentaries on the Four Last Books of Moses at 41-42 (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1950)). 19 Pennington, supra note 12, at 64. 20 Id. <br />
Quickening is different from viability; quickening is the time when the mother first feels the child move within her. One could be convicted of homicide for the killing of an unborn child, only if quickening had already taken place. <br />
<br />
But this common law rule did not mean that the child became a person only at quickening or that there was a right to abortion before quickening. Rather, it was a procedural matter of proof. '''One can be guilty of homicide only if the homicide victim was alive at the time of the alleged killing, and at that stage in the development of the common law, medical science had no way of proving the child was alive until the mother had felt the child move within her.'''21 <br />
<br />
For nearly half a century, this nation has been saddled with an abortion jurisprudence that has no foundation in the Constitution, no foundation in medical science, and no foundation in American or Biblical history and tradition, a jurisprudence that has resulted in an estimated 62,994,587 abortions since 1973 <br />
<br />
See www.abortioncounters.com and Steven Ertelt 62,502,904 Babies Have Been Killed by Abortion Since Roe v. Wade in 1973 (2021) available at https://www.lifenews.com/2021/01/22/62502904<br />
<br />
==43 Americans United for Life==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185211/20210729102214787_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20Americans%20United%20for%20Life.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
(Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey are not "settled precedents" worthy of being retained under the doctrine of "Stare Decisis".)<br />
<br />
Roe is radically unsettled for additional reasons. It has not received the acquiescence of Justices or lower court judges. Roe was wrongly decided and poorly reasoned. Numerous adjudicative errors during the original deliberations—especially the absence of any evidentiary record—have contributed to making Roe unworkable. It has been the subject of persistent judicial and scholarly criticism. There is a constant search for a constitutional rationale for Roe, and the Court has yet to give a reasoned justification for the viability rule. See Randy Beck, Gonzales, Casey and the Viability Rule, 103 Nw. U. L. Rev. 249 (2009). 3 <br />
<br />
Casey is unsettled by its failure to ground the abortion right in the Constitution, by an ambiguous standard of review that is unworkable, by conflicting precedents that have “defied consistent application” by the lower courts, and by persistent judicial and scholarly criticism. Payne v. Tennessee, 501 U.S. 808, 828–830 (1991). Politics aside, reconsidering Roe and Casey does not involve uprooting a stable, settled feature of the legal landscape. Because they are radically unsettled, Roe and Casey contradict the stare decisis values of consistency, dependability, and predictability and are entitled to minimal stare decisis respect. <br />
<br />
==44 Ethics and Public Policy Center==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185234/20210729114228086_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20Ethics%20and%20Public%20Policy%20Center.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
C. Factual Developments Have Also Undermined Roe and Casey’s Reasoning. Apart from these legal developments, “facts have so changed, or come to be seen so differently” since Roe and Casey were decided as to have significantly sapped those decisions of whatever residual force they might be thought to have. Casey, 505 U.S. at 855. <br />
Roe recognized that whether “life begins at conception and is present throughout pregnancy” was of pivotal importance, but it asserted that “at this point 19 in the development of man’s knowledge” medical science had been “unable to arrive at any consensus” on the issue. 410 U.S. at 159. Roe thus proceeded on the assumption that life “as we recognize it” “does not begin until live birth.” Id. at 160-61. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">This “unsupported empirical assumption” has been significantly undermined by subsequent developments. See Janus, 138 S. Ct. at 2483. It is now clear that an unborn fetus is not merely “potential life,” but is a “a living organism while within the womb, whether or not it is viable outside the womb.” Gonzales, 550 U.S. at 147. As a recent, exhaustive review of the scientific literature concludes, “[t]he scientific evidence clearly indicates that a one-cell human organism, the zygote, forms immediately at fusion of sperm and egg. From a scientific perspective, this single cell is inarguably a complete and living organism; i.e. a member of the human species at the earliest stage of natural development.” Maureen L. Condic, When Does Human Life Begin? The Scientific Evidence and Terminology Revisited, 8 U. ST. THOMAS J.L. & PUB. POL’Y 44, 70 (2013); see also Hana R. Marsden et al., Model systems for membrane fusion, 40 CHEM. SOC’Y REV. 1572, 1572 (2011) (“The fusion of sperm and egg membranes initiates the life of a sexually reproducing organism.”); Enrica Bianchi et al., Juno is the egg Izumo receptor and is essential for mammalian fertilization, 24 NATURE 483, 483 (2014) (“Fertilization occurs when sperm and egg recognize each other and fuse to form a new, genetically distinct organism.”). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Further, in 1973—and, to some extent, even in 1992—it was widely assumed that an unborn human being had no ability to sense and experience pain. Stuart W.G. Derbyshire & John C. Bockmann, Reconsidering fetal pain, 46 J. MED. ETHICS 3, 3 (2020). Today, by contrast, there is a growing scientific consensus that the unborn can feel pain as early as 12 weeks gestation. Id. at 6; see also American College of Pediatricians, Fetal Pain: What is the Scientific Evidence? at 1, 7 (2021), https://acpeds.org/assets/Fetal-Pain-Position-Statement-(2).pdf (concluding that “a large body of scientific evidence demonstrates that painful or noxious stimulation adversely affects immature human beings, both before and after birth,” “as early as 12 weeks gestation (and possibly earlier)”). These scientific advances further undermine Roe’s underpinnings.<br />
<br />
==45 Pennsylvania Pro-Life Federation==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185227/20210729111948208_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20the%20Pennsylvania%20Pro-Life%20Federation.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
Some of the subjects covered: <br />
I. THERE ARE TWO PATIENTS THAT MUST BE CARED FOR IN MODERN OBSTETRICAL PRACTICE, AND IT IS RARE THAT AN ABORTION WOULD BE NEEDED TO MANAGE A PREGNANCY SUCCESSFULLY <br />
<br />
II. II. CLAIMS THAT ELECTIVE ABORTIONS MUST BE ALLOWED BECAUSE ABORTION IS STATISTICALLY SAFER THAN CHILDBIRTH SHOULD BE REJECTED<br />
<br />
III. A. The Risk of Dying from Abortion or Childbirth Is Negligible<br />
<br />
IV. B. Although Abortion Is a Medical Procedure, It Is Rarely a Medical Decision<br />
<br />
V. C. Discussing Maternal Mortality Rates in Relation to Elective Abortion Has No Practical Relevance<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In modern obstetrical practice, the physician treats two patients—the mother and her unborn baby—and strives to maximize and protect the health and well-being of both. Good medical practice requires this. It is rare that the interests of one of these patients, from a medical standpoint, conflicts with the other. Even in those instances where the mother’s condition may place her physical health at greater risk, the pregnancy can generally be managed satisfactorily with a successful outcome for both the mother and baby. In those very rare circumstances when this cannot be done, laws like Mississippi’s allow pregnancy terminations to take place in order to protect the mother. <br />
<br />
Claims that abortion must be allowed on demand because abortion is statistically safer than childbirth should be rejected. The relative risk of death is negligible in both abortion and childbirth. Moreover, although abortion is a medical procedure, it is rarely a medical decision. In the vast majority of cases, abortions are sought for socio-economic reasons; not for medical reasons. Therefore, discussing maternal mortality in relation to elective abortion simply is not relevant in any practical or meaningful sense. <br />
<br />
Contrary to what some suggest, Roe was not a significant cause of reduced maternal mortality and morbidity from abortion. Such reductions correspond more closely with medical advances such as the development of effective antibiotics to manage infections and advances in medical technology allowing for blood transfusions and better administration of anesthesia. <br />
<br />
These medical advances were unrelated to the legalization of abortion, having occurred well before Roe was handed down. So, overturning Roe will not 3 affect those advances, nor will it preclude the application of future medical advances in the treatment of pregnant women and an overall reduction in maternal mortality from all causes. <br />
<br />
Roe was a radical decision that overrode the legislative judgments of all 50 states. It was based on a flawed understanding of the humanity of the unborn child and views of obstetrical practice that are outdated because they fail to treat unborn children as second patients in pregnancy. Additionally, it may have been based on false claims regarding the number of women supposedly dying from illegal abortion. It should be overturned. <br />
<br />
The impression frequently was given (and still is) that childbirth is extremely risky and that women need abortion because it is much safer than childbirth. Likewise, based on made up and grossly inflated numbers of maternal deaths prior to Roe, it has been erroneously suggested that Roe was the reason for a dramatic reduction in maternal mortality from abortion, and that its overturn would return the country to a time when “thousands” of women died from “back-alley” abortions. None of this is true. <br />
<br />
I. THERE ARE TWO PATIENTS THAT MUST BE CARED FOR IN MODERN OBSTETRICAL PRACTICE, AND IT IS RARE THAT AN ABORTION WOULD BE NEEDED TO MANAGE A PREGNANCY SUCCESSFULLY. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">1. Basic medical texts, for decades, have made it clear that there are two patients that must be cared for in modern obstetrical practice. For example, in explaining the need for significant revisions to the 1980 edition of Williams Obstetrics, the authors stated: <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Happily, we have entered an era in which the fetus can be rightfully considered and treated as our second patient. . . Fetal diagnosis and therapy have now emerged as legitimate tools the obstetrician must possess. Moreover, the number of tools the obstetrician can employ to address the needs of the fetus increases each year. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Jack A. Pritchard & Paul C. MacDonald, Williams Obstetrics, vii (16th Ed. 1980) (emphasis supplied). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">A later edition made it even more obvious that obstetricians must be cognizant of the unborn baby as a separate entity when managing a pregnancy. It stated: Obstetrics is an unusual specialty of medicine. Practitioners of this art and science must be concerned simultaneously with the lives and well-being of two persons; indeed, the lives of two who are interwoven. F. Gary Cunningham, et al., Williams Obstetrics, vii (18th ed. 1989). In a chapter entitled “Techniques to Evaluate Fetal Health,” it was stated: <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Until relatively recently, the intrauterine sanctuary of the fetus was held to be inviolate. The mother was the patient to be cared for; the fetus was but another albeit transient, maternal organ. . . Indeed, the fetus is no longer regarded as a maternal appendage. . . . Instead, the fetus has achieved the status of the second patient, a patient who usually faces much greater risks of serious morbidity and mortality than does the mother. <br />
*** <br />
<span style="color:red">The many advances in diagnosis and treatment that now clearly establish the fetus as a patient have also contributed remarkably to legal considerations involving the fetus. Fetal legal rights are emerging; for example, in some courts, the fetus has been allowed to file suit. Id at 277. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Obstetric ultrasound technology was in its infancy at the time of Roe, and was not widely used in the United States until well into the 1970’s. Malcolm Nicolson & John E.E. Fleming, Imaging and Imagining the Fetus 233 (2013). It has since given rise to whole new fields of medicine and top pediatric hospitals across the country regularly perform surgery on this second patient.2 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Abortion proponents disregard these basic facts when they ignore the existence of the second patient within the womb and suggest that unborn children are just appendages of the mother to be discarded upon her request. In so doing, they suggest a return to an outmoded and discredited approach to pregnancy and obstetrical practice. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">2. It is rare that the interests of one of these patients, from a medical standpoint, conflicts with the other. And, on those rare occasions when it does, the pregnancy can generally be successfully managed. So, medically speaking, abortion is almost never needed to manage a pregnancy. Honest abortion proponents long ago admitted to the overall safety of pregnancy and the lack of a need for abortion for medical reasons. <br />
<br />
In 1956, when maternal mortality rates were much higher than today,3 the namesake of Planned <br />
<br />
2 See e.g., the website of Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia: “Today, fetal therapy is recognized as one of the most promising fields in pediatric medicine, and prenatal surgery is becoming an option for a growing number of babies with birth defects.” Fetal Surgery, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia., https://www.chop.edu/treatments/fetal-surgery (last visited July 26, 2021). <br />
3 The maternal death rate in 1946 was 11.6/10,000 (or 116/100,000) and, by 1956, had declined to 4.0/10,000 (or <br />
<br />
Parenthood’s Guttmacher Institute highlighted the overall safety of pregnancy and childbirth. He stated that in more than 30 years of obstetrical practice, during which he had delivered about 6,000 babies, he had seen only 3 patients die—two from cancer and one from a blood clot. He stated that “[p]regnancy and labor have little to do with any of the three.” A.F. Guttmacher, Pregnancy and Birth 271 (1956). <br />
<br />
Likewise, in a paper published in 1960, Dr. Mary Calderone, then Medical Director of Planned Parenthood Federation of America, admitted: “medically speaking, that is, from the point of view of diseases of the various systems, cardiac, genitourinary, and so on, it is hardly ever necessary today to consider the life a mother as threatened by pregnancy.” Mary S. Calderone, Illegal Abortion as a Public Health Problem, 50 Am. J. Pub. Health 948 (1960) (“Illegal Abortion”). <br />
<br />
Obstetrics texts from the seventies also confirm the safety of pregnancy and childbirth and the ability to manage it successfully without abortion. One such textbook states: “abortion for purely medical reasons, i.e., vascular, renal or heart disease and so forth is rarely indicated in current medical practice.” Duncan E. Reid, et al., Principles in <br />
<br />
40/100,000). Milton C. Klein & Jacob Clahr, Factors in the Decline of Maternal Mortality, 168 JAMA 237 (1958) (“Factors”). <br />
<br />
Management of Human Reproduction 274 (1972). See also, J.P. Greenhill & Emanuel A. Friedman, Biological Principles in Modern Practice of Obstetrics 385 (1974) (noting that the number of induced abortions “on demand” had been rising astronomically, “while medical reasons appear to be almost vanishing” due to improved medical therapies). <br />
<br />
A. The Risk of Dying from Abortion or Childbirth Is Negligible. Claiming that abortion is statistically safer than childbirth makes a point. But, it is a point that has no practical significance. Assuming, arguendo, that the data upon which these claims rely is accurate, the risk of dying from either abortion or childbirth is still negligible. For example, comparing the worst-case scenario for childbirth (about 20/100,0000) and the best-case scenario for abortion (about 1/100,000), the risk of dying in childbirth is (.00020 or (.02%)) and the risk of dying in abortion is (.00001 or (.001%). In other words, your chance of surviving childbirth is 99.99980% and your chance of surviving abortion is 99.99999%. In either case, it is just the difference of a fraction of a fraction of 1 percent and is akin to comparing a 0% risk of dying with a 0% risk of dying. <br />
<br />
….Since very few women decide to have abortions because they wish to avoid risks to their physical health, it is disingenuous to suggest that abortion must be kept available on demand because it is statistically “safer” for women. This simply is not a consideration that informs their decisions. Nor should it be, given the exceedingly low rate of mortality from either course of action. <br />
<br />
….Roe was a radical decision that overrode the considered judgments of the legislatures in all 50 states. It was based on outmoded views of the humanity of the unborn child, outdated views of obstetrical practice (which failed to treat the baby within the womb as a second patient) and, arguably, on false claims regarding the number of women supposedly dying from illegal abortion.<br />
<br />
==46 Family Research Council==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185324/20210729150133457_Dobbs%20Amicus%20Proofs_THB%20Clean.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
The viability rule also removes states’ ability to adapt abortion regulations to advances in science and medicine. See MKB Mgmt. Corp. v. Stenehjem, 795 F.3d 768, 774 (8th Cir. 2015) (Shepherd, J.) (“By taking this decision away from the states, the Court has also removed the states’ ability to account for advances in medical and scientific technology [that] have greatly expanded our knowledge of prenatal life.”) (internal citations omitted). Courts are not “suited to make the necessary factual judgments” about viability and the “medical” practice of abortion. Akron I, 462 U.S. at 458 (O’Connor, J., dissenting). <br />
<br />
That is because <span style="color:red">“science … progress[es] even though [this] Court averts its eyes,” and legislatures are most capable of debating and responding to that progress. McCorvey v. Hill, 385 F.3d 846, 853-54 (2004) (Jones, J., concurring). The viability rule, however, forces courts to “pretend to act as science review boards,” removing the regulation of abortion from the democratic process. Akron I, 462 U.S. at 458 (O’Connor, J., dissenting). This rule has “rendered basic abortion policy beyond the power of our … representative government [which] may not meaningfully debate” abortion-related scientific and medical advances. McCorvey, 385 F.3d at 852. The “perverse result” of the “constitutional adjudication of] this fundamental social policy … is that … facts no longer matter.” Id. That cannot be the rule. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Similarly, in tort law, courts in thirty states have either “expressly or impliedly rejected viability as an appropriate cutoff point for determining liability for nonfatal prenatal injuries.” Linton, supra, 146. For wrongful death, forty-three states “now allow recovery … for prenatal injuries resulting in stillbirth … [and] the modern trend, supported by legislative reform, is toward abolishing any viability (or other gestational) requirement.” Id. at 323-24. <br />
<br />
See also W. Page Keeton et al., Prosser and Keeton on the Law of Torts § 55, at 369 (5th ed. 1984) (stating viability is “arbitrary” because it “of course does not affect the question of the legal existence of the unborn, and therefore of the defendant’s duty, and it is a most unsatisfactory criterion, since it is a relative matter.”). <br />
<br />
Paul Benjamin Linton, The Legal Status of the Unborn Child Under State Law, 6 U. St. Thomas J.L. & Pub. Pol’y 323-24 (2011) <br />
<br />
Petitioners ask the Court to overrule Roe and Casey because it cannot reconcile those cases with more recent precedent and with scientific advancements showing a compelling state interest in fetal life far earlier than those cases suggest <br />
<br />
The viability line therefore tends to afford greater protection to unborn children of the wealthy. See Beck, Gonzales at 259. Those unborn children whose parents are either closer to advanced medical technology or can afford to travel to receive high�quality medical care would be protected from abortion sooner than those children from poorer families. If, however, viability is based on the best technology currently in use, but unavailable to any particular woman, then “the [viability] rule is unprincipled for a different reason[,]” namely “caus[ing] the constitutional status of some fetuses to turn on unattainable hypothetical conditions, rather than real-world prospects for survival.” Id. Neither is a workable line. <br />
<br />
Finally, viability varies based on the competence and optimism of the doctor responsible for the evaluation. An incompetent doctor may place viability too late (or early). An overly pessimistic or otherwise ideological doctor may set the threshold too high. The 32 average patient hardly has the ability to question these determinations. Moreover, this deference to “disputable medical judgments becomes particularly problematic when the doctor has financial, legal, or ideological interests at stake in the determination.” Id. at 260. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">These factors cannot be “the sole criterion for deciding whether [a] child will live or die.” Box, 139 S. Ct. at 1783 (Thomas, J., concurring). <br />
<br />
In short, the viability rule is and always has been arbitrary and unworkable. The Court should no longer retain it <br />
<br />
==47 Human Coalition Action and Students for Life of America==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185195/20210729093947083_Amicus%20Brief%20of%20Human%20Coalition%20Action%20and%20Students%20for%20Life%20of%20America%20in%20Support%20of%20Petitioners%20File.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
The Supreme Court’s venerable duty to faithfully uphold the Constitution requires abrogating errant precedents, rather than reaffirming or extending them<br />
<br />
Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania v. Casey categorically fall under the weakest echelon of stare decisis. <br />
<br />
Developments have eroded the Court’s assumptions and the decisions which rested on them—the considerable cost to following them far outweighs the benefit.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Scientific and technological developments in the last 50 years reveal Roe and Casey’s fundamental error, warranting full reconsideration.<br />
<br />
Roe and Casey initiated considerable undesirable consequences in all facets of society, unmasking the decisions as egregiously wrong.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Abortion’s human death toll causes unsustainable population decline.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Abortion continues to fulfill eugenicists’ goals by eliminating disproportional amounts of minority populations <br />
<br />
Abortion is fraught with abuse by criminal actors. <br />
<br />
The unregulated abortion industry benefits from exemptions not provided to others, leading to continual scandal, malpractice, and abuse.<br />
<br />
Abortion commodifies humans—pregnant mothers and their unborn children. <br />
<br />
Continued fidelity to Roe and Casey is extraordinarily disruptive to a functioning and healthy society. <br />
<br />
Purported reliance interests on abortion are unnecessary <br />
<br />
The ever-increasing knowledge we have about the development of the child in the womb, its humanity, and life affirm Roe/Casey were decided on erroneous grounds. <span style="color:red">Abortion is always fraught with moral and ethical concerns as it always ends a vulnerable innocent human life, at any phase of development.33 The following scientific facts were equally true in 1973 and 1992 as in 2021 but were unknown or ignored by the Court. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Since Roe and Casey, medical and technological developments, including the developments of the sonogram and in vitro fertilization, reinforced the conclusion that the life of an individual human being begins at conception.34 The widespread clinical use of ultrasound, a technological development that the Roe Court could not anticipate, came to the commercial market after Roe and substantially affected medical practice and public opinion.35 Recently, biologists reached the consensus that human life begins at conception—95% of biologists agree.36 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">We now know that from the moment of conception, unborn children possess the seven characteristics that define life: responsiveness to the environment, growth and change, the ability to reproduce, a regulated metabolism and oxygen flow, maintaining homeostasis (the ability to regulate internal bodily functions in response to external changes), composed of cells, and the capacity to pass traits onto offspring—in this case, human offspring.37 The Department of Genetics at Mayo Clinic confirmed, “[b]y all the criteria of modern molecular biology, life is present from the moment of conception.”38 <br />
<br />
<small><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;35 Id. at 213; Malcolm Nicolson & John Fleming, Imaging and Imagining The Fetus: The Development of Obstetric Ultrasound 1–7 (2013) (“Ultrasonic imaging has also had a momentous social impact because it can visualize the fetus. Fifty years ago, the unborn human being was hidden, enveloped within the female abdomen, away from the medical gaze . . . . [T]he scanner had become widely deployed within the British hospital system by 1975 . . . . By the late 1970s, the ultrasound scanner had become a medical white good, a standardized commodity in a mass marketplace.”). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;36 Jacobs, S. A., Biologists’ Consensus on ‘When Life Begins’, U. OF C. DEP’T OF COMP. HUMAN DEVELOP. (2018). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;37 Wilkin, Douglas, and Niamh Gray-Wilson, Characteristics of Life, CK-12 Foundation. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;38 Liberty University, The Genetic Code; Principles and Choices, When Does Human Life Begin?, available at www.principlesandchoices.com/quick-code-library/pcs344 (current as of July 27, 2021). </small><br />
<br />
Similarly, the Unborn Victims of Violence Act of 1999 treats injury or death to an unborn child caused by a third party while committing a federal offense against the mother as a separate federal crime.44 <br />
<br />
These developments are emblematic of what the Court failed to acknowledge 48 years ago, a fetus in the womb is a distinct living human person—simply a very small one. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Court relied on central medical and scientific fallacies when rendering Roe and Casey. Texas’ brief presented medically accurate and detailed information about the developing child in the womb, including the humanity and rights of the unborn child.45 But Roe’s decision ignored Texas’ arguments, refusing to “resolve the difficult question of when life begins.”46 Instead, the Roe and Casey Courts inaccurately referred to unborn in the womb as “a fetus that may become a child,” and “potential life”.47<br />
<br />
<small><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;44 National Conference of State Legislatures, State Laws on Fetal Homicide and Penalty-Enhancement for Crimes Against Pregnant Women, available at www.ncsl.org/research/health/fetal-homicide-state-laws.aspx (current as of July 27, 2021). <br />
<span style="color:red"><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;45 Roe v. Henry Wade Dist. Atty. of Dallas Co., Texas, 1971 WL 134281 (U.S.), 29 (U.S., 2004)(arguing “The fetus implanted in the uterine wall deserves respect as a human life….It is alive because it has the ability to reproduce dying cells. It is human because it can be distinguished from other non-human species, and once implanted in the uterine wall it requires only nutrition and time to develop into one of us.”). </span><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;46 Roe, 410 U.S. at 159. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;47 Id. at 113; Casey, 505 U.S. at 875 and 876 </small><br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Both principal holdings hinged on refusing to acknowledge the significance of the interests of human life in the womb.48 This was an egregious error. The matter of when life begins is no longer a philosophic discussion “depending on one’s beliefs”49 but is instead a scientific fact.50 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Significant developments about the humanity of the child in the womb warrant reconsideration of fateful abortion decisions and their underpinnings. Unlike Roe and Casey, Dobbs presents this Court with the opportunity to consider the full scientific and factual spectrum about the most overlooked abortion participant—the human child.<br />
<br />
<small><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;48 Shah, Mamta K., Inconsistencies in the Legal Status of an Unborn Child: Recognition of a Fetus as Potential Life, 29 HOFSTRA LAW REVIEW 3, 93.1-93.2 (2001). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;49 Casey, 505 U.S. at 852. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;50 See Jacobs, Biologists’ Consensus on ‘When Life Begins’. </small><br />
<br />
iii. Abortion is fraught with abuse by criminal actors. <br />
<br />
Further, abortion is fraught with abuse by criminal actors. <span style="color:red">The human trafficking industry requires abortion to carry out its horrific activities and hold hundreds of thousands of victims enslaved and working.67 Women report being coerced through emotional and physical duress to have abortions 64% of the time.68 <br />
<br />
Another undesirable consequence of this Court’s abortion doctrine is the negative impact on women’s physical security in childbearing. <span style="color:red">Pregnant women experience an increased rate of assault and battery from unmarried partners.69 Women who pursue <br />
<br />
<small><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;64Congressional Findings, available at https://docs.house.gov/meetings/JU/JU10/20171101/106562/HH RG-115-JU10-Wstate-ParkerS-20171101-SD001.pdf (current as of July 27, 2021). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;65 Id. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;66 Id. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;67 Laura J. Lederer and Christopher A. Wetzel, The Health Consequences of Sex Trafficking and Their Implications for Identifying Victims in Healthcare Facilities, 23 THE ANNALS OF HEALTH LAW 1 (2014). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;68 The Elliot Institute, Forced Abortion in America (2014). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;69 Clarke D. Forsythe & Stephen B. Presser, The Tragic Failure of Roe v. Wade: Why Abortion Should Be Returned to the States, 10 TEX. REV. L. & POL’Y at 100 (2005). 21 </small><br />
<br />
surrogacy have been subjected to contracts that require them to abort and, or to demands to abort.70 A growing body of international medical data from dozens of countries established long-term risks to women from abortion.71<br />
<br />
==48 Lee J. Strang==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185338/20210729155700355_Dobbs%20Amicus.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
[This excerpt is included in my book as presented below, with my explanations and summary, even though I am not highlighting any of it in red; almost all of it, except for my own text, would be red.]<br />
<br />
The 14th Amendment: “...nor shall any State deprive any '''person''' of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws....”<br />
<br />
Lee J. Strang, in the Amicus Brief he filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'', explains how the correct meaning of “person” in the 14th Amendment is the “natural” one. That is, the meaning that all of us non-lawyers attach to the word. A human being. <br />
<br />
A baby. <br />
<br />
Plural: people. <br />
<br />
The ''normal'' meaning.<br />
<br />
He explains how Justice Blackmun, author of Roe v. Wade, was wrong to assume a legalistic meaning that doesn’t necessarily include ''unborn'' people. But not just ''that'' Blackmun was wrong, but ''how'' he got wrong. <br />
<br />
And not just Blackmun, but even Justice Scalia, the hero of conservatives. <br />
<br />
And even Judge Bork, the famous “originalist” nominated to the Supreme Court by President Reagan in 1987 but crucified by the Democrat-controlled Senate to the degree that his name was added to dictionaries. (https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/bork transitive verb - US politics, informal: to attack or defeat (a nominee or candidate for public office) unfairly through an organized campaign of harsh public criticism or vilification. “In any event, seeing one of their own being borked may itself energize the conservative base, even beyond what a conservative nomination would do.” — <br />
<br />
Mark Tushnet. “In 1987, conservative judge Robert Bork endured such virulent criticism … that to this day, a nominee sidelined by activists is said to have been ‘borked.’ ”— <br />
Claire Suddath )<br />
<br />
You ask, “What other definition matters, but this ‘natural’ meaning?”<br />
If you have to ask, you obviously are not a lawyer.<br />
<br />
Lawyers understand that when ''Roe v. Wade'' said “if Texas’ suggestion of personhood is ever established”, Roe meant, not established by evidence of the fact that babies of humans are humans by modern medicine or by court-recognized fact-finders, but evidence that the meaning of the word “persons” in the 14th Amendment, as understood by those who ratified it, was the way we “naturally” (normally) define “people” as opposed to treating “persons” as a technical legal term for lawyers to load with their own special courtroom meanings.<br />
<br />
According to this thinking, whether we adopt the “natural” or the legalistic meaning depends on which meaning was adopted by lawyers and legislatures when the 14th Amendment was ratified. The fact that some states – including the states that ratified the 14th Amendment – didn’t outlaw abortion from conception until several years ''after'' they ratified the Amendment is taken by this thinking to prove they understood it used the word “person” to mean only those whom ''voters'' chose to treat as human. <br />
<br />
Lee Strang points out logical inconsistencies with this approach, and shows how the “natural” meaning of “persons”, among states back then, better fits the historical record. He says the delay of states in outlawing abortion from conception is accounted for by the delay of the medical profession in understanding early pregnancy, and in explaining its discoveries to the general public. <br />
<br />
My own argument in this book assumes what Strang calls the “natural” meaning of “person”. I point out that any meaning ''but'' “all humans” leaves the Amendment with zero effect. If voters can decide not to include a whole class of people as “persons”, voters in the South would have restored slavery. This “legalistic” interpretation would thus lead to an “absurd result”, a sensible courtroom reason to reject an idiotic interpretation. <br />
<br />
I also point out that ''Roe'' treated “”if Texas’ suggestion of personhood is ever established” as a ''fact'' inquiry, since ''Roe'' later said if doctors and preachers can’t agree, “the judiciary, at this point in the development of man’s knowledge, is unable to speculate” about “when life begins”. By elevating doctors and preachers above themselves as experts on the meaning of “when life begins”, and by anticipating the possibility of later correction by “the development of man’s knowledge”, ''Roe'' rejected treating “when life begins” “as a matter of law” or of special technical courtroom applications, and treated the question as a ''fact'' question. <br />
<br />
Although ''Roe'' treated the question as a technical legalistic inquiry by exploring how past legislatures treated abortion, Roe treated it as a fact question by deferring to the superior expertise of doctors and preachers.<br />
<br />
In case you are screaming “stop talking about ''Roe''! It’s been overturned!” I must remind you that ''Roe’s'' ignorance-necessitated neutrality about “when life begins” is elevated to “scrupulous neutrality” in ''Dobbs''. At least ''Roe'' acknowledged the existence of the question and said it mattered; in fact, that it is dispositive. <br />
<br />
Strang’s study is hardly irrelevant with the passage of ''Dobbs''. We need it now more than ever. We need voters to realize if they think they can vote on who gets to be counted as human, the very right to vote is the least of the rights they will lose! <br />
<br />
Strang’s study is valuable for its ability to reach well meaning legal scholars struggling to honor the Constitution by establishing its “original meaning” but who are confused about what “original meaning” means. <br />
<br />
With that summary, we now go to Strang’s study:<br />
<br />
<blockquote>QUESTION PRESENTED Whether the original meaning of “person” in the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment includes unborn human beings <br />
My view has long been that the strongest originalist reason that supported Justice Blackmun’s conclusion that unborn human beings are not constitutional persons was the historical evidence that some states in 1868 allowed abortion in some instances, because that would mean that state law authorized actions fundamentally inconsistent with the full constitutional personhood of unborn human beings at the same time the [very same] states adopted the Fourteenth Amendment. </blockquote><br />
<br />
<blockquote>Indeed, this reason was cited by Justice Scalia to support his view that all abortion decisions remained with the states. “[S]ome states prohibited [abortion], some states didn’t . . . . It was one of those many things . . . left to democratic choice.”....<br />
See, e.g., Bork, supra (“It is impossible to suppose that the states ratified an Amendment they understood to outlaw all abortions but simultaneously left in place their laws permitting some abortions.”). </blockquote><br />
<br />
<blockquote>Below I describe an alternative view of this historical evidence...the progressive changes in abortion law toward fully protecting unborn human beings were in response to new medical information that caused lawmakers to continually re-align state law to better fit with their (explicit and implicit) natural kind original meaning of “person.” ….This account also explains how abortion law in 1868, which limited but did not eliminate abortion, fits the natural kind meaning of “person” because lawmakers’ knowledge of the status of unborn human beings had not yet informed (all of) them that unborn humans are, in fact, human from conception.</blockquote> <br />
<br />
Strang gives a history of “originalism”, which means “a legal philosophy that the words in documents and especially the U.S. Constitution should be interpreted as they were understood at the time they were written...the constitution does not ‘evolve’. ” <br />
<br />
[The whole rest of this footnote is quotes from Strang’s Amicus, although I am not indenting it.]<br />
...<br />
<br />
Strang says “Originalism in its modern theoretical form first appeared in the early 1970s. At this stage, originalism unselfconsciously focused on the intended meaning and goals of the Constitution’s framers....Many jurists and scholars criticized this early version of originalism. Three criticisms relevant to my argument, which many originalists took on board, include the claims that the framers intent is not the law, [Anton Scalia]..., there was not a single intended framer meaning, [Ronald Dworkin...], and that it was impractical for the legal system to try to uncover intended framer meaning (even if it, in theory, existed). [Paul Brest].... <br />
<br />
In response, most originalist scholars re-articulated originalism as public meaning originalism. [What the provisions of the Constitution meant to the public] Public meaning was a real fact of the world….and the evidence for it was relatively widely available. ...<br />
One [way to interpret words] is general public meaning and another is legal meaning. General public meaning is the meaning of the Constitution’s text that is widely available to and utilized by Americans at the time of ratification. ….<br />
Legal meaning...arises out of legal practice. Lawyers and legal practice are a linguistic subcommunity, and words and phrases have particular meanings and nuances of meaning within legal practice....<br />
<br />
….By contrast with the fundamentally conventional general and legal public meanings just discussed, natural kind meaning corresponds to natural reality, independent of human convention. It is the view that linguistic meaning is attached to something factually true. [In other words, the application of the word “person” to babies changes only as we better understand babies.]<br />
<br />
B. The original meaning of “person” in the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses was the natural kind of human being. <br />
<br />
….both the status quo of abortion law in 1868 and continual changes to that law support the natural kind interpretation. ….<br />
<br />
The Constitution’s text suggests that “person” was the natural kind of human being. [The Constitution used the word “person” as normal people normally define the word.] The text of the Fourteenth Amendment describes a being who [1] can be a citizen, who [2] can have his or her life deprived by the government, and who [3] can be harmed by private violence. U.S. CONST., amend. XIV, § 1. Two of these characteristics occur to human beings both pre- and postnatally; but the important point is that all of these are characteristics of human beings, and unborn human beings are the kind of beings who possess the capacities for those characteristics and will possess the actual characteristics themselves at some point in their lives (assuming normal development).<br />
<br />
The intended meaning of framers and ratifiers of constitutional text is also evidence of the Constitution’s original meaning. This is especially true when the framers and ratifiers publicly state their intentions so that they become aspects of the publicly available context. As many scholars have noted, there is no direct legislative history of the Fourteenth Amendment’s drafters and ratifiers discussing the Amendment’s relationship with abortion. ...However, [they made] numerous statements that the Amendment protects all human beings, regardless of their characteristics, and this supports the natural kind original meaning of “person.” <br />
<br />
For example, Senate Judiciary Committee chairman, Lyman Trumbull, spoke to the Senate about the Thirteenth Amendment and legislation for the Freedmen’s Bureau that he planned to introduce, and tied the Constitution’s protection to all human beings: “any legislation or any public sentiment which deprives any human being in the land of those great rights of liberty will be in defiance of the Constitution.” Cong. Globe, 39th Cong., 1st Sess. 77 (Dec. 19, 1865) (Lymann Trumbull). <br />
<br />
Similarly, a leading Senate sponsor of the Fourteenth Amendment, Jacob Howard, explained the broad scope of the Equal Protection Clause: “It establishes equality before the law, and it gives to the humblest, the poorest, the most despised of the [human] race the same rights and the same protection.” Cong. Globe, 39th Cong., 1st Sess. 2766 (May 23, 1866) (Jacob Howard). <br />
<br />
The “Father” of the Fourteenth Amendment, Representative John Bingham of Ohio, stated in 1867 to the House regarding the word “person” in the Fifth Amendment (whose text he copied for the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process Clause), that “[b]y that great law of ours it is not to be inquired whether a man is ‘free’ . . . ; it is only to be inquired is he a man, and therefore free by the law of that creative energy which breathed into his nostrils the breath of life, and he became a living soul, endowed with the rights of life and liberty.” Cong. Globe, 40th Cong., 1st Sess. 541 (July 9, 1867) (John Bingham). <br />
Like Trumbull and Howard, Bingham equated “person” with “human being.” It is worth noting before proceeding that there is no evidence from the framing and ratification process limiting “person” to born human beings. <br />
<br />
Dictionaries of the time period defined person as the natural kind of human being. For instance, Noah Webster’s American Dictionary of the English Language (1864), defined person as “a living human being; a man, woman, or child; an individual of the human race.” 1 NOAH WEBSTER ET AL., AMERICAN DICTIONARY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE 974 (1864). <br />
<br />
...the strongest argument [against] unborn personhood was the history of abortion regulation, and in particular the fact that some states permitted abortion in some contexts in 1868. [But] Scholars today agree that abortion law changed over time from a position of less-protective to more�protective of unborn human beings.... the basic pattern is widely recognized....<br />
<br />
The common law viewed unborn human beings as human beings and treated abortion upon quickening as a misdemeanor. Sir William Blackstone stated that “[l]ife is an immediate gift of God, a right inherent by nature in every individual and it begins in contemplation of the law as soon as an infant is able to stir in the mother’s womb.” 1 SIR WILLIAM BLACKSTONE, COMMENTARIES ON THE LAWS OF ENGLAND *126 (1776); see also 1 id. *119 (“Natural persons are such as the God of nature formed us.”). Blackstone’s description of unborn humans is as fully human. Blackstone explained that “[t]o kill a child in its mother’s womb, is now no murder, but a great misprison [a serious misdemeanor]: but if the child be born alive, and dieth by reason of the potion or bruises it received in the womb, it is murder.” 4 Id. *198. It is widely agreed by scholars that this protection after quickening in some instances, and after birth in others, was the product of evidentiary concerns over whether a woman was indeed pregnant and the unborn victim was indeed alive at the time of the crime. <br />
<br />
…. Crucial to [proving that] the natural kind meaning of “person” [is its meaning in the 14th Amendment,] state lawmakers progressively restricted abortion because new medical knowledge enabled them with greater clarity to see that unborn human beings were indeed human beings and extended the law’s protection to them. DELLAPENNA, supra at 313. As summarized 19 by the leading historian, Professor Joseph Dellapenna, this period saw “dramatic changes in scientific theories about the nature of conception and the emergence of a new consensus on when a distinct human being began that were built upon the scientific discoveries of the early nineteenth century.” Id. at 282. contemplation of the law as soon as an infant is able to stir in the mother’s womb.” 1 SIR WILLIAM BLACKSTONE, COMMENTARIES ON THE LAWS OF ENGLAND *126 (1776); see also 1 id. *119 (“Natural persons are such as the God of nature formed us.”).... <br />
<br />
By 1868, ...Thirty of the thirty-�seven states in the Union had enacted statutes that restricted abortion. Witherspoon, supra at 33. Of these thirty, twenty-seven state statutes restricted abortion prior to the common law line of quickening. ...<br />
Evidence of this can be seen from many sources. State law itself reflected this understanding because twenty-eight of the thirty jurisdictions that statutorily restricted abortion placed their restrictions under the label “offenses against the person,” and twenty-three states labeled unborn human beings “children”. Witherspoon, supra at 48. States imposed significant punishments for abortion, reflecting the humanity of unborn human beings. Id. at 52-54. State judiciaries similarly modified the common law to expand protection for unborn humans, for instance, by moving earlier than the common law quickening line. Craddock, supra at 555. <br />
<br />
The legal system’s shift was supported by and in response to information provided to lawmakers from the medical profession. DELLAPENNA, supra at 298. One of the most influential books on medical ethics leading up to this period, THOMAS PERCIVAL, MEDICAL ETHICS 135-36 (1827), by a noted English physician, stated that “to extinguish the first spark of life is a crime of the same nature, both against our maker and society, as to destroy an infant, a child, or a man.” <br />
<br />
Percival treated abortion as ethically indistinguishable from killing born human beings because all human beings are the same type of being. Percival’s view was influential in the United States and was adopted by the American Medical Association, which stated in 1859 that unborn human beings should be protected because of the “independent and actual existence of the child before birth, as a living being.” The Report on Criminal Abortion, 12 TRANS. OF THE AM. MED. ASS’N 76 (1859). <br />
<br />
The Report went on to advocate state legislative reform to better protect unborn human beings. Id. While the states were considering ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment, New York’s influential Medical Society stated that all abortions are “murder.” Byrne, supra at 836. <br />
<br />
Legislators changed both the common law and their own earlier statutes in response to this better information about the nature of unborn human beings. As legislators learned that quickening and other lines were irrelevant to the development of human beings, they discarded them and legislated greater protection. <br />
<br />
This is exactly what Ohio did. See Witherspoon, supra at 61-64 (describing this process). The Ohio legislature modified Ohio’s 1834 abortion law in early 1867. The Ohio Senate Report relied on the fact that “[p]hysicians have now arrived at a unanimous opinion that the foetus in utero is alive from the very moment of conception.” 1867 Ohio S.J. App. 233. Informed by the new medical information, including Dr. Percival’s statements, the Report condemned the “class of quacks who make child-murder a trade.” Id. The legislature therefore changed the law and eliminated the quickening line to take better account of these newly known facts. “[N]o opinion could be more erroneous [than] that the life of the foetus commences only with quickening [and] to destroy the embryo before that period is not child-murder.” Id. <br />
<br />
“[T]he legislative histories of the statutes of other states show that these statutes were often enacted pursuant to a request of state medical societies.” Witherspoon, supra at 65. For example, New York’s General Assembly, following the recommendation of its medical society that, “from the first moment of conception, there is a living creature in process of development to full maturity,” modified its 1845 abortion law to prohibit abortion throughout pregnancy. DELLAPENNA, supra at 323-28 <br />
<br />
C. The natural kind original meaning of “person” in the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses included unborn human beings <br />
<br />
Still, ...by 1868, ...some state legislation was not fully protective of unborn human beings. Id. at 316-17. As I noted earlier, this is the most powerful originalist argument against the constitutional personhood of unborn human beings. ...under the conventional� legal meaning approach, [the approach in Dobbs that protectable rights are “those rooted in our nation’s history”] that would be evidence that the original meaning of “person” did not include unborn human beings, or at least not all of them. [Because] if unborn human beings were constitutional persons in 1868, then many of the states that ratified the Fourteenth Amendment were violating the Amendment they adopted. So argued Blackmun, Scalia, Bork, and many others. <br />
<br />
[But] the reasons these states gave for changing their laws are precisely the reasons a rational legislator would give if the meaning of “person” was a natural kind [and in response to growing medical understanding of babies from conception].<br />
<br />
[Roe v. Wade claimed that] the Constitution’s use of “person” showed that it was limited to born human beings. Roe, 410 U.S. at 157. ...But...it does not logically follow from the multiple born uses of “person” that the uses of “person” in the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses are similarly limited....[Roe says] “in nearly all these instances, the use of the word [in the Constitution] is such that it has application only postnatally. None indicates, with any assurance, that it has any possible prenatal application.” <br />
...He admits that in some instances... “person” may apply to unborn human beings. Those instances clearly include the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses because there is nothing in their text to prohibit such application, unlike, for instance, the Citizenship Clause. Those instances also likely include Article I, Section 9, Clause 1 (“The Migration or Importation of such Persons as any of the States now existing shall think proper to admit . . . .”), Article IV, Section 2, Clause 3 (“No Person held to Service or Labour in one State, under the Laws thereof, escaping into another . . . .”), and the Fourth Amendment (“The right of the people to be secure in their persons . . . .”). <br />
<br />
Many of the instances of solely post-natal application are so only because their context and function limit them. For instance, the presidency is limited to “No Person except a natural born Citizen.” U.S. CONST., art. II, § 1, cl. 5. The Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses lack such limiting text or function; the Clauses are not limited to born persons or even natural persons. Moreover, the fact that “person” in the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses is not limited to some classes of humans, such as “born” or “natural persons” or “such persons,” suggests that it includes all persons. See Gorby, supra (providing a variety of critiques of Justice Blackmun’s intratextualism). <br />
[In other words “person” doesn’t mean ALL born persons, any more than it means all UNborn persons; the context tells us which persons are meant. In the “citizenship clause”, the first clause of the 14th Amendment, we know only born babies can be citizens because the Clause explicitly says so. The remaining clauses do not say so, nor does reason or common sense require that limit, so when the Amendment says “no person shall be deprived of life without due process of law”, we have no ground for making it mean something else. No one did then; no one should now.]<br />
<br />
CONCLUSION: the original meaning of “person” in the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses was the natural kind of human being. This natural kind interpretation of “person” was able to account for the status quo of American abortion law in 1868 as well as the fact that abortion law was progressively becoming more protective of all human life. <br />
<br />
==49 Biologists in Support of Neither Party==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185346/20210729162737297_19-1392%20BRIEF%20OF%20BIOLOGISTS%20AS%20AMICI%20CURIAE%20IN%20SUPPORT%20OF%20NEITHER%20PARTY.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
Amici curiae are biologists who work at colleges, universities, and other institutions in 15 countries around the world. On average, they have 10 years of undergraduate and graduate training, they have 27 years of experience working in academia, and overall they have dedicated 37 years to the study of life and to promoting science awareness. <br />
Their expertise bears directly on the question presented in this case. The Court will assess the constitutionality of Roe v. Wade’s viability standard, which was used as a proxy by the Court, in 1973, after it could not determine when a human’s life begins because it could not find a consensus view among experts. Today, amici provide the Court with evidence that shows most biologists affirm fertilization as the leading biological view. <br />
<br />
….This viability standard, which the Court ultimately claimed had biological justifications4 , was established after the Court could not find a consensus of relevant experts who agreed on when a human’s life begins5 . The Court considered Texas’s fertilization standard, but after Texas’s assistant attorneys general created doubt on the fertilization view—in both the oral argument6 and the oral <br />
<br />
<br />
6. After Justice Thurgood Marshall questioned Floyd about<br />
the scientific basis for Texas’s stance on when a human’s life begins,<br />
Floyd eventually relented: “Mr. Justice, there are un-answerable<br />
questions in this field.” Transcript of Oral Argument, Roe v. Wade,<br />
1971, at 45.<br />
<br />
reargument7 sessions—the Court rejected the standard by claiming that the fertilization view was merely “one theory of life”8 . The Court also claimed that the fertilization view had “[s]ubstantial problems”9 because embryological data had raised questions on whether fertilization was a process or event. <br />
<br />
Despite the Court’s use of fetal viability as a proxy for when a human’s life begins, which it described as the point that a fetus “has the capability of meaningful life outside the mother’s womb”10, the majority opinion stated that the Court was “not in a position to speculate” on the “difficult question of when life begins… at [that] point in the development of man’s knowledge.”11 However, no current member of the Court would have to speculate, today. The fertilization view is widely recognized—in the literature and by biologists—as the leading biological view on when a human’s life begins <br />
<br />
7. Justice Blackmun also questioned Floyd’s replacement, Texas Assistant Attorney General Robert C. Flowers, on when a human’s life begins during the Roe reargument session, but he also cast doubt on the fertilization view: “QUESTION:... Is it not true, or is it true that the medical profession itself is not in agreement as to when life begins?... MR. FLOWERS: I think that’s true, sir. But from a layman’s standpoint, medically speaking, we would say that at the moment of conception from the chromosomes, every potential that anybody in this room has is present, from the moment of conception…. QUESTION: But then you’re speaking of potential of life... MR. FLOWERS: Yes, sir.” Transcript of Oral Reargument of Roe v. Wade, 1972, at 23. <br />
<br />
The fertilization view was first discovered in the early 1800s. (See infra at Argument III.A). However, it was such a self-evident fact that little work was done to study or communicate that consensus since it was difficult for scientists to imagine that it could ever be challenged or if there would ever be a time the view would not be common knowledge.12 Since the Roe Court issued its decision in 1973, the scientific consensus13 on the fertilization view has been established. <br />
p. 4<br />
<br />
Recent surveys have shown that biologists are viewed as objective experts in the study of life and as the experts most qualified to determine when a human’s life begins (See infra at Argument I). The fertilization view on when a human’s life begins has been shown to be the leading biological view, and it can only be supplanted by an alternative view if there are paradigmatic shifts to axiomatic concepts within biology (See infra at Argument II). This is made clear by a review of: (1) the biological and life sciences literature, as peer-reviewed articles represent the fertilization view as a fact of biology that requires no explanation or citation (See infra at Argument III.B), (2) legislative testimony from scientists that suggests there is no alternative view in the scientific literature (See infra at Argument III.C), (3) an international survey of academic biologists’ views on when a human’s life begins that reported 96% of 5,577 participants affirmed the fertilization view (See infra at Argument III.D), and (4) statements by prominent abortion doctors and abortion advocates who affirm the fertilization view (See infra at Argument III.E) .<br />
Thus, amici respectfully offer the Court this brief to provide information on the biological perspective on when a human’s life begins: fertilization, generally, marks the beginning of a sexually reproducing organism’s life and, specifically, marks the beginning of a human’s life, as it is the point at which a human first comes into physical existence as an organism that is biologically classified as a member of the Homo sapiens species <br />
<br />
In the oral reargument session for Roe, Justice Potter Stewart signaled the importance of resolving who should determine when a human’s life begins: “Now, how should that question be decided, is it a legal question, a constitutional question, a medical question, a philosophical question, or a religious question, or what is it?”16 The majority opinion in Roe similarly suggested there are multiple dimensions to the question: “When those trained in the respective disciplines of medicine, philosophy, and theology are unable to arrive at any consensus, the judiciary, at this point in the development of man’s knowledge, is not in a position to speculate as to the answer.”1 <br />
<br />
<br />
Some support the view that a human’s life begins at birth or first breath. 12% of biologists (343 out of 2794) represented the birth view in response to an essay question on when a human’s life begins [Were law bent to this view] t it would make obsolete any biological basis for providing independent care to a fetus, as a patient, or performing fetal surgery27; it would also remove the biological basis of fetal homicide laws28, as a state could not rightfully convict someone for the homicide of a fetus since one would no longer be properly classified as a human.2 <br />
<br />
10% of biologists (284 out of 2794) represented the viability view in response to an essay question on when a human’s life begins. [Were law bent to this view] A human’s life could be biologically determined to begin at a different point for a fetus in Mt. Sinai Hospital in New York than in a medical clinic in a rural area, as the leading physicians of the former might be able to help a 22-week premature infant survive while physicians at the latter might not be able to. Further, one would have to say that a 27-week-old fetus in 1973 was not a human—as 28 weeks was the viability line at the time since that was when technology was capable of supporting life outside of the womb—but that a younger 24-week-old fetus, today, is a human. This standard could even one day be set at fertilization if an artificial womb is developed.31 Finally, it is important to note that, today, human embryos survive outside of the womb for years32 before being transferred and implanted. In fact, a human zygote is viable for a short period after fertilization, then loses the ability to survive outside of the womb and regains it sometime soon after the 20th week of his or her life.33 <br />
<br />
If this is used as an ability-based standard, by which human organisms without this ability are not classified as humans, it could also create a case in which a human who is temporarily on life support would cease to be biologically classified as a human since he or she is not then capable of meaningful life <br />
<br />
Some support the view that a human’s life begins at the first heartbeat, brainwave, or moment of pain capability. 10% of biologists (268 out of 2794) represented one of these views in response to an essay question on when a human’s life begins. [Were law bent to this view] <br />
<br />
If these ability-based standards are used as requirements for one to be biologically classified as a human, it would mean that those who were born without the capacity to feel pain, those whose hearts temporarily stop, and those who might one day undergo a brain transplant are not biological humans. <br />
<br />
Most biologists affirm that a human’s life begins at the start of the human life cycle. 68% of biologists (1898 out of 2794) represented the fertilization view in response to an essay question on when a human’s life begins.40 A review of recent discoveries and the development of scientific literature since Roe reveals a strong consensus that agrees fertilization—a process which starts with sperm-egg binding and is completed by sperm-egg pronuclear fusion41—is the starting point <br />
<br />
; a human zygote is, from a biological perspective, a human organism43 classified as a member of the Homo sapiens in the same way44 as an infant, a teenager,45 or an adult; a human zygote is simply a human being in the first stage of a human’s development, whether fertilization be deemed a process or an event.4 <br />
<br />
THE FERTILIZATION VIEW IS THE LEADING BIOLOGICAL VIEW ON WHEN A HUMAN’S LIFE BEGINS AND HAS BEEN SINCE THE 19TH CENTURY. A. The discovery of fertilization took place over a century ago. <br />
<br />
In 1827, Karl Ernst von Baer was the first scientist to record an observation of a mammalian egg; <br />
<br />
The early discoveries on the fertilization process, by which spermatozoa enter eggs, took place between 1843 until 1880: <br />
<br />
y, in 1876, Oscar Hertwig has been said to have first established the fertilization view when he described the fusion of the nuclei of a male’s spermatozoa and a female’s ovum <br />
<br />
Peer-reviewed journals present the fertilization view on when a human’s life begins as a fact that requires no explanation or citation <br />
<br />
During hearings conducted by the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Senate Bill 158, the “Human Life Bill,” numerous scientific experts testified on the question of when a human’s life begins. After hours of testimony by scientists and medical doctors, the Official Senate Report reached the following conclusion: “Physicians, biologists, and other scientists agree that conception marks the beginning of the life of a human being—of a being that is alive and is a member of the human species. There is overwhelming agreement on this point in countless medical, biological, and scientific writings.”<br />
<br />
<br />
This view is not merely shared by academics in the literature; it is also the view that college and medical students are taught in their biological and medical textbooks. <br />
<br />
French geneticist Dr. Jerome Lejeune testified that “[l]ife has a very, very long history, but each individual has a very neat beginning––the moment of its conception” because “[t]o accept the fact that after fertilization has taken place a new human has come into being is no longer a matter of taste or of opinion . . . it is plain experimental evidence.”72 Dr. Hymie Gordon, professor of medical genetics and physician at the Mayo Clinic, testified that “now we can say, unequivocally, that the question of when life begins––is no longer a question for theological or philosophical dispute. It is an established scientific fact. Theologians and philosophers may go on to debate the meaning of life or the purpose of life, but it is an established fact that all life, including human life, begins at the moment of conception.”73 Experts also testified that there are no alternative theories on when a human’s life begins in the scientific literature <br />
<br />
Dr. Gordon claimed: “I have never encountered in my reading of the scientific literature—long before I became concerned with abortion, euthanasia, and so on—anyone who has argued that life did not begin at the moment of conception, or that it was not a human conception if it resulted from the fertilization of a human egg by a human sperm. As far as I know, there has been no argument about these matters.”74 This lack of any alternative biological views in the literature was also attested to by Dr. Micheline Matthew-Roth, who worked as a principal <br />
<br />
<br />
96% of 5,577 biologists from 1,058 academic institutions affirmed that a human’s life begins at fertilization. 1. The survey questions solely focused on the biological perspective on when a human’s life begins <br />
<br />
<br />
96% of 5,577 biologists from 1,058 academic institutions affirmed that a human’s life begins at fertilization. 1. The survey questions solely focused on the biological perspective on when a human’s life begins <br />
<br />
Participation in the survey was sought from members of biology departments around the world. Of the participants who provided analyzable data, 5,577 biologists from 1,058 institutions provided analyzable data on operative questions. Most of the biologists in the sample identified as male (63%), non-religious (63%) and the majority held a Ph.D. (95%). Ideologically, most of the sample identified as liberal (89%) and pro-choice (85%). The sample was comprised of biologists from 86 countries. See supra n.17 at 239. 2 <br />
<br />
fertilization view. Participants were asked to affirm or reject the statements, and they were then presented an open-ended essay question on the biological perspective on when a human’s life begins (Q6)85: Question 1: The end product of mammalian fertilization is a fertilized egg (‘zygote’), a new mammalian organism in the first stage of its species’ life cycle with its species’ genome. Question 2: The development of a mammal begins with fertilization, a process by which the spermatozoon from the male and the oocyte from the female unite to give rise to a new organism, the zygote. Question 3: A mammal’s life begins at fertilization, the process during which a male gamete unites with a female gamete to form a single cell called a zygote. Question 4: In developmental biology, fertilization marks the beginning of a human’s life since that process produces an organism with a human genome that has begun to develop in the first stage of the human life cycle. Question 5: From a biological perspective, a zygote that has a human genome is a human because it is a human organism developing in the earliest stage of the human life cycle. <br />
<br />
<br />
Question 6: From a biological perspective, how would you answer the question “When does a human’s life begin?” <br />
<br />
The statement in Q1 was affirmed by 91% of participants (4555 out of 4993). The statement in Q2 was affirmed by 88% of participants (3984 out of 4510). The statement in Q3 was affirmed by 77% of participants (3153 out of 4078). The statement in Q4 was affirmed by 75% of participants (2500 out of 3334). The statement in Q5 was affirmed by 69% of participants (2744 out of 3980).86 Of those who assessed at least one of the five statements, 96% of participants affirmed at least one (5337 out of 5577) and 4% did not (240 out of 5577). <br />
<br />
Similarly, of those who assessed multiple statements, 96% affirmed at least one (4463 out of 4650) while 4% affirmed none (187 of 4650), and 85% affirmed at least half of the statements they assessed (3936 out of 4650).87 Consistent with their affirmation rates of the fertilization view in Q1-Q5, 68% of biologists represented the fertilization view (1898 out of 2794) in response to the open-ended essay question on when a human’s life begins (Q6). 10% represented some point between fertilization and the moment a fetus is viable (268 out of 2794), 10% represented the viability view (284 out of 2794), and 12% represented the view that a human’s life begins at birth (343 out of 2794).88 The strictest measure of biologists’ views assessed the responses of participants who answered each question consistently—those who either affirmed each statement (Q1-Q5) and represented the fertilization view in response to the essay question (Q6) or rejected each statement and represented some later point. There was a greater number of participants who consistently affirmed the fertilization view (97%; 1011 out of 1044) than the number of participants who consistently did not affirm the fertilization view (3%; 33 out of 1044).89 <br />
<br />
Abortion advocates and abortion doctors affirm that a human’s life begins at fertilization. Ethicist Peter Singer supports abortion rights and has promoted the fertilization view: “Whether a being is a member of a given species is something that can be determined scientifically, by an examination of the nature of the chromosomes in the cells of living organisms,” because “there is no doubt that from the first moments of its existence an embryo conceived from human sperm and eggs is a human being.”90 <br />
(Yet he argues for aborting up to 2 years old)<br />
<br />
The fertilization view is as subject to change due to new information as is the number of hydrogen atoms in a molecule of water: the number might not be two if scientists abandon the modern understanding of hydrogen, oxygen, atoms, molecules, and water—just as a human’s life might no longer be deemed to begin at fertilization if scientists abandon the modern understanding of fertilization, the human life cycle, and the genetics-based method of biologically classifying organisms. <br />
<br />
==50 Professors Mary Ann Glendon and O. Carter Snead==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185180/20210729085701253_19-1392%20Amici%20Brief.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
Abortion rulings have no support from the Constitution's text, history, or tradition.<br />
<br />
Roe and Doe are unconstitutional.<br />
<br />
Later precedents are even farther from the Constitution, offering nothing but confusion.<br />
<br />
Stare Decisis principles support overturning them.<br />
<br />
The Court’s Abortion Jurisprudence Grafts On to American Law a Constitutionally Unwarranted, False, and Destructive Account of Human Identity and Flourishing.<br />
<br />
The current law of abortion . . . frames the public question as a zero-sum conflict between isolated strangers, one of whom is recognized as a person, with the other deemed a sub-personal being whose moral and legal status is contingent upon the private judgment of others. It offers no com�prehensive support for the vulnerable persons in�volved, including especially the unborn child and her mother. . . .<br />
<br />
In response to the bodily, psychic, and financial burdens of unwanted pregnancy and parenthood, American abortion jurisprudence offers nothing more than the license to terminate the developing human life in utero . . . . These are the rights and privileges suited to atomized individual wills who inhabit a world of strife. They are limited weapons <br />
and tools of rational mastery fit for a lonely, disembodied self to defend and pursue its interests.<br />
<br />
American abortion jurisprudence offers nothing more than the license to terminate the developing human life in utero . . . . They are not well-designed to address the complex needs and wants of a community of embodied, vulnerable, and interdependent human persons.<br />
<br />
...it biases the Court’s analysis to craft a solution for the abortion issue that is more suitable for an individual seeking to repel a stranger from intruding into her interests, namely, by conferring a right to use lethal violence. This may be suitable for adversarial strangers in a world of strife. Not for a mother and a child in crisis.<br />
<br />
...The Court has no business in this space....<br />
<br />
==51 Monique Wubbenhorst, M.D., M.P.H., Grazie Christie, M.D., Colleen Malloy, M.D., and the Catholic Association Foundation==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185351/20210729163513970_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20in%20Support%20of%20Petitioners.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
Roe and Casey’s Viability Standard Is Incomplete and Outdated According to Current <br />
Science. “Viability” no longer means what it did at the time of Roe and Casey. Ultrasound technology has dramatically improved and provides a clear window into the womb to witness the humanity of the unborn child. Improved imaging has provided greater information about fetal development. <br />
<br />
Advancements in technology have led to recognition of the fetus as a patient by <br />
mainstream medicine. Current science shows that the fetus is pain-capable much earlier than previously thought. <br />
<br />
Casey Is Unworkable and Should Be Overruled. Casey does not allow for restrictions based <br />
on increased knowledge of how the brutal abortion procedure affects the unborn <br />
child.<br />
<br />
Casey is inconsistent with the Court’s recognition of other State interests that <br />
justify abortion restrictions. Casey’s standard is arbitrary and has had <br />
damaging effects.<br />
<br />
<br />
The dilation and evacuation (D&E) procedure currently used after 15 weeks’ gestation was not used for second-trimester abortions at the time of Roe. ''City of Akron v. Akron Ctr. for Reprod. Health, Inc''., 462 U.S. 416, 436 & n.23 (1983); ...The Supreme Court described the D&E procedure in gruesome “technical detail” in Stenberg v. Carhart, acknowledging that its description “may seem clinically cold or callous to some, perhaps horrifying to others.” <br />
<br />
As the Supreme Court explained, abortion doctors use D&E in the second trimester because at that stage of fetal development, “the fetus is larger”—“particularly the head”—and the “bones are more rigid,” meaning “dismemberment or other destructive procedures” are required. . . . A physician extracts from the womb what moments before had been a living <br />
“unborn child”—using forceps, scissors, or a sim�ilar instrument that “slices, crushes, or grasps” fetal body parts one at a time. Piece by piece. Arm by arm. Leg by leg. And as the abortion doctor “cut[s] or rip[s] the piece from the body”—a torso, a spine, a rib cage—he places each body part on a tray (or in a dish) to keep inventory and ensure that nothing is left behind. Sometimes the heart is still beating on the tray. The fetus dies just as an <br />
adult experiencing corporal dismemberment would—by bleeding to death as his or her body is <br />
torn apart.<br />
<br />
Whole Woman’s Health, 978 F.3d at 913 (Willett, J., dissenting) (emphasis added) (citations omitted).88 “As one bioethicist testified, it’s ‘self-evident that it’s brutal and <br />
inhumane to tear a living organism limb from limb alive.’” Id. at 930. And “[n]o one would dispute that, for many, D&E is a procedure itself laden with the power to devalue human life.” Gonzales, 550 U.S. at 158.<br />
<br />
...the D&E procedure is inherently brutal and inhumane regardless of whether the fetus can feel it. We would never countenance dismembering a person (or even an animal) as a means of causing death, even if the person were anesthetized first.<br />
<br />
...“[t]he notion that anything in the Constitution prevents States from passing laws prohibiting the dismembering of a living child is implausible.” ''Harris v. W. Alabama Women’s Ctr.,'' 139 S. Ct. 2606, 2607 (2019) (Thomas, J., concurring). <br />
<br />
Casey is also out-of-step with the Court’s own recognition of other state interests justifying regulation of previability abortion. Some examples: preventing the coarsening of society to the humanity of newborns, Gonzales, 550 U.S. at 157; the integrity and ethics of the medical profession, who must simultaneously treat the unborn child as a patient in <br />
some contexts and as mere “tissue” in others,94 id.; protection of minors, Casey, 505 U.S. at 899–900; and maternal health, Roe, 410 U.S. at 154.<br />
<br />
Box v. Planned Parenthood of Ind. & Ky., 139 S. Ct. 1780, 1784 (2019) (Thomas, J., concurring). Thus, there is a “compelling interest in preventing abortion from becoming a tool of modern-day eugenics.” Id. at 1783 & n.2 (Thomas, J., concurring). But Casey does not permit those interests to be considered in limiting abortion.<br />
<br />
...The Court’s foray into medical regulation may not merely be stagnating the legal standard despite advancing science—it may be impeding science. Researchers fear that acknowledging science on fetal pain may lead to restriction on abortion. ACOG’s clinging to decade-old research illustrates this point. It also illustrates how ACOG’s views are based less on science and more on the politics of protecting Roe and Casey. It is unconscionable to think that the “medical” community shapes “the science” to fit its political goals. But this is the division the Court’s abortion jurisprudence inflames.<br />
<br />
==52 Commissioner Andy Gipson, Former Representative and Chair of Mississippi House Judiciary B Committee==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185353/20210729163718064_Amicus%20Brief.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
==74. American College of Pediatricians==<br />
<br />
(This entire excerpt is copied into Footnote #2 of Statement #4) <br />
<br />
[http://supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185265/20210729133245734_Dobbs%20Amicus.pdf Filed in Dobbs]<br />
<br />
<blockquote>2. What we know today—as uncontroverted scientific fact—is that the child develops much more quickly than the Court in Roe presumed. The Court then was told that “in early pregnancy . . . embryonic development has scarcely begun.” Brief for Appellant at 20, Roe, 410 U.S. 113 (No. 70-18), 1971 WL 128054. But that is wrong. From conception, the unborn child is a unique human being who rapidly develops the functions and form of a child long before viability. (page 2-3)</blockquote><br />
<blockquote>At five weeks’ gestation (just three weeks after conception),1 the unborn child’s heart starts beating. By six weeks, brain waves are detectable, and the nervous system is steadily developing. By seven weeks, the child can move and starts to develop sensory receptors. By nine weeks, the child’s eyes, ears, and teeth are visible. By ten weeks, multiple organs begin to function, and the child has the neural circuitry for spinal reflex, an early response to pain. By twelve weeks, the child can open and close fingers and sense stimulation from the outside world. By fifteen weeks—when Mississippi’s law limits abortions—the child can smile and is likely sensitive to pain. Medical interventions after this stage (other than abortion) use analgesia to prevent suffering. And by eighteen weeks, pain induces hormonal responses in the child. All this happens long before viability. Reflecting these advances in medical knowledge, ultrasound imagery available at the time of Roe looks much different from the imagery available today: (Image not shown here)</blockquote><br />
<blockquote>Page 11-12: During the fifth week, “[t]he cardiovascular system is the first major system to function in the embryo,” with the heart and vascular system appearing in the middle of the week.33 By the end of the fifth week, “blood is circulating and the heart begins to beat on the 21st or 22nd day” after conception.34 </blockquote><br />
<blockquote>By six weeks, “[t]he embryonic heartbeat can be detected.”35 Technological advances permit not only imaging detection at this early stage, but also videography of the unborn child, including footage of the child’s heartbeat.36 </blockquote><br />
<blockquote>After detection of a fetal heartbeat—and absent an abortion—the overwhelming majority of unborn children will now survive to birth.37 “[O]nce a fetus possesses cardiac activity, its chances of surviving to full term are between 95%–98%.”38</blockquote> <br />
<blockquote>Also during the sixth week, the child’s nervous system is developing, with the brain already “patterned” at this early stage.39 The earliest neurons are generated in the region of the brain responsible for thinking, memory, and other higher functions.40 And</blockquote> <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnotes for Page 12:<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;34 Id. at 2662. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;35 Id. at 2755. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;36 See, e.g., Endowment for Hum. Dev., The Heart in Action: 4 Weeks, 4 Days, available athttps://www.ehd.org/movies/21/The#Heart-in-Action [https://perma.cc/GQN4-Q8QS] (last visited July 28, 2021) (showing footage of a heartbeat at six weeks); see also, e.g., Endowment for Hum. Dev., Your Life Before Birth (Mar. 18, <br />
2019), available at https://vimeo.com/325006095 [https://perma.cc/6QBT-UWLK] (last visited July 28, 2021) (displaying video footage of a child’s development). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;37 Joe Leigh Simpson, Low Fetal Loss Rates After Ultrasound Proved-Viability in First Trimester, 258 J. Am. Med. Ass’n 2555, 2555–57 (1987). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;38 Forte, supra note 11, at 140 & nn.121–22 (footnote omitted) (collecting post-Casey medical research). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;39 Thomas W. Sadler, Langman’s Medical Embryology 72 (14th ed. 2019); see generally id. at 59–95. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;40 See, e.g., Irina Bystron et al., Tangential Networks of Precocious Neurons and Early Axonal Outgrowth in the Embryonic Human Forebrain, 25 J. Neuroscience 2781, 2788 (2005). <br />
<blockquote>(Page 13) the child’s face is developing, with cheeks, chin, and jaw starting to form.41 At seven weeks, cutaneous sensory receptors, which permit prenatal pain perception, begin to develop.42 The unborn child also starts to move.43 During the seventh week, “the growth of the head exceeds that of other regions” largely because of “the rapid development of the brain” and facial features.44 At eight weeks, essential organs and systems have started to form, including the child’s kidneys, liver, and lungs.45 The upper lip and nose can be seen.46 At nine weeks, the child’s ears, eyes, teeth, and external genitalia are forming.47</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnotes for page 13:<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;41 See Sadler, supra note 39, at 72–95. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;42 Kanwaljeet S. Anand & Paul R. Hickey, Special Article, Pain and Its Effects in the Human Neonate and Fetus, 317 New Eng. J. Med. 1321, 1322 (1987). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;43 Alessandra Pionetelli, Development of Normal Fetal Movements: The First 25 Weeks of Gestation 98, 110 (2010). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;44 Keith L. Moore et al., The Developing Human: Clinically Oriented Embryology 65–84.e1 (11th ed. 2020). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;45 See Sadler, supra note 39, at 72–95. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;46 Moore et al., supra note 44, 1–9.e1. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;47 See Sadler, supra note 39, at 72–95; see also App. 66a. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;48 Pionetelli, supra note 43, at 65 (2010). <br />
<blockquote>Page 14: At ten weeks, vital organs begin to function, and the child’s hair and nails begin to form.49 By this point, the neural circuitry has formed for spinal reflex, or “nociception,” which is the fetus’s early response to pain.50 Starting around ten weeks, the earliest connections between neurons constituting the subcortical-frontal pathways—the circuitry of the brain that is involved in a wide range of psychological and emotional experiences, including pain perception—are established.51 At the time of Roe, “the medical consensus was that babies do not feel pain.”52 Only during the late 1980s and early 1990s did any of the initial scientific evidence for prenatal pain begin to emerge.53 Today, the “evidence for the subconscious incorporation of pain into neurological development and plasticity is incontrovertible.”54 Every modern review of prenatal </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnotes for page 14:<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;49 See Sadler, supra note 39, at 106–127; Moore et al., supra note 44, at 65–84.e1; Johns Hopkins Med., The First Trimester, available at https://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/health/wellness#and-prevention/the-first-trimester[https://perma.cc/8N6H#M6CN] (last visited July 28, 2021); see also App. 66a. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;50 See, e.g., Int’l Ass’n for the Study of Pain, IASP Terminology (last updated Dec. 14, 2017), available at https://www.iasp#pain.org/Education/Content.aspx?ItemNumber=1698#Nociception [https://perma.cc/5PV5-5T9H] (last visited July 28, 2021); see also App. 80a. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;51 Lana Vasung et al., Development of Axonal Pathways in the Human Fetal Fronto-Limbic Brain: Histochemical Characterization and Diffusion Tensor Imaging, 217 J. Anatomy 400, 400–03 (2010). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;52 Am. Coll. of Pediatricians, Fetal Pain: What is the Scientific Evidence? (Jan. 2021), available at https://acpeds.org/position#statements/fetal-pain [https://perma.cc/JM3T-XQV8] (last visited July 28, 2021). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;53 Ibid.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;54 Curtis L. Lowery et al., Neurodevelopmental Changes of Fetal Pain, 31 Seminars Perinatology 275, 275 (2007).<br />
<blockquote>Page 15: pain consistently issues the same interpretation of the data: by ten to twelve weeks, a fetus develops neural circuitry capable of detecting and responding to pain.55 Even more sophisticated reactions occur as the unborn child develops further.56 And new developments have provided still more evidence strengthening the conclusion that fetuses are capable of experiencing pain in the womb.57</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnotes for page 15:<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;55 See, e.g., Carlo V. Bellieni & Giuseppe Buonocore, Is Fetal Pain a Real Evidence?, 25 J. Maternal-Fetal & Neonatal Med. 1203, 1203–08 (2012); Richard Rokyta, Fetal Pain, 29 Neuroendocrinology Letters 807, 807–14 (2008). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;56 See Royal Coll. of Obstetricians & Gynaecologists, Fetal Awareness: Review of Research and Recommendations for Practice 5, 7 (Mar. 2010), available at https://www.rcog.org.uk/globalassets/documents/guidelines/rcogfetalawarenesswpr0610.pdf [https://perma.cc/4V84-TEMC] (last visited July 28, 2021); Susan J. Lee et al., Fetal Pain: A Systematic Multidisciplinary Review of the Evidence, 294 J. Am. Med. Ass’n 947, 948–49 (2005); see also App. 76a, 84a–85a. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;57 See Lisandra Stein Bernardes et al., Acute Pain Facial Expressions in 23-Week Fetus, Ultrasound Obstetrics & Gynecology (June 2021), available at https://obgyn.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/uog.23709?af=R [https://perma.cc/V8BU-PZK4] (last visited July 28, 2021)<br />
<blockquote>Page 17: Moreover, by twelve weeks, the parts of the central nervous system leading from peripheral nerves to the brain are sufficiently connected to permit the peripheral pain receptors to detect painful stimuli.68 Thus, the unborn “baby develops sensitivity to external stimuli and to pain much earlier than was believed” when Roe and Casey were decided. MKB Mgmt. Corp. v. Stenehjem, 795 F.3d 768, 774 (8th Cir. 2015) (cleaned up).</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnote for page 17: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;68 Sekulic et al., supra note 65, at 1034–35. <br />
<blockquote>Page 21: By eighteen weeks, the child can hear his or her mother’s voice, and the child can yawn.87 The nervous system in the brain is also developing the circuitry for all the senses: taste, touch, smell, sight, and hearing.</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnote for page 21: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;87 Ibid.; see also Cleveland Clinic, Fetal Development: Stages of Growth (last updated Apr. 16, 2020), available at https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/articles/7247-fetal#development-stages-of-growth [https://perma.cc/YG92-KRH4] (last visited July 28, 2021). <br />
<blockquote>Page 25: Around twenty-six weeks, the child’s eyes open, and he or she can fully see what is going on around him or her.106 Brain wave activity increases throughout this period. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnote: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;106 Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hosp., A Week-by-Week Pregnancy Calendar: Week 26, available at https://www.hopkinsallchildrens.org/Patients-Families/Health-Library/HealthDocNew/Week-26?id=13484 [https://perma.cc/A8QG#XBPA] (last visited July 28, 2021).<br />
<br />
==79. World Faith Foundation and Institute for Faith and Family==<br />
<br />
(This entire excerpt is copied into Footnote #2 of Statement #4)<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185238/20210729120554370_19-1392%20tsac%20IFF.pdf Filed in Dobbs] <br />
<br />
<blockquote>The viability line is arbitrary, lacks constitutional support, and conflicts with legal principles in other contexts. Developments in medical technology expose the reality of a child in the womb worthy of legal protection. “Emerging science never shows the unborn to be less than human; rather, each advancement further reveals the humanity of the developing child in all its wonder”—even at 15 weeks, the developing child has “fully formed eyebrows, noses, and lips,” and “the baby’s fully formed heart pumps about 26 quarts of blood per day.”3</blockquote><br />
<blockquote>Yet this Court has stubbornly maintained the viability line, reaffirming Roe’s “recognition of the right of the woman” to choose abortion “before viability . . . without undue interference from the State.” Casey, 505 U.S. at 846. Gonzales began by presuming the same principle and timeline (Gonzales, 550 U.S. at 146)—but on the next page described the unborn child as “a living organism within the womb, whether or not it is viable outside the womb” (id. at 147, emphasis added).</blockquote> <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Footnote: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; https://lozierinstitute.org/cli-experts-urge-scotus-to-catch-up-to#science-in-mississippi-abortion-case/; https://lozierinstitute.org/new-paper-coauthored-by-cli-scholars-examines-treating-the-patient#within-the-patient/. These articles described in further detail the baby’s fetal development at 15 weeks.<br />
<blockquote>Page 13: Another critical development is the ability to detect a child’s heartbeat in the womb. Several years ago, the Eighth Circuit considered whether the state could prohibit abortions of “unborn children who possess detectable heartbeats.” MKB, 795 F.3d at 770. Experts testified that “fetal cardiac activity is detectable by about 6 weeks” although viability does not occur “until about 24 weeks.” Id. at 771. Sadly, the court concluded that Roe dictated the outcome but suggested that “good reasons exist for [this] Court to reevaluate its jurisprudence.” Id. at 774. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Ironically, no discussion or evidence of infant heartbeats is given in the amicus by Heartbeat International. [http://www.supremecourt.gov /DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185354/20210729164709878_Dobbs%20Amicus%20Brief%20-%20FINAL.pdf]. The word “heart” comes up 39 times, but only to state the organization’s name.<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
conclusion doesn’t ask that acknowledgment that babies are people, <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red"><br />
<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red"></div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=The_140_Amicus_Briefs_filed_in_Dobbs_v._Jackson&diff=50387The 140 Amicus Briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson2024-01-21T03:26:33Z<p>DaveLeach: /* 50 Professors Mary Ann Glendon and O. Carter Snead */</p>
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<span style="color:#0000FF">This forum was created by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 13:35, 2 October 2023 (UTC) to mine the gold from the 140 "Amicus" Briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'', June 24, 2022, the ruling that overturned ''Roe v. Wade'' (1973) and ''Planned Parenthood v. Casey'' (1992), returning the decision whether to continue the slaughter to voters state by state. The search here is for nuggets that can help end the slaughter in ''every'' state. I am mining these nuggets for my book, [[Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases]].<br />
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<span style="color:#0DA">Register (see [[Begin!]]) and join the discussion. [http://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/wiki/Template#Vote Vote]. Improve it. Critique it. Sign your name with 4 tildes (<nowiki>(~~~~)</nowiki>).</span><br />
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Below are the titles, dates filed, and links to, the 140 Amicus Briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' (2022), and excerpts from them, and my comments. I indicate which of them I include in my book, [[Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases]]. They are numbered in the order they were filed.<br />
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<br />
==1. Roman Catholic Diocese of Jackson and Roman Catholic Diocese of Biloxi== <br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/147736/20200714142159951_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20Roman%20Catholic%20Diocese%20of%20Jackson.pdf July 14, 2021 filed]. Summary: this Court should find that the state’s interest in protecting unborn children who have the capacity to feel pain is sufficiently compelling to support a limited prohibition on abortion.<br />
<br />
===Excerpts===<br />
<br />
"The purpose of H.B.1510 is to protect those unborn children who, at 15 weeks gestation, have the capacity to feel pain. ...The government supplied expert testimony on this point" (which was excluded by the district court). <br />
<br />
The main argument seems to be that banning abortions at 15 weeks is not a "substantial" obstacle to abortion, so it doesn't violate Casey, 1992, which prohibits a "substantial" obstacle. While it enhances "respect for life", which Gonzales, 2003, endorses. "Respect for life is clearly shown in Gonzales to be a sufficient governmental interest in abortion regulations." <br />
<br />
States have an "important interest regarding the sanctity of life." Quoted from Carhart, 2000.<br />
<br />
Justice Thomas was quoted saying SCOTUS has “struggle[d] to find a guiding principle to distinguish fundamental rights that warrant protection from nonfundamental rights that do not", and then it is asked, "Does an unborn child have a fundamental right to be free from pain in the womb?"<br />
<br />
[COMMENT: what an understatement! No mention of the right to live? Actually being dead is an effective way to be free from pain. Life involves pain, and every day of life is a gift.]<br />
<br />
The district court shouldn't have forbidden expert testimony about babies feeling pain as they are being murdered. "Whether an unborn child can feel pain when a doctor...kills it, it is clearly relevant to a law which forbids abortions at a time when the unborn child can feel pain." <br />
<br />
"Consider how the Supreme Court has construed the Cruel and Unusual Punishments Clause of the Eighth Amendment to forbid executions of convicted murderers that involve unnecessary pain." Judge Ho added, "If courts grant convicted murderers the right to discovery to mitigate pain from executions, there's no reason they shouldn't be even more solicitous of unborn babies."<br />
<br />
"Should Lady Justice turn a blind eye to the cry of the unborn child, sucking its thumb, hidden in the sacred dark refuge of his or her mother's womb, only to have that womb become a tomb? Justice should not abandon the unborn child. One of the most important roles of law is to fight for those that cannot fight for themselves."<br />
<br />
"...the most fundamental of all rights - life. The right to life is, according to the Declaration of Independence, 'self-evident'. It is the sacred duty of our government to protect and respect this right...." "...a human being must be recognized as having the rights of a person - among which is the inviolable right of every innocent being to life." That's a quote from the Catholic catechism. Paragraph 2270. <br />
<br />
"Before I formed you in the womb, I knew you. Jeremiah 1:5."<br />
<br />
[COMMENT: It is stated that babies are people, yet far less is asked than the outlawing of murdering them in every state, which that fact demands. Not even the overturning of Roe and Casey are asked, but merely the survival of Mississippi's 15 week aborticide ban. Only one Bible verse in support of that fact is given. No evidence that babies are people is offered. The testimony of court-recognized fact finders is absent. <br />
<br />
[The comparison with pain studies for the benefit of convicted murderers being executed is a very strong point. But I am suspicious of the theory that babies much younger ''can't'' feel pain. A worm on a fish hook obviously feels pain. And a human baby, at the same size, can't?]<br />
<br />
==2. American Center for Law & Justice==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/148010/20200717125225969_Dobbs%20v.%20JWHO%20ACLJ%20amicus%20in%20support%20of%20cert.pdf Filed July 14, 2021]. Stare decisis cannot trump adherence to the Constitution as the supreme law of the land.<br />
<br />
===Excerpts===<br />
<br />
"Stare Decisis...cannot exalt knowingly incorrect supreme court decisions over the Constitution itself." "...the justices must prefer a a faithful reading of the Constitution to an acknowledged false reading."<br />
<br />
The "Supremacy Clause" of the Constitution, declaring the Constitution "the supreme law of the land", does not include "decisions of the United States Supreme Court". Judges take an oath to uphold the Constitution. <br />
<br />
"Abortion advocates, recognizing the doctrinal flimisness of this court's abortion jurisprudence, invoke the doctrine of stare decisis as counseling adherence to Roe and Casey even though they were wrongly decided." <br />
<br />
[COMMENT: The brevity of this brief is itself a strong statement, along with its only court cites being about judges not putting themselves above the Constitution. I think it is less than half the length allowed by the Court for an amicus brief. As if to say "Look, you know how wrong Roe and Casey are. Just, STOP!"<br />
<br />
[Nothing is explicitly said about a right to life for babies, to counter all the arguments from Hell for murdering them. But the nose-thumbing at all the arguments from Hell is breathtaking.]<br />
<br />
==3. 375 WOMEN INJURED BY SECOND AND THIRD TRIMESTER LATE TERM ABORTIONS AND ABORTION RECOVERY LEADERS==<br />
<br />
[https://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184712/20210722163259351_41205%20pdf%20Parker%20I%20br.pdf Filed July 20, 2021] “The Dignity Of Infant Life In The Womb” is appealed to.<br />
<br />
The brief says “Amici Women who actually experienced this gruesome<br />
reality request this Court to consider the effect on the woman who has felt her baby moving alive in her body, then realizing the baby is dead and not moving, for two days, before removal. This overall description is clinical gruesomeness at its most wretched level.”<br />
<br />
[COMMENT: Dignity of infant life. It was not pointed out that their “dignity” is made possible only by realization that they are human beings. We eat animals, and do not talk about their “dignity” as we slaughter them. Oh wait, I'm wrong. Democrats regard animal slaughter as way more violative of "dignity" than human slaughter. So maybe it is a more powerful argument in court to DENY that babies of humans are humans? They are animals, which merit greater protection? <br />
<br />
The sentence following: “Especially if one inserts the term ‘baby’ which is the term most women use instead of the clinical term ‘fetus.’”<br />
<br />
“Late term abortions are also a crime against humanity, which occurs when the government withdraws legal protection from a class of human beings.”<br />
<br />
[COMMENT: Three things are missing from making this a powerful argument against legal abortion: (1) ''evidence'' that babies are “human beings”, to trigger what Roe said would “of course...collapse” legal abortion, (2) a request of the Court to end legal abortion, without which there is little pressure on the Court to address this evidence, and (3) citing the fact that babies are human beings - not just the fact that some mothers are grossed out - as the reason legal abortion should end.] <br />
<br />
The only “remedies” requested by the “amici women” brief are: the right to “Protect Women’s Psychological Well-Being (Health), The Dignity<br />
Of “Infant Life” In The Womb, And The Integrity Of The Medical Profession And Society”. Amici women never ask for the end of all legal abortions, but only for an end to abortions after 15 weeks as the Mississippi law targets, because “Late Term Abortion Severely Injures Significant Numbers Of Women”. It causes “Grief More Anguished and Sorrow More Profound” and “Devastating Psychological Consequences”. (For some mothers, that is.) <br />
<br />
The murder of babies, though alleged, is not presented as a reason for the Court to do anything. The fact that only abortions past 15 weeks, which are only 4.5% of abortions, are the target, is consistent with the primary concern being for mothers, since concern for babies would call for outlawing all abortions. <br />
<br />
This analysis should not be taken to imply that the lawyers and women involved don’t care primarily for the slaughtered, dismembered babies! Of course that is their primary concern! But I marvel that they don’t say so in their brief, citing the overwhelming, irrefutable evidence of unborn personhood by the consensus of every court-recognized finder of fact that has taken a position on “when life begins”. <br />
<br />
==4. The States of Texas Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas Georgia Idaho Indiana Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Missouri Nebraska Ohio Oklahoma South Carolina Tennessee West Virginia==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/148156/20200720160750082_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief.pdf Filed July 20, 2021]<br />
<br />
Summary: Changed circumstances require the Court to reevaluate its viability precedent.<br />
<br />
==5. Illinois Right to Life==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/148202/20200720191618686_19-1392%20BRIEF%20FOR%20AMICUS%20CURIAE%20ILLINOIS%20RIGHT%20TO%20LIFE%20IN%20SUPPORT%20OF%20PETITIONERS.pdf Filed July 20, 2021] Our Declaration of Independence guarantees the “right to life.” This Court is the guardian of the Constitution and thus should take cognizance of the changes in culture, science, and law since Roe. The Court should revise its abortion jurisprudence to allow Mississippi and other states to enact laws to protect and further the inalienable and constitutional rights of preborn human beings. A consensus of biologists now acknowledges that a human fetus is, biologically speaking, a human being.<br />
<br />
Footnote 10 a. The scientific literature has established that fertilization initiates a new human being. . An overwhelming majority of biologists recognize that a human’s life begins at fertilization . . . . . . . . . . <br />
<br />
Footnote 13 c. Legislative hearings on when life begins marshalled scientific evidence that life begins at fertilization . Even doctors who perform abortions and proponents of abortion rights admit fetuses are human beings Views opposing the position that human life starts at fertilization are unscientific and ideological . Changes in the law have further e r o de d t he u nde r pi n n i ng s Roe. Those changes recognize the human fetus as a human being . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . <br />
<br />
Footnote 17 a. Enactment of fetal homicide laws in almost 80% of states demonstrates that, outside of the abortion context, a human fetus is legally recognized as a human being St at es a re i ncrea si ngly proposing and enacting laws protective of unborn human beings even when abortion is curtailed as a result . . . . . . . . . .<br />
<br />
Footnote 18 4. P r ot e c t i ve le g i s l at ion h a s ameliorated many detriments associated with pregnancy The Court should not continue to follow Roe’s viability standard since it ignores the fact that a human fetus is a biological human being and legal person at all stages of the human life cycle . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 II. SINCE A HU M A N FET US IS A HUMAN BEING, H.B. 1510 SHOULD BE SUSTAINED AS A REASONABLE PRO T EC T ION OF A PR EBOR N PERSON UNDER THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT <br />
The Fourteenth Amendment covers all human beings, including preborn humans, and guarantees the due process right to life and equal protection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 1. The Fourteenth Amendment was intended to protect every human being within the jurisdiction of the U.S. Over whelming evidence now exists that human fetuses are human beings and therefore protected by the Fourteenth Amendment The Court has a constitutional duty to recognize the right of human fetuses to legal protections as persons, and to begin to build a consensus favoring protection of fetuses under law . . . . . . . . . . . . <br />
<br />
23 B. Mississippi is entitled to pass legislation that protects prenatal humans from abortion <br />
<br />
The question of when a human’s life begins is now recognized to be biologically determinable, and '''an overwhelming scientific consensus confirms the view that a human’s life begins at fertilization.''' (See infra at Argument I.C.2.a-c). This growing scientific consensus has prompted '''38 states to enact changes in fetal homicide laws that recognize the humanity of preborn humans in non-abortive contexts, and other laws are being passed to protect preborn humans even though abortion restrictions are a consequence ...RECENT DEVELOPMENTS ESTABLISH PREVIABLE FETUSES ARE HUMAN PERSONS, RENDERING ROE AND ITS PROGENY OBSOLETE.''' A. State interest in protecting life is the most fundamental and important government duty. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In Roe, the Court based its “viability” standard on: (a) lack of a scientific consensus on when human life begins, </span> (b) absence of uniform legal protection of fetuses, and (c) maternal burdens of pregnancy and child-rearing. <br />
<br />
....” Roe, 410 U.S. at 153. The Court rejected that argument. Id. <span style="color:red">It recognized that if a human fetus is a “person” under the Fourteenth Amendment, the case for unrestricted abortion would be untenable “for the fetus’ right to life would then be guaranteed specifically by the Amendment.” Id. at 157. </span><br />
<br />
The Court acknowledged that the state may assert a “legitimate interest in protecting the potentiality of human life.” Id. at 154, 162. But the Court ultimately determined that the '''evidentiary record was insufficient to establish in science or in law when a human’s life begins'''. ...Thus, <span style="color:red">in Roe, the Court’s decision was based on its stated inability to locate in the record a scientific or legal basis for the humanity or personhood of the fetus, and the detriments posed by pregnancy and child-rearing. However, these conditions no longer prevail,12 </span> so the Court is obliged to reconsider Roe in light of these changed circumstances. C. Scientific, legal, and social developments have robbed Roe’s viability standard of its original justification p. 8 <br />
...Casey: “[I]n constitutional adjudication as elsewhere in life, changed circumstances may impose new obligations.” Id. at 864 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">...Roe’s recognition of a right to abort a previable pregnancy rests on the belief that the termination would not extinguish the life of a human person. That belief is no longer factually tenable given the current state of scientific knowledge concerning the origin and development of the human fetus. Roe also rests on a determination that the humanity and personhood of a human fetus was not generally recognized in law. That legal context has changed as well. Among other changes in the law, fetuses are now protected as human beings under laws prohibiting fetal homicide. Other laws, such as “heartbeat” laws and laws protecting against fetal pain, which are increasingly being enacted by the states, demonstrate their interest in protecting the youngest and most vulnerable humans. Finally, changes in the laws and the availability of social services that support and protect pregnant women have ameliorated the plight of pregnancy and lessened the burden of child-rearing. All of these changes rob Roe of its factual and legal underpinnings </span>and require the Court to revisit and overrule it or, at a minimum, to recalibrate the viability standard in Roe and Casey, to reflect the current state of scientific understanding and the legal realities of today. 2. A consensus of biologists now acknowledges that a human fetus is, biologically speaking, a human being. a. T he scienti f ic lit er atu re ha s established that fertilization initiates a new human being. <br />
<br />
A review of recent discoveries13 and the development of scientific literature since Roe reveal a strong consensus that sperm-egg plasma membrane fusion (fertilization) is the starting point of the life of a human organism (a human being).14 Dr. Maureen Condic, who is a member <br />
<br />
Footnote 13. The Virtual Human Embryo (VHE), a 14,250-page illustrated atlas of human embryology, describes the stages of human development called the Carnegie Stages of Embryonic Development. Mark A. Hill, Embryology Carnegie Stages, University of New South Wales, Dec. 24, 2019, https://perma. cc/QX4R-UZXM; see also: Conception to birth -- visualized | Alexander Tsiaras TED Talk, YouTube, https://perma.cc/VL9ZRQB5, and 9 Months In The Womb: A Remarkable Look At Fetal Development Through Ultrasound By PregnancyChat.com, YouTube, https://perma.cc/ZNJ3-T4GU. <br />
<br />
Footnote 14. Maureen L. Condic, When Does Human Life Begin? The Scientific Evidence and Terminology Revisited, 8 U. St. Thomas J.L. & Pub. Pol’y, 2013, https://perma.cc/JP33-Y8BH; Rita L. Gitchell, Should Legal Precedent Based on Old, Flawed, Scientific Analysis Regarding When Life Begins, Continue To Apply to Parental Disputes over the Fate of Frozen Embryos, When There Are Now Scientifically Known and Observed Facts Proving Life Begins at Fertilization?, 20 DePaul J. Health Care L. 1, at 8-9. (2018). <br />
<br />
Footnote 18. <span style="color:red">Dr. Alfred Bongiovanni, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, in his testimony in connection with the 1981 hearing on Senate Bill 158, the “Human Life Bill, see infra at 15-16, concluded, “I am no more prepared to say that these early stages [of development in the womb] represent an incomplete human being than I would be to say that the child prior to the dramatic effects of puberty . . . is not a human being. This is human life at every stage.” Cited in House Resolution No. 214, https://perma. cc/6XRG-L2C8. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">b. An overwhelming majority of biologists recognize that a human’s life begins at fertilization. A recent international study involving 5,577 biologists from 86 countries who work at 1,061 top-ranked academic institutions22 confirmed the scientific consensus on when life begins.23 The study asked biologists to confirm or reject five statements that represent the view that a human’s life begins at fertilization. The majority of the biologists in the study identified as liberal (89%), prochoice (85%), and non-religious (63%). 5,337 biologists (96%) affirmed at least one of the statements and only 240 participants declined to affirm any statements (4%). The study participants were also asked to answer an essay question: “From a biological perspective, how would you answer the question, ‘When does a human’s life begin?’” Most biologists (68%) indicated fertilization. Thus, while in Roe, the Court found that experts could not arrive at any consensus at that point in the development of man’s knowledge, that is no longer the case. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">c. Legislative hearings on when life begins marshalled scientific evidence that life begins at fertilization. During hearings conducted by the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Senate Bill 158, the “Human Life Bill”, numerous scientific experts testified regarding when life begins. The Official Senate Report concluded that: “Physicians, biologists, and other scientists agree that conception marks the beginning of the life of a human being - a being that is alive and is a member of the human species. There is overwhelming agreement on this point in countless medical, biological, and scientific writings.”24 In the hearings, Dr. Jerome Lejeune testified that “[l]ife has a very, very long history, but each individual has a very neat beginning – the moment of its conception” because “[t]o accept the fact that after fertilization has taken place a new human has come into being is no longer a matter of taste or opinion ... it is plain experimental evidence.” S-158 Hearings, April 23, 1981 transcript, 18.25 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Experts from leading institutions have testified that there are no alternative theories on when a human’s life...<br />
<br />
Footnote 24. Report, Subcommittee on Separation of Powers to Senate JudFootnote iciary Committee S-158, 97th Congress, 1st Session 1981, 7; similarly, in 2006, the legislature in South Dakota heard expert medical testimony on when human life begins and concluded that “abortion terminates the life of a unique, whole, living human being”. Report of The South Dakota Task Force to Study Abortion, Submitted to the Governor and Legislature of South Dakota, Dec. 2005, https://perma.cc/4WF8-TNM3. <br />
<br />
Footnote 25. S-158 Hearings, April 23, 1981 Transcript, https://perma. cc/6DCT-UT4P. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">begins in the scientific literature. Dr. Hymie Gordon, Professor of Medical Genetics and physician at the Mayo Clinic, testified: “I have never ever seen in my own scientific reading, long before I became concerned with issues of life of this nature, that anyone has ever argued that life did not begin at the moment of conception and that it was a human conception if it resulted from the fertilization of the human egg by a human sperm. As far as I know, these have never been argued against.” Id. at 52. This lack of any published, let alone generally accepted, alternative scientific theories was also attested to by Dr. Micheline Matthew-Roth, a principal research associate in the Department of Medicine at the Harvard Medical School. Id. at 41-42. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">d. Even doctors who perform abortions and proponents of abortion rights admit fetuses are human beings. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Many practitioners of abortion and supporters of abortion rights acknowledge human life begins at conception.26 For example, when abortion doctor Dr. Curtis Boyd was interviewed, he acknowledged with respect to abortion: “Am I killing? Yes, I am. I know that.”27 Abortion rights supporter and ethicist Peter Singer has written that being “a member of a given species is something that <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Footnote 26. Derek Smith, Pro-Choice Concedes: Prominent Abortion Proponents Concede The Barbarity Of Abortion, Human Defense Initiative, Nov. 7, 2018, https://perma.cc/GXH8-MAUU. See also, A New Ethic for Medicine and Society, California Medicine, Sep. 1970. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Footnote 27. KVUE Austin Interview of Dr. Curtis Boyd, at 0:23, YouTube, Nov. 6, 2009, https://perma.cc/GYB2-3YFY. <br />
<br />
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<br />
<span style="color:red">can be determined scientifically, by an examination of the nature of the chromosomes in the cells of living organisms. In this sense there is no doubt that from the first moments of its existence an embryo conceived from human sperm and eggs is a human being.”28 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">e. Views opposing the position that human life starts at fertilization are unscientific and ideological. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">While some oppose the consensus view that human life begins at fertilization, the few counter-arguments made are philosophical or ideological, rather than scientific or fact-driven. In point of fact, no viable alternative to the consensus view has been propounded.29 <br />
<br />
One opposing argument is that biological principles are incapable of classifying humans30 despite the fact that scientists have done so for countless other animal species on Earth. Other opponents suggest that a human zygote cannot be considered a human individual because it is physiologically dependent on another human. Setting aside the fact that infants are also wholly dependent on other humans for survival, this ableist distinction rejects the humanity of conjoined twins who are physiologically dependent on each other’s bodies for survival. It is also sometimes claimed that a human zygote is not yet a human <br />
<br />
Footnote 28. Peter Singer, Practical Ethics, 2nd ed., Cambridge University Press, 85-86, 1993. <br />
<br />
Footnote 29. See supra, p. 15. <br />
<br />
Footnote 30. Richard J. Paulson, The unscientific nature of the concept that “human life begins at fertilization,” and why it matters, Fertility and Sterility, Volume 107, Issue 3, Mar. 2017, https:// perma.cc/QDE5-C5C4. <br />
<br />
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<br />
being because many fetuses fail to survive pregnancy and childbirth. But this view is fallacious because whether a human being is able to continue in life is not a condition of his or her status as a human being. A human life is always a life with potential, which may or may not be realized. <br />
<br />
'''Ultimately, opposing arguments to the scientific consensus that a human’s life begins at fertilization are fallacious or focus on aspects of biology that are not relevant to the biological classification of human beings. '''<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">3. Changes in the law have further eroded the underpinnings Roe. Those changes recognize the human fetus as a human being. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">a. Enactment of fetal homicide laws in almost 80% of states demonstrates that, outside of the abortion context, a human fetus is legally recognized as a human being. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In its 1973 Roe decision, the Court stated, “the unborn have never been recognized in the law as persons in the whole sense.” Roe, 410 U.S. at 162. This has changed markedly since that time. Legislators in 38 of 50 states have enacted laws that criminalize the intentional killing of a human fetus. These “fetal homicide” laws, which only apply to non-abortive killings, recognize that preborn human fetuses are human beings entitled to protection under the law. In this context, a majority of states today recognize a human fetus as a human person from the moment of fertilization.31 <br />
<br />
'''Footnote 31. A listing of the states with fetal homicide laws can be found at: State Laws on Fetal Homicide and Penalty-enhancement''' <br />
<br />
Page 18 <br />
<br />
'''Fetuses are recognized as human persons in numerous contexts: (1) laws that restrict abortion at some point in fetal development, (2) fetal homicide laws, (3) prohibitions against capital punishment imposed upon pregnant women, (4) recovery for fetal deaths under wrongful death statutes, (5) the rights of preborn children under property law, (6) legal guardianship of prenatal humans,32 (7) the rights of preborn children to a deceased parent’s Social Security and Disability benefits33, and (8) the rights of inheritance of posthumously born children.34 Despite the plethora of contexts in which fetuses are recognized as persons under the law, this Court has yet to recognize the personhood of preborn humans.''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">b. States are increasingly proposing and enacting laws protective of unborn human beings even when abortion is curtailed as a result. <br />
<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Today, 43 states have enacted laws protecting prenatal humans although abortion is thereby restricted. All but one restrict abortion access at the earliest point <br />
<br />
for Crimes Against Pregnant Women, National Conference of State Legislatures, May 1, 2018, https://perma.cc/3XTG-WDLB. <br />
<br />
'''Footnote 32. See Paul Benjamin Linton, The Legal Status of the Unborn Child Under State Law, 6 U. St. Thomas J.L. & Pub. Pol’y, 2011, https://perma.cc/XB8E-G375. <br />
<br />
Footnote 33. SSR 68-22: SECTION 216(h)(3)(C). – Relationship – Status of Illegitimate Posthumous Child, Social Security Administration, https://perma.cc/W3TR-89L9. <br />
<br />
Footnote 34. Alea Roberts, Where’s My Share?: Inheritance Rights of Posthumous Children, American Bar Association, Jun. 13, 2019, https://perma.cc/36VN-HZZ8''' <br />
<br />
Page 19 <br />
<br />
'''permissible by Roe (viability), and states have recently more emphatically asserted a state interest in the lives of previable human beings by seeking to protect them: (1) after the sixth week since that is known to be the point at which a fetus’ heart first beats (AL HB314; IA SF359) and (2) after the twentieth week since that has been found to be the point at which a fetus can first feel pain (OH SB 127).''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Altogether, given the Court’s willingness to permit states to protect prenatal humans from harm and states’ desire to do so, it is clear that our nation prizes the protection of humans over the right to abortion. However, in the present case, the District and Circuit courts enjoined Mississippi’s law because this Court has yet to recognize that previable human fetuses are humans. <br />
<br />
'''4. Protective legislation has ameliorated many detriments associated with pregnancy. <br />
<br />
In deciding Roe in 1973, the Court considered the burdens upon women associated with child-rearing such as “a distressful life and future,” “[m]ental and physical health may be taxed by child care,” and “additional difficulties and continuing stigma of unwed motherhood may be involved.” Roe, 410 U.S. at 153. These considerations have since been significantly ameliorated through legislation including: Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972,35 the Pregnancy Discrimination Act,36 the Family <br />
<br />
Footnote 35. 20 U.S.C. §1681 et seq. <br />
<br />
Footnote 36. The Pregnancy Discrimination Act of 1978, U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, https://perma.cc/MH3SMLFE''' <br />
<br />
<br />
Page 20 <br />
<br />
'''and Medical Leave Act (“FMLA”),37 the Women, Infants, and Children program (“WIC”),38 and the Pregnancy Assistance Fund (“PAF”).39 <br />
<br />
D. The Court should not continue to follow Roe’s viability standard since it ignores the fact that a human fetus is a biological human being and legal person at all stages of the human life cycle. <br />
<br />
Roe’s recognition of a right to abort a previable pregnancy rested on the belief that termination would not extinguish the life of a human being. Developments in science and law since Roe reveal that belief to be erroneous. An abortion does take a human’s life. Given these changes, the Court should reassess Roe. ....'''<br />
<br />
==6. American Association of Pro-Life Obstetricians & Gynecologists==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/148145/20200720153839672_19-1392%20Amici%20Brief%20AAPLOG.pdf Filed July 20, 2021]<br />
<br />
THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT DOES NOT INCLUDE A LIBERTY INTEREST TO ABORT ALL PRE-VIABILITY UNBORN CHILDREN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 A. Historical Evidence Demonstrates that the Constitution Does Not Require a Ban Against All State Regulation of Previability Abortion.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Mississippi’s law is partially based on legislative findings pertaining to the advanced development and humanity of pre-born children at the gestational age of fifteen to twenty weeks. Pet. at 7-9. At twenty two days, the child’s heart begins to beat. https://www.ehd.org/your-life-before-birth-video/ (last visited July 15, 2020). At six weeks, the child begins moving. Id. At seven weeks, scientists can detect a child’s brainwaves, and the child can move his or her head and hands. Id. The child displays leg movements and the startle response. Id. At eight weeks, the child’s brain exhibits complex development. Id (Page 18)<br />
<br />
==7. Inner Life Fund and Institute for Faith and Family==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/148139/20200720153319734_19-1392 Amici Brief Inner Life Fund.pdf Filed July 20, 2021]<br />
<br />
SCOTUS should grant Missippi's petition. The time has come to expose the “social equality fallacy” that demeans the ability and contributions of women by presupposing they can only achieve equality through the “right” to abortion. Great progress has been made toward the goal of gender equality in the decades since Roe and Casey — independent of access to abortion or contraception.<br />
<br />
==8. Robin Pierucci, M.D., and Life Legal Defense Foundation==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/148122/20200720132309321_19-1392 Dobbs v. JWHO petition AC LLDF.pdf Filed July 20, 2021]<br />
<br />
“viability threshold for a compelling state interest in preserving human life, created by this Court in 1973, should be abandoned in favor of the medically updated and philosophically consistent standard of an “unqualified” interest in protecting life...” <br />
<br />
In Roe, this Court determined that the state’s interest in the protection of human life <br />
became compelling at viability, relying on the fetus’ “capability of meaningful life outside the mother's womb.” Id. at 163. <br />
<br />
By contrast, '''in Cruzan this Court rejected the idea of “meaningful life,” holding that “a State may properly decline to make judgments about the ‘quality’ of life that a particular individual may enjoy, and simply assert an unqualified interest in the preservation of human life to be weighed against the constitutionally protected interests of the individual.”''' Cruzan, 497 U.S. at 282; Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 U.S. 702, 729 (1997) (quoting Cruzan and holding that the state “has an unqualified interest in the preservation of human life”) (emphasis added). See also Britell v. United States, 372 F.3d 1370, 1383 (Fed. Cir. 2004) (“It is not the role of the courts to draw lines as to which fetal abnormalities or birth defects are so severe as to negate the state's otherwise legitimate interest in the fetus' potential life.”); State v. Final Exit Network, Inc., 889 N.W.2d 296, 305-06 (Minn. Ct. App. 2016) (“The state has a compelling interest in the preservation of D.D.’s life, and the prevention of her suicide, regardless of her incurable [non-viable] condition.”) <br />
<br />
Limiting a state’s ability to protect human lives directly to only those lives deemed <br />
“meaningful” because the arbitrary benchmark of viability has been reached is in direct conflict with this Court’s 1990 holding in Cruzan, that a state need not qualify its interest in the preservation of human life before acting. This Court should grant the petition to resolve the conflict between its abortion jurisprudence and its decisions in Cruzan and Glucksberg allowing states to protect human life regardless of the meaningfulness” of that life as measured by the uncertain yardstick of viability. <br />
<br />
==9. Cleveland Lawyers for Life==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184253/20210719151428392_19-1392 TSAC Cleveland Lawyers for Life.pdf filed July 19, 2021]<br />
<br />
The viability standard should be jettisoned in favor of the point at which the physical humanity of the fetus has become biologically manifest. Mississippi has met that burden of proof.” (15 week development is described. The cutoff for legal abortion should be when there are “biological markers” rather than when babies can survive outside wombs.)<br />
<br />
==10. David Boyle==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184456/20210720221629952_19-1392_tsac_DavidBoyle.pdf Filed July 20, 2021]<br />
<br />
This is an attempt at a “neutral” plea for compromise. It promises respect for both sides. The index doesn’t indicate that the humanity of the unborn is remotely addressed. <br />
<br />
==11. Jewish Pro-life Foundation==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184580/20210721170924501_41204%20pdf%20Parker.pdf Filed July 21, 2021]<br />
<br />
The Coalition for Jewish Values, Rabbi Yacov David Cohen, Rabbi Chananya Weissman, and Bonnie Chernin (President, Jewish Life League) <br />
<br />
Glory to God! This is largely '''a Bible study that addresses Deuteronomy 30:19, Exodus 21:22-25, Exodus 23:7, Genesis 9:6-7, Isaiah 49:1, Jeremiah 1:5, Jeremiah 22:3, Jeremiah 29:6, Jeremiah 29:11, Leviticus 18:21, Leviticus 19:16, Proverbs 24:11-12, Proverbs 31:8, Psalm 139:13-16, Psalm 106:35-38.'''<br />
<br />
This brief doesn’t say so, but Roe “opened the door” to the relevance of a Bible study by saying the alleged failure of doctors and preachers “to arrive at any consensus” about “when life begins” was Roe’s principal reason why “the judiciary, at this point in the development of man’s knowledge, is unable to speculate” about whether babies are people. Roe thus treated theology as highly relevant, and yet Roe analyzed no Scripture. This cries out for correction and updating. <br />
<br />
This pleading to the Court is Amici’s attempt to rescue innocent children in the womb from execution, as commanded in our Bible, Proverbs 24:11-12: “Rescue those being led away to death; hold back those staggering toward slaughter. If you say, ‘But we knew nothing about this’, does not He who weighs the heart perceive it? Does not He who guards your life know it? Will He not repay everyone for what they have done?”<br />
<br />
'''This brief begins by asking for more than just to outlaw abortions after 15 weeks:''' “The Mississippi law in this case seeks to protect the God-given right to life for babies of 15 weeks gestation and beyond. Yet, most significant developmental milestones occur during the first eight weeks following conception. A baby’s heart beats at 22 days, and her brainwaves can be measured at 6 weeks. At 9 weeks all internal organs are present and the baby is sensitive to touch. As early as 8 weeks, the ‘infant’ feels real physical pain during an abortion.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">'''“.... Jeremiah 22:3 admonishes us to avoid causing pain and death to the powerless: Do what is right and just; rescue the wronged from their oppressors; do nothing wrong or violent to the stranger, orphan or widow; don’t shed innocent blood in this place.’”'''<br />
<br />
The brief asks nothing less than overturning of Roe, Doe, and Casey. Not explicitly asked for but strongly implied is also ''protection'' of the unborn, meaning not allowing ''any'' state to keep abortion legal: <span style="color:red">'''“Amici implore the Court to study our arguments in this filing and thereby find the moral authority and conviction to overturn Roe, Doe and Casey. Indeed, to apply the protective elements of the 14th Amendment of the Constitution to all children.”'''<br />
<br />
The brief makes a claim for Judiasm which is even more so a claim for its Bible, which of course is shared with Christians. It is a claim about what the Bible did first. But stating what the Bible pioneered actually understates its uniqueness, because ''to this day'' no other religion, except to the extent it was influenced by the Bible, supports these rights and freedoms: <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Judaism Is The Original Pro-Life Religion. It Was The First Religion In Human History To Sanctify Human Life From Conception To Natural Death And To Prohibit Child Sacrifice.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Judaism has a strong legal tradition of protecting human life and prohibiting the murder of innocents. Jewish law and tradition emphasize and support the moral right to life for all human beings at every stage of development based on the understanding that all people are created in the image of God; therefore, each of us has intrinsic value and worth with a destiny to fulfill God’s vision for humanity on Earth.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Psalm 139:13-16 reveals this: ‘For you created my inmost being: you knit me together in my mother’s womb. I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made . . .My frame was not hidden from you when I was made in the secret place. When I was woven together in the depths of the earth, your eyes saw my unformed body. All the days ordained for me were written in your book before one of them came to me.’” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">…. “All of us who are able to do so have the duty to enforce this right of the child in the womb: Leviticus 19:16: ‘Do not stand idly by when your neighbor’s life is at stake.’” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">…. “The Almighty gives clear instructions on the life issue in Deuteronomy 30:19: ‘This day I call the heavens and the earth as witnesses against you that I have set before you life and death, blessings and curses. Now choose life, so that you and your children may live.’”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">…. “Maimonides, declared in his compilation of Jewish law, the Mishneh Torah: ‘The definition of murder according to the Noahide Laws includes a person “who kills even one unborn in the womb of its mother,” and adds that such a person is liable for the death penalty.’” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“The Talmud (Sanhedrin 57b) says that an unborn child is included in the Noahide prohibition of bloodshed that is learned from Genesis 9:6-7: (from a direct translation of the original text), ‘He who spills the blood of man within man shall have his blood spilt for in the image of God made He man. And you, be fruitful, and multiply; swarm in the earth, and multiply therein.’ The Talmud interprets ‘the blood of man in man” to include a fetus, which is the blood of man in man.’”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">…. “Clearly, the Jewish religion prohibits child sacrifice, the modern day version being abortion, as stated in the Torah: Leviticus 18:21: ‘Do not give any of your children to be sacrificed to Molek, for you must not profane the name of your God. I am the Lord.’ Psalm 106:35-38: ‘They mingled with the nations and adopted their customs. They worshiped their idols, which became a snare to them. They sacrificed their sons and their daughters to false gods. They shed innocent blood, the blood of their sons and daughters, whom they sacrificed to the idols of Canaan, and the land was desecrated by their blood.’”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Rabbinical opinion prohibits even helping non-Jews abort – even for “physical abnormalities”.''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Rabbi Chananya Weissman: “It should not need to be debated that unborn children have the right to be born, and the lives of the elderly and infirm are no less precious than the lives of society’s most fortunate. The rich and powerful do not have the right to decide the value of anyone’s life, nor when someone has ‘already lived their life’ and it’s time for them to go. That is strictly the purview of God, who forbids us to make such distinctions or calculations, even for the alleged ‘greater good.’ It is always for the greater evil. It is always to displace God. The Torah teaches that every life is a unique world, and every moment of every life is infused with the potential to<br />
achieve great spiritual heights.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Rabbi Pinchas Teitz: (Commenting on Deuteronomy 21:7): “Shedding innocent blood in Jewish life is so reprehensible that at times even those not responsible for the act of murder who hear of such an incident must dissociate themselves from it. This is expressed by the recitation of the elders of the city in whose proximity a dead man is found. In the eglo arufo ceremony that the Torah mandates, they must wash their hands, saying: ‘Our hands did not shed this blood,’ even though there is no reason to assume that they were directly involved in the death. How, then, are we to respond with less than shock to the killing of 100,000 fetuses through abortion in Israel, year after year? This is certainly a sin against Torah . . . It is a crime against Jewry, against mankind, and even against the Land itself—for the Torah clearly warns that the Land, in its sensitivity to corruption, can tolerate no bloodshed.”''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In Jewish law the only time abortion is permitted is to save the life of the mother. The brief doesn’t give a reference from the Bible, but a footnote explains, “One who is ‘pursuing’ another to murder him or her. According to Jewish law, such a person must be killed by any bystander after being warned to stop and refusing.” This describes a kind of self defense or defense of others. Scriptures I think of are: 2 Samuel 2:18-23, where Abner begged Asahel not to attack him, but Asahel refused so Abner killed him. Or Exodus 22:2 which excuses a homeowner for killing a thief who breaks in at night. <br />
<br />
I particularly appreciate the brief’s analysis of Exodus 21:22-25, the ONLY citation of the Bible included in Roe v. Wade, in a footnote. The brief says: <span style="color:red">“A note about Exodus 21:22-25, the mistranslation of which has led many to conclude that Judaism condones the mass slaughter of infant life.''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“This conclusion is entirely false. The verse describes a case in which fighting men in close proximity to a pregnant woman inadvertently cause a miscarriage. The Torah specifies that the guilty party would be prosecuted for involuntary manslaughter only if the pregnant woman herself dies. If the infant in the womb dies, they must pay only a monetary fine. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Long used by abortion advocates to reframe abortion as legal in Judaism, this text is not a license to abort infant life; rather, it is a reference to involuntary manslaughter requiring an adjudicated fine. It is not a capital crime.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“...This verse must be carefully understood. Many translations read ‘and a miscarriage occurs’ rather than as ‘a premature birth results’ as I have it here. The passage, in my opinion, is to ‘a premature birth’ when the context is considered. The text actually says that if the child ‘departs’ [“yasa”] the womb and no other damage ensues from the event. In other words, if because of the struggle the baby is born early but is otherwise fine, then the men may be required to pay damages for their carelessness but no more. ‘But if other damage ensues,’ i.e. the baby is born with some deformity or born dead, then the standard penalties will apply, ‘an eye for eye, tooth for tooth’. If the child dies as a result, the men are guilty of the murder, a life for a life. The text makes no sense any other way. The Hebrew term shachol references an abortion or miscarriage. That word is not used here. There is conclusive evidence that both Torah and Rabbinic halacha regarding the pre-birth child as fully human and subject to the same protections and respect as all other people.”''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">(I will further note that the penalty is to be decided by a jury. I take this as so the jury can take into account eyewitness testimony about how deliberately the woman was struck. Did a man deliberately aim his fist at her? Did she insert herself into the dispute so much as to make her injury unavoidable?)<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">More Scripture: “Our tradition teaches us to advocate for vulnerable and victimized targets of abuse and murder. Proverbs 31:8 demands, ‘Speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves.’ We acknowledge the harms done by abortion and speak out to prevent them.”<br />
<br />
The brief is the only one to note fornication as another deadly (spiritually and physically) consequence of abortion: “Abortion has become an accepted means of birth control, encouraging irresponsible, dangerous sexual activity leading to an explosion of sexually transmitted disease. Women die from legal abortion.”<br />
<br />
Scripture is cited in sympathy for the loss to men of abortion:<span style="color:red"> “It is now confirmed that men grieve lost fatherhood, resulting in broken relationships and dysfunctional family life. We heed Jeremiah 29:6, emphasizing the importance of the family even in difficult times: ‘Marry and have sons and daughters; find wives for your sons and give your daughters in marriage, so that they too may have sons and daughters. Increase in number there; do not decrease.’” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Judaism’s biblical tradition identifies the child in the womb as precious, valuable and unique. Isaiah 49:1: ‘Before I was born the Lord called me; from my mother’s womb he has spoken my name.’ And Jeremiah 1:5: ‘Before I formed you in the womb I knew you, before you were born I set you apart, I appointed you as a prophet of nations.’” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Evidence of the regard for unborn human life in Jewish law: “when human life is endangered, a Jew is required to violate any Sabbath law that stands in the way of saving that person. The concept of life being in danger is interpreted broadly; for example, it is mandated that one violate the Sabbath to take a woman in active labor to a hospital. Jewish law also not merely permits, but demands, that the Sabbath be violated in order to save infant life in the womb. As lifesaving activity is the only situation in which a Sabbath violation is permitted, were the infant child not deemed alive by the Torah, this behavior would be entirely prohibited.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Abortion industry practices dramatically contrast with Jewish ethics and moral guidelines in business, cleanliness, sexual propriety, responsibility to protect friends and neighbors from harm, honesty, and women’s safety. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Exodus 23:7 admonishes us: ‘Keep away from fraud, and do not cause the death of the innocent and righteous; for I will not justify the wicked.’ <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Abortion providers have long been exempted from standard medical practices and regulatory oversight. They perpetuate sex crimes by routinely failing to report evidence of sexual assault and sex trafficking. They fail to provide informed consent to patients and fail to counsel patients on alternatives to the abortion procedure or possible immediate and long-term negative consequences of the procedure.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">…. “Judaism prohibits desecrating the human body, but abortion destroys a human body, and the harvesting of baby parts for profit defies Jewish respect for the dead.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Today, the Justices have all the information needed to fully understand and acknowledge the status of the infant life, and have done so in Gonzales, at 159, 160. From conception onward, children in their mother’s womb manifest humanity to such an extent that only a decision that protects their lives and futures is humane and just.”<br />
<br />
The rest of the brief reports striking parallels between the Jew-dehumanizing rhetoric of Nazi Germany and the baby-dehumanizing rhetoric of American abortionists. Except that “only” 6 million Jews were slaughtered in Germany, compared with 60 million babies in America.<br />
<br />
I didn’t know the abortion pill, RU486, is actually the same chemical Hitler used to gas Jews, when it was called Zyklon B! “The Population Council brought the abortion pill to the United States in 1994. Originally called Zyklon B, Nazi scientists developed it in gaseous form to kill Jews in concentration camp ‘showers.’62 RU 486 is now used in 40% of all abortions due to inflated pricing and low overhead costs.” https://www.lifenews.com/2014/02/23/company-that-madezyklon-b-for-nazi-holocaust-made-ru-486-for-abortions/ <br />
<br />
“In a 1999 speech in Washington, D.C., Mr. Ellie Wiesel stressed our obligation to defend the defenseless. ‘We must always take sides. Neutrality helps the oppressor, never the victim. Silence encourages the tormentor, never the tormented.’”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The conclusion is the most magnificent I have read, which it would not have been without quoting God: “We must end abortion, an appalling crime against humanity. To begin the process of reconciliation with our Creator, to restore the dignity of those who have perished, and to return our country to a life affirming nation. Amici ask the Court to rise above political concerns and to contemplate the Divine promise bestowed upon every human being as pledged in Jeremiah 29:11: ‘For I know the plans I have for you, declares the LORD, plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.’”<br />
<br />
----<br />
(My online account is out of red ink, but the entire section from here to the end is included in Statement of Fact #4, Footnote #2)<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<u>Jewish Prolife Foundation</u> [http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184580/20210721170924501_41204%20pdf%20Parker.pdf] <br />
<blockquote>This tragic human rights violation must be remedied. The Mississippi law in this case seeks to protect the God-given right to life for babies of 15 weeks gestation and beyond. Yet, most significant developmental milestones occur during the first eight weeks following conception. A baby’s heart beats at 22 days, and her brainwaves can be measured at 6 weeks. At 9 weeks all internal organs are present and the baby is sensitive to touch.4 As early as 8 weeks, the “infant”5 feels real physical pain during an abortion.6 This is much sooner than the 15-week issue before the Court, a gestational age when the pain felt by the baby must surely be considered. Jeremiah 22:3 admonishes us to avoid causing pain and death to the powerless: “Do what is right and just; rescue the wronged from their oppressors; do nothing wrong or violent to the stranger, orphan or widow; don’t shed innocent blood in this place.”</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnotes: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 Endowment for Human Development. Prenatal Summary. https://www.ehd.org/prenatal-summary.php<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 Gonzales 159, 160<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 5 Gonzales 159, 160. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 Expert Tells Congress Unborn Babies Can Feel Pain Starting at 8 Weeks. Ertelt, Steven. May 23, 2013. LifeNews. https://www.lifenews.com/2013/05/23/expert-tells-congress-unborn-babies#can-feel-pain-starting-at-8-weeks/<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<u>Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide</u> www.supremecourt.gov /DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185155/20210728163153060_Amici%20Brief%20of%20CMP-Daleiden.pdf]<br />
<blockquote>1. By 15 weeks’ gestation, the human infant in the womb unmistakably manifests “the human form” identical to any other member of our community. Gonzales v. Carhart, 550 U.S. 124, 160 (2007). Ironically, it is precisely from this point when the fetus becomes most recognizably a fellow human being, that the fetuses vulnerable to abortion become most useful as an experimental biologic “resource.” Even though four-month-old infants in the womb move, kick, suck their thumbs, hiccup, and demonstrate a readily discernable heartbeat and brainwaves, App. 65a,4 and even though the Constitution guarantees that “neither slavery nor involuntary servitude” shall exist in America nor that any person be deprived of life without due process of law, U.S. Const., amends. XIII § 1, XIV § 1, these same children can be routinely killed through livedismemberment abortions or trafficked and sold for experimental use. (Page 3)</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnote: 4 Katrina Furth, Fetal EEGs: Signals from the Dawn of Life, ON POINT SERIES 28 (Nov. 2018), https://lozierinstitute.org/fetal#eegs-signals-from-the-dawn-of-life/; Winslow J. Borkowski & Richard L. Bernstine, Electroencephalography of the Fetus, 5(5) NEUROLOGY 362–65 (May 1, 1955)<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<u>National Catholic Bioethics Center, et al.</u> [www.supremecourt.gov/ DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185239/20210729121001402_19-1392%20tsac%20National%20Catholic%20Bioethics%20Center.pdf]<br />
<blockquote>Mississippi’s law is partially based on legislative findings pertaining to the advanced development and obvious humanity of pre-born children at the gestational age of fifteen to twenty weeks. Pet. at 7-9. At twenty-two days, the child’s heart begins to beat. https://www.ehd.org/your-life-before-birth-video/ (last visited July 15, 2020). At six weeks, the child begins moving. Id. At seven weeks, scientists can detect a child’s brainwaves, and the child can move his or her own head and hands. Id. The child also displays leg movements and the startle response by that time. Id. At eight weeks, the child’s brain exhibits complex development. Id. (p. 14)</blockquote><br />
<br />
==12. Alabama Center for Law and Liberty== <br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184666/20210722141347032_Dobbs%20ACLL%20Amicus.pdf Filed July 23, 2021]<br />
<br />
“ACLL believes that life begins at the moment of fertilization and that unborn children are people entitled to equal protection of the law.” This statement falls short of claiming unborn “personhood” is an objective fact. It also falls short of ''proving'' it is an objective fact. This phrasing treats it as ACLL’s subjective “belief”. <br />
<br />
Supposing ACLL’ “belief” to be true, then murdering the unborn violates the 14th Amendment: “The Framers of the Fourteenth Amendment believed that God gave every person the natural right to life and that unborn children were ‘people’ entitled to the Amendment’s protection. Consequently, laws that protect everyone from murder except unborn children violate the Equal Protection Clause.”<br />
<br />
ACLL asks that abortions after 15 weeks be outlawed. That requires the Court to overturn Roe’s claim that a state can’t protect babies before “viability”. <br />
<br />
ACLL therefore points out '''something illogical about the “viability” standard: “if a person’s right to life is dependent on his ability to survive without the help of others, then most people would not have a right to life. Most of us wake up each day in a dwelling that was built by someone else, eat food that was grown by someone else, drink water that was sent to our house by someone else, go to work in a car that was built by someone else, and provide goods or services to someone else in exchange for payment...”'''<br />
<br />
ACLL notes “we know far more about prenatal life now than we did when Roe and Casey were decided”, but none of what we now know is offered as evidence proving the veracity of ACLL’s “belief” that “life begins at the moment of fertilization and that unborn children are people entitled to equal protection of the law.”<br />
<br />
Inconsistency in law through abortion precedents is given as a reason to overturn Roe: “criminal law, tort law, guardianship law, health care law, property law, and family law often treat the unborn as persons, leaving abortion as an outlier.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">ACLL asks more than any other brief: not just that Roe be overturned, but that all unborn babies be protected, which means no state could keep abortion legal: “C. The Court Should Not Only Overrule Roe but Also Hold That the Constitution Protects the Child’s Right to Life.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Why should the Court do that? ACLL offers another “if...then” argument: “Roe itself conceded that if an unborn child is a person, the case for abortion collapses, because the child’s right to life would be specifically guaranteed by the Amendment. Roe, 410 U.S. at 156-57. The Court was correct in that regard.”<br />
<br />
Well, yes, Roe was right, but Roe didn’t, 50 years ago, think an unborn child being a “person” was “established”. Is it established now? Surely it is now that every court-recognized fact-finder that has taken a position has ruled unanimously, but ACLL didn’t mention that evidence, or any other evidence over the past 50 years. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">ACLL continues: “The Fourteenth Amendment states, in relevant part: “nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.” U.S. Const., amend. XIV, § 1 (emphasis added).”<br />
<br />
But ACLL offers no evidence because “other amicus briefs are developing this point in more detail” so ACLL will only observe that the question has “gained considerable attention” and “has also been debated in conservative academic circles.” Well, that’s news, isn’t it? Many cites are given, but no quotes or conclusions. <br />
<br />
One cite that I appreciate is <span style="color:red">“Charles I. Lugosi, Conforming to the Rule of Law: When Person and Human Being Finally Mean the Same Thing in Fourteenth Amendment Jurisprudence, 4 Geo. J. L. & Pub. Pol’y 360 (2007).”<br />
<br />
My book, “How States can Outlaw Abortion in a Way that Survives Courts”, points out that one definition of “persons” in Roe itself is “recognizably human”. No case law supports the strange notion that there are human beings who are not “persons”. <br />
<br />
An appeal is made to the beliefs about the unborn of our ancestors: <span style="color:red">“Blackstone said, ‘Natural persons are such as the God of nature formed us.’ 1 Blackstone, Commentaries *123. ‘The principle of Blackstone’s rule was that “where life can be shown to exist, legal personhood exists.’” Craddock, supra, at 554-55.12 Given that the dominant view at the Fourteenth Amendment’s passage was that life begins at conception, there is a strong case that the Fourteenth Amendment applies to unborn children.”'''<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">This is a strong attack on Roe’s logic that “the unborn have never been treated by our laws as persons in the whole sense”, and this approach invokes the legal principle that what the Constitution meant when it was enacted is what we should follow now until Americans choose to change it.<br />
<br />
Of course, whatever any culture of any past century thought about it, unborn babies are, and always have been, '''''in fact,''''' fully human beings. But this evidence of court-recognize fact finders from past centuries merits inclusion with the consensus of court-recognized fact finders over Roe's 49 bloody years, including juries, expert witnesses, state legislatures, Congress, and individual judges who took a position on "when life begins". <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">After its history lesson, ACLL concludes with another “if...then” argument: “Thus, if all people are endowed with their Creator with the unalienable gift of life, and if unborn children are people, then the States may not deny equal protection of the laws to them.”<br />
<br />
“If”? “If”? <br />
<br />
'''“Therefore, this Court should not only overrule Roe and its progeny but also hold that the Fourteenth Amendment protects unborn children from abortion. If this is too far for the Court to go in the present case, then it should at the very least refrain from foreclosing that question from being presented in the future.”''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">ACLL deserves credit for its strong, clear request for protection of the unborn: It is a “fact that Americans viewed unborn children as people when they ratified the Fourteenth Amendment. As Roe itself conceded, establishing the suggestion of personhood would make the case for abortion collapse. Roe, 410 U.S. at 156-57.”<br />
<br />
==13. National Right to Life Committee and Louisiana Right to Life Federation== <br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184772/20210723123330497_NRLC.Dobbs%20Amici%20Brief.pdf Filed July 23, 2021]<br />
<br />
“b. States may assert an interest in protecting preborn, individual human life, including against pain, during all periods of pregnancy.” That was a subheading. The subject was given 152 more words which did not say babies are “human life”, or present supporting evidence, or point out that legal abortion must end when that is acknowledged. <br />
<br />
==14. Jewish Coalition For Religious Liberty==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184865/20210726093205304_19-1932%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20Jewish%20Coalition%20for%20Religious%20Liberty.pdf Filed July 26, 2021]<br />
<br />
“Given the arguments made in prior cases, JCRL is concerned that proponents of a constitutional right to abortion will assert a novel “religious-veto” view of religious <br />
liberty that, if accepted, would make it more difficult for sincere religious adherents to obtain accommodations in future cases.”<br />
<br />
'''Religious proponents of a constitutional right to abortion have previously offered a novel view under which their religious views would dictate what laws may govern every American, even those with different faiths or no faith at all. This Court should reject that novel “religious-veto” view as it would ultimately diminish religious liberty for everyone.''' <br />
<br />
2 Letter From George Washington to the Hebrew Congregation in Newport, Rhode Island, 18 August 1790, FOUNDERS ONLINE, <br />
(https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Washington/05-06-02-0135) (last visited July 13, 2020) (“[T]he Government of the United States, which gives to bigotry no <br />
sanction, to persecution no assistance requires only that they <br />
who live under its protection should demean themselves as good <br />
citizens, in giving it on all occasions their effectual support.” In <br />
this country, “every one shall sit in safety under his own vine and <br />
fig tree, and there shall be none to make him afraid.”). <br />
3 Zorach v. Clauson, 343 U.S. 306, 313 (1952) (“We make room <br />
for as wide a variety of beliefs and creeds as the spiritual needs <br />
of man deem necessary. We sponsor an attitude on the part of <br />
government that shows no partiality to any one group and that <br />
lets each flourish according to the zeal of its adherents and the <br />
appeal of its dogma.”). from targeting religious activity,4 require state actors to treat religious conduct as favorably as comparable secular conduct,5 or prevent the government from substantially burdening religious activity unless doing so is necessary to further a compelling government interest.6 These traditional Free Exercise protections require that the state accommodate religious exercise, but they do not prevent government entities from enforcing laws against Americans who lack religious objections.7 <br />
<br />
4 Church of the Lukumi Babalu Aye, Inc. v. City of Hialeah, 508 U.S. 520 (1993). <br />
<br />
5 Tandon v. Newsom, 141 S. Ct. 1294 (2021). <br />
<br />
6 Holt v. Hobbs, 574 U.S. 352 (2015). <br />
<br />
7 Wisconsin v. Yoder, 406 U.S. 205, 236 (1972) (creating a religious accommodation to exempt Amish parents from having to send their children to formal high-school while confirming that, “[n]othing we hold is intended to undermine the general applicability of the State's compulsory school-attendance statutes … .”). <br />
<br />
Such protections help ensure that religious adherents can fully participate in civil society without having to abandon their faith.8 Importantly, they protect religious adherents without requiring that the rest of society follow their faith.9 <br />
<br />
8 Sherbert v. Verner, 374 U.S. 398, 404 (1963) (finding it unconstitutional for the government to force a religious adherent to “choose between following the precepts of her religion and forfeiting benefits, on the one hand, and abandoning one of the precepts of her religion '''in order to accept work''', on the other hand.”); Braunfeld v. Brown, 366 U.S. 599, 616 (1961) (Stewart, J. dissenting) ('''“Pennsylvania has passed a law which compels an Orthodox Jew to choose between his religious faith and his economic survival. That is a cruel choice. It is a choice which I think no State can constitutionally demand.”''') <br />
<br />
9 Fulton v. City of Philadelphia, Pa., No. 19-123, 2021 WL 2459253, at *9 (U.S. June 17, 2021) (“CSS seeks only an accommodation that will allow it to continue serving the children of Philadelphia in a manner consistent with its religious beliefs; it does not seek to impose those beliefs on anyone else”); id. at *20 (Alito, J. concurring) (“the text of the Free Exercise Clause gives a specific group of people (those who wish to engage in the ‘exercise of religion’) the right to do so without hindrance”). 10 See e.g., Brief for American Jewish Congress, et. al., as Amici Curiae at 4, Webster v. Reprod. Health Servs., No. 88-605, 492 U.S. 490 (1989) (“given the dramatically contrasting religious views about whether and when abortion is permitted or required, state statutes drastically curtailing access to abortion <br />
<br />
In the past, religious supporters of a right to abortion have advocated for a novel conception of religious liberty that is incompatible with this traditional understanding. In their view, the fact that some religions may allow or even require women to obtain abortions should cause this Court to recognize a general constitutional right to abortion. <span style="color:red">See Brief for 178 Organizations as Amici Curiae in Support of Respondents at app. a, Planned Parenthood of Se. Pa. v. Casey, Nos. 91-744, 91-902, 505 U.S. 833 (1992) (“in the face of the great moral and religious diversity in American society over abortion and in the light of Jewish traditions which in some cases command abortion, and in many others permit it, the existing constitutional rules, set down by Roe v. Wade, should be maintained ... .”) (citation omitted). The “right” that such advocates propose would not be limited to protecting the religious exercise of objectors. Instead, it would prohibit states from pursuing their interest in protecting the lives of unborn children, even in instances that would not impact adherents’ exercise of their faith.10 The proponents of such a right thus do not seek to ensure that they can fully participate in society without compromising their religious exercise; they seek to yoke the rest of society to their theological preferences. <br />
<br />
This novel “religious-veto” view of religious liberty is inconsistent with this Court’s precedents and, if given credence, would make it more difficult to protect religious liberty in the future. <br />
<br />
'''At first glance, a doctrine that would allow religious adherents to entirely block the state from pursuing goals with which they disagree—extending beyond protecting their own free exercise—might seem appealing to religious liberty advocates. However, such a novel and imperious regime would quickly prove untenable, especially in a large and religiously diverse country. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Under the religious-veto view of the Free Exercise Clause, every decision in favor of a religious adherent would entirely foreclose the state from pursuing its chosen interests. Such paralysis is not desirable, nor should it be the goal of those who seek to foster a religiously free and diverse nation. <br />
<br />
In the long term, the novel “religious-veto” view would diminish protections for religious exercise. <br />
<br />
[In other words, PP was not just demanding “free exercise of religion” for believers, but “free exercise of religion” to murder unbelieving babies, undercutting the value of any “compelling government interest” in saving lives, and the fundamental right to life of human babies.]<br />
<br />
'''In Employment Division, Department of Human Resources of Oregon v. Smith, this Court worried that applying the then existing system of religious accommodations might be “courting anarchy.” 494 U.S. 872, 888 (1990). Amicus vigorously disagrees that granting religious accommodations poses such a risk and believes the Court should overrule Smith. In fact, this Court has recently loosened Smith’s strictures, and has signaled that it may reconsider them entirely. However, the novel religious-veto rule proposed by supporters of a right to abortion would legitimize Smith’s concerns.''' <br />
<br />
Granting every religious person in America an absolute veto over any law that burdens his faith might in fact be “courting anarchy.” In order to avoid the negative consequences that would predictably follow from accepting a religious-veto theory of religious liberty, courts would likely either double-down on Smith’s restrictive reading of the First Amendment or adopt a new and even less favorable framework for granting relief to religious adherents. Fortunately, religious vetoes are not what the First Amendment or this Court’s precedents require. <br />
<br />
Even if courts continued to apply something resembling the current standards, religious liberty proponents would be less likely to prevail under the religious-veto approach than they are under the existing religious-accommodation approach. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Currently, the government can only burden an adherent’s religious exercise if it can show that “the asserted harm of granting specific exemptions to particular religious claimants” is of the highest magnitude.11 That analysis, which is favorable to religious objectors, only makes sense so long as the remedy is an individual exemption. '''Under the religious-veto approach, courts would have to analyze the harm of completely negating a law because exemptions would no longer be limited to the specific objectors. In other words, courts would have to determine whether the government has a compelling interest in enforcing a law at a societal rather than to any one person at an individual level.''' Such an analysis is far less favorable to religious adherents than the current test.<br />
<br />
==15. Catholic Medical Association, National Association of Catholic Nurses-USA, Idaho Chooses Life and Texas Alliance for Life==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184905/20210726125612491_19-1932%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20The%20Catholic%20Medical%20Association%20et%20al..pdf Filed July 26, 2021]<br />
<br />
This entire brief attacks the subjectivity of Roe’s “viability” standard. The lower courts had overruled Mississippi’s 15 week abortion ban on the ground that 15 weeks is before “viability”, and states have no legitimate interest in regulating abortion before viability. <br />
<br />
The CMA conclusion: “...It is an illusory distinction without legal or practical significance. Roe has pretended to be what it is not for long enough. It should be overturned so that states once again may provide legal protection for unborn human life.” <br />
<br />
No evidence is offered to prove the unborn are human to judges who profess not to be able to “speculate” about such deep subjects. <br />
<br />
One point I found interesting: “The Court [in Roe] provided no explanation as to why the state’s interest in protecting human life should grow substantially as the unborn child grows and develops during the pregnancy. Nor did the Court attempt to explain why the state’s interest in protecting unborn human life just prior to viability should be nonexistent and then suddenly appear just after viability.” Respect for human life of course accords all human life “equal protection of the laws”. Without that uniquely American, uniquely Biblical respect, prejudice, dehumanization, and slavery face no restraint.<br />
<br />
==16. African-American, Hispanic, Roman Catholic and Protestant Religious and Civil Rights Organizations and Leaders==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184908/20210726131118652_19-1392_Amici%20Brief%20In%20Support%20of%20Petitioners.pdf Filed July 26, 2021] by Mathew D. Staver, Liberty Counsel<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">This brief associates abortion, abortionists, and abortion-supporting courts, with the Eugenics movement “THAT ELIMINATES “LESS DESIRABLE” RACES AND CERTAIN CLASSES OF PEOPLE TO EVOLVE A SUPERIOR HUMAN POPULATION.” It starts off with a shot at the district judge who insulted Mississippi’s motives as part of a long string of racist denials of rights; this Liberty Counsel brief accuses the whole abortion movement, inclu<span style="color:red">ding Roe, Doe, Casey, etc. as the gold standard of racism. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“The sinister goal of the eugenics movement was to eliminate ‘unfit’ and ‘undesirable’ people—those with mental and physical disabilities as well as certain races.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">LC points out the rest of the title of Darwin’s racist “Origin of Species” which today’s atheists normally leave out of their proud citations: “or, the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life”! Many quotes are given from Darwin’s 1871 book, “The Descent of Man”, which must be terribly embarrassing for any atheist or evolutionist. He makes a Ku Klux Klan Grand Wizard look like a paragon of intelligence and tolerance. <br />
<br />
You’ve just got to go to this link and read it. This guy’s tirades are a sight to behold! <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Then it’s Margaret Sanger’s turn. Wow! The district judge had derided Mississippi which “sterilized six out of ten black women” at a local county hospital “against their will.” Well, LC points out that was the doings of Margaret Sanger, the heroine of that district judge. <br />
<br />
Then it was the Supreme Court’s turn! <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“In Buck, the Court approved the compulsory sterilization of an allegedly ‘feeble minded’ woman who had been falsely adjudged ‘the probable potential parent of socially inadequate offspring.’ Buck, 274 U.S. at 205, 207. In a short opinion, Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., joined by seven other Justices, ‘offered a full-throated defense of forced sterilization...as a means to ‘prevent’ society from being ‘swamped with incompetence’” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">6 out of 10 sterilized at one hospital, the district judge says? That’s nothing: “between 1907 and 1983, more than 60,000 people were involuntarily sterilized” with a boost from the Supreme Court’s 1927 ruling! <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">What an admission from Justice Ginsberg: “And as the late Justice Ginsburg once observed: ‘[A]t the time Roe was decided, there was concern about population growth and particularly growth in '''populations that we don’t want to have too many of'''. So that Roe was going to be then set up for Medicaid funding of abortion.’”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Now the tie-in to abortion today: The racism, the extermination of blacks especially, is not just in the past. It’s now. “In Mississippi, 3,005 abortions were reported in 2018. Of those abortions, 72% were performed on black women, compared to just 24% on White women and 4% on women of other races.” There are ''pages'' of stats like that. “The racial disparity in abortions is largely intentional: A study based on 2010 Census data shows that nearly eight out of ten Planned Parenthood abortion clinics are within walking distance of predominantly Black or Hispanic neighborhoods. More specifically, Planned Parenthood intentionally located 86 percent of its abortion facilities in or near minority neighborhoods in the 25 U.S. counties with the most abortions. These 25 counties contain 19 percent of the U.S. population, including 28 percent of the Black population and 37 percent of the Hispanic/Latino population.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The relevance to the case before us: “states have a compelling interesting in ‘preventing abortion from becoming a tool of modern-day eugenics.’ Id. at 1783. And that interest far outweighs this Court’s judicially fashioned distortion of the Constitution.”<br />
<br />
So LC concludes, “The Court should condemn the district court’s disparaging rhetoric, reverse the decision below, and finally overrule Roe v. Wade and its progeny.”<br />
<br />
==17. Senators Josh Hawley, Mike Lee, and Ted Cruz==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184947/20210726160225898_2021-07-26%20Hawley%20Amicus%20Brief%20FINAL%20-%20PDFA.pdf Filed July 26, 2021]<br />
<br />
Roe should be overturned, not because it legalizes murder of baby human beings, but because it is “unworkable”. That is, states have no idea what to expect of courts before they pass a law. <br />
<br />
No evidence is offered that babies of people are people. No medical evidence, no mention of the unanimous establishment that “life begins” at the beginning, by every court-recognized fact-finder that has taken a position: juries, expert witnesses, state legislatures, congress, individual judges. The protection of babies, by legal recognition that they are fully human so ''no'' state can keep abortion legal, is not requested or, apparently, even thought of. <br />
<br />
However, it may be that this brief, more than any other, strummed the heart-strings of the Dobbs justices to overturn Roe, because its focus was ''not'' on the cruelty towards unseen, unheard babies, but to the inconvenience for lawyers, lawmakers, and judges. <br />
<br />
The reversal of Roe is sought. Of course if that is all that happens, without court recognition that babies are people, then abortion will still remain legal in many states. <br />
<br />
Some excerpts:<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Justice Scalia called the undue burden standard ‘ultimately standardless’ and ‘inherently manipulable,’ with the result that it ‘will prove hopelessly unworkable in practice.’” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">''“Asking whether a state interest in protecting fetal life or ensuring informed decisions about abortion outweighs any burdens on the abortion decision is like asking ‘whether a particular line is longer than a particular rock is heavy.’”'' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“When the lower courts cannot consistently apply—or even understand—a standard after nearly thirty years of development, something is wrong.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Casey’s failure to provide adequate guidance for state legislatures has led national abortion rights organizations to immediately file for an injunction any time a law protecting prenatal life is enacted—if only to ‘give it a try.’ See, e.g., Women’s Med. Prof’l Corp. v. Voinovich, 130 F.3d 187, 218–19 (6th Cir. 1997) (Boggs, J., dissenting) '''(“The post-Casey history of abortion litigation in the lower courts is reminiscent of the classic recurring football drama of Charlie Brown and Lucy in the Peanuts comic strip.”''' <br />
<br />
==18. Trinity Legal Center== <br />
<br />
[https://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184950/20210726160604723_41111%20pdf%20Schlueter.pdf Filed July 26, 2021]<br />
<br />
TLC clearly states that babies are “human life”, which is clear from ultrasound, and is affirmed by Justice Scalia. Instead of offering evidence, an appeal is made to common knowledge. TLC’s affirmation does not affect what it asks of the Court: that is, an end to all legal abortion, since they are all murder, is not requested. Not even an end to Roe is asked. Only that Mississippi’s 15 week ban be allowed to stand. <br />
<br />
Here is TLC’s affirmation of unborn life: “At the time these opinions were announced, the Justices repeatedly referred to the unborn child as ‘potential life.’ Because of advancement in medical science and technology, it is [now] known that life begins at conception. Thus, Justices O’Connor, White, and Scalia’s argument that the State has a compelling interest throughout pregnancy becomes more profound because the baby is not just a potential life, but it is the life of a whole, separate human being.<br />
<br />
“Furthermore, from a medical perspective, the unborn child is treated as a separate patient.<br />
<br />
“Justice Scalia further emphasized that the unborn child is not just potential life but human life. Thus, the State is protecting the human life of the unborn child and not just potential life. He stated: But ‘reasoned judgment’ does not begin by begging the question, as Roe and subsequent cases unquestionably did by assuming that what the State is protecting is the mere ‘potentiality of human life.’ '''The whole ''argument'' of abortion opponents''' is that what the Court calls the fetus and what others call the unborn child is a human life.”<br />
<br />
Unfortunately, even Scalia’s statement falls short of a position. He reports it only as an “argument” which courts ought to address. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">TLC says “The fourth factor focuses on changes in the facts. Since Roe, there have been many scientific and medical developments. Probably the most significant developments have been in ultrasound technology and fetal surgery. Ultrasound technology demonstrates that the unborn child is human life that is actually alive and shows the development of the baby. <br />
<br />
"This undermines Roe’s claim that the unborn child is only potential life.”<br />
<br />
The following statement seems to walk back an implication that all unborn babies are fully “human life”, but rather only those who survive to birth: “The presence of a heartbeat is a strong indicator that the child will survive to birth, therefore, debunking the idea that the unborn child is merely potential life.”<br />
<br />
==19. Thomas More Society== <br />
<br />
[https://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184897/20210726123826819_19-1932%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20The%20Thomas%20More%20Society.pdf Filed July 26, 2021]<br />
<br />
This brief makes the argument that abortion is not a right “deeply rooted in the nation’s history, legal tradition, and practices” so it does not merit “special protection”. Therefore Roe should be overruled.<br />
<br />
The Thomas Moore brief documents the regard for unborn human life over the centuries, but not to prove that the unborn are fully human so their lives must be protected by every state. The point of its history is rather to prove that Roe should be overruled because it was largely based on claims that unborn babies were never treated by our laws as “persons in the whole sense”. <br />
<br />
It is a history of abortion law going back to the common law of England. It also reviews the laws of 30 states to show that in Unborn Victims of Violence Laws, where killing a pregnant woman is counted as a double murder, there is no distinction based on “viability”, so therefore the reliance of Roe and Casey on viability is unsupported in American law. <br />
<br />
There were “scores of cases” between 1850 and 1870 where courts treated abortion as against laws “enacted with an intent to protect unborn human life.” <br />
<br />
Since I am from Iowa, it is cool to see a holding from an Iowa court from that time: “In 1868, the Iowa Supreme Court, interpreting an 1858 statute, condemned abortion as ‘an act highly dangerous to the mother, and generally fatal, and frequently designed to be fatal, to the child.’ State v. Moore, 25 Iowa 128, 136 (1868).” A 1934 Idaho Supreme Court said its law was “to discourage abortions because thereby the life of a human being, the unborn child, is taken.” <br />
<br />
To summarize, <span style="color:red">“more than sixty decisions from forty-two states have recognized that their nineteenth-century abortion statutes were enacted with an intent to protect unborn human life. Given this wealth of case authority, the Court’s conclusion in Roe that state court decisions ‘focused on the State’s interest in protecting the woman’s health rather than in preserving the embryo and fetus’...is unsupportable.” <br />
<br />
Also, contrary to Roe’s claim, there was not an exemption for mothers from prosecution: <span style="color:red">“at least nineteen states criminalized the woman’s participation in her own abortion.” In the remaining states, women were not prosecuted either because they were considered co-victims, or because the woman’s testimony against the abortionist was needed but could not be compelled if she were treated as an accomplice, and because “in most states a criminal conviction cannot be based on the uncorroborated testimony of an accomplice.”<br />
<br />
The Moore brief spends its final section attacking Roe’s “viability” rule. The brief concludes, “The court in Casey stated that ‘a decision to overrule should rest on some special reason over and above the belief that a prior case was wrongly decided.’...If so, Amicus submits that there are more than 60 million special reasons to do so. Roe v. Wade should be overruled.”<br />
<br />
Not asked for is a ruling that babies of people are people, making abortion murder, whose legality no state may permit.<br />
<br />
==20. Melinda Thybault Moral Outcry==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184968/20210726175018044_41206%20pdf%20Parker%20III%20br.pdf Filed July 26]<br />
<br />
An interesting way to establish “standing” for a petition (defined not as a legal “petition”, or brief, before a court, but the popular sense of a short statement signed by a multitude) before the Supreme Court: <br />
<br />
“Melinda Thybault and The Signers, as do all citizens, have the right to petition the United States government for redress of grievances. U.S. Constitution Amendment I. With all due respect, Amici believe the Supreme Court is the specific branch of their government which has committed this crime against humanity by forcing all states to legalize abortion. Therefore, Amici must bring their arguments to this Court, not Congress or the States.”<br />
<br />
View the petition at https://themoraloutcry.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/the-moral-outcry-petition.pdf<br />
<br />
Quoting a law school and a U.N. document, she summarizes: <span style="color:red">“A crime against humanity occurs when the government withdraws legal protection from a class of human beings resulting in severe deprivation of rights, up to and including death.” (See Crime Against Humanity at https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/crime_against_humanity and see U.N. Office, Genocide Prevention, Crimes Against Humanity https://www.un.org/en/genocideprevention/crimes-against-humanity.shtml; Treaty of Rome (1957). See also Convention on the Non-Applicability of Statutory Limitations to War )<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">She “adopted” children at the frozen embryo stage, and had them conceived through vitro fertilization, not just proving but demonstrating “living evidence that, with today’s science, viability begins at fertilization.” Unborn children literally are “viable” even from the embryo stage!!! Their sex can be determined six days after fertilization! <br />
<br />
Her ground for reversing Roe? She cites a “Law of Judicial Precedent” authored by Justices Garner, Gorsuch, Kavanaugh, and Breyer, which says one ground for reversing precedent is “The decision has been met with general dissatisfaction, protest or severe criticism.” So she got a petition signed by over half a million citizens calling abortion a “crime against humanity”, and points out: <br />
<br />
“Through The Moral Outcry Petition, over 500,000 Americans have correctly identified legalized abortion as ‘a crime against humanity’ which is very, very ‘severe criticism.’ With due respect to the Court, every single signature on the Moral Outcry Petition is, by itself, evidence under The Law of Judicial Precedent12 because each person calling abortion a crime against humanity is “severely” criticizing this Court’s abortion jurisprudence.” <br />
<br />
This only adds to “continued ‘severe criticism’ for 48 years. Most reasonable observers would agree that Roe has been met with general dissatisfaction and major protest since its inception. The Court has an ethical and moral duty to never forget past crimes against humanity, to never stand by silently while one is occurring today, and to rescue the perishing.”<br />
<br />
She updates Casey’s premise that abortion prevents “unwanted children” by pointing out that today’s “safe haven” laws have eliminated “unwanted children”. She makes the point without conceding that Casey’s excuse was ever justified: “Because of Safe Haven laws in all fifty states, [which permit mothers to easily give away their babies without being charged for neglect or abandonment] women can now have the “freedom” of Roe, and make their own decision about the ultimate direction of their life, without the crime against humanity of killing the child and injuring themselves.”<br />
<br />
Under Safe Haven laws, a mother “can transfer responsibility to the state with no questions asked, no legal procedure, and unlike abortion, at no cost.”<br />
<br />
The evidence that babies are people? She quotes a phrase from Gonzales: “Infant life” to prove “that this Court has already recognized exists in the womb when it is aborted.” <br />
<br />
(The Gonzales context of the “infant life” quote: “Respect for human life finds an ultimate expression in the bond of love the mother has for her child....Whether to have an abortion requires a difficult and painful moral decision. ...it seems unexceptionable to conclude some women come to regret their choice to abort the infant life they once created and sustained.”)<br />
<br />
More evidence that babies are people: “new science, including but not limited to DNA testing, in vitro fertilization (IVF) and sonograms, which were not available to this Court in 1973, now show what the Roe Court did not know, or even the Casey Court, that life begins at conception.” But she doesn’t populate this claim with any details or evidence, thinking the Supreme Court already concedes that babies are people: “But the Court has now correctly found in Gonzales that abortion terminates an “infant life,” at 159 at the moment of the abortion.”<br />
<br />
Roe v. Wade isn’t the Supreme Court’s first “crime against humanity”. “Abortion is a crime against humanity. Like Dred Scott v. Sanford, 60 U.S. 393 (1857), which purported to enshrine slavery in the Constitution forever. It is unjust. Dred Scott also decided unjustly that African Americans ‘had no rights which the white man was bound to respect’, at 400. The Dred Scott decision prevented national compromise from occurring and many commentators feel it eventually led to the Civil War. A crime against humanity occurs when the government withdraws legal protection from a class of human beings, as this Court did in Scott.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“...the Court has not yet fully reversed Roe, Doe, and Casey. No American citizen should have to live under, nor as history tragically demonstrates, should they stand by silently, while their government sanctions and even promotes crimes against humanity.” Another low point in the Supreme Court’s grasp of 14th Amendment equal rights, she mentions, was Plessy v. Ferguson, 163 U.S. 537 (1896) which, like Roe and Dred Scott, “denied legal protection to a class of human beings” and “ignored the plain language of the Fourteenth Amendment”. “Plessy accepted the gloss that ‘separate but equal’ was ‘equal’.” <br />
<br />
She repeats, “When the government withdraws legal protection from a class of human beings, it is the classic definition of a crime against humanity.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">All nine justices know better, she demonstrates, by quoting them all calling the decision to abort “painful” and “difficult”. Five of the nine added “moral”. What could make such an allegedly “safe” “procedure”, which isn’t even expensive compared with most surgeries, either “painful” or “difficult”? Nothing can account for it, if babies are mere tumors or animals. Take it out! It doesn’t belong there! The only thing that can make the decision “painful” or “difficult” is that it is a decision to murder a healthy beautiful baby. That also makes it a “moral” decision. Removing a tumor or an animal is not a “moral” decision. By these words, all nine justices prove they know unborn babies of people are people. <br />
<br />
And yet before this year, no state has asked the Court to outlaw abortion because it murders people. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“The Supreme Court in Gonzales unanimously came to the conclusion that abortion is a ‘difficult and painful decision,’ at 159. Gonzales stated, ‘Whether or not to have an abortion is a difficult and painful moral decision.’ The five-person majority consisted of Justices Kennedy, Roberts, Thomas, Alito and Scalia. The four Justices in dissent, Justices Ginsburg, Stevens, Souter, and Breyer, also said: ‘The Court is surely correct that, for most women, abortion is a painfully difficult decision.’ The dissent left out the word ‘moral’ as part of the difficulty. Gonzales, FN 7, at 183, per Ginsburg, dissenting. Thus, all nine justices agreed that abortion is ‘difficult’ and ‘painful.’ Why? Because at some level, most people ‘know’ or ‘sense’ that abortion kills a human life.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Even abortionists admit they know better: “Planned Parenthood has recently admitted through its chief physician in Missouri, that: “Sometimes the choice to end a pregnancy, even when it is a highly desired one, is a really difficult one for people”, Dr. Eisenberg, Planned Parenthood St. Louis Clinic Director.23 Abortionist Lisa Harris states: “I know that for every woman whose abortion I perform, I stop a developing human from being born . . . Abortion feels morally complicated because it stops a developing human being from being born, which, of course, it does.”24 (23 NBC News, nbcnews.com by Ericka Edwards and Ali Galarte, May 28, 2019. 24 “My Day as An Abortion Care Provider,” Oct. 22, 2019, New York Times OP/ED.)<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Mothers know better, although not necessarily in time. What “devastating psychological consequences” for mothers could follow successful removal of cancer?!! But Casey acknowledges they often follow an abortion, Melinda points out. “Many, many women are morally conflicted as this Court has recognized. Many women feel they have murdered their own child, with devastating consequences.” (The full sentence from Casey: “In attempting to ensure that a woman apprehend the full consequences of her decision, the State furthers the legitimate purpose of reducing the risk that a woman may elect an abortion, only to discover later, with devastating psychological consequences, that her decision was not fully informed.”)<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Even the “Roe” of “Roe v. Wade” came to know better: “The affidavit of Norma McCorvey, the ‘Roe’ of Roe v. Wade describing her experience working in the abortion industry, which changed her mind about abortion and caused her to seek reversal of her case, is still on file in McCorvey v. Hill, 385 F. 3d 846 (5th Cir. 2004) (cert. denied) (Supreme Court Docket No. 04-967).” (“Cert. denied” is the Supreme Court’s way of saying they were too busy to deal with her.)<br />
<br />
“Safe Haven” laws let a mother give her baby, no cost, no guilt, to any medical facility or fire station. Even small towns have fire stations. In Mississippi a mother has three days to do that. Rules vary with the states; in North Dakota, mothers have up to a year after birth. Mothers have nine months to decide. Mississippi Medicaid covers all prenatal costs for low income mothers. Contrasted with the high pressure abortion decisions, the high cost of abortion, the limited availability of killing centers, and the guilt. <br />
<br />
Safe Haven babies don’t languish in foster care for years. A footnote to a news article: “Thousands line up to adopt Safe Haven baby”.<br />
<br />
Why are Safe Haven laws a reason to reverse Roe?<br />
<br />
“The burden of an ‘unwanted’ child was a large factor in the Court’s analysis in Roe itself and Casey. ‘Maternity or additional offspring, may force upon the woman a distressful life and future. Psychological harm may be imminent. Mental and physical health may be taxed by child care. There is also the distress, for all concerned, associated with the unwanted child, and there is the problem of bringing a child into a family already unable, psychologically and otherwise, to care for it.’ Roe, 410 U.S. 113 at 153.” <br />
<br />
Viola, these needs are now met by Safe Haven laws, without cost, the inconvenience of long distance travel, guilt, or murder. There are no unwanted children. “This is a major, substantial change in circumstances that has never existed before in American history.”<br />
<br />
“As a fourth major ‘change in circumstances,’ at least two million Americans every year are now waiting to adopt newborn children. Far more people are waiting to adopt newborns than the number of aborted children per year.37 This development satisfies Casey’s stare decisis reliance test because there is no longer a need for abortion to give freedom from unwanted children to women.”<br />
<br />
(37 www.AmericanAdoptions.com/pregnant/waiting_adoptive_families)<br />
<br />
“Fifth, Today Science Clearly Demonstrates That Life Begins At Conception. New Scientific Advances Justify Changing Prior Precedent Under Stare Decisis.” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“Supreme Court opinions [that are based on old science] should change when science advances. No society or court should be stuck in 1970’s science. One simple example is that DNA testing was not even used in the courts until the mid-1980’s. Anonymous DNA testing of the “infant life” in the womb and a DNA sample from the mother now shows that two separate humans exist. Sonograms, another example which started after Roe, convinced Dr. Bernard Nathanson, the founder of NARAL, as it should this Court, that he was wrong to kill innocent human life.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Court recognition of Life: “The Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals has already upheld South Dakota’s law requiring abortionists (against their will and financial self-interest) to tell a woman that ‘abortion will terminate the life of a whole, separate, unique, living human being,’ defined as a member of the human species (Homo sapiens). Planned Parenthood v. Rounds, 530 F. 3d 724 (8th Cir. 2008) (en banc). The Eighth Circuit reviewed the voluminous evidence and determined there was adequate scientific evidence to uphold the law, which was “act based, not opinion or ideology, just as this Court has courageously done in recognizing the child in the womb as ‘infant life’ in Gonzales. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Several quotes from federal appeals courts about the need to reconsider Roe concluded with this zinger: “In sum, if courts were to delve into the facts underlying Roe’s balancing scheme with present day knowledge, they might conclude that the woman’s ‘choice’ is far more risky and less beneficial, and the child’s sentience far more advanced than the Roe Court knew.’ McCorvey v. Hill 385 F.3d 846 page 11 (5th Cir. 2004) (cert. denied)”<br />
<br />
What an understatement: “In the case of a crime against humanity, it is the duty of the Court to correct its own error. All judges should be open in appropriate cases, to considering evidence that killing ‘infant life’ in the womb is wrong, and that changes in circumstances have produced sound and necessary reasons for reversal.”<br />
<br />
Although Melinda’s evidence and argument supports asking the Court to outlaw all abortion across America, her conclusion only asks that Mississippi be allowed to keep its 15 week ban, and that Roe be overruled (leaving individual states to decide whether to keep abortion legal). <br />
<br />
<br />
==21. The Becket Fund for Religious Liberty==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185042/20210727133310143_19-1392%20Becket%20Amicus%20Brief%20Dobbs%20FINAL.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
Becket's question for SCOTUS: "Whether the Roe/Casey framework should be replaced in order to reduce the number and intensity of religious liberty conflicts".<br />
<br />
Examples of "religious liberty conflicts": "Surely the federal government has many ways to distribute contraceptives to American women without dragooning the Little Sisters of the Poor [an adoption agency] or other religious nonprofits....And surely state governments have many ways to ensure access to abortion without involving churches. But the shadow of ''Roe'' and ''Casey'' prompted these governments to deny exemptions to religious groups, or to eliminate religious exemptions that had existed for decades. <br />
<br />
"Another area where abortion proponents have attacked religious exercise is pharmacy regulations. In some states, government officials have sought to force pharmacists to dispense Plan B and Ella despite—'''or even because of'''—their religious objections. <br />
For example, Washington State, acting at the behest of abortion advocates, required religious objectors to dispense Plan B and Ella despite the fact that the State allowed pharmacies not to stock or dispense these drugs for “‘an almost unlimited variety of secular reasons[.]’” <br />
<br />
After reviewing these conflicts, Becket said these conflicts would go away if SCOTUS would simply pull back its nose out of America's consciences: "But it does not have to be this way. It is possible to address abortion through ordinary politics, free from the systemic deformations and misincentives generated by the Roe/Casey regime. '''This is the American experience related to abortion before the Court departed from the Constitution’s text, structure, history and tradition in Roe/Casey.''' And it is the American experience with a variety of other contested issues related to human life and religious liberty, and the experience of many European countries today."<br />
<br />
==22. U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and Other Religious Organization==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185030/20210727130348783_13-1932.Dobbs.final.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
Neither Constitutional Text Nor History Supports a Right to Take the Life of an Unborn Child at Any Stage of Pregnancy. Neither Constitutional Text Nor History Supports a Right to Take the Life of an Unborn Child at Any Stage of Pregnancy <br />
<br />
Conclusion: Ultimately these cases, with all the problems they entail for lower courts, land on this Court’s doorstep. And under the current jurisprudence, it will never stop. This should not be. The way to prevent it is to return the issue to the states, where it properly belongs. (paragraph preceding “conclusion”)<br />
<br />
Circuit judges have been skeptical that preenforcement challenges should be allowed at all in the abortion context because such challenges do not allow the plaintiff’s predictions about the challenged law’s effect to be tested. Some appellate courts have concluded outright that it is an abuse of discretion for a trial judge to issue a pre-enforcement injunction since the effect of such an abortion law is open to debate.27 This Court too has indicated that as-applied challenges are to be favored over facial challenges in abortion cases. Gonzales, 550 U.S. at 167 (stating that a facial challenge in that case “should not have been entertained in the first instance”). And yet, the practice of bringing pre-enforcement facial challenges to abortion legislation continues, leading inevitably to (a) judgments based on speculative evidence, (b) a blurring of the distinction between facial and as applied challenges, and (c) court decisions based often on factors for which the government itself is not even responsible (such as the number and location of abortion clinics in a given state). This impossible state of affairs would correct itself if the Court were to follow Justice Scalia’s suggestion to, in his words, “get out of this area, where we have no right to be, and where we do neither ourselves nor the country any good by remaining.” Casey, 505 U.S. at 1002 (Scalia, J., concurring in the judgment in part, dissenting in part). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Roe also attempted, based on prior decisions of this Court that had declared protection under the Due Process Clause for rights deeply rooted in the Nation’s 6 history and tradition, to locate an abortion right in history. The attempt was seriously flawed. “[S]ubsequent scholarship has demonstrated conclusively that acceptance of abortion is not in any sense deeply rooted in the Nation’s history and traditions. The opposite is true: it is the prohibition of abortion that has deep roots in English and American history.” Institutional Integrity and Respect for Precedent, supra at 553-54. An exhaustive study of the issue concludes that “[t]he tradition of treating abortion as a crime was unbroken through nearly 800 years of English and American history until the ‘reform’ movement of the later twentieth century.” Joseph W. Dellapenna, DISPELLING THE MYTHS OF ABORTION HISTORY xii (2006).2 <br />
<br />
See Michael Stokes Paulsen, The Worst Constitutional Decision of All Time, 78 NOTRE DAME L. REV. 995, 1007 (2003) (“I know of no serious scholar, judge, or lawyer who attempts to defend Roe’s analysis on textual or historical grounds.”); Richard S. Myers, Lower Court “Dissent” from Roe and Casey, 18 AVE MARIA L. REV. 1, 6 (2020) (noting that “no one defends the Court’s opinion in Roe”). ...<br />
<br />
D. Multiple State Interests Justify Prohibitions on Abortion Before Viability. There is an unfortunate tendency in abortion cases to become lost in minutiae. The factual record in individual cases can be lengthy and complex, the case law complicated and difficult to apply. But these case-specific features cannot disguise <span style="color:red">the tragedy that is the common denominator in these cases: the intentional destruction, on an unprecedented scale, of the most innocent and defenseless of the human family. In the truest sense, they are our family, our brothers and sisters. Like all members of the human family, they should be treasured and loved. Nothing in the Constitution requires states to stand idly by while their lives are deliberately taken. <br />
<br />
21 <span style="color:red">The Declaration of Independence places the right to life first in the list of inalienable rights. The Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments list the right to life first among those rights of which the government cannot deprive a person without due process of law. Thomas Jefferson’s March 31, 1809 letter to the Republican Citizens of Washington County, Maryland, stated: “The care of human life and happiness, and not their destruction, is the first and only legitimate object of good government.” 8 THE WRITINGS OF THOMAS JEFFERSON 165 (H.A. Washington, ed.) (1871). <br />
<br />
...“The States—indeed, all civilized nations—demonstrate their commitment to life by treating homicide as a serious crime.” Id. The same can be said for state prohibitions on assisted suicide, <br />
<br />
==23. LONANG Institute==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185037/20210727131024868_19-1392%20tsac%20Lonang%20Institute.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">[Every word in this section is from Lonang's brief, except what is in these brackets, and colored blue. They are blue, because even though I have copied so much of their brief because I see in it potential for getting baby murder outlawed in every state, Lonang argues at one point that courts should NOT do that, but should remain "neutral" about whether states can support murder.]<br />
<br />
The Declaration Of Independence Affirms That The States Enjoy Police Power Which Carries With It The Power To Prohibit Abortion ... The Fourteenth Amendment Requires Only Procedural Due Process, not Substantive Due Process ...Courts Are The Mere Instruments Of The Law, And Can Will Nothing ...... According to The Law Of Nature, Judicial Power Extends To Issuing Orders In Cases And Controversies, Not To Making Rules Of General Applicability..... Judicial Decisions Articulating Substantive Due Process Rights Are Without Constitutional Textual Support ..... ONLY THE STATES AND THE PEOPLE ENJOY THE LAWFUL AUTHORITY, TO CONSTITUTIONALIZE FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS “IMPLICIT IN LIBERTY”, OR “DEEPLY ROOTED”, OR “INHERENT IN INDIVIDUAL AUTONOMY.” .....<br />
[CONTINUED IN FIRST SECTION]<br />
<br />
The Federal Courts Possess No Article III Power To Discover Or Constitutionalize Textually Unsupported Rights Or Impose A Duty To Enforce Those Rights On The States........ <br />
the law of nature provides that a government’s judicial branches are limited to declaring what is the law, not its codification. The concept of judicial review affirms that the province of a judge is to declare the law, not to make it <br />
<br />
The Supreme Court is routinely presented with the legal arguments that certain statutory or constitutional words or phrases have no fixed meaning. The Court is then called upon to supply a new meaning other than the one stated in the text. This process adjusts the words or phrases chosen by the lawgiver, to establish as precedent the Court’s desired meaning. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Denying the textual meaning of legal words is not a novel invention of the Court. Instead, it has historical precedent going back to the first recorded case in human history. At issue in that case, In Re: Adam, Eve & the Devil, 3 Genesis 1 (0001), was the intent and meaning of a statute prohibiting consumption of fruit from a specific tree in a Garden in Eden. A statute prohibiting such consumption was at issue. Two of the parties violated the statute and entered a guilty plea. A second statute prohibited various forms of fraud and deception. A third party was charged under this statute alleging he used deception to induce co-defendants to consume the prohibited fruit. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">At trial, he argued that he was not liable on the theory that the first statute did not actually prohibit consumption—that the words in the statute did not mean what the text declared. [Plausible but not recorded interaction between God and Satan.] As such he argued that he did not engage in deceit in his statements to the other parties. The Court was unpersuaded. It rejected the argument, finding that the prohibition was clear and unambiguous, reflected the drafter’s original intent and was, therefore, enforceable as written.3 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">This Court’s fourteenth amendment substantive due process jurisprudence is based on the same argument first made in Eden—the words of the law do not mean what they say. The Court has maintained the amendment itself contains a substantive due process clause into which the Court is empowered to pour un-enumerated fundamental rights of its own divination. The Court’s atextual adjustments, purportedly limited by the outcomeflexible concept of “judicial restraint,” have been internally justified by its moral appeals to novel high-sounding phrases such as “implicit in the concept of ordered liberty,”4 or the “concept of personal liberty,”5 or “deeply rooted in this nation’s history and tradition,”6 or “inherent in the concept of individual autonomy.”7 Alas, none of these phrases have textual support in the amendment itself. Nor has the Court been granted any state legislative power in Article III to define ordered or personal liberty, individual <br />
[])<br />
4 Judicial decisions finding that a state statute violates fundamental values discovered as “implicit in the concept of ordered liberty” are without textual support. See Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479, 500 (1965) (Harlan. J., concurring) (quoting Palko v. Connecticut, 302 U. S. 319, 325 (1937) (Cardozo, J.) overruled on other grounds, Benton v. Maryland, 395 U.S. 784 (1969)). <br />
<br />
5 Judicial decisions finding that a state statute violates a woman’s right to abortion discovered in the “concept of personal liberty” are without textual support. See Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113, 153 (1973). <br />
<br />
6 Judicial decisions finding that a state statute violates rights discovered as “deeply rooted in this nation’s history and tradition” are without textual support. See Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 U.S. 702, 721 (1997) “The Due Process Clause specially protects those fundamental rights and liberties which are, objectively, deeply rooted in this Nation's history and tradition.” Palko, 302 U.S. 325. The Court looks to principles of justice “so rooted in the traditions and conscience of our people as to be ranked as fundamental’) (quoting Snyder v. Massachusetts, 291 U. S. 97, 105 (1934) overruled in part on other grounds by Malloy v. Hogan, 378 U.S. 1 (1964)). <br />
<br />
7 Judicial decisions finding that a state statute violates a fundamental right which is “inherent in the concept of individual autonomy” without regard to history or tradition is without textual support. See Obergefell v. Hodges, 576 US 644; 135 S. Ct. at 2629 (2015) <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">autonomy, or traipse through history and tradition to discover and append any un-enumerated substantive individual rights into the amendment’s textually non-existent “substantive” due process clause. Nor does the law of nature of judicial review empower this Court to write new Constitutional text. The authority of a judge is to declare what written law already exists. The standard legal maxim is, Jus dicere, et non jus dare, also known as judicis est jus dicere non dare. The province of a judge is to declare the law, not to make it.8 At what point in time and on whose authority did that rule, binding on judges in England and America for centuries, become nonbinding? Even if fundamental rights are so demonstrably “implicit, inherent and rooted” as the Court maintains, the power of judicial review, nevertheless, does not carry with it the power to insert those rights into the fourteenth amendment. Amending the Constitution is governed by Article V in which the Court plays no part. <br />
<br />
8 “When an act of Congress is appropriately challenged in the courts as not conforming to the constitutional mandate, the judicial branch of the government has only one duty; to lay the article of the Constitution which is invoked beside the statute which is challenged and to decide whether the latter squares with the former. All the court does, or can do, is to announce its considered judgment upon the question. The only power it has, if such it may be called, is the power of judgment. This court neither approves nor condemns any legislative policy. Its delicate and difficult office is to ascertain and declare whether the legislation is in accordance with, or in contravention of, the provisions of the Constitution; and, having done that, its duty ends.” United States v. Butler, 297 U.S. 1, 62-63 (1936). <br />
<br />
Even assuming arguendo that the Court’s “implicit, inherent and rooted” approach to discovering un-enumerated fundamental rights is superior to legislative debate and enactment, or preferable to the Constitution’s chosen method of amendment, or that the Court’s wisdom and judgment in divining such rights is the manifestation of jurisprudential perfection, the fact remains that such an approach is without textual Constitutional support. Whether or not un-enumerated fundamental rights are or are not “implicit, inherent and rooted” in the Constitution’s fourteenth amendment, they are not found in the text itself. As such their discovery and incorporation into the law of the land is for the States and the People to decide.9 <br />
<br />
The case now before the Court provides an opportunity to restore judicial review to declaring what the text says. It provides an opportunity to resist anew the temptation first argued at Eden to opine to the contrary. The restoration will leave the State of Mississippi free to adopt laws protecting a pregnant woman by prohibiting conduct inducing a miscarriage or procuring an abortion. Such a determination would not merely return the law of abortion to its pre-1973 status. It would return judicial review itself to pre-substantive due process status <br />
<br />
9 See U.S. Const. amend. IX, “The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.” See also U.S. Const. amend. X, “The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people. <br />
<br />
A. The Declaration Of Independence Affirms That The States Enjoy Police Power Which Carries With It The Power To Prohibit Abortion. <br />
<br />
The question posed by the Court pertains to the power of a state, in this case Mississippi. The Declaration of Independence not only declared the States to be free and independent, but also declared the legal basis and extent of their power. <span style="color:red">No understanding of state power is complete without consideration of the Declaration. The Declaration grounded civil power itself on the “laws of nature and of nature’s God.” <br />
<br />
That is what it says. It further declared this law of nature affirmed that every person may lawfully enjoy those rights which God has given. The laws of nature and its God pledges to guarantee to each person: <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among 8 these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.–That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed. . . <br />
<br />
Remember that under the Declaration, the “governments instituted among men,” whose job it is to secure the rights of the people, exclusively referred to the several state governments, as no federal or national government then existed. Accordingly, the duty to declare and secure the rights of the people belongs to the States themselves, not to any branch, department or agency of the federal government later created. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Even if this Court’s search for new fundamental un-enumerated substantive due process rights was constitutionally legitimate, it has neglected to look carefully at the “laws of nature and of nature’s God” as a source of those rights. Any legitimate search even for rights “deeply rooted” in American history and tradition would consider unalienable rights granted by the Creator as asserted in such a quintessential founding American document. In other words, the first place to look for any rights of the people would be to examine those rights granted by the Creator, not any purported rights invented by people. And if the Creator has not deemed it necessary or advisable to confer a particular right, then the logical conclusion would be that such a right does not exist. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Nevertheless the state governments’ purpose is to secure these natural and unalienable rights and 9 as we have seen, any un-enumerated rights are reserved to the People (not the judicial branch) to find, identify, and assert, and their States to enact. The People created their state governments for this purpose and their national government for a much more limited purpose. The People did not establish a national government with a judicial branch given any power to make law or discover un-enumerated rights. <br />
<br />
As to the power of the States, the Declaration declared: <br />
<br />
That these United Colonies are, and of Right ought to be, Free and Independent States; . . . and that as Free and Independent States, they have full Power to levy War, conclude Peace, contract Alliances, establish Commerce, and to do all other Acts and Things which Independent States may of right do. (emphasis added). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The States in the union have all power to do all “Acts and Things which Independent States may of right do.” The Constitution of a state may further limit this power. The United States Constitution including the fourteenth amendment also limits the power of States. But neither the framers nor text of that amendment contain any substantive due process limitation on a state’s police power. <br />
<br />
...Mississippi is such a state. It stands on equal footing with the original States. It enjoys the police power to adopt laws prohibiting abortion because the Declaration of Independence recognizes it may do such acts according to the law of nature. Nothing in the text of the Fourteenth amendment legitimately articulates a substantive due process limitation on that power. <br />
<br />
Even if a right to privacy implicit in the concept of ordered liberty translates into a right to abortion, nothing in the text of Article III, or the power of judicial review, extends to this Court a power to interlineate that right into the <br />
<br />
<br />
B. The Fourteenth Amendment Requires Only Procedural Due Process, not Substantive Due Process. The fourteenth amendment states in part: No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; . . . (emphasis added). U.S. Const., amend XIV. Due process pertains entirely to matters of procedure. “Procedural due process rules are meant to protect persons not from the deprivation, but from the mistaken or unjustified deprivation of life, liberty, or property.” Carey v. Piphus, 435 U.S. 247, 259 (1978). “[P]rocedural due process rules are shaped by the risk of error inherent in the truthfinding process as applied to the generality of cases.” Mathews v. Eldridge, 424 U.S. 319, 344 (1976) (emphasis added). The core of these requirements is notice and an opportunity to be heard (often a hearing) before an impartial tribunal. Due process may also require 13 an opportunity for confrontation and crossexamination, and for discovery; that a decision be made based on the record, and that a party be allowed to be represented by counsel. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">A review of the text of the fourteenth amendment reflects no textual support for any “substantive due process” clause. Even the term is an oxymoron. If we took the words in their ordinary meaning, “due process” merely signifies a proper procedure. The word “substantive,” on the other hand, means rights and duties as opposed to the procedural rules by which such things are established or enforced. Thus, the term “substantive due process,” in plain English, means non-procedural proper procedure. Logically, “substantive due process” is a type of “A = Not A” statement, where something is procedural and not procedural simultaneously. But unlike philosophy or mathematics, An “A = Not A” statement in a legal context is just plain illogical. Either the Court, when invoking substantive due process, is talking about procedure or it is not. If yes, then due process as a legal doctrine stands on its own and there is no need to resort to substantive due process. If no, then due process does not affect the matter, for it does not relate to procedure. This brings us back to Eden where the argument was first made that the words of the law do not mean what they say. While we acknowledge the argument has the weight of time behind it, originating in great antiquity, we respectfully urge the Court not to follow that ancient precedent. <br />
<br />
C. Courts Are The Mere Instruments Of The Law, And Can Will Nothing. <br />
Applying a dialectical interpretation to words is not an element of judicial power. Nothing in the case or controversy jurisdiction of the Supreme Court in Article III, sec. 2, extends any power to the Court to identify un-enumerated fundamental rights “implicit in the concept of ordered liberty,” or in the “concept of personal liberty,” or “deeply rooted in this nation’s history and tradition,” or “inherent in the concept of individual autonomy.”13 <br />
<br />
Alexander Hamilton affirmed this view, writing in Federalist No. 78, that the judicial branch of government is the least dangerous because it has neither force nor will, only judgment. Chief Justice Marshall agreed, noting that: ''Judicial power, as contradistinguished from the powers of the law, has no existence. Courts are the mere instruments of the law, and can will nothing.'' Osborn v. Bank of the United States, 22 U.S. (9 Wheat.) 738, 866 (1824) (Chief Justice Marshall).14 In other words, the Court <br />
<br />
14 See also United States v. Butler, 297 U.S. 1, 78-79 (1936) (“The power of courts to declare a statute unconstitutional is subject to two guiding principles of decision which ought never to be absent from judicial consciousness. One is that courts are concerned only with the power to enact statutes, not with their wisdom. The other is that while unconstitutional exercise of power by the executive and legislative branches of the government is subject to judicial restraint, the only check upon our own exercise of power is our own sense of self-restraint. For the removal of unwise laws from the statute books appeal lies not to the courts, but to the ballot and to the processes of democratic government.”) The instant case calls for self-restraint. <br />
<br />
<br />
cannot will un-enumerated fundamental rights into Constitutional existence. It has no judicial power to will rights “implicit in the concept of ordered liberty,” or in the “concept of personal liberty,” or “deeply rooted in this nation’s history and tradition,” or “inherent in the concept of individual autonomy” into textual existence. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The high watermark of the Supreme Court misuse of judicial review came in Cooper v. Aaron, 358 U.S. 1 (1958). In its opinion, the court remarked that Article VI of the Constitution makes the Constitution the “supreme Law of the Land.” So far, so good. In 1803, Chief Justice Marshall, speaking for a unanimous Court, calling the Constitution “the fundamental and paramount law of the nation,” declared in Marbury v. Madison, 1 Cranch 137 (1803) that “It is emphatically the province and duty of the judicial department to say what the law is.” This is a description of the legitimate power of judicial review found in Article III, Section 2. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">From this legitimate recognition of the power of judicial review, the Cooper v. Aaron Court stepped back to Eden. The Court first expanded its own opinion in Marbury asserting that Marbury actually “declared the basic principle that the federal judiciary is supreme in the exposition of the law of the Constitution.” 358 U.S. at 18 (emphasis added). Recall that Chief Justice Marshall said the judiciary has a duty to say what the law is. He said nothing, however, about the Court’s opinions as supreme. Cooper added the “supreme” element. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In its ruling, the Court in Cooper made the egregious error of misconstruing the Supremacy Clause of Art VI that “This constitution and the laws of the United States which shall be made in pursuance thereof” shall be “the supreme law of the land.” The Court, without either textual or historical support, construed “the laws of the United States” to include judicial opinions of the Court, when clearly, historically and textually, it only referred to acts of Congress which became law when made in pursuance of the Constitution. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Further, the Constitution grants no “supreme” expository power to the Court. It is not found in Articles III or VI. It is not there. What is found in Article VI is that the Constitution, laws and treaties “shall be the supreme law of the land.” Nothing is said about Supreme Court opinions being supreme law, let alone being law at all. The Constitution extends no power to the Court to claim that even its legitimate constitutionally based opinions, are the sole and exclusive meaning of the Constitution itself. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The judicial power to review cases arising under the constitution, laws and treaties is stated in Article III, section 2, but that power is not the power to rewrite the Constitution itself. It is not the power to authorize the court to sit as a perpetual constitutional convention. It is not the power for the court to write into the Constitution whatever it wants, or the power to strike from the Constitution has a duty to say what the law is. He said nothing, however, about the Court’s opinions as supreme. Cooper added the “supreme” element. In its ruling, the Court in Cooper made the egregious error of misconstruing the Supremacy Clause of Art VI that “This constitution and the laws of the United States which shall be made in pursuance thereof” shall be “the supreme law of the land.” The Court, without either textual or historical support, construed “the laws of the United States” to include judicial opinions of the Court, when clearly, historically and textually, it only referred to acts of Congress which became law when made in pursuance of the Constitution. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Further, the Constitution grants no “supreme” expository power to the Court. It is not found in Articles III or VI. It is not there. What is found in Article VI is that the Constitution, laws and treaties “shall be the supreme law of the land.” Nothing is said about Supreme Court opinions being supreme law, let alone being law at all. The Constitution extends no power to the Court to claim that even its legitimate constitutionally based opinions, are the sole and exclusive meaning of the Constitution itself. <br />
<br />
The judicial power to review cases arising under the constitution, laws and treaties is stated in Article III, section 2, but that power is not the power to rewrite the Constitution itself. It is not the power to authorize the court to sit as a perpetual constitutional convention. It is <span style="color:red">not the power for the court to write into the Constitution whatever it wants, or the power to strike from the Constitution whatever it does not want. Constitutional insertions and deletions are a power retained by the People. This textual judicial power renders the Court’s opinion in Roe without support in the fourteenth amendment. <br />
<br />
D. According to The Law Of Nature, Judicial Power Extends To Issuing Orders In Cases And Controversies, Not To Making Rules Of General Applicability. <br />
This exercise of judicial power is reflected in the difference between a “rule” and an “order.” A court cannot issue a rule under the law of nature, because the nature of any rule is that it is an action of general application. '''Rules apply not only to parties in a case, but to everyone. The court’s judgment on the other hand must be confined to an order for its contempt power to be exercised lawfully. Otherwise, a court could hold anyone in contempt for simply disagreeing with its opinion. This distinguishes judicial power from legislative power. Only the legislative power can make laws; the judiciary can merely apply pre-existing laws to the facts in a given case.''' <br />
<br />
Not only is the law of nature of judicial power responsive rather than initiative, and limited to giving orders to parties rather than rules to all persons, <span style="color:red">the law of nature of judicial power is restricted to judgment, not will. All the judge has is judgment to make known the statute or Constitution’s text. This distinguishes judicial power from executive power. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">It follows that if judges do not make law, which by definition is a “rule,” then judges cannot issue “rules,” and may only issue orders. A rule binds the people generally, and is by nature legislative, whereas an order binds only the person to whom it is directed. Thus, Article III extends the judicial power of the courts of the United States only to “cases” and “controversies.” If a judge could issue a rule which governed such disputes, the judicial power would not be limited to actual cases and controversies. [I]f the policy of the Government upon vital questions affecting the whole people is to be irrevocably fixed by decisions of the Supreme Court, the instant they are made in ordinary litigation between parties in personal actions, the people will have ceased to be their own rulers....15<br />
<span style="color:red">15 Abraham Lincoln, First Inaugural Address, March 4, 1861. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">This Court’s substantive due process jurisprudence is an example of rulemaking simply because it purports to add new text to the Constitution itself. For this reason, it is contrary to the law of nature of judicial power. The opinion in Roe v. Wade can also be examined to determine whether it was in the nature of an order or a rule. Remarkably, the Court did not issue an instruction to Texas declaring its statute unconstitutional and unenforceable. Rather, it specified a trimester formula was essentially a legislative rule purporting to bind all future statute governing abortion in every state. Yet only Texas was a party to the case. Hence, the Court’s opinion again lacked an essential element of the exercise of judicial power, that is, the issuance of an order, not a rule.16<br />
[16 For a more extensive review of the law of nature regarding <br />
judicial power and judicial review, see Herbert W. Titus & <br />
Gerald R. Thompson, America’s Heritage: Constitutional <br />
Liberty, Judicial Power And Judicial Review, The LONANG <br />
Institute (2006).]<br />
<br />
Besides the lack of concrete, textual constitutional language, the limited nature of judicial power and its lack of authority to make rules, the Court has felt constrained to adjust rather than abandon its substantive due process practice of atextual fundamental rights rulemaking. These cases reflect its “go to” linguistic justifications, all of which neither have textual support nor are found enumerated among the judicial powers in Article III. Judicial decisions finding that a state statute violates fundamental values “implicit in the concept of ordered liberty” are without textual support. See Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479, 500 (1965) (Harlan. J., concurring) (quoting Palko v. Connecticut, 302 U. S. 319, 325 (1937) (Cardozo, J.) overruled on other grounds, Benton v. Maryland, 395 U.S. 784 (1969)). A judicial decision finding that a state statute violates a woman’s right to abortion discovered in the “concept of personal liberty” is without textual support. See Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113, 153 (1973). <br />
<br />
Likewise, judicial decisions finding that a state statute violates rights “deeply rooted in this nation’s history and tradition” are without textual support. See Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 U.S. 702, 721 (1997). “The Due Process Clause specially protects those fundamental rights and liberties which are, objectively, deeply rooted in this Nation's history and tradition.” Palko, 302 U.S. at 325. The Court looks to principles of justice “so rooted in the traditions and conscience of our people as to be ranked as fundamental”) (quoting Snyder v. Massachusetts, 291 U. S. 97, 105 (1934) overruled in part on other grounds by Malloy v. Hogan, 378 U.S. 1 (1964)). <br />
So too, a judicial decision finding that a state statute violates a fundamental right which is “inherent in the concept of individual autonomy” without regard to history or tradition, is equally without textual support. See Obergefell v. Hodges, 576 U.S. 644; 135 S. Ct. at 2629 (2015).17 <br />
<br />
[17 Chief Justice Roberts, with whom Justice Scalia and Justice <br />
Thomas joined in dissent, further underscored the lack of any <br />
textual support for the court’s decision. <br />
<br />
The majority purports to identify four <br />
“principles and traditions” in this Court’s due <br />
process precedents that support a fundamental <br />
right for same-sex couples to marry. Ante, at 12. <br />
In reality, however, the majority’s approach has <br />
no basis in principle or tradition, except for the <br />
unprincipled tradition of judicial policymaking]<br />
that characterized discredited decisions such as <br />
Lochner v. New York, 198 U.S. 45. Stripped of <br />
its shiny rhetorical gloss, the majority’s <br />
argument is that the Due Process Clause gives <br />
same-sex couples a fundamental right to marry <br />
because it will be good for them and for society. <br />
If I were a legislator, I would certainly consider <br />
that view as a matter of social policy. But as a <br />
judge, I find the majority’s position indefensible <br />
as a matter of constitutional law.<br />
<br />
The same reasoning applies with equal force and effect <br />
to Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.S. 479, 500 (1965); Palko v. <br />
Connecticut, 302 U. S. 319, 325 (1937) (overruled on other <br />
grounds, Benton v. Maryland, 395 U.S. 784 (1969)); Roe v. <br />
Wade, 410 U.S. 113, 153 (1973), Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 <br />
U.S. 702, 721 (1997) and Snyder v. Massachusetts, 291 U. S. 97, <br />
105 (1934) (overruled in part on other grounds by Malloy v. <br />
Hogan, 378 U.S. 1 (1964))<br />
<br />
Let us be clear here. What we mean when we say the Court is utilizing doctrines or rules of interpretation which have no textual support, is that the Court is just declaring its own majoritarian judicial will as the Supreme Law of the Land without regard to the Constitution’s text, form of government, separation of powers, or any known legal doctrine except the arbitrary will of a Despot. Rather than celebrating and continuing this “long train of abuses and usurpations pursuing invariably the same object, a design to reduce” the People “under absolute Despotism,” there is still a window of time in which to quash this judicial abuse and usurpation. <br />
<br />
Finally, Amicus would be remiss in failing to address <span style="color:red">a future judicial decision which would discover a fundamental “right to life” “implicit in the Concept of ordered liberty”, or in the “concept of personal liberty,” or “deeply rooted in this nation’s history and tradition” or “inherent in the concept of individual autonomy,” or existing in any other linguistic contrivance yet to be animated from the spirit of the original argument in Eden (that the words do not mean what they say). Such a decision would also lack textual support in the non-existent substantive due process clause. Its advocates would perpetuate judicial Despotism and continue to wrongly nationalize, state jurisdiction. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">[Wait a minute. I have copied so much of Lonang's brief because I perceive its usefulness towards the goal of outlawing abortion in EVERY state, as required by the Constitution, especially the 14th Amendment. Yet in this unfortunate paragraph, Lonang argues that courts should NOT outlaw genocide universally! It is this kind of argument that elevates the "scrupulous neutrality" about whether murder is good, of which Justice Kavanaugh brags!<br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">[The error of Lonang and Kavanaugh, as I perceive it, is to miss the points raised by Justice Thomas about basing the definition of Constitutional Rights on what is specifically listed in the Constitution, which is the original meaning of "privileges and immunities" in the 14th Amendment. By that measure, "Life" is specifically protected by the Constitution, while "Murder" is not. This demands of courts that they outlaw baby murder in every state.] <br />
<br />
A right to life needs no between-the-lines authorization. The Amendment plainly identifies what makes a state law unconstitutional.]<br />
<br />
...Objecting to the Court’s holding in Obergefell v. Hodges, 576 U.S. 644; 135 S. Ct. at 2629 (2015) Justice Scalia, with whom Justice Thomas joined in dissenting observed: “This is a naked judicial claim to legislative—indeed, super-legislative—power; a claim fundamentally at odds with our system of government. Except as limited by a constitutional prohibition agreed to by the People, the States are free to adopt whatever laws they like, even those that offend the esteemed Justices’ “reasoned judgment.” ....<br />
<br />
...” The power and process of amending the national Constitution is well <br />
provided for in Article V. That Article assigns no place for the federal judiciary in its text.1<br />
<br />
The powers reserved to the States and people include the power to decide if they shall constitutionalize or not, fundamental rights “implicit in the concept of ordered liberty,” or within the “concept of personal liberty,” or “deeply rooted in this nation’s history and tradition,” or “inherent in the concept of individual autonomy.” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">[But not to the destruction of enumerated rights like Life.]<br />
<br />
...., the Court trampled down the separation of powers. It also exceeded the law of nature of judicial power, because it does not declare the written law, but rather says what the law should be. That goes beyond judicial review. ....<br />
<br />
Justice Curtis provided insight into the phenomenon when he observed: Political reasons have not the requisite certainty to afford rules of juridical interpretation. They are different in different men. They are different in the same men at different times. And when a strict interpretation of the Constitution, according to the fixed rules which govern the interpretation of laws, is abandoned, and the theoretical opinions of individuals are allowed to control its meaning, we have no longer a Constitution; we are under the government of individual men who, for the time being, have power to declare what the Constitution is according to their own views of what it ought to mean.” [ Dred Scott v. Sandford, 60 U.S. 393, 620-621 (1856) (J. <br />
Curtis, dissenting). <br />
<br />
He concluded that: “When such a method of <br />
interpretation of the Constitution obtains, in place of a <br />
republican Government, with limited and defined powers, we <br />
have a Government which is merely an exponent of the will of <br />
Congress; or, what in my opinion, would not be preferable, an <br />
exponent of the individual political opinions of the members of <br />
this court.” Id]<br />
<br />
==24 Claremont Institute's Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185038/20210727131748801_19-1392%20tsac%20CCJ.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment protects against deprivation “life, liberty, or property.” In the abortion rights cases, this Court has focused on “liberty.” [of moms.] The real issue, however, is life. [of babes.] Life is a natural right endowed by our Creator and is the first unalienable right recognized in the Declaration of Independence. ...The duty of government to protect life is at the center of the nation’s first legal document. <br />
<br />
==25 22 State Policy Organizations==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185004/20210727112957999_Dobbs%20Amici%20brief_FPC_%207.23.21.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
22 State Policy Organizations <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The positivistic [materialistic – only physical things are real] reduction of persons represented by the Court’s abortion decisions has leavened the law in a way that curtails historic State policies grounded in deference to a given human nature and the common law rights that correspond to that nature. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">By purporting to leave the question of the meaning of persons in the Fourteenth Amendment unanswered, this Court’s holdings requiring States to abandon common and natural law commitments have effectively ratified a diminished view of the human person in law. These holdings have foisted upon the States a denatured anthropological model that prohibits them from ascribing objective meaning, dignity, and value to vulnerable persons. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The severe distortion of the human person in constitutional caselaw invites systemic effects well beyond the troubled context of abortion. If constitutional precept commands States to treat nascent human life as vacant of meaning and value apart from subjective individual determination or Court authorization, concurrently placed in doubt is the historic understanding of law as constrained by a reality prior to and beyond its coercive impositions. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">A national abortion-enablement policy is mournful in itself, but does not keep to itself. It corrodes the law altogether. [http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185004/20210727112957999_Dobbs Amici brief_FPC_ 7.23.21.pdf] <br />
<br />
==26 Connie Weiskopf and Kristine L. Brown==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185063/20210727174713396_FINAL_Brown_Weiskopf_Dobbs_Amicus.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The sophistry at the heart of Roe is that the beginning of human life was ever a subject for speculation ...There was no doubt at the time of the Fourteenth Amendment as to whether the common definition of “person” included preborn persons. One-hundred and fifty years since, medical science has overwhelmingly confirmed this commonly understood inclusion of preborn persons in legal personhood. ...no other so-called constitutional right involves the “the purposeful termination of a potential life.” Yet even in Harris, we see the poison of Roe in the qualifier “potential.” ...By choosing Levy v. Louisiana, 391 U.S. 68 (1968) as the test for legal personhood, this Court can reach a new milestone in the advancement of human rights. ...The Court started from the premise that “illegitimate children are not ‘nonpersons,’” insofar as they are “humans, live, and have their being.” Levy 391 U.S. at 70 (emphasis added). Thus all children who 1)are human, 2) are living, and 3) are in being, are “clearly” persons under the Equal Protection Clause. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">As Justice Gorsuch wrote in his Ramos concurrence, “stare decisis isn’t supposed to be the art of methodically ignoring what everyone knows to be true.” Ramos v. Louisiana, 590 U.S. __, __ (2020) (slip op. at 23). [http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185063/20210727174713396_FINAL_Brown_Weiskopf_Dobbs_Amicus.pdf]<br />
<br />
==27 Professor Kurt T. Lash==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185028/20210727125456897_19-1392%20tsac%20Lash.pdf Filed July 27, 2021] ZZZZZZZZZZZZZ<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113 (1973), the Supreme Court ruled that...“We feel...This right of privacy...[is] founded in the Fourteenth Amendment’s concept of personal liberty and restrictions upon state action [while] the District Court determined [it is founded] in the Ninth Amendment’s reservation of rights to the people....” . In Planned Parenthood v. Casey, 505 U.S. 883 (1992), a plurality...once again cit[ed] the Fourteenth Amendment and the Ninth Amendment...s. The Ninth Amendment, both at the time of its adoption and now, preserves the people’s retained right to local self-government. It cannot properly be read as a source of authority to deny the rights of local self-government. The Fourteenth Amendment protects substantive rights against the states, '''but only those previously enumerated, thus leaving all unenumerated rights under the authority of the people of the several states''' as a matter of constitutional right. This includes the non-enumerated subject of abortion.<br />
<br />
[Substantive definition: it exists independently, not subordinate to anything; for example not owing its existence to any law or constitution. Enumerated definition: rights named in the Constitution, like freedom of speech and religion.]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....In sum, at the threshold of the Civil War, moderate Republicans (who, according to Foner, “held the balance of power within the Republican Party,” Foner, FREE SOIL, at 205) had no intention of abandoning constitutional federalism or reinterpreting the Ninth and Tenth Amendments. These Republicans believed that the slave holding southern states had fallen away from the original federalist principles of the Constitution and had continuously violated the personal rights enumerated in the Bill of Rights. See Michael Kent Curtis, FREE SPEECH, “THE PEOPLE’S DARLING PRIVILEGE”: STRUGGLES FOR FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION IN AMERICAN HISTORY 266-70 (2000). The Republicans who framed and advanced the Fourteenth Amendment sought only to enforce those original rights while maintaining the basic principles of constitutional federalism announced in provisions like the Ninth and Tenth Amendments. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">...II. The Fourteenth Amendment neither enforces unenumerated substantive rights against the states nor alters the federalist meaning of the Ninth Amendment.<br />
A. John Bingham, primary draftsman of Section One of the Fourteenth Amendment, sought to apply enumerated constitutional rights against the states while preserving the structural principles of constitutional federalism declared in the Ninth and Tenth Amendments.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">...Consistent with his continued belief in the reserved rights of the states over all unenumerated subjects, Bingham proposed a constitutional amendment that would enforce the first eight amendments in the Bill of Rights against the states but leave the substance of all unenumerated rights under the control of the people in the States.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....None of Bingham’s Republican colleagues in the Thirty-Ninth Congress objected to the idea of enforcing the Bill of Rights against the states. Some members, however, worried that the wording in Bingham’s initial draft might empower Congress to define what counted as federally enforceable “privileges and immunities.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Republican Giles Hotchkiss suggested he would support an amendment that clearly announced “a constitutional right that cannot be wrested from any class of citizens, or from the citizens of any State by mere legislation. But this amendment proposes to leave it to the caprice of Congress.” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....As Bingham explained three years after the ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment: Mr. Speaker, that the scope and meaning of the limitations imposed by the first section, fourteenth amendment of the Constitution may be more fully understood, permit me to say that the privileges and immunities of citizens of the United States, as contradistinguished from citizens of a State, are chiefly defined in the first eight amendments to the Constitution of the United States. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">...John Bingham’s fellow member on Joint Committee on Reconstruction, Michigan Senator Jacob Howard, also described Bingham’s Privileges or Immunities Clause in terms that involve only constitutionally enumerated rights. See Speech of Jacob Howard, May 23, 1866, in 2 Reconstruction Amendments, at 187-88.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In his speech introducing the Fourteenth Amendment to the Senate, Howard explained that the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States included the right of traveling citizens to receive equal treatment enumerated in Article IV’s Comity Clause (and described in antebellum cases like Corfield v. Coryell, 6 Fed. Cas. 546 (C.C.E.D. Pa. 1823)) as well as those rights “secured by the first eight amendments of the Constitution.” Id. at 188. Every single privilege or immunity listed by Howard in his extended speech involved a guarantee enumerated in the original Constitution. Howard’s speech is important: It was so widely read and republished that during the ratification debates speakers often referred to the proposed Fourteenth Amendment as “the Howard Amendment.” See, e.g., North Carolina House of Representatives, July 2, 1868 (“Mr. Seymour introduced the following resolution, ratifying the fourteenth article of the Constitution of the United States, the article known as the Howard Amendment.”), <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....C. The ratifying public was well informed of<br />
the speeches of John Bingham and Jacob<br />
Howard.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Unlike the secret proceedings of Philadelphia<br />
Constitutional Convention, the proceedings of the<br />
Thirty-Ninth Congress were public. Newspapers<br />
reported on the speeches and debates, often with<br />
verbatim transcripts, on a daily basis. See Introduction<br />
to the Collection, 1 Reconstruction Amendments, at ix.<br />
Bingham’s speeches of February 1866 were published<br />
in the New York Times,11 The New York Herald,12 The<br />
Vermont Watchman and State Journal,13 The<br />
Philadelphia Inquirer,14 and Philadelphia’s Illustrated<br />
New Age.15 Bingham himself published his February<br />
28, 1866 speech separately and distributed it as a<br />
campaign document. <br />
<br />
....In the<br />
Thirty-Ninth Congress, Pennsylvania Democrat<br />
Benjamin M. Boyer quoted the Ninth and Tenth<br />
Amendments as evidence that Congress had no right to<br />
“disfranchise the majority of the citizens of any State<br />
on account of their past participation in the rebellion.”17<br />
One finds similar Democrat references to the Ninth<br />
and Tenth Amendments throughout the Reconstruction<br />
debates. See, e.g., CONG. GLOBE, 41st Cong., 2d Sess.<br />
app. at 354 (1870) (remarks of Sen. William T.<br />
Hamilton) (quoting the Ninth and Tenth Amendments<br />
in support of a narrow reading of federal power).<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....As noted<br />
above, both John Bingham and Jacob Howard omitted<br />
the Ninth and Tenth Amendments from their list of<br />
constitutional rights protected by the Privileges or<br />
Immunities Clause, and instead expressly named the<br />
rights enumerated in the first eight amendments. As<br />
Bingham explained, “these eight articles I have shown<br />
never were limitations upon the power of the States,<br />
until made so by the fourteenth amendment.”<br />
<br />
....in the common<br />
Reconstruction-era understanding that the last two<br />
amendments in the Bill of Rights were distinguishable<br />
from the personal rights protected in the first eight.<br />
....y, there is no<br />
historical evidence that between the time of the<br />
<br />
18 Nor does it mean that states are not bound to respect the<br />
federalism principles of the Ninth and Tenth Amendments. See,<br />
e.g., New York v. United States, 488 U.S. 1041 (1992) (rejecting the<br />
idea that states can waive the Constitution’s federalist separation<br />
of powers represented by the Tenth Amendment). <br />
24<br />
Founding and Reconstruction a new consensus<br />
understanding of the Ninth Amendment had emerged<br />
which viewed the provision as a font of unenumerated<br />
personal rights that could be applied against the states.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....McDonald v. Chicago, 561 U.S. 742, 811, (2010)<br />
(Thomas, J., concurring in part and concurring in<br />
judgment) (“the Court has determined that the Due<br />
Process Clause applies rights against the States that<br />
are not mentioned in the Constitution at all, even<br />
without seriously arguing that the Clause was<br />
originally understood to protect such rights. See, e.g.,<br />
Lochner v. New York; Roe v. Wade.”) (cleaned up). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Nor could it. At the time of the Fourteenth<br />
Amendment, the term “due process of law” was<br />
“universally understood to guarantee individual rights<br />
of legal process that only courts could provide.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....In 1859,<br />
for example, John Bingham “invit[ed] attention to the<br />
significant fact that natural or inherent rights, which<br />
belong to all men irrespective of all conventional<br />
regulations, are by this constitution guaranteed by the<br />
broad and comprehensive word ‘person,’ as<br />
contradistinguished from the limited term citizen— as<br />
in the fifth article of amendments, guarding those<br />
sacred rights which are as universal and indestructible<br />
as the human race, that ‘no person shall be deprived of<br />
life, liberty, or property but by due process of law.’”<br />
Bingham, 1 Reconstruction Amendments, at 153-54.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">This made slavery the ultimate denial of Due Process<br />
as it deprived persons of life, liberty and property<br />
without any procedural protections whatsoever. <br />
.... McDonald v.<span style="color:red"><br />
Chicago, 561 U.S. 742, 811 (2010) (Thomas, J.,<br />
concurring in part and concurring in judgment) (This<br />
Court created the right to abortion based on an<br />
amorphous, unwritten right to privacy, which it<br />
grounded in the “legal fiction” of substantive due<br />
process.”). The Due Process Clause requires states to<br />
provide all persons critically important procedural<br />
rights [equal rights in court], but nothing more.<br />
....In The Slaughterhouse Cases, 83 U.S. 36 (1873), the<br />
Supreme Court rejected a claim by Louisiana butchers<br />
that a state-enacted monopoly violated, among other<br />
things, the Privileges or Immunities Clause of the<br />
Fourteenth Amendment....Since the right to pursue a local trade was neither an<br />
enumerated federal responsibility or enumerated<br />
federal right, the subject remained under the<br />
regulatory control of the people in the several states.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In support of his reading of the Fourteenth<br />
Amendment, Justice Miller relied on the basic<br />
principles of constitutional federalism. According to<br />
Miller, interpreting the Privileges or Immunities<br />
Clause as somehow nationalizing the unenumerated<br />
subjects of municipal regulation, especially when<br />
combined with the congressional enforcement powers<br />
granted by Section Five of the Fourteenth Amendment,<br />
would obliterate the federalist structure of the<br />
Constitution. Miller was unwilling to accept an<br />
interpretation that “radically changes the whole theory<br />
of the relations of the State and Federal governments<br />
to each other and of both these governments to the<br />
people . . . in the absence of language which expresses<br />
such a purpose too clearly to admit of doubt.”<br />
Slaughterhouse, 83 U.S. at 78.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In<br />
his 1871 Speech on the Enforcement Act, in words that<br />
anticipate Miller’s later opinion in Slaughterhouse,<br />
Bingham explained:<br />
Is it not clear that other and different privileges<br />
and immunities than those to which a citizen of<br />
a State was entitled are secured by the provision<br />
30<br />
of the fourteenth article, that no state shall<br />
abridge the privileges and immunities of citizens<br />
of the United States, which are defined in the<br />
eight articles of amendment, and which were not<br />
limitations on the power of the States before the<br />
fourteenth amendment made them limitations?<br />
Bingham, March 31, 1871, in 2 Reconstruction<br />
Amendments at 626.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Justice Miller also was correct to insist that the<br />
Fourteenth Amendment be interpreted in a manner<br />
consistent with the traditional understanding of<br />
constitutional federalism. Bingham himself had no<br />
intention to obliterate constitutional federalism and he<br />
insisted that his proposal imposed no rights upon<br />
states which they were not already constitutionally<br />
oath-bound to protect. Like other moderate<br />
Republicans in the Reconstruction Congress, Bingham<br />
valued constitutional federalism, describing it as “our<br />
dual system of Government by which our own<br />
American nationality and liberty have been established<br />
and maintained. I have always believed that the<br />
protection in time of peace within the States of all the<br />
rights of person and citizen was of the powers reserved<br />
to the States. And so I still believe.” Bingham, March<br />
9, 1866, in 2 Reconstruction Amendments at 140. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Finally, Miller was right to limit the privileges or<br />
immunities of citizens of the United States to those<br />
rights actually enumerated in one form or another in<br />
the federal Constitution. It had long been settled law<br />
that no state was permitted to make or enforce any law<br />
that conflicted or interfered with a proper exercise of<br />
enumerated federal power. See McCulloch v. Maryland,<br />
31<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">17 U.S. 316 (1819). The problem in the 1860s was the<br />
lack of federal power to enforce enumerated federal<br />
rights. As Bingham explained early in the debates of<br />
the Thirty-Ninth Congress, “it has been the want of the<br />
Republic that there was not an express grant of power<br />
in the Constitution to enable the whole people of every<br />
State, by congressional enactment, to enforce obedience<br />
to these requirements of the Constitution.” Bingham,<br />
February 26, 1866, in 2 Reconstruction Amendments at<br />
100. '''Although Miller does not expressly declare that<br />
the Privileges or Immunities Clause applied the first<br />
eight amendments against the states, Miller does name<br />
enumerated First Amendment rights as protected<br />
“privileges or immunities.” Nothing in his opinion<br />
closes the door on incorporation of the Bill of Rights.'''<br />
See, Lash, THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT, at 252-65.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">'''That door was erroneously closed in a later case,<br />
Cruikshank v. United States''', 92 U.S. 542 (1876). Id. at<br />
265; see also McDonald v. Chicago, 561 U.S. 742, 808<br />
(2010) (Thomas, J. concurring).<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">United States, by the consent of the people of the<br />
United States, with the power to enforce the bill of<br />
32<br />
rights as it stands in the Constitution today.” Bingham,<br />
in 2 Reconstruction Amendments at 109.<br />
No moderate Republican in or out of Congress in the<br />
1860s would have approved of a constitutional<br />
amendment that bound the states to enforce an<br />
undefined set of substantive rights and gave Congress<br />
the power the nationalize the same. This includes the<br />
otherwise unenumerated “right to abortion.”<br />
<br />
==28 Robin Pierucci, M.D., and Life Legal Defense Foundation==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185034/20210727130751481_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20Robin%20Pierucci%20MD%20and%20Life%20Legal%20Defense%20Foundation.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
A very different “logical and biological” <br />
conclusion about constitutional rights could be <br />
drawn from the definition of viability: <br />
After viability, when a human being is <br />
capable of meaningful life outside the <br />
mother’s womb, the State must, consistent <br />
with its obligations under the Fourteenth <br />
Amendment, protect this human from being <br />
deliberately killed to the same extent it <br />
protects older human beings. <br />
<br />
Such a conclusion is at least as, and likely more, <br />
plausible than Roe’s declaration that only after the <br />
unborn child could survive outside the womb, a <br />
state may, or may not, prohibit his or her <br />
deliberate destruction, subject to broad exceptions <br />
effectively gutting even this limited permission. <br />
<br />
....These scholars recognize that establishing <br />
the principle of Fourteenth Amendment personhood <br />
for the unborn does not dictate a single, judicially#imposed result for all states, all statutes, or all <br />
pregnancies. Paulsen, at 70 (“That the word <br />
‘person,’ as used in the Constitution in the Fifth <br />
and Fourteenth Amendments, is broad enough to <br />
embrace living but unborn humans does not itself <br />
say anything specific about what the precise legal <br />
regime must be with respect to abortion”); Finnis, <br />
Born and Unborn: Answering Objections to <br />
Constitutional Personhood, First Things, April 9, <br />
<br />
....Whatever abortion restrictions may (or may <br />
not) exist on paper, because of the flexibility of this <br />
Court’s jurisprudence, abortion providers across the <br />
country advertise their services for later abortions: <br />
beyond 20 weeks, beyond 24 weeks, beyond 28 <br />
weeks, beyond 32 weeks. See Appendix. The <br />
audience for these advertisements and websites is <br />
not doctors who have unexpectedly diagnosed a <br />
dangerous condition in a pregnant woman. These <br />
advertisements are direct-to-consumer marketing <br />
of Roe- and Casey-sanctioned abortions <br />
indistinguishable from infanticide.<br />
<br />
e. Additionally, the <br />
viability threshold for a compelling state interest in <br />
preserving human life, created by this Court in <br />
1973, should be abandoned in favor of the medically <br />
updated and philosophically consistent standard of <br />
an “unqualified” interest in protecting life that this <br />
Court upheld in the 1990 case of Cruzan<br />
<br />
==29 Priests for Life==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185032/20210727130517073_19-1392%20tsac%20Priests%20for%20Life.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
Indeed, Priests for Life urges the Court to use this opportunity to end the charade that Roe v. Wade was correctly decided. This fateful decision has no legitimate foundation in law, it continues to tear at the fabric of our nation, and it has corrupted our judicial system. It is time for it to go ....<br />
<br />
In 1868, when the<br />
Fourteenth Amendment was ratified, a majority<br />
of the States and numerous Territories had laws<br />
on the books that limited (and in many cases<br />
nearly prohibited) abortion. See id., at 175, n.1. <br />
<br />
It would no doubt shock the public at that time<br />
to learn that one of the new constitutional<br />
Amendments contained hidden within the<br />
interstices of its text a right to abortion. <span style="color:red">The<br />
fact that it took this Court over a century to find<br />
that right all but proves that it was more than<br />
hidden—it simply was not (and is not) there.<br />
June Med. Servs. L.L.C. v. Russo, 140 S. Ct. 2103,<br />
2142, 2151 (2020) (Thomas, J., dissenting).<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">When deciding Roe v. Wade, this Court infamously<br />
stated:<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">We need not resolve the difficult question of<br />
when life begins. When those trained in the<br />
respective disciplines of medicine, philosophy,<br />
and theology are unable to arrive at any<br />
consensus, the judiciary, at this point in the<br />
development of man’s knowledge, is not in a<br />
position to speculate as to the answer.<br />
5<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113, 159 (1973). Consistent with<br />
this veiled philosophical pronouncement—a<br />
pronouncement grounded in secular positivism—a<br />
majority of the justices concluded that the U.S.<br />
Constitution “does not define ‘person,’” leading the<br />
Court to ultimately conclude that “the word ‘person,’ as<br />
used in the Fourteenth Amendment, does not include<br />
the unborn.” Id. at 158. <br />
<br />
Remarkably, the Court dismissed the life of the<br />
unborn based on its conclusion that there is no direct<br />
textual support to conclude that this “person” is<br />
protected by the Fourteenth Amendment. Yet, this<br />
same Court created a right to abortion “out of whole<br />
cloth, without a shred of support from the<br />
Constitution’s text.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Court’s ruling in Roe v. Wade is similar to how<br />
the Court had previously concluded in the infamous<br />
Dred Scott decision (Dred Scott v. Sandford, 60 US 393<br />
(1857)) that people of color were not legal “persons” as<br />
a matter of federal constitutional law. Unfortunately,<br />
it took a civil war to correct this injustice.<br />
<br />
[Actually Dred Scott called slaves a “class of persons”, but persons without rights. And although they are persons, they are not “people of the United States”: <br />
“The words "people of the United States" and "citizens" are synonymous terms, and mean the same thing. They both describe the political body who, according to our republican institutions, form the sovereignty and who hold the power and conduct the Government through their representatives. They are what we familiarly call the "sovereign people," and every citizen is one of this people, and a constituent member of this sovereignty. The question before us is whether the class of persons described in the plea in abatement compose a portion of this people, and are constituent members of this sovereignty? We think they are not,”<br />
<br />
...6. The only two clauses in the Constitution which point to this race treat them as persons whom it was morally lawfully to deal in as articles of property and to hold as slaves.<br />
<br />
...8. A State, by its laws passed since the adoption of the Constitution, may put a foreigner or any other description of persons upon a footing with its own citizens as to all the rights and privileges enjoyed by them within its dominion and by its laws. But that will not make him a citizen of the United States, nor entitle him to sue in its courts, nor to any of the privileges and immunities of a citizen in another State.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">...It is very true that, in that portion of the Union where the labor of the negro race was found to be unsuited to the climate and unprofitable to the master, but few slaves were held at the time of the Declaration of Independence, and when the Constitution was adopted, it had entirely worn out in one of them, and measures had been taken for its gradual abolition in several others. But this change had not been produced by any change of opinion in relation to this race, but because it was discovered from experience that slave labor was unsuited to the climate and productions of these States, for some of the States where it had ceased or nearly ceased to exist were actively engaged in the slave trade, procuring cargoes on the coast of Africa and transporting them for sale to those parts of the Union where their labor was found to be profitable and suited to the climate and productions.]<br />
<br />
==30 Hannah S., John S. and Marlene S==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185061/20210727165822368_41029%20pdf%20Parker%20II.pdf Filed July 27, 2021]<br />
<br />
The story of this “adoption” and this Amici Curiae Brief will reveal that Roe’s measuring line for viability has now been moved all the way back to fertilization by the modern scientific advancement called in vitro fertilization. Roe, at 160, has this viability definition: “ ‘viable,’ . . . potentially able to live outside the mother’s <br />
womb, albeit with artificial aid.”<br />
<br />
Advances in science have eliminated the distinction between previability and viability. Previability prohibitions on elective abortions should be constitutional because viability occurs at fertilization, as proven through in vitro fertilization techniques. <br />
<br />
==31 Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185155/20210728163153060_Amici%20Brief%20of%20CMP-Daleiden.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Federal law recognizes human infants in utero, and premature infants born alive, as persons under the law at any gestational age. The federal Unborn Victims of Violence Act recognizes the “child in utero” as “a member of the species homo sapiens, at any stage of development, who is carried in the womb” whose death or injury in the course of a federal crime is subject to prosecution the same as that of any born child or adult individual. 18 U.S.C. § 1841(d), (a)(1). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The federal Born Alive Infants Protection Act establishes even more broadly that, for purposes of “any Act of Congress” and “any ruling, regulation, or interpretation of the various administrative bureaus and agencies of the United States,” “the words ‘person’, ‘human being’, ‘child’, and ‘individual’, shall include every infant member of the species homo sapiens who is born alive at any stage of development.” 1 U.S.C. § 8 (a).<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Even prior to the ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment, this Court acknowledged that the word “person” in law was a term designed to include all of humanity. In United States v. Palmer, 16 U.S. 610 (1818), Chief Justice Marshall explained that “every human being” and “the whole human race” was included in the words “person or persons” in federal law. Id. at 631–32. And in Levy v. Louisiana, 391 U.S. 68 (1968), this Court articulated a simple test for ensuring equal protection for marginalized persons, reasoning that so-called “illegitimate” children were not “non-persons” as they were “humans, live, and have their being,” and therefore, “clearly ‘persons’ within the meaning of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.” Id. at 70. <br />
<br />
==32 European Legal Scholars in support of neither party==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185153/2021072 8162714090_European%20Legal%20Scholars%20Amici%20Brief.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
The European Court allows States a wide margin <br />
of appreciation to determine the starting point of the <br />
right to life in their domestic law and to formulate <br />
their laws on abortion. Consistent with this, the <br />
European Court has held that the Convention does not <br />
confer a right to abortion and has recognized as <br />
compatible with a Member State’s obligations under <br />
the Convention even very restrictive abortion laws. <br />
However, in several cases the European Court has <br />
found violations of the Convention in respect of <br />
individual applicants as a result of procedural <br />
deficiencies in the way national abortion laws have <br />
been given effect.<br />
<br />
.....The Court previously has considered European law when interpreting the Constitution. See, e.g., Roper v. Simmons, 543 U.S. 551, 575 (2005) (considering certain foreign law “instructive” when interpreting the Eighth Amendment); Lawrence v. Texas, 539 U.S. 558, 560 (2003) (discussing the European Court’s reasoning when interpreting the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment); Atkins v. Virginia, 536 U.S. 304, 316 n.21 (2002) (resorting to other countries’ views on capital punishment for the mentally ill). To be sure, the propriety of doing so is disputed. See, e.g., Roper, 543 U.S. at 627–28 (Scalia, J., dissenting); Lawrence, 539 U.S. at 598 (Scalia, J., dissenting); Atkins, 536 U.S. at 322–28 (Rehnquist, C.J., dissenting). But the fact that the very same source of European law this Court previously invoked also allows prohibitions on abortion admits of no serious dispute. Roper, 543 U.S. at 563; Atkins, 536 U.S. at 313–14. <br />
<br />
....Amici, accordingly, wish to highlight relevant abortion jurisprudence from the European Court that may prove helpful to this Court. Specifically, the European Court has a body of case law weighing abortion laws against human rights standards. This case law addresses issues comparable to those faced by the Court, including the scope of the right to privacy and the interests and rights that may legitimately be balanced against such a right by the state when regulating or restricting abortion.<br />
<br />
1.Member States may protect human life before birth through national law. The European Court has identified several rights and interests justifying such laws. These include protecting the right to life of the unborn, the legitimate interest of society in limiting the number of abortions, and the interests of society to protect morals. 2.The European Court has held that the Convention does not confer a right to abortion. 3.The compatibility with the Convention of Member States’ laws on abortion is primarily assessed by reference to Article 2 (“Right to life”) and Article 8 (“Right to respect for private and family life”) of the Convention. 4.The European Court has not determined whether the unborn child is a person for the purposes of Article 2 of the Convention. The European Court has not interpreted Article 2 as prohibiting States from making abortion legal; it instead interprets Article 2 as allowing States a margin of appreciation to determine the starting point of the right to life in their domestic law. 5.Legislation regulating the termination of pregnancy touches upon the sphere of a woman’s private life and thus may come within the scope of Article 8. But the European Court has also consistently recognized that Member States have a wide margin of appreciation under the Convention with respect to the regulation of abortion. <br />
<br />
6.Consistent with the foregoing, the European Court has recognized as compatible with a Member State’s obligations under the Convention even very restrictive abortion laws, including a national law prohibiting abortion at all stages of pregnancy and for any reason other than where there was a risk to the life (including by way of suicide) of the expectant mother. <br />
<br />
7.While acknowledging that it is the task of an individual Member State to frame its own abortion law, the European Court has found that it follows from its responsibility under Article 19 of the Convention to supervise whether any such law constitutes a proportionate balancing of the competing interests involved. <br />
<br />
8.The European Court has not relied upon any concept of the viability of the “foetus”3 as a basis for assessing the compatibility of Member States’ abortion laws with the Convention. <br />
9.In several cases, the European Court has found that Member States have violated the Article 8 rights of claimants seeking to access abortion services permitted under national law as a result of deficiencies in the way the national law has been given effect. These have included deficiencies in the arrangements for conscientious objection by healthcare providers or deficiencies in the processes for establishing whether the conditions under national 3 The European Court uses the terms “foetus” and “unborn child” interchangeably. See Vo v. France, 2004-VIII Eur. Ct. H.R. 67, 109; A, B & C v. Ireland, 2010-VI Eur. Ct. H.R. 185, 261. (“ABC”). 6 law for a lawful abortion have been satisfied by a claimant in a particular case. <br />
<br />
==33 396 State Legislators from 41 States==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185121/20210728125120809_Dobbs%20Amici%20brief_State%20Legislators_07272021.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
[This brief tackles 2 issues: power of ''Congress'' to correct state slights to the people’s rights. Second, the power of ''states'' to protect rights. It addresses a Problem, when an ''un''enumerated [not specified in the Constitution] right, abortion, is at the expense of an ''enumerated'' right, Life. <br />
<br />
[This brief shows Section 5 authority embedded in natural law way before 1868. Not just Congress but states. Courts have zero jurisdiction to enforce unenumerated rights like abortion, but full authority and inescapable responsibility to enforce enumerated rights like Life. Couldn’t a red state sue a blue state for slaughtering its people?] <br />
<br />
9 The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.[7] <br />
Wikipedia: addresses rights, retained by the people, that are not specifically enumerated in the Constitution. <br />
<br />
10 The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.[6]<br />
<br />
<br />
[Even if Section 5 of the 14th Amendment DIDN'T give Congress authority to define and enforce rights:]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red"> State legislators have the constitutional duty, and therefore the power, to protect the fundamental, civil rights of persons. The fundamental law in which those fundamental rights are found is the common law, which consists of both natural duties and those ancient, customary rights and immunities that are foundational to ordered liberty. Thus, a state legislature must declare and secure to all persons within the protection of its laws the rights that those persons have by natural and customary law. Cf. Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 U.S. 702, 721-22 (1997) (upholding state legislation that prohibited assisted suicide and reasoning that the Fourteenth Amendment’s “Due Process Clause specially protects those fundamental rights and liberties which are, objectively, ‘deeply rooted in this Nation’s history and tradition’.” (quoting Moore v. E. Cleveland, 431 U. S. 494, 503 (1977)). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England (1765): “Hence,” he said, “it follows, that the first and primary end of human laws is to '''maintain and regulate these absolute rights of individuals.'''” Id. Blackstone taught that the legislative power is to declare existing common-law rights and duties and to remedy any defects in the legal security for those rights. Id. at *42-43, 52-58, 86-87 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Founders echoed this view in the Declaration of Independence, declaring that '''governments are instituted among men in order to secure the inalienable rights with which human beings are endowed by nature and nature’s God.''' They also accused the crown and Parliament of infringing the rights of “our constitution,” which in 1776 could only have been a reference to the common-law constitution of British North America. This view predicated the Constitution of the United States, which expressly secures natural rights, such as life and religious liberty, and common-law rights, such as jury trials and freedom from the quartering of soldiers in one’s home, and expressly disclaims any intent to disparage the other rights of the fundamental law. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Indeed, '''the point of having legislatures, executives, and courts is to secure the rights that Americans already have.''' Neither state legislatures nor the Constitution of the United States create those rights. See District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570, 592 (2008) (stating that “it has always been widely understood that <span style="color:red">the Second Amendment, like the First and Fourth Amendments, codified a preexisting right,” that it “is not a right granted by the Constitution,” and is not “in any manner dependent upon that instrument for its existence.”). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Some, but not all, of the rights of natural persons are enumerated [listed] in the Constitution''' of the United States and its amendments. U.S. Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 8.; art. IV, §2; amends. I-VIII. '''Others are enumerated in state constitutions.''' See e.g., Soc’y for the Propagation of the Gospel v. Wheeler, 22 F. Cas. 756, 766 (No. 13,156) (C.C.D.N.H. 1814). Still others are declared in American constitutions but not enumerated. U.S. Const. amend. IX (“The enumeration of certain rights herein shall not be construed to deny or disparage other rights retained by the people.”) (emphasis added). '''State legislatures have a duty to declare and secure all fundamental rights, both enumerated and unenumerated.''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Fundamental rights are those that persons enjoy by fundamental law—natural law and common law— with or without any written constitution. Because the common law includes natural rights, to understand the fundamental rights declared and secured by the Constitution, it is sufficient to look to the common law, especially as explained by William Blackstone. Established common-law doctrines constitute the best evidence of the existence and meaning of both enumerated and unenumerated, fundamental rights. Jeffrey D. Jackson, Blackstone’s Ninth Amendment: A Historical Common Law Baseline for the Interpretation of Unenumerated Rights, 62 Okla. L. Rev. 167 (2010) (explaining why the unenumerated rights referred to in the Ninth Amendment should be understood with reference to a common law baseline, especially as specified in Blackstone’s Commentaries); Adam J. MacLeod, Our Universal and Particular Constitution, Public Discourse, https://www.thepublicdiscourse.com/2018/10/43788/ (October 4, 2018). <span style="color:red">“The interpretation of the Constitution of the United States is necessarily influenced by the fact that its provisions are framed in the language of the English common law, and are to be read in the light of its history.” Smith v. Alabama, 124 U.S. 465, 478 (1888). The terms and concepts of the common law provided the “the nomenclature of which the framers of the Constitution were familiar.” Minor v. Happersett, 88 U.S. (21 Wall) 162, 167 (1875). Accord James R. Stoner, Jr., Common-Law Liberty: Rethinking American Constitutionalism 9-29 (2003). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">American constitutional rights are not philosophical abstractions. They are described in detail in common law treatises, such as those by Coke and Hale, and especially Blackstone’s Commentaries. The framers crafted American constitutions—state and federal—in common law terms. And Blackstone was their teacher and lexicographer. <br />
<br />
Morris L. Cohen, Thomas Jefferson Recommends a Course of Law Study, 1119 U. Pa. L. Rev. 823 (1971); Robert A. Ferguson, Law and Letters in American Culture 11 (1984); Albert W. Alschuler, Rediscovering Blackstone, 145 U. Pa. L. Rev. 1 (1996); R.H. Helmholz, Natural Law in Court: A History of Legal Theory in Practice 131–41 (2015). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">As this Court has rightly acknowledged, Blackstone’s “works constituted the preeminent authority on English law for the founding generation.” Alden v. Maine, 527 U.S. 706, 715 (1999). Blackstone retained his influence through the adoption of the Civil War Amendments. James M. Ogden, Lincoln’s Early Impressions of the Law in Indiana, 7 Notre Dame L. Rev. 325, 328 (1932). And this Court continues to turn to Blackstone today. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">[2 A few examples from recent years include Gamble v. United States, __ U.S. __, 139 S. Ct. 1960 (2019) (the Court’s opinion, the concurrence, and one dissent citing Blackstone multiple times to determine the meaning of the phrase “the same offense” in the Fifth Amendment’s double jeopardy clause); Department of Homeland Security v. Thuraissigiam, __ U.S. __, 140 S. Ct. 1959, 1969 (2020) (calling Blackstone’s Commentaries a “satisfactory exposition of the common law of England”); Ramos v. Louisiana, __ U.S. __, 140 S. Ct. 1390, 1395 (2020) (citing Blackstone in explanation of the holding that the requirement of juror unanimity is “a vital right protected by the common law” and therefore the Constitution’s jury trial guarantee); Torres v. Madrid, __ U.S. __, 141 S. Ct. 989, 996, 997, 998, 1000 (2021) (citing Blackstone multiple times to determine meaning of Fourth Amendment “seizure”). ]<br />
<br />
...emphasis added). The legislature’s particular duty to declare and secure the natural and customary rights of America’s fundamental common law can be seen clearly by reading together the Ninth, Tenth, and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution of the United States. The Bill of Rights marks off certain rights as beyond the competence of Congress (and now, by incorporation, the states) to alter or abolish. It immunizes those rights by enumerating them and by stating in particular terms the official duties with which they correlate. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">But as the Ninth Amendment makes clear, the enumeration of certain common-law rights does not deny or disparage all the other rights that the American people enjoy by virtue of natural law and their ancient customs. The Ninth Amendment expressly reserves to the people those civil and fundamental rights that they enjoyed prior to ratification, which are their natural rights, other common-law rights and liberties, and some privileges enumerated in state constitutions. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Because many states refused to remedy infringements of fundamental rights [for blacks] prior to the Civil War, the Fourteenth Amendment was necessary to ensure to all persons due process of law and the equal protection of the laws, and to empower Congress to remedy infringements of those rights. It bears emphasis that <span style="color:red">the Fourteenth Amendment was necessary to recall state legislatures to their original task. '''Far from repealing the people’s retention of fundamental rights declared by the Ninth Amendment, the Fourteenth Amendment strengthened it'''. And far from abrogating the duty of state legislatures to declare and secure unenumerated rights, the Fourteenth Amendment reinforced that duty. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">[That is, the rights retained by the people but not protected by their state, such as the right of Blacks to liberty, was strengthened – at the expense of the freedom of the legislature to torpedo those rights. And the 14th Amendment did not supplant the duty of legislatures to protect rights, by courts, but rather that duty became enforceable by Congress.]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Legislatures are equipped to deliberate about and secure the rights of all persons as they identify and specify the boundaries between rights. <br />
<br />
See Grégoire Webber et al, Legislated Rights: Securing Human Rights through Legislation (2018). Many of the great civil rights achievements in American history have been legislative achievements. See, e.g., the Civil Rights Act of 1866, Civil Rights Act of 1875, and the Civil Rights Act of 1964. And these include state statutes that declare and secure common law rights against unreasonable discrimination. ....<br />
<br />
This Court has never denied that state legislatures have the power and duty to declare and specify the boundaries of fundamental rights in the abortion context. To the contrary, this Court has ratified the legislative province to identify, specify, and secure the rights of our fundamental law. Often using the term “interests” or “state interests,” ....<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In many respects, legislatures are better equipped for this task than courts, whose job is to secure the rights of the litigants who happen to appear in any case or controversy. The job of a court is to specify a right in a legal judgment resolving a dispute between two parties. To generalize that particular judgment, to make that right universal and absolute for all persons, carries the risk that the tribunal will unintentionally invite infringement of the rights of persons who are not parties to the litigation. Significantly, most constitutional abortion cases proceed without any involvement of the persons who are most interested in, and affected by, the outcome: expectant mothers, fathers, grandparents, physicians and other health care professionals who are called to deal with the fallout of abortions, and, critically, unborn human beings. By contrast, legislatures hear evidence and find facts about the rights of all interested persons <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Furthermore, a lawmaker must fashion remedies and sanctions for rights infringements that are commensurate and responsive to the particular wrong. Because not all persons who contribute to a person’s death are equally culpable, legislatures justly distinguish between them. The sanction for reckless acts that cause death need not be as severe as the sanction for intentional homicide. Legislatures also reasonably take into account the circumstances of the person whose life is lost. For example, remedies for wrongful death may take into account a person’s stage of development and relationship to any dependents. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">....For example, the right to life remains inviolable and absolute though a legislature may choose to sanction those who are most culpable for its deprivation and not others <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Similarly, state legislatures have long recognized that abortionists are the true, culpable parties in an abortion. Mothers are often victims of coercion. And mothers suffer the consequences of the abortion procedure itself. For these and other reasons, legislatures may choose not to impose legal sanctions on them, notwithstanding that their unborn children have a right to live. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Roe Court failed to understand this. The Court looked to state laws that impose criminal sanctions on abortionists, rather than on the mothers themselves, and then erroneously inferred that the law is indifferent to the lives of the unborn. Roe, 410 U.S. at 157 n.54. ...<br />
<br />
[Many prolifers similarly misunderstood]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">That a right is absolute means simply that it is vested—in jurisprudential terms, that it has built into it an immunity from retrospective or retroactive abrogation—so that governments are powerless to deprive any person of the right unless and until the person has been proven to have forfeited the right by committing some wrong, and that the wrong has been established in some proceeding that satisfies the requirements of due process, or until the person dies a natural death. Id. at *125, 128-30. <br />
<br />
,,,,the right to life is a right not to be intentionally killed. It is not a guarantee against death ‘<br />
<br />
==34 141 International Legal Scholars==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185170/20210729071535904_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20141%20International%20Legal%20Scholars.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Not even foreign legal authorities support any right to abortion. 141 International Legal Scholars submitted an amicus brief in the Dobbs v. Jackson case declaring that “Whatever role international law plays in evaluating abortion regulations in the United States, it offers no basis for the existence of a human right to abortion.” (http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185170/20210729071535904_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20141%20International%20Legal%20Scholars.pdf) “The minority of States that choose to allow elective abortion impose a standard gestational limit of twelve weeks, which is more restrictive than Mississippi’s Gestational Age Act.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“If the Court chooses to consult international law in this case, it will find there is no treaty that recognizes a so-called human right to abortion, nor has such a right been established through customary law. To the contrary, the practice across all regions demonstrates a consistent State prerogative to protect unborn life. Nor has any international court declared the existence of an international right to abortion, even in regions with the most permissive abortion regimes. Thirdparty actors seeking to invent a new right to abortion err when interpreting key international instruments, such as the Convention on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women, the Rome Statute, and the International Conference on Population and Development. The clear language in those documents defies any attempt to repurpose them to create an international human right to abortion. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">“On the other hand, provisions recognizing the unborn child as a rights-holder can be found in many international human rights instruments, including the American Convention on Human Rights, the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. Most States choose to exercise the prerogative to protect unborn life by regulating abortion much more strictly than in the United States. Even in the minority of States that permit elective abortions, most specify a gestational limit of twelve weeks. That limit is more restrictive than Mississippi’s Gestational Age Act, which allows elective abortion until fifteen weeks’ gestation, and then permits abortion only for medical emergencies or severe fetal abnormality.”<br />
<br />
<br />
==35 Prolife Center at the University of St. Thomas==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185177/20210729085125572_DOCKET%2019-1392%20BRIEF%20AMICUS%20CURIAE%20OF%20THE%20PROLIFE%20CENTER%20AT%20THE%20UNIVERISTY%20OF%20ST.%20THOMAS%20IN%20SUPPORT%20OF%20PETITIONERS.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
The Court should make clear that the States are not required to permit abortions for reasons relating to the mental or psychological health of the pregnant woman, or for undefined reasons of health, either of which would lead the Court, and the country, back to a regime of abortion–on–demand.<br />
<br />
==36 Mary Kay Bacallao Advocating for Unborn Children==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185109/20210728121621904_19-1392%20Brief%20Amicus%20Curiae.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">It is time to extend to unborn children the equal protection and due process rights they enjoyed in Mississippi until the Roe Court made an elementary grammar error, using a phrase that conferred citizenship in one clause to define personhood for other clauses. It is time to correct the Roe Court’s error in refusing to determine when life began and in the same stroke of the pen stripping the unborn of their personhood, citing the very amendment that codified the right of all persons, born and unborn, to equal protection and due process. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">THE ROE COURT MISINTERPRETED THE MEANING OF THE WORD “PERSON” AS FOUND IN THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT. The Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution3 includes the following three references to persons: <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">[1.] “All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">[2.] “No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law;” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">[3.] “nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Here, in looking at statutory construction cannons such as noscitur a sociis, which means, “it is known by its companions,” the meaning of the word “persons” can only be ascertained by its associates. In the first instance, “persons” is being modified by “born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">3 U.S. Const. amend. XIV (adopted July 9, 1868) Text: All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">jurisdiction thereof…” Here, “persons” is a general term that is being limited at least by two conditions, either “born” or “naturalized.” In this instance, the Fourteenth Amendment limits the type of persons who can be citizens to those either born or naturalized in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In the second instance, no “person” shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law, where “person” is used generally, unmodified by “born” or “naturalized, etc.” Here “citizens” as defined in the first instance is separate and distinct from “person” found in the second part of the sentence. The second use of “person” is unmodified. These persons are not necessarily citizens, nor does it follow that they must necessarily be “born.” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In the third instance, “any person” is also unmodified by either “born” or “naturalized, etc.” In other words, “person” is not limited to a person “born” or “naturalized in the United States,” rather, the term “person” is again unmodified and used in the general sense. Thus, where the second use of the term “person” prohibits a State from depriving a person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law, “person” is used generally rather than in the context of being “born.” Additionally, where the third use of the term “person” does not allow a State to deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws, again, “person” is unmodified. This does not limit protection to “persons born or naturalized in the United States…” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">To assert that one word, such as “born,” that is used in a single line to limit a general term, such as “person,” in one provision also limits that same general term, in this case “person,” each time it occurs 5 is linguistically incorrect. It is the same as saying that because one line refers to a black cat, all other times the word cat appears it can only refer to cats that are black. This is not the way language works. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">There is no evidence that the original meaning of person was limited to those who were born. Rather, the corpus evidence found in COHA, the Hansard Corpus, and the Corpus of U.S. Supreme Opinions point to the unborn as persons, legally able to inherit property and in need of protection. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Roe court did not resolve the question of when life begins, “We need not resolve the difficult question of when life begins. When those trained in the respective disciplines of medicine, philosophy, and theology are unable to arrive at any consensus, the judiciary, at this point in the development of man’s knowledge, is not in a position to speculate as to the answer.”4 However, the Roe Court maintained that “… the word ‘person,’ as used in the Fourteenth Amendment, does not include the unborn.”5 The Roe Court used faulty linguistics in determining that someone unborn was not a ‘person’ as used in second and third parts of the Fourteenth Amendment. In the first use of person, ‘born’ modifies or limits the meaning of ‘person,’ not the other way around. The Roe Court did not use proper linguistic interpretation of the text of the Fourteenth Amendment when limiting its interpretation of the second and third references to persons as those who were born. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The second reference to person in the Fourteenth Amendment, stating that a State may not deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law applies to persons both born and unborn. The third reference to person in the Fourteenth Amendment, where a State may not deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws also applies to persons both born and unborn. Simple linguistics, applied to these provisions in the U.S. Constitution, where the word person is unmodified by the word “born” confirms that a person is a person no matter how small. <br />
<br />
In the 1850’s, there is “love of an unborn child.”18 There is also mention of the absurdity of a “price for an unborn infant”19 and making “slaves of the unborn”20 in an argument against slavery in the New England Yale Review. In the “other” category there is a reference to the divine “I AM” as unborn21 in Rational Cosmology. In the 1860’s, a popular magazine called The Atlantic deals with the “crime, so common among church going ladies and others, of murdering their unborn offspring!”22 The same magazine asks a question about, “those who provide women with [th’] means of killing their unborn children, - a double crime, murder and suicide?”23 The Atlantic also mentions the “murder of unborn offspring” in the context of a “Church powerful enough to guard the issues of life.”24 In the 1870’s, the English Constitution mentions unborn children in the context of persons: “An Act of Parliament is at least as complex as a marriage settlement; and it is made much as a settlement would be if it were left to the vote and settled by the major part of persons concerned, including the unborn children. There is an advocate for every interest, and every interest clamours for every advantage.”25 <br />
<br />
==37 Professor Randy Beck==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185118/20210728124300921_19-1392tsacProfessorRandyBeck.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
Professor Tribe’s Justification Falls Short Because a Pregnant Woman Cannot Transfer a Viable Fetus to Other Caretakers ... 20 V. Viability Is an Arbitrary Line for Measuring Abortion Rights ...................... 22 VI. Stare Decisis Should Not Preserve an Arbitrary Rule Without Constitutional Warrant ..<br />
<br />
==38 Christian Legal Society and Robertson Center for Constitutional Law==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185104/20210728115957257_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20%20Christian%20Legal%20Society%20et%20al.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
The Court cannot serve the rule of law by preserving decisions that subvert the rule of law <br />
A Proper Conception Of Substantive Due Process Does Not Support Existing Abortion Jurisprudence ....<br />
<br />
<blockquote> <span style="color:red">Some of this Court’s most ignominious decisions emerged from expansive and unchecked conceptions of substantive due process. The “most salient instance . . . was, of course, the case that the [Fourteenth] Amendment would in due course overturn, Dred Scott v. Sandford.” Glucksberg, 521 U.S. at 758 (Souter, J., concurring in the judgment). A half-century later, Lochner v. New York inspired a line of “deviant economic due process cases” that “harbored the spirit of Dred Scott in their absolutist implementation of” substantive due process. Id. at 761. Roe fares no better under a proper constitutional analysis. </span><br />
<br />
==39 Center for Religious Expression==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185542/20210802162418144_19-1932%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20Center%20for%20Religious%20Expression.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Roe Court demurred on the central inquiry. When the case was decided, the presence of a life inside a mother’s womb was a debatable topic, largely informed by religious and philosophical perspectives. 410 U.S. at 159-60 (passing on “the difficult question of when life begins,” referencing differing belief systems).2 Wary of decreeing the precise moment of life, whether at conception, birth, or some time in between, the Roe Court rejected life as a marker and settled on viability as way to denote the State’s interest.</span><br />
<br />
==40 Center for Family and Human Rights==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185123/20210728132729071_CFam%20Amicus%20Brief%20Filed.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The 2018 Mississippi Gestational Age Act banning most abortions after the 15th week of pregnancy, when the child in utero is known to suffer pain from common abortion procedures, is fully consistent with International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights ratified by the United States, which presumptively protects the right to life of children in the womb (hereinafter, the “Covenant”), International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, Dec. 16, 1966, S. EXEC. DOC. E, 95-2 (1978), 999 U.N.T.S. 171 (entered into force Mar. 23, 1976), as well as other human rights commitments and obligations of the United States. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">A careful reading of the text and history of the Covenant reveals that children in the womb were never excluded from the right to life, and that, more broadly, international law does not establish a human right to abortion in any circumstance, either through treaty obligation or by custom....<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Treaty law is the supreme Law of the Land and the Court has a constitutional responsibility to declare what the law is. The Court should make a finding of law that children in the womb are not excluded from the right to life under the Covenant, given the plain meaning of the text of the Covenant when it was ratified by the U.S., the interpretation of the Covenant by the Executive branch, and its implementation by other States who are party to the treaty, therefore, laws to protect children in the womb from being arbitrarily deprived of their right to life, regardless of viability, are consistent with the international human rights obligations of the United States. <br />
<br />
The Court should nonetheless say something substantive on the topic of the status of the unborn in international human rights law without upsetting honest political debates that are legitimately carried out through democratic institutions. The Court should do this for prudential reasons, including that of shielding itself from accusations that it is avoiding foundational human rights questions and to preempt interference from international actors and foreign powers in U.S. domestic legal and political disputes.<br />
<br />
==41 Concerned Women for America==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185093/20210728111520674_No19-1392_CWA_Diaz_Amicusbrief.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
Mississippi Should Be Free To Make Reasonable Determinations About Abortion Policy That Place A Higher Value On The Life Of Mothers And Their Unborn Children ............................................................ 4 II. <br />
<br />
The Court Has Undervalued The State’s Interest In Women’s Health By Failing To Give Proper Weight To The Physical, Psychological, And Emotional Harms Abortion Can Have On Women’s Lives .. <br />
<br />
e. The states should have broad discretion in addressing the interests at play in the abortion context. Neither viability nor any other framework should constrain the state’s ability to address the ever-changing concerns associated with abortion.<br />
<br />
==42 Foundation for Moral Law, Lutherans for Life==<br />
<br />
[https://storage.googleapis.com/msgsndr/JTZoYWv3fly6hFemb8mU/media/63b73813b7386028645df690.pdf Filed July 28, 2021]<br />
<br />
neither abortion nor privacy are mentioned in the Constitution, but Justice Blackmun said the right is found in a "penumbra" formed from "emanations" from certain rights in the Bill of Rights. Thomas Jefferson's warning that "The Constitution ... is a 3 mere thing of wax in the hands of the judiciary, which they may twist and shape into any form they please"2 takes on special significance, because a jurisprudence of "penumbras" and "emanations" is entirely subjective and removes the Constitution from any kind of objective scholarship. It is also dangerous, because the same Court that can read into the Constitution rights that simply are not there, can also read out of the Constitution rights that are there, by reading into the Constitution powers that are not there....'''The viability test has no foundation in law, science, history, Biblical or church tradition.''' <br />
<br />
When Justice Blackmun used the viability test in Roe, he presented very little historical, legal, or medical support for that position, because very little support for that position exists. ...<br />
<br />
In fact, throughout history viability has seldom if ever been considered the beginning of human life. <span style="color:red">Much of our Western legal tradition has been shaped by the Bible. On October 4, 1982, Congress passed Public Law 97-280, declaring 1983 the “Year of the Bible,” and the President signed the bill into law. The opening clause of the bill is: “Whereas Biblical teachings inspired concepts of civil government that are contained in our Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of the United States; . . .” Joshua Berman, Senior Editor at Bar-Ilan University, in his 2008 book Created Equal: How the Bible Broke with Ancient Political Thought, contends that the Pentateuch is the world's first model of a society in which politics and economics embrace egalitarian ideals. Berman states flatly: If there was one truth the ancients held to be self-evident it was that all men were not created equal. If we maintain today that, in fact, they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights, then it is because we have inherited as part of our cultural heritage notions of equality that were deeply entrenched in the ancient passages of the Pentateuch.6 <br />
<br />
6 Joshua Berman, Created Equal: How the Bible Broke with Ancient Political Thought (Oxford 2008) 175, See also John Marshall Gest, The Influence of Biblical Texts Upon English Law, an address delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa and Sigma xi Societies of the University of Pennsylvania June 14, 1910, https://scholarship.law.upenn.edu quoting Sir Francis Bacon: “The law of England is not taken out of Amadis de Gaul, nor the Book of Palmerin, but out of the Scripture, of the laws of the Romans and the Grecians.”<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">A. The Bible on Pre-born Children <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Bible treats the preborn child as a living human being. When Elizabeth, the mother of John the Baptist, came into the presence of Mary who was carrying Jesus in her womb, Elizabeth declared that “the babe leaped in my womb for joy” (Luke 1:44). That doesn’t sound like a fetus or fertilized egg; that sounds like a child! It reminds us of Rebekah, of whom we read, “And the children struggled within her . . . .” (Genesis 25:21-26). These preborn children displayed traits that would follow them most of their lives. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The original languages used in these accounts make no distinction between born and preborn children. Of all of the Greek words used for child, brephos connotes a baby or very small child. That’s the word attributed to Elizabeth: “The brephos leaped in my womb for joy.” We see the same word in the next chapter: “Ye shall find the brephos wrapped in swaddling clothes, lying in a manger.” And in II Timothy 3:15 Paul uses the same word: “From a brephos thou hast known the holy Scriptures . . . .” The same word is used for a child in the womb, a child newly born, and a child sometime after birth. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Another Greek word used for “son” is huios. In Luke 1:36 the angel tells Mary, “And, behold, thy cousin, Elizabeth, she hath also conceived a huios.” And the angel tells Mary in Luke 1:31, “Thou shat conceive in thy womb, and bring forth a huios.” Two verbs, “conceive” and “bring forth,” with the same direct object, a “son” or huios. And years later, when Jesus is a young man, God the Father says to Him, “Thou art my beloved huios” (Luke 5:22). Again, the same Greek word used for a preborn child, a newborn child, and a young man. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The same is true of the Old Testament Hebrew. The same word used for the preborn children in Rebekah’s womb, bne, is also used for Ishmael when he is 13 years old (Genesis 17:25) and for Noah’s adult sons (Genesis 9:19). And Job says in his anguish, “Let the day perish wherein I was born, and the night in which it was said, There is a man child (gehver) conceived” (Job 3:3). The Old Testament uses gehver 65 times, and usually it is simply translated “man.” Job 3:3 could be accurately translated, “There is a man conceived.” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The biblical authors identify themselves with the preborn child. In Psalm 139:13 David says, “Thou hast covered me in my mother’s womb.” Isaiah says, “The Lord hath called me from the womb” (49:1), and in Jeremiah 1:5 we read, “before thou camest forth out of the womb I sanctified thee, and I ordained thee a prophet unto the nations.” They don’t say “the fetus that became me;” that person in the womb is “me.” <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Job wishes he could have died before he was born: “Wherefore then hast thou brought me forth out of the womb? Oh that I had given up the ghost, and no eye had seen me!” (10:18) How can the preborn child die if he or she is not alive? <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">And David says, “Behold, I was shapen in iniquity, and in sin did my mother conceive me.” (Psalm 51:5) There was nothing sinful about the act of David’s conception; this passage establishes that the preborn child has a sinful nature. How can a non-person have a sinful nature? And while other verses establish the child’s personhood before birth, this passage shows his or her humanity all the way back to conception! <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Clearly the Bible, especially in its original languages, treats the preborn child the same as a child already born. The Bible knows nothing about “potential human beings;” to the authors of Scripture, there are only human beings with potential. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Some will argue that, because Genesis 2:7 says, “God breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a living soul,” man doesn’t really become human until he takes that first breath. Amici believe this is a mistaken interpretation of Scripture.''' <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">(1) Genesis 2:7 is not normative about how and when human life begins. Adam was never a preborn child; he was formed out of the dust of the ground as a mature adult human being. No one else was formed out of the dust of the ground; even Eve was formed out of Adam’s rib, and we never read that God breathed the breath of life into her nostrils or those of anyone else. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">(2) Even if we were to conclude that without the “breath of life” we are not fully human, the preborn child takes in oxygen through a placenta. Birth constitutes a dramatic change of environment coupled with the ability to breathe for oneself; other than that birth is simply one more step on the road to maturity. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">So the Bible, taken as a whole, teaches that the preborn child is a living human being. Viability does not even enter the picture in determining the beginning of personhood. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">B. . Church Tradition on Pre-Born Children <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Church tradition has also been instrumental in the formation of Western law.7 For this reason, and because Justice Blackmun in Roe, 410 U.S. at 130, and Justice Stevens in his Webster dissent, 492 U.S. at 567-69, cited Catholic Church teaching to justify Roe v. Wade, Amici will briefly survey church history and its effect on Western law. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Didache, or Teaching of the Twelve Apostles, a manual of instruction dating possibly as early as 50 A.D. or possibly in the second or third centuries,8 commanded, "You shall not murder a child by abortion nor kill that which is born."9 The Church Father Tertullian, writing around 197 A.D., cited <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">7 Harold J. Berman, Law and Revolution: The Formation of the Western Legal Tradition (Cambridge, MA, 1983); John Eidsmoe, Historical and Theological Foundations of Law, 3 Vols. (Nordskog 2017) 8 Early Christian Writings, "Didache," www.earlychristianwritings. com/ didache.html. 9 Id., Roberts-Donaldson English Translation.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">extensively from Old Testament and New Testament Scriptures.10 He also noted that Hippocrates, Asciepiades, Erasistratus, Herophius, and Soranos, "all of them certain that a living being had been conceived and so deploring the most unhappy infancy of one of this kind who had first to be killed list a live woman being rent apart.”11 St. Hippolytus, writing around 228 A.D., condemned those who resorted to drugs " so to expel what was being conceived on account of their not wishing to have a child," declaring them guilty of "adultery and murder at the same time."12 And St. Basil wrote in his First Canonical Letter, <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The woman who purposely destroys her unborn child is guilty of murder. With us there is no nice enquiry as to its being formed or unformed. In this case it is not only the being about to be born who is vindicated, but the woman in her attack upon herself, because in most cases women who make such attempts die. the destruction of the embryo is an additional crime, a second murder, at all events, if we regard it as done with intent.13<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">10 Scriptures cited by Tertullian include Jeremiah 1:5; Psalm 139:15; Luke 1:41-42. 11 He declared firmly, “It is not permissible for us to destroy the seed by means of illicit manslaughter once it has been conceived in the womb, so long as blood remains in the person.” 12 Hyppolytus, circa 228. A.D.; quoted in The Ante-Nicene Fathers: The Writings of the Fathers Down to A.D. 325, ed. Alexander Roberts, Sir James Donaldson, (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1903) V:131. 13 10 Basil (c. 330-379 A.D.), reprinted in A Select Library of Post-Nicene Fathers of the Christian Church, Second Series, ed. Philip Schaff and Henry Wace (New York: The Christian Literature Company, 1895) VIII:225. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Canon Law of the Roman Catholic Church provides , "A person who procures a completed abortion incurs a latae sententiae [automatic] excommunication."14 The Canon Law developed in the early centuries of the Christian Church out of early Church documents such as the Didache and was based on and interacted with the Scriptures, Roman and Greek Law, Byzantine Law, the Justinian Code, the decrees of emperors, and other sacred and secular legal documents.15 The above citation from the Didache is evidence that the prohibition against abortion was part of the Canon Law from the beginning and consistently thereafter. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">No wonder Orthodox scholar Fr. Alexander F.C. Webster wrote that abortion “is one of only several moral issues on which not one dissenting opinion has ever been expressed by the Church Fathers.”16 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">14 Code of Canon Law, Title VI, Delicts Against Human Life and Freedom, Canon 1398, www.vatican.va/archive/ENG1104/_P57.HTM. 15 Kenneth Pennington, A Short History of the Canon Law from Apostolic Times to 1917, http://faculty.cua.edu/pennington /Canon%20Law/ ShortHistoryCanonLaw.htm, pp. 2, 3, 7, 10, 16, 19, 21, 25-26, 32, 33-37, 41, 44, 59, 61. Although, as Pennington notes at 74, Martin Luther initially rejected the Canon Law, as his thinking developed he came to appreciate the value of Roman Catholic Canon Law legal scholarship and concluded that that scholarship should be applied to the civil law and the common law; see John Witte, Jr., Law and Protestantism: The Legal Teachings of the Lutheran Reformation 55-85 (Cambridge University Press, 2002); John Eidsmoe, Historical & Theological Foundations of Law (American Vision 2012) III:983-84. 16 Dr. James Lamb, Abortion and the Message of the Church: Sin or Salvation? June 30, 2004, http://www.lutheransforlife.org/article/ abortion-and-the#message-of-the-church-sin-or-salvation/ (quoting “An Orthodox Word on Abortion” at 8-9 (Paper delivered at the Consultation on The Church and Abortion, Princeton, 1992)). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Nor was this view limited to the Church Fathers or to the Roman Catholic Tradition. Martin Luther stated his position forcefully: “For those who have no regard for pregnant women and who do not spare the tender fruit are murderers and infanticides.”17 John Calvin was just as clear: “If it seems more horrible to kill a man in his own house than in a field, because a man’s house is his most secure refuge, it ought surely to be deemed more atrocious to destroy the unborn in the womb before it has come to light.”18 And Pennington notes that when King Henry VIII (1491 - 1547 A.D.) separated the Church of England from the Roman Catholic Church, he proclaimed that "he, not the pope, was the source of all canon law henceforward."19 Pennington adds, "Consequently, the Anglican Church preserved the entire body of medieval canon law and converted it into a national legal system."20 <br />
<br />
C. Common Law on Preborn Children <br />
As the common law developed, "quickening" became the test for homicide prosecutions. <br />
<br />
17 Lamb, supra note 11 (quoting What Luther Says: An anthology, compiled by Ewald M. Plass (St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1959), Vol. 2, NO. 2826 at 905). 18 Lamb, supra note 11 (quoting Commentaries on the Four Last Books of Moses at 41-42 (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1950)). 19 Pennington, supra note 12, at 64. 20 Id. <br />
Quickening is different from viability; quickening is the time when the mother first feels the child move within her. One could be convicted of homicide for the killing of an unborn child, only if quickening had already taken place. <br />
<br />
But this common law rule did not mean that the child became a person only at quickening or that there was a right to abortion before quickening. Rather, it was a procedural matter of proof. '''One can be guilty of homicide only if the homicide victim was alive at the time of the alleged killing, and at that stage in the development of the common law, medical science had no way of proving the child was alive until the mother had felt the child move within her.'''21 <br />
<br />
For nearly half a century, this nation has been saddled with an abortion jurisprudence that has no foundation in the Constitution, no foundation in medical science, and no foundation in American or Biblical history and tradition, a jurisprudence that has resulted in an estimated 62,994,587 abortions since 1973 <br />
<br />
See www.abortioncounters.com and Steven Ertelt 62,502,904 Babies Have Been Killed by Abortion Since Roe v. Wade in 1973 (2021) available at https://www.lifenews.com/2021/01/22/62502904<br />
<br />
==43 Americans United for Life==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185211/20210729102214787_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20Americans%20United%20for%20Life.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
(Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey are not "settled precedents" worthy of being retained under the doctrine of "Stare Decisis".)<br />
<br />
Roe is radically unsettled for additional reasons. It has not received the acquiescence of Justices or lower court judges. Roe was wrongly decided and poorly reasoned. Numerous adjudicative errors during the original deliberations—especially the absence of any evidentiary record—have contributed to making Roe unworkable. It has been the subject of persistent judicial and scholarly criticism. There is a constant search for a constitutional rationale for Roe, and the Court has yet to give a reasoned justification for the viability rule. See Randy Beck, Gonzales, Casey and the Viability Rule, 103 Nw. U. L. Rev. 249 (2009). 3 <br />
<br />
Casey is unsettled by its failure to ground the abortion right in the Constitution, by an ambiguous standard of review that is unworkable, by conflicting precedents that have “defied consistent application” by the lower courts, and by persistent judicial and scholarly criticism. Payne v. Tennessee, 501 U.S. 808, 828–830 (1991). Politics aside, reconsidering Roe and Casey does not involve uprooting a stable, settled feature of the legal landscape. Because they are radically unsettled, Roe and Casey contradict the stare decisis values of consistency, dependability, and predictability and are entitled to minimal stare decisis respect. <br />
<br />
==44 Ethics and Public Policy Center==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185234/20210729114228086_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20Ethics%20and%20Public%20Policy%20Center.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
C. Factual Developments Have Also Undermined Roe and Casey’s Reasoning. Apart from these legal developments, “facts have so changed, or come to be seen so differently” since Roe and Casey were decided as to have significantly sapped those decisions of whatever residual force they might be thought to have. Casey, 505 U.S. at 855. <br />
Roe recognized that whether “life begins at conception and is present throughout pregnancy” was of pivotal importance, but it asserted that “at this point 19 in the development of man’s knowledge” medical science had been “unable to arrive at any consensus” on the issue. 410 U.S. at 159. Roe thus proceeded on the assumption that life “as we recognize it” “does not begin until live birth.” Id. at 160-61. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">This “unsupported empirical assumption” has been significantly undermined by subsequent developments. See Janus, 138 S. Ct. at 2483. It is now clear that an unborn fetus is not merely “potential life,” but is a “a living organism while within the womb, whether or not it is viable outside the womb.” Gonzales, 550 U.S. at 147. As a recent, exhaustive review of the scientific literature concludes, “[t]he scientific evidence clearly indicates that a one-cell human organism, the zygote, forms immediately at fusion of sperm and egg. From a scientific perspective, this single cell is inarguably a complete and living organism; i.e. a member of the human species at the earliest stage of natural development.” Maureen L. Condic, When Does Human Life Begin? The Scientific Evidence and Terminology Revisited, 8 U. ST. THOMAS J.L. & PUB. POL’Y 44, 70 (2013); see also Hana R. Marsden et al., Model systems for membrane fusion, 40 CHEM. SOC’Y REV. 1572, 1572 (2011) (“The fusion of sperm and egg membranes initiates the life of a sexually reproducing organism.”); Enrica Bianchi et al., Juno is the egg Izumo receptor and is essential for mammalian fertilization, 24 NATURE 483, 483 (2014) (“Fertilization occurs when sperm and egg recognize each other and fuse to form a new, genetically distinct organism.”). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Further, in 1973—and, to some extent, even in 1992—it was widely assumed that an unborn human being had no ability to sense and experience pain. Stuart W.G. Derbyshire & John C. Bockmann, Reconsidering fetal pain, 46 J. MED. ETHICS 3, 3 (2020). Today, by contrast, there is a growing scientific consensus that the unborn can feel pain as early as 12 weeks gestation. Id. at 6; see also American College of Pediatricians, Fetal Pain: What is the Scientific Evidence? at 1, 7 (2021), https://acpeds.org/assets/Fetal-Pain-Position-Statement-(2).pdf (concluding that “a large body of scientific evidence demonstrates that painful or noxious stimulation adversely affects immature human beings, both before and after birth,” “as early as 12 weeks gestation (and possibly earlier)”). These scientific advances further undermine Roe’s underpinnings.<br />
<br />
==45 Pennsylvania Pro-Life Federation==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185227/20210729111948208_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20of%20the%20Pennsylvania%20Pro-Life%20Federation.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
Some of the subjects covered: <br />
I. THERE ARE TWO PATIENTS THAT MUST BE CARED FOR IN MODERN OBSTETRICAL PRACTICE, AND IT IS RARE THAT AN ABORTION WOULD BE NEEDED TO MANAGE A PREGNANCY SUCCESSFULLY <br />
<br />
II. II. CLAIMS THAT ELECTIVE ABORTIONS MUST BE ALLOWED BECAUSE ABORTION IS STATISTICALLY SAFER THAN CHILDBIRTH SHOULD BE REJECTED<br />
<br />
III. A. The Risk of Dying from Abortion or Childbirth Is Negligible<br />
<br />
IV. B. Although Abortion Is a Medical Procedure, It Is Rarely a Medical Decision<br />
<br />
V. C. Discussing Maternal Mortality Rates in Relation to Elective Abortion Has No Practical Relevance<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">In modern obstetrical practice, the physician treats two patients—the mother and her unborn baby—and strives to maximize and protect the health and well-being of both. Good medical practice requires this. It is rare that the interests of one of these patients, from a medical standpoint, conflicts with the other. Even in those instances where the mother’s condition may place her physical health at greater risk, the pregnancy can generally be managed satisfactorily with a successful outcome for both the mother and baby. In those very rare circumstances when this cannot be done, laws like Mississippi’s allow pregnancy terminations to take place in order to protect the mother. <br />
<br />
Claims that abortion must be allowed on demand because abortion is statistically safer than childbirth should be rejected. The relative risk of death is negligible in both abortion and childbirth. Moreover, although abortion is a medical procedure, it is rarely a medical decision. In the vast majority of cases, abortions are sought for socio-economic reasons; not for medical reasons. Therefore, discussing maternal mortality in relation to elective abortion simply is not relevant in any practical or meaningful sense. <br />
<br />
Contrary to what some suggest, Roe was not a significant cause of reduced maternal mortality and morbidity from abortion. Such reductions correspond more closely with medical advances such as the development of effective antibiotics to manage infections and advances in medical technology allowing for blood transfusions and better administration of anesthesia. <br />
<br />
These medical advances were unrelated to the legalization of abortion, having occurred well before Roe was handed down. So, overturning Roe will not 3 affect those advances, nor will it preclude the application of future medical advances in the treatment of pregnant women and an overall reduction in maternal mortality from all causes. <br />
<br />
Roe was a radical decision that overrode the legislative judgments of all 50 states. It was based on a flawed understanding of the humanity of the unborn child and views of obstetrical practice that are outdated because they fail to treat unborn children as second patients in pregnancy. Additionally, it may have been based on false claims regarding the number of women supposedly dying from illegal abortion. It should be overturned. <br />
<br />
The impression frequently was given (and still is) that childbirth is extremely risky and that women need abortion because it is much safer than childbirth. Likewise, based on made up and grossly inflated numbers of maternal deaths prior to Roe, it has been erroneously suggested that Roe was the reason for a dramatic reduction in maternal mortality from abortion, and that its overturn would return the country to a time when “thousands” of women died from “back-alley” abortions. None of this is true. <br />
<br />
I. THERE ARE TWO PATIENTS THAT MUST BE CARED FOR IN MODERN OBSTETRICAL PRACTICE, AND IT IS RARE THAT AN ABORTION WOULD BE NEEDED TO MANAGE A PREGNANCY SUCCESSFULLY. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">1. Basic medical texts, for decades, have made it clear that there are two patients that must be cared for in modern obstetrical practice. For example, in explaining the need for significant revisions to the 1980 edition of Williams Obstetrics, the authors stated: <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Happily, we have entered an era in which the fetus can be rightfully considered and treated as our second patient. . . Fetal diagnosis and therapy have now emerged as legitimate tools the obstetrician must possess. Moreover, the number of tools the obstetrician can employ to address the needs of the fetus increases each year. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Jack A. Pritchard & Paul C. MacDonald, Williams Obstetrics, vii (16th Ed. 1980) (emphasis supplied). <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">A later edition made it even more obvious that obstetricians must be cognizant of the unborn baby as a separate entity when managing a pregnancy. It stated: Obstetrics is an unusual specialty of medicine. Practitioners of this art and science must be concerned simultaneously with the lives and well-being of two persons; indeed, the lives of two who are interwoven. F. Gary Cunningham, et al., Williams Obstetrics, vii (18th ed. 1989). In a chapter entitled “Techniques to Evaluate Fetal Health,” it was stated: <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Until relatively recently, the intrauterine sanctuary of the fetus was held to be inviolate. The mother was the patient to be cared for; the fetus was but another albeit transient, maternal organ. . . Indeed, the fetus is no longer regarded as a maternal appendage. . . . Instead, the fetus has achieved the status of the second patient, a patient who usually faces much greater risks of serious morbidity and mortality than does the mother. <br />
*** <br />
<span style="color:red">The many advances in diagnosis and treatment that now clearly establish the fetus as a patient have also contributed remarkably to legal considerations involving the fetus. Fetal legal rights are emerging; for example, in some courts, the fetus has been allowed to file suit. Id at 277. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Obstetric ultrasound technology was in its infancy at the time of Roe, and was not widely used in the United States until well into the 1970’s. Malcolm Nicolson & John E.E. Fleming, Imaging and Imagining the Fetus 233 (2013). It has since given rise to whole new fields of medicine and top pediatric hospitals across the country regularly perform surgery on this second patient.2 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Abortion proponents disregard these basic facts when they ignore the existence of the second patient within the womb and suggest that unborn children are just appendages of the mother to be discarded upon her request. In so doing, they suggest a return to an outmoded and discredited approach to pregnancy and obstetrical practice. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">2. It is rare that the interests of one of these patients, from a medical standpoint, conflicts with the other. And, on those rare occasions when it does, the pregnancy can generally be successfully managed. So, medically speaking, abortion is almost never needed to manage a pregnancy. Honest abortion proponents long ago admitted to the overall safety of pregnancy and the lack of a need for abortion for medical reasons. <br />
<br />
In 1956, when maternal mortality rates were much higher than today,3 the namesake of Planned <br />
<br />
2 See e.g., the website of Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia: “Today, fetal therapy is recognized as one of the most promising fields in pediatric medicine, and prenatal surgery is becoming an option for a growing number of babies with birth defects.” Fetal Surgery, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia., https://www.chop.edu/treatments/fetal-surgery (last visited July 26, 2021). <br />
3 The maternal death rate in 1946 was 11.6/10,000 (or 116/100,000) and, by 1956, had declined to 4.0/10,000 (or <br />
<br />
Parenthood’s Guttmacher Institute highlighted the overall safety of pregnancy and childbirth. He stated that in more than 30 years of obstetrical practice, during which he had delivered about 6,000 babies, he had seen only 3 patients die—two from cancer and one from a blood clot. He stated that “[p]regnancy and labor have little to do with any of the three.” A.F. Guttmacher, Pregnancy and Birth 271 (1956). <br />
<br />
Likewise, in a paper published in 1960, Dr. Mary Calderone, then Medical Director of Planned Parenthood Federation of America, admitted: “medically speaking, that is, from the point of view of diseases of the various systems, cardiac, genitourinary, and so on, it is hardly ever necessary today to consider the life a mother as threatened by pregnancy.” Mary S. Calderone, Illegal Abortion as a Public Health Problem, 50 Am. J. Pub. Health 948 (1960) (“Illegal Abortion”). <br />
<br />
Obstetrics texts from the seventies also confirm the safety of pregnancy and childbirth and the ability to manage it successfully without abortion. One such textbook states: “abortion for purely medical reasons, i.e., vascular, renal or heart disease and so forth is rarely indicated in current medical practice.” Duncan E. Reid, et al., Principles in <br />
<br />
40/100,000). Milton C. Klein & Jacob Clahr, Factors in the Decline of Maternal Mortality, 168 JAMA 237 (1958) (“Factors”). <br />
<br />
Management of Human Reproduction 274 (1972). See also, J.P. Greenhill & Emanuel A. Friedman, Biological Principles in Modern Practice of Obstetrics 385 (1974) (noting that the number of induced abortions “on demand” had been rising astronomically, “while medical reasons appear to be almost vanishing” due to improved medical therapies). <br />
<br />
A. The Risk of Dying from Abortion or Childbirth Is Negligible. Claiming that abortion is statistically safer than childbirth makes a point. But, it is a point that has no practical significance. Assuming, arguendo, that the data upon which these claims rely is accurate, the risk of dying from either abortion or childbirth is still negligible. For example, comparing the worst-case scenario for childbirth (about 20/100,0000) and the best-case scenario for abortion (about 1/100,000), the risk of dying in childbirth is (.00020 or (.02%)) and the risk of dying in abortion is (.00001 or (.001%). In other words, your chance of surviving childbirth is 99.99980% and your chance of surviving abortion is 99.99999%. In either case, it is just the difference of a fraction of a fraction of 1 percent and is akin to comparing a 0% risk of dying with a 0% risk of dying. <br />
<br />
….Since very few women decide to have abortions because they wish to avoid risks to their physical health, it is disingenuous to suggest that abortion must be kept available on demand because it is statistically “safer” for women. This simply is not a consideration that informs their decisions. Nor should it be, given the exceedingly low rate of mortality from either course of action. <br />
<br />
….Roe was a radical decision that overrode the considered judgments of the legislatures in all 50 states. It was based on outmoded views of the humanity of the unborn child, outdated views of obstetrical practice (which failed to treat the baby within the womb as a second patient) and, arguably, on false claims regarding the number of women supposedly dying from illegal abortion.<br />
<br />
==46 Family Research Council==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185324/20210729150133457_Dobbs%20Amicus%20Proofs_THB%20Clean.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
The viability rule also removes states’ ability to adapt abortion regulations to advances in science and medicine. See MKB Mgmt. Corp. v. Stenehjem, 795 F.3d 768, 774 (8th Cir. 2015) (Shepherd, J.) (“By taking this decision away from the states, the Court has also removed the states’ ability to account for advances in medical and scientific technology [that] have greatly expanded our knowledge of prenatal life.”) (internal citations omitted). Courts are not “suited to make the necessary factual judgments” about viability and the “medical” practice of abortion. Akron I, 462 U.S. at 458 (O’Connor, J., dissenting). <br />
<br />
That is because <span style="color:red">“science … progress[es] even though [this] Court averts its eyes,” and legislatures are most capable of debating and responding to that progress. McCorvey v. Hill, 385 F.3d 846, 853-54 (2004) (Jones, J., concurring). The viability rule, however, forces courts to “pretend to act as science review boards,” removing the regulation of abortion from the democratic process. Akron I, 462 U.S. at 458 (O’Connor, J., dissenting). This rule has “rendered basic abortion policy beyond the power of our … representative government [which] may not meaningfully debate” abortion-related scientific and medical advances. McCorvey, 385 F.3d at 852. The “perverse result” of the “constitutional adjudication of] this fundamental social policy … is that … facts no longer matter.” Id. That cannot be the rule. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Similarly, in tort law, courts in thirty states have either “expressly or impliedly rejected viability as an appropriate cutoff point for determining liability for nonfatal prenatal injuries.” Linton, supra, 146. For wrongful death, forty-three states “now allow recovery … for prenatal injuries resulting in stillbirth … [and] the modern trend, supported by legislative reform, is toward abolishing any viability (or other gestational) requirement.” Id. at 323-24. <br />
<br />
See also W. Page Keeton et al., Prosser and Keeton on the Law of Torts § 55, at 369 (5th ed. 1984) (stating viability is “arbitrary” because it “of course does not affect the question of the legal existence of the unborn, and therefore of the defendant’s duty, and it is a most unsatisfactory criterion, since it is a relative matter.”). <br />
<br />
Paul Benjamin Linton, The Legal Status of the Unborn Child Under State Law, 6 U. St. Thomas J.L. & Pub. Pol’y 323-24 (2011) <br />
<br />
Petitioners ask the Court to overrule Roe and Casey because it cannot reconcile those cases with more recent precedent and with scientific advancements showing a compelling state interest in fetal life far earlier than those cases suggest <br />
<br />
The viability line therefore tends to afford greater protection to unborn children of the wealthy. See Beck, Gonzales at 259. Those unborn children whose parents are either closer to advanced medical technology or can afford to travel to receive high�quality medical care would be protected from abortion sooner than those children from poorer families. If, however, viability is based on the best technology currently in use, but unavailable to any particular woman, then “the [viability] rule is unprincipled for a different reason[,]” namely “caus[ing] the constitutional status of some fetuses to turn on unattainable hypothetical conditions, rather than real-world prospects for survival.” Id. Neither is a workable line. <br />
<br />
Finally, viability varies based on the competence and optimism of the doctor responsible for the evaluation. An incompetent doctor may place viability too late (or early). An overly pessimistic or otherwise ideological doctor may set the threshold too high. The 32 average patient hardly has the ability to question these determinations. Moreover, this deference to “disputable medical judgments becomes particularly problematic when the doctor has financial, legal, or ideological interests at stake in the determination.” Id. at 260. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">These factors cannot be “the sole criterion for deciding whether [a] child will live or die.” Box, 139 S. Ct. at 1783 (Thomas, J., concurring). <br />
<br />
In short, the viability rule is and always has been arbitrary and unworkable. The Court should no longer retain it <br />
<br />
==47 Human Coalition Action and Students for Life of America==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185195/20210729093947083_Amicus%20Brief%20of%20Human%20Coalition%20Action%20and%20Students%20for%20Life%20of%20America%20in%20Support%20of%20Petitioners%20File.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
The Supreme Court’s venerable duty to faithfully uphold the Constitution requires abrogating errant precedents, rather than reaffirming or extending them<br />
<br />
Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania v. Casey categorically fall under the weakest echelon of stare decisis. <br />
<br />
Developments have eroded the Court’s assumptions and the decisions which rested on them—the considerable cost to following them far outweighs the benefit.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Scientific and technological developments in the last 50 years reveal Roe and Casey’s fundamental error, warranting full reconsideration.<br />
<br />
Roe and Casey initiated considerable undesirable consequences in all facets of society, unmasking the decisions as egregiously wrong.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Abortion’s human death toll causes unsustainable population decline.<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Abortion continues to fulfill eugenicists’ goals by eliminating disproportional amounts of minority populations <br />
<br />
Abortion is fraught with abuse by criminal actors. <br />
<br />
The unregulated abortion industry benefits from exemptions not provided to others, leading to continual scandal, malpractice, and abuse.<br />
<br />
Abortion commodifies humans—pregnant mothers and their unborn children. <br />
<br />
Continued fidelity to Roe and Casey is extraordinarily disruptive to a functioning and healthy society. <br />
<br />
Purported reliance interests on abortion are unnecessary <br />
<br />
The ever-increasing knowledge we have about the development of the child in the womb, its humanity, and life affirm Roe/Casey were decided on erroneous grounds. <span style="color:red">Abortion is always fraught with moral and ethical concerns as it always ends a vulnerable innocent human life, at any phase of development.33 The following scientific facts were equally true in 1973 and 1992 as in 2021 but were unknown or ignored by the Court. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Since Roe and Casey, medical and technological developments, including the developments of the sonogram and in vitro fertilization, reinforced the conclusion that the life of an individual human being begins at conception.34 The widespread clinical use of ultrasound, a technological development that the Roe Court could not anticipate, came to the commercial market after Roe and substantially affected medical practice and public opinion.35 Recently, biologists reached the consensus that human life begins at conception—95% of biologists agree.36 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">We now know that from the moment of conception, unborn children possess the seven characteristics that define life: responsiveness to the environment, growth and change, the ability to reproduce, a regulated metabolism and oxygen flow, maintaining homeostasis (the ability to regulate internal bodily functions in response to external changes), composed of cells, and the capacity to pass traits onto offspring—in this case, human offspring.37 The Department of Genetics at Mayo Clinic confirmed, “[b]y all the criteria of modern molecular biology, life is present from the moment of conception.”38 <br />
<br />
<small><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;35 Id. at 213; Malcolm Nicolson & John Fleming, Imaging and Imagining The Fetus: The Development of Obstetric Ultrasound 1–7 (2013) (“Ultrasonic imaging has also had a momentous social impact because it can visualize the fetus. Fifty years ago, the unborn human being was hidden, enveloped within the female abdomen, away from the medical gaze . . . . [T]he scanner had become widely deployed within the British hospital system by 1975 . . . . By the late 1970s, the ultrasound scanner had become a medical white good, a standardized commodity in a mass marketplace.”). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;36 Jacobs, S. A., Biologists’ Consensus on ‘When Life Begins’, U. OF C. DEP’T OF COMP. HUMAN DEVELOP. (2018). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;37 Wilkin, Douglas, and Niamh Gray-Wilson, Characteristics of Life, CK-12 Foundation. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;38 Liberty University, The Genetic Code; Principles and Choices, When Does Human Life Begin?, available at www.principlesandchoices.com/quick-code-library/pcs344 (current as of July 27, 2021). </small><br />
<br />
Similarly, the Unborn Victims of Violence Act of 1999 treats injury or death to an unborn child caused by a third party while committing a federal offense against the mother as a separate federal crime.44 <br />
<br />
These developments are emblematic of what the Court failed to acknowledge 48 years ago, a fetus in the womb is a distinct living human person—simply a very small one. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">The Court relied on central medical and scientific fallacies when rendering Roe and Casey. Texas’ brief presented medically accurate and detailed information about the developing child in the womb, including the humanity and rights of the unborn child.45 But Roe’s decision ignored Texas’ arguments, refusing to “resolve the difficult question of when life begins.”46 Instead, the Roe and Casey Courts inaccurately referred to unborn in the womb as “a fetus that may become a child,” and “potential life”.47<br />
<br />
<small><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;44 National Conference of State Legislatures, State Laws on Fetal Homicide and Penalty-Enhancement for Crimes Against Pregnant Women, available at www.ncsl.org/research/health/fetal-homicide-state-laws.aspx (current as of July 27, 2021). <br />
<span style="color:red"><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;45 Roe v. Henry Wade Dist. Atty. of Dallas Co., Texas, 1971 WL 134281 (U.S.), 29 (U.S., 2004)(arguing “The fetus implanted in the uterine wall deserves respect as a human life….It is alive because it has the ability to reproduce dying cells. It is human because it can be distinguished from other non-human species, and once implanted in the uterine wall it requires only nutrition and time to develop into one of us.”). </span><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;46 Roe, 410 U.S. at 159. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;47 Id. at 113; Casey, 505 U.S. at 875 and 876 </small><br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Both principal holdings hinged on refusing to acknowledge the significance of the interests of human life in the womb.48 This was an egregious error. The matter of when life begins is no longer a philosophic discussion “depending on one’s beliefs”49 but is instead a scientific fact.50 <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">Significant developments about the humanity of the child in the womb warrant reconsideration of fateful abortion decisions and their underpinnings. Unlike Roe and Casey, Dobbs presents this Court with the opportunity to consider the full scientific and factual spectrum about the most overlooked abortion participant—the human child.<br />
<br />
<small><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;48 Shah, Mamta K., Inconsistencies in the Legal Status of an Unborn Child: Recognition of a Fetus as Potential Life, 29 HOFSTRA LAW REVIEW 3, 93.1-93.2 (2001). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;49 Casey, 505 U.S. at 852. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;50 See Jacobs, Biologists’ Consensus on ‘When Life Begins’. </small><br />
<br />
iii. Abortion is fraught with abuse by criminal actors. <br />
<br />
Further, abortion is fraught with abuse by criminal actors. <span style="color:red">The human trafficking industry requires abortion to carry out its horrific activities and hold hundreds of thousands of victims enslaved and working.67 Women report being coerced through emotional and physical duress to have abortions 64% of the time.68 <br />
<br />
Another undesirable consequence of this Court’s abortion doctrine is the negative impact on women’s physical security in childbearing. <span style="color:red">Pregnant women experience an increased rate of assault and battery from unmarried partners.69 Women who pursue <br />
<br />
<small><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;64Congressional Findings, available at https://docs.house.gov/meetings/JU/JU10/20171101/106562/HH RG-115-JU10-Wstate-ParkerS-20171101-SD001.pdf (current as of July 27, 2021). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;65 Id. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;66 Id. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;67 Laura J. Lederer and Christopher A. Wetzel, The Health Consequences of Sex Trafficking and Their Implications for Identifying Victims in Healthcare Facilities, 23 THE ANNALS OF HEALTH LAW 1 (2014). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;68 The Elliot Institute, Forced Abortion in America (2014). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;69 Clarke D. Forsythe & Stephen B. Presser, The Tragic Failure of Roe v. Wade: Why Abortion Should Be Returned to the States, 10 TEX. REV. L. & POL’Y at 100 (2005). 21 </small><br />
<br />
surrogacy have been subjected to contracts that require them to abort and, or to demands to abort.70 A growing body of international medical data from dozens of countries established long-term risks to women from abortion.71<br />
<br />
==48 Lee J. Strang==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185338/20210729155700355_Dobbs%20Amicus.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
[This excerpt is included in my book as presented below, with my explanations and summary, even though I am not highlighting any of it in red; almost all of it, except for my own text, would be red.]<br />
<br />
The 14th Amendment: “...nor shall any State deprive any '''person''' of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws....”<br />
<br />
Lee J. Strang, in the Amicus Brief he filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'', explains how the correct meaning of “person” in the 14th Amendment is the “natural” one. That is, the meaning that all of us non-lawyers attach to the word. A human being. <br />
<br />
A baby. <br />
<br />
Plural: people. <br />
<br />
The ''normal'' meaning.<br />
<br />
He explains how Justice Blackmun, author of Roe v. Wade, was wrong to assume a legalistic meaning that doesn’t necessarily include ''unborn'' people. But not just ''that'' Blackmun was wrong, but ''how'' he got wrong. <br />
<br />
And not just Blackmun, but even Justice Scalia, the hero of conservatives. <br />
<br />
And even Judge Bork, the famous “originalist” nominated to the Supreme Court by President Reagan in 1987 but crucified by the Democrat-controlled Senate to the degree that his name was added to dictionaries. (https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/bork transitive verb - US politics, informal: to attack or defeat (a nominee or candidate for public office) unfairly through an organized campaign of harsh public criticism or vilification. “In any event, seeing one of their own being borked may itself energize the conservative base, even beyond what a conservative nomination would do.” — <br />
<br />
Mark Tushnet. “In 1987, conservative judge Robert Bork endured such virulent criticism … that to this day, a nominee sidelined by activists is said to have been ‘borked.’ ”— <br />
Claire Suddath )<br />
<br />
You ask, “What other definition matters, but this ‘natural’ meaning?”<br />
If you have to ask, you obviously are not a lawyer.<br />
<br />
Lawyers understand that when ''Roe v. Wade'' said “if Texas’ suggestion of personhood is ever established”, Roe meant, not established by evidence of the fact that babies of humans are humans by modern medicine or by court-recognized fact-finders, but evidence that the meaning of the word “persons” in the 14th Amendment, as understood by those who ratified it, was the way we “naturally” (normally) define “people” as opposed to treating “persons” as a technical legal term for lawyers to load with their own special courtroom meanings.<br />
<br />
According to this thinking, whether we adopt the “natural” or the legalistic meaning depends on which meaning was adopted by lawyers and legislatures when the 14th Amendment was ratified. The fact that some states – including the states that ratified the 14th Amendment – didn’t outlaw abortion from conception until several years ''after'' they ratified the Amendment is taken by this thinking to prove they understood it used the word “person” to mean only those whom ''voters'' chose to treat as human. <br />
<br />
Lee Strang points out logical inconsistencies with this approach, and shows how the “natural” meaning of “persons”, among states back then, better fits the historical record. He says the delay of states in outlawing abortion from conception is accounted for by the delay of the medical profession in understanding early pregnancy, and in explaining its discoveries to the general public. <br />
<br />
My own argument in this book assumes what Strang calls the “natural” meaning of “person”. I point out that any meaning ''but'' “all humans” leaves the Amendment with zero effect. If voters can decide not to include a whole class of people as “persons”, voters in the South would have restored slavery. This “legalistic” interpretation would thus lead to an “absurd result”, a sensible courtroom reason to reject an idiotic interpretation. <br />
<br />
I also point out that ''Roe'' treated “”if Texas’ suggestion of personhood is ever established” as a ''fact'' inquiry, since ''Roe'' later said if doctors and preachers can’t agree, “the judiciary, at this point in the development of man’s knowledge, is unable to speculate” about “when life begins”. By elevating doctors and preachers above themselves as experts on the meaning of “when life begins”, and by anticipating the possibility of later correction by “the development of man’s knowledge”, ''Roe'' rejected treating “when life begins” “as a matter of law” or of special technical courtroom applications, and treated the question as a ''fact'' question. <br />
<br />
Although ''Roe'' treated the question as a technical legalistic inquiry by exploring how past legislatures treated abortion, Roe treated it as a fact question by deferring to the superior expertise of doctors and preachers.<br />
<br />
In case you are screaming “stop talking about ''Roe''! It’s been overturned!” I must remind you that ''Roe’s'' ignorance-necessitated neutrality about “when life begins” is elevated to “scrupulous neutrality” in ''Dobbs''. At least ''Roe'' acknowledged the existence of the question and said it mattered; in fact, that it is dispositive. <br />
<br />
Strang’s study is hardly irrelevant with the passage of ''Dobbs''. We need it now more than ever. We need voters to realize if they think they can vote on who gets to be counted as human, the very right to vote is the least of the rights they will lose! <br />
<br />
Strang’s study is valuable for its ability to reach well meaning legal scholars struggling to honor the Constitution by establishing its “original meaning” but who are confused about what “original meaning” means. <br />
<br />
With that summary, we now go to Strang’s study:<br />
<br />
<blockquote>QUESTION PRESENTED Whether the original meaning of “person” in the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment includes unborn human beings <br />
My view has long been that the strongest originalist reason that supported Justice Blackmun’s conclusion that unborn human beings are not constitutional persons was the historical evidence that some states in 1868 allowed abortion in some instances, because that would mean that state law authorized actions fundamentally inconsistent with the full constitutional personhood of unborn human beings at the same time the [very same] states adopted the Fourteenth Amendment. </blockquote><br />
<br />
<blockquote>Indeed, this reason was cited by Justice Scalia to support his view that all abortion decisions remained with the states. “[S]ome states prohibited [abortion], some states didn’t . . . . It was one of those many things . . . left to democratic choice.”....<br />
See, e.g., Bork, supra (“It is impossible to suppose that the states ratified an Amendment they understood to outlaw all abortions but simultaneously left in place their laws permitting some abortions.”). </blockquote><br />
<br />
<blockquote>Below I describe an alternative view of this historical evidence...the progressive changes in abortion law toward fully protecting unborn human beings were in response to new medical information that caused lawmakers to continually re-align state law to better fit with their (explicit and implicit) natural kind original meaning of “person.” ….This account also explains how abortion law in 1868, which limited but did not eliminate abortion, fits the natural kind meaning of “person” because lawmakers’ knowledge of the status of unborn human beings had not yet informed (all of) them that unborn humans are, in fact, human from conception.</blockquote> <br />
<br />
Strang gives a history of “originalism”, which means “a legal philosophy that the words in documents and especially the U.S. Constitution should be interpreted as they were understood at the time they were written...the constitution does not ‘evolve’. ” <br />
<br />
[The whole rest of this footnote is quotes from Strang’s Amicus, although I am not indenting it.]<br />
...<br />
<br />
Strang says “Originalism in its modern theoretical form first appeared in the early 1970s. At this stage, originalism unselfconsciously focused on the intended meaning and goals of the Constitution’s framers....Many jurists and scholars criticized this early version of originalism. Three criticisms relevant to my argument, which many originalists took on board, include the claims that the framers intent is not the law, [Anton Scalia]..., there was not a single intended framer meaning, [Ronald Dworkin...], and that it was impractical for the legal system to try to uncover intended framer meaning (even if it, in theory, existed). [Paul Brest].... <br />
<br />
In response, most originalist scholars re-articulated originalism as public meaning originalism. [What the provisions of the Constitution meant to the public] Public meaning was a real fact of the world….and the evidence for it was relatively widely available. ...<br />
One [way to interpret words] is general public meaning and another is legal meaning. General public meaning is the meaning of the Constitution’s text that is widely available to and utilized by Americans at the time of ratification. ….<br />
Legal meaning...arises out of legal practice. Lawyers and legal practice are a linguistic subcommunity, and words and phrases have particular meanings and nuances of meaning within legal practice....<br />
<br />
….By contrast with the fundamentally conventional general and legal public meanings just discussed, natural kind meaning corresponds to natural reality, independent of human convention. It is the view that linguistic meaning is attached to something factually true. [In other words, the application of the word “person” to babies changes only as we better understand babies.]<br />
<br />
B. The original meaning of “person” in the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses was the natural kind of human being. <br />
<br />
….both the status quo of abortion law in 1868 and continual changes to that law support the natural kind interpretation. ….<br />
<br />
The Constitution’s text suggests that “person” was the natural kind of human being. [The Constitution used the word “person” as normal people normally define the word.] The text of the Fourteenth Amendment describes a being who [1] can be a citizen, who [2] can have his or her life deprived by the government, and who [3] can be harmed by private violence. U.S. CONST., amend. XIV, § 1. Two of these characteristics occur to human beings both pre- and postnatally; but the important point is that all of these are characteristics of human beings, and unborn human beings are the kind of beings who possess the capacities for those characteristics and will possess the actual characteristics themselves at some point in their lives (assuming normal development).<br />
<br />
The intended meaning of framers and ratifiers of constitutional text is also evidence of the Constitution’s original meaning. This is especially true when the framers and ratifiers publicly state their intentions so that they become aspects of the publicly available context. As many scholars have noted, there is no direct legislative history of the Fourteenth Amendment’s drafters and ratifiers discussing the Amendment’s relationship with abortion. ...However, [they made] numerous statements that the Amendment protects all human beings, regardless of their characteristics, and this supports the natural kind original meaning of “person.” <br />
<br />
For example, Senate Judiciary Committee chairman, Lyman Trumbull, spoke to the Senate about the Thirteenth Amendment and legislation for the Freedmen’s Bureau that he planned to introduce, and tied the Constitution’s protection to all human beings: “any legislation or any public sentiment which deprives any human being in the land of those great rights of liberty will be in defiance of the Constitution.” Cong. Globe, 39th Cong., 1st Sess. 77 (Dec. 19, 1865) (Lymann Trumbull). <br />
<br />
Similarly, a leading Senate sponsor of the Fourteenth Amendment, Jacob Howard, explained the broad scope of the Equal Protection Clause: “It establishes equality before the law, and it gives to the humblest, the poorest, the most despised of the [human] race the same rights and the same protection.” Cong. Globe, 39th Cong., 1st Sess. 2766 (May 23, 1866) (Jacob Howard). <br />
<br />
The “Father” of the Fourteenth Amendment, Representative John Bingham of Ohio, stated in 1867 to the House regarding the word “person” in the Fifth Amendment (whose text he copied for the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process Clause), that “[b]y that great law of ours it is not to be inquired whether a man is ‘free’ . . . ; it is only to be inquired is he a man, and therefore free by the law of that creative energy which breathed into his nostrils the breath of life, and he became a living soul, endowed with the rights of life and liberty.” Cong. Globe, 40th Cong., 1st Sess. 541 (July 9, 1867) (John Bingham). <br />
Like Trumbull and Howard, Bingham equated “person” with “human being.” It is worth noting before proceeding that there is no evidence from the framing and ratification process limiting “person” to born human beings. <br />
<br />
Dictionaries of the time period defined person as the natural kind of human being. For instance, Noah Webster’s American Dictionary of the English Language (1864), defined person as “a living human being; a man, woman, or child; an individual of the human race.” 1 NOAH WEBSTER ET AL., AMERICAN DICTIONARY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE 974 (1864). <br />
<br />
...the strongest argument [against] unborn personhood was the history of abortion regulation, and in particular the fact that some states permitted abortion in some contexts in 1868. [But] Scholars today agree that abortion law changed over time from a position of less-protective to more�protective of unborn human beings.... the basic pattern is widely recognized....<br />
<br />
The common law viewed unborn human beings as human beings and treated abortion upon quickening as a misdemeanor. Sir William Blackstone stated that “[l]ife is an immediate gift of God, a right inherent by nature in every individual and it begins in contemplation of the law as soon as an infant is able to stir in the mother’s womb.” 1 SIR WILLIAM BLACKSTONE, COMMENTARIES ON THE LAWS OF ENGLAND *126 (1776); see also 1 id. *119 (“Natural persons are such as the God of nature formed us.”). Blackstone’s description of unborn humans is as fully human. Blackstone explained that “[t]o kill a child in its mother’s womb, is now no murder, but a great misprison [a serious misdemeanor]: but if the child be born alive, and dieth by reason of the potion or bruises it received in the womb, it is murder.” 4 Id. *198. It is widely agreed by scholars that this protection after quickening in some instances, and after birth in others, was the product of evidentiary concerns over whether a woman was indeed pregnant and the unborn victim was indeed alive at the time of the crime. <br />
<br />
…. Crucial to [proving that] the natural kind meaning of “person” [is its meaning in the 14th Amendment,] state lawmakers progressively restricted abortion because new medical knowledge enabled them with greater clarity to see that unborn human beings were indeed human beings and extended the law’s protection to them. DELLAPENNA, supra at 313. As summarized 19 by the leading historian, Professor Joseph Dellapenna, this period saw “dramatic changes in scientific theories about the nature of conception and the emergence of a new consensus on when a distinct human being began that were built upon the scientific discoveries of the early nineteenth century.” Id. at 282. contemplation of the law as soon as an infant is able to stir in the mother’s womb.” 1 SIR WILLIAM BLACKSTONE, COMMENTARIES ON THE LAWS OF ENGLAND *126 (1776); see also 1 id. *119 (“Natural persons are such as the God of nature formed us.”).... <br />
<br />
By 1868, ...Thirty of the thirty-�seven states in the Union had enacted statutes that restricted abortion. Witherspoon, supra at 33. Of these thirty, twenty-seven state statutes restricted abortion prior to the common law line of quickening. ...<br />
Evidence of this can be seen from many sources. State law itself reflected this understanding because twenty-eight of the thirty jurisdictions that statutorily restricted abortion placed their restrictions under the label “offenses against the person,” and twenty-three states labeled unborn human beings “children”. Witherspoon, supra at 48. States imposed significant punishments for abortion, reflecting the humanity of unborn human beings. Id. at 52-54. State judiciaries similarly modified the common law to expand protection for unborn humans, for instance, by moving earlier than the common law quickening line. Craddock, supra at 555. <br />
<br />
The legal system’s shift was supported by and in response to information provided to lawmakers from the medical profession. DELLAPENNA, supra at 298. One of the most influential books on medical ethics leading up to this period, THOMAS PERCIVAL, MEDICAL ETHICS 135-36 (1827), by a noted English physician, stated that “to extinguish the first spark of life is a crime of the same nature, both against our maker and society, as to destroy an infant, a child, or a man.” <br />
<br />
Percival treated abortion as ethically indistinguishable from killing born human beings because all human beings are the same type of being. Percival’s view was influential in the United States and was adopted by the American Medical Association, which stated in 1859 that unborn human beings should be protected because of the “independent and actual existence of the child before birth, as a living being.” The Report on Criminal Abortion, 12 TRANS. OF THE AM. MED. ASS’N 76 (1859). <br />
<br />
The Report went on to advocate state legislative reform to better protect unborn human beings. Id. While the states were considering ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment, New York’s influential Medical Society stated that all abortions are “murder.” Byrne, supra at 836. <br />
<br />
Legislators changed both the common law and their own earlier statutes in response to this better information about the nature of unborn human beings. As legislators learned that quickening and other lines were irrelevant to the development of human beings, they discarded them and legislated greater protection. <br />
<br />
This is exactly what Ohio did. See Witherspoon, supra at 61-64 (describing this process). The Ohio legislature modified Ohio’s 1834 abortion law in early 1867. The Ohio Senate Report relied on the fact that “[p]hysicians have now arrived at a unanimous opinion that the foetus in utero is alive from the very moment of conception.” 1867 Ohio S.J. App. 233. Informed by the new medical information, including Dr. Percival’s statements, the Report condemned the “class of quacks who make child-murder a trade.” Id. The legislature therefore changed the law and eliminated the quickening line to take better account of these newly known facts. “[N]o opinion could be more erroneous [than] that the life of the foetus commences only with quickening [and] to destroy the embryo before that period is not child-murder.” Id. <br />
<br />
“[T]he legislative histories of the statutes of other states show that these statutes were often enacted pursuant to a request of state medical societies.” Witherspoon, supra at 65. For example, New York’s General Assembly, following the recommendation of its medical society that, “from the first moment of conception, there is a living creature in process of development to full maturity,” modified its 1845 abortion law to prohibit abortion throughout pregnancy. DELLAPENNA, supra at 323-28 <br />
<br />
C. The natural kind original meaning of “person” in the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses included unborn human beings <br />
<br />
Still, ...by 1868, ...some state legislation was not fully protective of unborn human beings. Id. at 316-17. As I noted earlier, this is the most powerful originalist argument against the constitutional personhood of unborn human beings. ...under the conventional� legal meaning approach, [the approach in Dobbs that protectable rights are “those rooted in our nation’s history”] that would be evidence that the original meaning of “person” did not include unborn human beings, or at least not all of them. [Because] if unborn human beings were constitutional persons in 1868, then many of the states that ratified the Fourteenth Amendment were violating the Amendment they adopted. So argued Blackmun, Scalia, Bork, and many others. <br />
<br />
[But] the reasons these states gave for changing their laws are precisely the reasons a rational legislator would give if the meaning of “person” was a natural kind [and in response to growing medical understanding of babies from conception].<br />
<br />
[Roe v. Wade claimed that] the Constitution’s use of “person” showed that it was limited to born human beings. Roe, 410 U.S. at 157. ...But...it does not logically follow from the multiple born uses of “person” that the uses of “person” in the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses are similarly limited....[Roe says] “in nearly all these instances, the use of the word [in the Constitution] is such that it has application only postnatally. None indicates, with any assurance, that it has any possible prenatal application.” <br />
...He admits that in some instances... “person” may apply to unborn human beings. Those instances clearly include the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses because there is nothing in their text to prohibit such application, unlike, for instance, the Citizenship Clause. Those instances also likely include Article I, Section 9, Clause 1 (“The Migration or Importation of such Persons as any of the States now existing shall think proper to admit . . . .”), Article IV, Section 2, Clause 3 (“No Person held to Service or Labour in one State, under the Laws thereof, escaping into another . . . .”), and the Fourth Amendment (“The right of the people to be secure in their persons . . . .”). <br />
<br />
Many of the instances of solely post-natal application are so only because their context and function limit them. For instance, the presidency is limited to “No Person except a natural born Citizen.” U.S. CONST., art. II, § 1, cl. 5. The Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses lack such limiting text or function; the Clauses are not limited to born persons or even natural persons. Moreover, the fact that “person” in the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses is not limited to some classes of humans, such as “born” or “natural persons” or “such persons,” suggests that it includes all persons. See Gorby, supra (providing a variety of critiques of Justice Blackmun’s intratextualism). <br />
[In other words “person” doesn’t mean ALL born persons, any more than it means all UNborn persons; the context tells us which persons are meant. In the “citizenship clause”, the first clause of the 14th Amendment, we know only born babies can be citizens because the Clause explicitly says so. The remaining clauses do not say so, nor does reason or common sense require that limit, so when the Amendment says “no person shall be deprived of life without due process of law”, we have no ground for making it mean something else. No one did then; no one should now.]<br />
<br />
CONCLUSION: the original meaning of “person” in the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses was the natural kind of human being. This natural kind interpretation of “person” was able to account for the status quo of American abortion law in 1868 as well as the fact that abortion law was progressively becoming more protective of all human life. <br />
<br />
==49 Biologists in Support of Neither Party==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185346/20210729162737297_19-1392%20BRIEF%20OF%20BIOLOGISTS%20AS%20AMICI%20CURIAE%20IN%20SUPPORT%20OF%20NEITHER%20PARTY.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
Amici curiae are biologists who work at colleges, universities, and other institutions in 15 countries around the world. On average, they have 10 years of undergraduate and graduate training, they have 27 years of experience working in academia, and overall they have dedicated 37 years to the study of life and to promoting science awareness. <br />
Their expertise bears directly on the question presented in this case. The Court will assess the constitutionality of Roe v. Wade’s viability standard, which was used as a proxy by the Court, in 1973, after it could not determine when a human’s life begins because it could not find a consensus view among experts. Today, amici provide the Court with evidence that shows most biologists affirm fertilization as the leading biological view. <br />
<br />
….This viability standard, which the Court ultimately claimed had biological justifications4 , was established after the Court could not find a consensus of relevant experts who agreed on when a human’s life begins5 . The Court considered Texas’s fertilization standard, but after Texas’s assistant attorneys general created doubt on the fertilization view—in both the oral argument6 and the oral <br />
<br />
<br />
6. After Justice Thurgood Marshall questioned Floyd about<br />
the scientific basis for Texas’s stance on when a human’s life begins,<br />
Floyd eventually relented: “Mr. Justice, there are un-answerable<br />
questions in this field.” Transcript of Oral Argument, Roe v. Wade,<br />
1971, at 45.<br />
<br />
reargument7 sessions—the Court rejected the standard by claiming that the fertilization view was merely “one theory of life”8 . The Court also claimed that the fertilization view had “[s]ubstantial problems”9 because embryological data had raised questions on whether fertilization was a process or event. <br />
<br />
Despite the Court’s use of fetal viability as a proxy for when a human’s life begins, which it described as the point that a fetus “has the capability of meaningful life outside the mother’s womb”10, the majority opinion stated that the Court was “not in a position to speculate” on the “difficult question of when life begins… at [that] point in the development of man’s knowledge.”11 However, no current member of the Court would have to speculate, today. The fertilization view is widely recognized—in the literature and by biologists—as the leading biological view on when a human’s life begins <br />
<br />
7. Justice Blackmun also questioned Floyd’s replacement, Texas Assistant Attorney General Robert C. Flowers, on when a human’s life begins during the Roe reargument session, but he also cast doubt on the fertilization view: “QUESTION:... Is it not true, or is it true that the medical profession itself is not in agreement as to when life begins?... MR. FLOWERS: I think that’s true, sir. But from a layman’s standpoint, medically speaking, we would say that at the moment of conception from the chromosomes, every potential that anybody in this room has is present, from the moment of conception…. QUESTION: But then you’re speaking of potential of life... MR. FLOWERS: Yes, sir.” Transcript of Oral Reargument of Roe v. Wade, 1972, at 23. <br />
<br />
The fertilization view was first discovered in the early 1800s. (See infra at Argument III.A). However, it was such a self-evident fact that little work was done to study or communicate that consensus since it was difficult for scientists to imagine that it could ever be challenged or if there would ever be a time the view would not be common knowledge.12 Since the Roe Court issued its decision in 1973, the scientific consensus13 on the fertilization view has been established. <br />
p. 4<br />
<br />
Recent surveys have shown that biologists are viewed as objective experts in the study of life and as the experts most qualified to determine when a human’s life begins (See infra at Argument I). The fertilization view on when a human’s life begins has been shown to be the leading biological view, and it can only be supplanted by an alternative view if there are paradigmatic shifts to axiomatic concepts within biology (See infra at Argument II). This is made clear by a review of: (1) the biological and life sciences literature, as peer-reviewed articles represent the fertilization view as a fact of biology that requires no explanation or citation (See infra at Argument III.B), (2) legislative testimony from scientists that suggests there is no alternative view in the scientific literature (See infra at Argument III.C), (3) an international survey of academic biologists’ views on when a human’s life begins that reported 96% of 5,577 participants affirmed the fertilization view (See infra at Argument III.D), and (4) statements by prominent abortion doctors and abortion advocates who affirm the fertilization view (See infra at Argument III.E) .<br />
Thus, amici respectfully offer the Court this brief to provide information on the biological perspective on when a human’s life begins: fertilization, generally, marks the beginning of a sexually reproducing organism’s life and, specifically, marks the beginning of a human’s life, as it is the point at which a human first comes into physical existence as an organism that is biologically classified as a member of the Homo sapiens species <br />
<br />
In the oral reargument session for Roe, Justice Potter Stewart signaled the importance of resolving who should determine when a human’s life begins: “Now, how should that question be decided, is it a legal question, a constitutional question, a medical question, a philosophical question, or a religious question, or what is it?”16 The majority opinion in Roe similarly suggested there are multiple dimensions to the question: “When those trained in the respective disciplines of medicine, philosophy, and theology are unable to arrive at any consensus, the judiciary, at this point in the development of man’s knowledge, is not in a position to speculate as to the answer.”1 <br />
<br />
<br />
Some support the view that a human’s life begins at birth or first breath. 12% of biologists (343 out of 2794) represented the birth view in response to an essay question on when a human’s life begins [Were law bent to this view] t it would make obsolete any biological basis for providing independent care to a fetus, as a patient, or performing fetal surgery27; it would also remove the biological basis of fetal homicide laws28, as a state could not rightfully convict someone for the homicide of a fetus since one would no longer be properly classified as a human.2 <br />
<br />
10% of biologists (284 out of 2794) represented the viability view in response to an essay question on when a human’s life begins. [Were law bent to this view] A human’s life could be biologically determined to begin at a different point for a fetus in Mt. Sinai Hospital in New York than in a medical clinic in a rural area, as the leading physicians of the former might be able to help a 22-week premature infant survive while physicians at the latter might not be able to. Further, one would have to say that a 27-week-old fetus in 1973 was not a human—as 28 weeks was the viability line at the time since that was when technology was capable of supporting life outside of the womb—but that a younger 24-week-old fetus, today, is a human. This standard could even one day be set at fertilization if an artificial womb is developed.31 Finally, it is important to note that, today, human embryos survive outside of the womb for years32 before being transferred and implanted. In fact, a human zygote is viable for a short period after fertilization, then loses the ability to survive outside of the womb and regains it sometime soon after the 20th week of his or her life.33 <br />
<br />
If this is used as an ability-based standard, by which human organisms without this ability are not classified as humans, it could also create a case in which a human who is temporarily on life support would cease to be biologically classified as a human since he or she is not then capable of meaningful life <br />
<br />
Some support the view that a human’s life begins at the first heartbeat, brainwave, or moment of pain capability. 10% of biologists (268 out of 2794) represented one of these views in response to an essay question on when a human’s life begins. [Were law bent to this view] <br />
<br />
If these ability-based standards are used as requirements for one to be biologically classified as a human, it would mean that those who were born without the capacity to feel pain, those whose hearts temporarily stop, and those who might one day undergo a brain transplant are not biological humans. <br />
<br />
Most biologists affirm that a human’s life begins at the start of the human life cycle. 68% of biologists (1898 out of 2794) represented the fertilization view in response to an essay question on when a human’s life begins.40 A review of recent discoveries and the development of scientific literature since Roe reveals a strong consensus that agrees fertilization—a process which starts with sperm-egg binding and is completed by sperm-egg pronuclear fusion41—is the starting point <br />
<br />
; a human zygote is, from a biological perspective, a human organism43 classified as a member of the Homo sapiens in the same way44 as an infant, a teenager,45 or an adult; a human zygote is simply a human being in the first stage of a human’s development, whether fertilization be deemed a process or an event.4 <br />
<br />
THE FERTILIZATION VIEW IS THE LEADING BIOLOGICAL VIEW ON WHEN A HUMAN’S LIFE BEGINS AND HAS BEEN SINCE THE 19TH CENTURY. A. The discovery of fertilization took place over a century ago. <br />
<br />
In 1827, Karl Ernst von Baer was the first scientist to record an observation of a mammalian egg; <br />
<br />
The early discoveries on the fertilization process, by which spermatozoa enter eggs, took place between 1843 until 1880: <br />
<br />
y, in 1876, Oscar Hertwig has been said to have first established the fertilization view when he described the fusion of the nuclei of a male’s spermatozoa and a female’s ovum <br />
<br />
Peer-reviewed journals present the fertilization view on when a human’s life begins as a fact that requires no explanation or citation <br />
<br />
During hearings conducted by the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Senate Bill 158, the “Human Life Bill,” numerous scientific experts testified on the question of when a human’s life begins. After hours of testimony by scientists and medical doctors, the Official Senate Report reached the following conclusion: “Physicians, biologists, and other scientists agree that conception marks the beginning of the life of a human being—of a being that is alive and is a member of the human species. There is overwhelming agreement on this point in countless medical, biological, and scientific writings.”<br />
<br />
<br />
This view is not merely shared by academics in the literature; it is also the view that college and medical students are taught in their biological and medical textbooks. <br />
<br />
French geneticist Dr. Jerome Lejeune testified that “[l]ife has a very, very long history, but each individual has a very neat beginning––the moment of its conception” because “[t]o accept the fact that after fertilization has taken place a new human has come into being is no longer a matter of taste or of opinion . . . it is plain experimental evidence.”72 Dr. Hymie Gordon, professor of medical genetics and physician at the Mayo Clinic, testified that “now we can say, unequivocally, that the question of when life begins––is no longer a question for theological or philosophical dispute. It is an established scientific fact. Theologians and philosophers may go on to debate the meaning of life or the purpose of life, but it is an established fact that all life, including human life, begins at the moment of conception.”73 Experts also testified that there are no alternative theories on when a human’s life begins in the scientific literature <br />
<br />
Dr. Gordon claimed: “I have never encountered in my reading of the scientific literature—long before I became concerned with abortion, euthanasia, and so on—anyone who has argued that life did not begin at the moment of conception, or that it was not a human conception if it resulted from the fertilization of a human egg by a human sperm. As far as I know, there has been no argument about these matters.”74 This lack of any alternative biological views in the literature was also attested to by Dr. Micheline Matthew-Roth, who worked as a principal <br />
<br />
<br />
96% of 5,577 biologists from 1,058 academic institutions affirmed that a human’s life begins at fertilization. 1. The survey questions solely focused on the biological perspective on when a human’s life begins <br />
<br />
<br />
96% of 5,577 biologists from 1,058 academic institutions affirmed that a human’s life begins at fertilization. 1. The survey questions solely focused on the biological perspective on when a human’s life begins <br />
<br />
Participation in the survey was sought from members of biology departments around the world. Of the participants who provided analyzable data, 5,577 biologists from 1,058 institutions provided analyzable data on operative questions. Most of the biologists in the sample identified as male (63%), non-religious (63%) and the majority held a Ph.D. (95%). Ideologically, most of the sample identified as liberal (89%) and pro-choice (85%). The sample was comprised of biologists from 86 countries. See supra n.17 at 239. 2 <br />
<br />
fertilization view. Participants were asked to affirm or reject the statements, and they were then presented an open-ended essay question on the biological perspective on when a human’s life begins (Q6)85: Question 1: The end product of mammalian fertilization is a fertilized egg (‘zygote’), a new mammalian organism in the first stage of its species’ life cycle with its species’ genome. Question 2: The development of a mammal begins with fertilization, a process by which the spermatozoon from the male and the oocyte from the female unite to give rise to a new organism, the zygote. Question 3: A mammal’s life begins at fertilization, the process during which a male gamete unites with a female gamete to form a single cell called a zygote. Question 4: In developmental biology, fertilization marks the beginning of a human’s life since that process produces an organism with a human genome that has begun to develop in the first stage of the human life cycle. Question 5: From a biological perspective, a zygote that has a human genome is a human because it is a human organism developing in the earliest stage of the human life cycle. <br />
<br />
<br />
Question 6: From a biological perspective, how would you answer the question “When does a human’s life begin?” <br />
<br />
The statement in Q1 was affirmed by 91% of participants (4555 out of 4993). The statement in Q2 was affirmed by 88% of participants (3984 out of 4510). The statement in Q3 was affirmed by 77% of participants (3153 out of 4078). The statement in Q4 was affirmed by 75% of participants (2500 out of 3334). The statement in Q5 was affirmed by 69% of participants (2744 out of 3980).86 Of those who assessed at least one of the five statements, 96% of participants affirmed at least one (5337 out of 5577) and 4% did not (240 out of 5577). <br />
<br />
Similarly, of those who assessed multiple statements, 96% affirmed at least one (4463 out of 4650) while 4% affirmed none (187 of 4650), and 85% affirmed at least half of the statements they assessed (3936 out of 4650).87 Consistent with their affirmation rates of the fertilization view in Q1-Q5, 68% of biologists represented the fertilization view (1898 out of 2794) in response to the open-ended essay question on when a human’s life begins (Q6). 10% represented some point between fertilization and the moment a fetus is viable (268 out of 2794), 10% represented the viability view (284 out of 2794), and 12% represented the view that a human’s life begins at birth (343 out of 2794).88 The strictest measure of biologists’ views assessed the responses of participants who answered each question consistently—those who either affirmed each statement (Q1-Q5) and represented the fertilization view in response to the essay question (Q6) or rejected each statement and represented some later point. There was a greater number of participants who consistently affirmed the fertilization view (97%; 1011 out of 1044) than the number of participants who consistently did not affirm the fertilization view (3%; 33 out of 1044).89 <br />
<br />
Abortion advocates and abortion doctors affirm that a human’s life begins at fertilization. Ethicist Peter Singer supports abortion rights and has promoted the fertilization view: “Whether a being is a member of a given species is something that can be determined scientifically, by an examination of the nature of the chromosomes in the cells of living organisms,” because “there is no doubt that from the first moments of its existence an embryo conceived from human sperm and eggs is a human being.”90 <br />
(Yet he argues for aborting up to 2 years old)<br />
<br />
The fertilization view is as subject to change due to new information as is the number of hydrogen atoms in a molecule of water: the number might not be two if scientists abandon the modern understanding of hydrogen, oxygen, atoms, molecules, and water—just as a human’s life might no longer be deemed to begin at fertilization if scientists abandon the modern understanding of fertilization, the human life cycle, and the genetics-based method of biologically classifying organisms. <br />
<br />
==50 Professors Mary Ann Glendon and O. Carter Snead==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185180/20210729085701253_19-1392%20Amici%20Brief.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
Abortion rulings have no support from the Constitution's text, history, or tradition.<br />
<br />
Roe and Doe are unconstitutional.<br />
<br />
Later precedents are even farther from the Constitution, offering nothing but confusion.<br />
<br />
Stare Decisis principles support overturning them.<br />
<br />
The Court’s Abortion Jurisprudence Grafts On to American Law a Constitutionally Unwarranted, False, and Destructive Account of Human Identity and Flourishing.<br />
<br />
The current law of abortion . . . frames the public question as a zero-sum conflict between isolated strangers, one of whom is recognized as a person, with the other deemed a sub-personal being whose moral and legal status is contingent upon the private judgment of others. It offers no com�prehensive support for the vulnerable persons in�volved, including especially the unborn child and her mother. . . .<br />
<br />
In response to the bodily, psychic, and financial burdens of unwanted pregnancy and parenthood, American abortion jurisprudence offers nothing more than the license to terminate the developing human life in utero . . . . These are the rights and privileges suited to atomized individual wills who inhabit a world of strife. They are limited weapons <br />
and tools of rational mastery fit for a lonely, disembodied self to defend and pursue its interests.<br />
<br />
American abortion jurisprudence offers nothing more than the license to terminate the developing human life in utero . . . . They are not well-designed to address the complex needs and wants of a community of embodied, vulnerable, and interdependent human persons.<br />
<br />
...it biases the Court’s analysis to craft a solution for the abortion issue that is more suitable for an individual seeking to repel a stranger from intruding into her interests, namely, by conferring a right to use lethal violence. This may be suitable for adversarial strangers in a world of strife. Not for a mother and a child in crisis.<br />
<br />
...The Court has no business in this space....<br />
<br />
==51 Monique Wubbenhorst, M.D., M.P.H., Grazie Christie, M.D., Colleen Malloy, M.D., and the Catholic Association Foundation==<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185351/20210729163513970_19-1392%20Amicus%20Brief%20in%20Support%20of%20Petitioners.pdf Filed July 29, 2021]<br />
<br />
==74. American College of Pediatricians==<br />
<br />
(This entire excerpt is copied into Footnote #2 of Statement #4) <br />
<br />
[http://supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185265/20210729133245734_Dobbs%20Amicus.pdf Filed in Dobbs]<br />
<br />
<blockquote>2. What we know today—as uncontroverted scientific fact—is that the child develops much more quickly than the Court in Roe presumed. The Court then was told that “in early pregnancy . . . embryonic development has scarcely begun.” Brief for Appellant at 20, Roe, 410 U.S. 113 (No. 70-18), 1971 WL 128054. But that is wrong. From conception, the unborn child is a unique human being who rapidly develops the functions and form of a child long before viability. (page 2-3)</blockquote><br />
<blockquote>At five weeks’ gestation (just three weeks after conception),1 the unborn child’s heart starts beating. By six weeks, brain waves are detectable, and the nervous system is steadily developing. By seven weeks, the child can move and starts to develop sensory receptors. By nine weeks, the child’s eyes, ears, and teeth are visible. By ten weeks, multiple organs begin to function, and the child has the neural circuitry for spinal reflex, an early response to pain. By twelve weeks, the child can open and close fingers and sense stimulation from the outside world. By fifteen weeks—when Mississippi’s law limits abortions—the child can smile and is likely sensitive to pain. Medical interventions after this stage (other than abortion) use analgesia to prevent suffering. And by eighteen weeks, pain induces hormonal responses in the child. All this happens long before viability. Reflecting these advances in medical knowledge, ultrasound imagery available at the time of Roe looks much different from the imagery available today: (Image not shown here)</blockquote><br />
<blockquote>Page 11-12: During the fifth week, “[t]he cardiovascular system is the first major system to function in the embryo,” with the heart and vascular system appearing in the middle of the week.33 By the end of the fifth week, “blood is circulating and the heart begins to beat on the 21st or 22nd day” after conception.34 </blockquote><br />
<blockquote>By six weeks, “[t]he embryonic heartbeat can be detected.”35 Technological advances permit not only imaging detection at this early stage, but also videography of the unborn child, including footage of the child’s heartbeat.36 </blockquote><br />
<blockquote>After detection of a fetal heartbeat—and absent an abortion—the overwhelming majority of unborn children will now survive to birth.37 “[O]nce a fetus possesses cardiac activity, its chances of surviving to full term are between 95%–98%.”38</blockquote> <br />
<blockquote>Also during the sixth week, the child’s nervous system is developing, with the brain already “patterned” at this early stage.39 The earliest neurons are generated in the region of the brain responsible for thinking, memory, and other higher functions.40 And</blockquote> <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnotes for Page 12:<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;34 Id. at 2662. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;35 Id. at 2755. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;36 See, e.g., Endowment for Hum. Dev., The Heart in Action: 4 Weeks, 4 Days, available athttps://www.ehd.org/movies/21/The#Heart-in-Action [https://perma.cc/GQN4-Q8QS] (last visited July 28, 2021) (showing footage of a heartbeat at six weeks); see also, e.g., Endowment for Hum. Dev., Your Life Before Birth (Mar. 18, <br />
2019), available at https://vimeo.com/325006095 [https://perma.cc/6QBT-UWLK] (last visited July 28, 2021) (displaying video footage of a child’s development). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;37 Joe Leigh Simpson, Low Fetal Loss Rates After Ultrasound Proved-Viability in First Trimester, 258 J. Am. Med. Ass’n 2555, 2555–57 (1987). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;38 Forte, supra note 11, at 140 & nn.121–22 (footnote omitted) (collecting post-Casey medical research). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;39 Thomas W. Sadler, Langman’s Medical Embryology 72 (14th ed. 2019); see generally id. at 59–95. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;40 See, e.g., Irina Bystron et al., Tangential Networks of Precocious Neurons and Early Axonal Outgrowth in the Embryonic Human Forebrain, 25 J. Neuroscience 2781, 2788 (2005). <br />
<blockquote>(Page 13) the child’s face is developing, with cheeks, chin, and jaw starting to form.41 At seven weeks, cutaneous sensory receptors, which permit prenatal pain perception, begin to develop.42 The unborn child also starts to move.43 During the seventh week, “the growth of the head exceeds that of other regions” largely because of “the rapid development of the brain” and facial features.44 At eight weeks, essential organs and systems have started to form, including the child’s kidneys, liver, and lungs.45 The upper lip and nose can be seen.46 At nine weeks, the child’s ears, eyes, teeth, and external genitalia are forming.47</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnotes for page 13:<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;41 See Sadler, supra note 39, at 72–95. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;42 Kanwaljeet S. Anand & Paul R. Hickey, Special Article, Pain and Its Effects in the Human Neonate and Fetus, 317 New Eng. J. Med. 1321, 1322 (1987). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;43 Alessandra Pionetelli, Development of Normal Fetal Movements: The First 25 Weeks of Gestation 98, 110 (2010). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;44 Keith L. Moore et al., The Developing Human: Clinically Oriented Embryology 65–84.e1 (11th ed. 2020). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;45 See Sadler, supra note 39, at 72–95. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;46 Moore et al., supra note 44, 1–9.e1. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;47 See Sadler, supra note 39, at 72–95; see also App. 66a. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;48 Pionetelli, supra note 43, at 65 (2010). <br />
<blockquote>Page 14: At ten weeks, vital organs begin to function, and the child’s hair and nails begin to form.49 By this point, the neural circuitry has formed for spinal reflex, or “nociception,” which is the fetus’s early response to pain.50 Starting around ten weeks, the earliest connections between neurons constituting the subcortical-frontal pathways—the circuitry of the brain that is involved in a wide range of psychological and emotional experiences, including pain perception—are established.51 At the time of Roe, “the medical consensus was that babies do not feel pain.”52 Only during the late 1980s and early 1990s did any of the initial scientific evidence for prenatal pain begin to emerge.53 Today, the “evidence for the subconscious incorporation of pain into neurological development and plasticity is incontrovertible.”54 Every modern review of prenatal </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnotes for page 14:<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;49 See Sadler, supra note 39, at 106–127; Moore et al., supra note 44, at 65–84.e1; Johns Hopkins Med., The First Trimester, available at https://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/health/wellness#and-prevention/the-first-trimester[https://perma.cc/8N6H#M6CN] (last visited July 28, 2021); see also App. 66a. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;50 See, e.g., Int’l Ass’n for the Study of Pain, IASP Terminology (last updated Dec. 14, 2017), available at https://www.iasp#pain.org/Education/Content.aspx?ItemNumber=1698#Nociception [https://perma.cc/5PV5-5T9H] (last visited July 28, 2021); see also App. 80a. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;51 Lana Vasung et al., Development of Axonal Pathways in the Human Fetal Fronto-Limbic Brain: Histochemical Characterization and Diffusion Tensor Imaging, 217 J. Anatomy 400, 400–03 (2010). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;52 Am. Coll. of Pediatricians, Fetal Pain: What is the Scientific Evidence? (Jan. 2021), available at https://acpeds.org/position#statements/fetal-pain [https://perma.cc/JM3T-XQV8] (last visited July 28, 2021). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;53 Ibid.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;54 Curtis L. Lowery et al., Neurodevelopmental Changes of Fetal Pain, 31 Seminars Perinatology 275, 275 (2007).<br />
<blockquote>Page 15: pain consistently issues the same interpretation of the data: by ten to twelve weeks, a fetus develops neural circuitry capable of detecting and responding to pain.55 Even more sophisticated reactions occur as the unborn child develops further.56 And new developments have provided still more evidence strengthening the conclusion that fetuses are capable of experiencing pain in the womb.57</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnotes for page 15:<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;55 See, e.g., Carlo V. Bellieni & Giuseppe Buonocore, Is Fetal Pain a Real Evidence?, 25 J. Maternal-Fetal & Neonatal Med. 1203, 1203–08 (2012); Richard Rokyta, Fetal Pain, 29 Neuroendocrinology Letters 807, 807–14 (2008). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;56 See Royal Coll. of Obstetricians & Gynaecologists, Fetal Awareness: Review of Research and Recommendations for Practice 5, 7 (Mar. 2010), available at https://www.rcog.org.uk/globalassets/documents/guidelines/rcogfetalawarenesswpr0610.pdf [https://perma.cc/4V84-TEMC] (last visited July 28, 2021); Susan J. Lee et al., Fetal Pain: A Systematic Multidisciplinary Review of the Evidence, 294 J. Am. Med. Ass’n 947, 948–49 (2005); see also App. 76a, 84a–85a. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;57 See Lisandra Stein Bernardes et al., Acute Pain Facial Expressions in 23-Week Fetus, Ultrasound Obstetrics & Gynecology (June 2021), available at https://obgyn.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/uog.23709?af=R [https://perma.cc/V8BU-PZK4] (last visited July 28, 2021)<br />
<blockquote>Page 17: Moreover, by twelve weeks, the parts of the central nervous system leading from peripheral nerves to the brain are sufficiently connected to permit the peripheral pain receptors to detect painful stimuli.68 Thus, the unborn “baby develops sensitivity to external stimuli and to pain much earlier than was believed” when Roe and Casey were decided. MKB Mgmt. Corp. v. Stenehjem, 795 F.3d 768, 774 (8th Cir. 2015) (cleaned up).</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnote for page 17: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;68 Sekulic et al., supra note 65, at 1034–35. <br />
<blockquote>Page 21: By eighteen weeks, the child can hear his or her mother’s voice, and the child can yawn.87 The nervous system in the brain is also developing the circuitry for all the senses: taste, touch, smell, sight, and hearing.</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnote for page 21: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;87 Ibid.; see also Cleveland Clinic, Fetal Development: Stages of Growth (last updated Apr. 16, 2020), available at https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/articles/7247-fetal#development-stages-of-growth [https://perma.cc/YG92-KRH4] (last visited July 28, 2021). <br />
<blockquote>Page 25: Around twenty-six weeks, the child’s eyes open, and he or she can fully see what is going on around him or her.106 Brain wave activity increases throughout this period. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Footnote: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;106 Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hosp., A Week-by-Week Pregnancy Calendar: Week 26, available at https://www.hopkinsallchildrens.org/Patients-Families/Health-Library/HealthDocNew/Week-26?id=13484 [https://perma.cc/A8QG#XBPA] (last visited July 28, 2021).<br />
<br />
==79. World Faith Foundation and Institute for Faith and Family==<br />
<br />
(This entire excerpt is copied into Footnote #2 of Statement #4)<br />
<br />
[http://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185238/20210729120554370_19-1392%20tsac%20IFF.pdf Filed in Dobbs] <br />
<br />
<blockquote>The viability line is arbitrary, lacks constitutional support, and conflicts with legal principles in other contexts. Developments in medical technology expose the reality of a child in the womb worthy of legal protection. “Emerging science never shows the unborn to be less than human; rather, each advancement further reveals the humanity of the developing child in all its wonder”—even at 15 weeks, the developing child has “fully formed eyebrows, noses, and lips,” and “the baby’s fully formed heart pumps about 26 quarts of blood per day.”3</blockquote><br />
<blockquote>Yet this Court has stubbornly maintained the viability line, reaffirming Roe’s “recognition of the right of the woman” to choose abortion “before viability . . . without undue interference from the State.” Casey, 505 U.S. at 846. Gonzales began by presuming the same principle and timeline (Gonzales, 550 U.S. at 146)—but on the next page described the unborn child as “a living organism within the womb, whether or not it is viable outside the womb” (id. at 147, emphasis added).</blockquote> <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Footnote: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; https://lozierinstitute.org/cli-experts-urge-scotus-to-catch-up-to#science-in-mississippi-abortion-case/; https://lozierinstitute.org/new-paper-coauthored-by-cli-scholars-examines-treating-the-patient#within-the-patient/. These articles described in further detail the baby’s fetal development at 15 weeks.<br />
<blockquote>Page 13: Another critical development is the ability to detect a child’s heartbeat in the womb. Several years ago, the Eighth Circuit considered whether the state could prohibit abortions of “unborn children who possess detectable heartbeats.” MKB, 795 F.3d at 770. Experts testified that “fetal cardiac activity is detectable by about 6 weeks” although viability does not occur “until about 24 weeks.” Id. at 771. Sadly, the court concluded that Roe dictated the outcome but suggested that “good reasons exist for [this] Court to reevaluate its jurisprudence.” Id. at 774. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Ironically, no discussion or evidence of infant heartbeats is given in the amicus by Heartbeat International. [http://www.supremecourt.gov /DocketPDF/19/19-1392/185354/20210729164709878_Dobbs%20Amicus%20Brief%20-%20FINAL.pdf]. The word “heart” comes up 39 times, but only to state the organization’s name.<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
conclusion doesn’t ask that acknowledgment that babies are people, <br />
<br />
<span style="color:red"><br />
<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red"></div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Reversing_Landmark_Abomination_Cases&diff=50386Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases2024-01-03T04:41:08Z<p>DaveLeach: /* Statement of Facts #10 of 12: Tyranny over any class of humans by any other is prohibited by the Constitution, and by the Declaration, which gives the purpose of the Constitution and rests its own authority on the revelation of God1 in the Bible */</p>
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<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters<br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion</span><br />
<br />
by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal<br />
''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal<br />
<span style="color:brown"><br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen <br />
<br />
by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 18:06, 15 October 2023 (UTC)<br />
<br />
=Introduction=<br />
<br />
This book offers twelve statements of fact about babies and abortion which I challenge any voter, lawyer, lawmaker, or judge to refute. Their footnotes contain nuggets from the 140 "Amicus" briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' (2022), the ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade. These statements are designed to soften the resistance of voters to outlawing baby murder, when presented in public, and to force judges to outlaw abortion in every state, when presented in court. <br />
<br />
They are truths designed to be so unignorable, that when any lawmaker includes them in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, in any state, prodeath fury will help publicize them with each advance through legislative deadlines. When friends of babies see them survive scrutiny, the force of these truths will grow like a snowball rolling down a hill. <br />
<br />
But murdering babies is only the most egregious of many Landmark Abomination Cases. Their common thread is usurping authority which the Constitution assigns to others, and equating the Bible with spurious religions. “Never let a crisis go to waste”, say the enemies of God, but God is the true master of turning evil into an opportunity for good. It’s time. Let’s end the Supreme Court’s war against God.<br />
<br />
The very fact that abortion is the worst of the ways the United States Supreme Court has turned American law upside down creates an opportunity to heal that branch of our government, and heal all the harm to our nation and its culture and morals that it has caused. As Professor Nathan Schluetter at Hillsdale College observes, “We must not let this opportunity pass to boldly challenge the prevailing jurisprudence and its attendant epistemological and moral skepticism with respect to abortion.”<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
It is the '''fact''' that unborn babies are living human children that makes killing them murder. It’s not what any ''law'' says about it, or even what the Constitution says about it. That’s what leaves ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' on the edge of reality, by treating this fact as something for voters to figure out, not on the basis of whether babies are ''in fact'' people but on the basis of some “value” they place on ''little'' people. <br />
<br />
That '''fact''' is what makes <u>the consensus of court-recognized fact finders</u> a stronger legal reason to end legal abortion than a Life Amendment, and a powerful social reason in the Court of Public Opinion able to soften hearts to the silent screams of Jesus' little brothers and His quiet knocking on hearts' doors. Which makes it insane for prolifers to not even mention this legally dispositive consensus in each and every prolife court case, and every “finding of fact” in prolife legislation, along with leveling with the public about the Scriptures which are the real reason we even care.<br />
<br />
[[File:Cover_Cartoon.jpg]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
Why these solutions may help even where abortion is already outlawed<br />
<br />
(1) They could defeat a national abortion legalization.<br />
<br />
(2) They could help you sue a nearby “blue state” for helping its baby killers murder your children. <br />
<br />
(3) They could help if your district judges join the courtroom rebellion against Dobbs in other states.<br />
<br />
(4) They could help meet challenges in the Court of Public Opinion, for example through a Resolution that irrefutably addresses every objection you have ever heard, as understandable to voters as it is irrefutable to judges. That would help the public see through future judicial gaslighting, and support judicial reform: ie. www.savetheworld .saltshaker.us/wiki/Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_ stop_judges_from_legislating<br />
<br />
(5) I could sure use your feedback. Proverbs 15:22. <br />
<br />
----<br />
<center>'''Ending legal abortion everywhere in close to a year<br />
(the goal of the following bill language)<br />
<br>'''requires a law whose Findings of Facts: '''<br />
</center><br />
<br />
<br />
* '''contain evidence which no judge can squarely address and keep abortion legal anywhere:''' that unborn babies are real people – established by the (unanimous) consensus of court-recognized factfinders: juries, expert witnesses, 38 states, judges, and Congress;<br />
<br />
* '''present its evidence in a way that is clear and persuasive to voters,''' to help them resist judicial and media gaslighting; (See below for “Why court-recognized fact finders persuade Voters”)<br />
<br />
* '''address misunderstandings about abortion jurisprudence''' that divide prolifers, intimidate lawyers, and blind judges;<br />
<br />
'''AND WHOSE PENALTIES'''<br />
<br />
* '''restrict some aspect of abortion substantially enough''' that THEY can't be defended as a mere regulation with some other legitimate government purpose than saving lives. The restriction must be profound enough that its only possible defense is that it saves human lives. That will force courts to address the evidence that babies are fully human;<br />
<br />
* '''provide no distractions that let judges rule on some technicality and ignore the evidence that the law would save lives.''' A perfect law that addresses everything from exceptions to contraception multiplies a judge’s opportunity to say “we don’t need to reach the issue of when life begins because the law fails on a lesser issue.” A simple yet substantial restriction, with “findings” that address the legal obstacles, will survive courts, which will get courts out of the way of saving life, which will free lawmakers to work out the challenging details with time to get a comprehensive solution right and with hope that they won’t waste their time; <br />
<br />
* '''list specific penalties for specific situations,''' rather than broadly stated goals such as “babies are to be protected as much as adults”, leaving prosecutors and judges to guess what to punish, or how, in situations where evidence and culpability are different; <br />
<br />
* '''contain a “life of the mother” exception''' whose applicability is clear enough that mothers are not denied life-saving care until doctors are assured by lawyers that said care will not put the doctors in jail; and<br />
<br />
'''THE LAW SHOULD ALSO order courts to “expedite” any review,''' “because lives are lost with each day that courts delay”. <br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate!)<br />
<br />
More ideas: [[Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_stop_judges_from_legislating]]<br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate! See below for Expedited Review federal rules.) <br />
<br />
WORD COUNTS: Using only the first boldfaced paragraph of each of these 12 Findings, in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, will total about 200 words. The complete Findings, without footnotes, total nearly 3000 words. For the advantages of including enough information in a prolife law for the Findings to defend themselves, see “Too Lengthy?” below. <br />
<br />
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: I am not a lawyer. But writing about prolife legal defenses designed to bring legal abortion to an end, and Scriptures calling for that goal, for 25 years in my Prayer * Action News, being uncertified as a lawyer, has created the opportunity for a remarkable interaction with Planned Barrenhoods priciest lawyers. Because news reporters wouldn’t report that my reasoning was designed as legal defenses in court, or that they were grounded in the Bible, what that left was their accusation that I advocated crime; whereas had my defenses been successful they would have allowed citizens to stop murderers legally, putting an end to the reason citizens took action. <br />
<br />
__TOC__<br />
<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and family, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge inaction deny themselves Life More Abundantly. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget: free wisdom, guaranteed success===<br />
<br />
'''John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
James 1:5 If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, [without finding fault]; and it shall be given him. 6 But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering.''' (Gr. διακρινω not withdrawn from, ie. by lack of support from actions, or opposed, ie. by indecision) <br />
<br />
'''Matthew 21:21 ...If ye have faith, and doubt not''' (Gr. διακρινω) ...'''ye shall say unto this mountain, Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea; it shall be done. 22 And all things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive.'''<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and families, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge their own inaction deny themselves, not just their neighbors, Life More Abundantly.<br />
<br />
If you are not satisfied with life less abundantly – ongoing slaughter of innocents – you won’t be satisfied now that the fate of babies is decided by the “value” that voters place on little people. You will keep searching for a strategy to end all the slaughter: to both outlaw it, and make it unthinkable to all but the worst of murderers. <br />
<br />
If you believe you ''will'' reach every good goal you pursue with all your being, Matthew 21:21-22, you won’t be turned from ending the slaughter in every state by experts who tell you that is impossible which rules out a strategy for achieving it. You will search until you find God’s way to do God’s will. <br />
<br />
You won’t say “I'm not smart enough to question prolife legal authorities who advise giving up”, if you believe James 1:5 which promises you all the wisdom you need to do good. Nor will you ever say you are not smart enough to read and understand legal briefs, court rulings, or to reason with lawmakers, lawyers, and prolife leaders, as necessary.<br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will not excuse yourself from God’s call because you can’t talk well, like Moses, whom God answered “Who made mouths?” Exodus 4:11. Nor will you excuse yourself to God, saying you are but a child against the world’s superbrains, like Jeremiah, whom God answered, “Stop saying that! It is MY words you will speak, and I am no child!” Jeremiah 1:6-8. <br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will shine God’s light wherever you find Darkness, Matthew 5:13-16. Since nothing is darker than murdering your own baby, you will seek God’s help as you oppose this evil, and none of these excuses will withdraw you from action.<br />
<br />
===Final Warning: read this at your own risk===<br />
<br />
Warning: read at your own risk. Rough reading Ahead, that may knock you from your TV chair.<br />
<br />
'''Findings of Facts which No Judge can Squarely Address and Keep Abortion Legal'''<br />
<br />
=Part 1: Authority of Court-Recognized Fact Finders=<br />
<br />
<span style="color:grey"><small>''Try to imagine how a judge, reviewing a prolife law with these Findings of Facts, would be able to dodge this evidence - in fact, see if you can find ANYONE who can ''refute'' these facts - as opposed to not ''caring'' about facts - that is, not caring about reality:''</small></span><br />
<br />
==Statement of Fact #1 of 12: Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let ''any'' state legalize==<br />
<br />
No fact can be more legally established than the fact that “life begins” at fertilization, being the consensus of every American legal authority who has taken a position, in every category of court-recognized finders of facts: juries,2 thousands of expert witnesses who were not contested,3 38 state legislatures,4 individual judges,5 and Congress.6 <br />
<br />
If the unanimous – uncontested – finding of every court-recognized fact-finder is not enough ‘establishment’ for the court to know a fact, it is impossible for any judge to know anything.<br />
<br />
No legal authority has ruled that any unborn baby of a human is not in fact a human person, or that “life begins” any later than fertilization.7 <br />
<br />
No state can keep abortion legal now that this fact is established. This is so obvious that even Roe v. Wade said “of course”, and the lawyer for the abortionists agreed.8 <br />
For most public issues, disagreement is over facts.9 The only disagreement about abortion is between unanimous fact finders and those who don't care about facts.10 A court that won’t address the facts that justify and necessitate a law, or hear evidence of those facts, violates Due Process and has no legitimate jurisdiction to review that law.11 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 1 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
----<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget===<br />
<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? <br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
<br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
<br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True. <br />
<br />
<br />
</span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget #2: The Cost of Success===<br />
<br />
'''Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? '''<br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True.<br />
<br />
==Statement of Facts #2 of 12: Courts Accept the Fact-Finding Authority of Legislatures, Juries, Experts for the same good reasons their findings persuade the public.==<br />
<br />
SCOTUS must accept legislative findings of facts that are not obviously irrational. “..the existence of facts supporting the legislative judgment is to be presumed...not to be pronounced unconstitutional unless in the light of the facts made known or generally assumed it is of such a character as to preclude the assumption that it rests upon some rational basis within the knowledge and experience of the legislators....” U.S. v. Carolene Products, 304 U.S. 144, 152 (1938).1<br />
<br />
Besides the court-recognized fact finding authority of legislatures, courts must conform their rulings to laws until such time as courts declare laws unconstitutional. No court has overturned the “unborn victims of violence” laws (based on “human babies are people”) of 39 states and Congress, despite many challenges.2<br />
<br />
To do so would require a court to positively affirm that human life does not begin until much later, which no legal authority has done, and for which no evidence exists.<br />
<br />
'''Legislatures'''. Lawmakers are there by the choice of a majority of voters. They are bombarded by information from experts. They are scrutinized by other lawmakers. Many are lawyers, some of whom are constitutional scholars and past or future judges. They set the salaries of judges, and have the power to hold impeachment trials of judges. Congress, the national legislature, scrutinizes Supreme Court justices. <br />
<br />
Many Congressmen are equally qualified: 15 U.S. Senators have served on the Supreme Court, and more were nominated.3 <br />
<br />
'''Juries''' are tested for impartiality. They are educated by the most qualified expert witnesses available. They study as long as necessary to establish truth – sometimes for months.4<br />
<br />
'''Expert Witnesses''' are the best experts money can buy, and they are scrutinized by the other side’s experts.5 <br />
<br />
For all its faults, American court recognition of Fact Finders is among the world’s top methods of establishing reality that is available to humans, earning respect in the Court of Public Opinion along with their authority in courts of law.6 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 2 + Footnotes]]<br />
----<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
----<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget===<br />
<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Mark 8:38 '''Whosoever therefore shall be ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful generation; of him also shall the Son of man be ashamed''', when he cometh in the glory of his Father with the holy angels.<br />
<br />
We Bible believing conservatives need to quit blaming social media and CIA censorship for our failures and stop censoring ourselves. <br />
<br />
I offer a way of stating evidence which no judge, news reporter, Democrat, or unbeliever can refute, along with answering objections that have crippled prolife messaging and legal strategy. But we despair of reaching those who stop their ears to evidence. “What’s the use of tightening our message? You’re preaching to the choir. We know babies are people but those other people have their opinion too.”<br />
<br />
I’m not "preaching to the choir". I’m passing out a new composition to the choir for a coming TV special.<br />
<br />
Most of those who won’t listen, won’t vote either, rendering their willful ignorance relatively benign. Stop worrying about them. All they will do is hate you, lie about you, wreck your business – childish stuff. We progress by clearly articulating to the extent possible. The same Bible which is the main reason we care about babies promises all the protection we need to finish what we are here to do.<br />
<br />
It isn’t just saving baby bodies where we self censor. Adult souls are lost. We hold back sharing what we know about God. Snap out of it. </span><br />
<br />
==Statement of Facts #3 of 12: The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS==<br />
<br />
From Roe (1973) through Dobbs (2022), SCOTUS evaded that core issue.1 <br />
<br />
SCOTUS never ruled babies Non-Persons “as a Matter of Law”, as lower courts allege.2 Roe made that fact not only relevant, but dispositive with a holding which no court has disputed even though Roe’s main holding was overturned:3 <br />
<br />
“[Prolifers] argue that the fetus is a ‘person’ within the language and meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment....If this suggestion of personhood is established, the [abortionist’s] case, of course, collapses, for the fetus’ right to life would then be guaranteed specifically by the [14th] Amendment [thus outlawing abortion in EVERY state]. The [abortionist’s lawyer] conceded as much....”4<br />
<br />
Dobbs explicitly left this statement of the obvious untouched, saying “our decision is not based on any view about when a State should regard pre-natal life as having rights or legally cognizable interests....”5 Dobbs did not say babies aren’t people. Dobbs did not say voters should still decide whether babies can be murdered in the face of proof that babies are ''in fact'' people.6 Dobbs left in place Roe’s observation that “establishment” of this fact, independently of any law, ruling, or future constitutional amendment,7 dictates whether abortion is legally recognizable as a right or as a crime.8<br />
<br />
This established '''fact''' is as relevant today as when Roe said “of course” it is.<br />
<br />
This established '''fact''' is not disestablished by any judge’s alleged inability to understand it.9<br />
<br />
This established '''FACT''' is not made irrelevant by any judge’s theory that the legal right of little humans to live is “impossible” to determine so it should be decided by their value to big humans.10<br />
<br />
If only those ''legally recognized'' as “persons” were people, slavery could still be legal and the 14th Amendment would mean nothing. Slavery states would merely need to classify their victims as only 3/5 human.11 The Amendment protects those who are '''IN FACT''' people – what is irrelevant is whether babies are people “as a matter of law”.12 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 3 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
=Part 2: The Power of Personhood=<br />
<br />
==Statement of Facts #4 of 12: Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life==<br />
<br />
Detectable heartbeats and brain waves are evidence that a person has not yet died, throughout state and federal law.1 Reason demands they be accepted as evidence that a person has begun to live.2<br />
<br />
<small>The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: American College of Pediatricians <> Heartbeat International <> World Faith Foundation and Institute for Faith and Family <> National Catholic Bioethics Center, et al <> Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide <> Jewish Prolife Foundation <> American Association of Prolife Obstretricians </small><br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 4 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
==Statement of Facts #5 of 12: Legislatures should regulate abortion, as Dobbs held, just as legislatures regulate the prosecution of all other murders==<br />
<br />
But not in the sense of absolute discretion to leave wholesale murders of a supposedly unwanted group of humans completely unregulated. That interpretation of Dobbs’ holding is premised on a “mistake of fact”, which is an official exception to Stare Decisis.1<br />
<br />
The “Mistake of Fact” that is the premise of letting voters decide whether to continue judge-approved genocide according to the “value” they place on little people is that the humanity of babies of humans is either unknowable or irrelevant. That premise was explicit in Roe and Casey, and implicit in Dobbs.2 <br />
<br />
That is an “erroneous factual premise”. The fact that little unborn humans are humans is neither unknowable3 nor irrelevant. It is verifiable and dispositive.4 The consensus of court-recognized fact finders cures that knowledge deficit, canceling that interpretation of Dobbs’ holding, while reinforcing Dobbs’ other two holdings that “The Constitution does not confer a right to abortion” and “Roe and Casey are overruled”, and requiring the outlawing of baby killing in every state.5 <br />
<br />
<small>'''Mini-lexicon of legal terms'''<br />
<br />
'''Mistake of Fact:''' A statement of facts upon which a ruling was based, which is later shown to be untrue. It means the same as “erroneous factual premise”.<br />
<br />
'''Stare Decisis:''' Hesitancy about reversing previous precedents. Precedents should only be reversed for very good reasons, because they affect how millions live, so the more law changes back and forth, the more that unsettles society.<br />
<br />
'''Dispositive:''' Evidence so overwhelming that it is final. It settles a matter, with no need of further evidence. As in Matthew 26:65 “What further need have we of witnesses?”<br />
Holding: The part of a ruling that demands obedience, or that is a conclusion that is the basis for the ruling. <br />
<br />
'''Overruled''': Means the same as “overturned”, “repealed”, or “vacated”. It is where a court changes its mind, deciding that a previous precedent was “wrongly decided” or “incorrect”. Often it also means the previous ruling was unconstitutional, although nobody is allowed to use that word out loud. <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: Illinois Right to Life <> Center for Religious Expression <> Connie Weiskopf and Kristine L. Brown </small> <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 5 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
==Statement of Facts #6 of 12: The full humanity of a tiny physical body is hard for many to grasp. But what distinguishes us from animals isn’t physical, and has no known pre-conscious stage==<br />
<br />
Part of the definition of “person” is “infused with a soul”, Roe v. Wade1 and dictionaries say.2 SCOTUS has not disagreed. “Consciousness” is another word for what has no physical explanation, and that distinguishes us from animals. <br />
<br />
Animal behavior is predictable within breeds, indicating little “choice”. They are not like people who can choose to behave like angels or demons. Nothing physical can explain our ability to choose against our own bodies: to sacrifice our own interests for others, which is how John 15:13 defines “love”;3 or to destroy ourselves in hate.4<br />
<br />
Roe v Wade was not out of line to consult “those trained in... theology” who study souls, as well as doctors who study bodies, to clarify who to count as human with an unalienable right to life.5<br />
<br />
The extent of human choice is said by Psalm 22:10 to enable an unborn baby to place his trust in God. Luke 1:44 similarly reports that a baby at 6 months heard a righteous voice [and/or felt the righteous Presence of God] and responded with joy,6 a response not everybody chooses, indicating that even the capacity for choosing between good and evil precedes birth. To human consciousness, we give greater legal protection than to animals.7 <br />
Because nothing physical explains such powers, undeveloped bodies don’t establish undeveloped consciousness. <br />
<br />
Since a “soul” without consciousness has never been theorized and can’t be imagined,8 the consensus of fact finders is, in effect, that abortion kills babies with conscious souls. <br />
<br />
All this testimony indicates that when a baby is killed by dismemberment, acid, or sucking out the brain, it is not some non-sentient animal, some pre-human “potential life”, but a self-aware conscious soul that feels the pain, understands the cruelty, and if out-of-body near-death experiences are real, sees, along with God, who is doing it.<br />
Even considering the body only, there is no objective line between birth and conception distinguishing “humans” from “nonpersons”, or between “meaningful life” and life which courts are free to terminate.9 Without such a line, there can be no stage of gestation at which killing a baby can be objectively distinguished from murder. No baby is safe while that line remains arbitrary.10 <br />
<br />
The failure of some people, and of some religions, to grasp the full humanity of babies at any given stage is a dangerous basis for permitting killing, since as many fail to grasp the full humanity of many groups of born persons.<br />
28/430 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''SCOTUS:''' Supreme Court Of The United States<br />
<br />
'''Stage of Gestation:''' Any time during the development of a baby in the womb. This isn’t exactly a legal term, but it is not common outside courts.<br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: Foundation for Moral Law, Lutherans for Life <> American College of Pedia-tricians <> Jewish Prolife Foundation <> Dr. Robin Pierucci, M.D. </small><br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] <br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
=Part 3: Myth Busters=<br />
<br />
==Statement of Facts #7 of 12: Congress has ''Already'' Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment ''already'' authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion, ''without'' allowing Congress to legalize it==<br />
<br />
Congress established in 2004 that: “‘unborn child’ means a child in utero, and the term ‘child in utero’...means a member of the species Homo Sapiens, at any stage of development, who is carried in the womb”, 18 U.S.C. 1841(d).1 <br />
<br />
This fact is not diminished by clause (c) which does not “permit [authorize] the prosecution of any person for...an abortion for which the consent of the pregnant woman...has been obtained.…”2 A law misaligned with facts does not block future lawmakers from making corrections, and states don’t need Congress’ “permission” to obey the 14th Amendment. <br />
<br />
The reason 18 U.S.C. 1841(d) has had no effect on the practice of legal abortion is not because of any deficiency in its authority to establish dispositive facts, but because no state law reviewed by SCOTUS has cited it to establish what Roe correctly said once “established” would “of course” require the end of legal abortion. <br />
<br />
Not only is the 2004 law unmitigated evidence of life strong enough to “collapse” legal abortion by itself, but it would not be stronger if it were an Amendment to the Constitution.3 No other Constitutional Amendment is relied on for evidence of a fact. An Amendment can bind courts. But establishment of the Facts Of Life by evidence presented, cited, and tested in court pulls not only courts, but society, closer to reality.4 32/254 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Personhood Law:''' A law stating that an unborn baby is a person. A human being. A“human person”, as Dobbs v. Jackson stated. That is, a person with all the legal rights of any other human. <br />
<br />
'''“In Utero”:''' In the womb. An unborn baby is in the womb - “in utero”.<br />
<br />
'''“Homo Sapiens”:''' humans. “The species homo sapiens”: the human race.<br />
<br />
'''Dispositive:''' Proved. Evidence so strong that no more is needed.<br />
<br />
'''Cited:''' Quoted. Referred to it. <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide <> and from Professor Nathan Schluetter, Hillsdale College <> Judge Bork</small><br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
==Statement #8 of 12: Roe, Dobbs, and the 14th Amendment agree: All Humans are “Persons”==<br />
<br />
Neither Roe nor Dobbs distinguished between “humans” and “persons” as if a “human” baby isn’t necessarily a “person”. [2] Nor does the 14th Amendment leave any human unprotected.<br />
<br />
Roe v. Wade equated the time an unborn child becomes “recognizably human” with the time the child becomes a “person”: “These disciplines variously approached the question [“of when life begins”] in terms of the point at which the embryo or fetus became ‘formed’ or recognizably human, or in terms of when a ‘person’ came into being, that is, infused with a ‘soul’ or ‘animated.’” 410 U.S. 113, 133(1973)<br />
<br />
Dobbs cites the belief that “a human person comes into being at conception” without distinguishing between the two words. [3] <br />
<br />
The word “person” in the 14th Amendment meant “An individual human being...man, woman, or child...consisting of body and soul.” The word “child” in that 1828 definition included unborn children, since to be “with child” meant to be pregnant. [4]<br />
<br />
Therefore the Amendment’s “nor shall any state deprive any person of life” and “equal protection” of every “person” means every human, including those unborn. Nothing about the first clause keeps later clauses from protecting unborn humans. [5]<br />
<br />
See also Wong Wing v. United States, 163 U.S.228, 242 (1896), “The term ‘person’ is broad enough to include any and every human being within the jurisdiction of the republic...This has been decided so often that the point does not require argument.” Steinberg v. Brown 321 F. Supp. 741 (N.D. Ohio, 1970) “[o]nce human life has commenced, the constitutional protections found in the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments impose upon the state a duty of safeguarding it”. [6]<br />
<br />
The word “persons” in the 14th Amendment means all who are IN FACT humans. Had it been only for those who are legally recognized as human, every deprivation of fundamental rights would be “constitutional” so long as a law or ruling questions whether its victims are “persons in the whole sense”.<br />
<br />
Although Dobbs showed by disproving the opposite that reverence for all human life from fertilization was “deeply rooted in America’s law and traditions”, that is not why rights merit 14th Amendment protection. By the “deeply rooted” test, slavery would be legal today, since freedom for slaves had zero historical support.<br />
<br />
Nor does it ''matter'' if the Amendment authors even wanted to protect all humans. In fact, it doesn’t matter if there is a 14th Amendment. If law is not equal upon its operation on all humans, which is the very definition of the word “law” as developed by Samuel Rutherford’s “Lex Rex” and Blackstone and adopted by America’s founders, to that extent there is, by definition, no “rule of law”, no restraint upon the “strong” to not tyrannize the “weak”.<br />
<br />
There is a direct test of whether babies merit 14th Amendment protection that does not require a romp through history: [7] see if their parents are humans.<br />
<br />
“To say that the test of equal protection should be the ‘legal’ rather than the biological relationship is to avoid the issue. For the Equal Protection Clause necessarily limits the authority of a State [or its judges] to draw such ‘legal’ lines as it chooses.” Glona, 391 U.S. 73, 75 (1968) [8]<br />
<br />
FOOTNOTES: see [[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''14th Amendment:''' Ratified in 1868, the third year after the Civil War ended, it ruled that every state must give everyone under its laws the “equal protection” of its laws. It gave Congress authority to “enforce” the rights listed in the Constitution when state legislatures can’t or won’t, and to block state laws that protect some people less. Starting five years later, the Supreme Court usurped that authority of Congress for itself, and instead of protecting rights listed in the Constitution it made up rights not in the Constitution that are hostile to constitutional rights. More about that later. <br />
<br />
'''Equal Protection Clause:''' The clause in the 14th Amendment that requires states to give “equal protection of the laws” to all its citizens.<br />
<br />
The footnotes are enriched by selections from the Amicus Briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson by: Lee J. Strang <> Scholars of Jurisprudence John M. Finnis and Robert P. George <> Mary Kay Bacallao Advocating for Unborn Children <> Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide <> and by selections from the 1996 debate between Judge Robert Bork and Professor Nathan Schluetter</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small>'<br />
<br />
==Statement of Facts #9 of 12: When pregnancies develop into medical emergencies requiring separation of mother and child to save the mother, the child has an equally fundamental right to life and medical care.==<br />
<br />
A legislature’s balancing of their interests cannot, therefore, be reviewed by “strict scrutiny”.2 Nor does alleged insufficiency of a “medical emergency” exception from a general abortion ban justify a court overturning the ban in the 99% of cases where no emergency is alleged.3 Legislatures are better equipped to deliberate about and secure the rights of all citizens than courts whose focus is the parties before them.4<br />
<br />
SCOTUS never denied that a legislature’s “personhood” statements in an abortion ban are strong evidence.5 That evidence is not mitigated by a ban’s exceptions.6 It is not made irrelevant because baby killers “rely” on killing babies.7 28/130 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms:<br />
'''<br />
Fundamental Right:''' This is a term not found in the Constitution but made up by SCOTUS for the rights SCOTUS makes up which often displace rights actually listed in the Constitution. Justice Clarence Thomas is eloquent on this point. More about this later.<br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: A Foundation for Moral Law <> Pennsylvania Pro-Life Federation <> 396 State Legislators from 41 States</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
==Statement of Facts #10 of 12: Tyranny over any class of humans by any other is prohibited by the Constitution, and by the Declaration, which gives the purpose of the Constitution and rests its own authority on the revelation of God1 in the Bible==<br />
<br />
Roe v Wade was not out of line to consult “those trained in... theology” who study souls, as well as doctors who study bodies, to clarify who to count as human with an unalienable right to life.3 <br />
<br />
America’s Freedom springs from “all men are created equal” and “equal protection of the laws” for all humans even if their looks, language, wealth, strength, ancestry, power, or faith are different.4 These rights have proven such a blessing to the world that their source, the Bible, deserves the fair hearing owed any witness whose reliability has been confirmed, when it promises still greater blessings if we will equally protect humans whose physical size is different.5 <br />
<br />
Its testimony is not “cumulative”, but “probative”.6 It is not to be feared as dispositive or compulsory: American freedom balances human understanding of how best to apply Biblical principles to government against the willingness of voting majorities to follow those principles. Even that is a Biblical principle legitimized in 1 Samuel 8.7 <br />
<br />
The history of slavery, Prohibition, and abortion illustrate the “willingness” factor. The probative value of the testimony of God is proved by the fact that without it, slavery would never have ended, and the prolife movement would never have begun. Which makes it probative to observe that not only the 14th Amendment, but also the revelation of God, requires this state, as it does every state, to outlaw all trampling of fundamental rights of any class of people, including abortion of babies.8 Where the two authorities say the same thing, the Bible, for all its alleged ambiguity, is better understood and more trusted than the Constitution which has indeed proven “a thing of wax” in the nimble fingers of even the most scrupulous judges.9 <br />
<br />
Without God – without belief in a more objective standard of right and wrong than the “value” that voters place on “different” people through “evolving community standards”, it is impossible to understand fundamental rights.10 <br />
<br />
Courts have demonstrated this impossibility by so often confusing abominations for rights, decimating those whom Jesus said “forbid them not to come unto Me”, denying that He created them, murdering 17% of them, sodomizing 20% of the survivors, and censoring 100% of His teachings in schools.11 <br />
<br />
That destruction of the 14th Amendment (1868) began when “Substantive Due Process”, pioneered in Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857), was applied in United States v. Cruikshank 92 U. S. 542 (1876) to acquit a white Democrat mililtia of murdering “as many as 165” black Republicans and burning down the courthouse they were defending.12 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring God does not “establish religion”. It does not compel belief, action or endorsement. It simply allows judges and voters to make informed decisions. It is part of fact-finding. It is part of reasoning. Part of embracing reality. Part of examining “the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth”. Judges must stop punishing people for telling the truth just because the truth favors God.13 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring the Bible does not require equal weight for claims of religions that deny equal rights for all.14 <br />
<br />
For example, some claim “souls” don’t enter babies until long after fertilization, or even long after birth.15 Their claims do not “cancel” the mountain of consensus of court-recognized fact finders that souls are present from the beginning. Our Constitution and laws reject their unequal rights, and are appropriately wary of their rationales for their unequal rights. The credibility of every witness is not equal. Credibility is earned. <br />
There can be “free exercise” of religions hostile to “equal protection of the laws” only to the extent their “exercise” does not threaten the rights of others or violate the laws enacted to protect them – laws ultimately decided by voting majorities, hopefully well informed through the uncensoring of reality.16 39/520 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms: <br />
<br />
'''Cumulative''': testimony so redundant that it wastes the court’s time<br />
Dispositive: testimony so strong that it settles the issue with no more<br />
Probative: probative facts establish, or contribute to, proof. Probative value is the degree of relevance of evidence. <br />
<br />
'''Prohibition''': From 1920 to 1932, drinking (alcohol) was made illegal, banned by an actual Constitutional Amendment. Actual alcohol consumption dropped by about 50%, or at least that is how much Cirrhosis of the Liver cases dropped. During that time the drop in drinking led to an economic boom, called the “Roaring Twenties”, which unfortunately were not remembered for their prosperity but for their immorality. In 1928, the prosperity collapsed into a “Great Depression” due to cheating by stock market investors. In 1932 Americans wanted liquor so bad they ratified another Constitutional Amendment repealing the 1920 Amendment. <br />
<br />
'''Substantive Due Process''': As Justice Clarence Thomas eloquently explains – see Statement #11 footnotes, this phrase was made up by SCOTUS to justify making up what it calls “fundamental rights” as its tool of repealing laws it doesn’t like. It gets its name from the SCOTUS claim that the “Due Process” clause of the 14th Amendment gives SCOTUS its authority to make up rights and call them “fundamental”. But “Due Process” only meant the legal procedures which everyone must be given equally, to defend their rights in court when necessary. The phrase has nothing to do with identifying what rights are protectable. But “Substantive” means those rights we care about, that the Constitution protects. Like freedom of speech or religion. Because “substantive” means substantial, serious rights, and “due process” has nothing to do with identifying any rights, the LONANG Institute observes in Statement #11 notes that “substantive due process” is an oxymoron. <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: Foundation for Moral Law and Lutherans for Life <> Jewish Prolife Foundation <> LONANG Institute <> U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and Other Religious Organizations <> Claremont Institute’s Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
=Part 4: Conclusions=<br />
<br />
==Statement of Facts #11 of 12: The 14th Amendment gives federal courts no “due process” authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the “right” to murder, and gives Congress no authority to legalize violations of Constitutional Rights, like taking a baby’s right to Life==<br />
<br />
The sole federal authority over state laws regarding the rights of their own citizens is through the 14th Amendment, Sections One and Five.1 Contrary to SCOTUS rulings, the 14th Amendment explicitly provides:<br />
<br />
* '''Congress authorized, not courts.''' Congress, not courts, determines the manner and scope of federal intervention in states whose laws don’t protect their citizens’ rights.2 Congress is not limited to enforcing only those rights of which SCOTUS approves, nor only to the extent that SCOTUS approves,3 nor only when state governments, not individuals, directly violate rights.4 <br />
<br />
* Federal courts aren’t permitted to stop either states or Congress from protecting enumerated rights (like Life), or to repeal their laws for conflicting with unenumerated [not listed in the Constitution] “rights” (like the “right” to murder babies), or to intervene in states’ protection of rights beyond prosecuting violations of federal laws.5 <br />
<br />
* Nor can Congress stop states from protecting enumerated rights. Neither Congress nor federal courts may overturn a state law protecting the lives of unborn babies from surgical abortion, chemical abortion, or contraceptives.6<br />
<br />
* The rights subject to federal enforcement are not those made up by SCOTUS allegedly based on the “Due Process” clause,7 but those listed in the Constitution, referred to as “privileges and immunities”8 (including, for unborn babies, the “privilege” of life and “immunity” from “cruel and unusual punishment” and execution “without due process of law”).9 <br />
* Enumerated Rights recognized before the Constitution existed are not excluded from Congressional intervention.10<br />
<br />
* '''“Substantive Due Process”''' is the sophistry by which SCOTUS turned the Constitution’s Authority to Define Rights, and Congress’ 14th Amendment Section 5 Authority to Enforce Rights, into its own authority to reclassify abominations as “rights”.11 It is an illegal, unconstitutional, Freedom-crushing fraud from Hell fomenting a long line of Landmark Abomination Cases.12 <br />
<br />
<small>Mini-lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Due Process:''' The duty of courts to give all parties to cases the fair and equal procedures and opportunities for defending themselves.<br />
<br />
(This argument for ending SCOTUS’ long line of Landmark Abomination Cases continues in Part Two of this book where its focus on SCOTUS-mandated murder of babies created in the Image of God is extended to SCOTUS’ censorship of God Himself.) <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amici who filed briefs in Dobbs v. Jackson: Lonang Institute <> Christian Legal Society <> AfricanAmerican, Hispanic, Roman Catholic and Protestant Religious and Civil Rights Organizations <> Senators Josh Hawley, Mike Lee, and Ted Cruz. And from Judge Robert Bork <> Nathan Schlueter, Professor of Philosophy and Religion, Hillsdale College, (when he debated Judge Bork in 2003 he was assistant professor of pre-law and political science at St. Ambrose University. Author, “Unborn Persons and the Fourteenth Amendment.” 2002.) <> Erwin Chemerinsky, Dean of Berkeley Law School <> Legal Information Institute, Cornell University <> Justice Clarence Thomas, dissents and concurrences <> justia.com <> James Gray Pope, Professor of Law and Sidney Reitman Scholar, Rutgers University School of Law <> Libby Adler professor of law and women’s, gender, and sexuality studies, Northeastern University Christmas, 2023''</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
==Statement #12 of 12:Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable. The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives.==<br />
<br />
Any judge interfering with this state’s compliance with the 14th Amendment and its ancient authority to protect its people1 – the central reason governments exist, is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders,2 and is guilty of exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide through an unconstitutional ruling,3 which exceeds the judicial powers given by any Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment.4<br />
<br />
The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives, including (1) giving the state Supreme Court original jurisdiction over any challenge to a law, (2) requiring that review be expedited, (3) requiring a supermajority of the Court to suspend a law, (4) questioning justices in a public hearing about the constitutionality of their ruling, and (5) overturning the ruling with a supermajority of the legislature.5 <br />
<br />
Should any federal judge so interfere with this state’s constitutional duty, this state appeals to its congressional delegation to examine similar grounds for disciplinary action,6 along with exercising its Article III, Section 2, paragraph 2 authority to make “exceptions” and “regulations” designed to end SCOTUS’ long line of landmark abomination cases. <br />
<br />
This state also appeals to its congressional delegation to exercise its life-saving and rights-protecting authority under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment whose plain words give Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of Rights,7 which subsumes the authority to define their scope and to balance competing interests, while the “privileges and immunities” clause identifies as protectable rights those listed in the Constitution.8 <br />
<br />
Official world-wide definitions of “crimes against humanity” apply “to representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission”, whether elected representatives or unelected judges.”9<br />
<br />
Any court review of this law must be expedited, because lives are lost with each day that courts delay.10 7/230 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of Legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Malfeasance in office:''' official misconduct; violation of a public trust or obligation; specifically, the doing of an act which is positively unlawful or wrongful.<br />
<br />
'''Subsumes:''' Includes. To include or place within something larger or more comprehensive: encompass as a subordinate or component element red, green, and yellow are subsumed under the term "color" <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: 396 State Legislators from 41 States <> Melinda Thybault/Moral Outcry <> and by Matthew J. Franck, Director of the William E. and Carol G. Simon Center on Religion and the Constitution at the Witherspoon Institute and visiting lecturer in politics at Princeton University</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small></div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Reversing_Landmark_Abomination_Cases&diff=50385Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases2024-01-03T04:40:08Z<p>DaveLeach: /* Statement of Facts #3 of 12: The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS */</p>
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<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters<br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion</span><br />
<br />
by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal<br />
''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal<br />
<span style="color:brown"><br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen <br />
<br />
by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 18:06, 15 October 2023 (UTC)<br />
<br />
=Introduction=<br />
<br />
This book offers twelve statements of fact about babies and abortion which I challenge any voter, lawyer, lawmaker, or judge to refute. Their footnotes contain nuggets from the 140 "Amicus" briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' (2022), the ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade. These statements are designed to soften the resistance of voters to outlawing baby murder, when presented in public, and to force judges to outlaw abortion in every state, when presented in court. <br />
<br />
They are truths designed to be so unignorable, that when any lawmaker includes them in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, in any state, prodeath fury will help publicize them with each advance through legislative deadlines. When friends of babies see them survive scrutiny, the force of these truths will grow like a snowball rolling down a hill. <br />
<br />
But murdering babies is only the most egregious of many Landmark Abomination Cases. Their common thread is usurping authority which the Constitution assigns to others, and equating the Bible with spurious religions. “Never let a crisis go to waste”, say the enemies of God, but God is the true master of turning evil into an opportunity for good. It’s time. Let’s end the Supreme Court’s war against God.<br />
<br />
The very fact that abortion is the worst of the ways the United States Supreme Court has turned American law upside down creates an opportunity to heal that branch of our government, and heal all the harm to our nation and its culture and morals that it has caused. As Professor Nathan Schluetter at Hillsdale College observes, “We must not let this opportunity pass to boldly challenge the prevailing jurisprudence and its attendant epistemological and moral skepticism with respect to abortion.”<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
It is the '''fact''' that unborn babies are living human children that makes killing them murder. It’s not what any ''law'' says about it, or even what the Constitution says about it. That’s what leaves ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' on the edge of reality, by treating this fact as something for voters to figure out, not on the basis of whether babies are ''in fact'' people but on the basis of some “value” they place on ''little'' people. <br />
<br />
That '''fact''' is what makes <u>the consensus of court-recognized fact finders</u> a stronger legal reason to end legal abortion than a Life Amendment, and a powerful social reason in the Court of Public Opinion able to soften hearts to the silent screams of Jesus' little brothers and His quiet knocking on hearts' doors. Which makes it insane for prolifers to not even mention this legally dispositive consensus in each and every prolife court case, and every “finding of fact” in prolife legislation, along with leveling with the public about the Scriptures which are the real reason we even care.<br />
<br />
[[File:Cover_Cartoon.jpg]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
Why these solutions may help even where abortion is already outlawed<br />
<br />
(1) They could defeat a national abortion legalization.<br />
<br />
(2) They could help you sue a nearby “blue state” for helping its baby killers murder your children. <br />
<br />
(3) They could help if your district judges join the courtroom rebellion against Dobbs in other states.<br />
<br />
(4) They could help meet challenges in the Court of Public Opinion, for example through a Resolution that irrefutably addresses every objection you have ever heard, as understandable to voters as it is irrefutable to judges. That would help the public see through future judicial gaslighting, and support judicial reform: ie. www.savetheworld .saltshaker.us/wiki/Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_ stop_judges_from_legislating<br />
<br />
(5) I could sure use your feedback. Proverbs 15:22. <br />
<br />
----<br />
<center>'''Ending legal abortion everywhere in close to a year<br />
(the goal of the following bill language)<br />
<br>'''requires a law whose Findings of Facts: '''<br />
</center><br />
<br />
<br />
* '''contain evidence which no judge can squarely address and keep abortion legal anywhere:''' that unborn babies are real people – established by the (unanimous) consensus of court-recognized factfinders: juries, expert witnesses, 38 states, judges, and Congress;<br />
<br />
* '''present its evidence in a way that is clear and persuasive to voters,''' to help them resist judicial and media gaslighting; (See below for “Why court-recognized fact finders persuade Voters”)<br />
<br />
* '''address misunderstandings about abortion jurisprudence''' that divide prolifers, intimidate lawyers, and blind judges;<br />
<br />
'''AND WHOSE PENALTIES'''<br />
<br />
* '''restrict some aspect of abortion substantially enough''' that THEY can't be defended as a mere regulation with some other legitimate government purpose than saving lives. The restriction must be profound enough that its only possible defense is that it saves human lives. That will force courts to address the evidence that babies are fully human;<br />
<br />
* '''provide no distractions that let judges rule on some technicality and ignore the evidence that the law would save lives.''' A perfect law that addresses everything from exceptions to contraception multiplies a judge’s opportunity to say “we don’t need to reach the issue of when life begins because the law fails on a lesser issue.” A simple yet substantial restriction, with “findings” that address the legal obstacles, will survive courts, which will get courts out of the way of saving life, which will free lawmakers to work out the challenging details with time to get a comprehensive solution right and with hope that they won’t waste their time; <br />
<br />
* '''list specific penalties for specific situations,''' rather than broadly stated goals such as “babies are to be protected as much as adults”, leaving prosecutors and judges to guess what to punish, or how, in situations where evidence and culpability are different; <br />
<br />
* '''contain a “life of the mother” exception''' whose applicability is clear enough that mothers are not denied life-saving care until doctors are assured by lawyers that said care will not put the doctors in jail; and<br />
<br />
'''THE LAW SHOULD ALSO order courts to “expedite” any review,''' “because lives are lost with each day that courts delay”. <br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate!)<br />
<br />
More ideas: [[Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_stop_judges_from_legislating]]<br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate! See below for Expedited Review federal rules.) <br />
<br />
WORD COUNTS: Using only the first boldfaced paragraph of each of these 12 Findings, in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, will total about 200 words. The complete Findings, without footnotes, total nearly 3000 words. For the advantages of including enough information in a prolife law for the Findings to defend themselves, see “Too Lengthy?” below. <br />
<br />
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: I am not a lawyer. But writing about prolife legal defenses designed to bring legal abortion to an end, and Scriptures calling for that goal, for 25 years in my Prayer * Action News, being uncertified as a lawyer, has created the opportunity for a remarkable interaction with Planned Barrenhoods priciest lawyers. Because news reporters wouldn’t report that my reasoning was designed as legal defenses in court, or that they were grounded in the Bible, what that left was their accusation that I advocated crime; whereas had my defenses been successful they would have allowed citizens to stop murderers legally, putting an end to the reason citizens took action. <br />
<br />
__TOC__<br />
<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and family, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge inaction deny themselves Life More Abundantly. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget: free wisdom, guaranteed success===<br />
<br />
'''John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
James 1:5 If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, [without finding fault]; and it shall be given him. 6 But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering.''' (Gr. διακρινω not withdrawn from, ie. by lack of support from actions, or opposed, ie. by indecision) <br />
<br />
'''Matthew 21:21 ...If ye have faith, and doubt not''' (Gr. διακρινω) ...'''ye shall say unto this mountain, Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea; it shall be done. 22 And all things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive.'''<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and families, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge their own inaction deny themselves, not just their neighbors, Life More Abundantly.<br />
<br />
If you are not satisfied with life less abundantly – ongoing slaughter of innocents – you won’t be satisfied now that the fate of babies is decided by the “value” that voters place on little people. You will keep searching for a strategy to end all the slaughter: to both outlaw it, and make it unthinkable to all but the worst of murderers. <br />
<br />
If you believe you ''will'' reach every good goal you pursue with all your being, Matthew 21:21-22, you won’t be turned from ending the slaughter in every state by experts who tell you that is impossible which rules out a strategy for achieving it. You will search until you find God’s way to do God’s will. <br />
<br />
You won’t say “I'm not smart enough to question prolife legal authorities who advise giving up”, if you believe James 1:5 which promises you all the wisdom you need to do good. Nor will you ever say you are not smart enough to read and understand legal briefs, court rulings, or to reason with lawmakers, lawyers, and prolife leaders, as necessary.<br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will not excuse yourself from God’s call because you can’t talk well, like Moses, whom God answered “Who made mouths?” Exodus 4:11. Nor will you excuse yourself to God, saying you are but a child against the world’s superbrains, like Jeremiah, whom God answered, “Stop saying that! It is MY words you will speak, and I am no child!” Jeremiah 1:6-8. <br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will shine God’s light wherever you find Darkness, Matthew 5:13-16. Since nothing is darker than murdering your own baby, you will seek God’s help as you oppose this evil, and none of these excuses will withdraw you from action.<br />
<br />
===Final Warning: read this at your own risk===<br />
<br />
Warning: read at your own risk. Rough reading Ahead, that may knock you from your TV chair.<br />
<br />
'''Findings of Facts which No Judge can Squarely Address and Keep Abortion Legal'''<br />
<br />
=Part 1: Authority of Court-Recognized Fact Finders=<br />
<br />
<span style="color:grey"><small>''Try to imagine how a judge, reviewing a prolife law with these Findings of Facts, would be able to dodge this evidence - in fact, see if you can find ANYONE who can ''refute'' these facts - as opposed to not ''caring'' about facts - that is, not caring about reality:''</small></span><br />
<br />
==Statement of Fact #1 of 12: Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let ''any'' state legalize==<br />
<br />
No fact can be more legally established than the fact that “life begins” at fertilization, being the consensus of every American legal authority who has taken a position, in every category of court-recognized finders of facts: juries,2 thousands of expert witnesses who were not contested,3 38 state legislatures,4 individual judges,5 and Congress.6 <br />
<br />
If the unanimous – uncontested – finding of every court-recognized fact-finder is not enough ‘establishment’ for the court to know a fact, it is impossible for any judge to know anything.<br />
<br />
No legal authority has ruled that any unborn baby of a human is not in fact a human person, or that “life begins” any later than fertilization.7 <br />
<br />
No state can keep abortion legal now that this fact is established. This is so obvious that even Roe v. Wade said “of course”, and the lawyer for the abortionists agreed.8 <br />
For most public issues, disagreement is over facts.9 The only disagreement about abortion is between unanimous fact finders and those who don't care about facts.10 A court that won’t address the facts that justify and necessitate a law, or hear evidence of those facts, violates Due Process and has no legitimate jurisdiction to review that law.11 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 1 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
----<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget===<br />
<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? <br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
<br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
<br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True. <br />
<br />
<br />
</span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget #2: The Cost of Success===<br />
<br />
'''Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? '''<br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True.<br />
<br />
==Statement of Facts #2 of 12: Courts Accept the Fact-Finding Authority of Legislatures, Juries, Experts for the same good reasons their findings persuade the public.==<br />
<br />
SCOTUS must accept legislative findings of facts that are not obviously irrational. “..the existence of facts supporting the legislative judgment is to be presumed...not to be pronounced unconstitutional unless in the light of the facts made known or generally assumed it is of such a character as to preclude the assumption that it rests upon some rational basis within the knowledge and experience of the legislators....” U.S. v. Carolene Products, 304 U.S. 144, 152 (1938).1<br />
<br />
Besides the court-recognized fact finding authority of legislatures, courts must conform their rulings to laws until such time as courts declare laws unconstitutional. No court has overturned the “unborn victims of violence” laws (based on “human babies are people”) of 39 states and Congress, despite many challenges.2<br />
<br />
To do so would require a court to positively affirm that human life does not begin until much later, which no legal authority has done, and for which no evidence exists.<br />
<br />
'''Legislatures'''. Lawmakers are there by the choice of a majority of voters. They are bombarded by information from experts. They are scrutinized by other lawmakers. Many are lawyers, some of whom are constitutional scholars and past or future judges. They set the salaries of judges, and have the power to hold impeachment trials of judges. Congress, the national legislature, scrutinizes Supreme Court justices. <br />
<br />
Many Congressmen are equally qualified: 15 U.S. Senators have served on the Supreme Court, and more were nominated.3 <br />
<br />
'''Juries''' are tested for impartiality. They are educated by the most qualified expert witnesses available. They study as long as necessary to establish truth – sometimes for months.4<br />
<br />
'''Expert Witnesses''' are the best experts money can buy, and they are scrutinized by the other side’s experts.5 <br />
<br />
For all its faults, American court recognition of Fact Finders is among the world’s top methods of establishing reality that is available to humans, earning respect in the Court of Public Opinion along with their authority in courts of law.6 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 2 + Footnotes]]<br />
----<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
----<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget===<br />
<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Mark 8:38 '''Whosoever therefore shall be ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful generation; of him also shall the Son of man be ashamed''', when he cometh in the glory of his Father with the holy angels.<br />
<br />
We Bible believing conservatives need to quit blaming social media and CIA censorship for our failures and stop censoring ourselves. <br />
<br />
I offer a way of stating evidence which no judge, news reporter, Democrat, or unbeliever can refute, along with answering objections that have crippled prolife messaging and legal strategy. But we despair of reaching those who stop their ears to evidence. “What’s the use of tightening our message? You’re preaching to the choir. We know babies are people but those other people have their opinion too.”<br />
<br />
I’m not "preaching to the choir". I’m passing out a new composition to the choir for a coming TV special.<br />
<br />
Most of those who won’t listen, won’t vote either, rendering their willful ignorance relatively benign. Stop worrying about them. All they will do is hate you, lie about you, wreck your business – childish stuff. We progress by clearly articulating to the extent possible. The same Bible which is the main reason we care about babies promises all the protection we need to finish what we are here to do.<br />
<br />
It isn’t just saving baby bodies where we self censor. Adult souls are lost. We hold back sharing what we know about God. Snap out of it. </span><br />
<br />
==Statement of Facts #3 of 12: The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS==<br />
<br />
From Roe (1973) through Dobbs (2022), SCOTUS evaded that core issue.1 <br />
<br />
SCOTUS never ruled babies Non-Persons “as a Matter of Law”, as lower courts allege.2 Roe made that fact not only relevant, but dispositive with a holding which no court has disputed even though Roe’s main holding was overturned:3 <br />
<br />
“[Prolifers] argue that the fetus is a ‘person’ within the language and meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment....If this suggestion of personhood is established, the [abortionist’s] case, of course, collapses, for the fetus’ right to life would then be guaranteed specifically by the [14th] Amendment [thus outlawing abortion in EVERY state]. The [abortionist’s lawyer] conceded as much....”4<br />
<br />
Dobbs explicitly left this statement of the obvious untouched, saying “our decision is not based on any view about when a State should regard pre-natal life as having rights or legally cognizable interests....”5 Dobbs did not say babies aren’t people. Dobbs did not say voters should still decide whether babies can be murdered in the face of proof that babies are ''in fact'' people.6 Dobbs left in place Roe’s observation that “establishment” of this fact, independently of any law, ruling, or future constitutional amendment,7 dictates whether abortion is legally recognizable as a right or as a crime.8<br />
<br />
This established '''fact''' is as relevant today as when Roe said “of course” it is.<br />
<br />
This established '''fact''' is not disestablished by any judge’s alleged inability to understand it.9<br />
<br />
This established '''FACT''' is not made irrelevant by any judge’s theory that the legal right of little humans to live is “impossible” to determine so it should be decided by their value to big humans.10<br />
<br />
If only those ''legally recognized'' as “persons” were people, slavery could still be legal and the 14th Amendment would mean nothing. Slavery states would merely need to classify their victims as only 3/5 human.11 The Amendment protects those who are '''IN FACT''' people – what is irrelevant is whether babies are people “as a matter of law”.12 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 3 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
=Part 2: The Power of Personhood=<br />
<br />
==Statement of Facts #4 of 12: Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life==<br />
<br />
Detectable heartbeats and brain waves are evidence that a person has not yet died, throughout state and federal law.1 Reason demands they be accepted as evidence that a person has begun to live.2<br />
<br />
<small>The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: American College of Pediatricians <> Heartbeat International <> World Faith Foundation and Institute for Faith and Family <> National Catholic Bioethics Center, et al <> Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide <> Jewish Prolife Foundation <> American Association of Prolife Obstretricians </small><br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 4 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
==Statement of Facts #5 of 12: Legislatures should regulate abortion, as Dobbs held, just as legislatures regulate the prosecution of all other murders==<br />
<br />
But not in the sense of absolute discretion to leave wholesale murders of a supposedly unwanted group of humans completely unregulated. That interpretation of Dobbs’ holding is premised on a “mistake of fact”, which is an official exception to Stare Decisis.1<br />
<br />
The “Mistake of Fact” that is the premise of letting voters decide whether to continue judge-approved genocide according to the “value” they place on little people is that the humanity of babies of humans is either unknowable or irrelevant. That premise was explicit in Roe and Casey, and implicit in Dobbs.2 <br />
<br />
That is an “erroneous factual premise”. The fact that little unborn humans are humans is neither unknowable3 nor irrelevant. It is verifiable and dispositive.4 The consensus of court-recognized fact finders cures that knowledge deficit, canceling that interpretation of Dobbs’ holding, while reinforcing Dobbs’ other two holdings that “The Constitution does not confer a right to abortion” and “Roe and Casey are overruled”, and requiring the outlawing of baby killing in every state.5 <br />
<br />
<small>'''Mini-lexicon of legal terms'''<br />
<br />
'''Mistake of Fact:''' A statement of facts upon which a ruling was based, which is later shown to be untrue. It means the same as “erroneous factual premise”.<br />
<br />
'''Stare Decisis:''' Hesitancy about reversing previous precedents. Precedents should only be reversed for very good reasons, because they affect how millions live, so the more law changes back and forth, the more that unsettles society.<br />
<br />
'''Dispositive:''' Evidence so overwhelming that it is final. It settles a matter, with no need of further evidence. As in Matthew 26:65 “What further need have we of witnesses?”<br />
Holding: The part of a ruling that demands obedience, or that is a conclusion that is the basis for the ruling. <br />
<br />
'''Overruled''': Means the same as “overturned”, “repealed”, or “vacated”. It is where a court changes its mind, deciding that a previous precedent was “wrongly decided” or “incorrect”. Often it also means the previous ruling was unconstitutional, although nobody is allowed to use that word out loud. <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: Illinois Right to Life <> Center for Religious Expression <> Connie Weiskopf and Kristine L. Brown </small> <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 5 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
==Statement of Facts #6 of 12: The full humanity of a tiny physical body is hard for many to grasp. But what distinguishes us from animals isn’t physical, and has no known pre-conscious stage==<br />
<br />
Part of the definition of “person” is “infused with a soul”, Roe v. Wade1 and dictionaries say.2 SCOTUS has not disagreed. “Consciousness” is another word for what has no physical explanation, and that distinguishes us from animals. <br />
<br />
Animal behavior is predictable within breeds, indicating little “choice”. They are not like people who can choose to behave like angels or demons. Nothing physical can explain our ability to choose against our own bodies: to sacrifice our own interests for others, which is how John 15:13 defines “love”;3 or to destroy ourselves in hate.4<br />
<br />
Roe v Wade was not out of line to consult “those trained in... theology” who study souls, as well as doctors who study bodies, to clarify who to count as human with an unalienable right to life.5<br />
<br />
The extent of human choice is said by Psalm 22:10 to enable an unborn baby to place his trust in God. Luke 1:44 similarly reports that a baby at 6 months heard a righteous voice [and/or felt the righteous Presence of God] and responded with joy,6 a response not everybody chooses, indicating that even the capacity for choosing between good and evil precedes birth. To human consciousness, we give greater legal protection than to animals.7 <br />
Because nothing physical explains such powers, undeveloped bodies don’t establish undeveloped consciousness. <br />
<br />
Since a “soul” without consciousness has never been theorized and can’t be imagined,8 the consensus of fact finders is, in effect, that abortion kills babies with conscious souls. <br />
<br />
All this testimony indicates that when a baby is killed by dismemberment, acid, or sucking out the brain, it is not some non-sentient animal, some pre-human “potential life”, but a self-aware conscious soul that feels the pain, understands the cruelty, and if out-of-body near-death experiences are real, sees, along with God, who is doing it.<br />
Even considering the body only, there is no objective line between birth and conception distinguishing “humans” from “nonpersons”, or between “meaningful life” and life which courts are free to terminate.9 Without such a line, there can be no stage of gestation at which killing a baby can be objectively distinguished from murder. No baby is safe while that line remains arbitrary.10 <br />
<br />
The failure of some people, and of some religions, to grasp the full humanity of babies at any given stage is a dangerous basis for permitting killing, since as many fail to grasp the full humanity of many groups of born persons.<br />
28/430 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''SCOTUS:''' Supreme Court Of The United States<br />
<br />
'''Stage of Gestation:''' Any time during the development of a baby in the womb. This isn’t exactly a legal term, but it is not common outside courts.<br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: Foundation for Moral Law, Lutherans for Life <> American College of Pedia-tricians <> Jewish Prolife Foundation <> Dr. Robin Pierucci, M.D. </small><br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] <br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
=Part 3: Myth Busters=<br />
<br />
==Statement of Facts #7 of 12: Congress has ''Already'' Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment ''already'' authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion, ''without'' allowing Congress to legalize it==<br />
<br />
Congress established in 2004 that: “‘unborn child’ means a child in utero, and the term ‘child in utero’...means a member of the species Homo Sapiens, at any stage of development, who is carried in the womb”, 18 U.S.C. 1841(d).1 <br />
<br />
This fact is not diminished by clause (c) which does not “permit [authorize] the prosecution of any person for...an abortion for which the consent of the pregnant woman...has been obtained.…”2 A law misaligned with facts does not block future lawmakers from making corrections, and states don’t need Congress’ “permission” to obey the 14th Amendment. <br />
<br />
The reason 18 U.S.C. 1841(d) has had no effect on the practice of legal abortion is not because of any deficiency in its authority to establish dispositive facts, but because no state law reviewed by SCOTUS has cited it to establish what Roe correctly said once “established” would “of course” require the end of legal abortion. <br />
<br />
Not only is the 2004 law unmitigated evidence of life strong enough to “collapse” legal abortion by itself, but it would not be stronger if it were an Amendment to the Constitution.3 No other Constitutional Amendment is relied on for evidence of a fact. An Amendment can bind courts. But establishment of the Facts Of Life by evidence presented, cited, and tested in court pulls not only courts, but society, closer to reality.4 32/254 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Personhood Law:''' A law stating that an unborn baby is a person. A human being. A“human person”, as Dobbs v. Jackson stated. That is, a person with all the legal rights of any other human. <br />
<br />
'''“In Utero”:''' In the womb. An unborn baby is in the womb - “in utero”.<br />
<br />
'''“Homo Sapiens”:''' humans. “The species homo sapiens”: the human race.<br />
<br />
'''Dispositive:''' Proved. Evidence so strong that no more is needed.<br />
<br />
'''Cited:''' Quoted. Referred to it. <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide <> and from Professor Nathan Schluetter, Hillsdale College <> Judge Bork</small><br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
==Statement #8 of 12: Roe, Dobbs, and the 14th Amendment agree: All Humans are “Persons”==<br />
<br />
Neither Roe nor Dobbs distinguished between “humans” and “persons” as if a “human” baby isn’t necessarily a “person”. [2] Nor does the 14th Amendment leave any human unprotected.<br />
<br />
Roe v. Wade equated the time an unborn child becomes “recognizably human” with the time the child becomes a “person”: “These disciplines variously approached the question [“of when life begins”] in terms of the point at which the embryo or fetus became ‘formed’ or recognizably human, or in terms of when a ‘person’ came into being, that is, infused with a ‘soul’ or ‘animated.’” 410 U.S. 113, 133(1973)<br />
<br />
Dobbs cites the belief that “a human person comes into being at conception” without distinguishing between the two words. [3] <br />
<br />
The word “person” in the 14th Amendment meant “An individual human being...man, woman, or child...consisting of body and soul.” The word “child” in that 1828 definition included unborn children, since to be “with child” meant to be pregnant. [4]<br />
<br />
Therefore the Amendment’s “nor shall any state deprive any person of life” and “equal protection” of every “person” means every human, including those unborn. Nothing about the first clause keeps later clauses from protecting unborn humans. [5]<br />
<br />
See also Wong Wing v. United States, 163 U.S.228, 242 (1896), “The term ‘person’ is broad enough to include any and every human being within the jurisdiction of the republic...This has been decided so often that the point does not require argument.” Steinberg v. Brown 321 F. Supp. 741 (N.D. Ohio, 1970) “[o]nce human life has commenced, the constitutional protections found in the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments impose upon the state a duty of safeguarding it”. [6]<br />
<br />
The word “persons” in the 14th Amendment means all who are IN FACT humans. Had it been only for those who are legally recognized as human, every deprivation of fundamental rights would be “constitutional” so long as a law or ruling questions whether its victims are “persons in the whole sense”.<br />
<br />
Although Dobbs showed by disproving the opposite that reverence for all human life from fertilization was “deeply rooted in America’s law and traditions”, that is not why rights merit 14th Amendment protection. By the “deeply rooted” test, slavery would be legal today, since freedom for slaves had zero historical support.<br />
<br />
Nor does it ''matter'' if the Amendment authors even wanted to protect all humans. In fact, it doesn’t matter if there is a 14th Amendment. If law is not equal upon its operation on all humans, which is the very definition of the word “law” as developed by Samuel Rutherford’s “Lex Rex” and Blackstone and adopted by America’s founders, to that extent there is, by definition, no “rule of law”, no restraint upon the “strong” to not tyrannize the “weak”.<br />
<br />
There is a direct test of whether babies merit 14th Amendment protection that does not require a romp through history: [7] see if their parents are humans.<br />
<br />
“To say that the test of equal protection should be the ‘legal’ rather than the biological relationship is to avoid the issue. For the Equal Protection Clause necessarily limits the authority of a State [or its judges] to draw such ‘legal’ lines as it chooses.” Glona, 391 U.S. 73, 75 (1968) [8]<br />
<br />
FOOTNOTES: see [[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''14th Amendment:''' Ratified in 1868, the third year after the Civil War ended, it ruled that every state must give everyone under its laws the “equal protection” of its laws. It gave Congress authority to “enforce” the rights listed in the Constitution when state legislatures can’t or won’t, and to block state laws that protect some people less. Starting five years later, the Supreme Court usurped that authority of Congress for itself, and instead of protecting rights listed in the Constitution it made up rights not in the Constitution that are hostile to constitutional rights. More about that later. <br />
<br />
'''Equal Protection Clause:''' The clause in the 14th Amendment that requires states to give “equal protection of the laws” to all its citizens.<br />
<br />
The footnotes are enriched by selections from the Amicus Briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson by: Lee J. Strang <> Scholars of Jurisprudence John M. Finnis and Robert P. George <> Mary Kay Bacallao Advocating for Unborn Children <> Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide <> and by selections from the 1996 debate between Judge Robert Bork and Professor Nathan Schluetter</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small>'<br />
<br />
==Statement of Facts #9 of 12: When pregnancies develop into medical emergencies requiring separation of mother and child to save the mother, the child has an equally fundamental right to life and medical care.==<br />
<br />
A legislature’s balancing of their interests cannot, therefore, be reviewed by “strict scrutiny”.2 Nor does alleged insufficiency of a “medical emergency” exception from a general abortion ban justify a court overturning the ban in the 99% of cases where no emergency is alleged.3 Legislatures are better equipped to deliberate about and secure the rights of all citizens than courts whose focus is the parties before them.4<br />
<br />
SCOTUS never denied that a legislature’s “personhood” statements in an abortion ban are strong evidence.5 That evidence is not mitigated by a ban’s exceptions.6 It is not made irrelevant because baby killers “rely” on killing babies.7 28/130 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms:<br />
'''<br />
Fundamental Right:''' This is a term not found in the Constitution but made up by SCOTUS for the rights SCOTUS makes up which often displace rights actually listed in the Constitution. Justice Clarence Thomas is eloquent on this point. More about this later.<br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: A Foundation for Moral Law <> Pennsylvania Pro-Life Federation <> 396 State Legislators from 41 States</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #10 of 12: Tyranny over any class of humans by any other is prohibited by the Constitution, and by the Declaration, which gives the purpose of the Constitution and rests its own authority on the revelation of God1 in the Bible====<br />
<br />
Roe v Wade was not out of line to consult “those trained in... theology” who study souls, as well as doctors who study bodies, to clarify who to count as human with an unalienable right to life.3 <br />
<br />
America’s Freedom springs from “all men are created equal” and “equal protection of the laws” for all humans even if their looks, language, wealth, strength, ancestry, power, or faith are different.4 These rights have proven such a blessing to the world that their source, the Bible, deserves the fair hearing owed any witness whose reliability has been confirmed, when it promises still greater blessings if we will equally protect humans whose physical size is different.5 <br />
<br />
Its testimony is not “cumulative”, but “probative”.6 It is not to be feared as dispositive or compulsory: American freedom balances human understanding of how best to apply Biblical principles to government against the willingness of voting majorities to follow those principles. Even that is a Biblical principle legitimized in 1 Samuel 8.7 <br />
<br />
The history of slavery, Prohibition, and abortion illustrate the “willingness” factor. The probative value of the testimony of God is proved by the fact that without it, slavery would never have ended, and the prolife movement would never have begun. Which makes it probative to observe that not only the 14th Amendment, but also the revelation of God, requires this state, as it does every state, to outlaw all trampling of fundamental rights of any class of people, including abortion of babies.8 Where the two authorities say the same thing, the Bible, for all its alleged ambiguity, is better understood and more trusted than the Constitution which has indeed proven “a thing of wax” in the nimble fingers of even the most scrupulous judges.9 <br />
<br />
Without God – without belief in a more objective standard of right and wrong than the “value” that voters place on “different” people through “evolving community standards”, it is impossible to understand fundamental rights.10 <br />
<br />
Courts have demonstrated this impossibility by so often confusing abominations for rights, decimating those whom Jesus said “forbid them not to come unto Me”, denying that He created them, murdering 17% of them, sodomizing 20% of the survivors, and censoring 100% of His teachings in schools.11 <br />
<br />
That destruction of the 14th Amendment (1868) began when “Substantive Due Process”, pioneered in Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857), was applied in United States v. Cruikshank 92 U. S. 542 (1876) to acquit a white Democrat mililtia of murdering “as many as 165” black Republicans and burning down the courthouse they were defending.12 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring God does not “establish religion”. It does not compel belief, action or endorsement. It simply allows judges and voters to make informed decisions. It is part of fact-finding. It is part of reasoning. Part of embracing reality. Part of examining “the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth”. Judges must stop punishing people for telling the truth just because the truth favors God.13 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring the Bible does not require equal weight for claims of religions that deny equal rights for all.14 <br />
<br />
For example, some claim “souls” don’t enter babies until long after fertilization, or even long after birth.15 Their claims do not “cancel” the mountain of consensus of court-recognized fact finders that souls are present from the beginning. Our Constitution and laws reject their unequal rights, and are appropriately wary of their rationales for their unequal rights. The credibility of every witness is not equal. Credibility is earned. <br />
There can be “free exercise” of religions hostile to “equal protection of the laws” only to the extent their “exercise” does not threaten the rights of others or violate the laws enacted to protect them – laws ultimately decided by voting majorities, hopefully well informed through the uncensoring of reality.16 39/520 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms: <br />
<br />
'''Cumulative''': testimony so redundant that it wastes the court’s time<br />
Dispositive: testimony so strong that it settles the issue with no more<br />
Probative: probative facts establish, or contribute to, proof. Probative value is the degree of relevance of evidence. <br />
<br />
'''Prohibition''': From 1920 to 1932, drinking (alcohol) was made illegal, banned by an actual Constitutional Amendment. Actual alcohol consumption dropped by about 50%, or at least that is how much Cirrhosis of the Liver cases dropped. During that time the drop in drinking led to an economic boom, called the “Roaring Twenties”, which unfortunately were not remembered for their prosperity but for their immorality. In 1928, the prosperity collapsed into a “Great Depression” due to cheating by stock market investors. In 1932 Americans wanted liquor so bad they ratified another Constitutional Amendment repealing the 1920 Amendment. <br />
<br />
'''Substantive Due Process''': As Justice Clarence Thomas eloquently explains – see Statement #11 footnotes, this phrase was made up by SCOTUS to justify making up what it calls “fundamental rights” as its tool of repealing laws it doesn’t like. It gets its name from the SCOTUS claim that the “Due Process” clause of the 14th Amendment gives SCOTUS its authority to make up rights and call them “fundamental”. But “Due Process” only meant the legal procedures which everyone must be given equally, to defend their rights in court when necessary. The phrase has nothing to do with identifying what rights are protectable. But “Substantive” means those rights we care about, that the Constitution protects. Like freedom of speech or religion. Because “substantive” means substantial, serious rights, and “due process” has nothing to do with identifying any rights, the LONANG Institute observes in Statement #11 notes that “substantive due process” is an oxymoron. <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: Foundation for Moral Law and Lutherans for Life <> Jewish Prolife Foundation <> LONANG Institute <> U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and Other Religious Organizations <> Claremont Institute’s Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
=Part 4: Conclusions=<br />
<br />
==Statement of Facts #11 of 12: The 14th Amendment gives federal courts no “due process” authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the “right” to murder, and gives Congress no authority to legalize violations of Constitutional Rights, like taking a baby’s right to Life==<br />
<br />
The sole federal authority over state laws regarding the rights of their own citizens is through the 14th Amendment, Sections One and Five.1 Contrary to SCOTUS rulings, the 14th Amendment explicitly provides:<br />
<br />
* '''Congress authorized, not courts.''' Congress, not courts, determines the manner and scope of federal intervention in states whose laws don’t protect their citizens’ rights.2 Congress is not limited to enforcing only those rights of which SCOTUS approves, nor only to the extent that SCOTUS approves,3 nor only when state governments, not individuals, directly violate rights.4 <br />
<br />
* Federal courts aren’t permitted to stop either states or Congress from protecting enumerated rights (like Life), or to repeal their laws for conflicting with unenumerated [not listed in the Constitution] “rights” (like the “right” to murder babies), or to intervene in states’ protection of rights beyond prosecuting violations of federal laws.5 <br />
<br />
* Nor can Congress stop states from protecting enumerated rights. Neither Congress nor federal courts may overturn a state law protecting the lives of unborn babies from surgical abortion, chemical abortion, or contraceptives.6<br />
<br />
* The rights subject to federal enforcement are not those made up by SCOTUS allegedly based on the “Due Process” clause,7 but those listed in the Constitution, referred to as “privileges and immunities”8 (including, for unborn babies, the “privilege” of life and “immunity” from “cruel and unusual punishment” and execution “without due process of law”).9 <br />
* Enumerated Rights recognized before the Constitution existed are not excluded from Congressional intervention.10<br />
<br />
* '''“Substantive Due Process”''' is the sophistry by which SCOTUS turned the Constitution’s Authority to Define Rights, and Congress’ 14th Amendment Section 5 Authority to Enforce Rights, into its own authority to reclassify abominations as “rights”.11 It is an illegal, unconstitutional, Freedom-crushing fraud from Hell fomenting a long line of Landmark Abomination Cases.12 <br />
<br />
<small>Mini-lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Due Process:''' The duty of courts to give all parties to cases the fair and equal procedures and opportunities for defending themselves.<br />
<br />
(This argument for ending SCOTUS’ long line of Landmark Abomination Cases continues in Part Two of this book where its focus on SCOTUS-mandated murder of babies created in the Image of God is extended to SCOTUS’ censorship of God Himself.) <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amici who filed briefs in Dobbs v. Jackson: Lonang Institute <> Christian Legal Society <> AfricanAmerican, Hispanic, Roman Catholic and Protestant Religious and Civil Rights Organizations <> Senators Josh Hawley, Mike Lee, and Ted Cruz. And from Judge Robert Bork <> Nathan Schlueter, Professor of Philosophy and Religion, Hillsdale College, (when he debated Judge Bork in 2003 he was assistant professor of pre-law and political science at St. Ambrose University. Author, “Unborn Persons and the Fourteenth Amendment.” 2002.) <> Erwin Chemerinsky, Dean of Berkeley Law School <> Legal Information Institute, Cornell University <> Justice Clarence Thomas, dissents and concurrences <> justia.com <> James Gray Pope, Professor of Law and Sidney Reitman Scholar, Rutgers University School of Law <> Libby Adler professor of law and women’s, gender, and sexuality studies, Northeastern University Christmas, 2023''</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
==Statement #12 of 12:Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable. The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives.==<br />
<br />
Any judge interfering with this state’s compliance with the 14th Amendment and its ancient authority to protect its people1 – the central reason governments exist, is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders,2 and is guilty of exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide through an unconstitutional ruling,3 which exceeds the judicial powers given by any Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment.4<br />
<br />
The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives, including (1) giving the state Supreme Court original jurisdiction over any challenge to a law, (2) requiring that review be expedited, (3) requiring a supermajority of the Court to suspend a law, (4) questioning justices in a public hearing about the constitutionality of their ruling, and (5) overturning the ruling with a supermajority of the legislature.5 <br />
<br />
Should any federal judge so interfere with this state’s constitutional duty, this state appeals to its congressional delegation to examine similar grounds for disciplinary action,6 along with exercising its Article III, Section 2, paragraph 2 authority to make “exceptions” and “regulations” designed to end SCOTUS’ long line of landmark abomination cases. <br />
<br />
This state also appeals to its congressional delegation to exercise its life-saving and rights-protecting authority under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment whose plain words give Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of Rights,7 which subsumes the authority to define their scope and to balance competing interests, while the “privileges and immunities” clause identifies as protectable rights those listed in the Constitution.8 <br />
<br />
Official world-wide definitions of “crimes against humanity” apply “to representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission”, whether elected representatives or unelected judges.”9<br />
<br />
Any court review of this law must be expedited, because lives are lost with each day that courts delay.10 7/230 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of Legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Malfeasance in office:''' official misconduct; violation of a public trust or obligation; specifically, the doing of an act which is positively unlawful or wrongful.<br />
<br />
'''Subsumes:''' Includes. To include or place within something larger or more comprehensive: encompass as a subordinate or component element red, green, and yellow are subsumed under the term "color" <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: 396 State Legislators from 41 States <> Melinda Thybault/Moral Outcry <> and by Matthew J. Franck, Director of the William E. and Carol G. Simon Center on Religion and the Constitution at the Witherspoon Institute and visiting lecturer in politics at Princeton University</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small></div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Reversing_Landmark_Abomination_Cases&diff=50384Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases2024-01-03T04:39:29Z<p>DaveLeach: /* Statement of Fact #1 of 12: Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let any state legali...</p>
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<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters<br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion</span><br />
<br />
by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal<br />
''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal<br />
<span style="color:brown"><br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen <br />
<br />
by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 18:06, 15 October 2023 (UTC)<br />
<br />
=Introduction=<br />
<br />
This book offers twelve statements of fact about babies and abortion which I challenge any voter, lawyer, lawmaker, or judge to refute. Their footnotes contain nuggets from the 140 "Amicus" briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' (2022), the ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade. These statements are designed to soften the resistance of voters to outlawing baby murder, when presented in public, and to force judges to outlaw abortion in every state, when presented in court. <br />
<br />
They are truths designed to be so unignorable, that when any lawmaker includes them in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, in any state, prodeath fury will help publicize them with each advance through legislative deadlines. When friends of babies see them survive scrutiny, the force of these truths will grow like a snowball rolling down a hill. <br />
<br />
But murdering babies is only the most egregious of many Landmark Abomination Cases. Their common thread is usurping authority which the Constitution assigns to others, and equating the Bible with spurious religions. “Never let a crisis go to waste”, say the enemies of God, but God is the true master of turning evil into an opportunity for good. It’s time. Let’s end the Supreme Court’s war against God.<br />
<br />
The very fact that abortion is the worst of the ways the United States Supreme Court has turned American law upside down creates an opportunity to heal that branch of our government, and heal all the harm to our nation and its culture and morals that it has caused. As Professor Nathan Schluetter at Hillsdale College observes, “We must not let this opportunity pass to boldly challenge the prevailing jurisprudence and its attendant epistemological and moral skepticism with respect to abortion.”<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
It is the '''fact''' that unborn babies are living human children that makes killing them murder. It’s not what any ''law'' says about it, or even what the Constitution says about it. That’s what leaves ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' on the edge of reality, by treating this fact as something for voters to figure out, not on the basis of whether babies are ''in fact'' people but on the basis of some “value” they place on ''little'' people. <br />
<br />
That '''fact''' is what makes <u>the consensus of court-recognized fact finders</u> a stronger legal reason to end legal abortion than a Life Amendment, and a powerful social reason in the Court of Public Opinion able to soften hearts to the silent screams of Jesus' little brothers and His quiet knocking on hearts' doors. Which makes it insane for prolifers to not even mention this legally dispositive consensus in each and every prolife court case, and every “finding of fact” in prolife legislation, along with leveling with the public about the Scriptures which are the real reason we even care.<br />
<br />
[[File:Cover_Cartoon.jpg]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
Why these solutions may help even where abortion is already outlawed<br />
<br />
(1) They could defeat a national abortion legalization.<br />
<br />
(2) They could help you sue a nearby “blue state” for helping its baby killers murder your children. <br />
<br />
(3) They could help if your district judges join the courtroom rebellion against Dobbs in other states.<br />
<br />
(4) They could help meet challenges in the Court of Public Opinion, for example through a Resolution that irrefutably addresses every objection you have ever heard, as understandable to voters as it is irrefutable to judges. That would help the public see through future judicial gaslighting, and support judicial reform: ie. www.savetheworld .saltshaker.us/wiki/Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_ stop_judges_from_legislating<br />
<br />
(5) I could sure use your feedback. Proverbs 15:22. <br />
<br />
----<br />
<center>'''Ending legal abortion everywhere in close to a year<br />
(the goal of the following bill language)<br />
<br>'''requires a law whose Findings of Facts: '''<br />
</center><br />
<br />
<br />
* '''contain evidence which no judge can squarely address and keep abortion legal anywhere:''' that unborn babies are real people – established by the (unanimous) consensus of court-recognized factfinders: juries, expert witnesses, 38 states, judges, and Congress;<br />
<br />
* '''present its evidence in a way that is clear and persuasive to voters,''' to help them resist judicial and media gaslighting; (See below for “Why court-recognized fact finders persuade Voters”)<br />
<br />
* '''address misunderstandings about abortion jurisprudence''' that divide prolifers, intimidate lawyers, and blind judges;<br />
<br />
'''AND WHOSE PENALTIES'''<br />
<br />
* '''restrict some aspect of abortion substantially enough''' that THEY can't be defended as a mere regulation with some other legitimate government purpose than saving lives. The restriction must be profound enough that its only possible defense is that it saves human lives. That will force courts to address the evidence that babies are fully human;<br />
<br />
* '''provide no distractions that let judges rule on some technicality and ignore the evidence that the law would save lives.''' A perfect law that addresses everything from exceptions to contraception multiplies a judge’s opportunity to say “we don’t need to reach the issue of when life begins because the law fails on a lesser issue.” A simple yet substantial restriction, with “findings” that address the legal obstacles, will survive courts, which will get courts out of the way of saving life, which will free lawmakers to work out the challenging details with time to get a comprehensive solution right and with hope that they won’t waste their time; <br />
<br />
* '''list specific penalties for specific situations,''' rather than broadly stated goals such as “babies are to be protected as much as adults”, leaving prosecutors and judges to guess what to punish, or how, in situations where evidence and culpability are different; <br />
<br />
* '''contain a “life of the mother” exception''' whose applicability is clear enough that mothers are not denied life-saving care until doctors are assured by lawyers that said care will not put the doctors in jail; and<br />
<br />
'''THE LAW SHOULD ALSO order courts to “expedite” any review,''' “because lives are lost with each day that courts delay”. <br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate!)<br />
<br />
More ideas: [[Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_stop_judges_from_legislating]]<br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate! See below for Expedited Review federal rules.) <br />
<br />
WORD COUNTS: Using only the first boldfaced paragraph of each of these 12 Findings, in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, will total about 200 words. The complete Findings, without footnotes, total nearly 3000 words. For the advantages of including enough information in a prolife law for the Findings to defend themselves, see “Too Lengthy?” below. <br />
<br />
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: I am not a lawyer. But writing about prolife legal defenses designed to bring legal abortion to an end, and Scriptures calling for that goal, for 25 years in my Prayer * Action News, being uncertified as a lawyer, has created the opportunity for a remarkable interaction with Planned Barrenhoods priciest lawyers. Because news reporters wouldn’t report that my reasoning was designed as legal defenses in court, or that they were grounded in the Bible, what that left was their accusation that I advocated crime; whereas had my defenses been successful they would have allowed citizens to stop murderers legally, putting an end to the reason citizens took action. <br />
<br />
__TOC__<br />
<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and family, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge inaction deny themselves Life More Abundantly. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget: free wisdom, guaranteed success===<br />
<br />
'''John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
James 1:5 If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, [without finding fault]; and it shall be given him. 6 But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering.''' (Gr. διακρινω not withdrawn from, ie. by lack of support from actions, or opposed, ie. by indecision) <br />
<br />
'''Matthew 21:21 ...If ye have faith, and doubt not''' (Gr. διακρινω) ...'''ye shall say unto this mountain, Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea; it shall be done. 22 And all things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive.'''<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and families, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge their own inaction deny themselves, not just their neighbors, Life More Abundantly.<br />
<br />
If you are not satisfied with life less abundantly – ongoing slaughter of innocents – you won’t be satisfied now that the fate of babies is decided by the “value” that voters place on little people. You will keep searching for a strategy to end all the slaughter: to both outlaw it, and make it unthinkable to all but the worst of murderers. <br />
<br />
If you believe you ''will'' reach every good goal you pursue with all your being, Matthew 21:21-22, you won’t be turned from ending the slaughter in every state by experts who tell you that is impossible which rules out a strategy for achieving it. You will search until you find God’s way to do God’s will. <br />
<br />
You won’t say “I'm not smart enough to question prolife legal authorities who advise giving up”, if you believe James 1:5 which promises you all the wisdom you need to do good. Nor will you ever say you are not smart enough to read and understand legal briefs, court rulings, or to reason with lawmakers, lawyers, and prolife leaders, as necessary.<br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will not excuse yourself from God’s call because you can’t talk well, like Moses, whom God answered “Who made mouths?” Exodus 4:11. Nor will you excuse yourself to God, saying you are but a child against the world’s superbrains, like Jeremiah, whom God answered, “Stop saying that! It is MY words you will speak, and I am no child!” Jeremiah 1:6-8. <br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will shine God’s light wherever you find Darkness, Matthew 5:13-16. Since nothing is darker than murdering your own baby, you will seek God’s help as you oppose this evil, and none of these excuses will withdraw you from action.<br />
<br />
===Final Warning: read this at your own risk===<br />
<br />
Warning: read at your own risk. Rough reading Ahead, that may knock you from your TV chair.<br />
<br />
'''Findings of Facts which No Judge can Squarely Address and Keep Abortion Legal'''<br />
<br />
=Part 1: Authority of Court-Recognized Fact Finders=<br />
<br />
<span style="color:grey"><small>''Try to imagine how a judge, reviewing a prolife law with these Findings of Facts, would be able to dodge this evidence - in fact, see if you can find ANYONE who can ''refute'' these facts - as opposed to not ''caring'' about facts - that is, not caring about reality:''</small></span><br />
<br />
==Statement of Fact #1 of 12: Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let ''any'' state legalize==<br />
<br />
No fact can be more legally established than the fact that “life begins” at fertilization, being the consensus of every American legal authority who has taken a position, in every category of court-recognized finders of facts: juries,2 thousands of expert witnesses who were not contested,3 38 state legislatures,4 individual judges,5 and Congress.6 <br />
<br />
If the unanimous – uncontested – finding of every court-recognized fact-finder is not enough ‘establishment’ for the court to know a fact, it is impossible for any judge to know anything.<br />
<br />
No legal authority has ruled that any unborn baby of a human is not in fact a human person, or that “life begins” any later than fertilization.7 <br />
<br />
No state can keep abortion legal now that this fact is established. This is so obvious that even Roe v. Wade said “of course”, and the lawyer for the abortionists agreed.8 <br />
For most public issues, disagreement is over facts.9 The only disagreement about abortion is between unanimous fact finders and those who don't care about facts.10 A court that won’t address the facts that justify and necessitate a law, or hear evidence of those facts, violates Due Process and has no legitimate jurisdiction to review that law.11 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 1 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
----<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget===<br />
<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? <br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
<br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
<br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True. <br />
<br />
<br />
</span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget #2: The Cost of Success===<br />
<br />
'''Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? '''<br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True.<br />
<br />
==Statement of Facts #2 of 12: Courts Accept the Fact-Finding Authority of Legislatures, Juries, Experts for the same good reasons their findings persuade the public.==<br />
<br />
SCOTUS must accept legislative findings of facts that are not obviously irrational. “..the existence of facts supporting the legislative judgment is to be presumed...not to be pronounced unconstitutional unless in the light of the facts made known or generally assumed it is of such a character as to preclude the assumption that it rests upon some rational basis within the knowledge and experience of the legislators....” U.S. v. Carolene Products, 304 U.S. 144, 152 (1938).1<br />
<br />
Besides the court-recognized fact finding authority of legislatures, courts must conform their rulings to laws until such time as courts declare laws unconstitutional. No court has overturned the “unborn victims of violence” laws (based on “human babies are people”) of 39 states and Congress, despite many challenges.2<br />
<br />
To do so would require a court to positively affirm that human life does not begin until much later, which no legal authority has done, and for which no evidence exists.<br />
<br />
'''Legislatures'''. Lawmakers are there by the choice of a majority of voters. They are bombarded by information from experts. They are scrutinized by other lawmakers. Many are lawyers, some of whom are constitutional scholars and past or future judges. They set the salaries of judges, and have the power to hold impeachment trials of judges. Congress, the national legislature, scrutinizes Supreme Court justices. <br />
<br />
Many Congressmen are equally qualified: 15 U.S. Senators have served on the Supreme Court, and more were nominated.3 <br />
<br />
'''Juries''' are tested for impartiality. They are educated by the most qualified expert witnesses available. They study as long as necessary to establish truth – sometimes for months.4<br />
<br />
'''Expert Witnesses''' are the best experts money can buy, and they are scrutinized by the other side’s experts.5 <br />
<br />
For all its faults, American court recognition of Fact Finders is among the world’s top methods of establishing reality that is available to humans, earning respect in the Court of Public Opinion along with their authority in courts of law.6 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 2 + Footnotes]]<br />
----<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
----<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget===<br />
<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Mark 8:38 '''Whosoever therefore shall be ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful generation; of him also shall the Son of man be ashamed''', when he cometh in the glory of his Father with the holy angels.<br />
<br />
We Bible believing conservatives need to quit blaming social media and CIA censorship for our failures and stop censoring ourselves. <br />
<br />
I offer a way of stating evidence which no judge, news reporter, Democrat, or unbeliever can refute, along with answering objections that have crippled prolife messaging and legal strategy. But we despair of reaching those who stop their ears to evidence. “What’s the use of tightening our message? You’re preaching to the choir. We know babies are people but those other people have their opinion too.”<br />
<br />
I’m not "preaching to the choir". I’m passing out a new composition to the choir for a coming TV special.<br />
<br />
Most of those who won’t listen, won’t vote either, rendering their willful ignorance relatively benign. Stop worrying about them. All they will do is hate you, lie about you, wreck your business – childish stuff. We progress by clearly articulating to the extent possible. The same Bible which is the main reason we care about babies promises all the protection we need to finish what we are here to do.<br />
<br />
It isn’t just saving baby bodies where we self censor. Adult souls are lost. We hold back sharing what we know about God. Snap out of it. </span><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #3 of 12: The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS====<br />
<br />
From Roe (1973) through Dobbs (2022), SCOTUS evaded that core issue.1 <br />
<br />
SCOTUS never ruled babies Non-Persons “as a Matter of Law”, as lower courts allege.2 Roe made that fact not only relevant, but dispositive with a holding which no court has disputed even though Roe’s main holding was overturned:3 <br />
<br />
“[Prolifers] argue that the fetus is a ‘person’ within the language and meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment....If this suggestion of personhood is established, the [abortionist’s] case, of course, collapses, for the fetus’ right to life would then be guaranteed specifically by the [14th] Amendment [thus outlawing abortion in EVERY state]. The [abortionist’s lawyer] conceded as much....”4<br />
<br />
Dobbs explicitly left this statement of the obvious untouched, saying “our decision is not based on any view about when a State should regard pre-natal life as having rights or legally cognizable interests....”5 Dobbs did not say babies aren’t people. Dobbs did not say voters should still decide whether babies can be murdered in the face of proof that babies are ''in fact'' people.6 Dobbs left in place Roe’s observation that “establishment” of this fact, independently of any law, ruling, or future constitutional amendment,7 dictates whether abortion is legally recognizable as a right or as a crime.8<br />
<br />
This established '''fact''' is as relevant today as when Roe said “of course” it is.<br />
<br />
This established '''fact''' is not disestablished by any judge’s alleged inability to understand it.9<br />
<br />
This established '''FACT''' is not made irrelevant by any judge’s theory that the legal right of little humans to live is “impossible” to determine so it should be decided by their value to big humans.10<br />
<br />
If only those ''legally recognized'' as “persons” were people, slavery could still be legal and the 14th Amendment would mean nothing. Slavery states would merely need to classify their victims as only 3/5 human.11 The Amendment protects those who are '''IN FACT''' people – what is irrelevant is whether babies are people “as a matter of law”.12 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 3 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
=Part 2: The Power of Personhood=<br />
<br />
==Statement of Facts #4 of 12: Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life==<br />
<br />
Detectable heartbeats and brain waves are evidence that a person has not yet died, throughout state and federal law.1 Reason demands they be accepted as evidence that a person has begun to live.2<br />
<br />
<small>The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: American College of Pediatricians <> Heartbeat International <> World Faith Foundation and Institute for Faith and Family <> National Catholic Bioethics Center, et al <> Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide <> Jewish Prolife Foundation <> American Association of Prolife Obstretricians </small><br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 4 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
==Statement of Facts #5 of 12: Legislatures should regulate abortion, as Dobbs held, just as legislatures regulate the prosecution of all other murders==<br />
<br />
But not in the sense of absolute discretion to leave wholesale murders of a supposedly unwanted group of humans completely unregulated. That interpretation of Dobbs’ holding is premised on a “mistake of fact”, which is an official exception to Stare Decisis.1<br />
<br />
The “Mistake of Fact” that is the premise of letting voters decide whether to continue judge-approved genocide according to the “value” they place on little people is that the humanity of babies of humans is either unknowable or irrelevant. That premise was explicit in Roe and Casey, and implicit in Dobbs.2 <br />
<br />
That is an “erroneous factual premise”. The fact that little unborn humans are humans is neither unknowable3 nor irrelevant. It is verifiable and dispositive.4 The consensus of court-recognized fact finders cures that knowledge deficit, canceling that interpretation of Dobbs’ holding, while reinforcing Dobbs’ other two holdings that “The Constitution does not confer a right to abortion” and “Roe and Casey are overruled”, and requiring the outlawing of baby killing in every state.5 <br />
<br />
<small>'''Mini-lexicon of legal terms'''<br />
<br />
'''Mistake of Fact:''' A statement of facts upon which a ruling was based, which is later shown to be untrue. It means the same as “erroneous factual premise”.<br />
<br />
'''Stare Decisis:''' Hesitancy about reversing previous precedents. Precedents should only be reversed for very good reasons, because they affect how millions live, so the more law changes back and forth, the more that unsettles society.<br />
<br />
'''Dispositive:''' Evidence so overwhelming that it is final. It settles a matter, with no need of further evidence. As in Matthew 26:65 “What further need have we of witnesses?”<br />
Holding: The part of a ruling that demands obedience, or that is a conclusion that is the basis for the ruling. <br />
<br />
'''Overruled''': Means the same as “overturned”, “repealed”, or “vacated”. It is where a court changes its mind, deciding that a previous precedent was “wrongly decided” or “incorrect”. Often it also means the previous ruling was unconstitutional, although nobody is allowed to use that word out loud. <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: Illinois Right to Life <> Center for Religious Expression <> Connie Weiskopf and Kristine L. Brown </small> <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 5 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
==Statement of Facts #6 of 12: The full humanity of a tiny physical body is hard for many to grasp. But what distinguishes us from animals isn’t physical, and has no known pre-conscious stage==<br />
<br />
Part of the definition of “person” is “infused with a soul”, Roe v. Wade1 and dictionaries say.2 SCOTUS has not disagreed. “Consciousness” is another word for what has no physical explanation, and that distinguishes us from animals. <br />
<br />
Animal behavior is predictable within breeds, indicating little “choice”. They are not like people who can choose to behave like angels or demons. Nothing physical can explain our ability to choose against our own bodies: to sacrifice our own interests for others, which is how John 15:13 defines “love”;3 or to destroy ourselves in hate.4<br />
<br />
Roe v Wade was not out of line to consult “those trained in... theology” who study souls, as well as doctors who study bodies, to clarify who to count as human with an unalienable right to life.5<br />
<br />
The extent of human choice is said by Psalm 22:10 to enable an unborn baby to place his trust in God. Luke 1:44 similarly reports that a baby at 6 months heard a righteous voice [and/or felt the righteous Presence of God] and responded with joy,6 a response not everybody chooses, indicating that even the capacity for choosing between good and evil precedes birth. To human consciousness, we give greater legal protection than to animals.7 <br />
Because nothing physical explains such powers, undeveloped bodies don’t establish undeveloped consciousness. <br />
<br />
Since a “soul” without consciousness has never been theorized and can’t be imagined,8 the consensus of fact finders is, in effect, that abortion kills babies with conscious souls. <br />
<br />
All this testimony indicates that when a baby is killed by dismemberment, acid, or sucking out the brain, it is not some non-sentient animal, some pre-human “potential life”, but a self-aware conscious soul that feels the pain, understands the cruelty, and if out-of-body near-death experiences are real, sees, along with God, who is doing it.<br />
Even considering the body only, there is no objective line between birth and conception distinguishing “humans” from “nonpersons”, or between “meaningful life” and life which courts are free to terminate.9 Without such a line, there can be no stage of gestation at which killing a baby can be objectively distinguished from murder. No baby is safe while that line remains arbitrary.10 <br />
<br />
The failure of some people, and of some religions, to grasp the full humanity of babies at any given stage is a dangerous basis for permitting killing, since as many fail to grasp the full humanity of many groups of born persons.<br />
28/430 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''SCOTUS:''' Supreme Court Of The United States<br />
<br />
'''Stage of Gestation:''' Any time during the development of a baby in the womb. This isn’t exactly a legal term, but it is not common outside courts.<br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: Foundation for Moral Law, Lutherans for Life <> American College of Pedia-tricians <> Jewish Prolife Foundation <> Dr. Robin Pierucci, M.D. </small><br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] <br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
=Part 3: Myth Busters=<br />
<br />
==Statement of Facts #7 of 12: Congress has ''Already'' Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment ''already'' authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion, ''without'' allowing Congress to legalize it==<br />
<br />
Congress established in 2004 that: “‘unborn child’ means a child in utero, and the term ‘child in utero’...means a member of the species Homo Sapiens, at any stage of development, who is carried in the womb”, 18 U.S.C. 1841(d).1 <br />
<br />
This fact is not diminished by clause (c) which does not “permit [authorize] the prosecution of any person for...an abortion for which the consent of the pregnant woman...has been obtained.…”2 A law misaligned with facts does not block future lawmakers from making corrections, and states don’t need Congress’ “permission” to obey the 14th Amendment. <br />
<br />
The reason 18 U.S.C. 1841(d) has had no effect on the practice of legal abortion is not because of any deficiency in its authority to establish dispositive facts, but because no state law reviewed by SCOTUS has cited it to establish what Roe correctly said once “established” would “of course” require the end of legal abortion. <br />
<br />
Not only is the 2004 law unmitigated evidence of life strong enough to “collapse” legal abortion by itself, but it would not be stronger if it were an Amendment to the Constitution.3 No other Constitutional Amendment is relied on for evidence of a fact. An Amendment can bind courts. But establishment of the Facts Of Life by evidence presented, cited, and tested in court pulls not only courts, but society, closer to reality.4 32/254 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Personhood Law:''' A law stating that an unborn baby is a person. A human being. A“human person”, as Dobbs v. Jackson stated. That is, a person with all the legal rights of any other human. <br />
<br />
'''“In Utero”:''' In the womb. An unborn baby is in the womb - “in utero”.<br />
<br />
'''“Homo Sapiens”:''' humans. “The species homo sapiens”: the human race.<br />
<br />
'''Dispositive:''' Proved. Evidence so strong that no more is needed.<br />
<br />
'''Cited:''' Quoted. Referred to it. <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide <> and from Professor Nathan Schluetter, Hillsdale College <> Judge Bork</small><br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
==Statement #8 of 12: Roe, Dobbs, and the 14th Amendment agree: All Humans are “Persons”==<br />
<br />
Neither Roe nor Dobbs distinguished between “humans” and “persons” as if a “human” baby isn’t necessarily a “person”. [2] Nor does the 14th Amendment leave any human unprotected.<br />
<br />
Roe v. Wade equated the time an unborn child becomes “recognizably human” with the time the child becomes a “person”: “These disciplines variously approached the question [“of when life begins”] in terms of the point at which the embryo or fetus became ‘formed’ or recognizably human, or in terms of when a ‘person’ came into being, that is, infused with a ‘soul’ or ‘animated.’” 410 U.S. 113, 133(1973)<br />
<br />
Dobbs cites the belief that “a human person comes into being at conception” without distinguishing between the two words. [3] <br />
<br />
The word “person” in the 14th Amendment meant “An individual human being...man, woman, or child...consisting of body and soul.” The word “child” in that 1828 definition included unborn children, since to be “with child” meant to be pregnant. [4]<br />
<br />
Therefore the Amendment’s “nor shall any state deprive any person of life” and “equal protection” of every “person” means every human, including those unborn. Nothing about the first clause keeps later clauses from protecting unborn humans. [5]<br />
<br />
See also Wong Wing v. United States, 163 U.S.228, 242 (1896), “The term ‘person’ is broad enough to include any and every human being within the jurisdiction of the republic...This has been decided so often that the point does not require argument.” Steinberg v. Brown 321 F. Supp. 741 (N.D. Ohio, 1970) “[o]nce human life has commenced, the constitutional protections found in the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments impose upon the state a duty of safeguarding it”. [6]<br />
<br />
The word “persons” in the 14th Amendment means all who are IN FACT humans. Had it been only for those who are legally recognized as human, every deprivation of fundamental rights would be “constitutional” so long as a law or ruling questions whether its victims are “persons in the whole sense”.<br />
<br />
Although Dobbs showed by disproving the opposite that reverence for all human life from fertilization was “deeply rooted in America’s law and traditions”, that is not why rights merit 14th Amendment protection. By the “deeply rooted” test, slavery would be legal today, since freedom for slaves had zero historical support.<br />
<br />
Nor does it ''matter'' if the Amendment authors even wanted to protect all humans. In fact, it doesn’t matter if there is a 14th Amendment. If law is not equal upon its operation on all humans, which is the very definition of the word “law” as developed by Samuel Rutherford’s “Lex Rex” and Blackstone and adopted by America’s founders, to that extent there is, by definition, no “rule of law”, no restraint upon the “strong” to not tyrannize the “weak”.<br />
<br />
There is a direct test of whether babies merit 14th Amendment protection that does not require a romp through history: [7] see if their parents are humans.<br />
<br />
“To say that the test of equal protection should be the ‘legal’ rather than the biological relationship is to avoid the issue. For the Equal Protection Clause necessarily limits the authority of a State [or its judges] to draw such ‘legal’ lines as it chooses.” Glona, 391 U.S. 73, 75 (1968) [8]<br />
<br />
FOOTNOTES: see [[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''14th Amendment:''' Ratified in 1868, the third year after the Civil War ended, it ruled that every state must give everyone under its laws the “equal protection” of its laws. It gave Congress authority to “enforce” the rights listed in the Constitution when state legislatures can’t or won’t, and to block state laws that protect some people less. Starting five years later, the Supreme Court usurped that authority of Congress for itself, and instead of protecting rights listed in the Constitution it made up rights not in the Constitution that are hostile to constitutional rights. More about that later. <br />
<br />
'''Equal Protection Clause:''' The clause in the 14th Amendment that requires states to give “equal protection of the laws” to all its citizens.<br />
<br />
The footnotes are enriched by selections from the Amicus Briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson by: Lee J. Strang <> Scholars of Jurisprudence John M. Finnis and Robert P. George <> Mary Kay Bacallao Advocating for Unborn Children <> Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide <> and by selections from the 1996 debate between Judge Robert Bork and Professor Nathan Schluetter</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small>'<br />
<br />
==Statement of Facts #9 of 12: When pregnancies develop into medical emergencies requiring separation of mother and child to save the mother, the child has an equally fundamental right to life and medical care.==<br />
<br />
A legislature’s balancing of their interests cannot, therefore, be reviewed by “strict scrutiny”.2 Nor does alleged insufficiency of a “medical emergency” exception from a general abortion ban justify a court overturning the ban in the 99% of cases where no emergency is alleged.3 Legislatures are better equipped to deliberate about and secure the rights of all citizens than courts whose focus is the parties before them.4<br />
<br />
SCOTUS never denied that a legislature’s “personhood” statements in an abortion ban are strong evidence.5 That evidence is not mitigated by a ban’s exceptions.6 It is not made irrelevant because baby killers “rely” on killing babies.7 28/130 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms:<br />
'''<br />
Fundamental Right:''' This is a term not found in the Constitution but made up by SCOTUS for the rights SCOTUS makes up which often displace rights actually listed in the Constitution. Justice Clarence Thomas is eloquent on this point. More about this later.<br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: A Foundation for Moral Law <> Pennsylvania Pro-Life Federation <> 396 State Legislators from 41 States</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #10 of 12: Tyranny over any class of humans by any other is prohibited by the Constitution, and by the Declaration, which gives the purpose of the Constitution and rests its own authority on the revelation of God1 in the Bible====<br />
<br />
Roe v Wade was not out of line to consult “those trained in... theology” who study souls, as well as doctors who study bodies, to clarify who to count as human with an unalienable right to life.3 <br />
<br />
America’s Freedom springs from “all men are created equal” and “equal protection of the laws” for all humans even if their looks, language, wealth, strength, ancestry, power, or faith are different.4 These rights have proven such a blessing to the world that their source, the Bible, deserves the fair hearing owed any witness whose reliability has been confirmed, when it promises still greater blessings if we will equally protect humans whose physical size is different.5 <br />
<br />
Its testimony is not “cumulative”, but “probative”.6 It is not to be feared as dispositive or compulsory: American freedom balances human understanding of how best to apply Biblical principles to government against the willingness of voting majorities to follow those principles. Even that is a Biblical principle legitimized in 1 Samuel 8.7 <br />
<br />
The history of slavery, Prohibition, and abortion illustrate the “willingness” factor. The probative value of the testimony of God is proved by the fact that without it, slavery would never have ended, and the prolife movement would never have begun. Which makes it probative to observe that not only the 14th Amendment, but also the revelation of God, requires this state, as it does every state, to outlaw all trampling of fundamental rights of any class of people, including abortion of babies.8 Where the two authorities say the same thing, the Bible, for all its alleged ambiguity, is better understood and more trusted than the Constitution which has indeed proven “a thing of wax” in the nimble fingers of even the most scrupulous judges.9 <br />
<br />
Without God – without belief in a more objective standard of right and wrong than the “value” that voters place on “different” people through “evolving community standards”, it is impossible to understand fundamental rights.10 <br />
<br />
Courts have demonstrated this impossibility by so often confusing abominations for rights, decimating those whom Jesus said “forbid them not to come unto Me”, denying that He created them, murdering 17% of them, sodomizing 20% of the survivors, and censoring 100% of His teachings in schools.11 <br />
<br />
That destruction of the 14th Amendment (1868) began when “Substantive Due Process”, pioneered in Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857), was applied in United States v. Cruikshank 92 U. S. 542 (1876) to acquit a white Democrat mililtia of murdering “as many as 165” black Republicans and burning down the courthouse they were defending.12 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring God does not “establish religion”. It does not compel belief, action or endorsement. It simply allows judges and voters to make informed decisions. It is part of fact-finding. It is part of reasoning. Part of embracing reality. Part of examining “the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth”. Judges must stop punishing people for telling the truth just because the truth favors God.13 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring the Bible does not require equal weight for claims of religions that deny equal rights for all.14 <br />
<br />
For example, some claim “souls” don’t enter babies until long after fertilization, or even long after birth.15 Their claims do not “cancel” the mountain of consensus of court-recognized fact finders that souls are present from the beginning. Our Constitution and laws reject their unequal rights, and are appropriately wary of their rationales for their unequal rights. The credibility of every witness is not equal. Credibility is earned. <br />
There can be “free exercise” of religions hostile to “equal protection of the laws” only to the extent their “exercise” does not threaten the rights of others or violate the laws enacted to protect them – laws ultimately decided by voting majorities, hopefully well informed through the uncensoring of reality.16 39/520 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms: <br />
<br />
'''Cumulative''': testimony so redundant that it wastes the court’s time<br />
Dispositive: testimony so strong that it settles the issue with no more<br />
Probative: probative facts establish, or contribute to, proof. Probative value is the degree of relevance of evidence. <br />
<br />
'''Prohibition''': From 1920 to 1932, drinking (alcohol) was made illegal, banned by an actual Constitutional Amendment. Actual alcohol consumption dropped by about 50%, or at least that is how much Cirrhosis of the Liver cases dropped. During that time the drop in drinking led to an economic boom, called the “Roaring Twenties”, which unfortunately were not remembered for their prosperity but for their immorality. In 1928, the prosperity collapsed into a “Great Depression” due to cheating by stock market investors. In 1932 Americans wanted liquor so bad they ratified another Constitutional Amendment repealing the 1920 Amendment. <br />
<br />
'''Substantive Due Process''': As Justice Clarence Thomas eloquently explains – see Statement #11 footnotes, this phrase was made up by SCOTUS to justify making up what it calls “fundamental rights” as its tool of repealing laws it doesn’t like. It gets its name from the SCOTUS claim that the “Due Process” clause of the 14th Amendment gives SCOTUS its authority to make up rights and call them “fundamental”. But “Due Process” only meant the legal procedures which everyone must be given equally, to defend their rights in court when necessary. The phrase has nothing to do with identifying what rights are protectable. But “Substantive” means those rights we care about, that the Constitution protects. Like freedom of speech or religion. Because “substantive” means substantial, serious rights, and “due process” has nothing to do with identifying any rights, the LONANG Institute observes in Statement #11 notes that “substantive due process” is an oxymoron. <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: Foundation for Moral Law and Lutherans for Life <> Jewish Prolife Foundation <> LONANG Institute <> U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and Other Religious Organizations <> Claremont Institute’s Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
=Part 4: Conclusions=<br />
<br />
==Statement of Facts #11 of 12: The 14th Amendment gives federal courts no “due process” authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the “right” to murder, and gives Congress no authority to legalize violations of Constitutional Rights, like taking a baby’s right to Life==<br />
<br />
The sole federal authority over state laws regarding the rights of their own citizens is through the 14th Amendment, Sections One and Five.1 Contrary to SCOTUS rulings, the 14th Amendment explicitly provides:<br />
<br />
* '''Congress authorized, not courts.''' Congress, not courts, determines the manner and scope of federal intervention in states whose laws don’t protect their citizens’ rights.2 Congress is not limited to enforcing only those rights of which SCOTUS approves, nor only to the extent that SCOTUS approves,3 nor only when state governments, not individuals, directly violate rights.4 <br />
<br />
* Federal courts aren’t permitted to stop either states or Congress from protecting enumerated rights (like Life), or to repeal their laws for conflicting with unenumerated [not listed in the Constitution] “rights” (like the “right” to murder babies), or to intervene in states’ protection of rights beyond prosecuting violations of federal laws.5 <br />
<br />
* Nor can Congress stop states from protecting enumerated rights. Neither Congress nor federal courts may overturn a state law protecting the lives of unborn babies from surgical abortion, chemical abortion, or contraceptives.6<br />
<br />
* The rights subject to federal enforcement are not those made up by SCOTUS allegedly based on the “Due Process” clause,7 but those listed in the Constitution, referred to as “privileges and immunities”8 (including, for unborn babies, the “privilege” of life and “immunity” from “cruel and unusual punishment” and execution “without due process of law”).9 <br />
* Enumerated Rights recognized before the Constitution existed are not excluded from Congressional intervention.10<br />
<br />
* '''“Substantive Due Process”''' is the sophistry by which SCOTUS turned the Constitution’s Authority to Define Rights, and Congress’ 14th Amendment Section 5 Authority to Enforce Rights, into its own authority to reclassify abominations as “rights”.11 It is an illegal, unconstitutional, Freedom-crushing fraud from Hell fomenting a long line of Landmark Abomination Cases.12 <br />
<br />
<small>Mini-lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Due Process:''' The duty of courts to give all parties to cases the fair and equal procedures and opportunities for defending themselves.<br />
<br />
(This argument for ending SCOTUS’ long line of Landmark Abomination Cases continues in Part Two of this book where its focus on SCOTUS-mandated murder of babies created in the Image of God is extended to SCOTUS’ censorship of God Himself.) <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amici who filed briefs in Dobbs v. Jackson: Lonang Institute <> Christian Legal Society <> AfricanAmerican, Hispanic, Roman Catholic and Protestant Religious and Civil Rights Organizations <> Senators Josh Hawley, Mike Lee, and Ted Cruz. And from Judge Robert Bork <> Nathan Schlueter, Professor of Philosophy and Religion, Hillsdale College, (when he debated Judge Bork in 2003 he was assistant professor of pre-law and political science at St. Ambrose University. Author, “Unborn Persons and the Fourteenth Amendment.” 2002.) <> Erwin Chemerinsky, Dean of Berkeley Law School <> Legal Information Institute, Cornell University <> Justice Clarence Thomas, dissents and concurrences <> justia.com <> James Gray Pope, Professor of Law and Sidney Reitman Scholar, Rutgers University School of Law <> Libby Adler professor of law and women’s, gender, and sexuality studies, Northeastern University Christmas, 2023''</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
==Statement #12 of 12:Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable. The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives.==<br />
<br />
Any judge interfering with this state’s compliance with the 14th Amendment and its ancient authority to protect its people1 – the central reason governments exist, is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders,2 and is guilty of exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide through an unconstitutional ruling,3 which exceeds the judicial powers given by any Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment.4<br />
<br />
The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives, including (1) giving the state Supreme Court original jurisdiction over any challenge to a law, (2) requiring that review be expedited, (3) requiring a supermajority of the Court to suspend a law, (4) questioning justices in a public hearing about the constitutionality of their ruling, and (5) overturning the ruling with a supermajority of the legislature.5 <br />
<br />
Should any federal judge so interfere with this state’s constitutional duty, this state appeals to its congressional delegation to examine similar grounds for disciplinary action,6 along with exercising its Article III, Section 2, paragraph 2 authority to make “exceptions” and “regulations” designed to end SCOTUS’ long line of landmark abomination cases. <br />
<br />
This state also appeals to its congressional delegation to exercise its life-saving and rights-protecting authority under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment whose plain words give Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of Rights,7 which subsumes the authority to define their scope and to balance competing interests, while the “privileges and immunities” clause identifies as protectable rights those listed in the Constitution.8 <br />
<br />
Official world-wide definitions of “crimes against humanity” apply “to representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission”, whether elected representatives or unelected judges.”9<br />
<br />
Any court review of this law must be expedited, because lives are lost with each day that courts delay.10 7/230 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of Legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Malfeasance in office:''' official misconduct; violation of a public trust or obligation; specifically, the doing of an act which is positively unlawful or wrongful.<br />
<br />
'''Subsumes:''' Includes. To include or place within something larger or more comprehensive: encompass as a subordinate or component element red, green, and yellow are subsumed under the term "color" <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: 396 State Legislators from 41 States <> Melinda Thybault/Moral Outcry <> and by Matthew J. Franck, Director of the William E. and Carol G. Simon Center on Religion and the Constitution at the Witherspoon Institute and visiting lecturer in politics at Princeton University</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small></div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Reversing_Landmark_Abomination_Cases&diff=50383Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases2024-01-03T04:37:49Z<p>DaveLeach: /* Statement of Facts #7 of 12: Congress has Already Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment already authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion, without allowing Congress to legalize it */</p>
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<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters<br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion</span><br />
<br />
by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal<br />
''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal<br />
<span style="color:brown"><br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen <br />
<br />
by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 18:06, 15 October 2023 (UTC)<br />
<br />
=Introduction=<br />
<br />
This book offers twelve statements of fact about babies and abortion which I challenge any voter, lawyer, lawmaker, or judge to refute. Their footnotes contain nuggets from the 140 "Amicus" briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' (2022), the ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade. These statements are designed to soften the resistance of voters to outlawing baby murder, when presented in public, and to force judges to outlaw abortion in every state, when presented in court. <br />
<br />
They are truths designed to be so unignorable, that when any lawmaker includes them in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, in any state, prodeath fury will help publicize them with each advance through legislative deadlines. When friends of babies see them survive scrutiny, the force of these truths will grow like a snowball rolling down a hill. <br />
<br />
But murdering babies is only the most egregious of many Landmark Abomination Cases. Their common thread is usurping authority which the Constitution assigns to others, and equating the Bible with spurious religions. “Never let a crisis go to waste”, say the enemies of God, but God is the true master of turning evil into an opportunity for good. It’s time. Let’s end the Supreme Court’s war against God.<br />
<br />
The very fact that abortion is the worst of the ways the United States Supreme Court has turned American law upside down creates an opportunity to heal that branch of our government, and heal all the harm to our nation and its culture and morals that it has caused. As Professor Nathan Schluetter at Hillsdale College observes, “We must not let this opportunity pass to boldly challenge the prevailing jurisprudence and its attendant epistemological and moral skepticism with respect to abortion.”<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
It is the '''fact''' that unborn babies are living human children that makes killing them murder. It’s not what any ''law'' says about it, or even what the Constitution says about it. That’s what leaves ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' on the edge of reality, by treating this fact as something for voters to figure out, not on the basis of whether babies are ''in fact'' people but on the basis of some “value” they place on ''little'' people. <br />
<br />
That '''fact''' is what makes <u>the consensus of court-recognized fact finders</u> a stronger legal reason to end legal abortion than a Life Amendment, and a powerful social reason in the Court of Public Opinion able to soften hearts to the silent screams of Jesus' little brothers and His quiet knocking on hearts' doors. Which makes it insane for prolifers to not even mention this legally dispositive consensus in each and every prolife court case, and every “finding of fact” in prolife legislation, along with leveling with the public about the Scriptures which are the real reason we even care.<br />
<br />
[[File:Cover_Cartoon.jpg]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
Why these solutions may help even where abortion is already outlawed<br />
<br />
(1) They could defeat a national abortion legalization.<br />
<br />
(2) They could help you sue a nearby “blue state” for helping its baby killers murder your children. <br />
<br />
(3) They could help if your district judges join the courtroom rebellion against Dobbs in other states.<br />
<br />
(4) They could help meet challenges in the Court of Public Opinion, for example through a Resolution that irrefutably addresses every objection you have ever heard, as understandable to voters as it is irrefutable to judges. That would help the public see through future judicial gaslighting, and support judicial reform: ie. www.savetheworld .saltshaker.us/wiki/Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_ stop_judges_from_legislating<br />
<br />
(5) I could sure use your feedback. Proverbs 15:22. <br />
<br />
----<br />
<center>'''Ending legal abortion everywhere in close to a year<br />
(the goal of the following bill language)<br />
<br>'''requires a law whose Findings of Facts: '''<br />
</center><br />
<br />
<br />
* '''contain evidence which no judge can squarely address and keep abortion legal anywhere:''' that unborn babies are real people – established by the (unanimous) consensus of court-recognized factfinders: juries, expert witnesses, 38 states, judges, and Congress;<br />
<br />
* '''present its evidence in a way that is clear and persuasive to voters,''' to help them resist judicial and media gaslighting; (See below for “Why court-recognized fact finders persuade Voters”)<br />
<br />
* '''address misunderstandings about abortion jurisprudence''' that divide prolifers, intimidate lawyers, and blind judges;<br />
<br />
'''AND WHOSE PENALTIES'''<br />
<br />
* '''restrict some aspect of abortion substantially enough''' that THEY can't be defended as a mere regulation with some other legitimate government purpose than saving lives. The restriction must be profound enough that its only possible defense is that it saves human lives. That will force courts to address the evidence that babies are fully human;<br />
<br />
* '''provide no distractions that let judges rule on some technicality and ignore the evidence that the law would save lives.''' A perfect law that addresses everything from exceptions to contraception multiplies a judge’s opportunity to say “we don’t need to reach the issue of when life begins because the law fails on a lesser issue.” A simple yet substantial restriction, with “findings” that address the legal obstacles, will survive courts, which will get courts out of the way of saving life, which will free lawmakers to work out the challenging details with time to get a comprehensive solution right and with hope that they won’t waste their time; <br />
<br />
* '''list specific penalties for specific situations,''' rather than broadly stated goals such as “babies are to be protected as much as adults”, leaving prosecutors and judges to guess what to punish, or how, in situations where evidence and culpability are different; <br />
<br />
* '''contain a “life of the mother” exception''' whose applicability is clear enough that mothers are not denied life-saving care until doctors are assured by lawyers that said care will not put the doctors in jail; and<br />
<br />
'''THE LAW SHOULD ALSO order courts to “expedite” any review,''' “because lives are lost with each day that courts delay”. <br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate!)<br />
<br />
More ideas: [[Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_stop_judges_from_legislating]]<br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate! See below for Expedited Review federal rules.) <br />
<br />
WORD COUNTS: Using only the first boldfaced paragraph of each of these 12 Findings, in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, will total about 200 words. The complete Findings, without footnotes, total nearly 3000 words. For the advantages of including enough information in a prolife law for the Findings to defend themselves, see “Too Lengthy?” below. <br />
<br />
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: I am not a lawyer. But writing about prolife legal defenses designed to bring legal abortion to an end, and Scriptures calling for that goal, for 25 years in my Prayer * Action News, being uncertified as a lawyer, has created the opportunity for a remarkable interaction with Planned Barrenhoods priciest lawyers. Because news reporters wouldn’t report that my reasoning was designed as legal defenses in court, or that they were grounded in the Bible, what that left was their accusation that I advocated crime; whereas had my defenses been successful they would have allowed citizens to stop murderers legally, putting an end to the reason citizens took action. <br />
<br />
__TOC__<br />
<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and family, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge inaction deny themselves Life More Abundantly. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget: free wisdom, guaranteed success===<br />
<br />
'''John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
James 1:5 If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, [without finding fault]; and it shall be given him. 6 But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering.''' (Gr. διακρινω not withdrawn from, ie. by lack of support from actions, or opposed, ie. by indecision) <br />
<br />
'''Matthew 21:21 ...If ye have faith, and doubt not''' (Gr. διακρινω) ...'''ye shall say unto this mountain, Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea; it shall be done. 22 And all things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive.'''<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and families, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge their own inaction deny themselves, not just their neighbors, Life More Abundantly.<br />
<br />
If you are not satisfied with life less abundantly – ongoing slaughter of innocents – you won’t be satisfied now that the fate of babies is decided by the “value” that voters place on little people. You will keep searching for a strategy to end all the slaughter: to both outlaw it, and make it unthinkable to all but the worst of murderers. <br />
<br />
If you believe you ''will'' reach every good goal you pursue with all your being, Matthew 21:21-22, you won’t be turned from ending the slaughter in every state by experts who tell you that is impossible which rules out a strategy for achieving it. You will search until you find God’s way to do God’s will. <br />
<br />
You won’t say “I'm not smart enough to question prolife legal authorities who advise giving up”, if you believe James 1:5 which promises you all the wisdom you need to do good. Nor will you ever say you are not smart enough to read and understand legal briefs, court rulings, or to reason with lawmakers, lawyers, and prolife leaders, as necessary.<br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will not excuse yourself from God’s call because you can’t talk well, like Moses, whom God answered “Who made mouths?” Exodus 4:11. Nor will you excuse yourself to God, saying you are but a child against the world’s superbrains, like Jeremiah, whom God answered, “Stop saying that! It is MY words you will speak, and I am no child!” Jeremiah 1:6-8. <br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will shine God’s light wherever you find Darkness, Matthew 5:13-16. Since nothing is darker than murdering your own baby, you will seek God’s help as you oppose this evil, and none of these excuses will withdraw you from action.<br />
<br />
===Final Warning: read this at your own risk===<br />
<br />
Warning: read at your own risk. Rough reading Ahead, that may knock you from your TV chair.<br />
<br />
'''Findings of Facts which No Judge can Squarely Address and Keep Abortion Legal'''<br />
<br />
=Part 1: Authority of Court-Recognized Fact Finders=<br />
<br />
<span style="color:grey"><small>''Try to imagine how a judge, reviewing a prolife law with these Findings of Facts, would be able to dodge this evidence - in fact, see if you can find ANYONE who can ''refute'' these facts - as opposed to not ''caring'' about facts - that is, not caring about reality:''</small></span><br />
<br />
====Statement of Fact #1 of 12: Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let ''any'' state legalize====<br />
<br />
No fact can be more legally established than the fact that “life begins” at fertilization, being the consensus of every American legal authority who has taken a position, in every category of court-recognized finders of facts: juries,2 thousands of expert witnesses who were not contested,3 38 state legislatures,4 individual judges,5 and Congress.6 <br />
<br />
If the unanimous – uncontested – finding of every court-recognized fact-finder is not enough ‘establishment’ for the court to know a fact, it is impossible for any judge to know anything.<br />
<br />
No legal authority has ruled that any unborn baby of a human is not in fact a human person, or that “life begins” any later than fertilization.7 <br />
<br />
No state can keep abortion legal now that this fact is established. This is so obvious that even Roe v. Wade said “of course”, and the lawyer for the abortionists agreed.8 <br />
For most public issues, disagreement is over facts.9 The only disagreement about abortion is between unanimous fact finders and those who don't care about facts.10 A court that won’t address the facts that justify and necessitate a law, or hear evidence of those facts, violates Due Process and has no legitimate jurisdiction to review that law.11 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 1 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
----<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget===<br />
<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? <br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
<br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
<br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True. <br />
<br />
<br />
</span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget #2: The Cost of Success===<br />
<br />
'''Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? '''<br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True.<br />
<br />
==Statement of Facts #2 of 12: Courts Accept the Fact-Finding Authority of Legislatures, Juries, Experts for the same good reasons their findings persuade the public.==<br />
<br />
SCOTUS must accept legislative findings of facts that are not obviously irrational. “..the existence of facts supporting the legislative judgment is to be presumed...not to be pronounced unconstitutional unless in the light of the facts made known or generally assumed it is of such a character as to preclude the assumption that it rests upon some rational basis within the knowledge and experience of the legislators....” U.S. v. Carolene Products, 304 U.S. 144, 152 (1938).1<br />
<br />
Besides the court-recognized fact finding authority of legislatures, courts must conform their rulings to laws until such time as courts declare laws unconstitutional. No court has overturned the “unborn victims of violence” laws (based on “human babies are people”) of 39 states and Congress, despite many challenges.2<br />
<br />
To do so would require a court to positively affirm that human life does not begin until much later, which no legal authority has done, and for which no evidence exists.<br />
<br />
'''Legislatures'''. Lawmakers are there by the choice of a majority of voters. They are bombarded by information from experts. They are scrutinized by other lawmakers. Many are lawyers, some of whom are constitutional scholars and past or future judges. They set the salaries of judges, and have the power to hold impeachment trials of judges. Congress, the national legislature, scrutinizes Supreme Court justices. <br />
<br />
Many Congressmen are equally qualified: 15 U.S. Senators have served on the Supreme Court, and more were nominated.3 <br />
<br />
'''Juries''' are tested for impartiality. They are educated by the most qualified expert witnesses available. They study as long as necessary to establish truth – sometimes for months.4<br />
<br />
'''Expert Witnesses''' are the best experts money can buy, and they are scrutinized by the other side’s experts.5 <br />
<br />
For all its faults, American court recognition of Fact Finders is among the world’s top methods of establishing reality that is available to humans, earning respect in the Court of Public Opinion along with their authority in courts of law.6 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 2 + Footnotes]]<br />
----<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
----<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget===<br />
<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Mark 8:38 '''Whosoever therefore shall be ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful generation; of him also shall the Son of man be ashamed''', when he cometh in the glory of his Father with the holy angels.<br />
<br />
We Bible believing conservatives need to quit blaming social media and CIA censorship for our failures and stop censoring ourselves. <br />
<br />
I offer a way of stating evidence which no judge, news reporter, Democrat, or unbeliever can refute, along with answering objections that have crippled prolife messaging and legal strategy. But we despair of reaching those who stop their ears to evidence. “What’s the use of tightening our message? You’re preaching to the choir. We know babies are people but those other people have their opinion too.”<br />
<br />
I’m not "preaching to the choir". I’m passing out a new composition to the choir for a coming TV special.<br />
<br />
Most of those who won’t listen, won’t vote either, rendering their willful ignorance relatively benign. Stop worrying about them. All they will do is hate you, lie about you, wreck your business – childish stuff. We progress by clearly articulating to the extent possible. The same Bible which is the main reason we care about babies promises all the protection we need to finish what we are here to do.<br />
<br />
It isn’t just saving baby bodies where we self censor. Adult souls are lost. We hold back sharing what we know about God. Snap out of it. </span><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #3 of 12: The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS====<br />
<br />
From Roe (1973) through Dobbs (2022), SCOTUS evaded that core issue.1 <br />
<br />
SCOTUS never ruled babies Non-Persons “as a Matter of Law”, as lower courts allege.2 Roe made that fact not only relevant, but dispositive with a holding which no court has disputed even though Roe’s main holding was overturned:3 <br />
<br />
“[Prolifers] argue that the fetus is a ‘person’ within the language and meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment....If this suggestion of personhood is established, the [abortionist’s] case, of course, collapses, for the fetus’ right to life would then be guaranteed specifically by the [14th] Amendment [thus outlawing abortion in EVERY state]. The [abortionist’s lawyer] conceded as much....”4<br />
<br />
Dobbs explicitly left this statement of the obvious untouched, saying “our decision is not based on any view about when a State should regard pre-natal life as having rights or legally cognizable interests....”5 Dobbs did not say babies aren’t people. Dobbs did not say voters should still decide whether babies can be murdered in the face of proof that babies are ''in fact'' people.6 Dobbs left in place Roe’s observation that “establishment” of this fact, independently of any law, ruling, or future constitutional amendment,7 dictates whether abortion is legally recognizable as a right or as a crime.8<br />
<br />
This established '''fact''' is as relevant today as when Roe said “of course” it is.<br />
<br />
This established '''fact''' is not disestablished by any judge’s alleged inability to understand it.9<br />
<br />
This established '''FACT''' is not made irrelevant by any judge’s theory that the legal right of little humans to live is “impossible” to determine so it should be decided by their value to big humans.10<br />
<br />
If only those ''legally recognized'' as “persons” were people, slavery could still be legal and the 14th Amendment would mean nothing. Slavery states would merely need to classify their victims as only 3/5 human.11 The Amendment protects those who are '''IN FACT''' people – what is irrelevant is whether babies are people “as a matter of law”.12 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 3 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
=Part 2: The Power of Personhood=<br />
<br />
==Statement of Facts #4 of 12: Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life==<br />
<br />
Detectable heartbeats and brain waves are evidence that a person has not yet died, throughout state and federal law.1 Reason demands they be accepted as evidence that a person has begun to live.2<br />
<br />
<small>The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: American College of Pediatricians <> Heartbeat International <> World Faith Foundation and Institute for Faith and Family <> National Catholic Bioethics Center, et al <> Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide <> Jewish Prolife Foundation <> American Association of Prolife Obstretricians </small><br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 4 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
==Statement of Facts #5 of 12: Legislatures should regulate abortion, as Dobbs held, just as legislatures regulate the prosecution of all other murders==<br />
<br />
But not in the sense of absolute discretion to leave wholesale murders of a supposedly unwanted group of humans completely unregulated. That interpretation of Dobbs’ holding is premised on a “mistake of fact”, which is an official exception to Stare Decisis.1<br />
<br />
The “Mistake of Fact” that is the premise of letting voters decide whether to continue judge-approved genocide according to the “value” they place on little people is that the humanity of babies of humans is either unknowable or irrelevant. That premise was explicit in Roe and Casey, and implicit in Dobbs.2 <br />
<br />
That is an “erroneous factual premise”. The fact that little unborn humans are humans is neither unknowable3 nor irrelevant. It is verifiable and dispositive.4 The consensus of court-recognized fact finders cures that knowledge deficit, canceling that interpretation of Dobbs’ holding, while reinforcing Dobbs’ other two holdings that “The Constitution does not confer a right to abortion” and “Roe and Casey are overruled”, and requiring the outlawing of baby killing in every state.5 <br />
<br />
<small>'''Mini-lexicon of legal terms'''<br />
<br />
'''Mistake of Fact:''' A statement of facts upon which a ruling was based, which is later shown to be untrue. It means the same as “erroneous factual premise”.<br />
<br />
'''Stare Decisis:''' Hesitancy about reversing previous precedents. Precedents should only be reversed for very good reasons, because they affect how millions live, so the more law changes back and forth, the more that unsettles society.<br />
<br />
'''Dispositive:''' Evidence so overwhelming that it is final. It settles a matter, with no need of further evidence. As in Matthew 26:65 “What further need have we of witnesses?”<br />
Holding: The part of a ruling that demands obedience, or that is a conclusion that is the basis for the ruling. <br />
<br />
'''Overruled''': Means the same as “overturned”, “repealed”, or “vacated”. It is where a court changes its mind, deciding that a previous precedent was “wrongly decided” or “incorrect”. Often it also means the previous ruling was unconstitutional, although nobody is allowed to use that word out loud. <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: Illinois Right to Life <> Center for Religious Expression <> Connie Weiskopf and Kristine L. Brown </small> <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 5 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
==Statement of Facts #6 of 12: The full humanity of a tiny physical body is hard for many to grasp. But what distinguishes us from animals isn’t physical, and has no known pre-conscious stage==<br />
<br />
Part of the definition of “person” is “infused with a soul”, Roe v. Wade1 and dictionaries say.2 SCOTUS has not disagreed. “Consciousness” is another word for what has no physical explanation, and that distinguishes us from animals. <br />
<br />
Animal behavior is predictable within breeds, indicating little “choice”. They are not like people who can choose to behave like angels or demons. Nothing physical can explain our ability to choose against our own bodies: to sacrifice our own interests for others, which is how John 15:13 defines “love”;3 or to destroy ourselves in hate.4<br />
<br />
Roe v Wade was not out of line to consult “those trained in... theology” who study souls, as well as doctors who study bodies, to clarify who to count as human with an unalienable right to life.5<br />
<br />
The extent of human choice is said by Psalm 22:10 to enable an unborn baby to place his trust in God. Luke 1:44 similarly reports that a baby at 6 months heard a righteous voice [and/or felt the righteous Presence of God] and responded with joy,6 a response not everybody chooses, indicating that even the capacity for choosing between good and evil precedes birth. To human consciousness, we give greater legal protection than to animals.7 <br />
Because nothing physical explains such powers, undeveloped bodies don’t establish undeveloped consciousness. <br />
<br />
Since a “soul” without consciousness has never been theorized and can’t be imagined,8 the consensus of fact finders is, in effect, that abortion kills babies with conscious souls. <br />
<br />
All this testimony indicates that when a baby is killed by dismemberment, acid, or sucking out the brain, it is not some non-sentient animal, some pre-human “potential life”, but a self-aware conscious soul that feels the pain, understands the cruelty, and if out-of-body near-death experiences are real, sees, along with God, who is doing it.<br />
Even considering the body only, there is no objective line between birth and conception distinguishing “humans” from “nonpersons”, or between “meaningful life” and life which courts are free to terminate.9 Without such a line, there can be no stage of gestation at which killing a baby can be objectively distinguished from murder. No baby is safe while that line remains arbitrary.10 <br />
<br />
The failure of some people, and of some religions, to grasp the full humanity of babies at any given stage is a dangerous basis for permitting killing, since as many fail to grasp the full humanity of many groups of born persons.<br />
28/430 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''SCOTUS:''' Supreme Court Of The United States<br />
<br />
'''Stage of Gestation:''' Any time during the development of a baby in the womb. This isn’t exactly a legal term, but it is not common outside courts.<br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: Foundation for Moral Law, Lutherans for Life <> American College of Pedia-tricians <> Jewish Prolife Foundation <> Dr. Robin Pierucci, M.D. </small><br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] <br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
=Part 3: Myth Busters=<br />
<br />
==Statement of Facts #7 of 12: Congress has ''Already'' Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment ''already'' authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion, ''without'' allowing Congress to legalize it==<br />
<br />
Congress established in 2004 that: “‘unborn child’ means a child in utero, and the term ‘child in utero’...means a member of the species Homo Sapiens, at any stage of development, who is carried in the womb”, 18 U.S.C. 1841(d).1 <br />
<br />
This fact is not diminished by clause (c) which does not “permit [authorize] the prosecution of any person for...an abortion for which the consent of the pregnant woman...has been obtained.…”2 A law misaligned with facts does not block future lawmakers from making corrections, and states don’t need Congress’ “permission” to obey the 14th Amendment. <br />
<br />
The reason 18 U.S.C. 1841(d) has had no effect on the practice of legal abortion is not because of any deficiency in its authority to establish dispositive facts, but because no state law reviewed by SCOTUS has cited it to establish what Roe correctly said once “established” would “of course” require the end of legal abortion. <br />
<br />
Not only is the 2004 law unmitigated evidence of life strong enough to “collapse” legal abortion by itself, but it would not be stronger if it were an Amendment to the Constitution.3 No other Constitutional Amendment is relied on for evidence of a fact. An Amendment can bind courts. But establishment of the Facts Of Life by evidence presented, cited, and tested in court pulls not only courts, but society, closer to reality.4 32/254 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Personhood Law:''' A law stating that an unborn baby is a person. A human being. A“human person”, as Dobbs v. Jackson stated. That is, a person with all the legal rights of any other human. <br />
<br />
'''“In Utero”:''' In the womb. An unborn baby is in the womb - “in utero”.<br />
<br />
'''“Homo Sapiens”:''' humans. “The species homo sapiens”: the human race.<br />
<br />
'''Dispositive:''' Proved. Evidence so strong that no more is needed.<br />
<br />
'''Cited:''' Quoted. Referred to it. <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide <> and from Professor Nathan Schluetter, Hillsdale College <> Judge Bork</small><br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
==Statement #8 of 12: Roe, Dobbs, and the 14th Amendment agree: All Humans are “Persons”==<br />
<br />
Neither Roe nor Dobbs distinguished between “humans” and “persons” as if a “human” baby isn’t necessarily a “person”. [2] Nor does the 14th Amendment leave any human unprotected.<br />
<br />
Roe v. Wade equated the time an unborn child becomes “recognizably human” with the time the child becomes a “person”: “These disciplines variously approached the question [“of when life begins”] in terms of the point at which the embryo or fetus became ‘formed’ or recognizably human, or in terms of when a ‘person’ came into being, that is, infused with a ‘soul’ or ‘animated.’” 410 U.S. 113, 133(1973)<br />
<br />
Dobbs cites the belief that “a human person comes into being at conception” without distinguishing between the two words. [3] <br />
<br />
The word “person” in the 14th Amendment meant “An individual human being...man, woman, or child...consisting of body and soul.” The word “child” in that 1828 definition included unborn children, since to be “with child” meant to be pregnant. [4]<br />
<br />
Therefore the Amendment’s “nor shall any state deprive any person of life” and “equal protection” of every “person” means every human, including those unborn. Nothing about the first clause keeps later clauses from protecting unborn humans. [5]<br />
<br />
See also Wong Wing v. United States, 163 U.S.228, 242 (1896), “The term ‘person’ is broad enough to include any and every human being within the jurisdiction of the republic...This has been decided so often that the point does not require argument.” Steinberg v. Brown 321 F. Supp. 741 (N.D. Ohio, 1970) “[o]nce human life has commenced, the constitutional protections found in the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments impose upon the state a duty of safeguarding it”. [6]<br />
<br />
The word “persons” in the 14th Amendment means all who are IN FACT humans. Had it been only for those who are legally recognized as human, every deprivation of fundamental rights would be “constitutional” so long as a law or ruling questions whether its victims are “persons in the whole sense”.<br />
<br />
Although Dobbs showed by disproving the opposite that reverence for all human life from fertilization was “deeply rooted in America’s law and traditions”, that is not why rights merit 14th Amendment protection. By the “deeply rooted” test, slavery would be legal today, since freedom for slaves had zero historical support.<br />
<br />
Nor does it ''matter'' if the Amendment authors even wanted to protect all humans. In fact, it doesn’t matter if there is a 14th Amendment. If law is not equal upon its operation on all humans, which is the very definition of the word “law” as developed by Samuel Rutherford’s “Lex Rex” and Blackstone and adopted by America’s founders, to that extent there is, by definition, no “rule of law”, no restraint upon the “strong” to not tyrannize the “weak”.<br />
<br />
There is a direct test of whether babies merit 14th Amendment protection that does not require a romp through history: [7] see if their parents are humans.<br />
<br />
“To say that the test of equal protection should be the ‘legal’ rather than the biological relationship is to avoid the issue. For the Equal Protection Clause necessarily limits the authority of a State [or its judges] to draw such ‘legal’ lines as it chooses.” Glona, 391 U.S. 73, 75 (1968) [8]<br />
<br />
FOOTNOTES: see [[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''14th Amendment:''' Ratified in 1868, the third year after the Civil War ended, it ruled that every state must give everyone under its laws the “equal protection” of its laws. It gave Congress authority to “enforce” the rights listed in the Constitution when state legislatures can’t or won’t, and to block state laws that protect some people less. Starting five years later, the Supreme Court usurped that authority of Congress for itself, and instead of protecting rights listed in the Constitution it made up rights not in the Constitution that are hostile to constitutional rights. More about that later. <br />
<br />
'''Equal Protection Clause:''' The clause in the 14th Amendment that requires states to give “equal protection of the laws” to all its citizens.<br />
<br />
The footnotes are enriched by selections from the Amicus Briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson by: Lee J. Strang <> Scholars of Jurisprudence John M. Finnis and Robert P. George <> Mary Kay Bacallao Advocating for Unborn Children <> Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide <> and by selections from the 1996 debate between Judge Robert Bork and Professor Nathan Schluetter</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small>'<br />
<br />
==Statement of Facts #9 of 12: When pregnancies develop into medical emergencies requiring separation of mother and child to save the mother, the child has an equally fundamental right to life and medical care.==<br />
<br />
A legislature’s balancing of their interests cannot, therefore, be reviewed by “strict scrutiny”.2 Nor does alleged insufficiency of a “medical emergency” exception from a general abortion ban justify a court overturning the ban in the 99% of cases where no emergency is alleged.3 Legislatures are better equipped to deliberate about and secure the rights of all citizens than courts whose focus is the parties before them.4<br />
<br />
SCOTUS never denied that a legislature’s “personhood” statements in an abortion ban are strong evidence.5 That evidence is not mitigated by a ban’s exceptions.6 It is not made irrelevant because baby killers “rely” on killing babies.7 28/130 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms:<br />
'''<br />
Fundamental Right:''' This is a term not found in the Constitution but made up by SCOTUS for the rights SCOTUS makes up which often displace rights actually listed in the Constitution. Justice Clarence Thomas is eloquent on this point. More about this later.<br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: A Foundation for Moral Law <> Pennsylvania Pro-Life Federation <> 396 State Legislators from 41 States</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #10 of 12: Tyranny over any class of humans by any other is prohibited by the Constitution, and by the Declaration, which gives the purpose of the Constitution and rests its own authority on the revelation of God1 in the Bible====<br />
<br />
Roe v Wade was not out of line to consult “those trained in... theology” who study souls, as well as doctors who study bodies, to clarify who to count as human with an unalienable right to life.3 <br />
<br />
America’s Freedom springs from “all men are created equal” and “equal protection of the laws” for all humans even if their looks, language, wealth, strength, ancestry, power, or faith are different.4 These rights have proven such a blessing to the world that their source, the Bible, deserves the fair hearing owed any witness whose reliability has been confirmed, when it promises still greater blessings if we will equally protect humans whose physical size is different.5 <br />
<br />
Its testimony is not “cumulative”, but “probative”.6 It is not to be feared as dispositive or compulsory: American freedom balances human understanding of how best to apply Biblical principles to government against the willingness of voting majorities to follow those principles. Even that is a Biblical principle legitimized in 1 Samuel 8.7 <br />
<br />
The history of slavery, Prohibition, and abortion illustrate the “willingness” factor. The probative value of the testimony of God is proved by the fact that without it, slavery would never have ended, and the prolife movement would never have begun. Which makes it probative to observe that not only the 14th Amendment, but also the revelation of God, requires this state, as it does every state, to outlaw all trampling of fundamental rights of any class of people, including abortion of babies.8 Where the two authorities say the same thing, the Bible, for all its alleged ambiguity, is better understood and more trusted than the Constitution which has indeed proven “a thing of wax” in the nimble fingers of even the most scrupulous judges.9 <br />
<br />
Without God – without belief in a more objective standard of right and wrong than the “value” that voters place on “different” people through “evolving community standards”, it is impossible to understand fundamental rights.10 <br />
<br />
Courts have demonstrated this impossibility by so often confusing abominations for rights, decimating those whom Jesus said “forbid them not to come unto Me”, denying that He created them, murdering 17% of them, sodomizing 20% of the survivors, and censoring 100% of His teachings in schools.11 <br />
<br />
That destruction of the 14th Amendment (1868) began when “Substantive Due Process”, pioneered in Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857), was applied in United States v. Cruikshank 92 U. S. 542 (1876) to acquit a white Democrat mililtia of murdering “as many as 165” black Republicans and burning down the courthouse they were defending.12 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring God does not “establish religion”. It does not compel belief, action or endorsement. It simply allows judges and voters to make informed decisions. It is part of fact-finding. It is part of reasoning. Part of embracing reality. Part of examining “the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth”. Judges must stop punishing people for telling the truth just because the truth favors God.13 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring the Bible does not require equal weight for claims of religions that deny equal rights for all.14 <br />
<br />
For example, some claim “souls” don’t enter babies until long after fertilization, or even long after birth.15 Their claims do not “cancel” the mountain of consensus of court-recognized fact finders that souls are present from the beginning. Our Constitution and laws reject their unequal rights, and are appropriately wary of their rationales for their unequal rights. The credibility of every witness is not equal. Credibility is earned. <br />
There can be “free exercise” of religions hostile to “equal protection of the laws” only to the extent their “exercise” does not threaten the rights of others or violate the laws enacted to protect them – laws ultimately decided by voting majorities, hopefully well informed through the uncensoring of reality.16 39/520 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms: <br />
<br />
'''Cumulative''': testimony so redundant that it wastes the court’s time<br />
Dispositive: testimony so strong that it settles the issue with no more<br />
Probative: probative facts establish, or contribute to, proof. Probative value is the degree of relevance of evidence. <br />
<br />
'''Prohibition''': From 1920 to 1932, drinking (alcohol) was made illegal, banned by an actual Constitutional Amendment. Actual alcohol consumption dropped by about 50%, or at least that is how much Cirrhosis of the Liver cases dropped. During that time the drop in drinking led to an economic boom, called the “Roaring Twenties”, which unfortunately were not remembered for their prosperity but for their immorality. In 1928, the prosperity collapsed into a “Great Depression” due to cheating by stock market investors. In 1932 Americans wanted liquor so bad they ratified another Constitutional Amendment repealing the 1920 Amendment. <br />
<br />
'''Substantive Due Process''': As Justice Clarence Thomas eloquently explains – see Statement #11 footnotes, this phrase was made up by SCOTUS to justify making up what it calls “fundamental rights” as its tool of repealing laws it doesn’t like. It gets its name from the SCOTUS claim that the “Due Process” clause of the 14th Amendment gives SCOTUS its authority to make up rights and call them “fundamental”. But “Due Process” only meant the legal procedures which everyone must be given equally, to defend their rights in court when necessary. The phrase has nothing to do with identifying what rights are protectable. But “Substantive” means those rights we care about, that the Constitution protects. Like freedom of speech or religion. Because “substantive” means substantial, serious rights, and “due process” has nothing to do with identifying any rights, the LONANG Institute observes in Statement #11 notes that “substantive due process” is an oxymoron. <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: Foundation for Moral Law and Lutherans for Life <> Jewish Prolife Foundation <> LONANG Institute <> U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and Other Religious Organizations <> Claremont Institute’s Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
=Part 4: Conclusions=<br />
<br />
==Statement of Facts #11 of 12: The 14th Amendment gives federal courts no “due process” authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the “right” to murder, and gives Congress no authority to legalize violations of Constitutional Rights, like taking a baby’s right to Life==<br />
<br />
The sole federal authority over state laws regarding the rights of their own citizens is through the 14th Amendment, Sections One and Five.1 Contrary to SCOTUS rulings, the 14th Amendment explicitly provides:<br />
<br />
* '''Congress authorized, not courts.''' Congress, not courts, determines the manner and scope of federal intervention in states whose laws don’t protect their citizens’ rights.2 Congress is not limited to enforcing only those rights of which SCOTUS approves, nor only to the extent that SCOTUS approves,3 nor only when state governments, not individuals, directly violate rights.4 <br />
<br />
* Federal courts aren’t permitted to stop either states or Congress from protecting enumerated rights (like Life), or to repeal their laws for conflicting with unenumerated [not listed in the Constitution] “rights” (like the “right” to murder babies), or to intervene in states’ protection of rights beyond prosecuting violations of federal laws.5 <br />
<br />
* Nor can Congress stop states from protecting enumerated rights. Neither Congress nor federal courts may overturn a state law protecting the lives of unborn babies from surgical abortion, chemical abortion, or contraceptives.6<br />
<br />
* The rights subject to federal enforcement are not those made up by SCOTUS allegedly based on the “Due Process” clause,7 but those listed in the Constitution, referred to as “privileges and immunities”8 (including, for unborn babies, the “privilege” of life and “immunity” from “cruel and unusual punishment” and execution “without due process of law”).9 <br />
* Enumerated Rights recognized before the Constitution existed are not excluded from Congressional intervention.10<br />
<br />
* '''“Substantive Due Process”''' is the sophistry by which SCOTUS turned the Constitution’s Authority to Define Rights, and Congress’ 14th Amendment Section 5 Authority to Enforce Rights, into its own authority to reclassify abominations as “rights”.11 It is an illegal, unconstitutional, Freedom-crushing fraud from Hell fomenting a long line of Landmark Abomination Cases.12 <br />
<br />
<small>Mini-lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Due Process:''' The duty of courts to give all parties to cases the fair and equal procedures and opportunities for defending themselves.<br />
<br />
(This argument for ending SCOTUS’ long line of Landmark Abomination Cases continues in Part Two of this book where its focus on SCOTUS-mandated murder of babies created in the Image of God is extended to SCOTUS’ censorship of God Himself.) <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amici who filed briefs in Dobbs v. Jackson: Lonang Institute <> Christian Legal Society <> AfricanAmerican, Hispanic, Roman Catholic and Protestant Religious and Civil Rights Organizations <> Senators Josh Hawley, Mike Lee, and Ted Cruz. And from Judge Robert Bork <> Nathan Schlueter, Professor of Philosophy and Religion, Hillsdale College, (when he debated Judge Bork in 2003 he was assistant professor of pre-law and political science at St. Ambrose University. Author, “Unborn Persons and the Fourteenth Amendment.” 2002.) <> Erwin Chemerinsky, Dean of Berkeley Law School <> Legal Information Institute, Cornell University <> Justice Clarence Thomas, dissents and concurrences <> justia.com <> James Gray Pope, Professor of Law and Sidney Reitman Scholar, Rutgers University School of Law <> Libby Adler professor of law and women’s, gender, and sexuality studies, Northeastern University Christmas, 2023''</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
==Statement #12 of 12:Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable. The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives.==<br />
<br />
Any judge interfering with this state’s compliance with the 14th Amendment and its ancient authority to protect its people1 – the central reason governments exist, is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders,2 and is guilty of exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide through an unconstitutional ruling,3 which exceeds the judicial powers given by any Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment.4<br />
<br />
The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives, including (1) giving the state Supreme Court original jurisdiction over any challenge to a law, (2) requiring that review be expedited, (3) requiring a supermajority of the Court to suspend a law, (4) questioning justices in a public hearing about the constitutionality of their ruling, and (5) overturning the ruling with a supermajority of the legislature.5 <br />
<br />
Should any federal judge so interfere with this state’s constitutional duty, this state appeals to its congressional delegation to examine similar grounds for disciplinary action,6 along with exercising its Article III, Section 2, paragraph 2 authority to make “exceptions” and “regulations” designed to end SCOTUS’ long line of landmark abomination cases. <br />
<br />
This state also appeals to its congressional delegation to exercise its life-saving and rights-protecting authority under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment whose plain words give Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of Rights,7 which subsumes the authority to define their scope and to balance competing interests, while the “privileges and immunities” clause identifies as protectable rights those listed in the Constitution.8 <br />
<br />
Official world-wide definitions of “crimes against humanity” apply “to representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission”, whether elected representatives or unelected judges.”9<br />
<br />
Any court review of this law must be expedited, because lives are lost with each day that courts delay.10 7/230 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of Legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Malfeasance in office:''' official misconduct; violation of a public trust or obligation; specifically, the doing of an act which is positively unlawful or wrongful.<br />
<br />
'''Subsumes:''' Includes. To include or place within something larger or more comprehensive: encompass as a subordinate or component element red, green, and yellow are subsumed under the term "color" <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: 396 State Legislators from 41 States <> Melinda Thybault/Moral Outcry <> and by Matthew J. Franck, Director of the William E. and Carol G. Simon Center on Religion and the Constitution at the Witherspoon Institute and visiting lecturer in politics at Princeton University</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small></div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Reversing_Landmark_Abomination_Cases&diff=50382Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases2024-01-03T04:36:01Z<p>DaveLeach: /* Bible Nugget #2: The Cost of Success */</p>
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<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters<br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion</span><br />
<br />
by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal<br />
''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal<br />
<span style="color:brown"><br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen <br />
<br />
by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 18:06, 15 October 2023 (UTC)<br />
<br />
=Introduction=<br />
<br />
This book offers twelve statements of fact about babies and abortion which I challenge any voter, lawyer, lawmaker, or judge to refute. Their footnotes contain nuggets from the 140 "Amicus" briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' (2022), the ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade. These statements are designed to soften the resistance of voters to outlawing baby murder, when presented in public, and to force judges to outlaw abortion in every state, when presented in court. <br />
<br />
They are truths designed to be so unignorable, that when any lawmaker includes them in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, in any state, prodeath fury will help publicize them with each advance through legislative deadlines. When friends of babies see them survive scrutiny, the force of these truths will grow like a snowball rolling down a hill. <br />
<br />
But murdering babies is only the most egregious of many Landmark Abomination Cases. Their common thread is usurping authority which the Constitution assigns to others, and equating the Bible with spurious religions. “Never let a crisis go to waste”, say the enemies of God, but God is the true master of turning evil into an opportunity for good. It’s time. Let’s end the Supreme Court’s war against God.<br />
<br />
The very fact that abortion is the worst of the ways the United States Supreme Court has turned American law upside down creates an opportunity to heal that branch of our government, and heal all the harm to our nation and its culture and morals that it has caused. As Professor Nathan Schluetter at Hillsdale College observes, “We must not let this opportunity pass to boldly challenge the prevailing jurisprudence and its attendant epistemological and moral skepticism with respect to abortion.”<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
It is the '''fact''' that unborn babies are living human children that makes killing them murder. It’s not what any ''law'' says about it, or even what the Constitution says about it. That’s what leaves ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' on the edge of reality, by treating this fact as something for voters to figure out, not on the basis of whether babies are ''in fact'' people but on the basis of some “value” they place on ''little'' people. <br />
<br />
That '''fact''' is what makes <u>the consensus of court-recognized fact finders</u> a stronger legal reason to end legal abortion than a Life Amendment, and a powerful social reason in the Court of Public Opinion able to soften hearts to the silent screams of Jesus' little brothers and His quiet knocking on hearts' doors. Which makes it insane for prolifers to not even mention this legally dispositive consensus in each and every prolife court case, and every “finding of fact” in prolife legislation, along with leveling with the public about the Scriptures which are the real reason we even care.<br />
<br />
[[File:Cover_Cartoon.jpg]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
Why these solutions may help even where abortion is already outlawed<br />
<br />
(1) They could defeat a national abortion legalization.<br />
<br />
(2) They could help you sue a nearby “blue state” for helping its baby killers murder your children. <br />
<br />
(3) They could help if your district judges join the courtroom rebellion against Dobbs in other states.<br />
<br />
(4) They could help meet challenges in the Court of Public Opinion, for example through a Resolution that irrefutably addresses every objection you have ever heard, as understandable to voters as it is irrefutable to judges. That would help the public see through future judicial gaslighting, and support judicial reform: ie. www.savetheworld .saltshaker.us/wiki/Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_ stop_judges_from_legislating<br />
<br />
(5) I could sure use your feedback. Proverbs 15:22. <br />
<br />
----<br />
<center>'''Ending legal abortion everywhere in close to a year<br />
(the goal of the following bill language)<br />
<br>'''requires a law whose Findings of Facts: '''<br />
</center><br />
<br />
<br />
* '''contain evidence which no judge can squarely address and keep abortion legal anywhere:''' that unborn babies are real people – established by the (unanimous) consensus of court-recognized factfinders: juries, expert witnesses, 38 states, judges, and Congress;<br />
<br />
* '''present its evidence in a way that is clear and persuasive to voters,''' to help them resist judicial and media gaslighting; (See below for “Why court-recognized fact finders persuade Voters”)<br />
<br />
* '''address misunderstandings about abortion jurisprudence''' that divide prolifers, intimidate lawyers, and blind judges;<br />
<br />
'''AND WHOSE PENALTIES'''<br />
<br />
* '''restrict some aspect of abortion substantially enough''' that THEY can't be defended as a mere regulation with some other legitimate government purpose than saving lives. The restriction must be profound enough that its only possible defense is that it saves human lives. That will force courts to address the evidence that babies are fully human;<br />
<br />
* '''provide no distractions that let judges rule on some technicality and ignore the evidence that the law would save lives.''' A perfect law that addresses everything from exceptions to contraception multiplies a judge’s opportunity to say “we don’t need to reach the issue of when life begins because the law fails on a lesser issue.” A simple yet substantial restriction, with “findings” that address the legal obstacles, will survive courts, which will get courts out of the way of saving life, which will free lawmakers to work out the challenging details with time to get a comprehensive solution right and with hope that they won’t waste their time; <br />
<br />
* '''list specific penalties for specific situations,''' rather than broadly stated goals such as “babies are to be protected as much as adults”, leaving prosecutors and judges to guess what to punish, or how, in situations where evidence and culpability are different; <br />
<br />
* '''contain a “life of the mother” exception''' whose applicability is clear enough that mothers are not denied life-saving care until doctors are assured by lawyers that said care will not put the doctors in jail; and<br />
<br />
'''THE LAW SHOULD ALSO order courts to “expedite” any review,''' “because lives are lost with each day that courts delay”. <br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate!)<br />
<br />
More ideas: [[Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_stop_judges_from_legislating]]<br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate! See below for Expedited Review federal rules.) <br />
<br />
WORD COUNTS: Using only the first boldfaced paragraph of each of these 12 Findings, in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, will total about 200 words. The complete Findings, without footnotes, total nearly 3000 words. For the advantages of including enough information in a prolife law for the Findings to defend themselves, see “Too Lengthy?” below. <br />
<br />
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: I am not a lawyer. But writing about prolife legal defenses designed to bring legal abortion to an end, and Scriptures calling for that goal, for 25 years in my Prayer * Action News, being uncertified as a lawyer, has created the opportunity for a remarkable interaction with Planned Barrenhoods priciest lawyers. Because news reporters wouldn’t report that my reasoning was designed as legal defenses in court, or that they were grounded in the Bible, what that left was their accusation that I advocated crime; whereas had my defenses been successful they would have allowed citizens to stop murderers legally, putting an end to the reason citizens took action. <br />
<br />
__TOC__<br />
<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and family, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge inaction deny themselves Life More Abundantly. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget: free wisdom, guaranteed success===<br />
<br />
'''John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
James 1:5 If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, [without finding fault]; and it shall be given him. 6 But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering.''' (Gr. διακρινω not withdrawn from, ie. by lack of support from actions, or opposed, ie. by indecision) <br />
<br />
'''Matthew 21:21 ...If ye have faith, and doubt not''' (Gr. διακρινω) ...'''ye shall say unto this mountain, Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea; it shall be done. 22 And all things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive.'''<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and families, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge their own inaction deny themselves, not just their neighbors, Life More Abundantly.<br />
<br />
If you are not satisfied with life less abundantly – ongoing slaughter of innocents – you won’t be satisfied now that the fate of babies is decided by the “value” that voters place on little people. You will keep searching for a strategy to end all the slaughter: to both outlaw it, and make it unthinkable to all but the worst of murderers. <br />
<br />
If you believe you ''will'' reach every good goal you pursue with all your being, Matthew 21:21-22, you won’t be turned from ending the slaughter in every state by experts who tell you that is impossible which rules out a strategy for achieving it. You will search until you find God’s way to do God’s will. <br />
<br />
You won’t say “I'm not smart enough to question prolife legal authorities who advise giving up”, if you believe James 1:5 which promises you all the wisdom you need to do good. Nor will you ever say you are not smart enough to read and understand legal briefs, court rulings, or to reason with lawmakers, lawyers, and prolife leaders, as necessary.<br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will not excuse yourself from God’s call because you can’t talk well, like Moses, whom God answered “Who made mouths?” Exodus 4:11. Nor will you excuse yourself to God, saying you are but a child against the world’s superbrains, like Jeremiah, whom God answered, “Stop saying that! It is MY words you will speak, and I am no child!” Jeremiah 1:6-8. <br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will shine God’s light wherever you find Darkness, Matthew 5:13-16. Since nothing is darker than murdering your own baby, you will seek God’s help as you oppose this evil, and none of these excuses will withdraw you from action.<br />
<br />
===Final Warning: read this at your own risk===<br />
<br />
Warning: read at your own risk. Rough reading Ahead, that may knock you from your TV chair.<br />
<br />
'''Findings of Facts which No Judge can Squarely Address and Keep Abortion Legal'''<br />
<br />
=Part 1: Authority of Court-Recognized Fact Finders=<br />
<br />
<span style="color:grey"><small>''Try to imagine how a judge, reviewing a prolife law with these Findings of Facts, would be able to dodge this evidence - in fact, see if you can find ANYONE who can ''refute'' these facts - as opposed to not ''caring'' about facts - that is, not caring about reality:''</small></span><br />
<br />
====Statement of Fact #1 of 12: Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let ''any'' state legalize====<br />
<br />
No fact can be more legally established than the fact that “life begins” at fertilization, being the consensus of every American legal authority who has taken a position, in every category of court-recognized finders of facts: juries,2 thousands of expert witnesses who were not contested,3 38 state legislatures,4 individual judges,5 and Congress.6 <br />
<br />
If the unanimous – uncontested – finding of every court-recognized fact-finder is not enough ‘establishment’ for the court to know a fact, it is impossible for any judge to know anything.<br />
<br />
No legal authority has ruled that any unborn baby of a human is not in fact a human person, or that “life begins” any later than fertilization.7 <br />
<br />
No state can keep abortion legal now that this fact is established. This is so obvious that even Roe v. Wade said “of course”, and the lawyer for the abortionists agreed.8 <br />
For most public issues, disagreement is over facts.9 The only disagreement about abortion is between unanimous fact finders and those who don't care about facts.10 A court that won’t address the facts that justify and necessitate a law, or hear evidence of those facts, violates Due Process and has no legitimate jurisdiction to review that law.11 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 1 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
----<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget===<br />
<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? <br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
<br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
<br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True. <br />
<br />
<br />
</span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget #2: The Cost of Success===<br />
<br />
'''Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? '''<br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True.<br />
<br />
==Statement of Facts #2 of 12: Courts Accept the Fact-Finding Authority of Legislatures, Juries, Experts for the same good reasons their findings persuade the public.==<br />
<br />
SCOTUS must accept legislative findings of facts that are not obviously irrational. “..the existence of facts supporting the legislative judgment is to be presumed...not to be pronounced unconstitutional unless in the light of the facts made known or generally assumed it is of such a character as to preclude the assumption that it rests upon some rational basis within the knowledge and experience of the legislators....” U.S. v. Carolene Products, 304 U.S. 144, 152 (1938).1<br />
<br />
Besides the court-recognized fact finding authority of legislatures, courts must conform their rulings to laws until such time as courts declare laws unconstitutional. No court has overturned the “unborn victims of violence” laws (based on “human babies are people”) of 39 states and Congress, despite many challenges.2<br />
<br />
To do so would require a court to positively affirm that human life does not begin until much later, which no legal authority has done, and for which no evidence exists.<br />
<br />
'''Legislatures'''. Lawmakers are there by the choice of a majority of voters. They are bombarded by information from experts. They are scrutinized by other lawmakers. Many are lawyers, some of whom are constitutional scholars and past or future judges. They set the salaries of judges, and have the power to hold impeachment trials of judges. Congress, the national legislature, scrutinizes Supreme Court justices. <br />
<br />
Many Congressmen are equally qualified: 15 U.S. Senators have served on the Supreme Court, and more were nominated.3 <br />
<br />
'''Juries''' are tested for impartiality. They are educated by the most qualified expert witnesses available. They study as long as necessary to establish truth – sometimes for months.4<br />
<br />
'''Expert Witnesses''' are the best experts money can buy, and they are scrutinized by the other side’s experts.5 <br />
<br />
For all its faults, American court recognition of Fact Finders is among the world’s top methods of establishing reality that is available to humans, earning respect in the Court of Public Opinion along with their authority in courts of law.6 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 2 + Footnotes]]<br />
----<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
----<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget===<br />
<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Mark 8:38 '''Whosoever therefore shall be ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful generation; of him also shall the Son of man be ashamed''', when he cometh in the glory of his Father with the holy angels.<br />
<br />
We Bible believing conservatives need to quit blaming social media and CIA censorship for our failures and stop censoring ourselves. <br />
<br />
I offer a way of stating evidence which no judge, news reporter, Democrat, or unbeliever can refute, along with answering objections that have crippled prolife messaging and legal strategy. But we despair of reaching those who stop their ears to evidence. “What’s the use of tightening our message? You’re preaching to the choir. We know babies are people but those other people have their opinion too.”<br />
<br />
I’m not "preaching to the choir". I’m passing out a new composition to the choir for a coming TV special.<br />
<br />
Most of those who won’t listen, won’t vote either, rendering their willful ignorance relatively benign. Stop worrying about them. All they will do is hate you, lie about you, wreck your business – childish stuff. We progress by clearly articulating to the extent possible. The same Bible which is the main reason we care about babies promises all the protection we need to finish what we are here to do.<br />
<br />
It isn’t just saving baby bodies where we self censor. Adult souls are lost. We hold back sharing what we know about God. Snap out of it. </span><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #3 of 12: The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS====<br />
<br />
From Roe (1973) through Dobbs (2022), SCOTUS evaded that core issue.1 <br />
<br />
SCOTUS never ruled babies Non-Persons “as a Matter of Law”, as lower courts allege.2 Roe made that fact not only relevant, but dispositive with a holding which no court has disputed even though Roe’s main holding was overturned:3 <br />
<br />
“[Prolifers] argue that the fetus is a ‘person’ within the language and meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment....If this suggestion of personhood is established, the [abortionist’s] case, of course, collapses, for the fetus’ right to life would then be guaranteed specifically by the [14th] Amendment [thus outlawing abortion in EVERY state]. The [abortionist’s lawyer] conceded as much....”4<br />
<br />
Dobbs explicitly left this statement of the obvious untouched, saying “our decision is not based on any view about when a State should regard pre-natal life as having rights or legally cognizable interests....”5 Dobbs did not say babies aren’t people. Dobbs did not say voters should still decide whether babies can be murdered in the face of proof that babies are ''in fact'' people.6 Dobbs left in place Roe’s observation that “establishment” of this fact, independently of any law, ruling, or future constitutional amendment,7 dictates whether abortion is legally recognizable as a right or as a crime.8<br />
<br />
This established '''fact''' is as relevant today as when Roe said “of course” it is.<br />
<br />
This established '''fact''' is not disestablished by any judge’s alleged inability to understand it.9<br />
<br />
This established '''FACT''' is not made irrelevant by any judge’s theory that the legal right of little humans to live is “impossible” to determine so it should be decided by their value to big humans.10<br />
<br />
If only those ''legally recognized'' as “persons” were people, slavery could still be legal and the 14th Amendment would mean nothing. Slavery states would merely need to classify their victims as only 3/5 human.11 The Amendment protects those who are '''IN FACT''' people – what is irrelevant is whether babies are people “as a matter of law”.12 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 3 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
=Part 2: The Power of Personhood=<br />
<br />
==Statement of Facts #4 of 12: Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life==<br />
<br />
Detectable heartbeats and brain waves are evidence that a person has not yet died, throughout state and federal law.1 Reason demands they be accepted as evidence that a person has begun to live.2<br />
<br />
<small>The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: American College of Pediatricians <> Heartbeat International <> World Faith Foundation and Institute for Faith and Family <> National Catholic Bioethics Center, et al <> Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide <> Jewish Prolife Foundation <> American Association of Prolife Obstretricians </small><br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 4 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
==Statement of Facts #5 of 12: Legislatures should regulate abortion, as Dobbs held, just as legislatures regulate the prosecution of all other murders==<br />
<br />
But not in the sense of absolute discretion to leave wholesale murders of a supposedly unwanted group of humans completely unregulated. That interpretation of Dobbs’ holding is premised on a “mistake of fact”, which is an official exception to Stare Decisis.1<br />
<br />
The “Mistake of Fact” that is the premise of letting voters decide whether to continue judge-approved genocide according to the “value” they place on little people is that the humanity of babies of humans is either unknowable or irrelevant. That premise was explicit in Roe and Casey, and implicit in Dobbs.2 <br />
<br />
That is an “erroneous factual premise”. The fact that little unborn humans are humans is neither unknowable3 nor irrelevant. It is verifiable and dispositive.4 The consensus of court-recognized fact finders cures that knowledge deficit, canceling that interpretation of Dobbs’ holding, while reinforcing Dobbs’ other two holdings that “The Constitution does not confer a right to abortion” and “Roe and Casey are overruled”, and requiring the outlawing of baby killing in every state.5 <br />
<br />
<small>'''Mini-lexicon of legal terms'''<br />
<br />
'''Mistake of Fact:''' A statement of facts upon which a ruling was based, which is later shown to be untrue. It means the same as “erroneous factual premise”.<br />
<br />
'''Stare Decisis:''' Hesitancy about reversing previous precedents. Precedents should only be reversed for very good reasons, because they affect how millions live, so the more law changes back and forth, the more that unsettles society.<br />
<br />
'''Dispositive:''' Evidence so overwhelming that it is final. It settles a matter, with no need of further evidence. As in Matthew 26:65 “What further need have we of witnesses?”<br />
Holding: The part of a ruling that demands obedience, or that is a conclusion that is the basis for the ruling. <br />
<br />
'''Overruled''': Means the same as “overturned”, “repealed”, or “vacated”. It is where a court changes its mind, deciding that a previous precedent was “wrongly decided” or “incorrect”. Often it also means the previous ruling was unconstitutional, although nobody is allowed to use that word out loud. <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: Illinois Right to Life <> Center for Religious Expression <> Connie Weiskopf and Kristine L. Brown </small> <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 5 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
==Statement of Facts #6 of 12: The full humanity of a tiny physical body is hard for many to grasp. But what distinguishes us from animals isn’t physical, and has no known pre-conscious stage==<br />
<br />
Part of the definition of “person” is “infused with a soul”, Roe v. Wade1 and dictionaries say.2 SCOTUS has not disagreed. “Consciousness” is another word for what has no physical explanation, and that distinguishes us from animals. <br />
<br />
Animal behavior is predictable within breeds, indicating little “choice”. They are not like people who can choose to behave like angels or demons. Nothing physical can explain our ability to choose against our own bodies: to sacrifice our own interests for others, which is how John 15:13 defines “love”;3 or to destroy ourselves in hate.4<br />
<br />
Roe v Wade was not out of line to consult “those trained in... theology” who study souls, as well as doctors who study bodies, to clarify who to count as human with an unalienable right to life.5<br />
<br />
The extent of human choice is said by Psalm 22:10 to enable an unborn baby to place his trust in God. Luke 1:44 similarly reports that a baby at 6 months heard a righteous voice [and/or felt the righteous Presence of God] and responded with joy,6 a response not everybody chooses, indicating that even the capacity for choosing between good and evil precedes birth. To human consciousness, we give greater legal protection than to animals.7 <br />
Because nothing physical explains such powers, undeveloped bodies don’t establish undeveloped consciousness. <br />
<br />
Since a “soul” without consciousness has never been theorized and can’t be imagined,8 the consensus of fact finders is, in effect, that abortion kills babies with conscious souls. <br />
<br />
All this testimony indicates that when a baby is killed by dismemberment, acid, or sucking out the brain, it is not some non-sentient animal, some pre-human “potential life”, but a self-aware conscious soul that feels the pain, understands the cruelty, and if out-of-body near-death experiences are real, sees, along with God, who is doing it.<br />
Even considering the body only, there is no objective line between birth and conception distinguishing “humans” from “nonpersons”, or between “meaningful life” and life which courts are free to terminate.9 Without such a line, there can be no stage of gestation at which killing a baby can be objectively distinguished from murder. No baby is safe while that line remains arbitrary.10 <br />
<br />
The failure of some people, and of some religions, to grasp the full humanity of babies at any given stage is a dangerous basis for permitting killing, since as many fail to grasp the full humanity of many groups of born persons.<br />
28/430 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''SCOTUS:''' Supreme Court Of The United States<br />
<br />
'''Stage of Gestation:''' Any time during the development of a baby in the womb. This isn’t exactly a legal term, but it is not common outside courts.<br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: Foundation for Moral Law, Lutherans for Life <> American College of Pedia-tricians <> Jewish Prolife Foundation <> Dr. Robin Pierucci, M.D. </small><br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] <br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
==Statement of Facts #7 of 12: Congress has ''Already'' Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment ''already'' authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion, ''without'' allowing Congress to legalize it==<br />
<br />
Congress established in 2004 that: “‘unborn child’ means a child in utero, and the term ‘child in utero’...means a member of the species Homo Sapiens, at any stage of development, who is carried in the womb”, 18 U.S.C. 1841(d).1 <br />
<br />
This fact is not diminished by clause (c) which does not “permit [authorize] the prosecution of any person for...an abortion for which the consent of the pregnant woman...has been obtained.…”2 A law misaligned with facts does not block future lawmakers from making corrections, and states don’t need Congress’ “permission” to obey the 14th Amendment. <br />
<br />
The reason 18 U.S.C. 1841(d) has had no effect on the practice of legal abortion is not because of any deficiency in its authority to establish dispositive facts, but because no state law reviewed by SCOTUS has cited it to establish what Roe correctly said once “established” would “of course” require the end of legal abortion. <br />
<br />
Not only is the 2004 law unmitigated evidence of life strong enough to “collapse” legal abortion by itself, but it would not be stronger if it were an Amendment to the Constitution.3 No other Constitutional Amendment is relied on for evidence of a fact. An Amendment can bind courts. But establishment of the Facts Of Life by evidence presented, cited, and tested in court pulls not only courts, but society, closer to reality.4 32/254 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Personhood Law:''' A law stating that an unborn baby is a person. A human being. A“human person”, as Dobbs v. Jackson stated. That is, a person with all the legal rights of any other human. <br />
<br />
'''“In Utero”:''' In the womb. An unborn baby is in the womb - “in utero”.<br />
<br />
'''“Homo Sapiens”:''' humans. “The species homo sapiens”: the human race.<br />
<br />
'''Dispositive:''' Proved. Evidence so strong that no more is needed.<br />
<br />
'''Cited:''' Quoted. Referred to it. <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide <> and from Professor Nathan Schluetter, Hillsdale College <> Judge Bork</small><br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
==Statement #8 of 12: Roe, Dobbs, and the 14th Amendment agree: All Humans are “Persons”==<br />
<br />
Neither Roe nor Dobbs distinguished between “humans” and “persons” as if a “human” baby isn’t necessarily a “person”. [2] Nor does the 14th Amendment leave any human unprotected.<br />
<br />
Roe v. Wade equated the time an unborn child becomes “recognizably human” with the time the child becomes a “person”: “These disciplines variously approached the question [“of when life begins”] in terms of the point at which the embryo or fetus became ‘formed’ or recognizably human, or in terms of when a ‘person’ came into being, that is, infused with a ‘soul’ or ‘animated.’” 410 U.S. 113, 133(1973)<br />
<br />
Dobbs cites the belief that “a human person comes into being at conception” without distinguishing between the two words. [3] <br />
<br />
The word “person” in the 14th Amendment meant “An individual human being...man, woman, or child...consisting of body and soul.” The word “child” in that 1828 definition included unborn children, since to be “with child” meant to be pregnant. [4]<br />
<br />
Therefore the Amendment’s “nor shall any state deprive any person of life” and “equal protection” of every “person” means every human, including those unborn. Nothing about the first clause keeps later clauses from protecting unborn humans. [5]<br />
<br />
See also Wong Wing v. United States, 163 U.S.228, 242 (1896), “The term ‘person’ is broad enough to include any and every human being within the jurisdiction of the republic...This has been decided so often that the point does not require argument.” Steinberg v. Brown 321 F. Supp. 741 (N.D. Ohio, 1970) “[o]nce human life has commenced, the constitutional protections found in the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments impose upon the state a duty of safeguarding it”. [6]<br />
<br />
The word “persons” in the 14th Amendment means all who are IN FACT humans. Had it been only for those who are legally recognized as human, every deprivation of fundamental rights would be “constitutional” so long as a law or ruling questions whether its victims are “persons in the whole sense”.<br />
<br />
Although Dobbs showed by disproving the opposite that reverence for all human life from fertilization was “deeply rooted in America’s law and traditions”, that is not why rights merit 14th Amendment protection. By the “deeply rooted” test, slavery would be legal today, since freedom for slaves had zero historical support.<br />
<br />
Nor does it ''matter'' if the Amendment authors even wanted to protect all humans. In fact, it doesn’t matter if there is a 14th Amendment. If law is not equal upon its operation on all humans, which is the very definition of the word “law” as developed by Samuel Rutherford’s “Lex Rex” and Blackstone and adopted by America’s founders, to that extent there is, by definition, no “rule of law”, no restraint upon the “strong” to not tyrannize the “weak”.<br />
<br />
There is a direct test of whether babies merit 14th Amendment protection that does not require a romp through history: [7] see if their parents are humans.<br />
<br />
“To say that the test of equal protection should be the ‘legal’ rather than the biological relationship is to avoid the issue. For the Equal Protection Clause necessarily limits the authority of a State [or its judges] to draw such ‘legal’ lines as it chooses.” Glona, 391 U.S. 73, 75 (1968) [8]<br />
<br />
FOOTNOTES: see [[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''14th Amendment:''' Ratified in 1868, the third year after the Civil War ended, it ruled that every state must give everyone under its laws the “equal protection” of its laws. It gave Congress authority to “enforce” the rights listed in the Constitution when state legislatures can’t or won’t, and to block state laws that protect some people less. Starting five years later, the Supreme Court usurped that authority of Congress for itself, and instead of protecting rights listed in the Constitution it made up rights not in the Constitution that are hostile to constitutional rights. More about that later. <br />
<br />
'''Equal Protection Clause:''' The clause in the 14th Amendment that requires states to give “equal protection of the laws” to all its citizens.<br />
<br />
The footnotes are enriched by selections from the Amicus Briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson by: Lee J. Strang <> Scholars of Jurisprudence John M. Finnis and Robert P. George <> Mary Kay Bacallao Advocating for Unborn Children <> Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide <> and by selections from the 1996 debate between Judge Robert Bork and Professor Nathan Schluetter</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small>'<br />
<br />
==Statement of Facts #9 of 12: When pregnancies develop into medical emergencies requiring separation of mother and child to save the mother, the child has an equally fundamental right to life and medical care.==<br />
<br />
A legislature’s balancing of their interests cannot, therefore, be reviewed by “strict scrutiny”.2 Nor does alleged insufficiency of a “medical emergency” exception from a general abortion ban justify a court overturning the ban in the 99% of cases where no emergency is alleged.3 Legislatures are better equipped to deliberate about and secure the rights of all citizens than courts whose focus is the parties before them.4<br />
<br />
SCOTUS never denied that a legislature’s “personhood” statements in an abortion ban are strong evidence.5 That evidence is not mitigated by a ban’s exceptions.6 It is not made irrelevant because baby killers “rely” on killing babies.7 28/130 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms:<br />
'''<br />
Fundamental Right:''' This is a term not found in the Constitution but made up by SCOTUS for the rights SCOTUS makes up which often displace rights actually listed in the Constitution. Justice Clarence Thomas is eloquent on this point. More about this later.<br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: A Foundation for Moral Law <> Pennsylvania Pro-Life Federation <> 396 State Legislators from 41 States</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #10 of 12: Tyranny over any class of humans by any other is prohibited by the Constitution, and by the Declaration, which gives the purpose of the Constitution and rests its own authority on the revelation of God1 in the Bible====<br />
<br />
Roe v Wade was not out of line to consult “those trained in... theology” who study souls, as well as doctors who study bodies, to clarify who to count as human with an unalienable right to life.3 <br />
<br />
America’s Freedom springs from “all men are created equal” and “equal protection of the laws” for all humans even if their looks, language, wealth, strength, ancestry, power, or faith are different.4 These rights have proven such a blessing to the world that their source, the Bible, deserves the fair hearing owed any witness whose reliability has been confirmed, when it promises still greater blessings if we will equally protect humans whose physical size is different.5 <br />
<br />
Its testimony is not “cumulative”, but “probative”.6 It is not to be feared as dispositive or compulsory: American freedom balances human understanding of how best to apply Biblical principles to government against the willingness of voting majorities to follow those principles. Even that is a Biblical principle legitimized in 1 Samuel 8.7 <br />
<br />
The history of slavery, Prohibition, and abortion illustrate the “willingness” factor. The probative value of the testimony of God is proved by the fact that without it, slavery would never have ended, and the prolife movement would never have begun. Which makes it probative to observe that not only the 14th Amendment, but also the revelation of God, requires this state, as it does every state, to outlaw all trampling of fundamental rights of any class of people, including abortion of babies.8 Where the two authorities say the same thing, the Bible, for all its alleged ambiguity, is better understood and more trusted than the Constitution which has indeed proven “a thing of wax” in the nimble fingers of even the most scrupulous judges.9 <br />
<br />
Without God – without belief in a more objective standard of right and wrong than the “value” that voters place on “different” people through “evolving community standards”, it is impossible to understand fundamental rights.10 <br />
<br />
Courts have demonstrated this impossibility by so often confusing abominations for rights, decimating those whom Jesus said “forbid them not to come unto Me”, denying that He created them, murdering 17% of them, sodomizing 20% of the survivors, and censoring 100% of His teachings in schools.11 <br />
<br />
That destruction of the 14th Amendment (1868) began when “Substantive Due Process”, pioneered in Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857), was applied in United States v. Cruikshank 92 U. S. 542 (1876) to acquit a white Democrat mililtia of murdering “as many as 165” black Republicans and burning down the courthouse they were defending.12 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring God does not “establish religion”. It does not compel belief, action or endorsement. It simply allows judges and voters to make informed decisions. It is part of fact-finding. It is part of reasoning. Part of embracing reality. Part of examining “the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth”. Judges must stop punishing people for telling the truth just because the truth favors God.13 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring the Bible does not require equal weight for claims of religions that deny equal rights for all.14 <br />
<br />
For example, some claim “souls” don’t enter babies until long after fertilization, or even long after birth.15 Their claims do not “cancel” the mountain of consensus of court-recognized fact finders that souls are present from the beginning. Our Constitution and laws reject their unequal rights, and are appropriately wary of their rationales for their unequal rights. The credibility of every witness is not equal. Credibility is earned. <br />
There can be “free exercise” of religions hostile to “equal protection of the laws” only to the extent their “exercise” does not threaten the rights of others or violate the laws enacted to protect them – laws ultimately decided by voting majorities, hopefully well informed through the uncensoring of reality.16 39/520 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms: <br />
<br />
'''Cumulative''': testimony so redundant that it wastes the court’s time<br />
Dispositive: testimony so strong that it settles the issue with no more<br />
Probative: probative facts establish, or contribute to, proof. Probative value is the degree of relevance of evidence. <br />
<br />
'''Prohibition''': From 1920 to 1932, drinking (alcohol) was made illegal, banned by an actual Constitutional Amendment. Actual alcohol consumption dropped by about 50%, or at least that is how much Cirrhosis of the Liver cases dropped. During that time the drop in drinking led to an economic boom, called the “Roaring Twenties”, which unfortunately were not remembered for their prosperity but for their immorality. In 1928, the prosperity collapsed into a “Great Depression” due to cheating by stock market investors. In 1932 Americans wanted liquor so bad they ratified another Constitutional Amendment repealing the 1920 Amendment. <br />
<br />
'''Substantive Due Process''': As Justice Clarence Thomas eloquently explains – see Statement #11 footnotes, this phrase was made up by SCOTUS to justify making up what it calls “fundamental rights” as its tool of repealing laws it doesn’t like. It gets its name from the SCOTUS claim that the “Due Process” clause of the 14th Amendment gives SCOTUS its authority to make up rights and call them “fundamental”. But “Due Process” only meant the legal procedures which everyone must be given equally, to defend their rights in court when necessary. The phrase has nothing to do with identifying what rights are protectable. But “Substantive” means those rights we care about, that the Constitution protects. Like freedom of speech or religion. Because “substantive” means substantial, serious rights, and “due process” has nothing to do with identifying any rights, the LONANG Institute observes in Statement #11 notes that “substantive due process” is an oxymoron. <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: Foundation for Moral Law and Lutherans for Life <> Jewish Prolife Foundation <> LONANG Institute <> U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and Other Religious Organizations <> Claremont Institute’s Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
=Part 4: Conclusions=<br />
<br />
==Statement of Facts #11 of 12: The 14th Amendment gives federal courts no “due process” authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the “right” to murder, and gives Congress no authority to legalize violations of Constitutional Rights, like taking a baby’s right to Life==<br />
<br />
The sole federal authority over state laws regarding the rights of their own citizens is through the 14th Amendment, Sections One and Five.1 Contrary to SCOTUS rulings, the 14th Amendment explicitly provides:<br />
<br />
* '''Congress authorized, not courts.''' Congress, not courts, determines the manner and scope of federal intervention in states whose laws don’t protect their citizens’ rights.2 Congress is not limited to enforcing only those rights of which SCOTUS approves, nor only to the extent that SCOTUS approves,3 nor only when state governments, not individuals, directly violate rights.4 <br />
<br />
* Federal courts aren’t permitted to stop either states or Congress from protecting enumerated rights (like Life), or to repeal their laws for conflicting with unenumerated [not listed in the Constitution] “rights” (like the “right” to murder babies), or to intervene in states’ protection of rights beyond prosecuting violations of federal laws.5 <br />
<br />
* Nor can Congress stop states from protecting enumerated rights. Neither Congress nor federal courts may overturn a state law protecting the lives of unborn babies from surgical abortion, chemical abortion, or contraceptives.6<br />
<br />
* The rights subject to federal enforcement are not those made up by SCOTUS allegedly based on the “Due Process” clause,7 but those listed in the Constitution, referred to as “privileges and immunities”8 (including, for unborn babies, the “privilege” of life and “immunity” from “cruel and unusual punishment” and execution “without due process of law”).9 <br />
* Enumerated Rights recognized before the Constitution existed are not excluded from Congressional intervention.10<br />
<br />
* '''“Substantive Due Process”''' is the sophistry by which SCOTUS turned the Constitution’s Authority to Define Rights, and Congress’ 14th Amendment Section 5 Authority to Enforce Rights, into its own authority to reclassify abominations as “rights”.11 It is an illegal, unconstitutional, Freedom-crushing fraud from Hell fomenting a long line of Landmark Abomination Cases.12 <br />
<br />
<small>Mini-lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Due Process:''' The duty of courts to give all parties to cases the fair and equal procedures and opportunities for defending themselves.<br />
<br />
(This argument for ending SCOTUS’ long line of Landmark Abomination Cases continues in Part Two of this book where its focus on SCOTUS-mandated murder of babies created in the Image of God is extended to SCOTUS’ censorship of God Himself.) <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amici who filed briefs in Dobbs v. Jackson: Lonang Institute <> Christian Legal Society <> AfricanAmerican, Hispanic, Roman Catholic and Protestant Religious and Civil Rights Organizations <> Senators Josh Hawley, Mike Lee, and Ted Cruz. And from Judge Robert Bork <> Nathan Schlueter, Professor of Philosophy and Religion, Hillsdale College, (when he debated Judge Bork in 2003 he was assistant professor of pre-law and political science at St. Ambrose University. Author, “Unborn Persons and the Fourteenth Amendment.” 2002.) <> Erwin Chemerinsky, Dean of Berkeley Law School <> Legal Information Institute, Cornell University <> Justice Clarence Thomas, dissents and concurrences <> justia.com <> James Gray Pope, Professor of Law and Sidney Reitman Scholar, Rutgers University School of Law <> Libby Adler professor of law and women’s, gender, and sexuality studies, Northeastern University Christmas, 2023''</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
==Statement #12 of 12:Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable. The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives.==<br />
<br />
Any judge interfering with this state’s compliance with the 14th Amendment and its ancient authority to protect its people1 – the central reason governments exist, is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders,2 and is guilty of exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide through an unconstitutional ruling,3 which exceeds the judicial powers given by any Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment.4<br />
<br />
The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives, including (1) giving the state Supreme Court original jurisdiction over any challenge to a law, (2) requiring that review be expedited, (3) requiring a supermajority of the Court to suspend a law, (4) questioning justices in a public hearing about the constitutionality of their ruling, and (5) overturning the ruling with a supermajority of the legislature.5 <br />
<br />
Should any federal judge so interfere with this state’s constitutional duty, this state appeals to its congressional delegation to examine similar grounds for disciplinary action,6 along with exercising its Article III, Section 2, paragraph 2 authority to make “exceptions” and “regulations” designed to end SCOTUS’ long line of landmark abomination cases. <br />
<br />
This state also appeals to its congressional delegation to exercise its life-saving and rights-protecting authority under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment whose plain words give Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of Rights,7 which subsumes the authority to define their scope and to balance competing interests, while the “privileges and immunities” clause identifies as protectable rights those listed in the Constitution.8 <br />
<br />
Official world-wide definitions of “crimes against humanity” apply “to representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission”, whether elected representatives or unelected judges.”9<br />
<br />
Any court review of this law must be expedited, because lives are lost with each day that courts delay.10 7/230 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of Legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Malfeasance in office:''' official misconduct; violation of a public trust or obligation; specifically, the doing of an act which is positively unlawful or wrongful.<br />
<br />
'''Subsumes:''' Includes. To include or place within something larger or more comprehensive: encompass as a subordinate or component element red, green, and yellow are subsumed under the term "color" <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: 396 State Legislators from 41 States <> Melinda Thybault/Moral Outcry <> and by Matthew J. Franck, Director of the William E. and Carol G. Simon Center on Religion and the Constitution at the Witherspoon Institute and visiting lecturer in politics at Princeton University</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small></div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Reversing_Landmark_Abomination_Cases&diff=50381Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases2024-01-03T03:51:59Z<p>DaveLeach: /* Statement of Fact #1 of 12: Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let any state legali...</p>
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<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters<br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion</span><br />
<br />
by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal<br />
''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal<br />
<span style="color:brown"><br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen <br />
<br />
by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 18:06, 15 October 2023 (UTC)<br />
<br />
=Introduction=<br />
<br />
This book offers twelve statements of fact about babies and abortion which I challenge any voter, lawyer, lawmaker, or judge to refute. Their footnotes contain nuggets from the 140 "Amicus" briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' (2022), the ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade. These statements are designed to soften the resistance of voters to outlawing baby murder, when presented in public, and to force judges to outlaw abortion in every state, when presented in court. <br />
<br />
They are truths designed to be so unignorable, that when any lawmaker includes them in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, in any state, prodeath fury will help publicize them with each advance through legislative deadlines. When friends of babies see them survive scrutiny, the force of these truths will grow like a snowball rolling down a hill. <br />
<br />
But murdering babies is only the most egregious of many Landmark Abomination Cases. Their common thread is usurping authority which the Constitution assigns to others, and equating the Bible with spurious religions. “Never let a crisis go to waste”, say the enemies of God, but God is the true master of turning evil into an opportunity for good. It’s time. Let’s end the Supreme Court’s war against God.<br />
<br />
The very fact that abortion is the worst of the ways the United States Supreme Court has turned American law upside down creates an opportunity to heal that branch of our government, and heal all the harm to our nation and its culture and morals that it has caused. As Professor Nathan Schluetter at Hillsdale College observes, “We must not let this opportunity pass to boldly challenge the prevailing jurisprudence and its attendant epistemological and moral skepticism with respect to abortion.”<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
It is the '''fact''' that unborn babies are living human children that makes killing them murder. It’s not what any ''law'' says about it, or even what the Constitution says about it. That’s what leaves ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' on the edge of reality, by treating this fact as something for voters to figure out, not on the basis of whether babies are ''in fact'' people but on the basis of some “value” they place on ''little'' people. <br />
<br />
That '''fact''' is what makes <u>the consensus of court-recognized fact finders</u> a stronger legal reason to end legal abortion than a Life Amendment, and a powerful social reason in the Court of Public Opinion able to soften hearts to the silent screams of Jesus' little brothers and His quiet knocking on hearts' doors. Which makes it insane for prolifers to not even mention this legally dispositive consensus in each and every prolife court case, and every “finding of fact” in prolife legislation, along with leveling with the public about the Scriptures which are the real reason we even care.<br />
<br />
[[File:Cover_Cartoon.jpg]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
Why these solutions may help even where abortion is already outlawed<br />
<br />
(1) They could defeat a national abortion legalization.<br />
<br />
(2) They could help you sue a nearby “blue state” for helping its baby killers murder your children. <br />
<br />
(3) They could help if your district judges join the courtroom rebellion against Dobbs in other states.<br />
<br />
(4) They could help meet challenges in the Court of Public Opinion, for example through a Resolution that irrefutably addresses every objection you have ever heard, as understandable to voters as it is irrefutable to judges. That would help the public see through future judicial gaslighting, and support judicial reform: ie. www.savetheworld .saltshaker.us/wiki/Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_ stop_judges_from_legislating<br />
<br />
(5) I could sure use your feedback. Proverbs 15:22. <br />
<br />
----<br />
<center>'''Ending legal abortion everywhere in close to a year<br />
(the goal of the following bill language)<br />
<br>'''requires a law whose Findings of Facts: '''<br />
</center><br />
<br />
<br />
* '''contain evidence which no judge can squarely address and keep abortion legal anywhere:''' that unborn babies are real people – established by the (unanimous) consensus of court-recognized factfinders: juries, expert witnesses, 38 states, judges, and Congress;<br />
<br />
* '''present its evidence in a way that is clear and persuasive to voters,''' to help them resist judicial and media gaslighting; (See below for “Why court-recognized fact finders persuade Voters”)<br />
<br />
* '''address misunderstandings about abortion jurisprudence''' that divide prolifers, intimidate lawyers, and blind judges;<br />
<br />
'''AND WHOSE PENALTIES'''<br />
<br />
* '''restrict some aspect of abortion substantially enough''' that THEY can't be defended as a mere regulation with some other legitimate government purpose than saving lives. The restriction must be profound enough that its only possible defense is that it saves human lives. That will force courts to address the evidence that babies are fully human;<br />
<br />
* '''provide no distractions that let judges rule on some technicality and ignore the evidence that the law would save lives.''' A perfect law that addresses everything from exceptions to contraception multiplies a judge’s opportunity to say “we don’t need to reach the issue of when life begins because the law fails on a lesser issue.” A simple yet substantial restriction, with “findings” that address the legal obstacles, will survive courts, which will get courts out of the way of saving life, which will free lawmakers to work out the challenging details with time to get a comprehensive solution right and with hope that they won’t waste their time; <br />
<br />
* '''list specific penalties for specific situations,''' rather than broadly stated goals such as “babies are to be protected as much as adults”, leaving prosecutors and judges to guess what to punish, or how, in situations where evidence and culpability are different; <br />
<br />
* '''contain a “life of the mother” exception''' whose applicability is clear enough that mothers are not denied life-saving care until doctors are assured by lawyers that said care will not put the doctors in jail; and<br />
<br />
'''THE LAW SHOULD ALSO order courts to “expedite” any review,''' “because lives are lost with each day that courts delay”. <br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate!)<br />
<br />
More ideas: [[Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_stop_judges_from_legislating]]<br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate! See below for Expedited Review federal rules.) <br />
<br />
WORD COUNTS: Using only the first boldfaced paragraph of each of these 12 Findings, in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, will total about 200 words. The complete Findings, without footnotes, total nearly 3000 words. For the advantages of including enough information in a prolife law for the Findings to defend themselves, see “Too Lengthy?” below. <br />
<br />
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: I am not a lawyer. But writing about prolife legal defenses designed to bring legal abortion to an end, and Scriptures calling for that goal, for 25 years in my Prayer * Action News, being uncertified as a lawyer, has created the opportunity for a remarkable interaction with Planned Barrenhoods priciest lawyers. Because news reporters wouldn’t report that my reasoning was designed as legal defenses in court, or that they were grounded in the Bible, what that left was their accusation that I advocated crime; whereas had my defenses been successful they would have allowed citizens to stop murderers legally, putting an end to the reason citizens took action. <br />
<br />
__TOC__<br />
<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and family, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge inaction deny themselves Life More Abundantly. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget: free wisdom, guaranteed success===<br />
<br />
'''John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
James 1:5 If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, [without finding fault]; and it shall be given him. 6 But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering.''' (Gr. διακρινω not withdrawn from, ie. by lack of support from actions, or opposed, ie. by indecision) <br />
<br />
'''Matthew 21:21 ...If ye have faith, and doubt not''' (Gr. διακρινω) ...'''ye shall say unto this mountain, Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea; it shall be done. 22 And all things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive.'''<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and families, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge their own inaction deny themselves, not just their neighbors, Life More Abundantly.<br />
<br />
If you are not satisfied with life less abundantly – ongoing slaughter of innocents – you won’t be satisfied now that the fate of babies is decided by the “value” that voters place on little people. You will keep searching for a strategy to end all the slaughter: to both outlaw it, and make it unthinkable to all but the worst of murderers. <br />
<br />
If you believe you ''will'' reach every good goal you pursue with all your being, Matthew 21:21-22, you won’t be turned from ending the slaughter in every state by experts who tell you that is impossible which rules out a strategy for achieving it. You will search until you find God’s way to do God’s will. <br />
<br />
You won’t say “I'm not smart enough to question prolife legal authorities who advise giving up”, if you believe James 1:5 which promises you all the wisdom you need to do good. Nor will you ever say you are not smart enough to read and understand legal briefs, court rulings, or to reason with lawmakers, lawyers, and prolife leaders, as necessary.<br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will not excuse yourself from God’s call because you can’t talk well, like Moses, whom God answered “Who made mouths?” Exodus 4:11. Nor will you excuse yourself to God, saying you are but a child against the world’s superbrains, like Jeremiah, whom God answered, “Stop saying that! It is MY words you will speak, and I am no child!” Jeremiah 1:6-8. <br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will shine God’s light wherever you find Darkness, Matthew 5:13-16. Since nothing is darker than murdering your own baby, you will seek God’s help as you oppose this evil, and none of these excuses will withdraw you from action.<br />
<br />
===Final Warning: read this at your own risk===<br />
<br />
Warning: read at your own risk. Rough reading Ahead, that may knock you from your TV chair.<br />
<br />
'''Findings of Facts which No Judge can Squarely Address and Keep Abortion Legal'''<br />
<br />
=Part 1: Authority of Court-Recognized Fact Finders=<br />
<br />
<span style="color:grey"><small>''Try to imagine how a judge, reviewing a prolife law with these Findings of Facts, would be able to dodge this evidence - in fact, see if you can find ANYONE who can ''refute'' these facts - as opposed to not ''caring'' about facts - that is, not caring about reality:''</small></span><br />
<br />
====Statement of Fact #1 of 12: Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let ''any'' state legalize====<br />
<br />
No fact can be more legally established than the fact that “life begins” at fertilization, being the consensus of every American legal authority who has taken a position, in every category of court-recognized finders of facts: juries,2 thousands of expert witnesses who were not contested,3 38 state legislatures,4 individual judges,5 and Congress.6 <br />
<br />
If the unanimous – uncontested – finding of every court-recognized fact-finder is not enough ‘establishment’ for the court to know a fact, it is impossible for any judge to know anything.<br />
<br />
No legal authority has ruled that any unborn baby of a human is not in fact a human person, or that “life begins” any later than fertilization.7 <br />
<br />
No state can keep abortion legal now that this fact is established. This is so obvious that even Roe v. Wade said “of course”, and the lawyer for the abortionists agreed.8 <br />
For most public issues, disagreement is over facts.9 The only disagreement about abortion is between unanimous fact finders and those who don't care about facts.10 A court that won’t address the facts that justify and necessitate a law, or hear evidence of those facts, violates Due Process and has no legitimate jurisdiction to review that law.11 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 1 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
----<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget===<br />
<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? <br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
<br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
<br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True. <br />
<br />
<br />
</span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget #2: The Cost of Success===<br />
<br />
'''Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? '''<br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True.<br />
<br />
=====Statement of Facts #2 of 12: Courts Accept the Fact-Finding Authority of Legislatures, Juries, Experts for the same good reasons their findings persuade the public.=====<br />
<br />
SCOTUS must accept legislative findings of facts that are not obviously irrational. “..the existence of facts supporting the legislative judgment is to be presumed...not to be pronounced unconstitutional unless in the light of the facts made known or generally assumed it is of such a character as to preclude the assumption that it rests upon some rational basis within the knowledge and experience of the legislators....” U.S. v. Carolene Products, 304 U.S. 144, 152 (1938).1<br />
<br />
Besides the court-recognized fact finding authority of legislatures, courts must conform their rulings to laws until such time as courts declare laws unconstitutional. No court has overturned the “unborn victims of violence” laws (based on “human babies are people”) of 39 states and Congress, despite many challenges.2<br />
<br />
To do so would require a court to positively affirm that human life does not begin until much later, which no legal authority has done, and for which no evidence exists.<br />
<br />
'''Legislatures'''. Lawmakers are there by the choice of a majority of voters. They are bombarded by information from experts. They are scrutinized by other lawmakers. Many are lawyers, some of whom are constitutional scholars and past or future judges. They set the salaries of judges, and have the power to hold impeachment trials of judges. Congress, the national legislature, scrutinizes Supreme Court justices. <br />
<br />
Many Congressmen are equally qualified: 15 U.S. Senators have served on the Supreme Court, and more were nominated.3 <br />
<br />
'''Juries''' are tested for impartiality. They are educated by the most qualified expert witnesses available. They study as long as necessary to establish truth – sometimes for months.4<br />
<br />
'''Expert Witnesses''' are the best experts money can buy, and they are scrutinized by the other side’s experts.5 <br />
<br />
It is for strong reasons that the findings of court-recognized fact finders are as respected in court as in the Court of Public Opinion.6<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 2 + Footnotes]]<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Mark 8:38 '''Whosoever therefore shall be ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful generation; of him also shall the Son of man be ashamed''', when he cometh in the glory of his Father with the holy angels.<br />
<br />
We Bible believing conservatives need to quit blaming social media and CIA censorship for our failures and stop censoring ourselves. <br />
<br />
I offer a way of stating evidence which no judge, news reporter, Democrat, or unbeliever can refute, along with answering objections that have crippled prolife messaging and legal strategy. But we despair of reaching those who stop their ears to evidence. “What’s the use of tightening our message? You’re preaching to the choir. We know babies are people but those other people have their opinion too.”<br />
<br />
I’m not "preaching to the choir". I’m passing out a new composition to the choir for a coming TV special.<br />
<br />
Most of those who won’t listen, won’t vote either, rendering their willful ignorance relatively benign. Stop worrying about them. All they will do is hate you, lie about you, wreck your business – childish stuff. We progress by clearly articulating to the extent possible. The same Bible which is the main reason we care about babies promises all the protection we need to finish what we are here to do.<br />
<br />
It isn’t just saving baby bodies where we self censor. Adult souls are lost. We hold back sharing what we know about God. Snap out of it. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
----<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #3 of 12: The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS====<br />
<br />
From Roe (1973) through Dobbs (2022), SCOTUS evaded that core issue.1 <br />
<br />
SCOTUS never ruled babies Non-Persons “as a Matter of Law”, as lower courts allege.2 Roe made that fact not only relevant, but dispositive with a holding which no court has disputed even though Roe’s main holding was overturned:3 <br />
<br />
“[Prolifers] argue that the fetus is a ‘person’ within the language and meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment....If this suggestion of personhood is established, the [abortionist’s] case, of course, collapses, for the fetus’ right to life would then be guaranteed specifically by the [14th] Amendment [thus outlawing abortion in EVERY state]. The [abortionist’s lawyer] conceded as much....”4<br />
<br />
Dobbs explicitly left this statement of the obvious untouched, saying “our decision is not based on any view about when a State should regard pre-natal life as having rights or legally cognizable interests....”5 Dobbs did not say babies aren’t people. Dobbs did not say voters should still decide whether babies can be murdered in the face of proof that babies are in fact people.6 Dobbs left in place Roe’s observation that “establishment” of this fact, independently of any law, ruling, or future constitutional amendment,7 dictates whether abortion is legally recognizable as a right or as a crime.8<br />
<br />
This established fact is as relevant today as when Roe said “of course” it is.<br />
<br />
This established fact is not disestablished by any judge’s alleged inability to understand it.9<br />
<br />
This established FACT is not made irrelevant by any judge’s theory that the legal right of little humans to live is “impossible” to determine so it should be decided by their value to big humans.10<br />
<br />
If only those legally recognized as “persons” were people, slavery could still be legal and the 14th Amendment would mean nothing. Slavery states would merely need to classify their victims as only 3/5 human.11 The Amendment protects those who are IN FACT people – what is irrelevant is whether babies are people “as a matter of law”.12 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 3 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #4 of 12: Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life====<br />
<br />
Detectable heartbeats and brain waves are evidence that a person has not yet died, throughout state and federal law.1 Reason demands they be accepted as evidence that a person has begun to live.2<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 4 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #5 of 12: Legislatures should regulate abortion, as Dobbs held, just as legislatures regulate the prosecution of all other murders====<br />
<br />
But not in the sense of absolute discretion to leave wholesale murders of a supposedly unwanted group of humans completely unregulated. That interpretation of Dobbs’ holding is premised on a “mistake of fact”, which is an official exception to Stare Decisis. 1<br />
<br />
The “Mistake of Fact” that is the premise of letting voters decide whether to continue judge-approved genocide according to the “value” they place on little people is that the humanity of babies of humans is either unknowable or irrelevant. That premise was explicit in Roe and Casey, and implicit in Dobbs.2 <br />
<br />
That is an “erroneous factual premise”. The fact that little unborn humans are humans is neither unknowable3 nor irrelevant. It is verifiable and dispositive.4 The consensus of court-recognized fact finders cures that knowledge deficit, canceling that interpretation of Dobbs’ holding, while reinforcing Dobbs’ other two holdings that “The Constitution does not confer a right to abortion” and “Roe and Casey are overruled”, and requiring the outlawing of baby killing in every state.5 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 5 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #6 of 12: The full humanity of a tiny physical body is hard for many to grasp. But what distinguishes us from animals isn’t physical, and has no known pre-conscious stage====<br />
<br />
DON’T READ past this 28 word paragraph unless you want <br />
an edge-of-your-seat adventure – legal ammunition <br />
against not only baby killing but also against the myth <br />
of the irrelevance of God in the reasoning of judges, <br />
lawmakers, and voters! Yet Roe v Wade, of all cases, <br />
"opened the door" with its sophomoric review of "theologians", <br />
and #6 comes charging through! <> The rest of this Statement <br />
is for lawmakers who want a stronger, clearer statement, <br />
and who have the stomach for the larger battle.<br />
<br />
Part of Roe’s definition of “person” was “infused with a soul”.1 Roe thus affirmed the belief of most of society, a belief logically demanded by the common knowledge that humans are distinguished from animals by consciousness which features a capacity for choices at variance with physical needs: to sacrifice one's interests for another,2 which is how John 15:13 defines “love”. And conversely, to destroy one’s own body.3<br />
<br />
These differences, along with self awareness and the capacity to choose between good and evil4 – to behave either as an angel or as a demon, can’t be explained by any known physical process. These differences justify greater legal protection of humans than of animals. <br />
<br />
Since a “soul” without consciousness has never been theorized and can’t be imagined, the consensus of fact finders is, in effect, that abortion kills babies with conscious souls. The lack of any physical explanation for a conscious soul rules out any reason to infer immaturity of consciousness from physical immaturity, and is consistent with the report in Luke 1:44 that a baby at 6 months heard a righteous voice [and/or felt the righteous Presence of God] and responded with joy,5 a response not everybody chooses, indicating that even the capacity for choosing between good and evil precedes birth. And also indicating that when a baby is killed by dismemberment, acid, or sucking out the brain, a self-aware conscious soul feels the pain, understands the cruelty, and if out-of-body near-death experiences are real, sees who is doing it.<br />
<br />
Even considering the body only, there is no objective line between birth and conception distinguishing “humans” from “nonpersons”, or between “meaningful life” and life which courts are free to terminate.6 Without such a line, there can be no stage of gestation at which killing a baby can be objectively distinguished from murder. No baby is safe while that line remains arbitrary. <br />
<br />
The failure of some to grasp the humanity of babies at any given stage is a dangerous basis for permitting killing, since as many fail to grasp the full humanity of quite a number of distinct groups of born persons.<br />
<br />
As Roe correctly established, it can be useful in clarifying who to count as a human with an unalienable right to life, to consult the religion from which that right was copied into America’s founding documents. But religions which oppose the foundation of American law – equal rights for all humans, merit little credibility in American courts when their claims justify destruction of an entire people group – such as the claim that souls do not enter bodies until around birth. There can be “free exercise” of religions which do not equally reverence all human life only to the extent their “exercise” does not violate the rights of others or the laws enacted to protect them.7<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] <br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #7 of 12: Congress has ''Already'' Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment already authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion, without allowing Congress to legalize it====<br />
<br />
<small>FORGET YOU READ this 32 word Statement and DON’T read farther – <br />
certainly not the footnotes – if you don’t want to question <br />
the near consensus of prolife leaders who say “we are helpless <br />
to outlaw abortion in every state before we get ANOTHER <br />
personhood law through Congress, if not a Life Amendment <br />
to the Constitution.” <> This is the 7th of 12 Statements <br />
designed to push courts out of the way of defending Life <br />
in every state when included in the Findings of Facts of <br />
prolife laws. The material below can make it clearer and stronger.</small><br />
<br />
Congress established in 2004 that: “‘unborn child’ means a child in utero, and the term ‘child in utero’...means a member of the species Homo Sapiens, at any stage of development, who is carried in the womb”, 18 U.S.C. 1841(d).1 <br />
<br />
This fact is not diminished by clause (c) which does not “permit [authorize] the prosecution of any person for...an abortion for which the consent of the pregnant woman...has been obtained.…”2 A law misaligned with facts does not block future lawmakers from making corrections, and states don’t need Congress’ “permission” to obey the 14th Amendment. <br />
<br />
The reason 18 U.S.C. 1841(d) has had no effect on the practice of legal abortion is not because of any deficiency in its authority to establish dispositive facts, but because no state law reviewed by SCOTUS has cited it to establish what Roe correctly said once “established” would “of course” require the end of legal abortion. <br />
<br />
Not only is the 2004 law unmitigated evidence of life strong enough to “collapse” legal abortion by itself, but it would not be stronger if it were an Amendment to the Constitution.3 No other Constitutional Amendment is relied on for evidence of a fact. An Amendment can bind courts. But establishment of the Facts Of Life by evidence presented, cited, and tested in court draws not only courts, but society, closer to reality.4<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #8 of 12: Roe, Dobbs, and the 14th Amendment agree: All Humans are “Persons”====<br />
<br />
<small>DON’T READ past this 11 word Statement <br />
unless you like to stare at where crazy lawyers <br />
ever got the idea that human babies aren’t people!</small><br />
<br />
Neither Roe nor Dobbs distinguished between “humans” and “persons” as if a “human” baby isn’t necessarily a “person”. [2] Nor does the 14th Amendment leave any human unprotected.<br />
<br />
Roe v. Wade equated the time an unborn child becomes “recognizably human” with the time the child becomes a “person”: “These disciplines variously approached the question [“of when life begins”] in terms of the point at which the embryo or fetus became ‘formed’ or recognizably human, or in terms of when a ‘person’ came into being, that is, infused with a ‘soul’ or ‘animated.’” 410 U.S. 113, 133(1973)<br />
<br />
Dobbs cites the belief that “a human person comes into being at conception” without distinguishing between the two words. [3] The word “person” in the 14th Amendment meant “An individual human being...man, woman, or child...consisting of body and soul.” The word “child” in that 1828 definition included unborn children, since to be “with child” meant to be pregnant. [4]<br />
<br />
Therefore the Amendment’s “nor shall any state deprive any person of life” and “equal protection” of every “person” means every human, including those unborn. Nothing about the first clause keeps later clauses from protecting unborn humans. [5]<br />
<br />
See also Wong Wing v. United States, 163 U.S.228, 242 (1896), “The term ‘person’ is broad enough to include any and every human being within the jurisdiction of the republic...This has been decided so often that the point does not require argument.” Steinberg v. Brown 321 F. Supp. 741 (N.D. Ohio, 1970) “[o]nce human life has commenced, the constitutional protections found in the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments impose upon the state a duty of safeguarding it”. [6]<br />
<br />
The word “persons” in the 14th Amendment means all who are IN FACT humans. Had it been only for those who are legally recognized as human, every deprivation of fundamental rights would be “constitutional” so long as a law or ruling questions whether its victims are “persons in the whole sense”.<br />
<br />
Although Dobbs showed by disproving the opposite that reverence for all human life from fertilization was “deeply rooted in America’s law and traditions”, that is not why rights merit 14th Amendment protection. By the “deeply rooted” test, slavery would be legal today, since freedom for slaves had zero historical support.<br />
<br />
Nor does it matter if the Amendment authors even wanted to protect all humans. In fact, it doesn’t matter if there is a 14th Amendment. If law is not equal upon its operation on all humans, which is the very definition of the word “law” as developed by Samuel Rutherford’s “Lex Rex” and Blackstone and adopted by America’s founders, to that extent there is, by definition, no “rule of law”, no restraint upon the “strong” to not tyrannize the “weak”.<br />
<br />
There is a direct test of whether babies merit 14th Amendment protection that does not require a romp through history: [7] see if their parents are humans.<br />
<br />
“To say that the test of equal protection should be the ‘legal’ rather than the biological relationship is to avoid the issue. For the Equal Protection Clause necessarily limits the authority of a State [or its judges] to draw such ‘legal’ lines as it chooses.” Glona, 391 U.S. 73, 75 (1968) [8]<br />
<br />
FOOTNOTES: see [[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
<small>The footnotes are enriched by selections from the Amicus Briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson by: Lee J. Strang <> Scholars of Jurisprudence John M. Finnis and Robert P. George <> Mary Kay Bacallao Advocating for Unborn Children <> Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide <> and by selections from the 1996 debate between Judge Robert Bork and Professor Nathan Schluetter</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small>'<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #9 of 12: When pregnancies develop into medical emergencies requiring separation of mother and child to save the mother, the child has an equally fundamental right to life and medical care.====<br />
<br />
A legislature’s balancing of their interests cannot, therefore, be reviewed by “strict scrutiny”.2 Nor does alleged insufficiency of a “medical emergency” exception from a general abortion ban justify a court overturning the ban in the 99% of cases where no emergency is alleged.3 Legislatures are better equipped to deliberate about and secure the rights of all citizens than courts whose focus is the parties before them.4<br />
<br />
SCOTUS never denied that a legislature’s “personhood” statements in an abortion ban are strong evidence.5 That evidence is not mitigated by a ban’s exceptions.6 It is not made irrelevant because baby killers “rely” on killing babies.7 28/130 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
Fundamental Right: This is a term not found in the Constitution but made up by SCOTUS for the rights SCOTUS makes up which often displace rights actually listed in the Constitution. Justice Clarence Thomas is eloquent on this point. More about this later.<br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: A Foundation for Moral Law <> Pennsylvania Pro-Life Federation <> 396 State Legislators from 41 States</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #10 of 12: Tyranny over any class of humans by any other is prohibited by the Constitution, and by the Declaration, which gives the purpose of the Constitution and rests its own authority on the revelation of God1 in the Bible====<br />
<br />
Roe v Wade was not out of line to consult “those trained in... theology” who study souls, as well as doctors who study bodies, to clarify who to count as human with an unalienable right to life.3 <br />
<br />
America’s Freedom springs from “all men are created equal” and “equal protection of the laws” for all humans even if their looks, language, wealth, strength, ancestry, power, or faith are different.4 These rights have proven such a blessing to the world that their source, the Bible, deserves the fair hearing owed any witness whose reliability has been confirmed, when it promises still greater blessings if we will equally protect humans whose physical size is different.5 <br />
<br />
Its testimony is not “cumulative”, but “probative”.6 It is not to be feared as dispositive or compulsory: American freedom balances human understanding of how best to apply Biblical principles to government against the willingness of voting majorities to follow those principles. Even that is a Biblical principle legitimized in 1 Samuel 8.7 <br />
<br />
The history of slavery, Prohibition, and abortion illustrate the “willingness” factor. The probative value of the testimony of God is proved by the fact that without it, slavery would never have ended, and the prolife movement would never have begun. Which makes it probative to observe that not only the 14th Amendment, but also the revelation of God, requires this state, as it does every state, to outlaw all trampling of fundamental rights of any class of people, including abortion of babies.8 Where the two authorities say the same thing, the Bible, for all its alleged ambiguity, is better understood and more trusted than the Constitution which has indeed proven “a thing of wax” in the nimble fingers of even the most scrupulous judges.9 <br />
<br />
Without God – without belief in a more objective standard of right and wrong than the “value” that voters place on “different” people through “evolving community standards”, it is impossible to understand fundamental rights.10 <br />
<br />
Courts have demonstrated this impossibility by so often confusing abominations for rights, decimating those whom Jesus said “forbid them not to come unto Me”, denying that He created them, murdering 17% of them, sodomizing 20% of the survivors, and censoring 100% of His teachings in schools.11 <br />
<br />
That destruction of the 14th Amendment (1868) began when “Substantive Due Process”, pioneered in Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857), was applied in United States v. Cruikshank 92 U. S. 542 (1876) to acquit a white Democrat mililtia of murdering “as many as 165” black Republicans and burning down the courthouse they were defending.12 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring God does not “establish religion”. It does not compel belief, action or endorsement. It simply allows judges and voters to make informed decisions. It is part of fact-finding. It is part of reasoning. Part of embracing reality. Part of examining “the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth”. Judges must stop punishing people for telling the truth just because the truth favors God.13 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring the Bible does not require equal weight for claims of religions that deny equal rights for all.14 <br />
<br />
For example, some claim “souls” don’t enter babies until long after fertilization, or even long after birth.15 Their claims do not “cancel” the mountain of consensus of court-recognized fact finders that souls are present from the beginning. Our Constitution and laws reject their unequal rights, and are appropriately wary of their rationales for their unequal rights. The credibility of every witness is not equal. Credibility is earned. <br />
There can be “free exercise” of religions hostile to “equal protection of the laws” only to the extent their “exercise” does not threaten the rights of others or violate the laws enacted to protect them – laws ultimately decided by voting majorities, hopefully well informed through the uncensoring of reality.16 39/520 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms: <br />
<br />
'''Cumulative''': testimony so redundant that it wastes the court’s time<br />
Dispositive: testimony so strong that it settles the issue with no more<br />
Probative: probative facts establish, or contribute to, proof. Probative value is the degree of relevance of evidence. <br />
<br />
'''Prohibition''': From 1920 to 1932, drinking (alcohol) was made illegal, banned by an actual Constitutional Amendment. Actual alcohol consumption dropped by about 50%, or at least that is how much Cirrhosis of the Liver cases dropped. During that time the drop in drinking led to an economic boom, called the “Roaring Twenties”, which unfortunately were not remembered for their prosperity but for their immorality. In 1928, the prosperity collapsed into a “Great Depression” due to cheating by stock market investors. In 1932 Americans wanted liquor so bad they ratified another Constitutional Amendment repealing the 1920 Amendment. <br />
<br />
'''Substantive Due Process''': As Justice Clarence Thomas eloquently explains – see Statement #11 footnotes, this phrase was made up by SCOTUS to justify making up what it calls “fundamental rights” as its tool of repealing laws it doesn’t like. It gets its name from the SCOTUS claim that the “Due Process” clause of the 14th Amendment gives SCOTUS its authority to make up rights and call them “fundamental”. But “Due Process” only meant the legal procedures which everyone must be given equally, to defend their rights in court when necessary. The phrase has nothing to do with identifying what rights are protectable. But “Substantive” means those rights we care about, that the Constitution protects. Like freedom of speech or religion. Because “substantive” means substantial, serious rights, and “due process” has nothing to do with identifying any rights, the LONANG Institute observes in Statement #11 notes that “substantive due process” is an oxymoron. <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: Foundation for Moral Law and Lutherans for Life <> Jewish Prolife Foundation <> LONANG Institute <> U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and Other Religious Organizations <> Claremont Institute’s Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #11 of 12: The 14th Amendment gives federal courts no “due process” authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the “right” to murder, and gives Congress no authority to legalize violations of Constitutional Rights, like taking a baby’s right to Life====<br />
<br />
The sole federal authority over state laws regarding the rights of their own citizens is through the 14th Amendment, Sections One and Five.1 Contrary to SCOTUS rulings, the 14th Amendment explicitly provides:<br />
<br />
* '''Congress authorized, not courts.''' Congress, not courts, determines the manner and scope of federal intervention in states whose laws don’t protect their citizens’ rights.2 Congress is not limited to enforcing only those rights of which SCOTUS approves, nor only to the extent that SCOTUS approves,3 nor only when state governments, not individuals, directly violate rights.4 <br />
<br />
* Federal courts aren’t permitted to stop either states or Congress from protecting enumerated rights (like Life), or to repeal their laws for conflicting with unenumerated [not listed in the Constitution] “rights” (like the “right” to murder babies), or to intervene in states’ protection of rights beyond prosecuting violations of federal laws.5 <br />
<br />
* Nor can Congress stop states from protecting enumerated rights. Neither Congress nor federal courts may overturn a state law protecting the lives of unborn babies from surgical abortion, chemical abortion, or contraceptives.6<br />
<br />
* The rights subject to federal enforcement are not those made up by SCOTUS allegedly based on the “Due Process” clause,7 but those listed in the Constitution, referred to as “privileges and immunities”8 (including, for unborn babies, the “privilege” of life and “immunity” from “cruel and unusual punishment” and execution “without due process of law”).9 <br />
* Enumerated Rights recognized before the Constitution existed are not excluded from Congressional intervention.10<br />
<br />
* '''“Substantive Due Process”''' is the sophistry by which SCOTUS turned the Constitution’s Authority to Define Rights, and Congress’ 14th Amendment Section 5 Authority to Enforce Rights, into its own authority to reclassify abominations as “rights”.11 It is an illegal, unconstitutional, Freedom-crushing fraud from Hell fomenting a long line of Landmark Abomination Cases.12 <br />
<br />
<small>Mini-lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Due Process:''' The duty of courts to give all parties to cases the fair and equal procedures and opportunities for defending themselves.<br />
<br />
(This argument for ending SCOTUS’ long line of Landmark Abomination Cases continues in Part Two of this book where its focus on SCOTUS-mandated murder of babies created in the Image of God is extended to SCOTUS’ censorship of God Himself.) <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amici who filed briefs in Dobbs v. Jackson: Lonang Institute <> Christian Legal Society <> AfricanAmerican, Hispanic, Roman Catholic and Protestant Religious and Civil Rights Organizations <> Senators Josh Hawley, Mike Lee, and Ted Cruz. And from Judge Robert Bork <> Nathan Schlueter, Professor of Philosophy and Religion, Hillsdale College, (when he debated Judge Bork in 2003 he was assistant professor of pre-law and political science at St. Ambrose University. Author, “Unborn Persons and the Fourteenth Amendment.” 2002.) <> Erwin Chemerinsky, Dean of Berkeley Law School <> Legal Information Institute, Cornell University <> Justice Clarence Thomas, dissents and concurrences <> justia.com <> James Gray Pope, Professor of Law and Sidney Reitman Scholar, Rutgers University School of Law <> Libby Adler professor of law and women’s, gender, and sexuality studies, Northeastern University Christmas, 2023''</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #12 of 12:Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable. The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives.====<br />
<br />
Any judge interfering with this state’s compliance with the 14th Amendment and its ancient authority to protect its people1 – the central reason governments exist, is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders,2 and is guilty of exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide through an unconstitutional ruling,3 which exceeds the judicial powers given by any Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment.4The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives, including (1) giving the state Supreme Court original jurisdiction over any challenge to a law, (2) requiring that review be expedited, (3) requiring a supermajority of the Court to suspend a law, (4) questioning justices in a public hearing about the constitutionality of their ruling, and (5) overturning the ruling with a supermajority of the legislature.5 <br />
<br />
Should any federal judge so interfere with this state’s constitutional duty, this state appeals to its congressional delegation to examine similar grounds for disciplinary action,6 along with exercising its Article III, Section 2, paragraph 2 authority to make “exceptions” and “regulations” designed to end SCOTUS’ long line of landmark abomination cases. This state also appeals to its congressional delegation to exercise its life-saving and rights-protecting authority under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment whose plain words give Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of Rights,7 which subsumes the authority to define their scope and to balance competing interests, while the “privileges and immunities” clause identifies as protectable rights those listed in the Constitution.8 <br />
<br />
Official world-wide definitions of “crimes against humanity” apply “to representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission”, whether elected representatives or unelected judges.”9<br />
<br />
Any court review of this law must be expedited, because lives are lost with each day that courts delay.10 7/230 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of Legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Malfeasance in office:''' official misconduct; violation of a public trust or obligation; specifically, the doing of an act which is positively unlawful or wrongful.<br />
<br />
'''Subsumes:''' Includes. To include or place within something larger or more comprehensive: encompass as a subordinate or component element red, green, and yellow are subsumed under the term "color" <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: 396 State Legislators from 41 States <> Melinda Thybault/Moral Outcry <> and by Matthew J. Franck, Director of the William E. and Carol G. Simon Center on Religion and the Constitution at the Witherspoon Institute and visiting lecturer in politics at Princeton University</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small></div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Reversing_Landmark_Abomination_Cases&diff=50380Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases2024-01-02T05:16:08Z<p>DaveLeach: /* Statement of Facts #12 of 12:Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable. The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives. */</p>
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<div>{| class="wikitable"<br />
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<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters<br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion</span><br />
<br />
by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal<br />
''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal<br />
<span style="color:brown"><br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen <br />
<br />
by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 18:06, 15 October 2023 (UTC)<br />
<br />
=Introduction=<br />
<br />
This book offers twelve statements of fact about babies and abortion which I challenge any voter, lawyer, lawmaker, or judge to refute. Their footnotes contain nuggets from the 140 "Amicus" briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' (2022), the ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade. These statements are designed to soften the resistance of voters to outlawing baby murder, when presented in public, and to force judges to outlaw abortion in every state, when presented in court. <br />
<br />
They are truths designed to be so unignorable, that when any lawmaker includes them in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, in any state, prodeath fury will help publicize them with each advance through legislative deadlines. When friends of babies see them survive scrutiny, the force of these truths will grow like a snowball rolling down a hill. <br />
<br />
But murdering babies is only the most egregious of many Landmark Abomination Cases. Their common thread is usurping authority which the Constitution assigns to others, and equating the Bible with spurious religions. “Never let a crisis go to waste”, say the enemies of God, but God is the true master of turning evil into an opportunity for good. It’s time. Let’s end the Supreme Court’s war against God.<br />
<br />
The very fact that abortion is the worst of the ways the United States Supreme Court has turned American law upside down creates an opportunity to heal that branch of our government, and heal all the harm to our nation and its culture and morals that it has caused. As Professor Nathan Schluetter at Hillsdale College observes, “We must not let this opportunity pass to boldly challenge the prevailing jurisprudence and its attendant epistemological and moral skepticism with respect to abortion.”<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
It is the '''fact''' that unborn babies are living human children that makes killing them murder. It’s not what any ''law'' says about it, or even what the Constitution says about it. That’s what leaves ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' on the edge of reality, by treating this fact as something for voters to figure out, not on the basis of whether babies are ''in fact'' people but on the basis of some “value” they place on ''little'' people. <br />
<br />
That '''fact''' is what makes <u>the consensus of court-recognized fact finders</u> a stronger legal reason to end legal abortion than a Life Amendment, and a powerful social reason in the Court of Public Opinion able to soften hearts to the silent screams of Jesus' little brothers and His quiet knocking on hearts' doors. Which makes it insane for prolifers to not even mention this legally dispositive consensus in each and every prolife court case, and every “finding of fact” in prolife legislation, along with leveling with the public about the Scriptures which are the real reason we even care.<br />
<br />
[[File:Cover_Cartoon.jpg]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
Why these solutions may help even where abortion is already outlawed<br />
<br />
(1) They could defeat a national abortion legalization.<br />
<br />
(2) They could help you sue a nearby “blue state” for helping its baby killers murder your children. <br />
<br />
(3) They could help if your district judges join the courtroom rebellion against Dobbs in other states.<br />
<br />
(4) They could help meet challenges in the Court of Public Opinion, for example through a Resolution that irrefutably addresses every objection you have ever heard, as understandable to voters as it is irrefutable to judges. That would help the public see through future judicial gaslighting, and support judicial reform: ie. www.savetheworld .saltshaker.us/wiki/Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_ stop_judges_from_legislating<br />
<br />
(5) I could sure use your feedback. Proverbs 15:22. <br />
<br />
----<br />
<center>'''Ending legal abortion everywhere in close to a year<br />
(the goal of the following bill language)<br />
<br>'''requires a law whose Findings of Facts: '''<br />
</center><br />
<br />
<br />
* '''contain evidence which no judge can squarely address and keep abortion legal anywhere:''' that unborn babies are real people – established by the (unanimous) consensus of court-recognized factfinders: juries, expert witnesses, 38 states, judges, and Congress;<br />
<br />
* '''present its evidence in a way that is clear and persuasive to voters,''' to help them resist judicial and media gaslighting; (See below for “Why court-recognized fact finders persuade Voters”)<br />
<br />
* '''address misunderstandings about abortion jurisprudence''' that divide prolifers, intimidate lawyers, and blind judges;<br />
<br />
'''AND WHOSE PENALTIES'''<br />
<br />
* '''restrict some aspect of abortion substantially enough''' that THEY can't be defended as a mere regulation with some other legitimate government purpose than saving lives. The restriction must be profound enough that its only possible defense is that it saves human lives. That will force courts to address the evidence that babies are fully human;<br />
<br />
* '''provide no distractions that let judges rule on some technicality and ignore the evidence that the law would save lives.''' A perfect law that addresses everything from exceptions to contraception multiplies a judge’s opportunity to say “we don’t need to reach the issue of when life begins because the law fails on a lesser issue.” A simple yet substantial restriction, with “findings” that address the legal obstacles, will survive courts, which will get courts out of the way of saving life, which will free lawmakers to work out the challenging details with time to get a comprehensive solution right and with hope that they won’t waste their time; <br />
<br />
* '''list specific penalties for specific situations,''' rather than broadly stated goals such as “babies are to be protected as much as adults”, leaving prosecutors and judges to guess what to punish, or how, in situations where evidence and culpability are different; <br />
<br />
* '''contain a “life of the mother” exception''' whose applicability is clear enough that mothers are not denied life-saving care until doctors are assured by lawyers that said care will not put the doctors in jail; and<br />
<br />
'''THE LAW SHOULD ALSO order courts to “expedite” any review,''' “because lives are lost with each day that courts delay”. <br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate!)<br />
<br />
More ideas: [[Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_stop_judges_from_legislating]]<br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate! See below for Expedited Review federal rules.) <br />
<br />
WORD COUNTS: Using only the first boldfaced paragraph of each of these 12 Findings, in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, will total about 200 words. The complete Findings, without footnotes, total nearly 3000 words. For the advantages of including enough information in a prolife law for the Findings to defend themselves, see “Too Lengthy?” below. <br />
<br />
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: I am not a lawyer. But writing about prolife legal defenses designed to bring legal abortion to an end, and Scriptures calling for that goal, for 25 years in my Prayer * Action News, being uncertified as a lawyer, has created the opportunity for a remarkable interaction with Planned Barrenhoods priciest lawyers. Because news reporters wouldn’t report that my reasoning was designed as legal defenses in court, or that they were grounded in the Bible, what that left was their accusation that I advocated crime; whereas had my defenses been successful they would have allowed citizens to stop murderers legally, putting an end to the reason citizens took action. <br />
<br />
__TOC__<br />
<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and family, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge inaction deny themselves Life More Abundantly. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget: free wisdom, guaranteed success===<br />
<br />
'''John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
James 1:5 If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, [without finding fault]; and it shall be given him. 6 But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering.''' (Gr. διακρινω not withdrawn from, ie. by lack of support from actions, or opposed, ie. by indecision) <br />
<br />
'''Matthew 21:21 ...If ye have faith, and doubt not''' (Gr. διακρινω) ...'''ye shall say unto this mountain, Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea; it shall be done. 22 And all things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive.'''<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and families, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge their own inaction deny themselves, not just their neighbors, Life More Abundantly.<br />
<br />
If you are not satisfied with life less abundantly – ongoing slaughter of innocents – you won’t be satisfied now that the fate of babies is decided by the “value” that voters place on little people. You will keep searching for a strategy to end all the slaughter: to both outlaw it, and make it unthinkable to all but the worst of murderers. <br />
<br />
If you believe you ''will'' reach every good goal you pursue with all your being, Matthew 21:21-22, you won’t be turned from ending the slaughter in every state by experts who tell you that is impossible which rules out a strategy for achieving it. You will search until you find God’s way to do God’s will. <br />
<br />
You won’t say “I'm not smart enough to question prolife legal authorities who advise giving up”, if you believe James 1:5 which promises you all the wisdom you need to do good. Nor will you ever say you are not smart enough to read and understand legal briefs, court rulings, or to reason with lawmakers, lawyers, and prolife leaders, as necessary.<br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will not excuse yourself from God’s call because you can’t talk well, like Moses, whom God answered “Who made mouths?” Exodus 4:11. Nor will you excuse yourself to God, saying you are but a child against the world’s superbrains, like Jeremiah, whom God answered, “Stop saying that! It is MY words you will speak, and I am no child!” Jeremiah 1:6-8. <br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will shine God’s light wherever you find Darkness, Matthew 5:13-16. Since nothing is darker than murdering your own baby, you will seek God’s help as you oppose this evil, and none of these excuses will withdraw you from action.<br />
<br />
===Final Warning: read this at your own risk===<br />
<br />
Warning: read at your own risk. Rough reading Ahead, that may knock you from your TV chair.<br />
<br />
'''Findings of Facts which No Judge can Squarely Address and Keep Abortion Legal'''<br />
<br />
=Part 1: Authority of Court-Recognized Fact Finders=<br />
<br />
<span style="color:grey"><small>''Try to imagine how a judge, reviewing a prolife law with these Findings of Facts, would be able to dodge this evidence - in fact, see if you can find ANYONE who can ''refute'' these facts - as opposed to not ''caring'' about facts - that is, not caring about reality:''</small></span><br />
<br />
====Statement of Fact #1 of 12: Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let any state legalize====<br />
<br />
'''Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let ''any'' state legalize.'''<br />
<br />
No fact can be more legally established than the fact that “life begins” at fertilization, being the consensus of every American legal authority who has taken a position, in every category of court-recognized finders of facts: juries,2 thousands of expert witnesses who were not contested,3 38 state legislatures,4 individual judges,5 and Congress.6 <br />
<br />
No legal authority has ruled that any unborn baby of a human is not in fact a human person, or that “life begins” any later than fertilization.7 <br />
<br />
No state can keep abortion legal now that this fact is established. This is so obvious that even Roe v. Wade said “of course”, and the lawyer for the abortionists agreed.8 <br />
For most public issues, disagreement is over facts.9 The only disagreement about abortion is between unanimous fact finders and those who don't care about facts.10 A court that won’t address the facts that justify and necessitate a law, or hear evidence of those facts, violates Due Process and has no legitimate jurisdiction to review that law.11 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 1 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? <br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
<br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
<br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True. <br />
<br />
<br />
</span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget #2: The Cost of Success===<br />
<br />
'''Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? '''<br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True.<br />
<br />
=====Statement of Facts #2 of 12: Courts Accept the Fact-Finding Authority of Legislatures, Juries, Experts for the same good reasons their findings persuade the public.=====<br />
<br />
SCOTUS must accept legislative findings of facts that are not obviously irrational. “..the existence of facts supporting the legislative judgment is to be presumed...not to be pronounced unconstitutional unless in the light of the facts made known or generally assumed it is of such a character as to preclude the assumption that it rests upon some rational basis within the knowledge and experience of the legislators....” U.S. v. Carolene Products, 304 U.S. 144, 152 (1938).1<br />
<br />
Besides the court-recognized fact finding authority of legislatures, courts must conform their rulings to laws until such time as courts declare laws unconstitutional. No court has overturned the “unborn victims of violence” laws (based on “human babies are people”) of 39 states and Congress, despite many challenges.2<br />
<br />
To do so would require a court to positively affirm that human life does not begin until much later, which no legal authority has done, and for which no evidence exists.<br />
<br />
'''Legislatures'''. Lawmakers are there by the choice of a majority of voters. They are bombarded by information from experts. They are scrutinized by other lawmakers. Many are lawyers, some of whom are constitutional scholars and past or future judges. They set the salaries of judges, and have the power to hold impeachment trials of judges. Congress, the national legislature, scrutinizes Supreme Court justices. <br />
<br />
Many Congressmen are equally qualified: 15 U.S. Senators have served on the Supreme Court, and more were nominated.3 <br />
<br />
'''Juries''' are tested for impartiality. They are educated by the most qualified expert witnesses available. They study as long as necessary to establish truth – sometimes for months.4<br />
<br />
'''Expert Witnesses''' are the best experts money can buy, and they are scrutinized by the other side’s experts.5 <br />
<br />
It is for strong reasons that the findings of court-recognized fact finders are as respected in court as in the Court of Public Opinion.6<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 2 + Footnotes]]<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Mark 8:38 '''Whosoever therefore shall be ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful generation; of him also shall the Son of man be ashamed''', when he cometh in the glory of his Father with the holy angels.<br />
<br />
We Bible believing conservatives need to quit blaming social media and CIA censorship for our failures and stop censoring ourselves. <br />
<br />
I offer a way of stating evidence which no judge, news reporter, Democrat, or unbeliever can refute, along with answering objections that have crippled prolife messaging and legal strategy. But we despair of reaching those who stop their ears to evidence. “What’s the use of tightening our message? You’re preaching to the choir. We know babies are people but those other people have their opinion too.”<br />
<br />
I’m not "preaching to the choir". I’m passing out a new composition to the choir for a coming TV special.<br />
<br />
Most of those who won’t listen, won’t vote either, rendering their willful ignorance relatively benign. Stop worrying about them. All they will do is hate you, lie about you, wreck your business – childish stuff. We progress by clearly articulating to the extent possible. The same Bible which is the main reason we care about babies promises all the protection we need to finish what we are here to do.<br />
<br />
It isn’t just saving baby bodies where we self censor. Adult souls are lost. We hold back sharing what we know about God. Snap out of it. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
----<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #3 of 12: The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS====<br />
<br />
From Roe (1973) through Dobbs (2022), SCOTUS evaded that core issue.1 <br />
<br />
SCOTUS never ruled babies Non-Persons “as a Matter of Law”, as lower courts allege.2 Roe made that fact not only relevant, but dispositive with a holding which no court has disputed even though Roe’s main holding was overturned:3 <br />
<br />
“[Prolifers] argue that the fetus is a ‘person’ within the language and meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment....If this suggestion of personhood is established, the [abortionist’s] case, of course, collapses, for the fetus’ right to life would then be guaranteed specifically by the [14th] Amendment [thus outlawing abortion in EVERY state]. The [abortionist’s lawyer] conceded as much....”4<br />
<br />
Dobbs explicitly left this statement of the obvious untouched, saying “our decision is not based on any view about when a State should regard pre-natal life as having rights or legally cognizable interests....”5 Dobbs did not say babies aren’t people. Dobbs did not say voters should still decide whether babies can be murdered in the face of proof that babies are in fact people.6 Dobbs left in place Roe’s observation that “establishment” of this fact, independently of any law, ruling, or future constitutional amendment,7 dictates whether abortion is legally recognizable as a right or as a crime.8<br />
<br />
This established fact is as relevant today as when Roe said “of course” it is.<br />
<br />
This established fact is not disestablished by any judge’s alleged inability to understand it.9<br />
<br />
This established FACT is not made irrelevant by any judge’s theory that the legal right of little humans to live is “impossible” to determine so it should be decided by their value to big humans.10<br />
<br />
If only those legally recognized as “persons” were people, slavery could still be legal and the 14th Amendment would mean nothing. Slavery states would merely need to classify their victims as only 3/5 human.11 The Amendment protects those who are IN FACT people – what is irrelevant is whether babies are people “as a matter of law”.12 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 3 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #4 of 12: Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life====<br />
<br />
Detectable heartbeats and brain waves are evidence that a person has not yet died, throughout state and federal law.1 Reason demands they be accepted as evidence that a person has begun to live.2<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 4 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #5 of 12: Legislatures should regulate abortion, as Dobbs held, just as legislatures regulate the prosecution of all other murders====<br />
<br />
But not in the sense of absolute discretion to leave wholesale murders of a supposedly unwanted group of humans completely unregulated. That interpretation of Dobbs’ holding is premised on a “mistake of fact”, which is an official exception to Stare Decisis. 1<br />
<br />
The “Mistake of Fact” that is the premise of letting voters decide whether to continue judge-approved genocide according to the “value” they place on little people is that the humanity of babies of humans is either unknowable or irrelevant. That premise was explicit in Roe and Casey, and implicit in Dobbs.2 <br />
<br />
That is an “erroneous factual premise”. The fact that little unborn humans are humans is neither unknowable3 nor irrelevant. It is verifiable and dispositive.4 The consensus of court-recognized fact finders cures that knowledge deficit, canceling that interpretation of Dobbs’ holding, while reinforcing Dobbs’ other two holdings that “The Constitution does not confer a right to abortion” and “Roe and Casey are overruled”, and requiring the outlawing of baby killing in every state.5 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 5 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #6 of 12: The full humanity of a tiny physical body is hard for many to grasp. But what distinguishes us from animals isn’t physical, and has no known pre-conscious stage====<br />
<br />
DON’T READ past this 28 word paragraph unless you want <br />
an edge-of-your-seat adventure – legal ammunition <br />
against not only baby killing but also against the myth <br />
of the irrelevance of God in the reasoning of judges, <br />
lawmakers, and voters! Yet Roe v Wade, of all cases, <br />
"opened the door" with its sophomoric review of "theologians", <br />
and #6 comes charging through! <> The rest of this Statement <br />
is for lawmakers who want a stronger, clearer statement, <br />
and who have the stomach for the larger battle.<br />
<br />
Part of Roe’s definition of “person” was “infused with a soul”.1 Roe thus affirmed the belief of most of society, a belief logically demanded by the common knowledge that humans are distinguished from animals by consciousness which features a capacity for choices at variance with physical needs: to sacrifice one's interests for another,2 which is how John 15:13 defines “love”. And conversely, to destroy one’s own body.3<br />
<br />
These differences, along with self awareness and the capacity to choose between good and evil4 – to behave either as an angel or as a demon, can’t be explained by any known physical process. These differences justify greater legal protection of humans than of animals. <br />
<br />
Since a “soul” without consciousness has never been theorized and can’t be imagined, the consensus of fact finders is, in effect, that abortion kills babies with conscious souls. The lack of any physical explanation for a conscious soul rules out any reason to infer immaturity of consciousness from physical immaturity, and is consistent with the report in Luke 1:44 that a baby at 6 months heard a righteous voice [and/or felt the righteous Presence of God] and responded with joy,5 a response not everybody chooses, indicating that even the capacity for choosing between good and evil precedes birth. And also indicating that when a baby is killed by dismemberment, acid, or sucking out the brain, a self-aware conscious soul feels the pain, understands the cruelty, and if out-of-body near-death experiences are real, sees who is doing it.<br />
<br />
Even considering the body only, there is no objective line between birth and conception distinguishing “humans” from “nonpersons”, or between “meaningful life” and life which courts are free to terminate.6 Without such a line, there can be no stage of gestation at which killing a baby can be objectively distinguished from murder. No baby is safe while that line remains arbitrary. <br />
<br />
The failure of some to grasp the humanity of babies at any given stage is a dangerous basis for permitting killing, since as many fail to grasp the full humanity of quite a number of distinct groups of born persons.<br />
<br />
As Roe correctly established, it can be useful in clarifying who to count as a human with an unalienable right to life, to consult the religion from which that right was copied into America’s founding documents. But religions which oppose the foundation of American law – equal rights for all humans, merit little credibility in American courts when their claims justify destruction of an entire people group – such as the claim that souls do not enter bodies until around birth. There can be “free exercise” of religions which do not equally reverence all human life only to the extent their “exercise” does not violate the rights of others or the laws enacted to protect them.7<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] <br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #7 of 12: Congress has ''Already'' Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment already authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion, without allowing Congress to legalize it====<br />
<br />
<small>FORGET YOU READ this 32 word Statement and DON’T read farther – <br />
certainly not the footnotes – if you don’t want to question <br />
the near consensus of prolife leaders who say “we are helpless <br />
to outlaw abortion in every state before we get ANOTHER <br />
personhood law through Congress, if not a Life Amendment <br />
to the Constitution.” <> This is the 7th of 12 Statements <br />
designed to push courts out of the way of defending Life <br />
in every state when included in the Findings of Facts of <br />
prolife laws. The material below can make it clearer and stronger.</small><br />
<br />
Congress established in 2004 that: “‘unborn child’ means a child in utero, and the term ‘child in utero’...means a member of the species Homo Sapiens, at any stage of development, who is carried in the womb”, 18 U.S.C. 1841(d).1 <br />
<br />
This fact is not diminished by clause (c) which does not “permit [authorize] the prosecution of any person for...an abortion for which the consent of the pregnant woman...has been obtained.…”2 A law misaligned with facts does not block future lawmakers from making corrections, and states don’t need Congress’ “permission” to obey the 14th Amendment. <br />
<br />
The reason 18 U.S.C. 1841(d) has had no effect on the practice of legal abortion is not because of any deficiency in its authority to establish dispositive facts, but because no state law reviewed by SCOTUS has cited it to establish what Roe correctly said once “established” would “of course” require the end of legal abortion. <br />
<br />
Not only is the 2004 law unmitigated evidence of life strong enough to “collapse” legal abortion by itself, but it would not be stronger if it were an Amendment to the Constitution.3 No other Constitutional Amendment is relied on for evidence of a fact. An Amendment can bind courts. But establishment of the Facts Of Life by evidence presented, cited, and tested in court draws not only courts, but society, closer to reality.4<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #8 of 12: Roe, Dobbs, and the 14th Amendment agree: All Humans are “Persons”====<br />
<br />
<small>DON’T READ past this 11 word Statement <br />
unless you like to stare at where crazy lawyers <br />
ever got the idea that human babies aren’t people!</small><br />
<br />
Neither Roe nor Dobbs distinguished between “humans” and “persons” as if a “human” baby isn’t necessarily a “person”. [2] Nor does the 14th Amendment leave any human unprotected.<br />
<br />
Roe v. Wade equated the time an unborn child becomes “recognizably human” with the time the child becomes a “person”: “These disciplines variously approached the question [“of when life begins”] in terms of the point at which the embryo or fetus became ‘formed’ or recognizably human, or in terms of when a ‘person’ came into being, that is, infused with a ‘soul’ or ‘animated.’” 410 U.S. 113, 133(1973)<br />
<br />
Dobbs cites the belief that “a human person comes into being at conception” without distinguishing between the two words. [3] The word “person” in the 14th Amendment meant “An individual human being...man, woman, or child...consisting of body and soul.” The word “child” in that 1828 definition included unborn children, since to be “with child” meant to be pregnant. [4]<br />
<br />
Therefore the Amendment’s “nor shall any state deprive any person of life” and “equal protection” of every “person” means every human, including those unborn. Nothing about the first clause keeps later clauses from protecting unborn humans. [5]<br />
<br />
See also Wong Wing v. United States, 163 U.S.228, 242 (1896), “The term ‘person’ is broad enough to include any and every human being within the jurisdiction of the republic...This has been decided so often that the point does not require argument.” Steinberg v. Brown 321 F. Supp. 741 (N.D. Ohio, 1970) “[o]nce human life has commenced, the constitutional protections found in the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments impose upon the state a duty of safeguarding it”. [6]<br />
<br />
The word “persons” in the 14th Amendment means all who are IN FACT humans. Had it been only for those who are legally recognized as human, every deprivation of fundamental rights would be “constitutional” so long as a law or ruling questions whether its victims are “persons in the whole sense”.<br />
<br />
Although Dobbs showed by disproving the opposite that reverence for all human life from fertilization was “deeply rooted in America’s law and traditions”, that is not why rights merit 14th Amendment protection. By the “deeply rooted” test, slavery would be legal today, since freedom for slaves had zero historical support.<br />
<br />
Nor does it matter if the Amendment authors even wanted to protect all humans. In fact, it doesn’t matter if there is a 14th Amendment. If law is not equal upon its operation on all humans, which is the very definition of the word “law” as developed by Samuel Rutherford’s “Lex Rex” and Blackstone and adopted by America’s founders, to that extent there is, by definition, no “rule of law”, no restraint upon the “strong” to not tyrannize the “weak”.<br />
<br />
There is a direct test of whether babies merit 14th Amendment protection that does not require a romp through history: [7] see if their parents are humans.<br />
<br />
“To say that the test of equal protection should be the ‘legal’ rather than the biological relationship is to avoid the issue. For the Equal Protection Clause necessarily limits the authority of a State [or its judges] to draw such ‘legal’ lines as it chooses.” Glona, 391 U.S. 73, 75 (1968) [8]<br />
<br />
FOOTNOTES: see [[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
<small>The footnotes are enriched by selections from the Amicus Briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson by: Lee J. Strang <> Scholars of Jurisprudence John M. Finnis and Robert P. George <> Mary Kay Bacallao Advocating for Unborn Children <> Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide <> and by selections from the 1996 debate between Judge Robert Bork and Professor Nathan Schluetter</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small>'<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #9 of 12: When pregnancies develop into medical emergencies requiring separation of mother and child to save the mother, the child has an equally fundamental right to life and medical care.====<br />
<br />
A legislature’s balancing of their interests cannot, therefore, be reviewed by “strict scrutiny”.2 Nor does alleged insufficiency of a “medical emergency” exception from a general abortion ban justify a court overturning the ban in the 99% of cases where no emergency is alleged.3 Legislatures are better equipped to deliberate about and secure the rights of all citizens than courts whose focus is the parties before them.4<br />
<br />
SCOTUS never denied that a legislature’s “personhood” statements in an abortion ban are strong evidence.5 That evidence is not mitigated by a ban’s exceptions.6 It is not made irrelevant because baby killers “rely” on killing babies.7 28/130 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
Fundamental Right: This is a term not found in the Constitution but made up by SCOTUS for the rights SCOTUS makes up which often displace rights actually listed in the Constitution. Justice Clarence Thomas is eloquent on this point. More about this later.<br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: A Foundation for Moral Law <> Pennsylvania Pro-Life Federation <> 396 State Legislators from 41 States</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #10 of 12: Tyranny over any class of humans by any other is prohibited by the Constitution, and by the Declaration, which gives the purpose of the Constitution and rests its own authority on the revelation of God1 in the Bible====<br />
<br />
Roe v Wade was not out of line to consult “those trained in... theology” who study souls, as well as doctors who study bodies, to clarify who to count as human with an unalienable right to life.3 <br />
<br />
America’s Freedom springs from “all men are created equal” and “equal protection of the laws” for all humans even if their looks, language, wealth, strength, ancestry, power, or faith are different.4 These rights have proven such a blessing to the world that their source, the Bible, deserves the fair hearing owed any witness whose reliability has been confirmed, when it promises still greater blessings if we will equally protect humans whose physical size is different.5 <br />
<br />
Its testimony is not “cumulative”, but “probative”.6 It is not to be feared as dispositive or compulsory: American freedom balances human understanding of how best to apply Biblical principles to government against the willingness of voting majorities to follow those principles. Even that is a Biblical principle legitimized in 1 Samuel 8.7 <br />
<br />
The history of slavery, Prohibition, and abortion illustrate the “willingness” factor. The probative value of the testimony of God is proved by the fact that without it, slavery would never have ended, and the prolife movement would never have begun. Which makes it probative to observe that not only the 14th Amendment, but also the revelation of God, requires this state, as it does every state, to outlaw all trampling of fundamental rights of any class of people, including abortion of babies.8 Where the two authorities say the same thing, the Bible, for all its alleged ambiguity, is better understood and more trusted than the Constitution which has indeed proven “a thing of wax” in the nimble fingers of even the most scrupulous judges.9 <br />
<br />
Without God – without belief in a more objective standard of right and wrong than the “value” that voters place on “different” people through “evolving community standards”, it is impossible to understand fundamental rights.10 <br />
<br />
Courts have demonstrated this impossibility by so often confusing abominations for rights, decimating those whom Jesus said “forbid them not to come unto Me”, denying that He created them, murdering 17% of them, sodomizing 20% of the survivors, and censoring 100% of His teachings in schools.11 <br />
<br />
That destruction of the 14th Amendment (1868) began when “Substantive Due Process”, pioneered in Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857), was applied in United States v. Cruikshank 92 U. S. 542 (1876) to acquit a white Democrat mililtia of murdering “as many as 165” black Republicans and burning down the courthouse they were defending.12 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring God does not “establish religion”. It does not compel belief, action or endorsement. It simply allows judges and voters to make informed decisions. It is part of fact-finding. It is part of reasoning. Part of embracing reality. Part of examining “the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth”. Judges must stop punishing people for telling the truth just because the truth favors God.13 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring the Bible does not require equal weight for claims of religions that deny equal rights for all.14 <br />
<br />
For example, some claim “souls” don’t enter babies until long after fertilization, or even long after birth.15 Their claims do not “cancel” the mountain of consensus of court-recognized fact finders that souls are present from the beginning. Our Constitution and laws reject their unequal rights, and are appropriately wary of their rationales for their unequal rights. The credibility of every witness is not equal. Credibility is earned. <br />
There can be “free exercise” of religions hostile to “equal protection of the laws” only to the extent their “exercise” does not threaten the rights of others or violate the laws enacted to protect them – laws ultimately decided by voting majorities, hopefully well informed through the uncensoring of reality.16 39/520 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms: <br />
<br />
'''Cumulative''': testimony so redundant that it wastes the court’s time<br />
Dispositive: testimony so strong that it settles the issue with no more<br />
Probative: probative facts establish, or contribute to, proof. Probative value is the degree of relevance of evidence. <br />
<br />
'''Prohibition''': From 1920 to 1932, drinking (alcohol) was made illegal, banned by an actual Constitutional Amendment. Actual alcohol consumption dropped by about 50%, or at least that is how much Cirrhosis of the Liver cases dropped. During that time the drop in drinking led to an economic boom, called the “Roaring Twenties”, which unfortunately were not remembered for their prosperity but for their immorality. In 1928, the prosperity collapsed into a “Great Depression” due to cheating by stock market investors. In 1932 Americans wanted liquor so bad they ratified another Constitutional Amendment repealing the 1920 Amendment. <br />
<br />
'''Substantive Due Process''': As Justice Clarence Thomas eloquently explains – see Statement #11 footnotes, this phrase was made up by SCOTUS to justify making up what it calls “fundamental rights” as its tool of repealing laws it doesn’t like. It gets its name from the SCOTUS claim that the “Due Process” clause of the 14th Amendment gives SCOTUS its authority to make up rights and call them “fundamental”. But “Due Process” only meant the legal procedures which everyone must be given equally, to defend their rights in court when necessary. The phrase has nothing to do with identifying what rights are protectable. But “Substantive” means those rights we care about, that the Constitution protects. Like freedom of speech or religion. Because “substantive” means substantial, serious rights, and “due process” has nothing to do with identifying any rights, the LONANG Institute observes in Statement #11 notes that “substantive due process” is an oxymoron. <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: Foundation for Moral Law and Lutherans for Life <> Jewish Prolife Foundation <> LONANG Institute <> U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and Other Religious Organizations <> Claremont Institute’s Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #11 of 12: The 14th Amendment gives federal courts no “due process” authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the “right” to murder, and gives Congress no authority to legalize violations of Constitutional Rights, like taking a baby’s right to Life====<br />
<br />
The sole federal authority over state laws regarding the rights of their own citizens is through the 14th Amendment, Sections One and Five.1 Contrary to SCOTUS rulings, the 14th Amendment explicitly provides:<br />
<br />
* '''Congress authorized, not courts.''' Congress, not courts, determines the manner and scope of federal intervention in states whose laws don’t protect their citizens’ rights.2 Congress is not limited to enforcing only those rights of which SCOTUS approves, nor only to the extent that SCOTUS approves,3 nor only when state governments, not individuals, directly violate rights.4 <br />
<br />
* Federal courts aren’t permitted to stop either states or Congress from protecting enumerated rights (like Life), or to repeal their laws for conflicting with unenumerated [not listed in the Constitution] “rights” (like the “right” to murder babies), or to intervene in states’ protection of rights beyond prosecuting violations of federal laws.5 <br />
<br />
* Nor can Congress stop states from protecting enumerated rights. Neither Congress nor federal courts may overturn a state law protecting the lives of unborn babies from surgical abortion, chemical abortion, or contraceptives.6<br />
<br />
* The rights subject to federal enforcement are not those made up by SCOTUS allegedly based on the “Due Process” clause,7 but those listed in the Constitution, referred to as “privileges and immunities”8 (including, for unborn babies, the “privilege” of life and “immunity” from “cruel and unusual punishment” and execution “without due process of law”).9 <br />
* Enumerated Rights recognized before the Constitution existed are not excluded from Congressional intervention.10<br />
<br />
* '''“Substantive Due Process”''' is the sophistry by which SCOTUS turned the Constitution’s Authority to Define Rights, and Congress’ 14th Amendment Section 5 Authority to Enforce Rights, into its own authority to reclassify abominations as “rights”.11 It is an illegal, unconstitutional, Freedom-crushing fraud from Hell fomenting a long line of Landmark Abomination Cases.12 <br />
<br />
<small>Mini-lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Due Process:''' The duty of courts to give all parties to cases the fair and equal procedures and opportunities for defending themselves.<br />
<br />
(This argument for ending SCOTUS’ long line of Landmark Abomination Cases continues in Part Two of this book where its focus on SCOTUS-mandated murder of babies created in the Image of God is extended to SCOTUS’ censorship of God Himself.) <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amici who filed briefs in Dobbs v. Jackson: Lonang Institute <> Christian Legal Society <> AfricanAmerican, Hispanic, Roman Catholic and Protestant Religious and Civil Rights Organizations <> Senators Josh Hawley, Mike Lee, and Ted Cruz. And from Judge Robert Bork <> Nathan Schlueter, Professor of Philosophy and Religion, Hillsdale College, (when he debated Judge Bork in 2003 he was assistant professor of pre-law and political science at St. Ambrose University. Author, “Unborn Persons and the Fourteenth Amendment.” 2002.) <> Erwin Chemerinsky, Dean of Berkeley Law School <> Legal Information Institute, Cornell University <> Justice Clarence Thomas, dissents and concurrences <> justia.com <> James Gray Pope, Professor of Law and Sidney Reitman Scholar, Rutgers University School of Law <> Libby Adler professor of law and women’s, gender, and sexuality studies, Northeastern University Christmas, 2023''</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #12 of 12:Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable. The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives.====<br />
<br />
Any judge interfering with this state’s compliance with the 14th Amendment and its ancient authority to protect its people1 – the central reason governments exist, is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders,2 and is guilty of exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide through an unconstitutional ruling,3 which exceeds the judicial powers given by any Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment.4The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives, including (1) giving the state Supreme Court original jurisdiction over any challenge to a law, (2) requiring that review be expedited, (3) requiring a supermajority of the Court to suspend a law, (4) questioning justices in a public hearing about the constitutionality of their ruling, and (5) overturning the ruling with a supermajority of the legislature.5 <br />
<br />
Should any federal judge so interfere with this state’s constitutional duty, this state appeals to its congressional delegation to examine similar grounds for disciplinary action,6 along with exercising its Article III, Section 2, paragraph 2 authority to make “exceptions” and “regulations” designed to end SCOTUS’ long line of landmark abomination cases. This state also appeals to its congressional delegation to exercise its life-saving and rights-protecting authority under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment whose plain words give Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of Rights,7 which subsumes the authority to define their scope and to balance competing interests, while the “privileges and immunities” clause identifies as protectable rights those listed in the Constitution.8 <br />
<br />
Official world-wide definitions of “crimes against humanity” apply “to representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission”, whether elected representatives or unelected judges.”9<br />
<br />
Any court review of this law must be expedited, because lives are lost with each day that courts delay.10 7/230 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of Legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Malfeasance in office:''' official misconduct; violation of a public trust or obligation; specifically, the doing of an act which is positively unlawful or wrongful.<br />
<br />
'''Subsumes:''' Includes. To include or place within something larger or more comprehensive: encompass as a subordinate or component element red, green, and yellow are subsumed under the term "color" <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: 396 State Legislators from 41 States <> Melinda Thybault/Moral Outcry <> and by Matthew J. Franck, Director of the William E. and Carol G. Simon Center on Religion and the Constitution at the Witherspoon Institute and visiting lecturer in politics at Princeton University</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small></div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Reversing_Landmark_Abomination_Cases&diff=50379Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases2024-01-02T05:15:43Z<p>DaveLeach: /* Statement of Facts #11 of 12: The 14th Amendment gives federal courts no “due process” authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the “right” to murder, and gives Congress no authority to legalize violations of Const...</p>
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<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters<br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion</span><br />
<br />
by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal<br />
''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal<br />
<span style="color:brown"><br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen <br />
<br />
by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 18:06, 15 October 2023 (UTC)<br />
<br />
=Introduction=<br />
<br />
This book offers twelve statements of fact about babies and abortion which I challenge any voter, lawyer, lawmaker, or judge to refute. Their footnotes contain nuggets from the 140 "Amicus" briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' (2022), the ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade. These statements are designed to soften the resistance of voters to outlawing baby murder, when presented in public, and to force judges to outlaw abortion in every state, when presented in court. <br />
<br />
They are truths designed to be so unignorable, that when any lawmaker includes them in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, in any state, prodeath fury will help publicize them with each advance through legislative deadlines. When friends of babies see them survive scrutiny, the force of these truths will grow like a snowball rolling down a hill. <br />
<br />
But murdering babies is only the most egregious of many Landmark Abomination Cases. Their common thread is usurping authority which the Constitution assigns to others, and equating the Bible with spurious religions. “Never let a crisis go to waste”, say the enemies of God, but God is the true master of turning evil into an opportunity for good. It’s time. Let’s end the Supreme Court’s war against God.<br />
<br />
The very fact that abortion is the worst of the ways the United States Supreme Court has turned American law upside down creates an opportunity to heal that branch of our government, and heal all the harm to our nation and its culture and morals that it has caused. As Professor Nathan Schluetter at Hillsdale College observes, “We must not let this opportunity pass to boldly challenge the prevailing jurisprudence and its attendant epistemological and moral skepticism with respect to abortion.”<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
It is the '''fact''' that unborn babies are living human children that makes killing them murder. It’s not what any ''law'' says about it, or even what the Constitution says about it. That’s what leaves ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' on the edge of reality, by treating this fact as something for voters to figure out, not on the basis of whether babies are ''in fact'' people but on the basis of some “value” they place on ''little'' people. <br />
<br />
That '''fact''' is what makes <u>the consensus of court-recognized fact finders</u> a stronger legal reason to end legal abortion than a Life Amendment, and a powerful social reason in the Court of Public Opinion able to soften hearts to the silent screams of Jesus' little brothers and His quiet knocking on hearts' doors. Which makes it insane for prolifers to not even mention this legally dispositive consensus in each and every prolife court case, and every “finding of fact” in prolife legislation, along with leveling with the public about the Scriptures which are the real reason we even care.<br />
<br />
[[File:Cover_Cartoon.jpg]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
Why these solutions may help even where abortion is already outlawed<br />
<br />
(1) They could defeat a national abortion legalization.<br />
<br />
(2) They could help you sue a nearby “blue state” for helping its baby killers murder your children. <br />
<br />
(3) They could help if your district judges join the courtroom rebellion against Dobbs in other states.<br />
<br />
(4) They could help meet challenges in the Court of Public Opinion, for example through a Resolution that irrefutably addresses every objection you have ever heard, as understandable to voters as it is irrefutable to judges. That would help the public see through future judicial gaslighting, and support judicial reform: ie. www.savetheworld .saltshaker.us/wiki/Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_ stop_judges_from_legislating<br />
<br />
(5) I could sure use your feedback. Proverbs 15:22. <br />
<br />
----<br />
<center>'''Ending legal abortion everywhere in close to a year<br />
(the goal of the following bill language)<br />
<br>'''requires a law whose Findings of Facts: '''<br />
</center><br />
<br />
<br />
* '''contain evidence which no judge can squarely address and keep abortion legal anywhere:''' that unborn babies are real people – established by the (unanimous) consensus of court-recognized factfinders: juries, expert witnesses, 38 states, judges, and Congress;<br />
<br />
* '''present its evidence in a way that is clear and persuasive to voters,''' to help them resist judicial and media gaslighting; (See below for “Why court-recognized fact finders persuade Voters”)<br />
<br />
* '''address misunderstandings about abortion jurisprudence''' that divide prolifers, intimidate lawyers, and blind judges;<br />
<br />
'''AND WHOSE PENALTIES'''<br />
<br />
* '''restrict some aspect of abortion substantially enough''' that THEY can't be defended as a mere regulation with some other legitimate government purpose than saving lives. The restriction must be profound enough that its only possible defense is that it saves human lives. That will force courts to address the evidence that babies are fully human;<br />
<br />
* '''provide no distractions that let judges rule on some technicality and ignore the evidence that the law would save lives.''' A perfect law that addresses everything from exceptions to contraception multiplies a judge’s opportunity to say “we don’t need to reach the issue of when life begins because the law fails on a lesser issue.” A simple yet substantial restriction, with “findings” that address the legal obstacles, will survive courts, which will get courts out of the way of saving life, which will free lawmakers to work out the challenging details with time to get a comprehensive solution right and with hope that they won’t waste their time; <br />
<br />
* '''list specific penalties for specific situations,''' rather than broadly stated goals such as “babies are to be protected as much as adults”, leaving prosecutors and judges to guess what to punish, or how, in situations where evidence and culpability are different; <br />
<br />
* '''contain a “life of the mother” exception''' whose applicability is clear enough that mothers are not denied life-saving care until doctors are assured by lawyers that said care will not put the doctors in jail; and<br />
<br />
'''THE LAW SHOULD ALSO order courts to “expedite” any review,''' “because lives are lost with each day that courts delay”. <br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate!)<br />
<br />
More ideas: [[Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_stop_judges_from_legislating]]<br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate! See below for Expedited Review federal rules.) <br />
<br />
WORD COUNTS: Using only the first boldfaced paragraph of each of these 12 Findings, in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, will total about 200 words. The complete Findings, without footnotes, total nearly 3000 words. For the advantages of including enough information in a prolife law for the Findings to defend themselves, see “Too Lengthy?” below. <br />
<br />
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: I am not a lawyer. But writing about prolife legal defenses designed to bring legal abortion to an end, and Scriptures calling for that goal, for 25 years in my Prayer * Action News, being uncertified as a lawyer, has created the opportunity for a remarkable interaction with Planned Barrenhoods priciest lawyers. Because news reporters wouldn’t report that my reasoning was designed as legal defenses in court, or that they were grounded in the Bible, what that left was their accusation that I advocated crime; whereas had my defenses been successful they would have allowed citizens to stop murderers legally, putting an end to the reason citizens took action. <br />
<br />
__TOC__<br />
<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and family, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge inaction deny themselves Life More Abundantly. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget: free wisdom, guaranteed success===<br />
<br />
'''John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
James 1:5 If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, [without finding fault]; and it shall be given him. 6 But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering.''' (Gr. διακρινω not withdrawn from, ie. by lack of support from actions, or opposed, ie. by indecision) <br />
<br />
'''Matthew 21:21 ...If ye have faith, and doubt not''' (Gr. διακρινω) ...'''ye shall say unto this mountain, Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea; it shall be done. 22 And all things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive.'''<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and families, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge their own inaction deny themselves, not just their neighbors, Life More Abundantly.<br />
<br />
If you are not satisfied with life less abundantly – ongoing slaughter of innocents – you won’t be satisfied now that the fate of babies is decided by the “value” that voters place on little people. You will keep searching for a strategy to end all the slaughter: to both outlaw it, and make it unthinkable to all but the worst of murderers. <br />
<br />
If you believe you ''will'' reach every good goal you pursue with all your being, Matthew 21:21-22, you won’t be turned from ending the slaughter in every state by experts who tell you that is impossible which rules out a strategy for achieving it. You will search until you find God’s way to do God’s will. <br />
<br />
You won’t say “I'm not smart enough to question prolife legal authorities who advise giving up”, if you believe James 1:5 which promises you all the wisdom you need to do good. Nor will you ever say you are not smart enough to read and understand legal briefs, court rulings, or to reason with lawmakers, lawyers, and prolife leaders, as necessary.<br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will not excuse yourself from God’s call because you can’t talk well, like Moses, whom God answered “Who made mouths?” Exodus 4:11. Nor will you excuse yourself to God, saying you are but a child against the world’s superbrains, like Jeremiah, whom God answered, “Stop saying that! It is MY words you will speak, and I am no child!” Jeremiah 1:6-8. <br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will shine God’s light wherever you find Darkness, Matthew 5:13-16. Since nothing is darker than murdering your own baby, you will seek God’s help as you oppose this evil, and none of these excuses will withdraw you from action.<br />
<br />
===Final Warning: read this at your own risk===<br />
<br />
Warning: read at your own risk. Rough reading Ahead, that may knock you from your TV chair.<br />
<br />
'''Findings of Facts which No Judge can Squarely Address and Keep Abortion Legal'''<br />
<br />
=Part 1: Authority of Court-Recognized Fact Finders=<br />
<br />
<span style="color:grey"><small>''Try to imagine how a judge, reviewing a prolife law with these Findings of Facts, would be able to dodge this evidence - in fact, see if you can find ANYONE who can ''refute'' these facts - as opposed to not ''caring'' about facts - that is, not caring about reality:''</small></span><br />
<br />
====Statement of Fact #1 of 12: Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let any state legalize====<br />
<br />
'''Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let ''any'' state legalize.'''<br />
<br />
No fact can be more legally established than the fact that “life begins” at fertilization, being the consensus of every American legal authority who has taken a position, in every category of court-recognized finders of facts: juries,2 thousands of expert witnesses who were not contested,3 38 state legislatures,4 individual judges,5 and Congress.6 <br />
<br />
No legal authority has ruled that any unborn baby of a human is not in fact a human person, or that “life begins” any later than fertilization.7 <br />
<br />
No state can keep abortion legal now that this fact is established. This is so obvious that even Roe v. Wade said “of course”, and the lawyer for the abortionists agreed.8 <br />
For most public issues, disagreement is over facts.9 The only disagreement about abortion is between unanimous fact finders and those who don't care about facts.10 A court that won’t address the facts that justify and necessitate a law, or hear evidence of those facts, violates Due Process and has no legitimate jurisdiction to review that law.11 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 1 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? <br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
<br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
<br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True. <br />
<br />
<br />
</span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget #2: The Cost of Success===<br />
<br />
'''Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? '''<br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True.<br />
<br />
=====Statement of Facts #2 of 12: Courts Accept the Fact-Finding Authority of Legislatures, Juries, Experts for the same good reasons their findings persuade the public.=====<br />
<br />
SCOTUS must accept legislative findings of facts that are not obviously irrational. “..the existence of facts supporting the legislative judgment is to be presumed...not to be pronounced unconstitutional unless in the light of the facts made known or generally assumed it is of such a character as to preclude the assumption that it rests upon some rational basis within the knowledge and experience of the legislators....” U.S. v. Carolene Products, 304 U.S. 144, 152 (1938).1<br />
<br />
Besides the court-recognized fact finding authority of legislatures, courts must conform their rulings to laws until such time as courts declare laws unconstitutional. No court has overturned the “unborn victims of violence” laws (based on “human babies are people”) of 39 states and Congress, despite many challenges.2<br />
<br />
To do so would require a court to positively affirm that human life does not begin until much later, which no legal authority has done, and for which no evidence exists.<br />
<br />
'''Legislatures'''. Lawmakers are there by the choice of a majority of voters. They are bombarded by information from experts. They are scrutinized by other lawmakers. Many are lawyers, some of whom are constitutional scholars and past or future judges. They set the salaries of judges, and have the power to hold impeachment trials of judges. Congress, the national legislature, scrutinizes Supreme Court justices. <br />
<br />
Many Congressmen are equally qualified: 15 U.S. Senators have served on the Supreme Court, and more were nominated.3 <br />
<br />
'''Juries''' are tested for impartiality. They are educated by the most qualified expert witnesses available. They study as long as necessary to establish truth – sometimes for months.4<br />
<br />
'''Expert Witnesses''' are the best experts money can buy, and they are scrutinized by the other side’s experts.5 <br />
<br />
It is for strong reasons that the findings of court-recognized fact finders are as respected in court as in the Court of Public Opinion.6<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 2 + Footnotes]]<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Mark 8:38 '''Whosoever therefore shall be ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful generation; of him also shall the Son of man be ashamed''', when he cometh in the glory of his Father with the holy angels.<br />
<br />
We Bible believing conservatives need to quit blaming social media and CIA censorship for our failures and stop censoring ourselves. <br />
<br />
I offer a way of stating evidence which no judge, news reporter, Democrat, or unbeliever can refute, along with answering objections that have crippled prolife messaging and legal strategy. But we despair of reaching those who stop their ears to evidence. “What’s the use of tightening our message? You’re preaching to the choir. We know babies are people but those other people have their opinion too.”<br />
<br />
I’m not "preaching to the choir". I’m passing out a new composition to the choir for a coming TV special.<br />
<br />
Most of those who won’t listen, won’t vote either, rendering their willful ignorance relatively benign. Stop worrying about them. All they will do is hate you, lie about you, wreck your business – childish stuff. We progress by clearly articulating to the extent possible. The same Bible which is the main reason we care about babies promises all the protection we need to finish what we are here to do.<br />
<br />
It isn’t just saving baby bodies where we self censor. Adult souls are lost. We hold back sharing what we know about God. Snap out of it. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
----<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #3 of 12: The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS====<br />
<br />
From Roe (1973) through Dobbs (2022), SCOTUS evaded that core issue.1 <br />
<br />
SCOTUS never ruled babies Non-Persons “as a Matter of Law”, as lower courts allege.2 Roe made that fact not only relevant, but dispositive with a holding which no court has disputed even though Roe’s main holding was overturned:3 <br />
<br />
“[Prolifers] argue that the fetus is a ‘person’ within the language and meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment....If this suggestion of personhood is established, the [abortionist’s] case, of course, collapses, for the fetus’ right to life would then be guaranteed specifically by the [14th] Amendment [thus outlawing abortion in EVERY state]. The [abortionist’s lawyer] conceded as much....”4<br />
<br />
Dobbs explicitly left this statement of the obvious untouched, saying “our decision is not based on any view about when a State should regard pre-natal life as having rights or legally cognizable interests....”5 Dobbs did not say babies aren’t people. Dobbs did not say voters should still decide whether babies can be murdered in the face of proof that babies are in fact people.6 Dobbs left in place Roe’s observation that “establishment” of this fact, independently of any law, ruling, or future constitutional amendment,7 dictates whether abortion is legally recognizable as a right or as a crime.8<br />
<br />
This established fact is as relevant today as when Roe said “of course” it is.<br />
<br />
This established fact is not disestablished by any judge’s alleged inability to understand it.9<br />
<br />
This established FACT is not made irrelevant by any judge’s theory that the legal right of little humans to live is “impossible” to determine so it should be decided by their value to big humans.10<br />
<br />
If only those legally recognized as “persons” were people, slavery could still be legal and the 14th Amendment would mean nothing. Slavery states would merely need to classify their victims as only 3/5 human.11 The Amendment protects those who are IN FACT people – what is irrelevant is whether babies are people “as a matter of law”.12 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 3 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #4 of 12: Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life====<br />
<br />
Detectable heartbeats and brain waves are evidence that a person has not yet died, throughout state and federal law.1 Reason demands they be accepted as evidence that a person has begun to live.2<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 4 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #5 of 12: Legislatures should regulate abortion, as Dobbs held, just as legislatures regulate the prosecution of all other murders====<br />
<br />
But not in the sense of absolute discretion to leave wholesale murders of a supposedly unwanted group of humans completely unregulated. That interpretation of Dobbs’ holding is premised on a “mistake of fact”, which is an official exception to Stare Decisis. 1<br />
<br />
The “Mistake of Fact” that is the premise of letting voters decide whether to continue judge-approved genocide according to the “value” they place on little people is that the humanity of babies of humans is either unknowable or irrelevant. That premise was explicit in Roe and Casey, and implicit in Dobbs.2 <br />
<br />
That is an “erroneous factual premise”. The fact that little unborn humans are humans is neither unknowable3 nor irrelevant. It is verifiable and dispositive.4 The consensus of court-recognized fact finders cures that knowledge deficit, canceling that interpretation of Dobbs’ holding, while reinforcing Dobbs’ other two holdings that “The Constitution does not confer a right to abortion” and “Roe and Casey are overruled”, and requiring the outlawing of baby killing in every state.5 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 5 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #6 of 12: The full humanity of a tiny physical body is hard for many to grasp. But what distinguishes us from animals isn’t physical, and has no known pre-conscious stage====<br />
<br />
DON’T READ past this 28 word paragraph unless you want <br />
an edge-of-your-seat adventure – legal ammunition <br />
against not only baby killing but also against the myth <br />
of the irrelevance of God in the reasoning of judges, <br />
lawmakers, and voters! Yet Roe v Wade, of all cases, <br />
"opened the door" with its sophomoric review of "theologians", <br />
and #6 comes charging through! <> The rest of this Statement <br />
is for lawmakers who want a stronger, clearer statement, <br />
and who have the stomach for the larger battle.<br />
<br />
Part of Roe’s definition of “person” was “infused with a soul”.1 Roe thus affirmed the belief of most of society, a belief logically demanded by the common knowledge that humans are distinguished from animals by consciousness which features a capacity for choices at variance with physical needs: to sacrifice one's interests for another,2 which is how John 15:13 defines “love”. And conversely, to destroy one’s own body.3<br />
<br />
These differences, along with self awareness and the capacity to choose between good and evil4 – to behave either as an angel or as a demon, can’t be explained by any known physical process. These differences justify greater legal protection of humans than of animals. <br />
<br />
Since a “soul” without consciousness has never been theorized and can’t be imagined, the consensus of fact finders is, in effect, that abortion kills babies with conscious souls. The lack of any physical explanation for a conscious soul rules out any reason to infer immaturity of consciousness from physical immaturity, and is consistent with the report in Luke 1:44 that a baby at 6 months heard a righteous voice [and/or felt the righteous Presence of God] and responded with joy,5 a response not everybody chooses, indicating that even the capacity for choosing between good and evil precedes birth. And also indicating that when a baby is killed by dismemberment, acid, or sucking out the brain, a self-aware conscious soul feels the pain, understands the cruelty, and if out-of-body near-death experiences are real, sees who is doing it.<br />
<br />
Even considering the body only, there is no objective line between birth and conception distinguishing “humans” from “nonpersons”, or between “meaningful life” and life which courts are free to terminate.6 Without such a line, there can be no stage of gestation at which killing a baby can be objectively distinguished from murder. No baby is safe while that line remains arbitrary. <br />
<br />
The failure of some to grasp the humanity of babies at any given stage is a dangerous basis for permitting killing, since as many fail to grasp the full humanity of quite a number of distinct groups of born persons.<br />
<br />
As Roe correctly established, it can be useful in clarifying who to count as a human with an unalienable right to life, to consult the religion from which that right was copied into America’s founding documents. But religions which oppose the foundation of American law – equal rights for all humans, merit little credibility in American courts when their claims justify destruction of an entire people group – such as the claim that souls do not enter bodies until around birth. There can be “free exercise” of religions which do not equally reverence all human life only to the extent their “exercise” does not violate the rights of others or the laws enacted to protect them.7<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] <br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #7 of 12: Congress has ''Already'' Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment already authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion, without allowing Congress to legalize it====<br />
<br />
<small>FORGET YOU READ this 32 word Statement and DON’T read farther – <br />
certainly not the footnotes – if you don’t want to question <br />
the near consensus of prolife leaders who say “we are helpless <br />
to outlaw abortion in every state before we get ANOTHER <br />
personhood law through Congress, if not a Life Amendment <br />
to the Constitution.” <> This is the 7th of 12 Statements <br />
designed to push courts out of the way of defending Life <br />
in every state when included in the Findings of Facts of <br />
prolife laws. The material below can make it clearer and stronger.</small><br />
<br />
Congress established in 2004 that: “‘unborn child’ means a child in utero, and the term ‘child in utero’...means a member of the species Homo Sapiens, at any stage of development, who is carried in the womb”, 18 U.S.C. 1841(d).1 <br />
<br />
This fact is not diminished by clause (c) which does not “permit [authorize] the prosecution of any person for...an abortion for which the consent of the pregnant woman...has been obtained.…”2 A law misaligned with facts does not block future lawmakers from making corrections, and states don’t need Congress’ “permission” to obey the 14th Amendment. <br />
<br />
The reason 18 U.S.C. 1841(d) has had no effect on the practice of legal abortion is not because of any deficiency in its authority to establish dispositive facts, but because no state law reviewed by SCOTUS has cited it to establish what Roe correctly said once “established” would “of course” require the end of legal abortion. <br />
<br />
Not only is the 2004 law unmitigated evidence of life strong enough to “collapse” legal abortion by itself, but it would not be stronger if it were an Amendment to the Constitution.3 No other Constitutional Amendment is relied on for evidence of a fact. An Amendment can bind courts. But establishment of the Facts Of Life by evidence presented, cited, and tested in court draws not only courts, but society, closer to reality.4<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #8 of 12: Roe, Dobbs, and the 14th Amendment agree: All Humans are “Persons”====<br />
<br />
<small>DON’T READ past this 11 word Statement <br />
unless you like to stare at where crazy lawyers <br />
ever got the idea that human babies aren’t people!</small><br />
<br />
Neither Roe nor Dobbs distinguished between “humans” and “persons” as if a “human” baby isn’t necessarily a “person”. [2] Nor does the 14th Amendment leave any human unprotected.<br />
<br />
Roe v. Wade equated the time an unborn child becomes “recognizably human” with the time the child becomes a “person”: “These disciplines variously approached the question [“of when life begins”] in terms of the point at which the embryo or fetus became ‘formed’ or recognizably human, or in terms of when a ‘person’ came into being, that is, infused with a ‘soul’ or ‘animated.’” 410 U.S. 113, 133(1973)<br />
<br />
Dobbs cites the belief that “a human person comes into being at conception” without distinguishing between the two words. [3] The word “person” in the 14th Amendment meant “An individual human being...man, woman, or child...consisting of body and soul.” The word “child” in that 1828 definition included unborn children, since to be “with child” meant to be pregnant. [4]<br />
<br />
Therefore the Amendment’s “nor shall any state deprive any person of life” and “equal protection” of every “person” means every human, including those unborn. Nothing about the first clause keeps later clauses from protecting unborn humans. [5]<br />
<br />
See also Wong Wing v. United States, 163 U.S.228, 242 (1896), “The term ‘person’ is broad enough to include any and every human being within the jurisdiction of the republic...This has been decided so often that the point does not require argument.” Steinberg v. Brown 321 F. Supp. 741 (N.D. Ohio, 1970) “[o]nce human life has commenced, the constitutional protections found in the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments impose upon the state a duty of safeguarding it”. [6]<br />
<br />
The word “persons” in the 14th Amendment means all who are IN FACT humans. Had it been only for those who are legally recognized as human, every deprivation of fundamental rights would be “constitutional” so long as a law or ruling questions whether its victims are “persons in the whole sense”.<br />
<br />
Although Dobbs showed by disproving the opposite that reverence for all human life from fertilization was “deeply rooted in America’s law and traditions”, that is not why rights merit 14th Amendment protection. By the “deeply rooted” test, slavery would be legal today, since freedom for slaves had zero historical support.<br />
<br />
Nor does it matter if the Amendment authors even wanted to protect all humans. In fact, it doesn’t matter if there is a 14th Amendment. If law is not equal upon its operation on all humans, which is the very definition of the word “law” as developed by Samuel Rutherford’s “Lex Rex” and Blackstone and adopted by America’s founders, to that extent there is, by definition, no “rule of law”, no restraint upon the “strong” to not tyrannize the “weak”.<br />
<br />
There is a direct test of whether babies merit 14th Amendment protection that does not require a romp through history: [7] see if their parents are humans.<br />
<br />
“To say that the test of equal protection should be the ‘legal’ rather than the biological relationship is to avoid the issue. For the Equal Protection Clause necessarily limits the authority of a State [or its judges] to draw such ‘legal’ lines as it chooses.” Glona, 391 U.S. 73, 75 (1968) [8]<br />
<br />
FOOTNOTES: see [[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
<small>The footnotes are enriched by selections from the Amicus Briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson by: Lee J. Strang <> Scholars of Jurisprudence John M. Finnis and Robert P. George <> Mary Kay Bacallao Advocating for Unborn Children <> Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide <> and by selections from the 1996 debate between Judge Robert Bork and Professor Nathan Schluetter</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small>'<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #9 of 12: When pregnancies develop into medical emergencies requiring separation of mother and child to save the mother, the child has an equally fundamental right to life and medical care.====<br />
<br />
A legislature’s balancing of their interests cannot, therefore, be reviewed by “strict scrutiny”.2 Nor does alleged insufficiency of a “medical emergency” exception from a general abortion ban justify a court overturning the ban in the 99% of cases where no emergency is alleged.3 Legislatures are better equipped to deliberate about and secure the rights of all citizens than courts whose focus is the parties before them.4<br />
<br />
SCOTUS never denied that a legislature’s “personhood” statements in an abortion ban are strong evidence.5 That evidence is not mitigated by a ban’s exceptions.6 It is not made irrelevant because baby killers “rely” on killing babies.7 28/130 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
Fundamental Right: This is a term not found in the Constitution but made up by SCOTUS for the rights SCOTUS makes up which often displace rights actually listed in the Constitution. Justice Clarence Thomas is eloquent on this point. More about this later.<br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: A Foundation for Moral Law <> Pennsylvania Pro-Life Federation <> 396 State Legislators from 41 States</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #10 of 12: Tyranny over any class of humans by any other is prohibited by the Constitution, and by the Declaration, which gives the purpose of the Constitution and rests its own authority on the revelation of God1 in the Bible====<br />
<br />
Roe v Wade was not out of line to consult “those trained in... theology” who study souls, as well as doctors who study bodies, to clarify who to count as human with an unalienable right to life.3 <br />
<br />
America’s Freedom springs from “all men are created equal” and “equal protection of the laws” for all humans even if their looks, language, wealth, strength, ancestry, power, or faith are different.4 These rights have proven such a blessing to the world that their source, the Bible, deserves the fair hearing owed any witness whose reliability has been confirmed, when it promises still greater blessings if we will equally protect humans whose physical size is different.5 <br />
<br />
Its testimony is not “cumulative”, but “probative”.6 It is not to be feared as dispositive or compulsory: American freedom balances human understanding of how best to apply Biblical principles to government against the willingness of voting majorities to follow those principles. Even that is a Biblical principle legitimized in 1 Samuel 8.7 <br />
<br />
The history of slavery, Prohibition, and abortion illustrate the “willingness” factor. The probative value of the testimony of God is proved by the fact that without it, slavery would never have ended, and the prolife movement would never have begun. Which makes it probative to observe that not only the 14th Amendment, but also the revelation of God, requires this state, as it does every state, to outlaw all trampling of fundamental rights of any class of people, including abortion of babies.8 Where the two authorities say the same thing, the Bible, for all its alleged ambiguity, is better understood and more trusted than the Constitution which has indeed proven “a thing of wax” in the nimble fingers of even the most scrupulous judges.9 <br />
<br />
Without God – without belief in a more objective standard of right and wrong than the “value” that voters place on “different” people through “evolving community standards”, it is impossible to understand fundamental rights.10 <br />
<br />
Courts have demonstrated this impossibility by so often confusing abominations for rights, decimating those whom Jesus said “forbid them not to come unto Me”, denying that He created them, murdering 17% of them, sodomizing 20% of the survivors, and censoring 100% of His teachings in schools.11 <br />
<br />
That destruction of the 14th Amendment (1868) began when “Substantive Due Process”, pioneered in Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857), was applied in United States v. Cruikshank 92 U. S. 542 (1876) to acquit a white Democrat mililtia of murdering “as many as 165” black Republicans and burning down the courthouse they were defending.12 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring God does not “establish religion”. It does not compel belief, action or endorsement. It simply allows judges and voters to make informed decisions. It is part of fact-finding. It is part of reasoning. Part of embracing reality. Part of examining “the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth”. Judges must stop punishing people for telling the truth just because the truth favors God.13 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring the Bible does not require equal weight for claims of religions that deny equal rights for all.14 <br />
<br />
For example, some claim “souls” don’t enter babies until long after fertilization, or even long after birth.15 Their claims do not “cancel” the mountain of consensus of court-recognized fact finders that souls are present from the beginning. Our Constitution and laws reject their unequal rights, and are appropriately wary of their rationales for their unequal rights. The credibility of every witness is not equal. Credibility is earned. <br />
There can be “free exercise” of religions hostile to “equal protection of the laws” only to the extent their “exercise” does not threaten the rights of others or violate the laws enacted to protect them – laws ultimately decided by voting majorities, hopefully well informed through the uncensoring of reality.16 39/520 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms: <br />
<br />
'''Cumulative''': testimony so redundant that it wastes the court’s time<br />
Dispositive: testimony so strong that it settles the issue with no more<br />
Probative: probative facts establish, or contribute to, proof. Probative value is the degree of relevance of evidence. <br />
<br />
'''Prohibition''': From 1920 to 1932, drinking (alcohol) was made illegal, banned by an actual Constitutional Amendment. Actual alcohol consumption dropped by about 50%, or at least that is how much Cirrhosis of the Liver cases dropped. During that time the drop in drinking led to an economic boom, called the “Roaring Twenties”, which unfortunately were not remembered for their prosperity but for their immorality. In 1928, the prosperity collapsed into a “Great Depression” due to cheating by stock market investors. In 1932 Americans wanted liquor so bad they ratified another Constitutional Amendment repealing the 1920 Amendment. <br />
<br />
'''Substantive Due Process''': As Justice Clarence Thomas eloquently explains – see Statement #11 footnotes, this phrase was made up by SCOTUS to justify making up what it calls “fundamental rights” as its tool of repealing laws it doesn’t like. It gets its name from the SCOTUS claim that the “Due Process” clause of the 14th Amendment gives SCOTUS its authority to make up rights and call them “fundamental”. But “Due Process” only meant the legal procedures which everyone must be given equally, to defend their rights in court when necessary. The phrase has nothing to do with identifying what rights are protectable. But “Substantive” means those rights we care about, that the Constitution protects. Like freedom of speech or religion. Because “substantive” means substantial, serious rights, and “due process” has nothing to do with identifying any rights, the LONANG Institute observes in Statement #11 notes that “substantive due process” is an oxymoron. <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: Foundation for Moral Law and Lutherans for Life <> Jewish Prolife Foundation <> LONANG Institute <> U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and Other Religious Organizations <> Claremont Institute’s Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #11 of 12: The 14th Amendment gives federal courts no “due process” authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the “right” to murder, and gives Congress no authority to legalize violations of Constitutional Rights, like taking a baby’s right to Life====<br />
<br />
The sole federal authority over state laws regarding the rights of their own citizens is through the 14th Amendment, Sections One and Five.1 Contrary to SCOTUS rulings, the 14th Amendment explicitly provides:<br />
<br />
* '''Congress authorized, not courts.''' Congress, not courts, determines the manner and scope of federal intervention in states whose laws don’t protect their citizens’ rights.2 Congress is not limited to enforcing only those rights of which SCOTUS approves, nor only to the extent that SCOTUS approves,3 nor only when state governments, not individuals, directly violate rights.4 <br />
<br />
* Federal courts aren’t permitted to stop either states or Congress from protecting enumerated rights (like Life), or to repeal their laws for conflicting with unenumerated [not listed in the Constitution] “rights” (like the “right” to murder babies), or to intervene in states’ protection of rights beyond prosecuting violations of federal laws.5 <br />
<br />
* Nor can Congress stop states from protecting enumerated rights. Neither Congress nor federal courts may overturn a state law protecting the lives of unborn babies from surgical abortion, chemical abortion, or contraceptives.6<br />
<br />
* The rights subject to federal enforcement are not those made up by SCOTUS allegedly based on the “Due Process” clause,7 but those listed in the Constitution, referred to as “privileges and immunities”8 (including, for unborn babies, the “privilege” of life and “immunity” from “cruel and unusual punishment” and execution “without due process of law”).9 <br />
* Enumerated Rights recognized before the Constitution existed are not excluded from Congressional intervention.10<br />
<br />
* '''“Substantive Due Process”''' is the sophistry by which SCOTUS turned the Constitution’s Authority to Define Rights, and Congress’ 14th Amendment Section 5 Authority to Enforce Rights, into its own authority to reclassify abominations as “rights”.11 It is an illegal, unconstitutional, Freedom-crushing fraud from Hell fomenting a long line of Landmark Abomination Cases.12 <br />
<br />
<small>Mini-lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Due Process:''' The duty of courts to give all parties to cases the fair and equal procedures and opportunities for defending themselves.<br />
<br />
(This argument for ending SCOTUS’ long line of Landmark Abomination Cases continues in Part Two of this book where its focus on SCOTUS-mandated murder of babies created in the Image of God is extended to SCOTUS’ censorship of God Himself.) <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amici who filed briefs in Dobbs v. Jackson: Lonang Institute <> Christian Legal Society <> AfricanAmerican, Hispanic, Roman Catholic and Protestant Religious and Civil Rights Organizations <> Senators Josh Hawley, Mike Lee, and Ted Cruz. And from Judge Robert Bork <> Nathan Schlueter, Professor of Philosophy and Religion, Hillsdale College, (when he debated Judge Bork in 2003 he was assistant professor of pre-law and political science at St. Ambrose University. Author, “Unborn Persons and the Fourteenth Amendment.” 2002.) <> Erwin Chemerinsky, Dean of Berkeley Law School <> Legal Information Institute, Cornell University <> Justice Clarence Thomas, dissents and concurrences <> justia.com <> James Gray Pope, Professor of Law and Sidney Reitman Scholar, Rutgers University School of Law <> Libby Adler professor of law and women’s, gender, and sexuality studies, Northeastern University Christmas, 2023''</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #12 of 12:Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable. The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives.====<br />
<br />
Any judge interfering with this state’s compliance with the 14th Amendment and its ancient authority to protect its people1 – the central reason governments exist, is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders,2 and is guilty of exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide through an unconstitutional ruling,3 which exceeds the judicial powers given by any Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment.4The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives, including (1) giving the state Supreme Court original jurisdiction over any challenge to a law, (2) requiring that review be expedited, (3) requiring a supermajority of the Court to suspend a law, (4) questioning justices in a public hearing about the constitutionality of their ruling, and (5) overturning the ruling with a supermajority of the legislature.5 <br />
<br />
Should any federal judge so interfere with this state’s constitutional duty, this state appeals to its congressional delegation to examine similar grounds for disciplinary action,6 along with exercising its Article III, Section 2, paragraph 2 authority to make “exceptions” and “regulations” designed to end SCOTUS’ long line of landmark abomination cases. This state also appeals to its congressional delegation to exercise its life-saving and rights-protecting authority under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment whose plain words give Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of Rights,7 which subsumes the authority to define their scope and to balance competing interests, while the “privileges and immunities” clause identifies as protectable rights those listed in the Constitution.8 <br />
<br />
Official world-wide definitions of “crimes against humanity” apply “to representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission”, whether elected representatives or unelected judges.”9<br />
<br />
Any court review of this law must be expedited, because lives are lost with each day that courts delay.10 7/230 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of Legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Malfeasance in office:''' official misconduct; violation of a public trust or obligation; specifically, the doing of an act which is positively unlawful or wrongful.<br />
<br />
'''Subsumes:''' Includes. To include or place within something larger or more comprehensive: encompass as a subordinate or component element red, green, and yellow are subsumed under the term "color" <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: 396 State Legislators from 41 States <> Melinda Thybault/Moral Outcry <> and by Matthew J. Franck, Director of the William E. and Carol G. Simon Center on Religion and the Constitution at the Witherspoon Institute and visiting lecturer in politics at Princeton University</small></div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Reversing_Landmark_Abomination_Cases&diff=50378Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases2024-01-02T05:15:11Z<p>DaveLeach: /* Statement of Facts #10 of 12: Tyranny over any class of humans by any other is prohibited by the Constitution, and by the Declaration, which gives the purpose of the Constitution and rests its own authority on the revelation of God1 in the Bible */</p>
<hr />
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<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters<br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion</span><br />
<br />
by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal<br />
''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal<br />
<span style="color:brown"><br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen <br />
<br />
by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 18:06, 15 October 2023 (UTC)<br />
<br />
=Introduction=<br />
<br />
This book offers twelve statements of fact about babies and abortion which I challenge any voter, lawyer, lawmaker, or judge to refute. Their footnotes contain nuggets from the 140 "Amicus" briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' (2022), the ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade. These statements are designed to soften the resistance of voters to outlawing baby murder, when presented in public, and to force judges to outlaw abortion in every state, when presented in court. <br />
<br />
They are truths designed to be so unignorable, that when any lawmaker includes them in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, in any state, prodeath fury will help publicize them with each advance through legislative deadlines. When friends of babies see them survive scrutiny, the force of these truths will grow like a snowball rolling down a hill. <br />
<br />
But murdering babies is only the most egregious of many Landmark Abomination Cases. Their common thread is usurping authority which the Constitution assigns to others, and equating the Bible with spurious religions. “Never let a crisis go to waste”, say the enemies of God, but God is the true master of turning evil into an opportunity for good. It’s time. Let’s end the Supreme Court’s war against God.<br />
<br />
The very fact that abortion is the worst of the ways the United States Supreme Court has turned American law upside down creates an opportunity to heal that branch of our government, and heal all the harm to our nation and its culture and morals that it has caused. As Professor Nathan Schluetter at Hillsdale College observes, “We must not let this opportunity pass to boldly challenge the prevailing jurisprudence and its attendant epistemological and moral skepticism with respect to abortion.”<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
It is the '''fact''' that unborn babies are living human children that makes killing them murder. It’s not what any ''law'' says about it, or even what the Constitution says about it. That’s what leaves ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' on the edge of reality, by treating this fact as something for voters to figure out, not on the basis of whether babies are ''in fact'' people but on the basis of some “value” they place on ''little'' people. <br />
<br />
That '''fact''' is what makes <u>the consensus of court-recognized fact finders</u> a stronger legal reason to end legal abortion than a Life Amendment, and a powerful social reason in the Court of Public Opinion able to soften hearts to the silent screams of Jesus' little brothers and His quiet knocking on hearts' doors. Which makes it insane for prolifers to not even mention this legally dispositive consensus in each and every prolife court case, and every “finding of fact” in prolife legislation, along with leveling with the public about the Scriptures which are the real reason we even care.<br />
<br />
[[File:Cover_Cartoon.jpg]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
Why these solutions may help even where abortion is already outlawed<br />
<br />
(1) They could defeat a national abortion legalization.<br />
<br />
(2) They could help you sue a nearby “blue state” for helping its baby killers murder your children. <br />
<br />
(3) They could help if your district judges join the courtroom rebellion against Dobbs in other states.<br />
<br />
(4) They could help meet challenges in the Court of Public Opinion, for example through a Resolution that irrefutably addresses every objection you have ever heard, as understandable to voters as it is irrefutable to judges. That would help the public see through future judicial gaslighting, and support judicial reform: ie. www.savetheworld .saltshaker.us/wiki/Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_ stop_judges_from_legislating<br />
<br />
(5) I could sure use your feedback. Proverbs 15:22. <br />
<br />
----<br />
<center>'''Ending legal abortion everywhere in close to a year<br />
(the goal of the following bill language)<br />
<br>'''requires a law whose Findings of Facts: '''<br />
</center><br />
<br />
<br />
* '''contain evidence which no judge can squarely address and keep abortion legal anywhere:''' that unborn babies are real people – established by the (unanimous) consensus of court-recognized factfinders: juries, expert witnesses, 38 states, judges, and Congress;<br />
<br />
* '''present its evidence in a way that is clear and persuasive to voters,''' to help them resist judicial and media gaslighting; (See below for “Why court-recognized fact finders persuade Voters”)<br />
<br />
* '''address misunderstandings about abortion jurisprudence''' that divide prolifers, intimidate lawyers, and blind judges;<br />
<br />
'''AND WHOSE PENALTIES'''<br />
<br />
* '''restrict some aspect of abortion substantially enough''' that THEY can't be defended as a mere regulation with some other legitimate government purpose than saving lives. The restriction must be profound enough that its only possible defense is that it saves human lives. That will force courts to address the evidence that babies are fully human;<br />
<br />
* '''provide no distractions that let judges rule on some technicality and ignore the evidence that the law would save lives.''' A perfect law that addresses everything from exceptions to contraception multiplies a judge’s opportunity to say “we don’t need to reach the issue of when life begins because the law fails on a lesser issue.” A simple yet substantial restriction, with “findings” that address the legal obstacles, will survive courts, which will get courts out of the way of saving life, which will free lawmakers to work out the challenging details with time to get a comprehensive solution right and with hope that they won’t waste their time; <br />
<br />
* '''list specific penalties for specific situations,''' rather than broadly stated goals such as “babies are to be protected as much as adults”, leaving prosecutors and judges to guess what to punish, or how, in situations where evidence and culpability are different; <br />
<br />
* '''contain a “life of the mother” exception''' whose applicability is clear enough that mothers are not denied life-saving care until doctors are assured by lawyers that said care will not put the doctors in jail; and<br />
<br />
'''THE LAW SHOULD ALSO order courts to “expedite” any review,''' “because lives are lost with each day that courts delay”. <br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate!)<br />
<br />
More ideas: [[Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_stop_judges_from_legislating]]<br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate! See below for Expedited Review federal rules.) <br />
<br />
WORD COUNTS: Using only the first boldfaced paragraph of each of these 12 Findings, in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, will total about 200 words. The complete Findings, without footnotes, total nearly 3000 words. For the advantages of including enough information in a prolife law for the Findings to defend themselves, see “Too Lengthy?” below. <br />
<br />
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: I am not a lawyer. But writing about prolife legal defenses designed to bring legal abortion to an end, and Scriptures calling for that goal, for 25 years in my Prayer * Action News, being uncertified as a lawyer, has created the opportunity for a remarkable interaction with Planned Barrenhoods priciest lawyers. Because news reporters wouldn’t report that my reasoning was designed as legal defenses in court, or that they were grounded in the Bible, what that left was their accusation that I advocated crime; whereas had my defenses been successful they would have allowed citizens to stop murderers legally, putting an end to the reason citizens took action. <br />
<br />
__TOC__<br />
<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and family, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge inaction deny themselves Life More Abundantly. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget: free wisdom, guaranteed success===<br />
<br />
'''John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
James 1:5 If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, [without finding fault]; and it shall be given him. 6 But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering.''' (Gr. διακρινω not withdrawn from, ie. by lack of support from actions, or opposed, ie. by indecision) <br />
<br />
'''Matthew 21:21 ...If ye have faith, and doubt not''' (Gr. διακρινω) ...'''ye shall say unto this mountain, Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea; it shall be done. 22 And all things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive.'''<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and families, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge their own inaction deny themselves, not just their neighbors, Life More Abundantly.<br />
<br />
If you are not satisfied with life less abundantly – ongoing slaughter of innocents – you won’t be satisfied now that the fate of babies is decided by the “value” that voters place on little people. You will keep searching for a strategy to end all the slaughter: to both outlaw it, and make it unthinkable to all but the worst of murderers. <br />
<br />
If you believe you ''will'' reach every good goal you pursue with all your being, Matthew 21:21-22, you won’t be turned from ending the slaughter in every state by experts who tell you that is impossible which rules out a strategy for achieving it. You will search until you find God’s way to do God’s will. <br />
<br />
You won’t say “I'm not smart enough to question prolife legal authorities who advise giving up”, if you believe James 1:5 which promises you all the wisdom you need to do good. Nor will you ever say you are not smart enough to read and understand legal briefs, court rulings, or to reason with lawmakers, lawyers, and prolife leaders, as necessary.<br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will not excuse yourself from God’s call because you can’t talk well, like Moses, whom God answered “Who made mouths?” Exodus 4:11. Nor will you excuse yourself to God, saying you are but a child against the world’s superbrains, like Jeremiah, whom God answered, “Stop saying that! It is MY words you will speak, and I am no child!” Jeremiah 1:6-8. <br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will shine God’s light wherever you find Darkness, Matthew 5:13-16. Since nothing is darker than murdering your own baby, you will seek God’s help as you oppose this evil, and none of these excuses will withdraw you from action.<br />
<br />
===Final Warning: read this at your own risk===<br />
<br />
Warning: read at your own risk. Rough reading Ahead, that may knock you from your TV chair.<br />
<br />
'''Findings of Facts which No Judge can Squarely Address and Keep Abortion Legal'''<br />
<br />
=Part 1: Authority of Court-Recognized Fact Finders=<br />
<br />
<span style="color:grey"><small>''Try to imagine how a judge, reviewing a prolife law with these Findings of Facts, would be able to dodge this evidence - in fact, see if you can find ANYONE who can ''refute'' these facts - as opposed to not ''caring'' about facts - that is, not caring about reality:''</small></span><br />
<br />
====Statement of Fact #1 of 12: Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let any state legalize====<br />
<br />
'''Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let ''any'' state legalize.'''<br />
<br />
No fact can be more legally established than the fact that “life begins” at fertilization, being the consensus of every American legal authority who has taken a position, in every category of court-recognized finders of facts: juries,2 thousands of expert witnesses who were not contested,3 38 state legislatures,4 individual judges,5 and Congress.6 <br />
<br />
No legal authority has ruled that any unborn baby of a human is not in fact a human person, or that “life begins” any later than fertilization.7 <br />
<br />
No state can keep abortion legal now that this fact is established. This is so obvious that even Roe v. Wade said “of course”, and the lawyer for the abortionists agreed.8 <br />
For most public issues, disagreement is over facts.9 The only disagreement about abortion is between unanimous fact finders and those who don't care about facts.10 A court that won’t address the facts that justify and necessitate a law, or hear evidence of those facts, violates Due Process and has no legitimate jurisdiction to review that law.11 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 1 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? <br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
<br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
<br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True. <br />
<br />
<br />
</span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget #2: The Cost of Success===<br />
<br />
'''Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? '''<br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True.<br />
<br />
=====Statement of Facts #2 of 12: Courts Accept the Fact-Finding Authority of Legislatures, Juries, Experts for the same good reasons their findings persuade the public.=====<br />
<br />
SCOTUS must accept legislative findings of facts that are not obviously irrational. “..the existence of facts supporting the legislative judgment is to be presumed...not to be pronounced unconstitutional unless in the light of the facts made known or generally assumed it is of such a character as to preclude the assumption that it rests upon some rational basis within the knowledge and experience of the legislators....” U.S. v. Carolene Products, 304 U.S. 144, 152 (1938).1<br />
<br />
Besides the court-recognized fact finding authority of legislatures, courts must conform their rulings to laws until such time as courts declare laws unconstitutional. No court has overturned the “unborn victims of violence” laws (based on “human babies are people”) of 39 states and Congress, despite many challenges.2<br />
<br />
To do so would require a court to positively affirm that human life does not begin until much later, which no legal authority has done, and for which no evidence exists.<br />
<br />
'''Legislatures'''. Lawmakers are there by the choice of a majority of voters. They are bombarded by information from experts. They are scrutinized by other lawmakers. Many are lawyers, some of whom are constitutional scholars and past or future judges. They set the salaries of judges, and have the power to hold impeachment trials of judges. Congress, the national legislature, scrutinizes Supreme Court justices. <br />
<br />
Many Congressmen are equally qualified: 15 U.S. Senators have served on the Supreme Court, and more were nominated.3 <br />
<br />
'''Juries''' are tested for impartiality. They are educated by the most qualified expert witnesses available. They study as long as necessary to establish truth – sometimes for months.4<br />
<br />
'''Expert Witnesses''' are the best experts money can buy, and they are scrutinized by the other side’s experts.5 <br />
<br />
It is for strong reasons that the findings of court-recognized fact finders are as respected in court as in the Court of Public Opinion.6<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 2 + Footnotes]]<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Mark 8:38 '''Whosoever therefore shall be ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful generation; of him also shall the Son of man be ashamed''', when he cometh in the glory of his Father with the holy angels.<br />
<br />
We Bible believing conservatives need to quit blaming social media and CIA censorship for our failures and stop censoring ourselves. <br />
<br />
I offer a way of stating evidence which no judge, news reporter, Democrat, or unbeliever can refute, along with answering objections that have crippled prolife messaging and legal strategy. But we despair of reaching those who stop their ears to evidence. “What’s the use of tightening our message? You’re preaching to the choir. We know babies are people but those other people have their opinion too.”<br />
<br />
I’m not "preaching to the choir". I’m passing out a new composition to the choir for a coming TV special.<br />
<br />
Most of those who won’t listen, won’t vote either, rendering their willful ignorance relatively benign. Stop worrying about them. All they will do is hate you, lie about you, wreck your business – childish stuff. We progress by clearly articulating to the extent possible. The same Bible which is the main reason we care about babies promises all the protection we need to finish what we are here to do.<br />
<br />
It isn’t just saving baby bodies where we self censor. Adult souls are lost. We hold back sharing what we know about God. Snap out of it. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
----<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #3 of 12: The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS====<br />
<br />
From Roe (1973) through Dobbs (2022), SCOTUS evaded that core issue.1 <br />
<br />
SCOTUS never ruled babies Non-Persons “as a Matter of Law”, as lower courts allege.2 Roe made that fact not only relevant, but dispositive with a holding which no court has disputed even though Roe’s main holding was overturned:3 <br />
<br />
“[Prolifers] argue that the fetus is a ‘person’ within the language and meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment....If this suggestion of personhood is established, the [abortionist’s] case, of course, collapses, for the fetus’ right to life would then be guaranteed specifically by the [14th] Amendment [thus outlawing abortion in EVERY state]. The [abortionist’s lawyer] conceded as much....”4<br />
<br />
Dobbs explicitly left this statement of the obvious untouched, saying “our decision is not based on any view about when a State should regard pre-natal life as having rights or legally cognizable interests....”5 Dobbs did not say babies aren’t people. Dobbs did not say voters should still decide whether babies can be murdered in the face of proof that babies are in fact people.6 Dobbs left in place Roe’s observation that “establishment” of this fact, independently of any law, ruling, or future constitutional amendment,7 dictates whether abortion is legally recognizable as a right or as a crime.8<br />
<br />
This established fact is as relevant today as when Roe said “of course” it is.<br />
<br />
This established fact is not disestablished by any judge’s alleged inability to understand it.9<br />
<br />
This established FACT is not made irrelevant by any judge’s theory that the legal right of little humans to live is “impossible” to determine so it should be decided by their value to big humans.10<br />
<br />
If only those legally recognized as “persons” were people, slavery could still be legal and the 14th Amendment would mean nothing. Slavery states would merely need to classify their victims as only 3/5 human.11 The Amendment protects those who are IN FACT people – what is irrelevant is whether babies are people “as a matter of law”.12 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 3 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #4 of 12: Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life====<br />
<br />
Detectable heartbeats and brain waves are evidence that a person has not yet died, throughout state and federal law.1 Reason demands they be accepted as evidence that a person has begun to live.2<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 4 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #5 of 12: Legislatures should regulate abortion, as Dobbs held, just as legislatures regulate the prosecution of all other murders====<br />
<br />
But not in the sense of absolute discretion to leave wholesale murders of a supposedly unwanted group of humans completely unregulated. That interpretation of Dobbs’ holding is premised on a “mistake of fact”, which is an official exception to Stare Decisis. 1<br />
<br />
The “Mistake of Fact” that is the premise of letting voters decide whether to continue judge-approved genocide according to the “value” they place on little people is that the humanity of babies of humans is either unknowable or irrelevant. That premise was explicit in Roe and Casey, and implicit in Dobbs.2 <br />
<br />
That is an “erroneous factual premise”. The fact that little unborn humans are humans is neither unknowable3 nor irrelevant. It is verifiable and dispositive.4 The consensus of court-recognized fact finders cures that knowledge deficit, canceling that interpretation of Dobbs’ holding, while reinforcing Dobbs’ other two holdings that “The Constitution does not confer a right to abortion” and “Roe and Casey are overruled”, and requiring the outlawing of baby killing in every state.5 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 5 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #6 of 12: The full humanity of a tiny physical body is hard for many to grasp. But what distinguishes us from animals isn’t physical, and has no known pre-conscious stage====<br />
<br />
DON’T READ past this 28 word paragraph unless you want <br />
an edge-of-your-seat adventure – legal ammunition <br />
against not only baby killing but also against the myth <br />
of the irrelevance of God in the reasoning of judges, <br />
lawmakers, and voters! Yet Roe v Wade, of all cases, <br />
"opened the door" with its sophomoric review of "theologians", <br />
and #6 comes charging through! <> The rest of this Statement <br />
is for lawmakers who want a stronger, clearer statement, <br />
and who have the stomach for the larger battle.<br />
<br />
Part of Roe’s definition of “person” was “infused with a soul”.1 Roe thus affirmed the belief of most of society, a belief logically demanded by the common knowledge that humans are distinguished from animals by consciousness which features a capacity for choices at variance with physical needs: to sacrifice one's interests for another,2 which is how John 15:13 defines “love”. And conversely, to destroy one’s own body.3<br />
<br />
These differences, along with self awareness and the capacity to choose between good and evil4 – to behave either as an angel or as a demon, can’t be explained by any known physical process. These differences justify greater legal protection of humans than of animals. <br />
<br />
Since a “soul” without consciousness has never been theorized and can’t be imagined, the consensus of fact finders is, in effect, that abortion kills babies with conscious souls. The lack of any physical explanation for a conscious soul rules out any reason to infer immaturity of consciousness from physical immaturity, and is consistent with the report in Luke 1:44 that a baby at 6 months heard a righteous voice [and/or felt the righteous Presence of God] and responded with joy,5 a response not everybody chooses, indicating that even the capacity for choosing between good and evil precedes birth. And also indicating that when a baby is killed by dismemberment, acid, or sucking out the brain, a self-aware conscious soul feels the pain, understands the cruelty, and if out-of-body near-death experiences are real, sees who is doing it.<br />
<br />
Even considering the body only, there is no objective line between birth and conception distinguishing “humans” from “nonpersons”, or between “meaningful life” and life which courts are free to terminate.6 Without such a line, there can be no stage of gestation at which killing a baby can be objectively distinguished from murder. No baby is safe while that line remains arbitrary. <br />
<br />
The failure of some to grasp the humanity of babies at any given stage is a dangerous basis for permitting killing, since as many fail to grasp the full humanity of quite a number of distinct groups of born persons.<br />
<br />
As Roe correctly established, it can be useful in clarifying who to count as a human with an unalienable right to life, to consult the religion from which that right was copied into America’s founding documents. But religions which oppose the foundation of American law – equal rights for all humans, merit little credibility in American courts when their claims justify destruction of an entire people group – such as the claim that souls do not enter bodies until around birth. There can be “free exercise” of religions which do not equally reverence all human life only to the extent their “exercise” does not violate the rights of others or the laws enacted to protect them.7<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] <br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #7 of 12: Congress has ''Already'' Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment already authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion, without allowing Congress to legalize it====<br />
<br />
<small>FORGET YOU READ this 32 word Statement and DON’T read farther – <br />
certainly not the footnotes – if you don’t want to question <br />
the near consensus of prolife leaders who say “we are helpless <br />
to outlaw abortion in every state before we get ANOTHER <br />
personhood law through Congress, if not a Life Amendment <br />
to the Constitution.” <> This is the 7th of 12 Statements <br />
designed to push courts out of the way of defending Life <br />
in every state when included in the Findings of Facts of <br />
prolife laws. The material below can make it clearer and stronger.</small><br />
<br />
Congress established in 2004 that: “‘unborn child’ means a child in utero, and the term ‘child in utero’...means a member of the species Homo Sapiens, at any stage of development, who is carried in the womb”, 18 U.S.C. 1841(d).1 <br />
<br />
This fact is not diminished by clause (c) which does not “permit [authorize] the prosecution of any person for...an abortion for which the consent of the pregnant woman...has been obtained.…”2 A law misaligned with facts does not block future lawmakers from making corrections, and states don’t need Congress’ “permission” to obey the 14th Amendment. <br />
<br />
The reason 18 U.S.C. 1841(d) has had no effect on the practice of legal abortion is not because of any deficiency in its authority to establish dispositive facts, but because no state law reviewed by SCOTUS has cited it to establish what Roe correctly said once “established” would “of course” require the end of legal abortion. <br />
<br />
Not only is the 2004 law unmitigated evidence of life strong enough to “collapse” legal abortion by itself, but it would not be stronger if it were an Amendment to the Constitution.3 No other Constitutional Amendment is relied on for evidence of a fact. An Amendment can bind courts. But establishment of the Facts Of Life by evidence presented, cited, and tested in court draws not only courts, but society, closer to reality.4<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #8 of 12: Roe, Dobbs, and the 14th Amendment agree: All Humans are “Persons”====<br />
<br />
<small>DON’T READ past this 11 word Statement <br />
unless you like to stare at where crazy lawyers <br />
ever got the idea that human babies aren’t people!</small><br />
<br />
Neither Roe nor Dobbs distinguished between “humans” and “persons” as if a “human” baby isn’t necessarily a “person”. [2] Nor does the 14th Amendment leave any human unprotected.<br />
<br />
Roe v. Wade equated the time an unborn child becomes “recognizably human” with the time the child becomes a “person”: “These disciplines variously approached the question [“of when life begins”] in terms of the point at which the embryo or fetus became ‘formed’ or recognizably human, or in terms of when a ‘person’ came into being, that is, infused with a ‘soul’ or ‘animated.’” 410 U.S. 113, 133(1973)<br />
<br />
Dobbs cites the belief that “a human person comes into being at conception” without distinguishing between the two words. [3] The word “person” in the 14th Amendment meant “An individual human being...man, woman, or child...consisting of body and soul.” The word “child” in that 1828 definition included unborn children, since to be “with child” meant to be pregnant. [4]<br />
<br />
Therefore the Amendment’s “nor shall any state deprive any person of life” and “equal protection” of every “person” means every human, including those unborn. Nothing about the first clause keeps later clauses from protecting unborn humans. [5]<br />
<br />
See also Wong Wing v. United States, 163 U.S.228, 242 (1896), “The term ‘person’ is broad enough to include any and every human being within the jurisdiction of the republic...This has been decided so often that the point does not require argument.” Steinberg v. Brown 321 F. Supp. 741 (N.D. Ohio, 1970) “[o]nce human life has commenced, the constitutional protections found in the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments impose upon the state a duty of safeguarding it”. [6]<br />
<br />
The word “persons” in the 14th Amendment means all who are IN FACT humans. Had it been only for those who are legally recognized as human, every deprivation of fundamental rights would be “constitutional” so long as a law or ruling questions whether its victims are “persons in the whole sense”.<br />
<br />
Although Dobbs showed by disproving the opposite that reverence for all human life from fertilization was “deeply rooted in America’s law and traditions”, that is not why rights merit 14th Amendment protection. By the “deeply rooted” test, slavery would be legal today, since freedom for slaves had zero historical support.<br />
<br />
Nor does it matter if the Amendment authors even wanted to protect all humans. In fact, it doesn’t matter if there is a 14th Amendment. If law is not equal upon its operation on all humans, which is the very definition of the word “law” as developed by Samuel Rutherford’s “Lex Rex” and Blackstone and adopted by America’s founders, to that extent there is, by definition, no “rule of law”, no restraint upon the “strong” to not tyrannize the “weak”.<br />
<br />
There is a direct test of whether babies merit 14th Amendment protection that does not require a romp through history: [7] see if their parents are humans.<br />
<br />
“To say that the test of equal protection should be the ‘legal’ rather than the biological relationship is to avoid the issue. For the Equal Protection Clause necessarily limits the authority of a State [or its judges] to draw such ‘legal’ lines as it chooses.” Glona, 391 U.S. 73, 75 (1968) [8]<br />
<br />
FOOTNOTES: see [[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
<small>The footnotes are enriched by selections from the Amicus Briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson by: Lee J. Strang <> Scholars of Jurisprudence John M. Finnis and Robert P. George <> Mary Kay Bacallao Advocating for Unborn Children <> Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide <> and by selections from the 1996 debate between Judge Robert Bork and Professor Nathan Schluetter</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small>'<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #9 of 12: When pregnancies develop into medical emergencies requiring separation of mother and child to save the mother, the child has an equally fundamental right to life and medical care.====<br />
<br />
A legislature’s balancing of their interests cannot, therefore, be reviewed by “strict scrutiny”.2 Nor does alleged insufficiency of a “medical emergency” exception from a general abortion ban justify a court overturning the ban in the 99% of cases where no emergency is alleged.3 Legislatures are better equipped to deliberate about and secure the rights of all citizens than courts whose focus is the parties before them.4<br />
<br />
SCOTUS never denied that a legislature’s “personhood” statements in an abortion ban are strong evidence.5 That evidence is not mitigated by a ban’s exceptions.6 It is not made irrelevant because baby killers “rely” on killing babies.7 28/130 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
Fundamental Right: This is a term not found in the Constitution but made up by SCOTUS for the rights SCOTUS makes up which often displace rights actually listed in the Constitution. Justice Clarence Thomas is eloquent on this point. More about this later.<br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: A Foundation for Moral Law <> Pennsylvania Pro-Life Federation <> 396 State Legislators from 41 States</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #10 of 12: Tyranny over any class of humans by any other is prohibited by the Constitution, and by the Declaration, which gives the purpose of the Constitution and rests its own authority on the revelation of God1 in the Bible====<br />
<br />
Roe v Wade was not out of line to consult “those trained in... theology” who study souls, as well as doctors who study bodies, to clarify who to count as human with an unalienable right to life.3 <br />
<br />
America’s Freedom springs from “all men are created equal” and “equal protection of the laws” for all humans even if their looks, language, wealth, strength, ancestry, power, or faith are different.4 These rights have proven such a blessing to the world that their source, the Bible, deserves the fair hearing owed any witness whose reliability has been confirmed, when it promises still greater blessings if we will equally protect humans whose physical size is different.5 <br />
<br />
Its testimony is not “cumulative”, but “probative”.6 It is not to be feared as dispositive or compulsory: American freedom balances human understanding of how best to apply Biblical principles to government against the willingness of voting majorities to follow those principles. Even that is a Biblical principle legitimized in 1 Samuel 8.7 <br />
<br />
The history of slavery, Prohibition, and abortion illustrate the “willingness” factor. The probative value of the testimony of God is proved by the fact that without it, slavery would never have ended, and the prolife movement would never have begun. Which makes it probative to observe that not only the 14th Amendment, but also the revelation of God, requires this state, as it does every state, to outlaw all trampling of fundamental rights of any class of people, including abortion of babies.8 Where the two authorities say the same thing, the Bible, for all its alleged ambiguity, is better understood and more trusted than the Constitution which has indeed proven “a thing of wax” in the nimble fingers of even the most scrupulous judges.9 <br />
<br />
Without God – without belief in a more objective standard of right and wrong than the “value” that voters place on “different” people through “evolving community standards”, it is impossible to understand fundamental rights.10 <br />
<br />
Courts have demonstrated this impossibility by so often confusing abominations for rights, decimating those whom Jesus said “forbid them not to come unto Me”, denying that He created them, murdering 17% of them, sodomizing 20% of the survivors, and censoring 100% of His teachings in schools.11 <br />
<br />
That destruction of the 14th Amendment (1868) began when “Substantive Due Process”, pioneered in Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857), was applied in United States v. Cruikshank 92 U. S. 542 (1876) to acquit a white Democrat mililtia of murdering “as many as 165” black Republicans and burning down the courthouse they were defending.12 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring God does not “establish religion”. It does not compel belief, action or endorsement. It simply allows judges and voters to make informed decisions. It is part of fact-finding. It is part of reasoning. Part of embracing reality. Part of examining “the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth”. Judges must stop punishing people for telling the truth just because the truth favors God.13 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring the Bible does not require equal weight for claims of religions that deny equal rights for all.14 <br />
<br />
For example, some claim “souls” don’t enter babies until long after fertilization, or even long after birth.15 Their claims do not “cancel” the mountain of consensus of court-recognized fact finders that souls are present from the beginning. Our Constitution and laws reject their unequal rights, and are appropriately wary of their rationales for their unequal rights. The credibility of every witness is not equal. Credibility is earned. <br />
There can be “free exercise” of religions hostile to “equal protection of the laws” only to the extent their “exercise” does not threaten the rights of others or violate the laws enacted to protect them – laws ultimately decided by voting majorities, hopefully well informed through the uncensoring of reality.16 39/520 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms: <br />
<br />
'''Cumulative''': testimony so redundant that it wastes the court’s time<br />
Dispositive: testimony so strong that it settles the issue with no more<br />
Probative: probative facts establish, or contribute to, proof. Probative value is the degree of relevance of evidence. <br />
<br />
'''Prohibition''': From 1920 to 1932, drinking (alcohol) was made illegal, banned by an actual Constitutional Amendment. Actual alcohol consumption dropped by about 50%, or at least that is how much Cirrhosis of the Liver cases dropped. During that time the drop in drinking led to an economic boom, called the “Roaring Twenties”, which unfortunately were not remembered for their prosperity but for their immorality. In 1928, the prosperity collapsed into a “Great Depression” due to cheating by stock market investors. In 1932 Americans wanted liquor so bad they ratified another Constitutional Amendment repealing the 1920 Amendment. <br />
<br />
'''Substantive Due Process''': As Justice Clarence Thomas eloquently explains – see Statement #11 footnotes, this phrase was made up by SCOTUS to justify making up what it calls “fundamental rights” as its tool of repealing laws it doesn’t like. It gets its name from the SCOTUS claim that the “Due Process” clause of the 14th Amendment gives SCOTUS its authority to make up rights and call them “fundamental”. But “Due Process” only meant the legal procedures which everyone must be given equally, to defend their rights in court when necessary. The phrase has nothing to do with identifying what rights are protectable. But “Substantive” means those rights we care about, that the Constitution protects. Like freedom of speech or religion. Because “substantive” means substantial, serious rights, and “due process” has nothing to do with identifying any rights, the LONANG Institute observes in Statement #11 notes that “substantive due process” is an oxymoron. <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: Foundation for Moral Law and Lutherans for Life <> Jewish Prolife Foundation <> LONANG Institute <> U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and Other Religious Organizations <> Claremont Institute’s Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #11 of 12: The 14th Amendment gives federal courts no “due process” authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the “right” to murder, and gives Congress no authority to legalize violations of Constitutional Rights, like taking a baby’s right to Life====<br />
<br />
The sole federal authority over state laws regarding the rights of their own citizens is through the 14th Amendment, Sections One and Five.1 Contrary to SCOTUS rulings, the 14th Amendment explicitly provides:<br />
<br />
* '''Congress authorized, not courts.''' Congress, not courts, determines the manner and scope of federal intervention in states whose laws don’t protect their citizens’ rights.2 Congress is not limited to enforcing only those rights of which SCOTUS approves, nor only to the extent that SCOTUS approves,3 nor only when state governments, not individuals, directly violate rights.4 <br />
<br />
* Federal courts aren’t permitted to stop either states or Congress from protecting enumerated rights (like Life), or to repeal their laws for conflicting with unenumerated [not listed in the Constitution] “rights” (like the “right” to murder babies), or to intervene in states’ protection of rights beyond prosecuting violations of federal laws.5 <br />
<br />
* Nor can Congress stop states from protecting enumerated rights. Neither Congress nor federal courts may overturn a state law protecting the lives of unborn babies from surgical abortion, chemical abortion, or contraceptives.6<br />
<br />
* The rights subject to federal enforcement are not those made up by SCOTUS allegedly based on the “Due Process” clause,7 but those listed in the Constitution, referred to as “privileges and immunities”8 (including, for unborn babies, the “privilege” of life and “immunity” from “cruel and unusual punishment” and execution “without due process of law”).9 <br />
* Enumerated Rights recognized before the Constitution existed are not excluded from Congressional intervention.10<br />
<br />
* '''“Substantive Due Process”''' is the sophistry by which SCOTUS turned the Constitution’s Authority to Define Rights, and Congress’ 14th Amendment Section 5 Authority to Enforce Rights, into its own authority to reclassify abominations as “rights”.11 It is an illegal, unconstitutional, Freedom-crushing fraud from Hell fomenting a long line of Landmark Abomination Cases.12 <br />
<br />
<small>Mini-lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Due Process:''' The duty of courts to give all parties to cases the fair and equal procedures and opportunities for defending themselves.<br />
<br />
(This argument for ending SCOTUS’ long line of Landmark Abomination Cases continues in Part Two of this book where its focus on SCOTUS-mandated murder of babies created in the Image of God is extended to SCOTUS’ censorship of God Himself.) <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amici who filed briefs in Dobbs v. Jackson: Lonang Institute <> Christian Legal Society <> AfricanAmerican, Hispanic, Roman Catholic and Protestant Religious and Civil Rights Organizations <> Senators Josh Hawley, Mike Lee, and Ted Cruz. And from Judge Robert Bork <> Nathan Schlueter, Professor of Philosophy and Religion, Hillsdale College, (when he debated Judge Bork in 2003 he was assistant professor of pre-law and political science at St. Ambrose University. Author, “Unborn Persons and the Fourteenth Amendment.” 2002.) <> Erwin Chemerinsky, Dean of Berkeley Law School <> Legal Information Institute, Cornell University <> Justice Clarence Thomas, dissents and concurrences <> justia.com <> James Gray Pope, Professor of Law and Sidney Reitman Scholar, Rutgers University School of Law <> Libby Adler professor of law and women’s, gender, and sexuality studies, Northeastern University Christmas, 2023''</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #12 of 12:Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable. The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives.====<br />
<br />
Any judge interfering with this state’s compliance with the 14th Amendment and its ancient authority to protect its people1 – the central reason governments exist, is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders,2 and is guilty of exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide through an unconstitutional ruling,3 which exceeds the judicial powers given by any Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment.4The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives, including (1) giving the state Supreme Court original jurisdiction over any challenge to a law, (2) requiring that review be expedited, (3) requiring a supermajority of the Court to suspend a law, (4) questioning justices in a public hearing about the constitutionality of their ruling, and (5) overturning the ruling with a supermajority of the legislature.5 <br />
<br />
Should any federal judge so interfere with this state’s constitutional duty, this state appeals to its congressional delegation to examine similar grounds for disciplinary action,6 along with exercising its Article III, Section 2, paragraph 2 authority to make “exceptions” and “regulations” designed to end SCOTUS’ long line of landmark abomination cases. This state also appeals to its congressional delegation to exercise its life-saving and rights-protecting authority under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment whose plain words give Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of Rights,7 which subsumes the authority to define their scope and to balance competing interests, while the “privileges and immunities” clause identifies as protectable rights those listed in the Constitution.8 <br />
<br />
Official world-wide definitions of “crimes against humanity” apply “to representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission”, whether elected representatives or unelected judges.”9<br />
<br />
Any court review of this law must be expedited, because lives are lost with each day that courts delay.10 7/230 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of Legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Malfeasance in office:''' official misconduct; violation of a public trust or obligation; specifically, the doing of an act which is positively unlawful or wrongful.<br />
<br />
'''Subsumes:''' Includes. To include or place within something larger or more comprehensive: encompass as a subordinate or component element red, green, and yellow are subsumed under the term "color" <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: 396 State Legislators from 41 States <> Melinda Thybault/Moral Outcry <> and by Matthew J. Franck, Director of the William E. and Carol G. Simon Center on Religion and the Constitution at the Witherspoon Institute and visiting lecturer in politics at Princeton University</small></div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Reversing_Landmark_Abomination_Cases&diff=50377Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases2024-01-02T05:14:41Z<p>DaveLeach: /* Statement of Facts #9 of 12: When pregnancies develop into medical emergencies requiring separation of mother and child to save the mother, the child has an equally fundamental right to life and medical care. */</p>
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<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters<br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion</span><br />
<br />
by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal<br />
''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal<br />
<span style="color:brown"><br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen <br />
<br />
by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 18:06, 15 October 2023 (UTC)<br />
<br />
=Introduction=<br />
<br />
This book offers twelve statements of fact about babies and abortion which I challenge any voter, lawyer, lawmaker, or judge to refute. Their footnotes contain nuggets from the 140 "Amicus" briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' (2022), the ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade. These statements are designed to soften the resistance of voters to outlawing baby murder, when presented in public, and to force judges to outlaw abortion in every state, when presented in court. <br />
<br />
They are truths designed to be so unignorable, that when any lawmaker includes them in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, in any state, prodeath fury will help publicize them with each advance through legislative deadlines. When friends of babies see them survive scrutiny, the force of these truths will grow like a snowball rolling down a hill. <br />
<br />
But murdering babies is only the most egregious of many Landmark Abomination Cases. Their common thread is usurping authority which the Constitution assigns to others, and equating the Bible with spurious religions. “Never let a crisis go to waste”, say the enemies of God, but God is the true master of turning evil into an opportunity for good. It’s time. Let’s end the Supreme Court’s war against God.<br />
<br />
The very fact that abortion is the worst of the ways the United States Supreme Court has turned American law upside down creates an opportunity to heal that branch of our government, and heal all the harm to our nation and its culture and morals that it has caused. As Professor Nathan Schluetter at Hillsdale College observes, “We must not let this opportunity pass to boldly challenge the prevailing jurisprudence and its attendant epistemological and moral skepticism with respect to abortion.”<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
It is the '''fact''' that unborn babies are living human children that makes killing them murder. It’s not what any ''law'' says about it, or even what the Constitution says about it. That’s what leaves ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' on the edge of reality, by treating this fact as something for voters to figure out, not on the basis of whether babies are ''in fact'' people but on the basis of some “value” they place on ''little'' people. <br />
<br />
That '''fact''' is what makes <u>the consensus of court-recognized fact finders</u> a stronger legal reason to end legal abortion than a Life Amendment, and a powerful social reason in the Court of Public Opinion able to soften hearts to the silent screams of Jesus' little brothers and His quiet knocking on hearts' doors. Which makes it insane for prolifers to not even mention this legally dispositive consensus in each and every prolife court case, and every “finding of fact” in prolife legislation, along with leveling with the public about the Scriptures which are the real reason we even care.<br />
<br />
[[File:Cover_Cartoon.jpg]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
Why these solutions may help even where abortion is already outlawed<br />
<br />
(1) They could defeat a national abortion legalization.<br />
<br />
(2) They could help you sue a nearby “blue state” for helping its baby killers murder your children. <br />
<br />
(3) They could help if your district judges join the courtroom rebellion against Dobbs in other states.<br />
<br />
(4) They could help meet challenges in the Court of Public Opinion, for example through a Resolution that irrefutably addresses every objection you have ever heard, as understandable to voters as it is irrefutable to judges. That would help the public see through future judicial gaslighting, and support judicial reform: ie. www.savetheworld .saltshaker.us/wiki/Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_ stop_judges_from_legislating<br />
<br />
(5) I could sure use your feedback. Proverbs 15:22. <br />
<br />
----<br />
<center>'''Ending legal abortion everywhere in close to a year<br />
(the goal of the following bill language)<br />
<br>'''requires a law whose Findings of Facts: '''<br />
</center><br />
<br />
<br />
* '''contain evidence which no judge can squarely address and keep abortion legal anywhere:''' that unborn babies are real people – established by the (unanimous) consensus of court-recognized factfinders: juries, expert witnesses, 38 states, judges, and Congress;<br />
<br />
* '''present its evidence in a way that is clear and persuasive to voters,''' to help them resist judicial and media gaslighting; (See below for “Why court-recognized fact finders persuade Voters”)<br />
<br />
* '''address misunderstandings about abortion jurisprudence''' that divide prolifers, intimidate lawyers, and blind judges;<br />
<br />
'''AND WHOSE PENALTIES'''<br />
<br />
* '''restrict some aspect of abortion substantially enough''' that THEY can't be defended as a mere regulation with some other legitimate government purpose than saving lives. The restriction must be profound enough that its only possible defense is that it saves human lives. That will force courts to address the evidence that babies are fully human;<br />
<br />
* '''provide no distractions that let judges rule on some technicality and ignore the evidence that the law would save lives.''' A perfect law that addresses everything from exceptions to contraception multiplies a judge’s opportunity to say “we don’t need to reach the issue of when life begins because the law fails on a lesser issue.” A simple yet substantial restriction, with “findings” that address the legal obstacles, will survive courts, which will get courts out of the way of saving life, which will free lawmakers to work out the challenging details with time to get a comprehensive solution right and with hope that they won’t waste their time; <br />
<br />
* '''list specific penalties for specific situations,''' rather than broadly stated goals such as “babies are to be protected as much as adults”, leaving prosecutors and judges to guess what to punish, or how, in situations where evidence and culpability are different; <br />
<br />
* '''contain a “life of the mother” exception''' whose applicability is clear enough that mothers are not denied life-saving care until doctors are assured by lawyers that said care will not put the doctors in jail; and<br />
<br />
'''THE LAW SHOULD ALSO order courts to “expedite” any review,''' “because lives are lost with each day that courts delay”. <br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate!)<br />
<br />
More ideas: [[Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_stop_judges_from_legislating]]<br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate! See below for Expedited Review federal rules.) <br />
<br />
WORD COUNTS: Using only the first boldfaced paragraph of each of these 12 Findings, in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, will total about 200 words. The complete Findings, without footnotes, total nearly 3000 words. For the advantages of including enough information in a prolife law for the Findings to defend themselves, see “Too Lengthy?” below. <br />
<br />
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: I am not a lawyer. But writing about prolife legal defenses designed to bring legal abortion to an end, and Scriptures calling for that goal, for 25 years in my Prayer * Action News, being uncertified as a lawyer, has created the opportunity for a remarkable interaction with Planned Barrenhoods priciest lawyers. Because news reporters wouldn’t report that my reasoning was designed as legal defenses in court, or that they were grounded in the Bible, what that left was their accusation that I advocated crime; whereas had my defenses been successful they would have allowed citizens to stop murderers legally, putting an end to the reason citizens took action. <br />
<br />
__TOC__<br />
<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and family, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge inaction deny themselves Life More Abundantly. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget: free wisdom, guaranteed success===<br />
<br />
'''John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
James 1:5 If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, [without finding fault]; and it shall be given him. 6 But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering.''' (Gr. διακρινω not withdrawn from, ie. by lack of support from actions, or opposed, ie. by indecision) <br />
<br />
'''Matthew 21:21 ...If ye have faith, and doubt not''' (Gr. διακρινω) ...'''ye shall say unto this mountain, Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea; it shall be done. 22 And all things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive.'''<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and families, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge their own inaction deny themselves, not just their neighbors, Life More Abundantly.<br />
<br />
If you are not satisfied with life less abundantly – ongoing slaughter of innocents – you won’t be satisfied now that the fate of babies is decided by the “value” that voters place on little people. You will keep searching for a strategy to end all the slaughter: to both outlaw it, and make it unthinkable to all but the worst of murderers. <br />
<br />
If you believe you ''will'' reach every good goal you pursue with all your being, Matthew 21:21-22, you won’t be turned from ending the slaughter in every state by experts who tell you that is impossible which rules out a strategy for achieving it. You will search until you find God’s way to do God’s will. <br />
<br />
You won’t say “I'm not smart enough to question prolife legal authorities who advise giving up”, if you believe James 1:5 which promises you all the wisdom you need to do good. Nor will you ever say you are not smart enough to read and understand legal briefs, court rulings, or to reason with lawmakers, lawyers, and prolife leaders, as necessary.<br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will not excuse yourself from God’s call because you can’t talk well, like Moses, whom God answered “Who made mouths?” Exodus 4:11. Nor will you excuse yourself to God, saying you are but a child against the world’s superbrains, like Jeremiah, whom God answered, “Stop saying that! It is MY words you will speak, and I am no child!” Jeremiah 1:6-8. <br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will shine God’s light wherever you find Darkness, Matthew 5:13-16. Since nothing is darker than murdering your own baby, you will seek God’s help as you oppose this evil, and none of these excuses will withdraw you from action.<br />
<br />
===Final Warning: read this at your own risk===<br />
<br />
Warning: read at your own risk. Rough reading Ahead, that may knock you from your TV chair.<br />
<br />
'''Findings of Facts which No Judge can Squarely Address and Keep Abortion Legal'''<br />
<br />
=Part 1: Authority of Court-Recognized Fact Finders=<br />
<br />
<span style="color:grey"><small>''Try to imagine how a judge, reviewing a prolife law with these Findings of Facts, would be able to dodge this evidence - in fact, see if you can find ANYONE who can ''refute'' these facts - as opposed to not ''caring'' about facts - that is, not caring about reality:''</small></span><br />
<br />
====Statement of Fact #1 of 12: Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let any state legalize====<br />
<br />
'''Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let ''any'' state legalize.'''<br />
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No fact can be more legally established than the fact that “life begins” at fertilization, being the consensus of every American legal authority who has taken a position, in every category of court-recognized finders of facts: juries,2 thousands of expert witnesses who were not contested,3 38 state legislatures,4 individual judges,5 and Congress.6 <br />
<br />
No legal authority has ruled that any unborn baby of a human is not in fact a human person, or that “life begins” any later than fertilization.7 <br />
<br />
No state can keep abortion legal now that this fact is established. This is so obvious that even Roe v. Wade said “of course”, and the lawyer for the abortionists agreed.8 <br />
For most public issues, disagreement is over facts.9 The only disagreement about abortion is between unanimous fact finders and those who don't care about facts.10 A court that won’t address the facts that justify and necessitate a law, or hear evidence of those facts, violates Due Process and has no legitimate jurisdiction to review that law.11 <br />
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Footnotes: see [[Statement 1 + Footnotes]]<br />
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INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
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<span style="color:#0f0">Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? <br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
<br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
<br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True. <br />
<br />
<br />
</span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget #2: The Cost of Success===<br />
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'''Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? '''<br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True.<br />
<br />
=====Statement of Facts #2 of 12: Courts Accept the Fact-Finding Authority of Legislatures, Juries, Experts for the same good reasons their findings persuade the public.=====<br />
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SCOTUS must accept legislative findings of facts that are not obviously irrational. “..the existence of facts supporting the legislative judgment is to be presumed...not to be pronounced unconstitutional unless in the light of the facts made known or generally assumed it is of such a character as to preclude the assumption that it rests upon some rational basis within the knowledge and experience of the legislators....” U.S. v. Carolene Products, 304 U.S. 144, 152 (1938).1<br />
<br />
Besides the court-recognized fact finding authority of legislatures, courts must conform their rulings to laws until such time as courts declare laws unconstitutional. No court has overturned the “unborn victims of violence” laws (based on “human babies are people”) of 39 states and Congress, despite many challenges.2<br />
<br />
To do so would require a court to positively affirm that human life does not begin until much later, which no legal authority has done, and for which no evidence exists.<br />
<br />
'''Legislatures'''. Lawmakers are there by the choice of a majority of voters. They are bombarded by information from experts. They are scrutinized by other lawmakers. Many are lawyers, some of whom are constitutional scholars and past or future judges. They set the salaries of judges, and have the power to hold impeachment trials of judges. Congress, the national legislature, scrutinizes Supreme Court justices. <br />
<br />
Many Congressmen are equally qualified: 15 U.S. Senators have served on the Supreme Court, and more were nominated.3 <br />
<br />
'''Juries''' are tested for impartiality. They are educated by the most qualified expert witnesses available. They study as long as necessary to establish truth – sometimes for months.4<br />
<br />
'''Expert Witnesses''' are the best experts money can buy, and they are scrutinized by the other side’s experts.5 <br />
<br />
It is for strong reasons that the findings of court-recognized fact finders are as respected in court as in the Court of Public Opinion.6<br />
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Footnotes: see [[Statement 2 + Footnotes]]<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Mark 8:38 '''Whosoever therefore shall be ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful generation; of him also shall the Son of man be ashamed''', when he cometh in the glory of his Father with the holy angels.<br />
<br />
We Bible believing conservatives need to quit blaming social media and CIA censorship for our failures and stop censoring ourselves. <br />
<br />
I offer a way of stating evidence which no judge, news reporter, Democrat, or unbeliever can refute, along with answering objections that have crippled prolife messaging and legal strategy. But we despair of reaching those who stop their ears to evidence. “What’s the use of tightening our message? You’re preaching to the choir. We know babies are people but those other people have their opinion too.”<br />
<br />
I’m not "preaching to the choir". I’m passing out a new composition to the choir for a coming TV special.<br />
<br />
Most of those who won’t listen, won’t vote either, rendering their willful ignorance relatively benign. Stop worrying about them. All they will do is hate you, lie about you, wreck your business – childish stuff. We progress by clearly articulating to the extent possible. The same Bible which is the main reason we care about babies promises all the protection we need to finish what we are here to do.<br />
<br />
It isn’t just saving baby bodies where we self censor. Adult souls are lost. We hold back sharing what we know about God. Snap out of it. </span><br />
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INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
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====Statement of Facts #3 of 12: The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS====<br />
<br />
From Roe (1973) through Dobbs (2022), SCOTUS evaded that core issue.1 <br />
<br />
SCOTUS never ruled babies Non-Persons “as a Matter of Law”, as lower courts allege.2 Roe made that fact not only relevant, but dispositive with a holding which no court has disputed even though Roe’s main holding was overturned:3 <br />
<br />
“[Prolifers] argue that the fetus is a ‘person’ within the language and meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment....If this suggestion of personhood is established, the [abortionist’s] case, of course, collapses, for the fetus’ right to life would then be guaranteed specifically by the [14th] Amendment [thus outlawing abortion in EVERY state]. The [abortionist’s lawyer] conceded as much....”4<br />
<br />
Dobbs explicitly left this statement of the obvious untouched, saying “our decision is not based on any view about when a State should regard pre-natal life as having rights or legally cognizable interests....”5 Dobbs did not say babies aren’t people. Dobbs did not say voters should still decide whether babies can be murdered in the face of proof that babies are in fact people.6 Dobbs left in place Roe’s observation that “establishment” of this fact, independently of any law, ruling, or future constitutional amendment,7 dictates whether abortion is legally recognizable as a right or as a crime.8<br />
<br />
This established fact is as relevant today as when Roe said “of course” it is.<br />
<br />
This established fact is not disestablished by any judge’s alleged inability to understand it.9<br />
<br />
This established FACT is not made irrelevant by any judge’s theory that the legal right of little humans to live is “impossible” to determine so it should be decided by their value to big humans.10<br />
<br />
If only those legally recognized as “persons” were people, slavery could still be legal and the 14th Amendment would mean nothing. Slavery states would merely need to classify their victims as only 3/5 human.11 The Amendment protects those who are IN FACT people – what is irrelevant is whether babies are people “as a matter of law”.12 <br />
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Footnotes: see [[Statement 3 + Footnotes]]<br />
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INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #4 of 12: Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life====<br />
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Detectable heartbeats and brain waves are evidence that a person has not yet died, throughout state and federal law.1 Reason demands they be accepted as evidence that a person has begun to live.2<br />
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Footnotes: see [[Statement 4 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
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INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #5 of 12: Legislatures should regulate abortion, as Dobbs held, just as legislatures regulate the prosecution of all other murders====<br />
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But not in the sense of absolute discretion to leave wholesale murders of a supposedly unwanted group of humans completely unregulated. That interpretation of Dobbs’ holding is premised on a “mistake of fact”, which is an official exception to Stare Decisis. 1<br />
<br />
The “Mistake of Fact” that is the premise of letting voters decide whether to continue judge-approved genocide according to the “value” they place on little people is that the humanity of babies of humans is either unknowable or irrelevant. That premise was explicit in Roe and Casey, and implicit in Dobbs.2 <br />
<br />
That is an “erroneous factual premise”. The fact that little unborn humans are humans is neither unknowable3 nor irrelevant. It is verifiable and dispositive.4 The consensus of court-recognized fact finders cures that knowledge deficit, canceling that interpretation of Dobbs’ holding, while reinforcing Dobbs’ other two holdings that “The Constitution does not confer a right to abortion” and “Roe and Casey are overruled”, and requiring the outlawing of baby killing in every state.5 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 5 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #6 of 12: The full humanity of a tiny physical body is hard for many to grasp. But what distinguishes us from animals isn’t physical, and has no known pre-conscious stage====<br />
<br />
DON’T READ past this 28 word paragraph unless you want <br />
an edge-of-your-seat adventure – legal ammunition <br />
against not only baby killing but also against the myth <br />
of the irrelevance of God in the reasoning of judges, <br />
lawmakers, and voters! Yet Roe v Wade, of all cases, <br />
"opened the door" with its sophomoric review of "theologians", <br />
and #6 comes charging through! <> The rest of this Statement <br />
is for lawmakers who want a stronger, clearer statement, <br />
and who have the stomach for the larger battle.<br />
<br />
Part of Roe’s definition of “person” was “infused with a soul”.1 Roe thus affirmed the belief of most of society, a belief logically demanded by the common knowledge that humans are distinguished from animals by consciousness which features a capacity for choices at variance with physical needs: to sacrifice one's interests for another,2 which is how John 15:13 defines “love”. And conversely, to destroy one’s own body.3<br />
<br />
These differences, along with self awareness and the capacity to choose between good and evil4 – to behave either as an angel or as a demon, can’t be explained by any known physical process. These differences justify greater legal protection of humans than of animals. <br />
<br />
Since a “soul” without consciousness has never been theorized and can’t be imagined, the consensus of fact finders is, in effect, that abortion kills babies with conscious souls. The lack of any physical explanation for a conscious soul rules out any reason to infer immaturity of consciousness from physical immaturity, and is consistent with the report in Luke 1:44 that a baby at 6 months heard a righteous voice [and/or felt the righteous Presence of God] and responded with joy,5 a response not everybody chooses, indicating that even the capacity for choosing between good and evil precedes birth. And also indicating that when a baby is killed by dismemberment, acid, or sucking out the brain, a self-aware conscious soul feels the pain, understands the cruelty, and if out-of-body near-death experiences are real, sees who is doing it.<br />
<br />
Even considering the body only, there is no objective line between birth and conception distinguishing “humans” from “nonpersons”, or between “meaningful life” and life which courts are free to terminate.6 Without such a line, there can be no stage of gestation at which killing a baby can be objectively distinguished from murder. No baby is safe while that line remains arbitrary. <br />
<br />
The failure of some to grasp the humanity of babies at any given stage is a dangerous basis for permitting killing, since as many fail to grasp the full humanity of quite a number of distinct groups of born persons.<br />
<br />
As Roe correctly established, it can be useful in clarifying who to count as a human with an unalienable right to life, to consult the religion from which that right was copied into America’s founding documents. But religions which oppose the foundation of American law – equal rights for all humans, merit little credibility in American courts when their claims justify destruction of an entire people group – such as the claim that souls do not enter bodies until around birth. There can be “free exercise” of religions which do not equally reverence all human life only to the extent their “exercise” does not violate the rights of others or the laws enacted to protect them.7<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] <br />
<br />
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INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #7 of 12: Congress has ''Already'' Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment already authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion, without allowing Congress to legalize it====<br />
<br />
<small>FORGET YOU READ this 32 word Statement and DON’T read farther – <br />
certainly not the footnotes – if you don’t want to question <br />
the near consensus of prolife leaders who say “we are helpless <br />
to outlaw abortion in every state before we get ANOTHER <br />
personhood law through Congress, if not a Life Amendment <br />
to the Constitution.” <> This is the 7th of 12 Statements <br />
designed to push courts out of the way of defending Life <br />
in every state when included in the Findings of Facts of <br />
prolife laws. The material below can make it clearer and stronger.</small><br />
<br />
Congress established in 2004 that: “‘unborn child’ means a child in utero, and the term ‘child in utero’...means a member of the species Homo Sapiens, at any stage of development, who is carried in the womb”, 18 U.S.C. 1841(d).1 <br />
<br />
This fact is not diminished by clause (c) which does not “permit [authorize] the prosecution of any person for...an abortion for which the consent of the pregnant woman...has been obtained.…”2 A law misaligned with facts does not block future lawmakers from making corrections, and states don’t need Congress’ “permission” to obey the 14th Amendment. <br />
<br />
The reason 18 U.S.C. 1841(d) has had no effect on the practice of legal abortion is not because of any deficiency in its authority to establish dispositive facts, but because no state law reviewed by SCOTUS has cited it to establish what Roe correctly said once “established” would “of course” require the end of legal abortion. <br />
<br />
Not only is the 2004 law unmitigated evidence of life strong enough to “collapse” legal abortion by itself, but it would not be stronger if it were an Amendment to the Constitution.3 No other Constitutional Amendment is relied on for evidence of a fact. An Amendment can bind courts. But establishment of the Facts Of Life by evidence presented, cited, and tested in court draws not only courts, but society, closer to reality.4<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
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INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #8 of 12: Roe, Dobbs, and the 14th Amendment agree: All Humans are “Persons”====<br />
<br />
<small>DON’T READ past this 11 word Statement <br />
unless you like to stare at where crazy lawyers <br />
ever got the idea that human babies aren’t people!</small><br />
<br />
Neither Roe nor Dobbs distinguished between “humans” and “persons” as if a “human” baby isn’t necessarily a “person”. [2] Nor does the 14th Amendment leave any human unprotected.<br />
<br />
Roe v. Wade equated the time an unborn child becomes “recognizably human” with the time the child becomes a “person”: “These disciplines variously approached the question [“of when life begins”] in terms of the point at which the embryo or fetus became ‘formed’ or recognizably human, or in terms of when a ‘person’ came into being, that is, infused with a ‘soul’ or ‘animated.’” 410 U.S. 113, 133(1973)<br />
<br />
Dobbs cites the belief that “a human person comes into being at conception” without distinguishing between the two words. [3] The word “person” in the 14th Amendment meant “An individual human being...man, woman, or child...consisting of body and soul.” The word “child” in that 1828 definition included unborn children, since to be “with child” meant to be pregnant. [4]<br />
<br />
Therefore the Amendment’s “nor shall any state deprive any person of life” and “equal protection” of every “person” means every human, including those unborn. Nothing about the first clause keeps later clauses from protecting unborn humans. [5]<br />
<br />
See also Wong Wing v. United States, 163 U.S.228, 242 (1896), “The term ‘person’ is broad enough to include any and every human being within the jurisdiction of the republic...This has been decided so often that the point does not require argument.” Steinberg v. Brown 321 F. Supp. 741 (N.D. Ohio, 1970) “[o]nce human life has commenced, the constitutional protections found in the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments impose upon the state a duty of safeguarding it”. [6]<br />
<br />
The word “persons” in the 14th Amendment means all who are IN FACT humans. Had it been only for those who are legally recognized as human, every deprivation of fundamental rights would be “constitutional” so long as a law or ruling questions whether its victims are “persons in the whole sense”.<br />
<br />
Although Dobbs showed by disproving the opposite that reverence for all human life from fertilization was “deeply rooted in America’s law and traditions”, that is not why rights merit 14th Amendment protection. By the “deeply rooted” test, slavery would be legal today, since freedom for slaves had zero historical support.<br />
<br />
Nor does it matter if the Amendment authors even wanted to protect all humans. In fact, it doesn’t matter if there is a 14th Amendment. If law is not equal upon its operation on all humans, which is the very definition of the word “law” as developed by Samuel Rutherford’s “Lex Rex” and Blackstone and adopted by America’s founders, to that extent there is, by definition, no “rule of law”, no restraint upon the “strong” to not tyrannize the “weak”.<br />
<br />
There is a direct test of whether babies merit 14th Amendment protection that does not require a romp through history: [7] see if their parents are humans.<br />
<br />
“To say that the test of equal protection should be the ‘legal’ rather than the biological relationship is to avoid the issue. For the Equal Protection Clause necessarily limits the authority of a State [or its judges] to draw such ‘legal’ lines as it chooses.” Glona, 391 U.S. 73, 75 (1968) [8]<br />
<br />
FOOTNOTES: see [[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
<small>The footnotes are enriched by selections from the Amicus Briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson by: Lee J. Strang <> Scholars of Jurisprudence John M. Finnis and Robert P. George <> Mary Kay Bacallao Advocating for Unborn Children <> Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide <> and by selections from the 1996 debate between Judge Robert Bork and Professor Nathan Schluetter</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small>'<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #9 of 12: When pregnancies develop into medical emergencies requiring separation of mother and child to save the mother, the child has an equally fundamental right to life and medical care.====<br />
<br />
A legislature’s balancing of their interests cannot, therefore, be reviewed by “strict scrutiny”.2 Nor does alleged insufficiency of a “medical emergency” exception from a general abortion ban justify a court overturning the ban in the 99% of cases where no emergency is alleged.3 Legislatures are better equipped to deliberate about and secure the rights of all citizens than courts whose focus is the parties before them.4<br />
<br />
SCOTUS never denied that a legislature’s “personhood” statements in an abortion ban are strong evidence.5 That evidence is not mitigated by a ban’s exceptions.6 It is not made irrelevant because baby killers “rely” on killing babies.7 28/130 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
Fundamental Right: This is a term not found in the Constitution but made up by SCOTUS for the rights SCOTUS makes up which often displace rights actually listed in the Constitution. Justice Clarence Thomas is eloquent on this point. More about this later.<br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: A Foundation for Moral Law <> Pennsylvania Pro-Life Federation <> 396 State Legislators from 41 States</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #10 of 12: Tyranny over any class of humans by any other is prohibited by the Constitution, and by the Declaration, which gives the purpose of the Constitution and rests its own authority on the revelation of God1 in the Bible====<br />
<br />
Roe v Wade was not out of line to consult “those trained in... theology” who study souls, as well as doctors who study bodies, to clarify who to count as human with an unalienable right to life.3 <br />
<br />
America’s Freedom springs from “all men are created equal” and “equal protection of the laws” for all humans even if their looks, language, wealth, strength, ancestry, power, or faith are different.4 These rights have proven such a blessing to the world that their source, the Bible, deserves the fair hearing owed any witness whose reliability has been confirmed, when it promises still greater blessings if we will equally protect humans whose physical size is different.5 <br />
<br />
Its testimony is not “cumulative”, but “probative”.6 It is not to be feared as dispositive or compulsory: American freedom balances human understanding of how best to apply Biblical principles to government against the willingness of voting majorities to follow those principles. Even that is a Biblical principle legitimized in 1 Samuel 8.7 <br />
<br />
The history of slavery, Prohibition, and abortion illustrate the “willingness” factor. The probative value of the testimony of God is proved by the fact that without it, slavery would never have ended, and the prolife movement would never have begun. Which makes it probative to observe that not only the 14th Amendment, but also the revelation of God, requires this state, as it does every state, to outlaw all trampling of fundamental rights of any class of people, including abortion of babies.8 Where the two authorities say the same thing, the Bible, for all its alleged ambiguity, is better understood and more trusted than the Constitution which has indeed proven “a thing of wax” in the nimble fingers of even the most scrupulous judges.9 <br />
<br />
Without God – without belief in a more objective standard of right and wrong than the “value” that voters place on “different” people through “evolving community standards”, it is impossible to understand fundamental rights.10 <br />
<br />
Courts have demonstrated this impossibility by so often confusing abominations for rights, decimating those whom Jesus said “forbid them not to come unto Me”, denying that He created them, murdering 17% of them, sodomizing 20% of the survivors, and censoring 100% of His teachings in schools.11 <br />
<br />
That destruction of the 14th Amendment (1868) began when “Substantive Due Process”, pioneered in Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857), was applied in United States v. Cruikshank 92 U. S. 542 (1876) to acquit a white Democrat mililtia of murdering “as many as 165” black Republicans and burning down the courthouse they were defending.12 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring God does not “establish religion”. It does not compel belief, action or endorsement. It simply allows judges and voters to make informed decisions. It is part of fact-finding. It is part of reasoning. Part of embracing reality. Part of examining “the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth”. Judges must stop punishing people for telling the truth just because the truth favors God.13 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring the Bible does not require equal weight for claims of religions that deny equal rights for all.14 <br />
<br />
For example, some claim “souls” don’t enter babies until long after fertilization, or even long after birth.15 Their claims do not “cancel” the mountain of consensus of court-recognized fact finders that souls are present from the beginning. Our Constitution and laws reject their unequal rights, and are appropriately wary of their rationales for their unequal rights. The credibility of every witness is not equal. Credibility is earned. <br />
There can be “free exercise” of religions hostile to “equal protection of the laws” only to the extent their “exercise” does not threaten the rights of others or violate the laws enacted to protect them – laws ultimately decided by voting majorities, hopefully well informed through the uncensoring of reality.16 39/520 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms: <br />
<br />
'''Cumulative''': testimony so redundant that it wastes the court’s time<br />
Dispositive: testimony so strong that it settles the issue with no more<br />
Probative: probative facts establish, or contribute to, proof. Probative value is the degree of relevance of evidence. <br />
<br />
'''Prohibition''': From 1920 to 1932, drinking (alcohol) was made illegal, banned by an actual Constitutional Amendment. Actual alcohol consumption dropped by about 50%, or at least that is how much Cirrhosis of the Liver cases dropped. During that time the drop in drinking led to an economic boom, called the “Roaring Twenties”, which unfortunately were not remembered for their prosperity but for their immorality. In 1928, the prosperity collapsed into a “Great Depression” due to cheating by stock market investors. In 1932 Americans wanted liquor so bad they ratified another Constitutional Amendment repealing the 1920 Amendment. <br />
<br />
'''Substantive Due Process''': As Justice Clarence Thomas eloquently explains – see Statement #11 footnotes, this phrase was made up by SCOTUS to justify making up what it calls “fundamental rights” as its tool of repealing laws it doesn’t like. It gets its name from the SCOTUS claim that the “Due Process” clause of the 14th Amendment gives SCOTUS its authority to make up rights and call them “fundamental”. But “Due Process” only meant the legal procedures which everyone must be given equally, to defend their rights in court when necessary. The phrase has nothing to do with identifying what rights are protectable. But “Substantive” means those rights we care about, that the Constitution protects. Like freedom of speech or religion. Because “substantive” means substantial, serious rights, and “due process” has nothing to do with identifying any rights, the LONANG Institute observes in Statement #11 notes that “substantive due process” is an oxymoron. <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: Foundation for Moral Law and Lutherans for Life <> Jewish Prolife Foundation <> LONANG Institute <> U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and Other Religious Organizations <> Claremont Institute’s Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #11 of 12: The 14th Amendment gives federal courts no “due process” authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the “right” to murder, and gives Congress no authority to legalize violations of Constitutional Rights, like taking a baby’s right to Life====<br />
<br />
The sole federal authority over state laws regarding the rights of their own citizens is through the 14th Amendment, Sections One and Five.1 Contrary to SCOTUS rulings, the 14th Amendment explicitly provides:<br />
<br />
* '''Congress authorized, not courts.''' Congress, not courts, determines the manner and scope of federal intervention in states whose laws don’t protect their citizens’ rights.2 Congress is not limited to enforcing only those rights of which SCOTUS approves, nor only to the extent that SCOTUS approves,3 nor only when state governments, not individuals, directly violate rights.4 <br />
<br />
* Federal courts aren’t permitted to stop either states or Congress from protecting enumerated rights (like Life), or to repeal their laws for conflicting with unenumerated [not listed in the Constitution] “rights” (like the “right” to murder babies), or to intervene in states’ protection of rights beyond prosecuting violations of federal laws.5 <br />
<br />
* Nor can Congress stop states from protecting enumerated rights. Neither Congress nor federal courts may overturn a state law protecting the lives of unborn babies from surgical abortion, chemical abortion, or contraceptives.6<br />
<br />
* The rights subject to federal enforcement are not those made up by SCOTUS allegedly based on the “Due Process” clause,7 but those listed in the Constitution, referred to as “privileges and immunities”8 (including, for unborn babies, the “privilege” of life and “immunity” from “cruel and unusual punishment” and execution “without due process of law”).9 <br />
* Enumerated Rights recognized before the Constitution existed are not excluded from Congressional intervention.10<br />
<br />
* '''“Substantive Due Process”''' is the sophistry by which SCOTUS turned the Constitution’s Authority to Define Rights, and Congress’ 14th Amendment Section 5 Authority to Enforce Rights, into its own authority to reclassify abominations as “rights”.11 It is an illegal, unconstitutional, Freedom-crushing fraud from Hell fomenting a long line of Landmark Abomination Cases.12 <br />
<br />
<small>Mini-lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Due Process:''' The duty of courts to give all parties to cases the fair and equal procedures and opportunities for defending themselves.<br />
<br />
(This argument for ending SCOTUS’ long line of Landmark Abomination Cases continues in Part Two of this book where its focus on SCOTUS-mandated murder of babies created in the Image of God is extended to SCOTUS’ censorship of God Himself.) <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amici who filed briefs in Dobbs v. Jackson: Lonang Institute <> Christian Legal Society <> AfricanAmerican, Hispanic, Roman Catholic and Protestant Religious and Civil Rights Organizations <> Senators Josh Hawley, Mike Lee, and Ted Cruz. And from Judge Robert Bork <> Nathan Schlueter, Professor of Philosophy and Religion, Hillsdale College, (when he debated Judge Bork in 2003 he was assistant professor of pre-law and political science at St. Ambrose University. Author, “Unborn Persons and the Fourteenth Amendment.” 2002.) <> Erwin Chemerinsky, Dean of Berkeley Law School <> Legal Information Institute, Cornell University <> Justice Clarence Thomas, dissents and concurrences <> justia.com <> James Gray Pope, Professor of Law and Sidney Reitman Scholar, Rutgers University School of Law <> Libby Adler professor of law and women’s, gender, and sexuality studies, Northeastern University Christmas, 2023''</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #12 of 12:Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable. The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives.====<br />
<br />
Any judge interfering with this state’s compliance with the 14th Amendment and its ancient authority to protect its people1 – the central reason governments exist, is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders,2 and is guilty of exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide through an unconstitutional ruling,3 which exceeds the judicial powers given by any Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment.4The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives, including (1) giving the state Supreme Court original jurisdiction over any challenge to a law, (2) requiring that review be expedited, (3) requiring a supermajority of the Court to suspend a law, (4) questioning justices in a public hearing about the constitutionality of their ruling, and (5) overturning the ruling with a supermajority of the legislature.5 <br />
<br />
Should any federal judge so interfere with this state’s constitutional duty, this state appeals to its congressional delegation to examine similar grounds for disciplinary action,6 along with exercising its Article III, Section 2, paragraph 2 authority to make “exceptions” and “regulations” designed to end SCOTUS’ long line of landmark abomination cases. This state also appeals to its congressional delegation to exercise its life-saving and rights-protecting authority under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment whose plain words give Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of Rights,7 which subsumes the authority to define their scope and to balance competing interests, while the “privileges and immunities” clause identifies as protectable rights those listed in the Constitution.8 <br />
<br />
Official world-wide definitions of “crimes against humanity” apply “to representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission”, whether elected representatives or unelected judges.”9<br />
<br />
Any court review of this law must be expedited, because lives are lost with each day that courts delay.10 7/230 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of Legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Malfeasance in office:''' official misconduct; violation of a public trust or obligation; specifically, the doing of an act which is positively unlawful or wrongful.<br />
<br />
'''Subsumes:''' Includes. To include or place within something larger or more comprehensive: encompass as a subordinate or component element red, green, and yellow are subsumed under the term "color" <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: 396 State Legislators from 41 States <> Melinda Thybault/Moral Outcry <> and by Matthew J. Franck, Director of the William E. and Carol G. Simon Center on Religion and the Constitution at the Witherspoon Institute and visiting lecturer in politics at Princeton University</small></div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Reversing_Landmark_Abomination_Cases&diff=50376Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases2024-01-02T05:13:53Z<p>DaveLeach: /* Statement of Facts #8 of 12: Roe, Dobbs, and the 14th Amendment agree: All Humans are “Persons” */</p>
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<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters<br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion</span><br />
<br />
by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal<br />
''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal<br />
<span style="color:brown"><br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen <br />
<br />
by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 18:06, 15 October 2023 (UTC)<br />
<br />
=Introduction=<br />
<br />
This book offers twelve statements of fact about babies and abortion which I challenge any voter, lawyer, lawmaker, or judge to refute. Their footnotes contain nuggets from the 140 "Amicus" briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' (2022), the ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade. These statements are designed to soften the resistance of voters to outlawing baby murder, when presented in public, and to force judges to outlaw abortion in every state, when presented in court. <br />
<br />
They are truths designed to be so unignorable, that when any lawmaker includes them in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, in any state, prodeath fury will help publicize them with each advance through legislative deadlines. When friends of babies see them survive scrutiny, the force of these truths will grow like a snowball rolling down a hill. <br />
<br />
But murdering babies is only the most egregious of many Landmark Abomination Cases. Their common thread is usurping authority which the Constitution assigns to others, and equating the Bible with spurious religions. “Never let a crisis go to waste”, say the enemies of God, but God is the true master of turning evil into an opportunity for good. It’s time. Let’s end the Supreme Court’s war against God.<br />
<br />
The very fact that abortion is the worst of the ways the United States Supreme Court has turned American law upside down creates an opportunity to heal that branch of our government, and heal all the harm to our nation and its culture and morals that it has caused. As Professor Nathan Schluetter at Hillsdale College observes, “We must not let this opportunity pass to boldly challenge the prevailing jurisprudence and its attendant epistemological and moral skepticism with respect to abortion.”<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
It is the '''fact''' that unborn babies are living human children that makes killing them murder. It’s not what any ''law'' says about it, or even what the Constitution says about it. That’s what leaves ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' on the edge of reality, by treating this fact as something for voters to figure out, not on the basis of whether babies are ''in fact'' people but on the basis of some “value” they place on ''little'' people. <br />
<br />
That '''fact''' is what makes <u>the consensus of court-recognized fact finders</u> a stronger legal reason to end legal abortion than a Life Amendment, and a powerful social reason in the Court of Public Opinion able to soften hearts to the silent screams of Jesus' little brothers and His quiet knocking on hearts' doors. Which makes it insane for prolifers to not even mention this legally dispositive consensus in each and every prolife court case, and every “finding of fact” in prolife legislation, along with leveling with the public about the Scriptures which are the real reason we even care.<br />
<br />
[[File:Cover_Cartoon.jpg]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
Why these solutions may help even where abortion is already outlawed<br />
<br />
(1) They could defeat a national abortion legalization.<br />
<br />
(2) They could help you sue a nearby “blue state” for helping its baby killers murder your children. <br />
<br />
(3) They could help if your district judges join the courtroom rebellion against Dobbs in other states.<br />
<br />
(4) They could help meet challenges in the Court of Public Opinion, for example through a Resolution that irrefutably addresses every objection you have ever heard, as understandable to voters as it is irrefutable to judges. That would help the public see through future judicial gaslighting, and support judicial reform: ie. www.savetheworld .saltshaker.us/wiki/Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_ stop_judges_from_legislating<br />
<br />
(5) I could sure use your feedback. Proverbs 15:22. <br />
<br />
----<br />
<center>'''Ending legal abortion everywhere in close to a year<br />
(the goal of the following bill language)<br />
<br>'''requires a law whose Findings of Facts: '''<br />
</center><br />
<br />
<br />
* '''contain evidence which no judge can squarely address and keep abortion legal anywhere:''' that unborn babies are real people – established by the (unanimous) consensus of court-recognized factfinders: juries, expert witnesses, 38 states, judges, and Congress;<br />
<br />
* '''present its evidence in a way that is clear and persuasive to voters,''' to help them resist judicial and media gaslighting; (See below for “Why court-recognized fact finders persuade Voters”)<br />
<br />
* '''address misunderstandings about abortion jurisprudence''' that divide prolifers, intimidate lawyers, and blind judges;<br />
<br />
'''AND WHOSE PENALTIES'''<br />
<br />
* '''restrict some aspect of abortion substantially enough''' that THEY can't be defended as a mere regulation with some other legitimate government purpose than saving lives. The restriction must be profound enough that its only possible defense is that it saves human lives. That will force courts to address the evidence that babies are fully human;<br />
<br />
* '''provide no distractions that let judges rule on some technicality and ignore the evidence that the law would save lives.''' A perfect law that addresses everything from exceptions to contraception multiplies a judge’s opportunity to say “we don’t need to reach the issue of when life begins because the law fails on a lesser issue.” A simple yet substantial restriction, with “findings” that address the legal obstacles, will survive courts, which will get courts out of the way of saving life, which will free lawmakers to work out the challenging details with time to get a comprehensive solution right and with hope that they won’t waste their time; <br />
<br />
* '''list specific penalties for specific situations,''' rather than broadly stated goals such as “babies are to be protected as much as adults”, leaving prosecutors and judges to guess what to punish, or how, in situations where evidence and culpability are different; <br />
<br />
* '''contain a “life of the mother” exception''' whose applicability is clear enough that mothers are not denied life-saving care until doctors are assured by lawyers that said care will not put the doctors in jail; and<br />
<br />
'''THE LAW SHOULD ALSO order courts to “expedite” any review,''' “because lives are lost with each day that courts delay”. <br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate!)<br />
<br />
More ideas: [[Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_stop_judges_from_legislating]]<br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate! See below for Expedited Review federal rules.) <br />
<br />
WORD COUNTS: Using only the first boldfaced paragraph of each of these 12 Findings, in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, will total about 200 words. The complete Findings, without footnotes, total nearly 3000 words. For the advantages of including enough information in a prolife law for the Findings to defend themselves, see “Too Lengthy?” below. <br />
<br />
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: I am not a lawyer. But writing about prolife legal defenses designed to bring legal abortion to an end, and Scriptures calling for that goal, for 25 years in my Prayer * Action News, being uncertified as a lawyer, has created the opportunity for a remarkable interaction with Planned Barrenhoods priciest lawyers. Because news reporters wouldn’t report that my reasoning was designed as legal defenses in court, or that they were grounded in the Bible, what that left was their accusation that I advocated crime; whereas had my defenses been successful they would have allowed citizens to stop murderers legally, putting an end to the reason citizens took action. <br />
<br />
__TOC__<br />
<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and family, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge inaction deny themselves Life More Abundantly. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget: free wisdom, guaranteed success===<br />
<br />
'''John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
James 1:5 If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, [without finding fault]; and it shall be given him. 6 But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering.''' (Gr. διακρινω not withdrawn from, ie. by lack of support from actions, or opposed, ie. by indecision) <br />
<br />
'''Matthew 21:21 ...If ye have faith, and doubt not''' (Gr. διακρινω) ...'''ye shall say unto this mountain, Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea; it shall be done. 22 And all things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive.'''<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and families, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge their own inaction deny themselves, not just their neighbors, Life More Abundantly.<br />
<br />
If you are not satisfied with life less abundantly – ongoing slaughter of innocents – you won’t be satisfied now that the fate of babies is decided by the “value” that voters place on little people. You will keep searching for a strategy to end all the slaughter: to both outlaw it, and make it unthinkable to all but the worst of murderers. <br />
<br />
If you believe you ''will'' reach every good goal you pursue with all your being, Matthew 21:21-22, you won’t be turned from ending the slaughter in every state by experts who tell you that is impossible which rules out a strategy for achieving it. You will search until you find God’s way to do God’s will. <br />
<br />
You won’t say “I'm not smart enough to question prolife legal authorities who advise giving up”, if you believe James 1:5 which promises you all the wisdom you need to do good. Nor will you ever say you are not smart enough to read and understand legal briefs, court rulings, or to reason with lawmakers, lawyers, and prolife leaders, as necessary.<br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will not excuse yourself from God’s call because you can’t talk well, like Moses, whom God answered “Who made mouths?” Exodus 4:11. Nor will you excuse yourself to God, saying you are but a child against the world’s superbrains, like Jeremiah, whom God answered, “Stop saying that! It is MY words you will speak, and I am no child!” Jeremiah 1:6-8. <br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will shine God’s light wherever you find Darkness, Matthew 5:13-16. Since nothing is darker than murdering your own baby, you will seek God’s help as you oppose this evil, and none of these excuses will withdraw you from action.<br />
<br />
===Final Warning: read this at your own risk===<br />
<br />
Warning: read at your own risk. Rough reading Ahead, that may knock you from your TV chair.<br />
<br />
'''Findings of Facts which No Judge can Squarely Address and Keep Abortion Legal'''<br />
<br />
=Part 1: Authority of Court-Recognized Fact Finders=<br />
<br />
<span style="color:grey"><small>''Try to imagine how a judge, reviewing a prolife law with these Findings of Facts, would be able to dodge this evidence - in fact, see if you can find ANYONE who can ''refute'' these facts - as opposed to not ''caring'' about facts - that is, not caring about reality:''</small></span><br />
<br />
====Statement of Fact #1 of 12: Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let any state legalize====<br />
<br />
'''Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let ''any'' state legalize.'''<br />
<br />
No fact can be more legally established than the fact that “life begins” at fertilization, being the consensus of every American legal authority who has taken a position, in every category of court-recognized finders of facts: juries,2 thousands of expert witnesses who were not contested,3 38 state legislatures,4 individual judges,5 and Congress.6 <br />
<br />
No legal authority has ruled that any unborn baby of a human is not in fact a human person, or that “life begins” any later than fertilization.7 <br />
<br />
No state can keep abortion legal now that this fact is established. This is so obvious that even Roe v. Wade said “of course”, and the lawyer for the abortionists agreed.8 <br />
For most public issues, disagreement is over facts.9 The only disagreement about abortion is between unanimous fact finders and those who don't care about facts.10 A court that won’t address the facts that justify and necessitate a law, or hear evidence of those facts, violates Due Process and has no legitimate jurisdiction to review that law.11 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 1 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? <br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
<br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
<br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True. <br />
<br />
<br />
</span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget #2: The Cost of Success===<br />
<br />
'''Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? '''<br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True.<br />
<br />
=====Statement of Facts #2 of 12: Courts Accept the Fact-Finding Authority of Legislatures, Juries, Experts for the same good reasons their findings persuade the public.=====<br />
<br />
SCOTUS must accept legislative findings of facts that are not obviously irrational. “..the existence of facts supporting the legislative judgment is to be presumed...not to be pronounced unconstitutional unless in the light of the facts made known or generally assumed it is of such a character as to preclude the assumption that it rests upon some rational basis within the knowledge and experience of the legislators....” U.S. v. Carolene Products, 304 U.S. 144, 152 (1938).1<br />
<br />
Besides the court-recognized fact finding authority of legislatures, courts must conform their rulings to laws until such time as courts declare laws unconstitutional. No court has overturned the “unborn victims of violence” laws (based on “human babies are people”) of 39 states and Congress, despite many challenges.2<br />
<br />
To do so would require a court to positively affirm that human life does not begin until much later, which no legal authority has done, and for which no evidence exists.<br />
<br />
'''Legislatures'''. Lawmakers are there by the choice of a majority of voters. They are bombarded by information from experts. They are scrutinized by other lawmakers. Many are lawyers, some of whom are constitutional scholars and past or future judges. They set the salaries of judges, and have the power to hold impeachment trials of judges. Congress, the national legislature, scrutinizes Supreme Court justices. <br />
<br />
Many Congressmen are equally qualified: 15 U.S. Senators have served on the Supreme Court, and more were nominated.3 <br />
<br />
'''Juries''' are tested for impartiality. They are educated by the most qualified expert witnesses available. They study as long as necessary to establish truth – sometimes for months.4<br />
<br />
'''Expert Witnesses''' are the best experts money can buy, and they are scrutinized by the other side’s experts.5 <br />
<br />
It is for strong reasons that the findings of court-recognized fact finders are as respected in court as in the Court of Public Opinion.6<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 2 + Footnotes]]<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Mark 8:38 '''Whosoever therefore shall be ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful generation; of him also shall the Son of man be ashamed''', when he cometh in the glory of his Father with the holy angels.<br />
<br />
We Bible believing conservatives need to quit blaming social media and CIA censorship for our failures and stop censoring ourselves. <br />
<br />
I offer a way of stating evidence which no judge, news reporter, Democrat, or unbeliever can refute, along with answering objections that have crippled prolife messaging and legal strategy. But we despair of reaching those who stop their ears to evidence. “What’s the use of tightening our message? You’re preaching to the choir. We know babies are people but those other people have their opinion too.”<br />
<br />
I’m not "preaching to the choir". I’m passing out a new composition to the choir for a coming TV special.<br />
<br />
Most of those who won’t listen, won’t vote either, rendering their willful ignorance relatively benign. Stop worrying about them. All they will do is hate you, lie about you, wreck your business – childish stuff. We progress by clearly articulating to the extent possible. The same Bible which is the main reason we care about babies promises all the protection we need to finish what we are here to do.<br />
<br />
It isn’t just saving baby bodies where we self censor. Adult souls are lost. We hold back sharing what we know about God. Snap out of it. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
----<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #3 of 12: The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS====<br />
<br />
From Roe (1973) through Dobbs (2022), SCOTUS evaded that core issue.1 <br />
<br />
SCOTUS never ruled babies Non-Persons “as a Matter of Law”, as lower courts allege.2 Roe made that fact not only relevant, but dispositive with a holding which no court has disputed even though Roe’s main holding was overturned:3 <br />
<br />
“[Prolifers] argue that the fetus is a ‘person’ within the language and meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment....If this suggestion of personhood is established, the [abortionist’s] case, of course, collapses, for the fetus’ right to life would then be guaranteed specifically by the [14th] Amendment [thus outlawing abortion in EVERY state]. The [abortionist’s lawyer] conceded as much....”4<br />
<br />
Dobbs explicitly left this statement of the obvious untouched, saying “our decision is not based on any view about when a State should regard pre-natal life as having rights or legally cognizable interests....”5 Dobbs did not say babies aren’t people. Dobbs did not say voters should still decide whether babies can be murdered in the face of proof that babies are in fact people.6 Dobbs left in place Roe’s observation that “establishment” of this fact, independently of any law, ruling, or future constitutional amendment,7 dictates whether abortion is legally recognizable as a right or as a crime.8<br />
<br />
This established fact is as relevant today as when Roe said “of course” it is.<br />
<br />
This established fact is not disestablished by any judge’s alleged inability to understand it.9<br />
<br />
This established FACT is not made irrelevant by any judge’s theory that the legal right of little humans to live is “impossible” to determine so it should be decided by their value to big humans.10<br />
<br />
If only those legally recognized as “persons” were people, slavery could still be legal and the 14th Amendment would mean nothing. Slavery states would merely need to classify their victims as only 3/5 human.11 The Amendment protects those who are IN FACT people – what is irrelevant is whether babies are people “as a matter of law”.12 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 3 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #4 of 12: Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life====<br />
<br />
Detectable heartbeats and brain waves are evidence that a person has not yet died, throughout state and federal law.1 Reason demands they be accepted as evidence that a person has begun to live.2<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 4 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #5 of 12: Legislatures should regulate abortion, as Dobbs held, just as legislatures regulate the prosecution of all other murders====<br />
<br />
But not in the sense of absolute discretion to leave wholesale murders of a supposedly unwanted group of humans completely unregulated. That interpretation of Dobbs’ holding is premised on a “mistake of fact”, which is an official exception to Stare Decisis. 1<br />
<br />
The “Mistake of Fact” that is the premise of letting voters decide whether to continue judge-approved genocide according to the “value” they place on little people is that the humanity of babies of humans is either unknowable or irrelevant. That premise was explicit in Roe and Casey, and implicit in Dobbs.2 <br />
<br />
That is an “erroneous factual premise”. The fact that little unborn humans are humans is neither unknowable3 nor irrelevant. It is verifiable and dispositive.4 The consensus of court-recognized fact finders cures that knowledge deficit, canceling that interpretation of Dobbs’ holding, while reinforcing Dobbs’ other two holdings that “The Constitution does not confer a right to abortion” and “Roe and Casey are overruled”, and requiring the outlawing of baby killing in every state.5 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 5 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #6 of 12: The full humanity of a tiny physical body is hard for many to grasp. But what distinguishes us from animals isn’t physical, and has no known pre-conscious stage====<br />
<br />
DON’T READ past this 28 word paragraph unless you want <br />
an edge-of-your-seat adventure – legal ammunition <br />
against not only baby killing but also against the myth <br />
of the irrelevance of God in the reasoning of judges, <br />
lawmakers, and voters! Yet Roe v Wade, of all cases, <br />
"opened the door" with its sophomoric review of "theologians", <br />
and #6 comes charging through! <> The rest of this Statement <br />
is for lawmakers who want a stronger, clearer statement, <br />
and who have the stomach for the larger battle.<br />
<br />
Part of Roe’s definition of “person” was “infused with a soul”.1 Roe thus affirmed the belief of most of society, a belief logically demanded by the common knowledge that humans are distinguished from animals by consciousness which features a capacity for choices at variance with physical needs: to sacrifice one's interests for another,2 which is how John 15:13 defines “love”. And conversely, to destroy one’s own body.3<br />
<br />
These differences, along with self awareness and the capacity to choose between good and evil4 – to behave either as an angel or as a demon, can’t be explained by any known physical process. These differences justify greater legal protection of humans than of animals. <br />
<br />
Since a “soul” without consciousness has never been theorized and can’t be imagined, the consensus of fact finders is, in effect, that abortion kills babies with conscious souls. The lack of any physical explanation for a conscious soul rules out any reason to infer immaturity of consciousness from physical immaturity, and is consistent with the report in Luke 1:44 that a baby at 6 months heard a righteous voice [and/or felt the righteous Presence of God] and responded with joy,5 a response not everybody chooses, indicating that even the capacity for choosing between good and evil precedes birth. And also indicating that when a baby is killed by dismemberment, acid, or sucking out the brain, a self-aware conscious soul feels the pain, understands the cruelty, and if out-of-body near-death experiences are real, sees who is doing it.<br />
<br />
Even considering the body only, there is no objective line between birth and conception distinguishing “humans” from “nonpersons”, or between “meaningful life” and life which courts are free to terminate.6 Without such a line, there can be no stage of gestation at which killing a baby can be objectively distinguished from murder. No baby is safe while that line remains arbitrary. <br />
<br />
The failure of some to grasp the humanity of babies at any given stage is a dangerous basis for permitting killing, since as many fail to grasp the full humanity of quite a number of distinct groups of born persons.<br />
<br />
As Roe correctly established, it can be useful in clarifying who to count as a human with an unalienable right to life, to consult the religion from which that right was copied into America’s founding documents. But religions which oppose the foundation of American law – equal rights for all humans, merit little credibility in American courts when their claims justify destruction of an entire people group – such as the claim that souls do not enter bodies until around birth. There can be “free exercise” of religions which do not equally reverence all human life only to the extent their “exercise” does not violate the rights of others or the laws enacted to protect them.7<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] <br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #7 of 12: Congress has ''Already'' Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment already authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion, without allowing Congress to legalize it====<br />
<br />
<small>FORGET YOU READ this 32 word Statement and DON’T read farther – <br />
certainly not the footnotes – if you don’t want to question <br />
the near consensus of prolife leaders who say “we are helpless <br />
to outlaw abortion in every state before we get ANOTHER <br />
personhood law through Congress, if not a Life Amendment <br />
to the Constitution.” <> This is the 7th of 12 Statements <br />
designed to push courts out of the way of defending Life <br />
in every state when included in the Findings of Facts of <br />
prolife laws. The material below can make it clearer and stronger.</small><br />
<br />
Congress established in 2004 that: “‘unborn child’ means a child in utero, and the term ‘child in utero’...means a member of the species Homo Sapiens, at any stage of development, who is carried in the womb”, 18 U.S.C. 1841(d).1 <br />
<br />
This fact is not diminished by clause (c) which does not “permit [authorize] the prosecution of any person for...an abortion for which the consent of the pregnant woman...has been obtained.…”2 A law misaligned with facts does not block future lawmakers from making corrections, and states don’t need Congress’ “permission” to obey the 14th Amendment. <br />
<br />
The reason 18 U.S.C. 1841(d) has had no effect on the practice of legal abortion is not because of any deficiency in its authority to establish dispositive facts, but because no state law reviewed by SCOTUS has cited it to establish what Roe correctly said once “established” would “of course” require the end of legal abortion. <br />
<br />
Not only is the 2004 law unmitigated evidence of life strong enough to “collapse” legal abortion by itself, but it would not be stronger if it were an Amendment to the Constitution.3 No other Constitutional Amendment is relied on for evidence of a fact. An Amendment can bind courts. But establishment of the Facts Of Life by evidence presented, cited, and tested in court draws not only courts, but society, closer to reality.4<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #8 of 12: Roe, Dobbs, and the 14th Amendment agree: All Humans are “Persons”====<br />
<br />
<small>DON’T READ past this 11 word Statement <br />
unless you like to stare at where crazy lawyers <br />
ever got the idea that human babies aren’t people!</small><br />
<br />
Neither Roe nor Dobbs distinguished between “humans” and “persons” as if a “human” baby isn’t necessarily a “person”. [2] Nor does the 14th Amendment leave any human unprotected.<br />
<br />
Roe v. Wade equated the time an unborn child becomes “recognizably human” with the time the child becomes a “person”: “These disciplines variously approached the question [“of when life begins”] in terms of the point at which the embryo or fetus became ‘formed’ or recognizably human, or in terms of when a ‘person’ came into being, that is, infused with a ‘soul’ or ‘animated.’” 410 U.S. 113, 133(1973)<br />
<br />
Dobbs cites the belief that “a human person comes into being at conception” without distinguishing between the two words. [3] The word “person” in the 14th Amendment meant “An individual human being...man, woman, or child...consisting of body and soul.” The word “child” in that 1828 definition included unborn children, since to be “with child” meant to be pregnant. [4]<br />
<br />
Therefore the Amendment’s “nor shall any state deprive any person of life” and “equal protection” of every “person” means every human, including those unborn. Nothing about the first clause keeps later clauses from protecting unborn humans. [5]<br />
<br />
See also Wong Wing v. United States, 163 U.S.228, 242 (1896), “The term ‘person’ is broad enough to include any and every human being within the jurisdiction of the republic...This has been decided so often that the point does not require argument.” Steinberg v. Brown 321 F. Supp. 741 (N.D. Ohio, 1970) “[o]nce human life has commenced, the constitutional protections found in the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments impose upon the state a duty of safeguarding it”. [6]<br />
<br />
The word “persons” in the 14th Amendment means all who are IN FACT humans. Had it been only for those who are legally recognized as human, every deprivation of fundamental rights would be “constitutional” so long as a law or ruling questions whether its victims are “persons in the whole sense”.<br />
<br />
Although Dobbs showed by disproving the opposite that reverence for all human life from fertilization was “deeply rooted in America’s law and traditions”, that is not why rights merit 14th Amendment protection. By the “deeply rooted” test, slavery would be legal today, since freedom for slaves had zero historical support.<br />
<br />
Nor does it matter if the Amendment authors even wanted to protect all humans. In fact, it doesn’t matter if there is a 14th Amendment. If law is not equal upon its operation on all humans, which is the very definition of the word “law” as developed by Samuel Rutherford’s “Lex Rex” and Blackstone and adopted by America’s founders, to that extent there is, by definition, no “rule of law”, no restraint upon the “strong” to not tyrannize the “weak”.<br />
<br />
There is a direct test of whether babies merit 14th Amendment protection that does not require a romp through history: [7] see if their parents are humans.<br />
<br />
“To say that the test of equal protection should be the ‘legal’ rather than the biological relationship is to avoid the issue. For the Equal Protection Clause necessarily limits the authority of a State [or its judges] to draw such ‘legal’ lines as it chooses.” Glona, 391 U.S. 73, 75 (1968) [8]<br />
<br />
FOOTNOTES: see [[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
<small>The footnotes are enriched by selections from the Amicus Briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson by: Lee J. Strang <> Scholars of Jurisprudence John M. Finnis and Robert P. George <> Mary Kay Bacallao Advocating for Unborn Children <> Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide <> and by selections from the 1996 debate between Judge Robert Bork and Professor Nathan Schluetter</small><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small>'<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #9 of 12: When pregnancies develop into medical emergencies requiring separation of mother and child to save the mother, the child has an equally fundamental right to life and medical care.====<br />
<br />
A legislature’s balancing of their interests cannot, therefore, be reviewed by “strict scrutiny”.2 Nor does alleged insufficiency of a “medical emergency” exception from a general abortion ban justify a court overturning the ban in the 99% of cases where no emergency is alleged.3 Legislatures are better equipped to deliberate about and secure the rights of all citizens than courts whose focus is the parties before them.4<br />
<br />
SCOTUS never denied that a legislature’s “personhood” statements in an abortion ban are strong evidence.5 That evidence is not mitigated by a ban’s exceptions.6 It is not made irrelevant because baby killers “rely” on killing babies.7 28/130 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
Fundamental Right: This is a term not found in the Constitution but made up by SCOTUS for the rights SCOTUS makes up which often displace rights actually listed in the Constitution. Justice Clarence Thomas is eloquent on this point. More about this later.<br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: A Foundation for Moral Law <> Pennsylvania Pro-Life Federation <> 396 State Legislators from 41 States</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #10 of 12: Tyranny over any class of humans by any other is prohibited by the Constitution, and by the Declaration, which gives the purpose of the Constitution and rests its own authority on the revelation of God1 in the Bible====<br />
<br />
Roe v Wade was not out of line to consult “those trained in... theology” who study souls, as well as doctors who study bodies, to clarify who to count as human with an unalienable right to life.3 <br />
<br />
America’s Freedom springs from “all men are created equal” and “equal protection of the laws” for all humans even if their looks, language, wealth, strength, ancestry, power, or faith are different.4 These rights have proven such a blessing to the world that their source, the Bible, deserves the fair hearing owed any witness whose reliability has been confirmed, when it promises still greater blessings if we will equally protect humans whose physical size is different.5 <br />
<br />
Its testimony is not “cumulative”, but “probative”.6 It is not to be feared as dispositive or compulsory: American freedom balances human understanding of how best to apply Biblical principles to government against the willingness of voting majorities to follow those principles. Even that is a Biblical principle legitimized in 1 Samuel 8.7 <br />
<br />
The history of slavery, Prohibition, and abortion illustrate the “willingness” factor. The probative value of the testimony of God is proved by the fact that without it, slavery would never have ended, and the prolife movement would never have begun. Which makes it probative to observe that not only the 14th Amendment, but also the revelation of God, requires this state, as it does every state, to outlaw all trampling of fundamental rights of any class of people, including abortion of babies.8 Where the two authorities say the same thing, the Bible, for all its alleged ambiguity, is better understood and more trusted than the Constitution which has indeed proven “a thing of wax” in the nimble fingers of even the most scrupulous judges.9 <br />
<br />
Without God – without belief in a more objective standard of right and wrong than the “value” that voters place on “different” people through “evolving community standards”, it is impossible to understand fundamental rights.10 <br />
<br />
Courts have demonstrated this impossibility by so often confusing abominations for rights, decimating those whom Jesus said “forbid them not to come unto Me”, denying that He created them, murdering 17% of them, sodomizing 20% of the survivors, and censoring 100% of His teachings in schools.11 <br />
<br />
That destruction of the 14th Amendment (1868) began when “Substantive Due Process”, pioneered in Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857), was applied in United States v. Cruikshank 92 U. S. 542 (1876) to acquit a white Democrat mililtia of murdering “as many as 165” black Republicans and burning down the courthouse they were defending.12 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring God does not “establish religion”. It does not compel belief, action or endorsement. It simply allows judges and voters to make informed decisions. It is part of fact-finding. It is part of reasoning. Part of embracing reality. Part of examining “the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth”. Judges must stop punishing people for telling the truth just because the truth favors God.13 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring the Bible does not require equal weight for claims of religions that deny equal rights for all.14 <br />
<br />
For example, some claim “souls” don’t enter babies until long after fertilization, or even long after birth.15 Their claims do not “cancel” the mountain of consensus of court-recognized fact finders that souls are present from the beginning. Our Constitution and laws reject their unequal rights, and are appropriately wary of their rationales for their unequal rights. The credibility of every witness is not equal. Credibility is earned. <br />
There can be “free exercise” of religions hostile to “equal protection of the laws” only to the extent their “exercise” does not threaten the rights of others or violate the laws enacted to protect them – laws ultimately decided by voting majorities, hopefully well informed through the uncensoring of reality.16 39/520 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms: <br />
<br />
'''Cumulative''': testimony so redundant that it wastes the court’s time<br />
Dispositive: testimony so strong that it settles the issue with no more<br />
Probative: probative facts establish, or contribute to, proof. Probative value is the degree of relevance of evidence. <br />
<br />
'''Prohibition''': From 1920 to 1932, drinking (alcohol) was made illegal, banned by an actual Constitutional Amendment. Actual alcohol consumption dropped by about 50%, or at least that is how much Cirrhosis of the Liver cases dropped. During that time the drop in drinking led to an economic boom, called the “Roaring Twenties”, which unfortunately were not remembered for their prosperity but for their immorality. In 1928, the prosperity collapsed into a “Great Depression” due to cheating by stock market investors. In 1932 Americans wanted liquor so bad they ratified another Constitutional Amendment repealing the 1920 Amendment. <br />
<br />
'''Substantive Due Process''': As Justice Clarence Thomas eloquently explains – see Statement #11 footnotes, this phrase was made up by SCOTUS to justify making up what it calls “fundamental rights” as its tool of repealing laws it doesn’t like. It gets its name from the SCOTUS claim that the “Due Process” clause of the 14th Amendment gives SCOTUS its authority to make up rights and call them “fundamental”. But “Due Process” only meant the legal procedures which everyone must be given equally, to defend their rights in court when necessary. The phrase has nothing to do with identifying what rights are protectable. But “Substantive” means those rights we care about, that the Constitution protects. Like freedom of speech or religion. Because “substantive” means substantial, serious rights, and “due process” has nothing to do with identifying any rights, the LONANG Institute observes in Statement #11 notes that “substantive due process” is an oxymoron. <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: Foundation for Moral Law and Lutherans for Life <> Jewish Prolife Foundation <> LONANG Institute <> U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and Other Religious Organizations <> Claremont Institute’s Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #11 of 12: The 14th Amendment gives federal courts no “due process” authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the “right” to murder, and gives Congress no authority to legalize violations of Constitutional Rights, like taking a baby’s right to Life====<br />
<br />
The sole federal authority over state laws regarding the rights of their own citizens is through the 14th Amendment, Sections One and Five.1 Contrary to SCOTUS rulings, the 14th Amendment explicitly provides:<br />
<br />
* '''Congress authorized, not courts.''' Congress, not courts, determines the manner and scope of federal intervention in states whose laws don’t protect their citizens’ rights.2 Congress is not limited to enforcing only those rights of which SCOTUS approves, nor only to the extent that SCOTUS approves,3 nor only when state governments, not individuals, directly violate rights.4 <br />
<br />
* Federal courts aren’t permitted to stop either states or Congress from protecting enumerated rights (like Life), or to repeal their laws for conflicting with unenumerated [not listed in the Constitution] “rights” (like the “right” to murder babies), or to intervene in states’ protection of rights beyond prosecuting violations of federal laws.5 <br />
<br />
* Nor can Congress stop states from protecting enumerated rights. Neither Congress nor federal courts may overturn a state law protecting the lives of unborn babies from surgical abortion, chemical abortion, or contraceptives.6<br />
<br />
* The rights subject to federal enforcement are not those made up by SCOTUS allegedly based on the “Due Process” clause,7 but those listed in the Constitution, referred to as “privileges and immunities”8 (including, for unborn babies, the “privilege” of life and “immunity” from “cruel and unusual punishment” and execution “without due process of law”).9 <br />
* Enumerated Rights recognized before the Constitution existed are not excluded from Congressional intervention.10<br />
<br />
* '''“Substantive Due Process”''' is the sophistry by which SCOTUS turned the Constitution’s Authority to Define Rights, and Congress’ 14th Amendment Section 5 Authority to Enforce Rights, into its own authority to reclassify abominations as “rights”.11 It is an illegal, unconstitutional, Freedom-crushing fraud from Hell fomenting a long line of Landmark Abomination Cases.12 <br />
<br />
<small>Mini-lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Due Process:''' The duty of courts to give all parties to cases the fair and equal procedures and opportunities for defending themselves.<br />
<br />
(This argument for ending SCOTUS’ long line of Landmark Abomination Cases continues in Part Two of this book where its focus on SCOTUS-mandated murder of babies created in the Image of God is extended to SCOTUS’ censorship of God Himself.) <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amici who filed briefs in Dobbs v. Jackson: Lonang Institute <> Christian Legal Society <> AfricanAmerican, Hispanic, Roman Catholic and Protestant Religious and Civil Rights Organizations <> Senators Josh Hawley, Mike Lee, and Ted Cruz. And from Judge Robert Bork <> Nathan Schlueter, Professor of Philosophy and Religion, Hillsdale College, (when he debated Judge Bork in 2003 he was assistant professor of pre-law and political science at St. Ambrose University. Author, “Unborn Persons and the Fourteenth Amendment.” 2002.) <> Erwin Chemerinsky, Dean of Berkeley Law School <> Legal Information Institute, Cornell University <> Justice Clarence Thomas, dissents and concurrences <> justia.com <> James Gray Pope, Professor of Law and Sidney Reitman Scholar, Rutgers University School of Law <> Libby Adler professor of law and women’s, gender, and sexuality studies, Northeastern University Christmas, 2023''</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #12 of 12:Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable. The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives.====<br />
<br />
Any judge interfering with this state’s compliance with the 14th Amendment and its ancient authority to protect its people1 – the central reason governments exist, is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders,2 and is guilty of exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide through an unconstitutional ruling,3 which exceeds the judicial powers given by any Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment.4The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives, including (1) giving the state Supreme Court original jurisdiction over any challenge to a law, (2) requiring that review be expedited, (3) requiring a supermajority of the Court to suspend a law, (4) questioning justices in a public hearing about the constitutionality of their ruling, and (5) overturning the ruling with a supermajority of the legislature.5 <br />
<br />
Should any federal judge so interfere with this state’s constitutional duty, this state appeals to its congressional delegation to examine similar grounds for disciplinary action,6 along with exercising its Article III, Section 2, paragraph 2 authority to make “exceptions” and “regulations” designed to end SCOTUS’ long line of landmark abomination cases. This state also appeals to its congressional delegation to exercise its life-saving and rights-protecting authority under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment whose plain words give Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of Rights,7 which subsumes the authority to define their scope and to balance competing interests, while the “privileges and immunities” clause identifies as protectable rights those listed in the Constitution.8 <br />
<br />
Official world-wide definitions of “crimes against humanity” apply “to representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission”, whether elected representatives or unelected judges.”9<br />
<br />
Any court review of this law must be expedited, because lives are lost with each day that courts delay.10 7/230 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of Legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Malfeasance in office:''' official misconduct; violation of a public trust or obligation; specifically, the doing of an act which is positively unlawful or wrongful.<br />
<br />
'''Subsumes:''' Includes. To include or place within something larger or more comprehensive: encompass as a subordinate or component element red, green, and yellow are subsumed under the term "color" <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: 396 State Legislators from 41 States <> Melinda Thybault/Moral Outcry <> and by Matthew J. Franck, Director of the William E. and Carol G. Simon Center on Religion and the Constitution at the Witherspoon Institute and visiting lecturer in politics at Princeton University</small></div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Reversing_Landmark_Abomination_Cases&diff=50375Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases2024-01-02T05:13:28Z<p>DaveLeach: /* Statement of Facts #7 of 12: Congress has Already Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment already authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion, without allowing Congress to legalize it */</p>
<hr />
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<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters<br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion</span><br />
<br />
by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal<br />
''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal<br />
<span style="color:brown"><br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen <br />
<br />
by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 18:06, 15 October 2023 (UTC)<br />
<br />
=Introduction=<br />
<br />
This book offers twelve statements of fact about babies and abortion which I challenge any voter, lawyer, lawmaker, or judge to refute. Their footnotes contain nuggets from the 140 "Amicus" briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' (2022), the ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade. These statements are designed to soften the resistance of voters to outlawing baby murder, when presented in public, and to force judges to outlaw abortion in every state, when presented in court. <br />
<br />
They are truths designed to be so unignorable, that when any lawmaker includes them in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, in any state, prodeath fury will help publicize them with each advance through legislative deadlines. When friends of babies see them survive scrutiny, the force of these truths will grow like a snowball rolling down a hill. <br />
<br />
But murdering babies is only the most egregious of many Landmark Abomination Cases. Their common thread is usurping authority which the Constitution assigns to others, and equating the Bible with spurious religions. “Never let a crisis go to waste”, say the enemies of God, but God is the true master of turning evil into an opportunity for good. It’s time. Let’s end the Supreme Court’s war against God.<br />
<br />
The very fact that abortion is the worst of the ways the United States Supreme Court has turned American law upside down creates an opportunity to heal that branch of our government, and heal all the harm to our nation and its culture and morals that it has caused. As Professor Nathan Schluetter at Hillsdale College observes, “We must not let this opportunity pass to boldly challenge the prevailing jurisprudence and its attendant epistemological and moral skepticism with respect to abortion.”<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
It is the '''fact''' that unborn babies are living human children that makes killing them murder. It’s not what any ''law'' says about it, or even what the Constitution says about it. That’s what leaves ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' on the edge of reality, by treating this fact as something for voters to figure out, not on the basis of whether babies are ''in fact'' people but on the basis of some “value” they place on ''little'' people. <br />
<br />
That '''fact''' is what makes <u>the consensus of court-recognized fact finders</u> a stronger legal reason to end legal abortion than a Life Amendment, and a powerful social reason in the Court of Public Opinion able to soften hearts to the silent screams of Jesus' little brothers and His quiet knocking on hearts' doors. Which makes it insane for prolifers to not even mention this legally dispositive consensus in each and every prolife court case, and every “finding of fact” in prolife legislation, along with leveling with the public about the Scriptures which are the real reason we even care.<br />
<br />
[[File:Cover_Cartoon.jpg]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
Why these solutions may help even where abortion is already outlawed<br />
<br />
(1) They could defeat a national abortion legalization.<br />
<br />
(2) They could help you sue a nearby “blue state” for helping its baby killers murder your children. <br />
<br />
(3) They could help if your district judges join the courtroom rebellion against Dobbs in other states.<br />
<br />
(4) They could help meet challenges in the Court of Public Opinion, for example through a Resolution that irrefutably addresses every objection you have ever heard, as understandable to voters as it is irrefutable to judges. That would help the public see through future judicial gaslighting, and support judicial reform: ie. www.savetheworld .saltshaker.us/wiki/Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_ stop_judges_from_legislating<br />
<br />
(5) I could sure use your feedback. Proverbs 15:22. <br />
<br />
----<br />
<center>'''Ending legal abortion everywhere in close to a year<br />
(the goal of the following bill language)<br />
<br>'''requires a law whose Findings of Facts: '''<br />
</center><br />
<br />
<br />
* '''contain evidence which no judge can squarely address and keep abortion legal anywhere:''' that unborn babies are real people – established by the (unanimous) consensus of court-recognized factfinders: juries, expert witnesses, 38 states, judges, and Congress;<br />
<br />
* '''present its evidence in a way that is clear and persuasive to voters,''' to help them resist judicial and media gaslighting; (See below for “Why court-recognized fact finders persuade Voters”)<br />
<br />
* '''address misunderstandings about abortion jurisprudence''' that divide prolifers, intimidate lawyers, and blind judges;<br />
<br />
'''AND WHOSE PENALTIES'''<br />
<br />
* '''restrict some aspect of abortion substantially enough''' that THEY can't be defended as a mere regulation with some other legitimate government purpose than saving lives. The restriction must be profound enough that its only possible defense is that it saves human lives. That will force courts to address the evidence that babies are fully human;<br />
<br />
* '''provide no distractions that let judges rule on some technicality and ignore the evidence that the law would save lives.''' A perfect law that addresses everything from exceptions to contraception multiplies a judge’s opportunity to say “we don’t need to reach the issue of when life begins because the law fails on a lesser issue.” A simple yet substantial restriction, with “findings” that address the legal obstacles, will survive courts, which will get courts out of the way of saving life, which will free lawmakers to work out the challenging details with time to get a comprehensive solution right and with hope that they won’t waste their time; <br />
<br />
* '''list specific penalties for specific situations,''' rather than broadly stated goals such as “babies are to be protected as much as adults”, leaving prosecutors and judges to guess what to punish, or how, in situations where evidence and culpability are different; <br />
<br />
* '''contain a “life of the mother” exception''' whose applicability is clear enough that mothers are not denied life-saving care until doctors are assured by lawyers that said care will not put the doctors in jail; and<br />
<br />
'''THE LAW SHOULD ALSO order courts to “expedite” any review,''' “because lives are lost with each day that courts delay”. <br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate!)<br />
<br />
More ideas: [[Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_stop_judges_from_legislating]]<br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate! See below for Expedited Review federal rules.) <br />
<br />
WORD COUNTS: Using only the first boldfaced paragraph of each of these 12 Findings, in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, will total about 200 words. The complete Findings, without footnotes, total nearly 3000 words. For the advantages of including enough information in a prolife law for the Findings to defend themselves, see “Too Lengthy?” below. <br />
<br />
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: I am not a lawyer. But writing about prolife legal defenses designed to bring legal abortion to an end, and Scriptures calling for that goal, for 25 years in my Prayer * Action News, being uncertified as a lawyer, has created the opportunity for a remarkable interaction with Planned Barrenhoods priciest lawyers. Because news reporters wouldn’t report that my reasoning was designed as legal defenses in court, or that they were grounded in the Bible, what that left was their accusation that I advocated crime; whereas had my defenses been successful they would have allowed citizens to stop murderers legally, putting an end to the reason citizens took action. <br />
<br />
__TOC__<br />
<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and family, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge inaction deny themselves Life More Abundantly. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget: free wisdom, guaranteed success===<br />
<br />
'''John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
James 1:5 If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, [without finding fault]; and it shall be given him. 6 But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering.''' (Gr. διακρινω not withdrawn from, ie. by lack of support from actions, or opposed, ie. by indecision) <br />
<br />
'''Matthew 21:21 ...If ye have faith, and doubt not''' (Gr. διακρινω) ...'''ye shall say unto this mountain, Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea; it shall be done. 22 And all things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive.'''<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and families, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge their own inaction deny themselves, not just their neighbors, Life More Abundantly.<br />
<br />
If you are not satisfied with life less abundantly – ongoing slaughter of innocents – you won’t be satisfied now that the fate of babies is decided by the “value” that voters place on little people. You will keep searching for a strategy to end all the slaughter: to both outlaw it, and make it unthinkable to all but the worst of murderers. <br />
<br />
If you believe you ''will'' reach every good goal you pursue with all your being, Matthew 21:21-22, you won’t be turned from ending the slaughter in every state by experts who tell you that is impossible which rules out a strategy for achieving it. You will search until you find God’s way to do God’s will. <br />
<br />
You won’t say “I'm not smart enough to question prolife legal authorities who advise giving up”, if you believe James 1:5 which promises you all the wisdom you need to do good. Nor will you ever say you are not smart enough to read and understand legal briefs, court rulings, or to reason with lawmakers, lawyers, and prolife leaders, as necessary.<br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will not excuse yourself from God’s call because you can’t talk well, like Moses, whom God answered “Who made mouths?” Exodus 4:11. Nor will you excuse yourself to God, saying you are but a child against the world’s superbrains, like Jeremiah, whom God answered, “Stop saying that! It is MY words you will speak, and I am no child!” Jeremiah 1:6-8. <br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will shine God’s light wherever you find Darkness, Matthew 5:13-16. Since nothing is darker than murdering your own baby, you will seek God’s help as you oppose this evil, and none of these excuses will withdraw you from action.<br />
<br />
===Final Warning: read this at your own risk===<br />
<br />
Warning: read at your own risk. Rough reading Ahead, that may knock you from your TV chair.<br />
<br />
'''Findings of Facts which No Judge can Squarely Address and Keep Abortion Legal'''<br />
<br />
=Part 1: Authority of Court-Recognized Fact Finders=<br />
<br />
<span style="color:grey"><small>''Try to imagine how a judge, reviewing a prolife law with these Findings of Facts, would be able to dodge this evidence - in fact, see if you can find ANYONE who can ''refute'' these facts - as opposed to not ''caring'' about facts - that is, not caring about reality:''</small></span><br />
<br />
====Statement of Fact #1 of 12: Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let any state legalize====<br />
<br />
'''Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let ''any'' state legalize.'''<br />
<br />
No fact can be more legally established than the fact that “life begins” at fertilization, being the consensus of every American legal authority who has taken a position, in every category of court-recognized finders of facts: juries,2 thousands of expert witnesses who were not contested,3 38 state legislatures,4 individual judges,5 and Congress.6 <br />
<br />
No legal authority has ruled that any unborn baby of a human is not in fact a human person, or that “life begins” any later than fertilization.7 <br />
<br />
No state can keep abortion legal now that this fact is established. This is so obvious that even Roe v. Wade said “of course”, and the lawyer for the abortionists agreed.8 <br />
For most public issues, disagreement is over facts.9 The only disagreement about abortion is between unanimous fact finders and those who don't care about facts.10 A court that won’t address the facts that justify and necessitate a law, or hear evidence of those facts, violates Due Process and has no legitimate jurisdiction to review that law.11 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 1 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? <br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
<br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
<br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True. <br />
<br />
<br />
</span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget #2: The Cost of Success===<br />
<br />
'''Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? '''<br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True.<br />
<br />
=====Statement of Facts #2 of 12: Courts Accept the Fact-Finding Authority of Legislatures, Juries, Experts for the same good reasons their findings persuade the public.=====<br />
<br />
SCOTUS must accept legislative findings of facts that are not obviously irrational. “..the existence of facts supporting the legislative judgment is to be presumed...not to be pronounced unconstitutional unless in the light of the facts made known or generally assumed it is of such a character as to preclude the assumption that it rests upon some rational basis within the knowledge and experience of the legislators....” U.S. v. Carolene Products, 304 U.S. 144, 152 (1938).1<br />
<br />
Besides the court-recognized fact finding authority of legislatures, courts must conform their rulings to laws until such time as courts declare laws unconstitutional. No court has overturned the “unborn victims of violence” laws (based on “human babies are people”) of 39 states and Congress, despite many challenges.2<br />
<br />
To do so would require a court to positively affirm that human life does not begin until much later, which no legal authority has done, and for which no evidence exists.<br />
<br />
'''Legislatures'''. Lawmakers are there by the choice of a majority of voters. They are bombarded by information from experts. They are scrutinized by other lawmakers. Many are lawyers, some of whom are constitutional scholars and past or future judges. They set the salaries of judges, and have the power to hold impeachment trials of judges. Congress, the national legislature, scrutinizes Supreme Court justices. <br />
<br />
Many Congressmen are equally qualified: 15 U.S. Senators have served on the Supreme Court, and more were nominated.3 <br />
<br />
'''Juries''' are tested for impartiality. They are educated by the most qualified expert witnesses available. They study as long as necessary to establish truth – sometimes for months.4<br />
<br />
'''Expert Witnesses''' are the best experts money can buy, and they are scrutinized by the other side’s experts.5 <br />
<br />
It is for strong reasons that the findings of court-recognized fact finders are as respected in court as in the Court of Public Opinion.6<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 2 + Footnotes]]<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Mark 8:38 '''Whosoever therefore shall be ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful generation; of him also shall the Son of man be ashamed''', when he cometh in the glory of his Father with the holy angels.<br />
<br />
We Bible believing conservatives need to quit blaming social media and CIA censorship for our failures and stop censoring ourselves. <br />
<br />
I offer a way of stating evidence which no judge, news reporter, Democrat, or unbeliever can refute, along with answering objections that have crippled prolife messaging and legal strategy. But we despair of reaching those who stop their ears to evidence. “What’s the use of tightening our message? You’re preaching to the choir. We know babies are people but those other people have their opinion too.”<br />
<br />
I’m not "preaching to the choir". I’m passing out a new composition to the choir for a coming TV special.<br />
<br />
Most of those who won’t listen, won’t vote either, rendering their willful ignorance relatively benign. Stop worrying about them. All they will do is hate you, lie about you, wreck your business – childish stuff. We progress by clearly articulating to the extent possible. The same Bible which is the main reason we care about babies promises all the protection we need to finish what we are here to do.<br />
<br />
It isn’t just saving baby bodies where we self censor. Adult souls are lost. We hold back sharing what we know about God. Snap out of it. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
----<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #3 of 12: The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS====<br />
<br />
From Roe (1973) through Dobbs (2022), SCOTUS evaded that core issue.1 <br />
<br />
SCOTUS never ruled babies Non-Persons “as a Matter of Law”, as lower courts allege.2 Roe made that fact not only relevant, but dispositive with a holding which no court has disputed even though Roe’s main holding was overturned:3 <br />
<br />
“[Prolifers] argue that the fetus is a ‘person’ within the language and meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment....If this suggestion of personhood is established, the [abortionist’s] case, of course, collapses, for the fetus’ right to life would then be guaranteed specifically by the [14th] Amendment [thus outlawing abortion in EVERY state]. The [abortionist’s lawyer] conceded as much....”4<br />
<br />
Dobbs explicitly left this statement of the obvious untouched, saying “our decision is not based on any view about when a State should regard pre-natal life as having rights or legally cognizable interests....”5 Dobbs did not say babies aren’t people. Dobbs did not say voters should still decide whether babies can be murdered in the face of proof that babies are in fact people.6 Dobbs left in place Roe’s observation that “establishment” of this fact, independently of any law, ruling, or future constitutional amendment,7 dictates whether abortion is legally recognizable as a right or as a crime.8<br />
<br />
This established fact is as relevant today as when Roe said “of course” it is.<br />
<br />
This established fact is not disestablished by any judge’s alleged inability to understand it.9<br />
<br />
This established FACT is not made irrelevant by any judge’s theory that the legal right of little humans to live is “impossible” to determine so it should be decided by their value to big humans.10<br />
<br />
If only those legally recognized as “persons” were people, slavery could still be legal and the 14th Amendment would mean nothing. Slavery states would merely need to classify their victims as only 3/5 human.11 The Amendment protects those who are IN FACT people – what is irrelevant is whether babies are people “as a matter of law”.12 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 3 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #4 of 12: Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life====<br />
<br />
Detectable heartbeats and brain waves are evidence that a person has not yet died, throughout state and federal law.1 Reason demands they be accepted as evidence that a person has begun to live.2<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 4 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #5 of 12: Legislatures should regulate abortion, as Dobbs held, just as legislatures regulate the prosecution of all other murders====<br />
<br />
But not in the sense of absolute discretion to leave wholesale murders of a supposedly unwanted group of humans completely unregulated. That interpretation of Dobbs’ holding is premised on a “mistake of fact”, which is an official exception to Stare Decisis. 1<br />
<br />
The “Mistake of Fact” that is the premise of letting voters decide whether to continue judge-approved genocide according to the “value” they place on little people is that the humanity of babies of humans is either unknowable or irrelevant. That premise was explicit in Roe and Casey, and implicit in Dobbs.2 <br />
<br />
That is an “erroneous factual premise”. The fact that little unborn humans are humans is neither unknowable3 nor irrelevant. It is verifiable and dispositive.4 The consensus of court-recognized fact finders cures that knowledge deficit, canceling that interpretation of Dobbs’ holding, while reinforcing Dobbs’ other two holdings that “The Constitution does not confer a right to abortion” and “Roe and Casey are overruled”, and requiring the outlawing of baby killing in every state.5 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 5 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #6 of 12: The full humanity of a tiny physical body is hard for many to grasp. But what distinguishes us from animals isn’t physical, and has no known pre-conscious stage====<br />
<br />
DON’T READ past this 28 word paragraph unless you want <br />
an edge-of-your-seat adventure – legal ammunition <br />
against not only baby killing but also against the myth <br />
of the irrelevance of God in the reasoning of judges, <br />
lawmakers, and voters! Yet Roe v Wade, of all cases, <br />
"opened the door" with its sophomoric review of "theologians", <br />
and #6 comes charging through! <> The rest of this Statement <br />
is for lawmakers who want a stronger, clearer statement, <br />
and who have the stomach for the larger battle.<br />
<br />
Part of Roe’s definition of “person” was “infused with a soul”.1 Roe thus affirmed the belief of most of society, a belief logically demanded by the common knowledge that humans are distinguished from animals by consciousness which features a capacity for choices at variance with physical needs: to sacrifice one's interests for another,2 which is how John 15:13 defines “love”. And conversely, to destroy one’s own body.3<br />
<br />
These differences, along with self awareness and the capacity to choose between good and evil4 – to behave either as an angel or as a demon, can’t be explained by any known physical process. These differences justify greater legal protection of humans than of animals. <br />
<br />
Since a “soul” without consciousness has never been theorized and can’t be imagined, the consensus of fact finders is, in effect, that abortion kills babies with conscious souls. The lack of any physical explanation for a conscious soul rules out any reason to infer immaturity of consciousness from physical immaturity, and is consistent with the report in Luke 1:44 that a baby at 6 months heard a righteous voice [and/or felt the righteous Presence of God] and responded with joy,5 a response not everybody chooses, indicating that even the capacity for choosing between good and evil precedes birth. And also indicating that when a baby is killed by dismemberment, acid, or sucking out the brain, a self-aware conscious soul feels the pain, understands the cruelty, and if out-of-body near-death experiences are real, sees who is doing it.<br />
<br />
Even considering the body only, there is no objective line between birth and conception distinguishing “humans” from “nonpersons”, or between “meaningful life” and life which courts are free to terminate.6 Without such a line, there can be no stage of gestation at which killing a baby can be objectively distinguished from murder. No baby is safe while that line remains arbitrary. <br />
<br />
The failure of some to grasp the humanity of babies at any given stage is a dangerous basis for permitting killing, since as many fail to grasp the full humanity of quite a number of distinct groups of born persons.<br />
<br />
As Roe correctly established, it can be useful in clarifying who to count as a human with an unalienable right to life, to consult the religion from which that right was copied into America’s founding documents. But religions which oppose the foundation of American law – equal rights for all humans, merit little credibility in American courts when their claims justify destruction of an entire people group – such as the claim that souls do not enter bodies until around birth. There can be “free exercise” of religions which do not equally reverence all human life only to the extent their “exercise” does not violate the rights of others or the laws enacted to protect them.7<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] <br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #7 of 12: Congress has ''Already'' Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment already authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion, without allowing Congress to legalize it====<br />
<br />
<small>FORGET YOU READ this 32 word Statement and DON’T read farther – <br />
certainly not the footnotes – if you don’t want to question <br />
the near consensus of prolife leaders who say “we are helpless <br />
to outlaw abortion in every state before we get ANOTHER <br />
personhood law through Congress, if not a Life Amendment <br />
to the Constitution.” <> This is the 7th of 12 Statements <br />
designed to push courts out of the way of defending Life <br />
in every state when included in the Findings of Facts of <br />
prolife laws. The material below can make it clearer and stronger.</small><br />
<br />
Congress established in 2004 that: “‘unborn child’ means a child in utero, and the term ‘child in utero’...means a member of the species Homo Sapiens, at any stage of development, who is carried in the womb”, 18 U.S.C. 1841(d).1 <br />
<br />
This fact is not diminished by clause (c) which does not “permit [authorize] the prosecution of any person for...an abortion for which the consent of the pregnant woman...has been obtained.…”2 A law misaligned with facts does not block future lawmakers from making corrections, and states don’t need Congress’ “permission” to obey the 14th Amendment. <br />
<br />
The reason 18 U.S.C. 1841(d) has had no effect on the practice of legal abortion is not because of any deficiency in its authority to establish dispositive facts, but because no state law reviewed by SCOTUS has cited it to establish what Roe correctly said once “established” would “of course” require the end of legal abortion. <br />
<br />
Not only is the 2004 law unmitigated evidence of life strong enough to “collapse” legal abortion by itself, but it would not be stronger if it were an Amendment to the Constitution.3 No other Constitutional Amendment is relied on for evidence of a fact. An Amendment can bind courts. But establishment of the Facts Of Life by evidence presented, cited, and tested in court draws not only courts, but society, closer to reality.4<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #8 of 12: Roe, Dobbs, and the 14th Amendment agree: All Humans are “Persons”====<br />
<br />
<small>DON’T READ past this 11 word Statement <br />
unless you like to stare at where crazy lawyers <br />
ever got the idea that human babies aren’t people!</small><br />
<br />
Neither Roe nor Dobbs distinguished between “humans” and “persons” as if a “human” baby isn’t necessarily a “person”. [2] Nor does the 14th Amendment leave any human unprotected.<br />
<br />
Roe v. Wade equated the time an unborn child becomes “recognizably human” with the time the child becomes a “person”: “These disciplines variously approached the question [“of when life begins”] in terms of the point at which the embryo or fetus became ‘formed’ or recognizably human, or in terms of when a ‘person’ came into being, that is, infused with a ‘soul’ or ‘animated.’” 410 U.S. 113, 133(1973)<br />
<br />
Dobbs cites the belief that “a human person comes into being at conception” without distinguishing between the two words. [3] The word “person” in the 14th Amendment meant “An individual human being...man, woman, or child...consisting of body and soul.” The word “child” in that 1828 definition included unborn children, since to be “with child” meant to be pregnant. [4]<br />
<br />
Therefore the Amendment’s “nor shall any state deprive any person of life” and “equal protection” of every “person” means every human, including those unborn. Nothing about the first clause keeps later clauses from protecting unborn humans. [5]<br />
<br />
See also Wong Wing v. United States, 163 U.S.228, 242 (1896), “The term ‘person’ is broad enough to include any and every human being within the jurisdiction of the republic...This has been decided so often that the point does not require argument.” Steinberg v. Brown 321 F. Supp. 741 (N.D. Ohio, 1970) “[o]nce human life has commenced, the constitutional protections found in the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments impose upon the state a duty of safeguarding it”. [6]<br />
<br />
The word “persons” in the 14th Amendment means all who are IN FACT humans. Had it been only for those who are legally recognized as human, every deprivation of fundamental rights would be “constitutional” so long as a law or ruling questions whether its victims are “persons in the whole sense”.<br />
<br />
Although Dobbs showed by disproving the opposite that reverence for all human life from fertilization was “deeply rooted in America’s law and traditions”, that is not why rights merit 14th Amendment protection. By the “deeply rooted” test, slavery would be legal today, since freedom for slaves had zero historical support.<br />
<br />
Nor does it matter if the Amendment authors even wanted to protect all humans. In fact, it doesn’t matter if there is a 14th Amendment. If law is not equal upon its operation on all humans, which is the very definition of the word “law” as developed by Samuel Rutherford’s “Lex Rex” and Blackstone and adopted by America’s founders, to that extent there is, by definition, no “rule of law”, no restraint upon the “strong” to not tyrannize the “weak”.<br />
<br />
There is a direct test of whether babies merit 14th Amendment protection that does not require a romp through history: [7] see if their parents are humans.<br />
<br />
“To say that the test of equal protection should be the ‘legal’ rather than the biological relationship is to avoid the issue. For the Equal Protection Clause necessarily limits the authority of a State [or its judges] to draw such ‘legal’ lines as it chooses.” Glona, 391 U.S. 73, 75 (1968) [8]<br />
<br />
FOOTNOTES: see [[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
<small>The footnotes are enriched by selections from the Amicus Briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson by: Lee J. Strang <> Scholars of Jurisprudence John M. Finnis and Robert P. George <> Mary Kay Bacallao Advocating for Unborn Children <> Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide <> and by selections from the 1996 debate between Judge Robert Bork and Professor Nathan Schluetter</small><br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #9 of 12: When pregnancies develop into medical emergencies requiring separation of mother and child to save the mother, the child has an equally fundamental right to life and medical care.====<br />
<br />
A legislature’s balancing of their interests cannot, therefore, be reviewed by “strict scrutiny”.2 Nor does alleged insufficiency of a “medical emergency” exception from a general abortion ban justify a court overturning the ban in the 99% of cases where no emergency is alleged.3 Legislatures are better equipped to deliberate about and secure the rights of all citizens than courts whose focus is the parties before them.4<br />
<br />
SCOTUS never denied that a legislature’s “personhood” statements in an abortion ban are strong evidence.5 That evidence is not mitigated by a ban’s exceptions.6 It is not made irrelevant because baby killers “rely” on killing babies.7 28/130 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
Fundamental Right: This is a term not found in the Constitution but made up by SCOTUS for the rights SCOTUS makes up which often displace rights actually listed in the Constitution. Justice Clarence Thomas is eloquent on this point. More about this later.<br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: A Foundation for Moral Law <> Pennsylvania Pro-Life Federation <> 396 State Legislators from 41 States</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #10 of 12: Tyranny over any class of humans by any other is prohibited by the Constitution, and by the Declaration, which gives the purpose of the Constitution and rests its own authority on the revelation of God1 in the Bible====<br />
<br />
Roe v Wade was not out of line to consult “those trained in... theology” who study souls, as well as doctors who study bodies, to clarify who to count as human with an unalienable right to life.3 <br />
<br />
America’s Freedom springs from “all men are created equal” and “equal protection of the laws” for all humans even if their looks, language, wealth, strength, ancestry, power, or faith are different.4 These rights have proven such a blessing to the world that their source, the Bible, deserves the fair hearing owed any witness whose reliability has been confirmed, when it promises still greater blessings if we will equally protect humans whose physical size is different.5 <br />
<br />
Its testimony is not “cumulative”, but “probative”.6 It is not to be feared as dispositive or compulsory: American freedom balances human understanding of how best to apply Biblical principles to government against the willingness of voting majorities to follow those principles. Even that is a Biblical principle legitimized in 1 Samuel 8.7 <br />
<br />
The history of slavery, Prohibition, and abortion illustrate the “willingness” factor. The probative value of the testimony of God is proved by the fact that without it, slavery would never have ended, and the prolife movement would never have begun. Which makes it probative to observe that not only the 14th Amendment, but also the revelation of God, requires this state, as it does every state, to outlaw all trampling of fundamental rights of any class of people, including abortion of babies.8 Where the two authorities say the same thing, the Bible, for all its alleged ambiguity, is better understood and more trusted than the Constitution which has indeed proven “a thing of wax” in the nimble fingers of even the most scrupulous judges.9 <br />
<br />
Without God – without belief in a more objective standard of right and wrong than the “value” that voters place on “different” people through “evolving community standards”, it is impossible to understand fundamental rights.10 <br />
<br />
Courts have demonstrated this impossibility by so often confusing abominations for rights, decimating those whom Jesus said “forbid them not to come unto Me”, denying that He created them, murdering 17% of them, sodomizing 20% of the survivors, and censoring 100% of His teachings in schools.11 <br />
<br />
That destruction of the 14th Amendment (1868) began when “Substantive Due Process”, pioneered in Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857), was applied in United States v. Cruikshank 92 U. S. 542 (1876) to acquit a white Democrat mililtia of murdering “as many as 165” black Republicans and burning down the courthouse they were defending.12 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring God does not “establish religion”. It does not compel belief, action or endorsement. It simply allows judges and voters to make informed decisions. It is part of fact-finding. It is part of reasoning. Part of embracing reality. Part of examining “the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth”. Judges must stop punishing people for telling the truth just because the truth favors God.13 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring the Bible does not require equal weight for claims of religions that deny equal rights for all.14 <br />
<br />
For example, some claim “souls” don’t enter babies until long after fertilization, or even long after birth.15 Their claims do not “cancel” the mountain of consensus of court-recognized fact finders that souls are present from the beginning. Our Constitution and laws reject their unequal rights, and are appropriately wary of their rationales for their unequal rights. The credibility of every witness is not equal. Credibility is earned. <br />
There can be “free exercise” of religions hostile to “equal protection of the laws” only to the extent their “exercise” does not threaten the rights of others or violate the laws enacted to protect them – laws ultimately decided by voting majorities, hopefully well informed through the uncensoring of reality.16 39/520 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms: <br />
<br />
'''Cumulative''': testimony so redundant that it wastes the court’s time<br />
Dispositive: testimony so strong that it settles the issue with no more<br />
Probative: probative facts establish, or contribute to, proof. Probative value is the degree of relevance of evidence. <br />
<br />
'''Prohibition''': From 1920 to 1932, drinking (alcohol) was made illegal, banned by an actual Constitutional Amendment. Actual alcohol consumption dropped by about 50%, or at least that is how much Cirrhosis of the Liver cases dropped. During that time the drop in drinking led to an economic boom, called the “Roaring Twenties”, which unfortunately were not remembered for their prosperity but for their immorality. In 1928, the prosperity collapsed into a “Great Depression” due to cheating by stock market investors. In 1932 Americans wanted liquor so bad they ratified another Constitutional Amendment repealing the 1920 Amendment. <br />
<br />
'''Substantive Due Process''': As Justice Clarence Thomas eloquently explains – see Statement #11 footnotes, this phrase was made up by SCOTUS to justify making up what it calls “fundamental rights” as its tool of repealing laws it doesn’t like. It gets its name from the SCOTUS claim that the “Due Process” clause of the 14th Amendment gives SCOTUS its authority to make up rights and call them “fundamental”. But “Due Process” only meant the legal procedures which everyone must be given equally, to defend their rights in court when necessary. The phrase has nothing to do with identifying what rights are protectable. But “Substantive” means those rights we care about, that the Constitution protects. Like freedom of speech or religion. Because “substantive” means substantial, serious rights, and “due process” has nothing to do with identifying any rights, the LONANG Institute observes in Statement #11 notes that “substantive due process” is an oxymoron. <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: Foundation for Moral Law and Lutherans for Life <> Jewish Prolife Foundation <> LONANG Institute <> U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and Other Religious Organizations <> Claremont Institute’s Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #11 of 12: The 14th Amendment gives federal courts no “due process” authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the “right” to murder, and gives Congress no authority to legalize violations of Constitutional Rights, like taking a baby’s right to Life====<br />
<br />
The sole federal authority over state laws regarding the rights of their own citizens is through the 14th Amendment, Sections One and Five.1 Contrary to SCOTUS rulings, the 14th Amendment explicitly provides:<br />
<br />
* '''Congress authorized, not courts.''' Congress, not courts, determines the manner and scope of federal intervention in states whose laws don’t protect their citizens’ rights.2 Congress is not limited to enforcing only those rights of which SCOTUS approves, nor only to the extent that SCOTUS approves,3 nor only when state governments, not individuals, directly violate rights.4 <br />
<br />
* Federal courts aren’t permitted to stop either states or Congress from protecting enumerated rights (like Life), or to repeal their laws for conflicting with unenumerated [not listed in the Constitution] “rights” (like the “right” to murder babies), or to intervene in states’ protection of rights beyond prosecuting violations of federal laws.5 <br />
<br />
* Nor can Congress stop states from protecting enumerated rights. Neither Congress nor federal courts may overturn a state law protecting the lives of unborn babies from surgical abortion, chemical abortion, or contraceptives.6<br />
<br />
* The rights subject to federal enforcement are not those made up by SCOTUS allegedly based on the “Due Process” clause,7 but those listed in the Constitution, referred to as “privileges and immunities”8 (including, for unborn babies, the “privilege” of life and “immunity” from “cruel and unusual punishment” and execution “without due process of law”).9 <br />
* Enumerated Rights recognized before the Constitution existed are not excluded from Congressional intervention.10<br />
<br />
* '''“Substantive Due Process”''' is the sophistry by which SCOTUS turned the Constitution’s Authority to Define Rights, and Congress’ 14th Amendment Section 5 Authority to Enforce Rights, into its own authority to reclassify abominations as “rights”.11 It is an illegal, unconstitutional, Freedom-crushing fraud from Hell fomenting a long line of Landmark Abomination Cases.12 <br />
<br />
<small>Mini-lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Due Process:''' The duty of courts to give all parties to cases the fair and equal procedures and opportunities for defending themselves.<br />
<br />
(This argument for ending SCOTUS’ long line of Landmark Abomination Cases continues in Part Two of this book where its focus on SCOTUS-mandated murder of babies created in the Image of God is extended to SCOTUS’ censorship of God Himself.) <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amici who filed briefs in Dobbs v. Jackson: Lonang Institute <> Christian Legal Society <> AfricanAmerican, Hispanic, Roman Catholic and Protestant Religious and Civil Rights Organizations <> Senators Josh Hawley, Mike Lee, and Ted Cruz. And from Judge Robert Bork <> Nathan Schlueter, Professor of Philosophy and Religion, Hillsdale College, (when he debated Judge Bork in 2003 he was assistant professor of pre-law and political science at St. Ambrose University. Author, “Unborn Persons and the Fourteenth Amendment.” 2002.) <> Erwin Chemerinsky, Dean of Berkeley Law School <> Legal Information Institute, Cornell University <> Justice Clarence Thomas, dissents and concurrences <> justia.com <> James Gray Pope, Professor of Law and Sidney Reitman Scholar, Rutgers University School of Law <> Libby Adler professor of law and women’s, gender, and sexuality studies, Northeastern University Christmas, 2023''</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #12 of 12:Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable. The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives.====<br />
<br />
Any judge interfering with this state’s compliance with the 14th Amendment and its ancient authority to protect its people1 – the central reason governments exist, is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders,2 and is guilty of exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide through an unconstitutional ruling,3 which exceeds the judicial powers given by any Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment.4The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives, including (1) giving the state Supreme Court original jurisdiction over any challenge to a law, (2) requiring that review be expedited, (3) requiring a supermajority of the Court to suspend a law, (4) questioning justices in a public hearing about the constitutionality of their ruling, and (5) overturning the ruling with a supermajority of the legislature.5 <br />
<br />
Should any federal judge so interfere with this state’s constitutional duty, this state appeals to its congressional delegation to examine similar grounds for disciplinary action,6 along with exercising its Article III, Section 2, paragraph 2 authority to make “exceptions” and “regulations” designed to end SCOTUS’ long line of landmark abomination cases. This state also appeals to its congressional delegation to exercise its life-saving and rights-protecting authority under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment whose plain words give Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of Rights,7 which subsumes the authority to define their scope and to balance competing interests, while the “privileges and immunities” clause identifies as protectable rights those listed in the Constitution.8 <br />
<br />
Official world-wide definitions of “crimes against humanity” apply “to representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission”, whether elected representatives or unelected judges.”9<br />
<br />
Any court review of this law must be expedited, because lives are lost with each day that courts delay.10 7/230 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of Legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Malfeasance in office:''' official misconduct; violation of a public trust or obligation; specifically, the doing of an act which is positively unlawful or wrongful.<br />
<br />
'''Subsumes:''' Includes. To include or place within something larger or more comprehensive: encompass as a subordinate or component element red, green, and yellow are subsumed under the term "color" <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: 396 State Legislators from 41 States <> Melinda Thybault/Moral Outcry <> and by Matthew J. Franck, Director of the William E. and Carol G. Simon Center on Religion and the Constitution at the Witherspoon Institute and visiting lecturer in politics at Princeton University</small></div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Reversing_Landmark_Abomination_Cases&diff=50374Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases2024-01-02T05:13:03Z<p>DaveLeach: /* Statement of Facts #6 of 12: The full humanity of a tiny physical body is hard for many to grasp. But what distinguishes us from animals isn’t physical, and has no known pre-conscious stage */</p>
<hr />
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<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters<br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion</span><br />
<br />
by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal<br />
''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal<br />
<span style="color:brown"><br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen <br />
<br />
by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 18:06, 15 October 2023 (UTC)<br />
<br />
=Introduction=<br />
<br />
This book offers twelve statements of fact about babies and abortion which I challenge any voter, lawyer, lawmaker, or judge to refute. Their footnotes contain nuggets from the 140 "Amicus" briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' (2022), the ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade. These statements are designed to soften the resistance of voters to outlawing baby murder, when presented in public, and to force judges to outlaw abortion in every state, when presented in court. <br />
<br />
They are truths designed to be so unignorable, that when any lawmaker includes them in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, in any state, prodeath fury will help publicize them with each advance through legislative deadlines. When friends of babies see them survive scrutiny, the force of these truths will grow like a snowball rolling down a hill. <br />
<br />
But murdering babies is only the most egregious of many Landmark Abomination Cases. Their common thread is usurping authority which the Constitution assigns to others, and equating the Bible with spurious religions. “Never let a crisis go to waste”, say the enemies of God, but God is the true master of turning evil into an opportunity for good. It’s time. Let’s end the Supreme Court’s war against God.<br />
<br />
The very fact that abortion is the worst of the ways the United States Supreme Court has turned American law upside down creates an opportunity to heal that branch of our government, and heal all the harm to our nation and its culture and morals that it has caused. As Professor Nathan Schluetter at Hillsdale College observes, “We must not let this opportunity pass to boldly challenge the prevailing jurisprudence and its attendant epistemological and moral skepticism with respect to abortion.”<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
It is the '''fact''' that unborn babies are living human children that makes killing them murder. It’s not what any ''law'' says about it, or even what the Constitution says about it. That’s what leaves ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' on the edge of reality, by treating this fact as something for voters to figure out, not on the basis of whether babies are ''in fact'' people but on the basis of some “value” they place on ''little'' people. <br />
<br />
That '''fact''' is what makes <u>the consensus of court-recognized fact finders</u> a stronger legal reason to end legal abortion than a Life Amendment, and a powerful social reason in the Court of Public Opinion able to soften hearts to the silent screams of Jesus' little brothers and His quiet knocking on hearts' doors. Which makes it insane for prolifers to not even mention this legally dispositive consensus in each and every prolife court case, and every “finding of fact” in prolife legislation, along with leveling with the public about the Scriptures which are the real reason we even care.<br />
<br />
[[File:Cover_Cartoon.jpg]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
Why these solutions may help even where abortion is already outlawed<br />
<br />
(1) They could defeat a national abortion legalization.<br />
<br />
(2) They could help you sue a nearby “blue state” for helping its baby killers murder your children. <br />
<br />
(3) They could help if your district judges join the courtroom rebellion against Dobbs in other states.<br />
<br />
(4) They could help meet challenges in the Court of Public Opinion, for example through a Resolution that irrefutably addresses every objection you have ever heard, as understandable to voters as it is irrefutable to judges. That would help the public see through future judicial gaslighting, and support judicial reform: ie. www.savetheworld .saltshaker.us/wiki/Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_ stop_judges_from_legislating<br />
<br />
(5) I could sure use your feedback. Proverbs 15:22. <br />
<br />
----<br />
<center>'''Ending legal abortion everywhere in close to a year<br />
(the goal of the following bill language)<br />
<br>'''requires a law whose Findings of Facts: '''<br />
</center><br />
<br />
<br />
* '''contain evidence which no judge can squarely address and keep abortion legal anywhere:''' that unborn babies are real people – established by the (unanimous) consensus of court-recognized factfinders: juries, expert witnesses, 38 states, judges, and Congress;<br />
<br />
* '''present its evidence in a way that is clear and persuasive to voters,''' to help them resist judicial and media gaslighting; (See below for “Why court-recognized fact finders persuade Voters”)<br />
<br />
* '''address misunderstandings about abortion jurisprudence''' that divide prolifers, intimidate lawyers, and blind judges;<br />
<br />
'''AND WHOSE PENALTIES'''<br />
<br />
* '''restrict some aspect of abortion substantially enough''' that THEY can't be defended as a mere regulation with some other legitimate government purpose than saving lives. The restriction must be profound enough that its only possible defense is that it saves human lives. That will force courts to address the evidence that babies are fully human;<br />
<br />
* '''provide no distractions that let judges rule on some technicality and ignore the evidence that the law would save lives.''' A perfect law that addresses everything from exceptions to contraception multiplies a judge’s opportunity to say “we don’t need to reach the issue of when life begins because the law fails on a lesser issue.” A simple yet substantial restriction, with “findings” that address the legal obstacles, will survive courts, which will get courts out of the way of saving life, which will free lawmakers to work out the challenging details with time to get a comprehensive solution right and with hope that they won’t waste their time; <br />
<br />
* '''list specific penalties for specific situations,''' rather than broadly stated goals such as “babies are to be protected as much as adults”, leaving prosecutors and judges to guess what to punish, or how, in situations where evidence and culpability are different; <br />
<br />
* '''contain a “life of the mother” exception''' whose applicability is clear enough that mothers are not denied life-saving care until doctors are assured by lawyers that said care will not put the doctors in jail; and<br />
<br />
'''THE LAW SHOULD ALSO order courts to “expedite” any review,''' “because lives are lost with each day that courts delay”. <br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate!)<br />
<br />
More ideas: [[Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_stop_judges_from_legislating]]<br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate! See below for Expedited Review federal rules.) <br />
<br />
WORD COUNTS: Using only the first boldfaced paragraph of each of these 12 Findings, in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, will total about 200 words. The complete Findings, without footnotes, total nearly 3000 words. For the advantages of including enough information in a prolife law for the Findings to defend themselves, see “Too Lengthy?” below. <br />
<br />
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: I am not a lawyer. But writing about prolife legal defenses designed to bring legal abortion to an end, and Scriptures calling for that goal, for 25 years in my Prayer * Action News, being uncertified as a lawyer, has created the opportunity for a remarkable interaction with Planned Barrenhoods priciest lawyers. Because news reporters wouldn’t report that my reasoning was designed as legal defenses in court, or that they were grounded in the Bible, what that left was their accusation that I advocated crime; whereas had my defenses been successful they would have allowed citizens to stop murderers legally, putting an end to the reason citizens took action. <br />
<br />
__TOC__<br />
<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and family, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge inaction deny themselves Life More Abundantly. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget: free wisdom, guaranteed success===<br />
<br />
'''John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
James 1:5 If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, [without finding fault]; and it shall be given him. 6 But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering.''' (Gr. διακρινω not withdrawn from, ie. by lack of support from actions, or opposed, ie. by indecision) <br />
<br />
'''Matthew 21:21 ...If ye have faith, and doubt not''' (Gr. διακρινω) ...'''ye shall say unto this mountain, Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea; it shall be done. 22 And all things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive.'''<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and families, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge their own inaction deny themselves, not just their neighbors, Life More Abundantly.<br />
<br />
If you are not satisfied with life less abundantly – ongoing slaughter of innocents – you won’t be satisfied now that the fate of babies is decided by the “value” that voters place on little people. You will keep searching for a strategy to end all the slaughter: to both outlaw it, and make it unthinkable to all but the worst of murderers. <br />
<br />
If you believe you ''will'' reach every good goal you pursue with all your being, Matthew 21:21-22, you won’t be turned from ending the slaughter in every state by experts who tell you that is impossible which rules out a strategy for achieving it. You will search until you find God’s way to do God’s will. <br />
<br />
You won’t say “I'm not smart enough to question prolife legal authorities who advise giving up”, if you believe James 1:5 which promises you all the wisdom you need to do good. Nor will you ever say you are not smart enough to read and understand legal briefs, court rulings, or to reason with lawmakers, lawyers, and prolife leaders, as necessary.<br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will not excuse yourself from God’s call because you can’t talk well, like Moses, whom God answered “Who made mouths?” Exodus 4:11. Nor will you excuse yourself to God, saying you are but a child against the world’s superbrains, like Jeremiah, whom God answered, “Stop saying that! It is MY words you will speak, and I am no child!” Jeremiah 1:6-8. <br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will shine God’s light wherever you find Darkness, Matthew 5:13-16. Since nothing is darker than murdering your own baby, you will seek God’s help as you oppose this evil, and none of these excuses will withdraw you from action.<br />
<br />
===Final Warning: read this at your own risk===<br />
<br />
Warning: read at your own risk. Rough reading Ahead, that may knock you from your TV chair.<br />
<br />
'''Findings of Facts which No Judge can Squarely Address and Keep Abortion Legal'''<br />
<br />
=Part 1: Authority of Court-Recognized Fact Finders=<br />
<br />
<span style="color:grey"><small>''Try to imagine how a judge, reviewing a prolife law with these Findings of Facts, would be able to dodge this evidence - in fact, see if you can find ANYONE who can ''refute'' these facts - as opposed to not ''caring'' about facts - that is, not caring about reality:''</small></span><br />
<br />
====Statement of Fact #1 of 12: Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let any state legalize====<br />
<br />
'''Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let ''any'' state legalize.'''<br />
<br />
No fact can be more legally established than the fact that “life begins” at fertilization, being the consensus of every American legal authority who has taken a position, in every category of court-recognized finders of facts: juries,2 thousands of expert witnesses who were not contested,3 38 state legislatures,4 individual judges,5 and Congress.6 <br />
<br />
No legal authority has ruled that any unborn baby of a human is not in fact a human person, or that “life begins” any later than fertilization.7 <br />
<br />
No state can keep abortion legal now that this fact is established. This is so obvious that even Roe v. Wade said “of course”, and the lawyer for the abortionists agreed.8 <br />
For most public issues, disagreement is over facts.9 The only disagreement about abortion is between unanimous fact finders and those who don't care about facts.10 A court that won’t address the facts that justify and necessitate a law, or hear evidence of those facts, violates Due Process and has no legitimate jurisdiction to review that law.11 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 1 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? <br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
<br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
<br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True. <br />
<br />
<br />
</span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget #2: The Cost of Success===<br />
<br />
'''Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? '''<br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True.<br />
<br />
=====Statement of Facts #2 of 12: Courts Accept the Fact-Finding Authority of Legislatures, Juries, Experts for the same good reasons their findings persuade the public.=====<br />
<br />
SCOTUS must accept legislative findings of facts that are not obviously irrational. “..the existence of facts supporting the legislative judgment is to be presumed...not to be pronounced unconstitutional unless in the light of the facts made known or generally assumed it is of such a character as to preclude the assumption that it rests upon some rational basis within the knowledge and experience of the legislators....” U.S. v. Carolene Products, 304 U.S. 144, 152 (1938).1<br />
<br />
Besides the court-recognized fact finding authority of legislatures, courts must conform their rulings to laws until such time as courts declare laws unconstitutional. No court has overturned the “unborn victims of violence” laws (based on “human babies are people”) of 39 states and Congress, despite many challenges.2<br />
<br />
To do so would require a court to positively affirm that human life does not begin until much later, which no legal authority has done, and for which no evidence exists.<br />
<br />
'''Legislatures'''. Lawmakers are there by the choice of a majority of voters. They are bombarded by information from experts. They are scrutinized by other lawmakers. Many are lawyers, some of whom are constitutional scholars and past or future judges. They set the salaries of judges, and have the power to hold impeachment trials of judges. Congress, the national legislature, scrutinizes Supreme Court justices. <br />
<br />
Many Congressmen are equally qualified: 15 U.S. Senators have served on the Supreme Court, and more were nominated.3 <br />
<br />
'''Juries''' are tested for impartiality. They are educated by the most qualified expert witnesses available. They study as long as necessary to establish truth – sometimes for months.4<br />
<br />
'''Expert Witnesses''' are the best experts money can buy, and they are scrutinized by the other side’s experts.5 <br />
<br />
It is for strong reasons that the findings of court-recognized fact finders are as respected in court as in the Court of Public Opinion.6<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 2 + Footnotes]]<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Mark 8:38 '''Whosoever therefore shall be ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful generation; of him also shall the Son of man be ashamed''', when he cometh in the glory of his Father with the holy angels.<br />
<br />
We Bible believing conservatives need to quit blaming social media and CIA censorship for our failures and stop censoring ourselves. <br />
<br />
I offer a way of stating evidence which no judge, news reporter, Democrat, or unbeliever can refute, along with answering objections that have crippled prolife messaging and legal strategy. But we despair of reaching those who stop their ears to evidence. “What’s the use of tightening our message? You’re preaching to the choir. We know babies are people but those other people have their opinion too.”<br />
<br />
I’m not "preaching to the choir". I’m passing out a new composition to the choir for a coming TV special.<br />
<br />
Most of those who won’t listen, won’t vote either, rendering their willful ignorance relatively benign. Stop worrying about them. All they will do is hate you, lie about you, wreck your business – childish stuff. We progress by clearly articulating to the extent possible. The same Bible which is the main reason we care about babies promises all the protection we need to finish what we are here to do.<br />
<br />
It isn’t just saving baby bodies where we self censor. Adult souls are lost. We hold back sharing what we know about God. Snap out of it. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
----<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #3 of 12: The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS====<br />
<br />
From Roe (1973) through Dobbs (2022), SCOTUS evaded that core issue.1 <br />
<br />
SCOTUS never ruled babies Non-Persons “as a Matter of Law”, as lower courts allege.2 Roe made that fact not only relevant, but dispositive with a holding which no court has disputed even though Roe’s main holding was overturned:3 <br />
<br />
“[Prolifers] argue that the fetus is a ‘person’ within the language and meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment....If this suggestion of personhood is established, the [abortionist’s] case, of course, collapses, for the fetus’ right to life would then be guaranteed specifically by the [14th] Amendment [thus outlawing abortion in EVERY state]. The [abortionist’s lawyer] conceded as much....”4<br />
<br />
Dobbs explicitly left this statement of the obvious untouched, saying “our decision is not based on any view about when a State should regard pre-natal life as having rights or legally cognizable interests....”5 Dobbs did not say babies aren’t people. Dobbs did not say voters should still decide whether babies can be murdered in the face of proof that babies are in fact people.6 Dobbs left in place Roe’s observation that “establishment” of this fact, independently of any law, ruling, or future constitutional amendment,7 dictates whether abortion is legally recognizable as a right or as a crime.8<br />
<br />
This established fact is as relevant today as when Roe said “of course” it is.<br />
<br />
This established fact is not disestablished by any judge’s alleged inability to understand it.9<br />
<br />
This established FACT is not made irrelevant by any judge’s theory that the legal right of little humans to live is “impossible” to determine so it should be decided by their value to big humans.10<br />
<br />
If only those legally recognized as “persons” were people, slavery could still be legal and the 14th Amendment would mean nothing. Slavery states would merely need to classify their victims as only 3/5 human.11 The Amendment protects those who are IN FACT people – what is irrelevant is whether babies are people “as a matter of law”.12 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 3 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #4 of 12: Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life====<br />
<br />
Detectable heartbeats and brain waves are evidence that a person has not yet died, throughout state and federal law.1 Reason demands they be accepted as evidence that a person has begun to live.2<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 4 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #5 of 12: Legislatures should regulate abortion, as Dobbs held, just as legislatures regulate the prosecution of all other murders====<br />
<br />
But not in the sense of absolute discretion to leave wholesale murders of a supposedly unwanted group of humans completely unregulated. That interpretation of Dobbs’ holding is premised on a “mistake of fact”, which is an official exception to Stare Decisis. 1<br />
<br />
The “Mistake of Fact” that is the premise of letting voters decide whether to continue judge-approved genocide according to the “value” they place on little people is that the humanity of babies of humans is either unknowable or irrelevant. That premise was explicit in Roe and Casey, and implicit in Dobbs.2 <br />
<br />
That is an “erroneous factual premise”. The fact that little unborn humans are humans is neither unknowable3 nor irrelevant. It is verifiable and dispositive.4 The consensus of court-recognized fact finders cures that knowledge deficit, canceling that interpretation of Dobbs’ holding, while reinforcing Dobbs’ other two holdings that “The Constitution does not confer a right to abortion” and “Roe and Casey are overruled”, and requiring the outlawing of baby killing in every state.5 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 5 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #6 of 12: The full humanity of a tiny physical body is hard for many to grasp. But what distinguishes us from animals isn’t physical, and has no known pre-conscious stage====<br />
<br />
DON’T READ past this 28 word paragraph unless you want <br />
an edge-of-your-seat adventure – legal ammunition <br />
against not only baby killing but also against the myth <br />
of the irrelevance of God in the reasoning of judges, <br />
lawmakers, and voters! Yet Roe v Wade, of all cases, <br />
"opened the door" with its sophomoric review of "theologians", <br />
and #6 comes charging through! <> The rest of this Statement <br />
is for lawmakers who want a stronger, clearer statement, <br />
and who have the stomach for the larger battle.<br />
<br />
Part of Roe’s definition of “person” was “infused with a soul”.1 Roe thus affirmed the belief of most of society, a belief logically demanded by the common knowledge that humans are distinguished from animals by consciousness which features a capacity for choices at variance with physical needs: to sacrifice one's interests for another,2 which is how John 15:13 defines “love”. And conversely, to destroy one’s own body.3<br />
<br />
These differences, along with self awareness and the capacity to choose between good and evil4 – to behave either as an angel or as a demon, can’t be explained by any known physical process. These differences justify greater legal protection of humans than of animals. <br />
<br />
Since a “soul” without consciousness has never been theorized and can’t be imagined, the consensus of fact finders is, in effect, that abortion kills babies with conscious souls. The lack of any physical explanation for a conscious soul rules out any reason to infer immaturity of consciousness from physical immaturity, and is consistent with the report in Luke 1:44 that a baby at 6 months heard a righteous voice [and/or felt the righteous Presence of God] and responded with joy,5 a response not everybody chooses, indicating that even the capacity for choosing between good and evil precedes birth. And also indicating that when a baby is killed by dismemberment, acid, or sucking out the brain, a self-aware conscious soul feels the pain, understands the cruelty, and if out-of-body near-death experiences are real, sees who is doing it.<br />
<br />
Even considering the body only, there is no objective line between birth and conception distinguishing “humans” from “nonpersons”, or between “meaningful life” and life which courts are free to terminate.6 Without such a line, there can be no stage of gestation at which killing a baby can be objectively distinguished from murder. No baby is safe while that line remains arbitrary. <br />
<br />
The failure of some to grasp the humanity of babies at any given stage is a dangerous basis for permitting killing, since as many fail to grasp the full humanity of quite a number of distinct groups of born persons.<br />
<br />
As Roe correctly established, it can be useful in clarifying who to count as a human with an unalienable right to life, to consult the religion from which that right was copied into America’s founding documents. But religions which oppose the foundation of American law – equal rights for all humans, merit little credibility in American courts when their claims justify destruction of an entire people group – such as the claim that souls do not enter bodies until around birth. There can be “free exercise” of religions which do not equally reverence all human life only to the extent their “exercise” does not violate the rights of others or the laws enacted to protect them.7<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] <br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #7 of 12: Congress has ''Already'' Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment already authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion, without allowing Congress to legalize it====<br />
<br />
<small>FORGET YOU READ this 32 word Statement and DON’T read farther – <br />
certainly not the footnotes – if you don’t want to question <br />
the near consensus of prolife leaders who say “we are helpless <br />
to outlaw abortion in every state before we get ANOTHER <br />
personhood law through Congress, if not a Life Amendment <br />
to the Constitution.” <> This is the 7th of 12 Statements <br />
designed to push courts out of the way of defending Life <br />
in every state when included in the Findings of Facts of <br />
prolife laws. The material below can make it clearer and stronger.</small><br />
<br />
Congress established in 2004 that: “‘unborn child’ means a child in utero, and the term ‘child in utero’...means a member of the species Homo Sapiens, at any stage of development, who is carried in the womb”, 18 U.S.C. 1841(d).1 <br />
<br />
This fact is not diminished by clause (c) which does not “permit [authorize] the prosecution of any person for...an abortion for which the consent of the pregnant woman...has been obtained.…”2 A law misaligned with facts does not block future lawmakers from making corrections, and states don’t need Congress’ “permission” to obey the 14th Amendment. <br />
<br />
The reason 18 U.S.C. 1841(d) has had no effect on the practice of legal abortion is not because of any deficiency in its authority to establish dispositive facts, but because no state law reviewed by SCOTUS has cited it to establish what Roe correctly said once “established” would “of course” require the end of legal abortion. <br />
<br />
Not only is the 2004 law unmitigated evidence of life strong enough to “collapse” legal abortion by itself, but it would not be stronger if it were an Amendment to the Constitution.3 No other Constitutional Amendment is relied on for evidence of a fact. An Amendment can bind courts. But establishment of the Facts Of Life by evidence presented, cited, and tested in court draws not only courts, but society, closer to reality.4<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #8 of 12: Roe, Dobbs, and the 14th Amendment agree: All Humans are “Persons”====<br />
<br />
<small>DON’T READ past this 11 word Statement <br />
unless you like to stare at where crazy lawyers <br />
ever got the idea that human babies aren’t people!</small><br />
<br />
Neither Roe nor Dobbs distinguished between “humans” and “persons” as if a “human” baby isn’t necessarily a “person”. [2] Nor does the 14th Amendment leave any human unprotected.<br />
<br />
Roe v. Wade equated the time an unborn child becomes “recognizably human” with the time the child becomes a “person”: “These disciplines variously approached the question [“of when life begins”] in terms of the point at which the embryo or fetus became ‘formed’ or recognizably human, or in terms of when a ‘person’ came into being, that is, infused with a ‘soul’ or ‘animated.’” 410 U.S. 113, 133(1973)<br />
<br />
Dobbs cites the belief that “a human person comes into being at conception” without distinguishing between the two words. [3] The word “person” in the 14th Amendment meant “An individual human being...man, woman, or child...consisting of body and soul.” The word “child” in that 1828 definition included unborn children, since to be “with child” meant to be pregnant. [4]<br />
<br />
Therefore the Amendment’s “nor shall any state deprive any person of life” and “equal protection” of every “person” means every human, including those unborn. Nothing about the first clause keeps later clauses from protecting unborn humans. [5]<br />
<br />
See also Wong Wing v. United States, 163 U.S.228, 242 (1896), “The term ‘person’ is broad enough to include any and every human being within the jurisdiction of the republic...This has been decided so often that the point does not require argument.” Steinberg v. Brown 321 F. Supp. 741 (N.D. Ohio, 1970) “[o]nce human life has commenced, the constitutional protections found in the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments impose upon the state a duty of safeguarding it”. [6]<br />
<br />
The word “persons” in the 14th Amendment means all who are IN FACT humans. Had it been only for those who are legally recognized as human, every deprivation of fundamental rights would be “constitutional” so long as a law or ruling questions whether its victims are “persons in the whole sense”.<br />
<br />
Although Dobbs showed by disproving the opposite that reverence for all human life from fertilization was “deeply rooted in America’s law and traditions”, that is not why rights merit 14th Amendment protection. By the “deeply rooted” test, slavery would be legal today, since freedom for slaves had zero historical support.<br />
<br />
Nor does it matter if the Amendment authors even wanted to protect all humans. In fact, it doesn’t matter if there is a 14th Amendment. If law is not equal upon its operation on all humans, which is the very definition of the word “law” as developed by Samuel Rutherford’s “Lex Rex” and Blackstone and adopted by America’s founders, to that extent there is, by definition, no “rule of law”, no restraint upon the “strong” to not tyrannize the “weak”.<br />
<br />
There is a direct test of whether babies merit 14th Amendment protection that does not require a romp through history: [7] see if their parents are humans.<br />
<br />
“To say that the test of equal protection should be the ‘legal’ rather than the biological relationship is to avoid the issue. For the Equal Protection Clause necessarily limits the authority of a State [or its judges] to draw such ‘legal’ lines as it chooses.” Glona, 391 U.S. 73, 75 (1968) [8]<br />
<br />
FOOTNOTES: see [[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
<small>The footnotes are enriched by selections from the Amicus Briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson by: Lee J. Strang <> Scholars of Jurisprudence John M. Finnis and Robert P. George <> Mary Kay Bacallao Advocating for Unborn Children <> Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide <> and by selections from the 1996 debate between Judge Robert Bork and Professor Nathan Schluetter</small><br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #9 of 12: When pregnancies develop into medical emergencies requiring separation of mother and child to save the mother, the child has an equally fundamental right to life and medical care.====<br />
<br />
A legislature’s balancing of their interests cannot, therefore, be reviewed by “strict scrutiny”.2 Nor does alleged insufficiency of a “medical emergency” exception from a general abortion ban justify a court overturning the ban in the 99% of cases where no emergency is alleged.3 Legislatures are better equipped to deliberate about and secure the rights of all citizens than courts whose focus is the parties before them.4<br />
<br />
SCOTUS never denied that a legislature’s “personhood” statements in an abortion ban are strong evidence.5 That evidence is not mitigated by a ban’s exceptions.6 It is not made irrelevant because baby killers “rely” on killing babies.7 28/130 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
Fundamental Right: This is a term not found in the Constitution but made up by SCOTUS for the rights SCOTUS makes up which often displace rights actually listed in the Constitution. Justice Clarence Thomas is eloquent on this point. More about this later.<br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: A Foundation for Moral Law <> Pennsylvania Pro-Life Federation <> 396 State Legislators from 41 States</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #10 of 12: Tyranny over any class of humans by any other is prohibited by the Constitution, and by the Declaration, which gives the purpose of the Constitution and rests its own authority on the revelation of God1 in the Bible====<br />
<br />
Roe v Wade was not out of line to consult “those trained in... theology” who study souls, as well as doctors who study bodies, to clarify who to count as human with an unalienable right to life.3 <br />
<br />
America’s Freedom springs from “all men are created equal” and “equal protection of the laws” for all humans even if their looks, language, wealth, strength, ancestry, power, or faith are different.4 These rights have proven such a blessing to the world that their source, the Bible, deserves the fair hearing owed any witness whose reliability has been confirmed, when it promises still greater blessings if we will equally protect humans whose physical size is different.5 <br />
<br />
Its testimony is not “cumulative”, but “probative”.6 It is not to be feared as dispositive or compulsory: American freedom balances human understanding of how best to apply Biblical principles to government against the willingness of voting majorities to follow those principles. Even that is a Biblical principle legitimized in 1 Samuel 8.7 <br />
<br />
The history of slavery, Prohibition, and abortion illustrate the “willingness” factor. The probative value of the testimony of God is proved by the fact that without it, slavery would never have ended, and the prolife movement would never have begun. Which makes it probative to observe that not only the 14th Amendment, but also the revelation of God, requires this state, as it does every state, to outlaw all trampling of fundamental rights of any class of people, including abortion of babies.8 Where the two authorities say the same thing, the Bible, for all its alleged ambiguity, is better understood and more trusted than the Constitution which has indeed proven “a thing of wax” in the nimble fingers of even the most scrupulous judges.9 <br />
<br />
Without God – without belief in a more objective standard of right and wrong than the “value” that voters place on “different” people through “evolving community standards”, it is impossible to understand fundamental rights.10 <br />
<br />
Courts have demonstrated this impossibility by so often confusing abominations for rights, decimating those whom Jesus said “forbid them not to come unto Me”, denying that He created them, murdering 17% of them, sodomizing 20% of the survivors, and censoring 100% of His teachings in schools.11 <br />
<br />
That destruction of the 14th Amendment (1868) began when “Substantive Due Process”, pioneered in Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857), was applied in United States v. Cruikshank 92 U. S. 542 (1876) to acquit a white Democrat mililtia of murdering “as many as 165” black Republicans and burning down the courthouse they were defending.12 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring God does not “establish religion”. It does not compel belief, action or endorsement. It simply allows judges and voters to make informed decisions. It is part of fact-finding. It is part of reasoning. Part of embracing reality. Part of examining “the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth”. Judges must stop punishing people for telling the truth just because the truth favors God.13 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring the Bible does not require equal weight for claims of religions that deny equal rights for all.14 <br />
<br />
For example, some claim “souls” don’t enter babies until long after fertilization, or even long after birth.15 Their claims do not “cancel” the mountain of consensus of court-recognized fact finders that souls are present from the beginning. Our Constitution and laws reject their unequal rights, and are appropriately wary of their rationales for their unequal rights. The credibility of every witness is not equal. Credibility is earned. <br />
There can be “free exercise” of religions hostile to “equal protection of the laws” only to the extent their “exercise” does not threaten the rights of others or violate the laws enacted to protect them – laws ultimately decided by voting majorities, hopefully well informed through the uncensoring of reality.16 39/520 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms: <br />
<br />
'''Cumulative''': testimony so redundant that it wastes the court’s time<br />
Dispositive: testimony so strong that it settles the issue with no more<br />
Probative: probative facts establish, or contribute to, proof. Probative value is the degree of relevance of evidence. <br />
<br />
'''Prohibition''': From 1920 to 1932, drinking (alcohol) was made illegal, banned by an actual Constitutional Amendment. Actual alcohol consumption dropped by about 50%, or at least that is how much Cirrhosis of the Liver cases dropped. During that time the drop in drinking led to an economic boom, called the “Roaring Twenties”, which unfortunately were not remembered for their prosperity but for their immorality. In 1928, the prosperity collapsed into a “Great Depression” due to cheating by stock market investors. In 1932 Americans wanted liquor so bad they ratified another Constitutional Amendment repealing the 1920 Amendment. <br />
<br />
'''Substantive Due Process''': As Justice Clarence Thomas eloquently explains – see Statement #11 footnotes, this phrase was made up by SCOTUS to justify making up what it calls “fundamental rights” as its tool of repealing laws it doesn’t like. It gets its name from the SCOTUS claim that the “Due Process” clause of the 14th Amendment gives SCOTUS its authority to make up rights and call them “fundamental”. But “Due Process” only meant the legal procedures which everyone must be given equally, to defend their rights in court when necessary. The phrase has nothing to do with identifying what rights are protectable. But “Substantive” means those rights we care about, that the Constitution protects. Like freedom of speech or religion. Because “substantive” means substantial, serious rights, and “due process” has nothing to do with identifying any rights, the LONANG Institute observes in Statement #11 notes that “substantive due process” is an oxymoron. <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: Foundation for Moral Law and Lutherans for Life <> Jewish Prolife Foundation <> LONANG Institute <> U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and Other Religious Organizations <> Claremont Institute’s Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #11 of 12: The 14th Amendment gives federal courts no “due process” authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the “right” to murder, and gives Congress no authority to legalize violations of Constitutional Rights, like taking a baby’s right to Life====<br />
<br />
The sole federal authority over state laws regarding the rights of their own citizens is through the 14th Amendment, Sections One and Five.1 Contrary to SCOTUS rulings, the 14th Amendment explicitly provides:<br />
<br />
* '''Congress authorized, not courts.''' Congress, not courts, determines the manner and scope of federal intervention in states whose laws don’t protect their citizens’ rights.2 Congress is not limited to enforcing only those rights of which SCOTUS approves, nor only to the extent that SCOTUS approves,3 nor only when state governments, not individuals, directly violate rights.4 <br />
<br />
* Federal courts aren’t permitted to stop either states or Congress from protecting enumerated rights (like Life), or to repeal their laws for conflicting with unenumerated [not listed in the Constitution] “rights” (like the “right” to murder babies), or to intervene in states’ protection of rights beyond prosecuting violations of federal laws.5 <br />
<br />
* Nor can Congress stop states from protecting enumerated rights. Neither Congress nor federal courts may overturn a state law protecting the lives of unborn babies from surgical abortion, chemical abortion, or contraceptives.6<br />
<br />
* The rights subject to federal enforcement are not those made up by SCOTUS allegedly based on the “Due Process” clause,7 but those listed in the Constitution, referred to as “privileges and immunities”8 (including, for unborn babies, the “privilege” of life and “immunity” from “cruel and unusual punishment” and execution “without due process of law”).9 <br />
* Enumerated Rights recognized before the Constitution existed are not excluded from Congressional intervention.10<br />
<br />
* '''“Substantive Due Process”''' is the sophistry by which SCOTUS turned the Constitution’s Authority to Define Rights, and Congress’ 14th Amendment Section 5 Authority to Enforce Rights, into its own authority to reclassify abominations as “rights”.11 It is an illegal, unconstitutional, Freedom-crushing fraud from Hell fomenting a long line of Landmark Abomination Cases.12 <br />
<br />
<small>Mini-lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Due Process:''' The duty of courts to give all parties to cases the fair and equal procedures and opportunities for defending themselves.<br />
<br />
(This argument for ending SCOTUS’ long line of Landmark Abomination Cases continues in Part Two of this book where its focus on SCOTUS-mandated murder of babies created in the Image of God is extended to SCOTUS’ censorship of God Himself.) <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amici who filed briefs in Dobbs v. Jackson: Lonang Institute <> Christian Legal Society <> AfricanAmerican, Hispanic, Roman Catholic and Protestant Religious and Civil Rights Organizations <> Senators Josh Hawley, Mike Lee, and Ted Cruz. And from Judge Robert Bork <> Nathan Schlueter, Professor of Philosophy and Religion, Hillsdale College, (when he debated Judge Bork in 2003 he was assistant professor of pre-law and political science at St. Ambrose University. Author, “Unborn Persons and the Fourteenth Amendment.” 2002.) <> Erwin Chemerinsky, Dean of Berkeley Law School <> Legal Information Institute, Cornell University <> Justice Clarence Thomas, dissents and concurrences <> justia.com <> James Gray Pope, Professor of Law and Sidney Reitman Scholar, Rutgers University School of Law <> Libby Adler professor of law and women’s, gender, and sexuality studies, Northeastern University Christmas, 2023''</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #12 of 12:Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable. The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives.====<br />
<br />
Any judge interfering with this state’s compliance with the 14th Amendment and its ancient authority to protect its people1 – the central reason governments exist, is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders,2 and is guilty of exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide through an unconstitutional ruling,3 which exceeds the judicial powers given by any Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment.4The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives, including (1) giving the state Supreme Court original jurisdiction over any challenge to a law, (2) requiring that review be expedited, (3) requiring a supermajority of the Court to suspend a law, (4) questioning justices in a public hearing about the constitutionality of their ruling, and (5) overturning the ruling with a supermajority of the legislature.5 <br />
<br />
Should any federal judge so interfere with this state’s constitutional duty, this state appeals to its congressional delegation to examine similar grounds for disciplinary action,6 along with exercising its Article III, Section 2, paragraph 2 authority to make “exceptions” and “regulations” designed to end SCOTUS’ long line of landmark abomination cases. This state also appeals to its congressional delegation to exercise its life-saving and rights-protecting authority under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment whose plain words give Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of Rights,7 which subsumes the authority to define their scope and to balance competing interests, while the “privileges and immunities” clause identifies as protectable rights those listed in the Constitution.8 <br />
<br />
Official world-wide definitions of “crimes against humanity” apply “to representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission”, whether elected representatives or unelected judges.”9<br />
<br />
Any court review of this law must be expedited, because lives are lost with each day that courts delay.10 7/230 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of Legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Malfeasance in office:''' official misconduct; violation of a public trust or obligation; specifically, the doing of an act which is positively unlawful or wrongful.<br />
<br />
'''Subsumes:''' Includes. To include or place within something larger or more comprehensive: encompass as a subordinate or component element red, green, and yellow are subsumed under the term "color" <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: 396 State Legislators from 41 States <> Melinda Thybault/Moral Outcry <> and by Matthew J. Franck, Director of the William E. and Carol G. Simon Center on Religion and the Constitution at the Witherspoon Institute and visiting lecturer in politics at Princeton University</small></div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Reversing_Landmark_Abomination_Cases&diff=50373Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases2024-01-02T05:12:24Z<p>DaveLeach: /* Statement of Facts #5 of 12: Legislatures should regulate abortion, as Dobbs held, just as legislatures regulate the prosecution of all other murders */</p>
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<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters<br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion</span><br />
<br />
by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal<br />
''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal<br />
<span style="color:brown"><br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen <br />
<br />
by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 18:06, 15 October 2023 (UTC)<br />
<br />
=Introduction=<br />
<br />
This book offers twelve statements of fact about babies and abortion which I challenge any voter, lawyer, lawmaker, or judge to refute. Their footnotes contain nuggets from the 140 "Amicus" briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' (2022), the ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade. These statements are designed to soften the resistance of voters to outlawing baby murder, when presented in public, and to force judges to outlaw abortion in every state, when presented in court. <br />
<br />
They are truths designed to be so unignorable, that when any lawmaker includes them in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, in any state, prodeath fury will help publicize them with each advance through legislative deadlines. When friends of babies see them survive scrutiny, the force of these truths will grow like a snowball rolling down a hill. <br />
<br />
But murdering babies is only the most egregious of many Landmark Abomination Cases. Their common thread is usurping authority which the Constitution assigns to others, and equating the Bible with spurious religions. “Never let a crisis go to waste”, say the enemies of God, but God is the true master of turning evil into an opportunity for good. It’s time. Let’s end the Supreme Court’s war against God.<br />
<br />
The very fact that abortion is the worst of the ways the United States Supreme Court has turned American law upside down creates an opportunity to heal that branch of our government, and heal all the harm to our nation and its culture and morals that it has caused. As Professor Nathan Schluetter at Hillsdale College observes, “We must not let this opportunity pass to boldly challenge the prevailing jurisprudence and its attendant epistemological and moral skepticism with respect to abortion.”<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
It is the '''fact''' that unborn babies are living human children that makes killing them murder. It’s not what any ''law'' says about it, or even what the Constitution says about it. That’s what leaves ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' on the edge of reality, by treating this fact as something for voters to figure out, not on the basis of whether babies are ''in fact'' people but on the basis of some “value” they place on ''little'' people. <br />
<br />
That '''fact''' is what makes <u>the consensus of court-recognized fact finders</u> a stronger legal reason to end legal abortion than a Life Amendment, and a powerful social reason in the Court of Public Opinion able to soften hearts to the silent screams of Jesus' little brothers and His quiet knocking on hearts' doors. Which makes it insane for prolifers to not even mention this legally dispositive consensus in each and every prolife court case, and every “finding of fact” in prolife legislation, along with leveling with the public about the Scriptures which are the real reason we even care.<br />
<br />
[[File:Cover_Cartoon.jpg]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
Why these solutions may help even where abortion is already outlawed<br />
<br />
(1) They could defeat a national abortion legalization.<br />
<br />
(2) They could help you sue a nearby “blue state” for helping its baby killers murder your children. <br />
<br />
(3) They could help if your district judges join the courtroom rebellion against Dobbs in other states.<br />
<br />
(4) They could help meet challenges in the Court of Public Opinion, for example through a Resolution that irrefutably addresses every objection you have ever heard, as understandable to voters as it is irrefutable to judges. That would help the public see through future judicial gaslighting, and support judicial reform: ie. www.savetheworld .saltshaker.us/wiki/Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_ stop_judges_from_legislating<br />
<br />
(5) I could sure use your feedback. Proverbs 15:22. <br />
<br />
----<br />
<center>'''Ending legal abortion everywhere in close to a year<br />
(the goal of the following bill language)<br />
<br>'''requires a law whose Findings of Facts: '''<br />
</center><br />
<br />
<br />
* '''contain evidence which no judge can squarely address and keep abortion legal anywhere:''' that unborn babies are real people – established by the (unanimous) consensus of court-recognized factfinders: juries, expert witnesses, 38 states, judges, and Congress;<br />
<br />
* '''present its evidence in a way that is clear and persuasive to voters,''' to help them resist judicial and media gaslighting; (See below for “Why court-recognized fact finders persuade Voters”)<br />
<br />
* '''address misunderstandings about abortion jurisprudence''' that divide prolifers, intimidate lawyers, and blind judges;<br />
<br />
'''AND WHOSE PENALTIES'''<br />
<br />
* '''restrict some aspect of abortion substantially enough''' that THEY can't be defended as a mere regulation with some other legitimate government purpose than saving lives. The restriction must be profound enough that its only possible defense is that it saves human lives. That will force courts to address the evidence that babies are fully human;<br />
<br />
* '''provide no distractions that let judges rule on some technicality and ignore the evidence that the law would save lives.''' A perfect law that addresses everything from exceptions to contraception multiplies a judge’s opportunity to say “we don’t need to reach the issue of when life begins because the law fails on a lesser issue.” A simple yet substantial restriction, with “findings” that address the legal obstacles, will survive courts, which will get courts out of the way of saving life, which will free lawmakers to work out the challenging details with time to get a comprehensive solution right and with hope that they won’t waste their time; <br />
<br />
* '''list specific penalties for specific situations,''' rather than broadly stated goals such as “babies are to be protected as much as adults”, leaving prosecutors and judges to guess what to punish, or how, in situations where evidence and culpability are different; <br />
<br />
* '''contain a “life of the mother” exception''' whose applicability is clear enough that mothers are not denied life-saving care until doctors are assured by lawyers that said care will not put the doctors in jail; and<br />
<br />
'''THE LAW SHOULD ALSO order courts to “expedite” any review,''' “because lives are lost with each day that courts delay”. <br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate!)<br />
<br />
More ideas: [[Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_stop_judges_from_legislating]]<br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate! See below for Expedited Review federal rules.) <br />
<br />
WORD COUNTS: Using only the first boldfaced paragraph of each of these 12 Findings, in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, will total about 200 words. The complete Findings, without footnotes, total nearly 3000 words. For the advantages of including enough information in a prolife law for the Findings to defend themselves, see “Too Lengthy?” below. <br />
<br />
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: I am not a lawyer. But writing about prolife legal defenses designed to bring legal abortion to an end, and Scriptures calling for that goal, for 25 years in my Prayer * Action News, being uncertified as a lawyer, has created the opportunity for a remarkable interaction with Planned Barrenhoods priciest lawyers. Because news reporters wouldn’t report that my reasoning was designed as legal defenses in court, or that they were grounded in the Bible, what that left was their accusation that I advocated crime; whereas had my defenses been successful they would have allowed citizens to stop murderers legally, putting an end to the reason citizens took action. <br />
<br />
__TOC__<br />
<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and family, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge inaction deny themselves Life More Abundantly. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget: free wisdom, guaranteed success===<br />
<br />
'''John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
James 1:5 If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, [without finding fault]; and it shall be given him. 6 But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering.''' (Gr. διακρινω not withdrawn from, ie. by lack of support from actions, or opposed, ie. by indecision) <br />
<br />
'''Matthew 21:21 ...If ye have faith, and doubt not''' (Gr. διακρινω) ...'''ye shall say unto this mountain, Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea; it shall be done. 22 And all things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive.'''<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and families, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge their own inaction deny themselves, not just their neighbors, Life More Abundantly.<br />
<br />
If you are not satisfied with life less abundantly – ongoing slaughter of innocents – you won’t be satisfied now that the fate of babies is decided by the “value” that voters place on little people. You will keep searching for a strategy to end all the slaughter: to both outlaw it, and make it unthinkable to all but the worst of murderers. <br />
<br />
If you believe you ''will'' reach every good goal you pursue with all your being, Matthew 21:21-22, you won’t be turned from ending the slaughter in every state by experts who tell you that is impossible which rules out a strategy for achieving it. You will search until you find God’s way to do God’s will. <br />
<br />
You won’t say “I'm not smart enough to question prolife legal authorities who advise giving up”, if you believe James 1:5 which promises you all the wisdom you need to do good. Nor will you ever say you are not smart enough to read and understand legal briefs, court rulings, or to reason with lawmakers, lawyers, and prolife leaders, as necessary.<br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will not excuse yourself from God’s call because you can’t talk well, like Moses, whom God answered “Who made mouths?” Exodus 4:11. Nor will you excuse yourself to God, saying you are but a child against the world’s superbrains, like Jeremiah, whom God answered, “Stop saying that! It is MY words you will speak, and I am no child!” Jeremiah 1:6-8. <br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will shine God’s light wherever you find Darkness, Matthew 5:13-16. Since nothing is darker than murdering your own baby, you will seek God’s help as you oppose this evil, and none of these excuses will withdraw you from action.<br />
<br />
===Final Warning: read this at your own risk===<br />
<br />
Warning: read at your own risk. Rough reading Ahead, that may knock you from your TV chair.<br />
<br />
'''Findings of Facts which No Judge can Squarely Address and Keep Abortion Legal'''<br />
<br />
=Part 1: Authority of Court-Recognized Fact Finders=<br />
<br />
<span style="color:grey"><small>''Try to imagine how a judge, reviewing a prolife law with these Findings of Facts, would be able to dodge this evidence - in fact, see if you can find ANYONE who can ''refute'' these facts - as opposed to not ''caring'' about facts - that is, not caring about reality:''</small></span><br />
<br />
====Statement of Fact #1 of 12: Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let any state legalize====<br />
<br />
'''Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let ''any'' state legalize.'''<br />
<br />
No fact can be more legally established than the fact that “life begins” at fertilization, being the consensus of every American legal authority who has taken a position, in every category of court-recognized finders of facts: juries,2 thousands of expert witnesses who were not contested,3 38 state legislatures,4 individual judges,5 and Congress.6 <br />
<br />
No legal authority has ruled that any unborn baby of a human is not in fact a human person, or that “life begins” any later than fertilization.7 <br />
<br />
No state can keep abortion legal now that this fact is established. This is so obvious that even Roe v. Wade said “of course”, and the lawyer for the abortionists agreed.8 <br />
For most public issues, disagreement is over facts.9 The only disagreement about abortion is between unanimous fact finders and those who don't care about facts.10 A court that won’t address the facts that justify and necessitate a law, or hear evidence of those facts, violates Due Process and has no legitimate jurisdiction to review that law.11 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 1 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? <br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
<br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
<br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True. <br />
<br />
<br />
</span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget #2: The Cost of Success===<br />
<br />
'''Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? '''<br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True.<br />
<br />
=====Statement of Facts #2 of 12: Courts Accept the Fact-Finding Authority of Legislatures, Juries, Experts for the same good reasons their findings persuade the public.=====<br />
<br />
SCOTUS must accept legislative findings of facts that are not obviously irrational. “..the existence of facts supporting the legislative judgment is to be presumed...not to be pronounced unconstitutional unless in the light of the facts made known or generally assumed it is of such a character as to preclude the assumption that it rests upon some rational basis within the knowledge and experience of the legislators....” U.S. v. Carolene Products, 304 U.S. 144, 152 (1938).1<br />
<br />
Besides the court-recognized fact finding authority of legislatures, courts must conform their rulings to laws until such time as courts declare laws unconstitutional. No court has overturned the “unborn victims of violence” laws (based on “human babies are people”) of 39 states and Congress, despite many challenges.2<br />
<br />
To do so would require a court to positively affirm that human life does not begin until much later, which no legal authority has done, and for which no evidence exists.<br />
<br />
'''Legislatures'''. Lawmakers are there by the choice of a majority of voters. They are bombarded by information from experts. They are scrutinized by other lawmakers. Many are lawyers, some of whom are constitutional scholars and past or future judges. They set the salaries of judges, and have the power to hold impeachment trials of judges. Congress, the national legislature, scrutinizes Supreme Court justices. <br />
<br />
Many Congressmen are equally qualified: 15 U.S. Senators have served on the Supreme Court, and more were nominated.3 <br />
<br />
'''Juries''' are tested for impartiality. They are educated by the most qualified expert witnesses available. They study as long as necessary to establish truth – sometimes for months.4<br />
<br />
'''Expert Witnesses''' are the best experts money can buy, and they are scrutinized by the other side’s experts.5 <br />
<br />
It is for strong reasons that the findings of court-recognized fact finders are as respected in court as in the Court of Public Opinion.6<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 2 + Footnotes]]<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Mark 8:38 '''Whosoever therefore shall be ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful generation; of him also shall the Son of man be ashamed''', when he cometh in the glory of his Father with the holy angels.<br />
<br />
We Bible believing conservatives need to quit blaming social media and CIA censorship for our failures and stop censoring ourselves. <br />
<br />
I offer a way of stating evidence which no judge, news reporter, Democrat, or unbeliever can refute, along with answering objections that have crippled prolife messaging and legal strategy. But we despair of reaching those who stop their ears to evidence. “What’s the use of tightening our message? You’re preaching to the choir. We know babies are people but those other people have their opinion too.”<br />
<br />
I’m not "preaching to the choir". I’m passing out a new composition to the choir for a coming TV special.<br />
<br />
Most of those who won’t listen, won’t vote either, rendering their willful ignorance relatively benign. Stop worrying about them. All they will do is hate you, lie about you, wreck your business – childish stuff. We progress by clearly articulating to the extent possible. The same Bible which is the main reason we care about babies promises all the protection we need to finish what we are here to do.<br />
<br />
It isn’t just saving baby bodies where we self censor. Adult souls are lost. We hold back sharing what we know about God. Snap out of it. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
----<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #3 of 12: The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS====<br />
<br />
From Roe (1973) through Dobbs (2022), SCOTUS evaded that core issue.1 <br />
<br />
SCOTUS never ruled babies Non-Persons “as a Matter of Law”, as lower courts allege.2 Roe made that fact not only relevant, but dispositive with a holding which no court has disputed even though Roe’s main holding was overturned:3 <br />
<br />
“[Prolifers] argue that the fetus is a ‘person’ within the language and meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment....If this suggestion of personhood is established, the [abortionist’s] case, of course, collapses, for the fetus’ right to life would then be guaranteed specifically by the [14th] Amendment [thus outlawing abortion in EVERY state]. The [abortionist’s lawyer] conceded as much....”4<br />
<br />
Dobbs explicitly left this statement of the obvious untouched, saying “our decision is not based on any view about when a State should regard pre-natal life as having rights or legally cognizable interests....”5 Dobbs did not say babies aren’t people. Dobbs did not say voters should still decide whether babies can be murdered in the face of proof that babies are in fact people.6 Dobbs left in place Roe’s observation that “establishment” of this fact, independently of any law, ruling, or future constitutional amendment,7 dictates whether abortion is legally recognizable as a right or as a crime.8<br />
<br />
This established fact is as relevant today as when Roe said “of course” it is.<br />
<br />
This established fact is not disestablished by any judge’s alleged inability to understand it.9<br />
<br />
This established FACT is not made irrelevant by any judge’s theory that the legal right of little humans to live is “impossible” to determine so it should be decided by their value to big humans.10<br />
<br />
If only those legally recognized as “persons” were people, slavery could still be legal and the 14th Amendment would mean nothing. Slavery states would merely need to classify their victims as only 3/5 human.11 The Amendment protects those who are IN FACT people – what is irrelevant is whether babies are people “as a matter of law”.12 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 3 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #4 of 12: Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life====<br />
<br />
Detectable heartbeats and brain waves are evidence that a person has not yet died, throughout state and federal law.1 Reason demands they be accepted as evidence that a person has begun to live.2<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 4 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #5 of 12: Legislatures should regulate abortion, as Dobbs held, just as legislatures regulate the prosecution of all other murders====<br />
<br />
But not in the sense of absolute discretion to leave wholesale murders of a supposedly unwanted group of humans completely unregulated. That interpretation of Dobbs’ holding is premised on a “mistake of fact”, which is an official exception to Stare Decisis. 1<br />
<br />
The “Mistake of Fact” that is the premise of letting voters decide whether to continue judge-approved genocide according to the “value” they place on little people is that the humanity of babies of humans is either unknowable or irrelevant. That premise was explicit in Roe and Casey, and implicit in Dobbs.2 <br />
<br />
That is an “erroneous factual premise”. The fact that little unborn humans are humans is neither unknowable3 nor irrelevant. It is verifiable and dispositive.4 The consensus of court-recognized fact finders cures that knowledge deficit, canceling that interpretation of Dobbs’ holding, while reinforcing Dobbs’ other two holdings that “The Constitution does not confer a right to abortion” and “Roe and Casey are overruled”, and requiring the outlawing of baby killing in every state.5 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 5 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #6 of 12: The full humanity of a tiny physical body is hard for many to grasp. But what distinguishes us from animals isn’t physical, and has no known pre-conscious stage====<br />
<br />
DON’T READ past this 28 word paragraph unless you want <br />
an edge-of-your-seat adventure – legal ammunition <br />
against not only baby killing but also against the myth <br />
of the irrelevance of God in the reasoning of judges, <br />
lawmakers, and voters! Yet Roe v Wade, of all cases, <br />
"opened the door" with its sophomoric review of "theologians", <br />
and #6 comes charging through! <> The rest of this Statement <br />
is for lawmakers who want a stronger, clearer statement, <br />
and who have the stomach for the larger battle.<br />
<br />
Part of Roe’s definition of “person” was “infused with a soul”.1 Roe thus affirmed the belief of most of society, a belief logically demanded by the common knowledge that humans are distinguished from animals by consciousness which features a capacity for choices at variance with physical needs: to sacrifice one's interests for another,2 which is how John 15:13 defines “love”. And conversely, to destroy one’s own body.3<br />
<br />
These differences, along with self awareness and the capacity to choose between good and evil4 – to behave either as an angel or as a demon, can’t be explained by any known physical process. These differences justify greater legal protection of humans than of animals. <br />
<br />
Since a “soul” without consciousness has never been theorized and can’t be imagined, the consensus of fact finders is, in effect, that abortion kills babies with conscious souls. The lack of any physical explanation for a conscious soul rules out any reason to infer immaturity of consciousness from physical immaturity, and is consistent with the report in Luke 1:44 that a baby at 6 months heard a righteous voice [and/or felt the righteous Presence of God] and responded with joy,5 a response not everybody chooses, indicating that even the capacity for choosing between good and evil precedes birth. And also indicating that when a baby is killed by dismemberment, acid, or sucking out the brain, a self-aware conscious soul feels the pain, understands the cruelty, and if out-of-body near-death experiences are real, sees who is doing it.<br />
<br />
Even considering the body only, there is no objective line between birth and conception distinguishing “humans” from “nonpersons”, or between “meaningful life” and life which courts are free to terminate.6 Without such a line, there can be no stage of gestation at which killing a baby can be objectively distinguished from murder. No baby is safe while that line remains arbitrary. <br />
<br />
The failure of some to grasp the humanity of babies at any given stage is a dangerous basis for permitting killing, since as many fail to grasp the full humanity of quite a number of distinct groups of born persons.<br />
<br />
As Roe correctly established, it can be useful in clarifying who to count as a human with an unalienable right to life, to consult the religion from which that right was copied into America’s founding documents. But religions which oppose the foundation of American law – equal rights for all humans, merit little credibility in American courts when their claims justify destruction of an entire people group – such as the claim that souls do not enter bodies until around birth. There can be “free exercise” of religions which do not equally reverence all human life only to the extent their “exercise” does not violate the rights of others or the laws enacted to protect them.7<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] <br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #7 of 12: Congress has ''Already'' Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment already authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion, without allowing Congress to legalize it====<br />
<br />
<small>FORGET YOU READ this 32 word Statement and DON’T read farther – <br />
certainly not the footnotes – if you don’t want to question <br />
the near consensus of prolife leaders who say “we are helpless <br />
to outlaw abortion in every state before we get ANOTHER <br />
personhood law through Congress, if not a Life Amendment <br />
to the Constitution.” <> This is the 7th of 12 Statements <br />
designed to push courts out of the way of defending Life <br />
in every state when included in the Findings of Facts of <br />
prolife laws. The material below can make it clearer and stronger.</small><br />
<br />
Congress established in 2004 that: “‘unborn child’ means a child in utero, and the term ‘child in utero’...means a member of the species Homo Sapiens, at any stage of development, who is carried in the womb”, 18 U.S.C. 1841(d).1 <br />
<br />
This fact is not diminished by clause (c) which does not “permit [authorize] the prosecution of any person for...an abortion for which the consent of the pregnant woman...has been obtained.…”2 A law misaligned with facts does not block future lawmakers from making corrections, and states don’t need Congress’ “permission” to obey the 14th Amendment. <br />
<br />
The reason 18 U.S.C. 1841(d) has had no effect on the practice of legal abortion is not because of any deficiency in its authority to establish dispositive facts, but because no state law reviewed by SCOTUS has cited it to establish what Roe correctly said once “established” would “of course” require the end of legal abortion. <br />
<br />
Not only is the 2004 law unmitigated evidence of life strong enough to “collapse” legal abortion by itself, but it would not be stronger if it were an Amendment to the Constitution.3 No other Constitutional Amendment is relied on for evidence of a fact. An Amendment can bind courts. But establishment of the Facts Of Life by evidence presented, cited, and tested in court draws not only courts, but society, closer to reality.4<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #8 of 12: Roe, Dobbs, and the 14th Amendment agree: All Humans are “Persons”====<br />
<br />
<small>DON’T READ past this 11 word Statement <br />
unless you like to stare at where crazy lawyers <br />
ever got the idea that human babies aren’t people!</small><br />
<br />
Neither Roe nor Dobbs distinguished between “humans” and “persons” as if a “human” baby isn’t necessarily a “person”. [2] Nor does the 14th Amendment leave any human unprotected.<br />
<br />
Roe v. Wade equated the time an unborn child becomes “recognizably human” with the time the child becomes a “person”: “These disciplines variously approached the question [“of when life begins”] in terms of the point at which the embryo or fetus became ‘formed’ or recognizably human, or in terms of when a ‘person’ came into being, that is, infused with a ‘soul’ or ‘animated.’” 410 U.S. 113, 133(1973)<br />
<br />
Dobbs cites the belief that “a human person comes into being at conception” without distinguishing between the two words. [3] The word “person” in the 14th Amendment meant “An individual human being...man, woman, or child...consisting of body and soul.” The word “child” in that 1828 definition included unborn children, since to be “with child” meant to be pregnant. [4]<br />
<br />
Therefore the Amendment’s “nor shall any state deprive any person of life” and “equal protection” of every “person” means every human, including those unborn. Nothing about the first clause keeps later clauses from protecting unborn humans. [5]<br />
<br />
See also Wong Wing v. United States, 163 U.S.228, 242 (1896), “The term ‘person’ is broad enough to include any and every human being within the jurisdiction of the republic...This has been decided so often that the point does not require argument.” Steinberg v. Brown 321 F. Supp. 741 (N.D. Ohio, 1970) “[o]nce human life has commenced, the constitutional protections found in the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments impose upon the state a duty of safeguarding it”. [6]<br />
<br />
The word “persons” in the 14th Amendment means all who are IN FACT humans. Had it been only for those who are legally recognized as human, every deprivation of fundamental rights would be “constitutional” so long as a law or ruling questions whether its victims are “persons in the whole sense”.<br />
<br />
Although Dobbs showed by disproving the opposite that reverence for all human life from fertilization was “deeply rooted in America’s law and traditions”, that is not why rights merit 14th Amendment protection. By the “deeply rooted” test, slavery would be legal today, since freedom for slaves had zero historical support.<br />
<br />
Nor does it matter if the Amendment authors even wanted to protect all humans. In fact, it doesn’t matter if there is a 14th Amendment. If law is not equal upon its operation on all humans, which is the very definition of the word “law” as developed by Samuel Rutherford’s “Lex Rex” and Blackstone and adopted by America’s founders, to that extent there is, by definition, no “rule of law”, no restraint upon the “strong” to not tyrannize the “weak”.<br />
<br />
There is a direct test of whether babies merit 14th Amendment protection that does not require a romp through history: [7] see if their parents are humans.<br />
<br />
“To say that the test of equal protection should be the ‘legal’ rather than the biological relationship is to avoid the issue. For the Equal Protection Clause necessarily limits the authority of a State [or its judges] to draw such ‘legal’ lines as it chooses.” Glona, 391 U.S. 73, 75 (1968) [8]<br />
<br />
FOOTNOTES: see [[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
<small>The footnotes are enriched by selections from the Amicus Briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson by: Lee J. Strang <> Scholars of Jurisprudence John M. Finnis and Robert P. George <> Mary Kay Bacallao Advocating for Unborn Children <> Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide <> and by selections from the 1996 debate between Judge Robert Bork and Professor Nathan Schluetter</small><br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #9 of 12: When pregnancies develop into medical emergencies requiring separation of mother and child to save the mother, the child has an equally fundamental right to life and medical care.====<br />
<br />
A legislature’s balancing of their interests cannot, therefore, be reviewed by “strict scrutiny”.2 Nor does alleged insufficiency of a “medical emergency” exception from a general abortion ban justify a court overturning the ban in the 99% of cases where no emergency is alleged.3 Legislatures are better equipped to deliberate about and secure the rights of all citizens than courts whose focus is the parties before them.4<br />
<br />
SCOTUS never denied that a legislature’s “personhood” statements in an abortion ban are strong evidence.5 That evidence is not mitigated by a ban’s exceptions.6 It is not made irrelevant because baby killers “rely” on killing babies.7 28/130 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
Fundamental Right: This is a term not found in the Constitution but made up by SCOTUS for the rights SCOTUS makes up which often displace rights actually listed in the Constitution. Justice Clarence Thomas is eloquent on this point. More about this later.<br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: A Foundation for Moral Law <> Pennsylvania Pro-Life Federation <> 396 State Legislators from 41 States</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #10 of 12: Tyranny over any class of humans by any other is prohibited by the Constitution, and by the Declaration, which gives the purpose of the Constitution and rests its own authority on the revelation of God1 in the Bible====<br />
<br />
Roe v Wade was not out of line to consult “those trained in... theology” who study souls, as well as doctors who study bodies, to clarify who to count as human with an unalienable right to life.3 <br />
<br />
America’s Freedom springs from “all men are created equal” and “equal protection of the laws” for all humans even if their looks, language, wealth, strength, ancestry, power, or faith are different.4 These rights have proven such a blessing to the world that their source, the Bible, deserves the fair hearing owed any witness whose reliability has been confirmed, when it promises still greater blessings if we will equally protect humans whose physical size is different.5 <br />
<br />
Its testimony is not “cumulative”, but “probative”.6 It is not to be feared as dispositive or compulsory: American freedom balances human understanding of how best to apply Biblical principles to government against the willingness of voting majorities to follow those principles. Even that is a Biblical principle legitimized in 1 Samuel 8.7 <br />
<br />
The history of slavery, Prohibition, and abortion illustrate the “willingness” factor. The probative value of the testimony of God is proved by the fact that without it, slavery would never have ended, and the prolife movement would never have begun. Which makes it probative to observe that not only the 14th Amendment, but also the revelation of God, requires this state, as it does every state, to outlaw all trampling of fundamental rights of any class of people, including abortion of babies.8 Where the two authorities say the same thing, the Bible, for all its alleged ambiguity, is better understood and more trusted than the Constitution which has indeed proven “a thing of wax” in the nimble fingers of even the most scrupulous judges.9 <br />
<br />
Without God – without belief in a more objective standard of right and wrong than the “value” that voters place on “different” people through “evolving community standards”, it is impossible to understand fundamental rights.10 <br />
<br />
Courts have demonstrated this impossibility by so often confusing abominations for rights, decimating those whom Jesus said “forbid them not to come unto Me”, denying that He created them, murdering 17% of them, sodomizing 20% of the survivors, and censoring 100% of His teachings in schools.11 <br />
<br />
That destruction of the 14th Amendment (1868) began when “Substantive Due Process”, pioneered in Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857), was applied in United States v. Cruikshank 92 U. S. 542 (1876) to acquit a white Democrat mililtia of murdering “as many as 165” black Republicans and burning down the courthouse they were defending.12 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring God does not “establish religion”. It does not compel belief, action or endorsement. It simply allows judges and voters to make informed decisions. It is part of fact-finding. It is part of reasoning. Part of embracing reality. Part of examining “the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth”. Judges must stop punishing people for telling the truth just because the truth favors God.13 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring the Bible does not require equal weight for claims of religions that deny equal rights for all.14 <br />
<br />
For example, some claim “souls” don’t enter babies until long after fertilization, or even long after birth.15 Their claims do not “cancel” the mountain of consensus of court-recognized fact finders that souls are present from the beginning. Our Constitution and laws reject their unequal rights, and are appropriately wary of their rationales for their unequal rights. The credibility of every witness is not equal. Credibility is earned. <br />
There can be “free exercise” of religions hostile to “equal protection of the laws” only to the extent their “exercise” does not threaten the rights of others or violate the laws enacted to protect them – laws ultimately decided by voting majorities, hopefully well informed through the uncensoring of reality.16 39/520 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms: <br />
<br />
'''Cumulative''': testimony so redundant that it wastes the court’s time<br />
Dispositive: testimony so strong that it settles the issue with no more<br />
Probative: probative facts establish, or contribute to, proof. Probative value is the degree of relevance of evidence. <br />
<br />
'''Prohibition''': From 1920 to 1932, drinking (alcohol) was made illegal, banned by an actual Constitutional Amendment. Actual alcohol consumption dropped by about 50%, or at least that is how much Cirrhosis of the Liver cases dropped. During that time the drop in drinking led to an economic boom, called the “Roaring Twenties”, which unfortunately were not remembered for their prosperity but for their immorality. In 1928, the prosperity collapsed into a “Great Depression” due to cheating by stock market investors. In 1932 Americans wanted liquor so bad they ratified another Constitutional Amendment repealing the 1920 Amendment. <br />
<br />
'''Substantive Due Process''': As Justice Clarence Thomas eloquently explains – see Statement #11 footnotes, this phrase was made up by SCOTUS to justify making up what it calls “fundamental rights” as its tool of repealing laws it doesn’t like. It gets its name from the SCOTUS claim that the “Due Process” clause of the 14th Amendment gives SCOTUS its authority to make up rights and call them “fundamental”. But “Due Process” only meant the legal procedures which everyone must be given equally, to defend their rights in court when necessary. The phrase has nothing to do with identifying what rights are protectable. But “Substantive” means those rights we care about, that the Constitution protects. Like freedom of speech or religion. Because “substantive” means substantial, serious rights, and “due process” has nothing to do with identifying any rights, the LONANG Institute observes in Statement #11 notes that “substantive due process” is an oxymoron. <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: Foundation for Moral Law and Lutherans for Life <> Jewish Prolife Foundation <> LONANG Institute <> U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and Other Religious Organizations <> Claremont Institute’s Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #11 of 12: The 14th Amendment gives federal courts no “due process” authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the “right” to murder, and gives Congress no authority to legalize violations of Constitutional Rights, like taking a baby’s right to Life====<br />
<br />
The sole federal authority over state laws regarding the rights of their own citizens is through the 14th Amendment, Sections One and Five.1 Contrary to SCOTUS rulings, the 14th Amendment explicitly provides:<br />
<br />
* '''Congress authorized, not courts.''' Congress, not courts, determines the manner and scope of federal intervention in states whose laws don’t protect their citizens’ rights.2 Congress is not limited to enforcing only those rights of which SCOTUS approves, nor only to the extent that SCOTUS approves,3 nor only when state governments, not individuals, directly violate rights.4 <br />
<br />
* Federal courts aren’t permitted to stop either states or Congress from protecting enumerated rights (like Life), or to repeal their laws for conflicting with unenumerated [not listed in the Constitution] “rights” (like the “right” to murder babies), or to intervene in states’ protection of rights beyond prosecuting violations of federal laws.5 <br />
<br />
* Nor can Congress stop states from protecting enumerated rights. Neither Congress nor federal courts may overturn a state law protecting the lives of unborn babies from surgical abortion, chemical abortion, or contraceptives.6<br />
<br />
* The rights subject to federal enforcement are not those made up by SCOTUS allegedly based on the “Due Process” clause,7 but those listed in the Constitution, referred to as “privileges and immunities”8 (including, for unborn babies, the “privilege” of life and “immunity” from “cruel and unusual punishment” and execution “without due process of law”).9 <br />
* Enumerated Rights recognized before the Constitution existed are not excluded from Congressional intervention.10<br />
<br />
* '''“Substantive Due Process”''' is the sophistry by which SCOTUS turned the Constitution’s Authority to Define Rights, and Congress’ 14th Amendment Section 5 Authority to Enforce Rights, into its own authority to reclassify abominations as “rights”.11 It is an illegal, unconstitutional, Freedom-crushing fraud from Hell fomenting a long line of Landmark Abomination Cases.12 <br />
<br />
<small>Mini-lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Due Process:''' The duty of courts to give all parties to cases the fair and equal procedures and opportunities for defending themselves.<br />
<br />
(This argument for ending SCOTUS’ long line of Landmark Abomination Cases continues in Part Two of this book where its focus on SCOTUS-mandated murder of babies created in the Image of God is extended to SCOTUS’ censorship of God Himself.) <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amici who filed briefs in Dobbs v. Jackson: Lonang Institute <> Christian Legal Society <> AfricanAmerican, Hispanic, Roman Catholic and Protestant Religious and Civil Rights Organizations <> Senators Josh Hawley, Mike Lee, and Ted Cruz. And from Judge Robert Bork <> Nathan Schlueter, Professor of Philosophy and Religion, Hillsdale College, (when he debated Judge Bork in 2003 he was assistant professor of pre-law and political science at St. Ambrose University. Author, “Unborn Persons and the Fourteenth Amendment.” 2002.) <> Erwin Chemerinsky, Dean of Berkeley Law School <> Legal Information Institute, Cornell University <> Justice Clarence Thomas, dissents and concurrences <> justia.com <> James Gray Pope, Professor of Law and Sidney Reitman Scholar, Rutgers University School of Law <> Libby Adler professor of law and women’s, gender, and sexuality studies, Northeastern University Christmas, 2023''</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #12 of 12:Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable. The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives.====<br />
<br />
Any judge interfering with this state’s compliance with the 14th Amendment and its ancient authority to protect its people1 – the central reason governments exist, is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders,2 and is guilty of exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide through an unconstitutional ruling,3 which exceeds the judicial powers given by any Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment.4The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives, including (1) giving the state Supreme Court original jurisdiction over any challenge to a law, (2) requiring that review be expedited, (3) requiring a supermajority of the Court to suspend a law, (4) questioning justices in a public hearing about the constitutionality of their ruling, and (5) overturning the ruling with a supermajority of the legislature.5 <br />
<br />
Should any federal judge so interfere with this state’s constitutional duty, this state appeals to its congressional delegation to examine similar grounds for disciplinary action,6 along with exercising its Article III, Section 2, paragraph 2 authority to make “exceptions” and “regulations” designed to end SCOTUS’ long line of landmark abomination cases. This state also appeals to its congressional delegation to exercise its life-saving and rights-protecting authority under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment whose plain words give Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of Rights,7 which subsumes the authority to define their scope and to balance competing interests, while the “privileges and immunities” clause identifies as protectable rights those listed in the Constitution.8 <br />
<br />
Official world-wide definitions of “crimes against humanity” apply “to representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission”, whether elected representatives or unelected judges.”9<br />
<br />
Any court review of this law must be expedited, because lives are lost with each day that courts delay.10 7/230 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of Legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Malfeasance in office:''' official misconduct; violation of a public trust or obligation; specifically, the doing of an act which is positively unlawful or wrongful.<br />
<br />
'''Subsumes:''' Includes. To include or place within something larger or more comprehensive: encompass as a subordinate or component element red, green, and yellow are subsumed under the term "color" <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: 396 State Legislators from 41 States <> Melinda Thybault/Moral Outcry <> and by Matthew J. Franck, Director of the William E. and Carol G. Simon Center on Religion and the Constitution at the Witherspoon Institute and visiting lecturer in politics at Princeton University</small></div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Reversing_Landmark_Abomination_Cases&diff=50372Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases2024-01-02T05:11:59Z<p>DaveLeach: /* Statement of Facts #4 of 12: Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life */</p>
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<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters<br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion</span><br />
<br />
by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal<br />
''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal<br />
<span style="color:brown"><br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen <br />
<br />
by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 18:06, 15 October 2023 (UTC)<br />
<br />
=Introduction=<br />
<br />
This book offers twelve statements of fact about babies and abortion which I challenge any voter, lawyer, lawmaker, or judge to refute. Their footnotes contain nuggets from the 140 "Amicus" briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' (2022), the ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade. These statements are designed to soften the resistance of voters to outlawing baby murder, when presented in public, and to force judges to outlaw abortion in every state, when presented in court. <br />
<br />
They are truths designed to be so unignorable, that when any lawmaker includes them in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, in any state, prodeath fury will help publicize them with each advance through legislative deadlines. When friends of babies see them survive scrutiny, the force of these truths will grow like a snowball rolling down a hill. <br />
<br />
But murdering babies is only the most egregious of many Landmark Abomination Cases. Their common thread is usurping authority which the Constitution assigns to others, and equating the Bible with spurious religions. “Never let a crisis go to waste”, say the enemies of God, but God is the true master of turning evil into an opportunity for good. It’s time. Let’s end the Supreme Court’s war against God.<br />
<br />
The very fact that abortion is the worst of the ways the United States Supreme Court has turned American law upside down creates an opportunity to heal that branch of our government, and heal all the harm to our nation and its culture and morals that it has caused. As Professor Nathan Schluetter at Hillsdale College observes, “We must not let this opportunity pass to boldly challenge the prevailing jurisprudence and its attendant epistemological and moral skepticism with respect to abortion.”<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
It is the '''fact''' that unborn babies are living human children that makes killing them murder. It’s not what any ''law'' says about it, or even what the Constitution says about it. That’s what leaves ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' on the edge of reality, by treating this fact as something for voters to figure out, not on the basis of whether babies are ''in fact'' people but on the basis of some “value” they place on ''little'' people. <br />
<br />
That '''fact''' is what makes <u>the consensus of court-recognized fact finders</u> a stronger legal reason to end legal abortion than a Life Amendment, and a powerful social reason in the Court of Public Opinion able to soften hearts to the silent screams of Jesus' little brothers and His quiet knocking on hearts' doors. Which makes it insane for prolifers to not even mention this legally dispositive consensus in each and every prolife court case, and every “finding of fact” in prolife legislation, along with leveling with the public about the Scriptures which are the real reason we even care.<br />
<br />
[[File:Cover_Cartoon.jpg]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
Why these solutions may help even where abortion is already outlawed<br />
<br />
(1) They could defeat a national abortion legalization.<br />
<br />
(2) They could help you sue a nearby “blue state” for helping its baby killers murder your children. <br />
<br />
(3) They could help if your district judges join the courtroom rebellion against Dobbs in other states.<br />
<br />
(4) They could help meet challenges in the Court of Public Opinion, for example through a Resolution that irrefutably addresses every objection you have ever heard, as understandable to voters as it is irrefutable to judges. That would help the public see through future judicial gaslighting, and support judicial reform: ie. www.savetheworld .saltshaker.us/wiki/Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_ stop_judges_from_legislating<br />
<br />
(5) I could sure use your feedback. Proverbs 15:22. <br />
<br />
----<br />
<center>'''Ending legal abortion everywhere in close to a year<br />
(the goal of the following bill language)<br />
<br>'''requires a law whose Findings of Facts: '''<br />
</center><br />
<br />
<br />
* '''contain evidence which no judge can squarely address and keep abortion legal anywhere:''' that unborn babies are real people – established by the (unanimous) consensus of court-recognized factfinders: juries, expert witnesses, 38 states, judges, and Congress;<br />
<br />
* '''present its evidence in a way that is clear and persuasive to voters,''' to help them resist judicial and media gaslighting; (See below for “Why court-recognized fact finders persuade Voters”)<br />
<br />
* '''address misunderstandings about abortion jurisprudence''' that divide prolifers, intimidate lawyers, and blind judges;<br />
<br />
'''AND WHOSE PENALTIES'''<br />
<br />
* '''restrict some aspect of abortion substantially enough''' that THEY can't be defended as a mere regulation with some other legitimate government purpose than saving lives. The restriction must be profound enough that its only possible defense is that it saves human lives. That will force courts to address the evidence that babies are fully human;<br />
<br />
* '''provide no distractions that let judges rule on some technicality and ignore the evidence that the law would save lives.''' A perfect law that addresses everything from exceptions to contraception multiplies a judge’s opportunity to say “we don’t need to reach the issue of when life begins because the law fails on a lesser issue.” A simple yet substantial restriction, with “findings” that address the legal obstacles, will survive courts, which will get courts out of the way of saving life, which will free lawmakers to work out the challenging details with time to get a comprehensive solution right and with hope that they won’t waste their time; <br />
<br />
* '''list specific penalties for specific situations,''' rather than broadly stated goals such as “babies are to be protected as much as adults”, leaving prosecutors and judges to guess what to punish, or how, in situations where evidence and culpability are different; <br />
<br />
* '''contain a “life of the mother” exception''' whose applicability is clear enough that mothers are not denied life-saving care until doctors are assured by lawyers that said care will not put the doctors in jail; and<br />
<br />
'''THE LAW SHOULD ALSO order courts to “expedite” any review,''' “because lives are lost with each day that courts delay”. <br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate!)<br />
<br />
More ideas: [[Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_stop_judges_from_legislating]]<br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate! See below for Expedited Review federal rules.) <br />
<br />
WORD COUNTS: Using only the first boldfaced paragraph of each of these 12 Findings, in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, will total about 200 words. The complete Findings, without footnotes, total nearly 3000 words. For the advantages of including enough information in a prolife law for the Findings to defend themselves, see “Too Lengthy?” below. <br />
<br />
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: I am not a lawyer. But writing about prolife legal defenses designed to bring legal abortion to an end, and Scriptures calling for that goal, for 25 years in my Prayer * Action News, being uncertified as a lawyer, has created the opportunity for a remarkable interaction with Planned Barrenhoods priciest lawyers. Because news reporters wouldn’t report that my reasoning was designed as legal defenses in court, or that they were grounded in the Bible, what that left was their accusation that I advocated crime; whereas had my defenses been successful they would have allowed citizens to stop murderers legally, putting an end to the reason citizens took action. <br />
<br />
__TOC__<br />
<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and family, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge inaction deny themselves Life More Abundantly. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget: free wisdom, guaranteed success===<br />
<br />
'''John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
James 1:5 If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, [without finding fault]; and it shall be given him. 6 But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering.''' (Gr. διακρινω not withdrawn from, ie. by lack of support from actions, or opposed, ie. by indecision) <br />
<br />
'''Matthew 21:21 ...If ye have faith, and doubt not''' (Gr. διακρινω) ...'''ye shall say unto this mountain, Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea; it shall be done. 22 And all things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive.'''<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and families, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge their own inaction deny themselves, not just their neighbors, Life More Abundantly.<br />
<br />
If you are not satisfied with life less abundantly – ongoing slaughter of innocents – you won’t be satisfied now that the fate of babies is decided by the “value” that voters place on little people. You will keep searching for a strategy to end all the slaughter: to both outlaw it, and make it unthinkable to all but the worst of murderers. <br />
<br />
If you believe you ''will'' reach every good goal you pursue with all your being, Matthew 21:21-22, you won’t be turned from ending the slaughter in every state by experts who tell you that is impossible which rules out a strategy for achieving it. You will search until you find God’s way to do God’s will. <br />
<br />
You won’t say “I'm not smart enough to question prolife legal authorities who advise giving up”, if you believe James 1:5 which promises you all the wisdom you need to do good. Nor will you ever say you are not smart enough to read and understand legal briefs, court rulings, or to reason with lawmakers, lawyers, and prolife leaders, as necessary.<br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will not excuse yourself from God’s call because you can’t talk well, like Moses, whom God answered “Who made mouths?” Exodus 4:11. Nor will you excuse yourself to God, saying you are but a child against the world’s superbrains, like Jeremiah, whom God answered, “Stop saying that! It is MY words you will speak, and I am no child!” Jeremiah 1:6-8. <br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will shine God’s light wherever you find Darkness, Matthew 5:13-16. Since nothing is darker than murdering your own baby, you will seek God’s help as you oppose this evil, and none of these excuses will withdraw you from action.<br />
<br />
===Final Warning: read this at your own risk===<br />
<br />
Warning: read at your own risk. Rough reading Ahead, that may knock you from your TV chair.<br />
<br />
'''Findings of Facts which No Judge can Squarely Address and Keep Abortion Legal'''<br />
<br />
=Part 1: Authority of Court-Recognized Fact Finders=<br />
<br />
<span style="color:grey"><small>''Try to imagine how a judge, reviewing a prolife law with these Findings of Facts, would be able to dodge this evidence - in fact, see if you can find ANYONE who can ''refute'' these facts - as opposed to not ''caring'' about facts - that is, not caring about reality:''</small></span><br />
<br />
====Statement of Fact #1 of 12: Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let any state legalize====<br />
<br />
'''Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let ''any'' state legalize.'''<br />
<br />
No fact can be more legally established than the fact that “life begins” at fertilization, being the consensus of every American legal authority who has taken a position, in every category of court-recognized finders of facts: juries,2 thousands of expert witnesses who were not contested,3 38 state legislatures,4 individual judges,5 and Congress.6 <br />
<br />
No legal authority has ruled that any unborn baby of a human is not in fact a human person, or that “life begins” any later than fertilization.7 <br />
<br />
No state can keep abortion legal now that this fact is established. This is so obvious that even Roe v. Wade said “of course”, and the lawyer for the abortionists agreed.8 <br />
For most public issues, disagreement is over facts.9 The only disagreement about abortion is between unanimous fact finders and those who don't care about facts.10 A court that won’t address the facts that justify and necessitate a law, or hear evidence of those facts, violates Due Process and has no legitimate jurisdiction to review that law.11 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 1 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? <br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
<br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
<br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True. <br />
<br />
<br />
</span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget #2: The Cost of Success===<br />
<br />
'''Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? '''<br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True.<br />
<br />
=====Statement of Facts #2 of 12: Courts Accept the Fact-Finding Authority of Legislatures, Juries, Experts for the same good reasons their findings persuade the public.=====<br />
<br />
SCOTUS must accept legislative findings of facts that are not obviously irrational. “..the existence of facts supporting the legislative judgment is to be presumed...not to be pronounced unconstitutional unless in the light of the facts made known or generally assumed it is of such a character as to preclude the assumption that it rests upon some rational basis within the knowledge and experience of the legislators....” U.S. v. Carolene Products, 304 U.S. 144, 152 (1938).1<br />
<br />
Besides the court-recognized fact finding authority of legislatures, courts must conform their rulings to laws until such time as courts declare laws unconstitutional. No court has overturned the “unborn victims of violence” laws (based on “human babies are people”) of 39 states and Congress, despite many challenges.2<br />
<br />
To do so would require a court to positively affirm that human life does not begin until much later, which no legal authority has done, and for which no evidence exists.<br />
<br />
'''Legislatures'''. Lawmakers are there by the choice of a majority of voters. They are bombarded by information from experts. They are scrutinized by other lawmakers. Many are lawyers, some of whom are constitutional scholars and past or future judges. They set the salaries of judges, and have the power to hold impeachment trials of judges. Congress, the national legislature, scrutinizes Supreme Court justices. <br />
<br />
Many Congressmen are equally qualified: 15 U.S. Senators have served on the Supreme Court, and more were nominated.3 <br />
<br />
'''Juries''' are tested for impartiality. They are educated by the most qualified expert witnesses available. They study as long as necessary to establish truth – sometimes for months.4<br />
<br />
'''Expert Witnesses''' are the best experts money can buy, and they are scrutinized by the other side’s experts.5 <br />
<br />
It is for strong reasons that the findings of court-recognized fact finders are as respected in court as in the Court of Public Opinion.6<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 2 + Footnotes]]<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Mark 8:38 '''Whosoever therefore shall be ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful generation; of him also shall the Son of man be ashamed''', when he cometh in the glory of his Father with the holy angels.<br />
<br />
We Bible believing conservatives need to quit blaming social media and CIA censorship for our failures and stop censoring ourselves. <br />
<br />
I offer a way of stating evidence which no judge, news reporter, Democrat, or unbeliever can refute, along with answering objections that have crippled prolife messaging and legal strategy. But we despair of reaching those who stop their ears to evidence. “What’s the use of tightening our message? You’re preaching to the choir. We know babies are people but those other people have their opinion too.”<br />
<br />
I’m not "preaching to the choir". I’m passing out a new composition to the choir for a coming TV special.<br />
<br />
Most of those who won’t listen, won’t vote either, rendering their willful ignorance relatively benign. Stop worrying about them. All they will do is hate you, lie about you, wreck your business – childish stuff. We progress by clearly articulating to the extent possible. The same Bible which is the main reason we care about babies promises all the protection we need to finish what we are here to do.<br />
<br />
It isn’t just saving baby bodies where we self censor. Adult souls are lost. We hold back sharing what we know about God. Snap out of it. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
----<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #3 of 12: The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS====<br />
<br />
From Roe (1973) through Dobbs (2022), SCOTUS evaded that core issue.1 <br />
<br />
SCOTUS never ruled babies Non-Persons “as a Matter of Law”, as lower courts allege.2 Roe made that fact not only relevant, but dispositive with a holding which no court has disputed even though Roe’s main holding was overturned:3 <br />
<br />
“[Prolifers] argue that the fetus is a ‘person’ within the language and meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment....If this suggestion of personhood is established, the [abortionist’s] case, of course, collapses, for the fetus’ right to life would then be guaranteed specifically by the [14th] Amendment [thus outlawing abortion in EVERY state]. The [abortionist’s lawyer] conceded as much....”4<br />
<br />
Dobbs explicitly left this statement of the obvious untouched, saying “our decision is not based on any view about when a State should regard pre-natal life as having rights or legally cognizable interests....”5 Dobbs did not say babies aren’t people. Dobbs did not say voters should still decide whether babies can be murdered in the face of proof that babies are in fact people.6 Dobbs left in place Roe’s observation that “establishment” of this fact, independently of any law, ruling, or future constitutional amendment,7 dictates whether abortion is legally recognizable as a right or as a crime.8<br />
<br />
This established fact is as relevant today as when Roe said “of course” it is.<br />
<br />
This established fact is not disestablished by any judge’s alleged inability to understand it.9<br />
<br />
This established FACT is not made irrelevant by any judge’s theory that the legal right of little humans to live is “impossible” to determine so it should be decided by their value to big humans.10<br />
<br />
If only those legally recognized as “persons” were people, slavery could still be legal and the 14th Amendment would mean nothing. Slavery states would merely need to classify their victims as only 3/5 human.11 The Amendment protects those who are IN FACT people – what is irrelevant is whether babies are people “as a matter of law”.12 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 3 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #4 of 12: Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life====<br />
<br />
Detectable heartbeats and brain waves are evidence that a person has not yet died, throughout state and federal law.1 Reason demands they be accepted as evidence that a person has begun to live.2<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 4 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #5 of 12: Legislatures should regulate abortion, as Dobbs held, just as legislatures regulate the prosecution of all other murders====<br />
<br />
But not in the sense of absolute discretion to leave wholesale murders of a supposedly unwanted group of humans completely unregulated. That interpretation of Dobbs’ holding is premised on a “mistake of fact”, which is an official exception to Stare Decisis. 1<br />
<br />
The “Mistake of Fact” that is the premise of letting voters decide whether to continue judge-approved genocide according to the “value” they place on little people is that the humanity of babies of humans is either unknowable or irrelevant. That premise was explicit in Roe and Casey, and implicit in Dobbs.2 <br />
<br />
That is an “erroneous factual premise”. The fact that little unborn humans are humans is neither unknowable3 nor irrelevant. It is verifiable and dispositive.4 The consensus of court-recognized fact finders cures that knowledge deficit, canceling that interpretation of Dobbs’ holding, while reinforcing Dobbs’ other two holdings that “The Constitution does not confer a right to abortion” and “Roe and Casey are overruled”, and requiring the outlawing of baby killing in every state.5 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 5 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #6 of 12: The full humanity of a tiny physical body is hard for many to grasp. But what distinguishes us from animals isn’t physical, and has no known pre-conscious stage====<br />
<br />
DON’T READ past this 28 word paragraph unless you want <br />
an edge-of-your-seat adventure – legal ammunition <br />
against not only baby killing but also against the myth <br />
of the irrelevance of God in the reasoning of judges, <br />
lawmakers, and voters! Yet Roe v Wade, of all cases, <br />
"opened the door" with its sophomoric review of "theologians", <br />
and #6 comes charging through! <> The rest of this Statement <br />
is for lawmakers who want a stronger, clearer statement, <br />
and who have the stomach for the larger battle.<br />
<br />
Part of Roe’s definition of “person” was “infused with a soul”.1 Roe thus affirmed the belief of most of society, a belief logically demanded by the common knowledge that humans are distinguished from animals by consciousness which features a capacity for choices at variance with physical needs: to sacrifice one's interests for another,2 which is how John 15:13 defines “love”. And conversely, to destroy one’s own body.3<br />
<br />
These differences, along with self awareness and the capacity to choose between good and evil4 – to behave either as an angel or as a demon, can’t be explained by any known physical process. These differences justify greater legal protection of humans than of animals. <br />
<br />
Since a “soul” without consciousness has never been theorized and can’t be imagined, the consensus of fact finders is, in effect, that abortion kills babies with conscious souls. The lack of any physical explanation for a conscious soul rules out any reason to infer immaturity of consciousness from physical immaturity, and is consistent with the report in Luke 1:44 that a baby at 6 months heard a righteous voice [and/or felt the righteous Presence of God] and responded with joy,5 a response not everybody chooses, indicating that even the capacity for choosing between good and evil precedes birth. And also indicating that when a baby is killed by dismemberment, acid, or sucking out the brain, a self-aware conscious soul feels the pain, understands the cruelty, and if out-of-body near-death experiences are real, sees who is doing it.<br />
<br />
Even considering the body only, there is no objective line between birth and conception distinguishing “humans” from “nonpersons”, or between “meaningful life” and life which courts are free to terminate.6 Without such a line, there can be no stage of gestation at which killing a baby can be objectively distinguished from murder. No baby is safe while that line remains arbitrary. <br />
<br />
The failure of some to grasp the humanity of babies at any given stage is a dangerous basis for permitting killing, since as many fail to grasp the full humanity of quite a number of distinct groups of born persons.<br />
<br />
As Roe correctly established, it can be useful in clarifying who to count as a human with an unalienable right to life, to consult the religion from which that right was copied into America’s founding documents. But religions which oppose the foundation of American law – equal rights for all humans, merit little credibility in American courts when their claims justify destruction of an entire people group – such as the claim that souls do not enter bodies until around birth. There can be “free exercise” of religions which do not equally reverence all human life only to the extent their “exercise” does not violate the rights of others or the laws enacted to protect them.7<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] <br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #7 of 12: Congress has ''Already'' Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment already authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion, without allowing Congress to legalize it====<br />
<br />
<small>FORGET YOU READ this 32 word Statement and DON’T read farther – <br />
certainly not the footnotes – if you don’t want to question <br />
the near consensus of prolife leaders who say “we are helpless <br />
to outlaw abortion in every state before we get ANOTHER <br />
personhood law through Congress, if not a Life Amendment <br />
to the Constitution.” <> This is the 7th of 12 Statements <br />
designed to push courts out of the way of defending Life <br />
in every state when included in the Findings of Facts of <br />
prolife laws. The material below can make it clearer and stronger.</small><br />
<br />
Congress established in 2004 that: “‘unborn child’ means a child in utero, and the term ‘child in utero’...means a member of the species Homo Sapiens, at any stage of development, who is carried in the womb”, 18 U.S.C. 1841(d).1 <br />
<br />
This fact is not diminished by clause (c) which does not “permit [authorize] the prosecution of any person for...an abortion for which the consent of the pregnant woman...has been obtained.…”2 A law misaligned with facts does not block future lawmakers from making corrections, and states don’t need Congress’ “permission” to obey the 14th Amendment. <br />
<br />
The reason 18 U.S.C. 1841(d) has had no effect on the practice of legal abortion is not because of any deficiency in its authority to establish dispositive facts, but because no state law reviewed by SCOTUS has cited it to establish what Roe correctly said once “established” would “of course” require the end of legal abortion. <br />
<br />
Not only is the 2004 law unmitigated evidence of life strong enough to “collapse” legal abortion by itself, but it would not be stronger if it were an Amendment to the Constitution.3 No other Constitutional Amendment is relied on for evidence of a fact. An Amendment can bind courts. But establishment of the Facts Of Life by evidence presented, cited, and tested in court draws not only courts, but society, closer to reality.4<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #8 of 12: Roe, Dobbs, and the 14th Amendment agree: All Humans are “Persons”====<br />
<br />
<small>DON’T READ past this 11 word Statement <br />
unless you like to stare at where crazy lawyers <br />
ever got the idea that human babies aren’t people!</small><br />
<br />
Neither Roe nor Dobbs distinguished between “humans” and “persons” as if a “human” baby isn’t necessarily a “person”. [2] Nor does the 14th Amendment leave any human unprotected.<br />
<br />
Roe v. Wade equated the time an unborn child becomes “recognizably human” with the time the child becomes a “person”: “These disciplines variously approached the question [“of when life begins”] in terms of the point at which the embryo or fetus became ‘formed’ or recognizably human, or in terms of when a ‘person’ came into being, that is, infused with a ‘soul’ or ‘animated.’” 410 U.S. 113, 133(1973)<br />
<br />
Dobbs cites the belief that “a human person comes into being at conception” without distinguishing between the two words. [3] The word “person” in the 14th Amendment meant “An individual human being...man, woman, or child...consisting of body and soul.” The word “child” in that 1828 definition included unborn children, since to be “with child” meant to be pregnant. [4]<br />
<br />
Therefore the Amendment’s “nor shall any state deprive any person of life” and “equal protection” of every “person” means every human, including those unborn. Nothing about the first clause keeps later clauses from protecting unborn humans. [5]<br />
<br />
See also Wong Wing v. United States, 163 U.S.228, 242 (1896), “The term ‘person’ is broad enough to include any and every human being within the jurisdiction of the republic...This has been decided so often that the point does not require argument.” Steinberg v. Brown 321 F. Supp. 741 (N.D. Ohio, 1970) “[o]nce human life has commenced, the constitutional protections found in the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments impose upon the state a duty of safeguarding it”. [6]<br />
<br />
The word “persons” in the 14th Amendment means all who are IN FACT humans. Had it been only for those who are legally recognized as human, every deprivation of fundamental rights would be “constitutional” so long as a law or ruling questions whether its victims are “persons in the whole sense”.<br />
<br />
Although Dobbs showed by disproving the opposite that reverence for all human life from fertilization was “deeply rooted in America’s law and traditions”, that is not why rights merit 14th Amendment protection. By the “deeply rooted” test, slavery would be legal today, since freedom for slaves had zero historical support.<br />
<br />
Nor does it matter if the Amendment authors even wanted to protect all humans. In fact, it doesn’t matter if there is a 14th Amendment. If law is not equal upon its operation on all humans, which is the very definition of the word “law” as developed by Samuel Rutherford’s “Lex Rex” and Blackstone and adopted by America’s founders, to that extent there is, by definition, no “rule of law”, no restraint upon the “strong” to not tyrannize the “weak”.<br />
<br />
There is a direct test of whether babies merit 14th Amendment protection that does not require a romp through history: [7] see if their parents are humans.<br />
<br />
“To say that the test of equal protection should be the ‘legal’ rather than the biological relationship is to avoid the issue. For the Equal Protection Clause necessarily limits the authority of a State [or its judges] to draw such ‘legal’ lines as it chooses.” Glona, 391 U.S. 73, 75 (1968) [8]<br />
<br />
FOOTNOTES: see [[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
<small>The footnotes are enriched by selections from the Amicus Briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson by: Lee J. Strang <> Scholars of Jurisprudence John M. Finnis and Robert P. George <> Mary Kay Bacallao Advocating for Unborn Children <> Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide <> and by selections from the 1996 debate between Judge Robert Bork and Professor Nathan Schluetter</small><br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #9 of 12: When pregnancies develop into medical emergencies requiring separation of mother and child to save the mother, the child has an equally fundamental right to life and medical care.====<br />
<br />
A legislature’s balancing of their interests cannot, therefore, be reviewed by “strict scrutiny”.2 Nor does alleged insufficiency of a “medical emergency” exception from a general abortion ban justify a court overturning the ban in the 99% of cases where no emergency is alleged.3 Legislatures are better equipped to deliberate about and secure the rights of all citizens than courts whose focus is the parties before them.4<br />
<br />
SCOTUS never denied that a legislature’s “personhood” statements in an abortion ban are strong evidence.5 That evidence is not mitigated by a ban’s exceptions.6 It is not made irrelevant because baby killers “rely” on killing babies.7 28/130 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
Fundamental Right: This is a term not found in the Constitution but made up by SCOTUS for the rights SCOTUS makes up which often displace rights actually listed in the Constitution. Justice Clarence Thomas is eloquent on this point. More about this later.<br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: A Foundation for Moral Law <> Pennsylvania Pro-Life Federation <> 396 State Legislators from 41 States</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #10 of 12: Tyranny over any class of humans by any other is prohibited by the Constitution, and by the Declaration, which gives the purpose of the Constitution and rests its own authority on the revelation of God1 in the Bible====<br />
<br />
Roe v Wade was not out of line to consult “those trained in... theology” who study souls, as well as doctors who study bodies, to clarify who to count as human with an unalienable right to life.3 <br />
<br />
America’s Freedom springs from “all men are created equal” and “equal protection of the laws” for all humans even if their looks, language, wealth, strength, ancestry, power, or faith are different.4 These rights have proven such a blessing to the world that their source, the Bible, deserves the fair hearing owed any witness whose reliability has been confirmed, when it promises still greater blessings if we will equally protect humans whose physical size is different.5 <br />
<br />
Its testimony is not “cumulative”, but “probative”.6 It is not to be feared as dispositive or compulsory: American freedom balances human understanding of how best to apply Biblical principles to government against the willingness of voting majorities to follow those principles. Even that is a Biblical principle legitimized in 1 Samuel 8.7 <br />
<br />
The history of slavery, Prohibition, and abortion illustrate the “willingness” factor. The probative value of the testimony of God is proved by the fact that without it, slavery would never have ended, and the prolife movement would never have begun. Which makes it probative to observe that not only the 14th Amendment, but also the revelation of God, requires this state, as it does every state, to outlaw all trampling of fundamental rights of any class of people, including abortion of babies.8 Where the two authorities say the same thing, the Bible, for all its alleged ambiguity, is better understood and more trusted than the Constitution which has indeed proven “a thing of wax” in the nimble fingers of even the most scrupulous judges.9 <br />
<br />
Without God – without belief in a more objective standard of right and wrong than the “value” that voters place on “different” people through “evolving community standards”, it is impossible to understand fundamental rights.10 <br />
<br />
Courts have demonstrated this impossibility by so often confusing abominations for rights, decimating those whom Jesus said “forbid them not to come unto Me”, denying that He created them, murdering 17% of them, sodomizing 20% of the survivors, and censoring 100% of His teachings in schools.11 <br />
<br />
That destruction of the 14th Amendment (1868) began when “Substantive Due Process”, pioneered in Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857), was applied in United States v. Cruikshank 92 U. S. 542 (1876) to acquit a white Democrat mililtia of murdering “as many as 165” black Republicans and burning down the courthouse they were defending.12 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring God does not “establish religion”. It does not compel belief, action or endorsement. It simply allows judges and voters to make informed decisions. It is part of fact-finding. It is part of reasoning. Part of embracing reality. Part of examining “the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth”. Judges must stop punishing people for telling the truth just because the truth favors God.13 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring the Bible does not require equal weight for claims of religions that deny equal rights for all.14 <br />
<br />
For example, some claim “souls” don’t enter babies until long after fertilization, or even long after birth.15 Their claims do not “cancel” the mountain of consensus of court-recognized fact finders that souls are present from the beginning. Our Constitution and laws reject their unequal rights, and are appropriately wary of their rationales for their unequal rights. The credibility of every witness is not equal. Credibility is earned. <br />
There can be “free exercise” of religions hostile to “equal protection of the laws” only to the extent their “exercise” does not threaten the rights of others or violate the laws enacted to protect them – laws ultimately decided by voting majorities, hopefully well informed through the uncensoring of reality.16 39/520 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms: <br />
<br />
'''Cumulative''': testimony so redundant that it wastes the court’s time<br />
Dispositive: testimony so strong that it settles the issue with no more<br />
Probative: probative facts establish, or contribute to, proof. Probative value is the degree of relevance of evidence. <br />
<br />
'''Prohibition''': From 1920 to 1932, drinking (alcohol) was made illegal, banned by an actual Constitutional Amendment. Actual alcohol consumption dropped by about 50%, or at least that is how much Cirrhosis of the Liver cases dropped. During that time the drop in drinking led to an economic boom, called the “Roaring Twenties”, which unfortunately were not remembered for their prosperity but for their immorality. In 1928, the prosperity collapsed into a “Great Depression” due to cheating by stock market investors. In 1932 Americans wanted liquor so bad they ratified another Constitutional Amendment repealing the 1920 Amendment. <br />
<br />
'''Substantive Due Process''': As Justice Clarence Thomas eloquently explains – see Statement #11 footnotes, this phrase was made up by SCOTUS to justify making up what it calls “fundamental rights” as its tool of repealing laws it doesn’t like. It gets its name from the SCOTUS claim that the “Due Process” clause of the 14th Amendment gives SCOTUS its authority to make up rights and call them “fundamental”. But “Due Process” only meant the legal procedures which everyone must be given equally, to defend their rights in court when necessary. The phrase has nothing to do with identifying what rights are protectable. But “Substantive” means those rights we care about, that the Constitution protects. Like freedom of speech or religion. Because “substantive” means substantial, serious rights, and “due process” has nothing to do with identifying any rights, the LONANG Institute observes in Statement #11 notes that “substantive due process” is an oxymoron. <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: Foundation for Moral Law and Lutherans for Life <> Jewish Prolife Foundation <> LONANG Institute <> U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and Other Religious Organizations <> Claremont Institute’s Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #11 of 12: The 14th Amendment gives federal courts no “due process” authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the “right” to murder, and gives Congress no authority to legalize violations of Constitutional Rights, like taking a baby’s right to Life====<br />
<br />
The sole federal authority over state laws regarding the rights of their own citizens is through the 14th Amendment, Sections One and Five.1 Contrary to SCOTUS rulings, the 14th Amendment explicitly provides:<br />
<br />
* '''Congress authorized, not courts.''' Congress, not courts, determines the manner and scope of federal intervention in states whose laws don’t protect their citizens’ rights.2 Congress is not limited to enforcing only those rights of which SCOTUS approves, nor only to the extent that SCOTUS approves,3 nor only when state governments, not individuals, directly violate rights.4 <br />
<br />
* Federal courts aren’t permitted to stop either states or Congress from protecting enumerated rights (like Life), or to repeal their laws for conflicting with unenumerated [not listed in the Constitution] “rights” (like the “right” to murder babies), or to intervene in states’ protection of rights beyond prosecuting violations of federal laws.5 <br />
<br />
* Nor can Congress stop states from protecting enumerated rights. Neither Congress nor federal courts may overturn a state law protecting the lives of unborn babies from surgical abortion, chemical abortion, or contraceptives.6<br />
<br />
* The rights subject to federal enforcement are not those made up by SCOTUS allegedly based on the “Due Process” clause,7 but those listed in the Constitution, referred to as “privileges and immunities”8 (including, for unborn babies, the “privilege” of life and “immunity” from “cruel and unusual punishment” and execution “without due process of law”).9 <br />
* Enumerated Rights recognized before the Constitution existed are not excluded from Congressional intervention.10<br />
<br />
* '''“Substantive Due Process”''' is the sophistry by which SCOTUS turned the Constitution’s Authority to Define Rights, and Congress’ 14th Amendment Section 5 Authority to Enforce Rights, into its own authority to reclassify abominations as “rights”.11 It is an illegal, unconstitutional, Freedom-crushing fraud from Hell fomenting a long line of Landmark Abomination Cases.12 <br />
<br />
<small>Mini-lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Due Process:''' The duty of courts to give all parties to cases the fair and equal procedures and opportunities for defending themselves.<br />
<br />
(This argument for ending SCOTUS’ long line of Landmark Abomination Cases continues in Part Two of this book where its focus on SCOTUS-mandated murder of babies created in the Image of God is extended to SCOTUS’ censorship of God Himself.) <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amici who filed briefs in Dobbs v. Jackson: Lonang Institute <> Christian Legal Society <> AfricanAmerican, Hispanic, Roman Catholic and Protestant Religious and Civil Rights Organizations <> Senators Josh Hawley, Mike Lee, and Ted Cruz. And from Judge Robert Bork <> Nathan Schlueter, Professor of Philosophy and Religion, Hillsdale College, (when he debated Judge Bork in 2003 he was assistant professor of pre-law and political science at St. Ambrose University. Author, “Unborn Persons and the Fourteenth Amendment.” 2002.) <> Erwin Chemerinsky, Dean of Berkeley Law School <> Legal Information Institute, Cornell University <> Justice Clarence Thomas, dissents and concurrences <> justia.com <> James Gray Pope, Professor of Law and Sidney Reitman Scholar, Rutgers University School of Law <> Libby Adler professor of law and women’s, gender, and sexuality studies, Northeastern University Christmas, 2023''</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #12 of 12:Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable. The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives.====<br />
<br />
Any judge interfering with this state’s compliance with the 14th Amendment and its ancient authority to protect its people1 – the central reason governments exist, is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders,2 and is guilty of exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide through an unconstitutional ruling,3 which exceeds the judicial powers given by any Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment.4The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives, including (1) giving the state Supreme Court original jurisdiction over any challenge to a law, (2) requiring that review be expedited, (3) requiring a supermajority of the Court to suspend a law, (4) questioning justices in a public hearing about the constitutionality of their ruling, and (5) overturning the ruling with a supermajority of the legislature.5 <br />
<br />
Should any federal judge so interfere with this state’s constitutional duty, this state appeals to its congressional delegation to examine similar grounds for disciplinary action,6 along with exercising its Article III, Section 2, paragraph 2 authority to make “exceptions” and “regulations” designed to end SCOTUS’ long line of landmark abomination cases. This state also appeals to its congressional delegation to exercise its life-saving and rights-protecting authority under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment whose plain words give Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of Rights,7 which subsumes the authority to define their scope and to balance competing interests, while the “privileges and immunities” clause identifies as protectable rights those listed in the Constitution.8 <br />
<br />
Official world-wide definitions of “crimes against humanity” apply “to representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission”, whether elected representatives or unelected judges.”9<br />
<br />
Any court review of this law must be expedited, because lives are lost with each day that courts delay.10 7/230 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of Legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Malfeasance in office:''' official misconduct; violation of a public trust or obligation; specifically, the doing of an act which is positively unlawful or wrongful.<br />
<br />
'''Subsumes:''' Includes. To include or place within something larger or more comprehensive: encompass as a subordinate or component element red, green, and yellow are subsumed under the term "color" <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: 396 State Legislators from 41 States <> Melinda Thybault/Moral Outcry <> and by Matthew J. Franck, Director of the William E. and Carol G. Simon Center on Religion and the Constitution at the Witherspoon Institute and visiting lecturer in politics at Princeton University</small></div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Reversing_Landmark_Abomination_Cases&diff=50371Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases2024-01-02T05:11:33Z<p>DaveLeach: /* Statement of Facts #3 of 12: The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS */</p>
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<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters<br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion</span><br />
<br />
by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal<br />
''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal<br />
<span style="color:brown"><br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen <br />
<br />
by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 18:06, 15 October 2023 (UTC)<br />
<br />
=Introduction=<br />
<br />
This book offers twelve statements of fact about babies and abortion which I challenge any voter, lawyer, lawmaker, or judge to refute. Their footnotes contain nuggets from the 140 "Amicus" briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' (2022), the ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade. These statements are designed to soften the resistance of voters to outlawing baby murder, when presented in public, and to force judges to outlaw abortion in every state, when presented in court. <br />
<br />
They are truths designed to be so unignorable, that when any lawmaker includes them in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, in any state, prodeath fury will help publicize them with each advance through legislative deadlines. When friends of babies see them survive scrutiny, the force of these truths will grow like a snowball rolling down a hill. <br />
<br />
But murdering babies is only the most egregious of many Landmark Abomination Cases. Their common thread is usurping authority which the Constitution assigns to others, and equating the Bible with spurious religions. “Never let a crisis go to waste”, say the enemies of God, but God is the true master of turning evil into an opportunity for good. It’s time. Let’s end the Supreme Court’s war against God.<br />
<br />
The very fact that abortion is the worst of the ways the United States Supreme Court has turned American law upside down creates an opportunity to heal that branch of our government, and heal all the harm to our nation and its culture and morals that it has caused. As Professor Nathan Schluetter at Hillsdale College observes, “We must not let this opportunity pass to boldly challenge the prevailing jurisprudence and its attendant epistemological and moral skepticism with respect to abortion.”<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
It is the '''fact''' that unborn babies are living human children that makes killing them murder. It’s not what any ''law'' says about it, or even what the Constitution says about it. That’s what leaves ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' on the edge of reality, by treating this fact as something for voters to figure out, not on the basis of whether babies are ''in fact'' people but on the basis of some “value” they place on ''little'' people. <br />
<br />
That '''fact''' is what makes <u>the consensus of court-recognized fact finders</u> a stronger legal reason to end legal abortion than a Life Amendment, and a powerful social reason in the Court of Public Opinion able to soften hearts to the silent screams of Jesus' little brothers and His quiet knocking on hearts' doors. Which makes it insane for prolifers to not even mention this legally dispositive consensus in each and every prolife court case, and every “finding of fact” in prolife legislation, along with leveling with the public about the Scriptures which are the real reason we even care.<br />
<br />
[[File:Cover_Cartoon.jpg]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
Why these solutions may help even where abortion is already outlawed<br />
<br />
(1) They could defeat a national abortion legalization.<br />
<br />
(2) They could help you sue a nearby “blue state” for helping its baby killers murder your children. <br />
<br />
(3) They could help if your district judges join the courtroom rebellion against Dobbs in other states.<br />
<br />
(4) They could help meet challenges in the Court of Public Opinion, for example through a Resolution that irrefutably addresses every objection you have ever heard, as understandable to voters as it is irrefutable to judges. That would help the public see through future judicial gaslighting, and support judicial reform: ie. www.savetheworld .saltshaker.us/wiki/Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_ stop_judges_from_legislating<br />
<br />
(5) I could sure use your feedback. Proverbs 15:22. <br />
<br />
----<br />
<center>'''Ending legal abortion everywhere in close to a year<br />
(the goal of the following bill language)<br />
<br>'''requires a law whose Findings of Facts: '''<br />
</center><br />
<br />
<br />
* '''contain evidence which no judge can squarely address and keep abortion legal anywhere:''' that unborn babies are real people – established by the (unanimous) consensus of court-recognized factfinders: juries, expert witnesses, 38 states, judges, and Congress;<br />
<br />
* '''present its evidence in a way that is clear and persuasive to voters,''' to help them resist judicial and media gaslighting; (See below for “Why court-recognized fact finders persuade Voters”)<br />
<br />
* '''address misunderstandings about abortion jurisprudence''' that divide prolifers, intimidate lawyers, and blind judges;<br />
<br />
'''AND WHOSE PENALTIES'''<br />
<br />
* '''restrict some aspect of abortion substantially enough''' that THEY can't be defended as a mere regulation with some other legitimate government purpose than saving lives. The restriction must be profound enough that its only possible defense is that it saves human lives. That will force courts to address the evidence that babies are fully human;<br />
<br />
* '''provide no distractions that let judges rule on some technicality and ignore the evidence that the law would save lives.''' A perfect law that addresses everything from exceptions to contraception multiplies a judge’s opportunity to say “we don’t need to reach the issue of when life begins because the law fails on a lesser issue.” A simple yet substantial restriction, with “findings” that address the legal obstacles, will survive courts, which will get courts out of the way of saving life, which will free lawmakers to work out the challenging details with time to get a comprehensive solution right and with hope that they won’t waste their time; <br />
<br />
* '''list specific penalties for specific situations,''' rather than broadly stated goals such as “babies are to be protected as much as adults”, leaving prosecutors and judges to guess what to punish, or how, in situations where evidence and culpability are different; <br />
<br />
* '''contain a “life of the mother” exception''' whose applicability is clear enough that mothers are not denied life-saving care until doctors are assured by lawyers that said care will not put the doctors in jail; and<br />
<br />
'''THE LAW SHOULD ALSO order courts to “expedite” any review,''' “because lives are lost with each day that courts delay”. <br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate!)<br />
<br />
More ideas: [[Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_stop_judges_from_legislating]]<br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate! See below for Expedited Review federal rules.) <br />
<br />
WORD COUNTS: Using only the first boldfaced paragraph of each of these 12 Findings, in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, will total about 200 words. The complete Findings, without footnotes, total nearly 3000 words. For the advantages of including enough information in a prolife law for the Findings to defend themselves, see “Too Lengthy?” below. <br />
<br />
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: I am not a lawyer. But writing about prolife legal defenses designed to bring legal abortion to an end, and Scriptures calling for that goal, for 25 years in my Prayer * Action News, being uncertified as a lawyer, has created the opportunity for a remarkable interaction with Planned Barrenhoods priciest lawyers. Because news reporters wouldn’t report that my reasoning was designed as legal defenses in court, or that they were grounded in the Bible, what that left was their accusation that I advocated crime; whereas had my defenses been successful they would have allowed citizens to stop murderers legally, putting an end to the reason citizens took action. <br />
<br />
__TOC__<br />
<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and family, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge inaction deny themselves Life More Abundantly. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget: free wisdom, guaranteed success===<br />
<br />
'''John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
James 1:5 If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, [without finding fault]; and it shall be given him. 6 But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering.''' (Gr. διακρινω not withdrawn from, ie. by lack of support from actions, or opposed, ie. by indecision) <br />
<br />
'''Matthew 21:21 ...If ye have faith, and doubt not''' (Gr. διακρινω) ...'''ye shall say unto this mountain, Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea; it shall be done. 22 And all things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive.'''<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and families, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge their own inaction deny themselves, not just their neighbors, Life More Abundantly.<br />
<br />
If you are not satisfied with life less abundantly – ongoing slaughter of innocents – you won’t be satisfied now that the fate of babies is decided by the “value” that voters place on little people. You will keep searching for a strategy to end all the slaughter: to both outlaw it, and make it unthinkable to all but the worst of murderers. <br />
<br />
If you believe you ''will'' reach every good goal you pursue with all your being, Matthew 21:21-22, you won’t be turned from ending the slaughter in every state by experts who tell you that is impossible which rules out a strategy for achieving it. You will search until you find God’s way to do God’s will. <br />
<br />
You won’t say “I'm not smart enough to question prolife legal authorities who advise giving up”, if you believe James 1:5 which promises you all the wisdom you need to do good. Nor will you ever say you are not smart enough to read and understand legal briefs, court rulings, or to reason with lawmakers, lawyers, and prolife leaders, as necessary.<br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will not excuse yourself from God’s call because you can’t talk well, like Moses, whom God answered “Who made mouths?” Exodus 4:11. Nor will you excuse yourself to God, saying you are but a child against the world’s superbrains, like Jeremiah, whom God answered, “Stop saying that! It is MY words you will speak, and I am no child!” Jeremiah 1:6-8. <br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will shine God’s light wherever you find Darkness, Matthew 5:13-16. Since nothing is darker than murdering your own baby, you will seek God’s help as you oppose this evil, and none of these excuses will withdraw you from action.<br />
<br />
===Final Warning: read this at your own risk===<br />
<br />
Warning: read at your own risk. Rough reading Ahead, that may knock you from your TV chair.<br />
<br />
'''Findings of Facts which No Judge can Squarely Address and Keep Abortion Legal'''<br />
<br />
=Part 1: Authority of Court-Recognized Fact Finders=<br />
<br />
<span style="color:grey"><small>''Try to imagine how a judge, reviewing a prolife law with these Findings of Facts, would be able to dodge this evidence - in fact, see if you can find ANYONE who can ''refute'' these facts - as opposed to not ''caring'' about facts - that is, not caring about reality:''</small></span><br />
<br />
====Statement of Fact #1 of 12: Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let any state legalize====<br />
<br />
'''Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let ''any'' state legalize.'''<br />
<br />
No fact can be more legally established than the fact that “life begins” at fertilization, being the consensus of every American legal authority who has taken a position, in every category of court-recognized finders of facts: juries,2 thousands of expert witnesses who were not contested,3 38 state legislatures,4 individual judges,5 and Congress.6 <br />
<br />
No legal authority has ruled that any unborn baby of a human is not in fact a human person, or that “life begins” any later than fertilization.7 <br />
<br />
No state can keep abortion legal now that this fact is established. This is so obvious that even Roe v. Wade said “of course”, and the lawyer for the abortionists agreed.8 <br />
For most public issues, disagreement is over facts.9 The only disagreement about abortion is between unanimous fact finders and those who don't care about facts.10 A court that won’t address the facts that justify and necessitate a law, or hear evidence of those facts, violates Due Process and has no legitimate jurisdiction to review that law.11 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 1 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? <br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
<br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
<br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True. <br />
<br />
<br />
</span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget #2: The Cost of Success===<br />
<br />
'''Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? '''<br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True.<br />
<br />
=====Statement of Facts #2 of 12: Courts Accept the Fact-Finding Authority of Legislatures, Juries, Experts for the same good reasons their findings persuade the public.=====<br />
<br />
SCOTUS must accept legislative findings of facts that are not obviously irrational. “..the existence of facts supporting the legislative judgment is to be presumed...not to be pronounced unconstitutional unless in the light of the facts made known or generally assumed it is of such a character as to preclude the assumption that it rests upon some rational basis within the knowledge and experience of the legislators....” U.S. v. Carolene Products, 304 U.S. 144, 152 (1938).1<br />
<br />
Besides the court-recognized fact finding authority of legislatures, courts must conform their rulings to laws until such time as courts declare laws unconstitutional. No court has overturned the “unborn victims of violence” laws (based on “human babies are people”) of 39 states and Congress, despite many challenges.2<br />
<br />
To do so would require a court to positively affirm that human life does not begin until much later, which no legal authority has done, and for which no evidence exists.<br />
<br />
'''Legislatures'''. Lawmakers are there by the choice of a majority of voters. They are bombarded by information from experts. They are scrutinized by other lawmakers. Many are lawyers, some of whom are constitutional scholars and past or future judges. They set the salaries of judges, and have the power to hold impeachment trials of judges. Congress, the national legislature, scrutinizes Supreme Court justices. <br />
<br />
Many Congressmen are equally qualified: 15 U.S. Senators have served on the Supreme Court, and more were nominated.3 <br />
<br />
'''Juries''' are tested for impartiality. They are educated by the most qualified expert witnesses available. They study as long as necessary to establish truth – sometimes for months.4<br />
<br />
'''Expert Witnesses''' are the best experts money can buy, and they are scrutinized by the other side’s experts.5 <br />
<br />
It is for strong reasons that the findings of court-recognized fact finders are as respected in court as in the Court of Public Opinion.6<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 2 + Footnotes]]<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Mark 8:38 '''Whosoever therefore shall be ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful generation; of him also shall the Son of man be ashamed''', when he cometh in the glory of his Father with the holy angels.<br />
<br />
We Bible believing conservatives need to quit blaming social media and CIA censorship for our failures and stop censoring ourselves. <br />
<br />
I offer a way of stating evidence which no judge, news reporter, Democrat, or unbeliever can refute, along with answering objections that have crippled prolife messaging and legal strategy. But we despair of reaching those who stop their ears to evidence. “What’s the use of tightening our message? You’re preaching to the choir. We know babies are people but those other people have their opinion too.”<br />
<br />
I’m not "preaching to the choir". I’m passing out a new composition to the choir for a coming TV special.<br />
<br />
Most of those who won’t listen, won’t vote either, rendering their willful ignorance relatively benign. Stop worrying about them. All they will do is hate you, lie about you, wreck your business – childish stuff. We progress by clearly articulating to the extent possible. The same Bible which is the main reason we care about babies promises all the protection we need to finish what we are here to do.<br />
<br />
It isn’t just saving baby bodies where we self censor. Adult souls are lost. We hold back sharing what we know about God. Snap out of it. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
----<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #3 of 12: The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS====<br />
<br />
From Roe (1973) through Dobbs (2022), SCOTUS evaded that core issue.1 <br />
<br />
SCOTUS never ruled babies Non-Persons “as a Matter of Law”, as lower courts allege.2 Roe made that fact not only relevant, but dispositive with a holding which no court has disputed even though Roe’s main holding was overturned:3 <br />
<br />
“[Prolifers] argue that the fetus is a ‘person’ within the language and meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment....If this suggestion of personhood is established, the [abortionist’s] case, of course, collapses, for the fetus’ right to life would then be guaranteed specifically by the [14th] Amendment [thus outlawing abortion in EVERY state]. The [abortionist’s lawyer] conceded as much....”4<br />
<br />
Dobbs explicitly left this statement of the obvious untouched, saying “our decision is not based on any view about when a State should regard pre-natal life as having rights or legally cognizable interests....”5 Dobbs did not say babies aren’t people. Dobbs did not say voters should still decide whether babies can be murdered in the face of proof that babies are in fact people.6 Dobbs left in place Roe’s observation that “establishment” of this fact, independently of any law, ruling, or future constitutional amendment,7 dictates whether abortion is legally recognizable as a right or as a crime.8<br />
<br />
This established fact is as relevant today as when Roe said “of course” it is.<br />
<br />
This established fact is not disestablished by any judge’s alleged inability to understand it.9<br />
<br />
This established FACT is not made irrelevant by any judge’s theory that the legal right of little humans to live is “impossible” to determine so it should be decided by their value to big humans.10<br />
<br />
If only those legally recognized as “persons” were people, slavery could still be legal and the 14th Amendment would mean nothing. Slavery states would merely need to classify their victims as only 3/5 human.11 The Amendment protects those who are IN FACT people – what is irrelevant is whether babies are people “as a matter of law”.12 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 3 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #4 of 12: Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life====<br />
<br />
Detectable heartbeats and brain waves are evidence that a person has not yet died, throughout state and federal law.1 Reason demands they be accepted as evidence that a person has begun to live.2<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 4 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #5 of 12: Legislatures should regulate abortion, as Dobbs held, just as legislatures regulate the prosecution of all other murders====<br />
<br />
But not in the sense of absolute discretion to leave wholesale murders of a supposedly unwanted group of humans completely unregulated. That interpretation of Dobbs’ holding is premised on a “mistake of fact”, which is an official exception to Stare Decisis. 1<br />
<br />
The “Mistake of Fact” that is the premise of letting voters decide whether to continue judge-approved genocide according to the “value” they place on little people is that the humanity of babies of humans is either unknowable or irrelevant. That premise was explicit in Roe and Casey, and implicit in Dobbs.2 <br />
<br />
That is an “erroneous factual premise”. The fact that little unborn humans are humans is neither unknowable3 nor irrelevant. It is verifiable and dispositive.4 The consensus of court-recognized fact finders cures that knowledge deficit, canceling that interpretation of Dobbs’ holding, while reinforcing Dobbs’ other two holdings that “The Constitution does not confer a right to abortion” and “Roe and Casey are overruled”, and requiring the outlawing of baby killing in every state.5 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 5 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #6 of 12: The full humanity of a tiny physical body is hard for many to grasp. But what distinguishes us from animals isn’t physical, and has no known pre-conscious stage====<br />
<br />
DON’T READ past this 28 word paragraph unless you want <br />
an edge-of-your-seat adventure – legal ammunition <br />
against not only baby killing but also against the myth <br />
of the irrelevance of God in the reasoning of judges, <br />
lawmakers, and voters! Yet Roe v Wade, of all cases, <br />
"opened the door" with its sophomoric review of "theologians", <br />
and #6 comes charging through! <> The rest of this Statement <br />
is for lawmakers who want a stronger, clearer statement, <br />
and who have the stomach for the larger battle.<br />
<br />
Part of Roe’s definition of “person” was “infused with a soul”.1 Roe thus affirmed the belief of most of society, a belief logically demanded by the common knowledge that humans are distinguished from animals by consciousness which features a capacity for choices at variance with physical needs: to sacrifice one's interests for another,2 which is how John 15:13 defines “love”. And conversely, to destroy one’s own body.3<br />
<br />
These differences, along with self awareness and the capacity to choose between good and evil4 – to behave either as an angel or as a demon, can’t be explained by any known physical process. These differences justify greater legal protection of humans than of animals. <br />
<br />
Since a “soul” without consciousness has never been theorized and can’t be imagined, the consensus of fact finders is, in effect, that abortion kills babies with conscious souls. The lack of any physical explanation for a conscious soul rules out any reason to infer immaturity of consciousness from physical immaturity, and is consistent with the report in Luke 1:44 that a baby at 6 months heard a righteous voice [and/or felt the righteous Presence of God] and responded with joy,5 a response not everybody chooses, indicating that even the capacity for choosing between good and evil precedes birth. And also indicating that when a baby is killed by dismemberment, acid, or sucking out the brain, a self-aware conscious soul feels the pain, understands the cruelty, and if out-of-body near-death experiences are real, sees who is doing it.<br />
<br />
Even considering the body only, there is no objective line between birth and conception distinguishing “humans” from “nonpersons”, or between “meaningful life” and life which courts are free to terminate.6 Without such a line, there can be no stage of gestation at which killing a baby can be objectively distinguished from murder. No baby is safe while that line remains arbitrary. <br />
<br />
The failure of some to grasp the humanity of babies at any given stage is a dangerous basis for permitting killing, since as many fail to grasp the full humanity of quite a number of distinct groups of born persons.<br />
<br />
As Roe correctly established, it can be useful in clarifying who to count as a human with an unalienable right to life, to consult the religion from which that right was copied into America’s founding documents. But religions which oppose the foundation of American law – equal rights for all humans, merit little credibility in American courts when their claims justify destruction of an entire people group – such as the claim that souls do not enter bodies until around birth. There can be “free exercise” of religions which do not equally reverence all human life only to the extent their “exercise” does not violate the rights of others or the laws enacted to protect them.7<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] <br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #7 of 12: Congress has ''Already'' Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment already authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion, without allowing Congress to legalize it====<br />
<br />
<small>FORGET YOU READ this 32 word Statement and DON’T read farther – <br />
certainly not the footnotes – if you don’t want to question <br />
the near consensus of prolife leaders who say “we are helpless <br />
to outlaw abortion in every state before we get ANOTHER <br />
personhood law through Congress, if not a Life Amendment <br />
to the Constitution.” <> This is the 7th of 12 Statements <br />
designed to push courts out of the way of defending Life <br />
in every state when included in the Findings of Facts of <br />
prolife laws. The material below can make it clearer and stronger.</small><br />
<br />
Congress established in 2004 that: “‘unborn child’ means a child in utero, and the term ‘child in utero’...means a member of the species Homo Sapiens, at any stage of development, who is carried in the womb”, 18 U.S.C. 1841(d).1 <br />
<br />
This fact is not diminished by clause (c) which does not “permit [authorize] the prosecution of any person for...an abortion for which the consent of the pregnant woman...has been obtained.…”2 A law misaligned with facts does not block future lawmakers from making corrections, and states don’t need Congress’ “permission” to obey the 14th Amendment. <br />
<br />
The reason 18 U.S.C. 1841(d) has had no effect on the practice of legal abortion is not because of any deficiency in its authority to establish dispositive facts, but because no state law reviewed by SCOTUS has cited it to establish what Roe correctly said once “established” would “of course” require the end of legal abortion. <br />
<br />
Not only is the 2004 law unmitigated evidence of life strong enough to “collapse” legal abortion by itself, but it would not be stronger if it were an Amendment to the Constitution.3 No other Constitutional Amendment is relied on for evidence of a fact. An Amendment can bind courts. But establishment of the Facts Of Life by evidence presented, cited, and tested in court draws not only courts, but society, closer to reality.4<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #8 of 12: Roe, Dobbs, and the 14th Amendment agree: All Humans are “Persons”====<br />
<br />
<small>DON’T READ past this 11 word Statement <br />
unless you like to stare at where crazy lawyers <br />
ever got the idea that human babies aren’t people!</small><br />
<br />
Neither Roe nor Dobbs distinguished between “humans” and “persons” as if a “human” baby isn’t necessarily a “person”. [2] Nor does the 14th Amendment leave any human unprotected.<br />
<br />
Roe v. Wade equated the time an unborn child becomes “recognizably human” with the time the child becomes a “person”: “These disciplines variously approached the question [“of when life begins”] in terms of the point at which the embryo or fetus became ‘formed’ or recognizably human, or in terms of when a ‘person’ came into being, that is, infused with a ‘soul’ or ‘animated.’” 410 U.S. 113, 133(1973)<br />
<br />
Dobbs cites the belief that “a human person comes into being at conception” without distinguishing between the two words. [3] The word “person” in the 14th Amendment meant “An individual human being...man, woman, or child...consisting of body and soul.” The word “child” in that 1828 definition included unborn children, since to be “with child” meant to be pregnant. [4]<br />
<br />
Therefore the Amendment’s “nor shall any state deprive any person of life” and “equal protection” of every “person” means every human, including those unborn. Nothing about the first clause keeps later clauses from protecting unborn humans. [5]<br />
<br />
See also Wong Wing v. United States, 163 U.S.228, 242 (1896), “The term ‘person’ is broad enough to include any and every human being within the jurisdiction of the republic...This has been decided so often that the point does not require argument.” Steinberg v. Brown 321 F. Supp. 741 (N.D. Ohio, 1970) “[o]nce human life has commenced, the constitutional protections found in the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments impose upon the state a duty of safeguarding it”. [6]<br />
<br />
The word “persons” in the 14th Amendment means all who are IN FACT humans. Had it been only for those who are legally recognized as human, every deprivation of fundamental rights would be “constitutional” so long as a law or ruling questions whether its victims are “persons in the whole sense”.<br />
<br />
Although Dobbs showed by disproving the opposite that reverence for all human life from fertilization was “deeply rooted in America’s law and traditions”, that is not why rights merit 14th Amendment protection. By the “deeply rooted” test, slavery would be legal today, since freedom for slaves had zero historical support.<br />
<br />
Nor does it matter if the Amendment authors even wanted to protect all humans. In fact, it doesn’t matter if there is a 14th Amendment. If law is not equal upon its operation on all humans, which is the very definition of the word “law” as developed by Samuel Rutherford’s “Lex Rex” and Blackstone and adopted by America’s founders, to that extent there is, by definition, no “rule of law”, no restraint upon the “strong” to not tyrannize the “weak”.<br />
<br />
There is a direct test of whether babies merit 14th Amendment protection that does not require a romp through history: [7] see if their parents are humans.<br />
<br />
“To say that the test of equal protection should be the ‘legal’ rather than the biological relationship is to avoid the issue. For the Equal Protection Clause necessarily limits the authority of a State [or its judges] to draw such ‘legal’ lines as it chooses.” Glona, 391 U.S. 73, 75 (1968) [8]<br />
<br />
FOOTNOTES: see [[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
<small>The footnotes are enriched by selections from the Amicus Briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson by: Lee J. Strang <> Scholars of Jurisprudence John M. Finnis and Robert P. George <> Mary Kay Bacallao Advocating for Unborn Children <> Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide <> and by selections from the 1996 debate between Judge Robert Bork and Professor Nathan Schluetter</small><br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #9 of 12: When pregnancies develop into medical emergencies requiring separation of mother and child to save the mother, the child has an equally fundamental right to life and medical care.====<br />
<br />
A legislature’s balancing of their interests cannot, therefore, be reviewed by “strict scrutiny”.2 Nor does alleged insufficiency of a “medical emergency” exception from a general abortion ban justify a court overturning the ban in the 99% of cases where no emergency is alleged.3 Legislatures are better equipped to deliberate about and secure the rights of all citizens than courts whose focus is the parties before them.4<br />
<br />
SCOTUS never denied that a legislature’s “personhood” statements in an abortion ban are strong evidence.5 That evidence is not mitigated by a ban’s exceptions.6 It is not made irrelevant because baby killers “rely” on killing babies.7 28/130 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
Fundamental Right: This is a term not found in the Constitution but made up by SCOTUS for the rights SCOTUS makes up which often displace rights actually listed in the Constitution. Justice Clarence Thomas is eloquent on this point. More about this later.<br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: A Foundation for Moral Law <> Pennsylvania Pro-Life Federation <> 396 State Legislators from 41 States</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #10 of 12: Tyranny over any class of humans by any other is prohibited by the Constitution, and by the Declaration, which gives the purpose of the Constitution and rests its own authority on the revelation of God1 in the Bible====<br />
<br />
Roe v Wade was not out of line to consult “those trained in... theology” who study souls, as well as doctors who study bodies, to clarify who to count as human with an unalienable right to life.3 <br />
<br />
America’s Freedom springs from “all men are created equal” and “equal protection of the laws” for all humans even if their looks, language, wealth, strength, ancestry, power, or faith are different.4 These rights have proven such a blessing to the world that their source, the Bible, deserves the fair hearing owed any witness whose reliability has been confirmed, when it promises still greater blessings if we will equally protect humans whose physical size is different.5 <br />
<br />
Its testimony is not “cumulative”, but “probative”.6 It is not to be feared as dispositive or compulsory: American freedom balances human understanding of how best to apply Biblical principles to government against the willingness of voting majorities to follow those principles. Even that is a Biblical principle legitimized in 1 Samuel 8.7 <br />
<br />
The history of slavery, Prohibition, and abortion illustrate the “willingness” factor. The probative value of the testimony of God is proved by the fact that without it, slavery would never have ended, and the prolife movement would never have begun. Which makes it probative to observe that not only the 14th Amendment, but also the revelation of God, requires this state, as it does every state, to outlaw all trampling of fundamental rights of any class of people, including abortion of babies.8 Where the two authorities say the same thing, the Bible, for all its alleged ambiguity, is better understood and more trusted than the Constitution which has indeed proven “a thing of wax” in the nimble fingers of even the most scrupulous judges.9 <br />
<br />
Without God – without belief in a more objective standard of right and wrong than the “value” that voters place on “different” people through “evolving community standards”, it is impossible to understand fundamental rights.10 <br />
<br />
Courts have demonstrated this impossibility by so often confusing abominations for rights, decimating those whom Jesus said “forbid them not to come unto Me”, denying that He created them, murdering 17% of them, sodomizing 20% of the survivors, and censoring 100% of His teachings in schools.11 <br />
<br />
That destruction of the 14th Amendment (1868) began when “Substantive Due Process”, pioneered in Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857), was applied in United States v. Cruikshank 92 U. S. 542 (1876) to acquit a white Democrat mililtia of murdering “as many as 165” black Republicans and burning down the courthouse they were defending.12 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring God does not “establish religion”. It does not compel belief, action or endorsement. It simply allows judges and voters to make informed decisions. It is part of fact-finding. It is part of reasoning. Part of embracing reality. Part of examining “the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth”. Judges must stop punishing people for telling the truth just because the truth favors God.13 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring the Bible does not require equal weight for claims of religions that deny equal rights for all.14 <br />
<br />
For example, some claim “souls” don’t enter babies until long after fertilization, or even long after birth.15 Their claims do not “cancel” the mountain of consensus of court-recognized fact finders that souls are present from the beginning. Our Constitution and laws reject their unequal rights, and are appropriately wary of their rationales for their unequal rights. The credibility of every witness is not equal. Credibility is earned. <br />
There can be “free exercise” of religions hostile to “equal protection of the laws” only to the extent their “exercise” does not threaten the rights of others or violate the laws enacted to protect them – laws ultimately decided by voting majorities, hopefully well informed through the uncensoring of reality.16 39/520 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms: <br />
<br />
'''Cumulative''': testimony so redundant that it wastes the court’s time<br />
Dispositive: testimony so strong that it settles the issue with no more<br />
Probative: probative facts establish, or contribute to, proof. Probative value is the degree of relevance of evidence. <br />
<br />
'''Prohibition''': From 1920 to 1932, drinking (alcohol) was made illegal, banned by an actual Constitutional Amendment. Actual alcohol consumption dropped by about 50%, or at least that is how much Cirrhosis of the Liver cases dropped. During that time the drop in drinking led to an economic boom, called the “Roaring Twenties”, which unfortunately were not remembered for their prosperity but for their immorality. In 1928, the prosperity collapsed into a “Great Depression” due to cheating by stock market investors. In 1932 Americans wanted liquor so bad they ratified another Constitutional Amendment repealing the 1920 Amendment. <br />
<br />
'''Substantive Due Process''': As Justice Clarence Thomas eloquently explains – see Statement #11 footnotes, this phrase was made up by SCOTUS to justify making up what it calls “fundamental rights” as its tool of repealing laws it doesn’t like. It gets its name from the SCOTUS claim that the “Due Process” clause of the 14th Amendment gives SCOTUS its authority to make up rights and call them “fundamental”. But “Due Process” only meant the legal procedures which everyone must be given equally, to defend their rights in court when necessary. The phrase has nothing to do with identifying what rights are protectable. But “Substantive” means those rights we care about, that the Constitution protects. Like freedom of speech or religion. Because “substantive” means substantial, serious rights, and “due process” has nothing to do with identifying any rights, the LONANG Institute observes in Statement #11 notes that “substantive due process” is an oxymoron. <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: Foundation for Moral Law and Lutherans for Life <> Jewish Prolife Foundation <> LONANG Institute <> U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and Other Religious Organizations <> Claremont Institute’s Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #11 of 12: The 14th Amendment gives federal courts no “due process” authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the “right” to murder, and gives Congress no authority to legalize violations of Constitutional Rights, like taking a baby’s right to Life====<br />
<br />
The sole federal authority over state laws regarding the rights of their own citizens is through the 14th Amendment, Sections One and Five.1 Contrary to SCOTUS rulings, the 14th Amendment explicitly provides:<br />
<br />
* '''Congress authorized, not courts.''' Congress, not courts, determines the manner and scope of federal intervention in states whose laws don’t protect their citizens’ rights.2 Congress is not limited to enforcing only those rights of which SCOTUS approves, nor only to the extent that SCOTUS approves,3 nor only when state governments, not individuals, directly violate rights.4 <br />
<br />
* Federal courts aren’t permitted to stop either states or Congress from protecting enumerated rights (like Life), or to repeal their laws for conflicting with unenumerated [not listed in the Constitution] “rights” (like the “right” to murder babies), or to intervene in states’ protection of rights beyond prosecuting violations of federal laws.5 <br />
<br />
* Nor can Congress stop states from protecting enumerated rights. Neither Congress nor federal courts may overturn a state law protecting the lives of unborn babies from surgical abortion, chemical abortion, or contraceptives.6<br />
<br />
* The rights subject to federal enforcement are not those made up by SCOTUS allegedly based on the “Due Process” clause,7 but those listed in the Constitution, referred to as “privileges and immunities”8 (including, for unborn babies, the “privilege” of life and “immunity” from “cruel and unusual punishment” and execution “without due process of law”).9 <br />
* Enumerated Rights recognized before the Constitution existed are not excluded from Congressional intervention.10<br />
<br />
* '''“Substantive Due Process”''' is the sophistry by which SCOTUS turned the Constitution’s Authority to Define Rights, and Congress’ 14th Amendment Section 5 Authority to Enforce Rights, into its own authority to reclassify abominations as “rights”.11 It is an illegal, unconstitutional, Freedom-crushing fraud from Hell fomenting a long line of Landmark Abomination Cases.12 <br />
<br />
<small>Mini-lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Due Process:''' The duty of courts to give all parties to cases the fair and equal procedures and opportunities for defending themselves.<br />
<br />
(This argument for ending SCOTUS’ long line of Landmark Abomination Cases continues in Part Two of this book where its focus on SCOTUS-mandated murder of babies created in the Image of God is extended to SCOTUS’ censorship of God Himself.) <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amici who filed briefs in Dobbs v. Jackson: Lonang Institute <> Christian Legal Society <> AfricanAmerican, Hispanic, Roman Catholic and Protestant Religious and Civil Rights Organizations <> Senators Josh Hawley, Mike Lee, and Ted Cruz. And from Judge Robert Bork <> Nathan Schlueter, Professor of Philosophy and Religion, Hillsdale College, (when he debated Judge Bork in 2003 he was assistant professor of pre-law and political science at St. Ambrose University. Author, “Unborn Persons and the Fourteenth Amendment.” 2002.) <> Erwin Chemerinsky, Dean of Berkeley Law School <> Legal Information Institute, Cornell University <> Justice Clarence Thomas, dissents and concurrences <> justia.com <> James Gray Pope, Professor of Law and Sidney Reitman Scholar, Rutgers University School of Law <> Libby Adler professor of law and women’s, gender, and sexuality studies, Northeastern University Christmas, 2023''</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #12 of 12:Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable. The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives.====<br />
<br />
Any judge interfering with this state’s compliance with the 14th Amendment and its ancient authority to protect its people1 – the central reason governments exist, is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders,2 and is guilty of exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide through an unconstitutional ruling,3 which exceeds the judicial powers given by any Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment.4The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives, including (1) giving the state Supreme Court original jurisdiction over any challenge to a law, (2) requiring that review be expedited, (3) requiring a supermajority of the Court to suspend a law, (4) questioning justices in a public hearing about the constitutionality of their ruling, and (5) overturning the ruling with a supermajority of the legislature.5 <br />
<br />
Should any federal judge so interfere with this state’s constitutional duty, this state appeals to its congressional delegation to examine similar grounds for disciplinary action,6 along with exercising its Article III, Section 2, paragraph 2 authority to make “exceptions” and “regulations” designed to end SCOTUS’ long line of landmark abomination cases. This state also appeals to its congressional delegation to exercise its life-saving and rights-protecting authority under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment whose plain words give Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of Rights,7 which subsumes the authority to define their scope and to balance competing interests, while the “privileges and immunities” clause identifies as protectable rights those listed in the Constitution.8 <br />
<br />
Official world-wide definitions of “crimes against humanity” apply “to representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission”, whether elected representatives or unelected judges.”9<br />
<br />
Any court review of this law must be expedited, because lives are lost with each day that courts delay.10 7/230 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of Legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Malfeasance in office:''' official misconduct; violation of a public trust or obligation; specifically, the doing of an act which is positively unlawful or wrongful.<br />
<br />
'''Subsumes:''' Includes. To include or place within something larger or more comprehensive: encompass as a subordinate or component element red, green, and yellow are subsumed under the term "color" <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: 396 State Legislators from 41 States <> Melinda Thybault/Moral Outcry <> and by Matthew J. Franck, Director of the William E. and Carol G. Simon Center on Religion and the Constitution at the Witherspoon Institute and visiting lecturer in politics at Princeton University</small></div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Reversing_Landmark_Abomination_Cases&diff=50370Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases2024-01-02T05:11:00Z<p>DaveLeach: /* Statement of Facts #2 of 12: Courts Accept the Fact-Finding Authority of Legislatures, Juries, Experts for the same good reasons their findings persuade the public. */</p>
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<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters<br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion</span><br />
<br />
by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal<br />
''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal<br />
<span style="color:brown"><br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen <br />
<br />
by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 18:06, 15 October 2023 (UTC)<br />
<br />
=Introduction=<br />
<br />
This book offers twelve statements of fact about babies and abortion which I challenge any voter, lawyer, lawmaker, or judge to refute. Their footnotes contain nuggets from the 140 "Amicus" briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' (2022), the ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade. These statements are designed to soften the resistance of voters to outlawing baby murder, when presented in public, and to force judges to outlaw abortion in every state, when presented in court. <br />
<br />
They are truths designed to be so unignorable, that when any lawmaker includes them in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, in any state, prodeath fury will help publicize them with each advance through legislative deadlines. When friends of babies see them survive scrutiny, the force of these truths will grow like a snowball rolling down a hill. <br />
<br />
But murdering babies is only the most egregious of many Landmark Abomination Cases. Their common thread is usurping authority which the Constitution assigns to others, and equating the Bible with spurious religions. “Never let a crisis go to waste”, say the enemies of God, but God is the true master of turning evil into an opportunity for good. It’s time. Let’s end the Supreme Court’s war against God.<br />
<br />
The very fact that abortion is the worst of the ways the United States Supreme Court has turned American law upside down creates an opportunity to heal that branch of our government, and heal all the harm to our nation and its culture and morals that it has caused. As Professor Nathan Schluetter at Hillsdale College observes, “We must not let this opportunity pass to boldly challenge the prevailing jurisprudence and its attendant epistemological and moral skepticism with respect to abortion.”<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
It is the '''fact''' that unborn babies are living human children that makes killing them murder. It’s not what any ''law'' says about it, or even what the Constitution says about it. That’s what leaves ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' on the edge of reality, by treating this fact as something for voters to figure out, not on the basis of whether babies are ''in fact'' people but on the basis of some “value” they place on ''little'' people. <br />
<br />
That '''fact''' is what makes <u>the consensus of court-recognized fact finders</u> a stronger legal reason to end legal abortion than a Life Amendment, and a powerful social reason in the Court of Public Opinion able to soften hearts to the silent screams of Jesus' little brothers and His quiet knocking on hearts' doors. Which makes it insane for prolifers to not even mention this legally dispositive consensus in each and every prolife court case, and every “finding of fact” in prolife legislation, along with leveling with the public about the Scriptures which are the real reason we even care.<br />
<br />
[[File:Cover_Cartoon.jpg]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
Why these solutions may help even where abortion is already outlawed<br />
<br />
(1) They could defeat a national abortion legalization.<br />
<br />
(2) They could help you sue a nearby “blue state” for helping its baby killers murder your children. <br />
<br />
(3) They could help if your district judges join the courtroom rebellion against Dobbs in other states.<br />
<br />
(4) They could help meet challenges in the Court of Public Opinion, for example through a Resolution that irrefutably addresses every objection you have ever heard, as understandable to voters as it is irrefutable to judges. That would help the public see through future judicial gaslighting, and support judicial reform: ie. www.savetheworld .saltshaker.us/wiki/Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_ stop_judges_from_legislating<br />
<br />
(5) I could sure use your feedback. Proverbs 15:22. <br />
<br />
----<br />
<center>'''Ending legal abortion everywhere in close to a year<br />
(the goal of the following bill language)<br />
<br>'''requires a law whose Findings of Facts: '''<br />
</center><br />
<br />
<br />
* '''contain evidence which no judge can squarely address and keep abortion legal anywhere:''' that unborn babies are real people – established by the (unanimous) consensus of court-recognized factfinders: juries, expert witnesses, 38 states, judges, and Congress;<br />
<br />
* '''present its evidence in a way that is clear and persuasive to voters,''' to help them resist judicial and media gaslighting; (See below for “Why court-recognized fact finders persuade Voters”)<br />
<br />
* '''address misunderstandings about abortion jurisprudence''' that divide prolifers, intimidate lawyers, and blind judges;<br />
<br />
'''AND WHOSE PENALTIES'''<br />
<br />
* '''restrict some aspect of abortion substantially enough''' that THEY can't be defended as a mere regulation with some other legitimate government purpose than saving lives. The restriction must be profound enough that its only possible defense is that it saves human lives. That will force courts to address the evidence that babies are fully human;<br />
<br />
* '''provide no distractions that let judges rule on some technicality and ignore the evidence that the law would save lives.''' A perfect law that addresses everything from exceptions to contraception multiplies a judge’s opportunity to say “we don’t need to reach the issue of when life begins because the law fails on a lesser issue.” A simple yet substantial restriction, with “findings” that address the legal obstacles, will survive courts, which will get courts out of the way of saving life, which will free lawmakers to work out the challenging details with time to get a comprehensive solution right and with hope that they won’t waste their time; <br />
<br />
* '''list specific penalties for specific situations,''' rather than broadly stated goals such as “babies are to be protected as much as adults”, leaving prosecutors and judges to guess what to punish, or how, in situations where evidence and culpability are different; <br />
<br />
* '''contain a “life of the mother” exception''' whose applicability is clear enough that mothers are not denied life-saving care until doctors are assured by lawyers that said care will not put the doctors in jail; and<br />
<br />
'''THE LAW SHOULD ALSO order courts to “expedite” any review,''' “because lives are lost with each day that courts delay”. <br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate!)<br />
<br />
More ideas: [[Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_stop_judges_from_legislating]]<br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate! See below for Expedited Review federal rules.) <br />
<br />
WORD COUNTS: Using only the first boldfaced paragraph of each of these 12 Findings, in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, will total about 200 words. The complete Findings, without footnotes, total nearly 3000 words. For the advantages of including enough information in a prolife law for the Findings to defend themselves, see “Too Lengthy?” below. <br />
<br />
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: I am not a lawyer. But writing about prolife legal defenses designed to bring legal abortion to an end, and Scriptures calling for that goal, for 25 years in my Prayer * Action News, being uncertified as a lawyer, has created the opportunity for a remarkable interaction with Planned Barrenhoods priciest lawyers. Because news reporters wouldn’t report that my reasoning was designed as legal defenses in court, or that they were grounded in the Bible, what that left was their accusation that I advocated crime; whereas had my defenses been successful they would have allowed citizens to stop murderers legally, putting an end to the reason citizens took action. <br />
<br />
__TOC__<br />
<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and family, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge inaction deny themselves Life More Abundantly. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget: free wisdom, guaranteed success===<br />
<br />
'''John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
James 1:5 If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, [without finding fault]; and it shall be given him. 6 But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering.''' (Gr. διακρινω not withdrawn from, ie. by lack of support from actions, or opposed, ie. by indecision) <br />
<br />
'''Matthew 21:21 ...If ye have faith, and doubt not''' (Gr. διακρινω) ...'''ye shall say unto this mountain, Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea; it shall be done. 22 And all things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive.'''<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and families, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge their own inaction deny themselves, not just their neighbors, Life More Abundantly.<br />
<br />
If you are not satisfied with life less abundantly – ongoing slaughter of innocents – you won’t be satisfied now that the fate of babies is decided by the “value” that voters place on little people. You will keep searching for a strategy to end all the slaughter: to both outlaw it, and make it unthinkable to all but the worst of murderers. <br />
<br />
If you believe you ''will'' reach every good goal you pursue with all your being, Matthew 21:21-22, you won’t be turned from ending the slaughter in every state by experts who tell you that is impossible which rules out a strategy for achieving it. You will search until you find God’s way to do God’s will. <br />
<br />
You won’t say “I'm not smart enough to question prolife legal authorities who advise giving up”, if you believe James 1:5 which promises you all the wisdom you need to do good. Nor will you ever say you are not smart enough to read and understand legal briefs, court rulings, or to reason with lawmakers, lawyers, and prolife leaders, as necessary.<br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will not excuse yourself from God’s call because you can’t talk well, like Moses, whom God answered “Who made mouths?” Exodus 4:11. Nor will you excuse yourself to God, saying you are but a child against the world’s superbrains, like Jeremiah, whom God answered, “Stop saying that! It is MY words you will speak, and I am no child!” Jeremiah 1:6-8. <br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will shine God’s light wherever you find Darkness, Matthew 5:13-16. Since nothing is darker than murdering your own baby, you will seek God’s help as you oppose this evil, and none of these excuses will withdraw you from action.<br />
<br />
===Final Warning: read this at your own risk===<br />
<br />
Warning: read at your own risk. Rough reading Ahead, that may knock you from your TV chair.<br />
<br />
'''Findings of Facts which No Judge can Squarely Address and Keep Abortion Legal'''<br />
<br />
=Part 1: Authority of Court-Recognized Fact Finders=<br />
<br />
<span style="color:grey"><small>''Try to imagine how a judge, reviewing a prolife law with these Findings of Facts, would be able to dodge this evidence - in fact, see if you can find ANYONE who can ''refute'' these facts - as opposed to not ''caring'' about facts - that is, not caring about reality:''</small></span><br />
<br />
====Statement of Fact #1 of 12: Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let any state legalize====<br />
<br />
'''Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let ''any'' state legalize.'''<br />
<br />
No fact can be more legally established than the fact that “life begins” at fertilization, being the consensus of every American legal authority who has taken a position, in every category of court-recognized finders of facts: juries,2 thousands of expert witnesses who were not contested,3 38 state legislatures,4 individual judges,5 and Congress.6 <br />
<br />
No legal authority has ruled that any unborn baby of a human is not in fact a human person, or that “life begins” any later than fertilization.7 <br />
<br />
No state can keep abortion legal now that this fact is established. This is so obvious that even Roe v. Wade said “of course”, and the lawyer for the abortionists agreed.8 <br />
For most public issues, disagreement is over facts.9 The only disagreement about abortion is between unanimous fact finders and those who don't care about facts.10 A court that won’t address the facts that justify and necessitate a law, or hear evidence of those facts, violates Due Process and has no legitimate jurisdiction to review that law.11 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 1 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? <br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
<br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
<br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True. <br />
<br />
<br />
</span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget #2: The Cost of Success===<br />
<br />
'''Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? '''<br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True.<br />
<br />
=====Statement of Facts #2 of 12: Courts Accept the Fact-Finding Authority of Legislatures, Juries, Experts for the same good reasons their findings persuade the public.=====<br />
<br />
SCOTUS must accept legislative findings of facts that are not obviously irrational. “..the existence of facts supporting the legislative judgment is to be presumed...not to be pronounced unconstitutional unless in the light of the facts made known or generally assumed it is of such a character as to preclude the assumption that it rests upon some rational basis within the knowledge and experience of the legislators....” U.S. v. Carolene Products, 304 U.S. 144, 152 (1938).1<br />
<br />
Besides the court-recognized fact finding authority of legislatures, courts must conform their rulings to laws until such time as courts declare laws unconstitutional. No court has overturned the “unborn victims of violence” laws (based on “human babies are people”) of 39 states and Congress, despite many challenges.2<br />
<br />
To do so would require a court to positively affirm that human life does not begin until much later, which no legal authority has done, and for which no evidence exists.<br />
<br />
'''Legislatures'''. Lawmakers are there by the choice of a majority of voters. They are bombarded by information from experts. They are scrutinized by other lawmakers. Many are lawyers, some of whom are constitutional scholars and past or future judges. They set the salaries of judges, and have the power to hold impeachment trials of judges. Congress, the national legislature, scrutinizes Supreme Court justices. <br />
<br />
Many Congressmen are equally qualified: 15 U.S. Senators have served on the Supreme Court, and more were nominated.3 <br />
<br />
'''Juries''' are tested for impartiality. They are educated by the most qualified expert witnesses available. They study as long as necessary to establish truth – sometimes for months.4<br />
<br />
'''Expert Witnesses''' are the best experts money can buy, and they are scrutinized by the other side’s experts.5 <br />
<br />
It is for strong reasons that the findings of court-recognized fact finders are as respected in court as in the Court of Public Opinion.6<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 2 + Footnotes]]<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Mark 8:38 '''Whosoever therefore shall be ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful generation; of him also shall the Son of man be ashamed''', when he cometh in the glory of his Father with the holy angels.<br />
<br />
We Bible believing conservatives need to quit blaming social media and CIA censorship for our failures and stop censoring ourselves. <br />
<br />
I offer a way of stating evidence which no judge, news reporter, Democrat, or unbeliever can refute, along with answering objections that have crippled prolife messaging and legal strategy. But we despair of reaching those who stop their ears to evidence. “What’s the use of tightening our message? You’re preaching to the choir. We know babies are people but those other people have their opinion too.”<br />
<br />
I’m not "preaching to the choir". I’m passing out a new composition to the choir for a coming TV special.<br />
<br />
Most of those who won’t listen, won’t vote either, rendering their willful ignorance relatively benign. Stop worrying about them. All they will do is hate you, lie about you, wreck your business – childish stuff. We progress by clearly articulating to the extent possible. The same Bible which is the main reason we care about babies promises all the protection we need to finish what we are here to do.<br />
<br />
It isn’t just saving baby bodies where we self censor. Adult souls are lost. We hold back sharing what we know about God. Snap out of it. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
----<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #3 of 12: The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS====<br />
<br />
From Roe (1973) through Dobbs (2022), SCOTUS evaded that core issue.1 <br />
<br />
SCOTUS never ruled babies Non-Persons “as a Matter of Law”, as lower courts allege.2 Roe made that fact not only relevant, but dispositive with a holding which no court has disputed even though Roe’s main holding was overturned:3 <br />
<br />
“[Prolifers] argue that the fetus is a ‘person’ within the language and meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment....If this suggestion of personhood is established, the [abortionist’s] case, of course, collapses, for the fetus’ right to life would then be guaranteed specifically by the [14th] Amendment [thus outlawing abortion in EVERY state]. The [abortionist’s lawyer] conceded as much....”4<br />
<br />
Dobbs explicitly left this statement of the obvious untouched, saying “our decision is not based on any view about when a State should regard pre-natal life as having rights or legally cognizable interests....”5 Dobbs did not say babies aren’t people. Dobbs did not say voters should still decide whether babies can be murdered in the face of proof that babies are in fact people.6 Dobbs left in place Roe’s observation that “establishment” of this fact, independently of any law, ruling, or future constitutional amendment,7 dictates whether abortion is legally recognizable as a right or as a crime.8<br />
<br />
This established fact is as relevant today as when Roe said “of course” it is.<br />
<br />
This established fact is not disestablished by any judge’s alleged inability to understand it.9<br />
<br />
This established FACT is not made irrelevant by any judge’s theory that the legal right of little humans to live is “impossible” to determine so it should be decided by their value to big humans.10<br />
<br />
If only those legally recognized as “persons” were people, slavery could still be legal and the 14th Amendment would mean nothing. Slavery states would merely need to classify their victims as only 3/5 human.11 The Amendment protects those who are IN FACT people – what is irrelevant is whether babies are people “as a matter of law”.12 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 3 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #4 of 12: Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life====<br />
<br />
Detectable heartbeats and brain waves are evidence that a person has not yet died, throughout state and federal law.1 Reason demands they be accepted as evidence that a person has begun to live.2<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 4 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #5 of 12: Legislatures should regulate abortion, as Dobbs held, just as legislatures regulate the prosecution of all other murders====<br />
<br />
But not in the sense of absolute discretion to leave wholesale murders of a supposedly unwanted group of humans completely unregulated. That interpretation of Dobbs’ holding is premised on a “mistake of fact”, which is an official exception to Stare Decisis. 1<br />
<br />
The “Mistake of Fact” that is the premise of letting voters decide whether to continue judge-approved genocide according to the “value” they place on little people is that the humanity of babies of humans is either unknowable or irrelevant. That premise was explicit in Roe and Casey, and implicit in Dobbs.2 <br />
<br />
That is an “erroneous factual premise”. The fact that little unborn humans are humans is neither unknowable3 nor irrelevant. It is verifiable and dispositive.4 The consensus of court-recognized fact finders cures that knowledge deficit, canceling that interpretation of Dobbs’ holding, while reinforcing Dobbs’ other two holdings that “The Constitution does not confer a right to abortion” and “Roe and Casey are overruled”, and requiring the outlawing of baby killing in every state.5 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 5 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #6 of 12: The full humanity of a tiny physical body is hard for many to grasp. But what distinguishes us from animals isn’t physical, and has no known pre-conscious stage====<br />
<br />
DON’T READ past this 28 word paragraph unless you want <br />
an edge-of-your-seat adventure – legal ammunition <br />
against not only baby killing but also against the myth <br />
of the irrelevance of God in the reasoning of judges, <br />
lawmakers, and voters! Yet Roe v Wade, of all cases, <br />
"opened the door" with its sophomoric review of "theologians", <br />
and #6 comes charging through! <> The rest of this Statement <br />
is for lawmakers who want a stronger, clearer statement, <br />
and who have the stomach for the larger battle.<br />
<br />
Part of Roe’s definition of “person” was “infused with a soul”.1 Roe thus affirmed the belief of most of society, a belief logically demanded by the common knowledge that humans are distinguished from animals by consciousness which features a capacity for choices at variance with physical needs: to sacrifice one's interests for another,2 which is how John 15:13 defines “love”. And conversely, to destroy one’s own body.3<br />
<br />
These differences, along with self awareness and the capacity to choose between good and evil4 – to behave either as an angel or as a demon, can’t be explained by any known physical process. These differences justify greater legal protection of humans than of animals. <br />
<br />
Since a “soul” without consciousness has never been theorized and can’t be imagined, the consensus of fact finders is, in effect, that abortion kills babies with conscious souls. The lack of any physical explanation for a conscious soul rules out any reason to infer immaturity of consciousness from physical immaturity, and is consistent with the report in Luke 1:44 that a baby at 6 months heard a righteous voice [and/or felt the righteous Presence of God] and responded with joy,5 a response not everybody chooses, indicating that even the capacity for choosing between good and evil precedes birth. And also indicating that when a baby is killed by dismemberment, acid, or sucking out the brain, a self-aware conscious soul feels the pain, understands the cruelty, and if out-of-body near-death experiences are real, sees who is doing it.<br />
<br />
Even considering the body only, there is no objective line between birth and conception distinguishing “humans” from “nonpersons”, or between “meaningful life” and life which courts are free to terminate.6 Without such a line, there can be no stage of gestation at which killing a baby can be objectively distinguished from murder. No baby is safe while that line remains arbitrary. <br />
<br />
The failure of some to grasp the humanity of babies at any given stage is a dangerous basis for permitting killing, since as many fail to grasp the full humanity of quite a number of distinct groups of born persons.<br />
<br />
As Roe correctly established, it can be useful in clarifying who to count as a human with an unalienable right to life, to consult the religion from which that right was copied into America’s founding documents. But religions which oppose the foundation of American law – equal rights for all humans, merit little credibility in American courts when their claims justify destruction of an entire people group – such as the claim that souls do not enter bodies until around birth. There can be “free exercise” of religions which do not equally reverence all human life only to the extent their “exercise” does not violate the rights of others or the laws enacted to protect them.7<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] <br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #7 of 12: Congress has ''Already'' Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment already authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion, without allowing Congress to legalize it====<br />
<br />
<small>FORGET YOU READ this 32 word Statement and DON’T read farther – <br />
certainly not the footnotes – if you don’t want to question <br />
the near consensus of prolife leaders who say “we are helpless <br />
to outlaw abortion in every state before we get ANOTHER <br />
personhood law through Congress, if not a Life Amendment <br />
to the Constitution.” <> This is the 7th of 12 Statements <br />
designed to push courts out of the way of defending Life <br />
in every state when included in the Findings of Facts of <br />
prolife laws. The material below can make it clearer and stronger.</small><br />
<br />
Congress established in 2004 that: “‘unborn child’ means a child in utero, and the term ‘child in utero’...means a member of the species Homo Sapiens, at any stage of development, who is carried in the womb”, 18 U.S.C. 1841(d).1 <br />
<br />
This fact is not diminished by clause (c) which does not “permit [authorize] the prosecution of any person for...an abortion for which the consent of the pregnant woman...has been obtained.…”2 A law misaligned with facts does not block future lawmakers from making corrections, and states don’t need Congress’ “permission” to obey the 14th Amendment. <br />
<br />
The reason 18 U.S.C. 1841(d) has had no effect on the practice of legal abortion is not because of any deficiency in its authority to establish dispositive facts, but because no state law reviewed by SCOTUS has cited it to establish what Roe correctly said once “established” would “of course” require the end of legal abortion. <br />
<br />
Not only is the 2004 law unmitigated evidence of life strong enough to “collapse” legal abortion by itself, but it would not be stronger if it were an Amendment to the Constitution.3 No other Constitutional Amendment is relied on for evidence of a fact. An Amendment can bind courts. But establishment of the Facts Of Life by evidence presented, cited, and tested in court draws not only courts, but society, closer to reality.4<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #8 of 12: Roe, Dobbs, and the 14th Amendment agree: All Humans are “Persons”====<br />
<br />
<small>DON’T READ past this 11 word Statement <br />
unless you like to stare at where crazy lawyers <br />
ever got the idea that human babies aren’t people!</small><br />
<br />
Neither Roe nor Dobbs distinguished between “humans” and “persons” as if a “human” baby isn’t necessarily a “person”. [2] Nor does the 14th Amendment leave any human unprotected.<br />
<br />
Roe v. Wade equated the time an unborn child becomes “recognizably human” with the time the child becomes a “person”: “These disciplines variously approached the question [“of when life begins”] in terms of the point at which the embryo or fetus became ‘formed’ or recognizably human, or in terms of when a ‘person’ came into being, that is, infused with a ‘soul’ or ‘animated.’” 410 U.S. 113, 133(1973)<br />
<br />
Dobbs cites the belief that “a human person comes into being at conception” without distinguishing between the two words. [3] The word “person” in the 14th Amendment meant “An individual human being...man, woman, or child...consisting of body and soul.” The word “child” in that 1828 definition included unborn children, since to be “with child” meant to be pregnant. [4]<br />
<br />
Therefore the Amendment’s “nor shall any state deprive any person of life” and “equal protection” of every “person” means every human, including those unborn. Nothing about the first clause keeps later clauses from protecting unborn humans. [5]<br />
<br />
See also Wong Wing v. United States, 163 U.S.228, 242 (1896), “The term ‘person’ is broad enough to include any and every human being within the jurisdiction of the republic...This has been decided so often that the point does not require argument.” Steinberg v. Brown 321 F. Supp. 741 (N.D. Ohio, 1970) “[o]nce human life has commenced, the constitutional protections found in the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments impose upon the state a duty of safeguarding it”. [6]<br />
<br />
The word “persons” in the 14th Amendment means all who are IN FACT humans. Had it been only for those who are legally recognized as human, every deprivation of fundamental rights would be “constitutional” so long as a law or ruling questions whether its victims are “persons in the whole sense”.<br />
<br />
Although Dobbs showed by disproving the opposite that reverence for all human life from fertilization was “deeply rooted in America’s law and traditions”, that is not why rights merit 14th Amendment protection. By the “deeply rooted” test, slavery would be legal today, since freedom for slaves had zero historical support.<br />
<br />
Nor does it matter if the Amendment authors even wanted to protect all humans. In fact, it doesn’t matter if there is a 14th Amendment. If law is not equal upon its operation on all humans, which is the very definition of the word “law” as developed by Samuel Rutherford’s “Lex Rex” and Blackstone and adopted by America’s founders, to that extent there is, by definition, no “rule of law”, no restraint upon the “strong” to not tyrannize the “weak”.<br />
<br />
There is a direct test of whether babies merit 14th Amendment protection that does not require a romp through history: [7] see if their parents are humans.<br />
<br />
“To say that the test of equal protection should be the ‘legal’ rather than the biological relationship is to avoid the issue. For the Equal Protection Clause necessarily limits the authority of a State [or its judges] to draw such ‘legal’ lines as it chooses.” Glona, 391 U.S. 73, 75 (1968) [8]<br />
<br />
FOOTNOTES: see [[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
<small>The footnotes are enriched by selections from the Amicus Briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson by: Lee J. Strang <> Scholars of Jurisprudence John M. Finnis and Robert P. George <> Mary Kay Bacallao Advocating for Unborn Children <> Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide <> and by selections from the 1996 debate between Judge Robert Bork and Professor Nathan Schluetter</small><br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #9 of 12: When pregnancies develop into medical emergencies requiring separation of mother and child to save the mother, the child has an equally fundamental right to life and medical care.====<br />
<br />
A legislature’s balancing of their interests cannot, therefore, be reviewed by “strict scrutiny”.2 Nor does alleged insufficiency of a “medical emergency” exception from a general abortion ban justify a court overturning the ban in the 99% of cases where no emergency is alleged.3 Legislatures are better equipped to deliberate about and secure the rights of all citizens than courts whose focus is the parties before them.4<br />
<br />
SCOTUS never denied that a legislature’s “personhood” statements in an abortion ban are strong evidence.5 That evidence is not mitigated by a ban’s exceptions.6 It is not made irrelevant because baby killers “rely” on killing babies.7 28/130 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
Fundamental Right: This is a term not found in the Constitution but made up by SCOTUS for the rights SCOTUS makes up which often displace rights actually listed in the Constitution. Justice Clarence Thomas is eloquent on this point. More about this later.<br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: A Foundation for Moral Law <> Pennsylvania Pro-Life Federation <> 396 State Legislators from 41 States</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #10 of 12: Tyranny over any class of humans by any other is prohibited by the Constitution, and by the Declaration, which gives the purpose of the Constitution and rests its own authority on the revelation of God1 in the Bible====<br />
<br />
Roe v Wade was not out of line to consult “those trained in... theology” who study souls, as well as doctors who study bodies, to clarify who to count as human with an unalienable right to life.3 <br />
<br />
America’s Freedom springs from “all men are created equal” and “equal protection of the laws” for all humans even if their looks, language, wealth, strength, ancestry, power, or faith are different.4 These rights have proven such a blessing to the world that their source, the Bible, deserves the fair hearing owed any witness whose reliability has been confirmed, when it promises still greater blessings if we will equally protect humans whose physical size is different.5 <br />
<br />
Its testimony is not “cumulative”, but “probative”.6 It is not to be feared as dispositive or compulsory: American freedom balances human understanding of how best to apply Biblical principles to government against the willingness of voting majorities to follow those principles. Even that is a Biblical principle legitimized in 1 Samuel 8.7 <br />
<br />
The history of slavery, Prohibition, and abortion illustrate the “willingness” factor. The probative value of the testimony of God is proved by the fact that without it, slavery would never have ended, and the prolife movement would never have begun. Which makes it probative to observe that not only the 14th Amendment, but also the revelation of God, requires this state, as it does every state, to outlaw all trampling of fundamental rights of any class of people, including abortion of babies.8 Where the two authorities say the same thing, the Bible, for all its alleged ambiguity, is better understood and more trusted than the Constitution which has indeed proven “a thing of wax” in the nimble fingers of even the most scrupulous judges.9 <br />
<br />
Without God – without belief in a more objective standard of right and wrong than the “value” that voters place on “different” people through “evolving community standards”, it is impossible to understand fundamental rights.10 <br />
<br />
Courts have demonstrated this impossibility by so often confusing abominations for rights, decimating those whom Jesus said “forbid them not to come unto Me”, denying that He created them, murdering 17% of them, sodomizing 20% of the survivors, and censoring 100% of His teachings in schools.11 <br />
<br />
That destruction of the 14th Amendment (1868) began when “Substantive Due Process”, pioneered in Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857), was applied in United States v. Cruikshank 92 U. S. 542 (1876) to acquit a white Democrat mililtia of murdering “as many as 165” black Republicans and burning down the courthouse they were defending.12 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring God does not “establish religion”. It does not compel belief, action or endorsement. It simply allows judges and voters to make informed decisions. It is part of fact-finding. It is part of reasoning. Part of embracing reality. Part of examining “the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth”. Judges must stop punishing people for telling the truth just because the truth favors God.13 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring the Bible does not require equal weight for claims of religions that deny equal rights for all.14 <br />
<br />
For example, some claim “souls” don’t enter babies until long after fertilization, or even long after birth.15 Their claims do not “cancel” the mountain of consensus of court-recognized fact finders that souls are present from the beginning. Our Constitution and laws reject their unequal rights, and are appropriately wary of their rationales for their unequal rights. The credibility of every witness is not equal. Credibility is earned. <br />
There can be “free exercise” of religions hostile to “equal protection of the laws” only to the extent their “exercise” does not threaten the rights of others or violate the laws enacted to protect them – laws ultimately decided by voting majorities, hopefully well informed through the uncensoring of reality.16 39/520 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms: <br />
<br />
'''Cumulative''': testimony so redundant that it wastes the court’s time<br />
Dispositive: testimony so strong that it settles the issue with no more<br />
Probative: probative facts establish, or contribute to, proof. Probative value is the degree of relevance of evidence. <br />
<br />
'''Prohibition''': From 1920 to 1932, drinking (alcohol) was made illegal, banned by an actual Constitutional Amendment. Actual alcohol consumption dropped by about 50%, or at least that is how much Cirrhosis of the Liver cases dropped. During that time the drop in drinking led to an economic boom, called the “Roaring Twenties”, which unfortunately were not remembered for their prosperity but for their immorality. In 1928, the prosperity collapsed into a “Great Depression” due to cheating by stock market investors. In 1932 Americans wanted liquor so bad they ratified another Constitutional Amendment repealing the 1920 Amendment. <br />
<br />
'''Substantive Due Process''': As Justice Clarence Thomas eloquently explains – see Statement #11 footnotes, this phrase was made up by SCOTUS to justify making up what it calls “fundamental rights” as its tool of repealing laws it doesn’t like. It gets its name from the SCOTUS claim that the “Due Process” clause of the 14th Amendment gives SCOTUS its authority to make up rights and call them “fundamental”. But “Due Process” only meant the legal procedures which everyone must be given equally, to defend their rights in court when necessary. The phrase has nothing to do with identifying what rights are protectable. But “Substantive” means those rights we care about, that the Constitution protects. Like freedom of speech or religion. Because “substantive” means substantial, serious rights, and “due process” has nothing to do with identifying any rights, the LONANG Institute observes in Statement #11 notes that “substantive due process” is an oxymoron. <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: Foundation for Moral Law and Lutherans for Life <> Jewish Prolife Foundation <> LONANG Institute <> U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and Other Religious Organizations <> Claremont Institute’s Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #11 of 12: The 14th Amendment gives federal courts no “due process” authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the “right” to murder, and gives Congress no authority to legalize violations of Constitutional Rights, like taking a baby’s right to Life====<br />
<br />
The sole federal authority over state laws regarding the rights of their own citizens is through the 14th Amendment, Sections One and Five.1 Contrary to SCOTUS rulings, the 14th Amendment explicitly provides:<br />
<br />
* '''Congress authorized, not courts.''' Congress, not courts, determines the manner and scope of federal intervention in states whose laws don’t protect their citizens’ rights.2 Congress is not limited to enforcing only those rights of which SCOTUS approves, nor only to the extent that SCOTUS approves,3 nor only when state governments, not individuals, directly violate rights.4 <br />
<br />
* Federal courts aren’t permitted to stop either states or Congress from protecting enumerated rights (like Life), or to repeal their laws for conflicting with unenumerated [not listed in the Constitution] “rights” (like the “right” to murder babies), or to intervene in states’ protection of rights beyond prosecuting violations of federal laws.5 <br />
<br />
* Nor can Congress stop states from protecting enumerated rights. Neither Congress nor federal courts may overturn a state law protecting the lives of unborn babies from surgical abortion, chemical abortion, or contraceptives.6<br />
<br />
* The rights subject to federal enforcement are not those made up by SCOTUS allegedly based on the “Due Process” clause,7 but those listed in the Constitution, referred to as “privileges and immunities”8 (including, for unborn babies, the “privilege” of life and “immunity” from “cruel and unusual punishment” and execution “without due process of law”).9 <br />
* Enumerated Rights recognized before the Constitution existed are not excluded from Congressional intervention.10<br />
<br />
* '''“Substantive Due Process”''' is the sophistry by which SCOTUS turned the Constitution’s Authority to Define Rights, and Congress’ 14th Amendment Section 5 Authority to Enforce Rights, into its own authority to reclassify abominations as “rights”.11 It is an illegal, unconstitutional, Freedom-crushing fraud from Hell fomenting a long line of Landmark Abomination Cases.12 <br />
<br />
<small>Mini-lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Due Process:''' The duty of courts to give all parties to cases the fair and equal procedures and opportunities for defending themselves.<br />
<br />
(This argument for ending SCOTUS’ long line of Landmark Abomination Cases continues in Part Two of this book where its focus on SCOTUS-mandated murder of babies created in the Image of God is extended to SCOTUS’ censorship of God Himself.) <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amici who filed briefs in Dobbs v. Jackson: Lonang Institute <> Christian Legal Society <> AfricanAmerican, Hispanic, Roman Catholic and Protestant Religious and Civil Rights Organizations <> Senators Josh Hawley, Mike Lee, and Ted Cruz. And from Judge Robert Bork <> Nathan Schlueter, Professor of Philosophy and Religion, Hillsdale College, (when he debated Judge Bork in 2003 he was assistant professor of pre-law and political science at St. Ambrose University. Author, “Unborn Persons and the Fourteenth Amendment.” 2002.) <> Erwin Chemerinsky, Dean of Berkeley Law School <> Legal Information Institute, Cornell University <> Justice Clarence Thomas, dissents and concurrences <> justia.com <> James Gray Pope, Professor of Law and Sidney Reitman Scholar, Rutgers University School of Law <> Libby Adler professor of law and women’s, gender, and sexuality studies, Northeastern University Christmas, 2023''</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #12 of 12:Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable. The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives.====<br />
<br />
Any judge interfering with this state’s compliance with the 14th Amendment and its ancient authority to protect its people1 – the central reason governments exist, is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders,2 and is guilty of exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide through an unconstitutional ruling,3 which exceeds the judicial powers given by any Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment.4The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives, including (1) giving the state Supreme Court original jurisdiction over any challenge to a law, (2) requiring that review be expedited, (3) requiring a supermajority of the Court to suspend a law, (4) questioning justices in a public hearing about the constitutionality of their ruling, and (5) overturning the ruling with a supermajority of the legislature.5 <br />
<br />
Should any federal judge so interfere with this state’s constitutional duty, this state appeals to its congressional delegation to examine similar grounds for disciplinary action,6 along with exercising its Article III, Section 2, paragraph 2 authority to make “exceptions” and “regulations” designed to end SCOTUS’ long line of landmark abomination cases. This state also appeals to its congressional delegation to exercise its life-saving and rights-protecting authority under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment whose plain words give Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of Rights,7 which subsumes the authority to define their scope and to balance competing interests, while the “privileges and immunities” clause identifies as protectable rights those listed in the Constitution.8 <br />
<br />
Official world-wide definitions of “crimes against humanity” apply “to representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission”, whether elected representatives or unelected judges.”9<br />
<br />
Any court review of this law must be expedited, because lives are lost with each day that courts delay.10 7/230 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of Legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Malfeasance in office:''' official misconduct; violation of a public trust or obligation; specifically, the doing of an act which is positively unlawful or wrongful.<br />
<br />
'''Subsumes:''' Includes. To include or place within something larger or more comprehensive: encompass as a subordinate or component element red, green, and yellow are subsumed under the term "color" <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: 396 State Legislators from 41 States <> Melinda Thybault/Moral Outcry <> and by Matthew J. Franck, Director of the William E. and Carol G. Simon Center on Religion and the Constitution at the Witherspoon Institute and visiting lecturer in politics at Princeton University</small></div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Reversing_Landmark_Abomination_Cases&diff=50369Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases2024-01-02T05:10:02Z<p>DaveLeach: /* Statement of Fact #1 of 12: Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let any state legali...</p>
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<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters<br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion</span><br />
<br />
by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal<br />
''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal<br />
<span style="color:brown"><br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen <br />
<br />
by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 18:06, 15 October 2023 (UTC)<br />
<br />
=Introduction=<br />
<br />
This book offers twelve statements of fact about babies and abortion which I challenge any voter, lawyer, lawmaker, or judge to refute. Their footnotes contain nuggets from the 140 "Amicus" briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' (2022), the ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade. These statements are designed to soften the resistance of voters to outlawing baby murder, when presented in public, and to force judges to outlaw abortion in every state, when presented in court. <br />
<br />
They are truths designed to be so unignorable, that when any lawmaker includes them in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, in any state, prodeath fury will help publicize them with each advance through legislative deadlines. When friends of babies see them survive scrutiny, the force of these truths will grow like a snowball rolling down a hill. <br />
<br />
But murdering babies is only the most egregious of many Landmark Abomination Cases. Their common thread is usurping authority which the Constitution assigns to others, and equating the Bible with spurious religions. “Never let a crisis go to waste”, say the enemies of God, but God is the true master of turning evil into an opportunity for good. It’s time. Let’s end the Supreme Court’s war against God.<br />
<br />
The very fact that abortion is the worst of the ways the United States Supreme Court has turned American law upside down creates an opportunity to heal that branch of our government, and heal all the harm to our nation and its culture and morals that it has caused. As Professor Nathan Schluetter at Hillsdale College observes, “We must not let this opportunity pass to boldly challenge the prevailing jurisprudence and its attendant epistemological and moral skepticism with respect to abortion.”<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
It is the '''fact''' that unborn babies are living human children that makes killing them murder. It’s not what any ''law'' says about it, or even what the Constitution says about it. That’s what leaves ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' on the edge of reality, by treating this fact as something for voters to figure out, not on the basis of whether babies are ''in fact'' people but on the basis of some “value” they place on ''little'' people. <br />
<br />
That '''fact''' is what makes <u>the consensus of court-recognized fact finders</u> a stronger legal reason to end legal abortion than a Life Amendment, and a powerful social reason in the Court of Public Opinion able to soften hearts to the silent screams of Jesus' little brothers and His quiet knocking on hearts' doors. Which makes it insane for prolifers to not even mention this legally dispositive consensus in each and every prolife court case, and every “finding of fact” in prolife legislation, along with leveling with the public about the Scriptures which are the real reason we even care.<br />
<br />
[[File:Cover_Cartoon.jpg]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
Why these solutions may help even where abortion is already outlawed<br />
<br />
(1) They could defeat a national abortion legalization.<br />
<br />
(2) They could help you sue a nearby “blue state” for helping its baby killers murder your children. <br />
<br />
(3) They could help if your district judges join the courtroom rebellion against Dobbs in other states.<br />
<br />
(4) They could help meet challenges in the Court of Public Opinion, for example through a Resolution that irrefutably addresses every objection you have ever heard, as understandable to voters as it is irrefutable to judges. That would help the public see through future judicial gaslighting, and support judicial reform: ie. www.savetheworld .saltshaker.us/wiki/Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_ stop_judges_from_legislating<br />
<br />
(5) I could sure use your feedback. Proverbs 15:22. <br />
<br />
----<br />
<center>'''Ending legal abortion everywhere in close to a year<br />
(the goal of the following bill language)<br />
<br>'''requires a law whose Findings of Facts: '''<br />
</center><br />
<br />
<br />
* '''contain evidence which no judge can squarely address and keep abortion legal anywhere:''' that unborn babies are real people – established by the (unanimous) consensus of court-recognized factfinders: juries, expert witnesses, 38 states, judges, and Congress;<br />
<br />
* '''present its evidence in a way that is clear and persuasive to voters,''' to help them resist judicial and media gaslighting; (See below for “Why court-recognized fact finders persuade Voters”)<br />
<br />
* '''address misunderstandings about abortion jurisprudence''' that divide prolifers, intimidate lawyers, and blind judges;<br />
<br />
'''AND WHOSE PENALTIES'''<br />
<br />
* '''restrict some aspect of abortion substantially enough''' that THEY can't be defended as a mere regulation with some other legitimate government purpose than saving lives. The restriction must be profound enough that its only possible defense is that it saves human lives. That will force courts to address the evidence that babies are fully human;<br />
<br />
* '''provide no distractions that let judges rule on some technicality and ignore the evidence that the law would save lives.''' A perfect law that addresses everything from exceptions to contraception multiplies a judge’s opportunity to say “we don’t need to reach the issue of when life begins because the law fails on a lesser issue.” A simple yet substantial restriction, with “findings” that address the legal obstacles, will survive courts, which will get courts out of the way of saving life, which will free lawmakers to work out the challenging details with time to get a comprehensive solution right and with hope that they won’t waste their time; <br />
<br />
* '''list specific penalties for specific situations,''' rather than broadly stated goals such as “babies are to be protected as much as adults”, leaving prosecutors and judges to guess what to punish, or how, in situations where evidence and culpability are different; <br />
<br />
* '''contain a “life of the mother” exception''' whose applicability is clear enough that mothers are not denied life-saving care until doctors are assured by lawyers that said care will not put the doctors in jail; and<br />
<br />
'''THE LAW SHOULD ALSO order courts to “expedite” any review,''' “because lives are lost with each day that courts delay”. <br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate!)<br />
<br />
More ideas: [[Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_stop_judges_from_legislating]]<br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate! See below for Expedited Review federal rules.) <br />
<br />
WORD COUNTS: Using only the first boldfaced paragraph of each of these 12 Findings, in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, will total about 200 words. The complete Findings, without footnotes, total nearly 3000 words. For the advantages of including enough information in a prolife law for the Findings to defend themselves, see “Too Lengthy?” below. <br />
<br />
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: I am not a lawyer. But writing about prolife legal defenses designed to bring legal abortion to an end, and Scriptures calling for that goal, for 25 years in my Prayer * Action News, being uncertified as a lawyer, has created the opportunity for a remarkable interaction with Planned Barrenhoods priciest lawyers. Because news reporters wouldn’t report that my reasoning was designed as legal defenses in court, or that they were grounded in the Bible, what that left was their accusation that I advocated crime; whereas had my defenses been successful they would have allowed citizens to stop murderers legally, putting an end to the reason citizens took action. <br />
<br />
__TOC__<br />
<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and family, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge inaction deny themselves Life More Abundantly. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget: free wisdom, guaranteed success===<br />
<br />
'''John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
James 1:5 If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, [without finding fault]; and it shall be given him. 6 But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering.''' (Gr. διακρινω not withdrawn from, ie. by lack of support from actions, or opposed, ie. by indecision) <br />
<br />
'''Matthew 21:21 ...If ye have faith, and doubt not''' (Gr. διακρινω) ...'''ye shall say unto this mountain, Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea; it shall be done. 22 And all things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive.'''<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and families, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge their own inaction deny themselves, not just their neighbors, Life More Abundantly.<br />
<br />
If you are not satisfied with life less abundantly – ongoing slaughter of innocents – you won’t be satisfied now that the fate of babies is decided by the “value” that voters place on little people. You will keep searching for a strategy to end all the slaughter: to both outlaw it, and make it unthinkable to all but the worst of murderers. <br />
<br />
If you believe you ''will'' reach every good goal you pursue with all your being, Matthew 21:21-22, you won’t be turned from ending the slaughter in every state by experts who tell you that is impossible which rules out a strategy for achieving it. You will search until you find God’s way to do God’s will. <br />
<br />
You won’t say “I'm not smart enough to question prolife legal authorities who advise giving up”, if you believe James 1:5 which promises you all the wisdom you need to do good. Nor will you ever say you are not smart enough to read and understand legal briefs, court rulings, or to reason with lawmakers, lawyers, and prolife leaders, as necessary.<br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will not excuse yourself from God’s call because you can’t talk well, like Moses, whom God answered “Who made mouths?” Exodus 4:11. Nor will you excuse yourself to God, saying you are but a child against the world’s superbrains, like Jeremiah, whom God answered, “Stop saying that! It is MY words you will speak, and I am no child!” Jeremiah 1:6-8. <br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will shine God’s light wherever you find Darkness, Matthew 5:13-16. Since nothing is darker than murdering your own baby, you will seek God’s help as you oppose this evil, and none of these excuses will withdraw you from action.<br />
<br />
===Final Warning: read this at your own risk===<br />
<br />
Warning: read at your own risk. Rough reading Ahead, that may knock you from your TV chair.<br />
<br />
'''Findings of Facts which No Judge can Squarely Address and Keep Abortion Legal'''<br />
<br />
=Part 1: Authority of Court-Recognized Fact Finders=<br />
<br />
<span style="color:grey"><small>''Try to imagine how a judge, reviewing a prolife law with these Findings of Facts, would be able to dodge this evidence - in fact, see if you can find ANYONE who can ''refute'' these facts - as opposed to not ''caring'' about facts - that is, not caring about reality:''</small></span><br />
<br />
====Statement of Fact #1 of 12: Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let any state legalize====<br />
<br />
'''Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let ''any'' state legalize.'''<br />
<br />
No fact can be more legally established than the fact that “life begins” at fertilization, being the consensus of every American legal authority who has taken a position, in every category of court-recognized finders of facts: juries,2 thousands of expert witnesses who were not contested,3 38 state legislatures,4 individual judges,5 and Congress.6 <br />
<br />
No legal authority has ruled that any unborn baby of a human is not in fact a human person, or that “life begins” any later than fertilization.7 <br />
<br />
No state can keep abortion legal now that this fact is established. This is so obvious that even Roe v. Wade said “of course”, and the lawyer for the abortionists agreed.8 <br />
For most public issues, disagreement is over facts.9 The only disagreement about abortion is between unanimous fact finders and those who don't care about facts.10 A court that won’t address the facts that justify and necessitate a law, or hear evidence of those facts, violates Due Process and has no legitimate jurisdiction to review that law.11 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 1 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Fact finders agree babies are people. No state can legalize people killing. <br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] “Fact finders” persuade courts for the same reason they persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never denied that Babies are fully human or ruled that irrelevant.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures must “regulate” abortion – the way they do other murders!<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] What makes us human isn’t physical, so physical size isn’t its measure. <br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress ''already'' passed a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. <br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] SCOTUS never said there are humans who aren't people.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] Babies separated from moms to save moms have an equal right to live.<br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any people group violates the Constitution, and the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives Congress no authority to block state protection of rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? <br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
<br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
<br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True. <br />
<br />
<br />
</span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget #2: The Cost of Success===<br />
<br />
'''Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? '''<br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True.<br />
<br />
=====Statement of Facts #2 of 12: Courts Accept the Fact-Finding Authority of Legislatures, Juries, Experts for the same good reasons their findings persuade the public.=====<br />
<br />
SCOTUS must accept legislative findings of facts that are not obviously irrational. “..the existence of facts supporting the legislative judgment is to be presumed...not to be pronounced unconstitutional unless in the light of the facts made known or generally assumed it is of such a character as to preclude the assumption that it rests upon some rational basis within the knowledge and experience of the legislators....” U.S. v. Carolene Products, 304 U.S. 144, 152 (1938).1<br />
<br />
Besides the court-recognized fact finding authority of legislatures, courts must conform their rulings to laws until such time as courts declare laws unconstitutional. No court has overturned the “unborn victims of violence” laws (based on “human babies are people”) of 39 states and Congress, despite many challenges.2<br />
<br />
To do so would require a court to positively affirm that human life does not begin until much later, which no legal authority has done, and for which no evidence exists.<br />
<br />
'''Legislatures'''. Lawmakers are there by the choice of a majority of voters. They are bombarded by information from experts. They are scrutinized by other lawmakers. Many are lawyers, some of whom are constitutional scholars and past or future judges. They set the salaries of judges, and have the power to hold impeachment trials of judges. Congress, the national legislature, scrutinizes Supreme Court justices. <br />
<br />
Many Congressmen are equally qualified: 15 U.S. Senators have served on the Supreme Court, and more were nominated.3 <br />
<br />
'''Juries''' are tested for impartiality. They are educated by the most qualified expert witnesses available. They study as long as necessary to establish truth – sometimes for months.4<br />
<br />
'''Expert Witnesses''' are the best experts money can buy, and they are scrutinized by the other side’s experts.5 <br />
<br />
It is for strong reasons that the findings of court-recognized fact finders are as respected in court as in the Court of Public Opinion.6<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 2 + Footnotes]]<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Mark 8:38 '''Whosoever therefore shall be ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful generation; of him also shall the Son of man be ashamed''', when he cometh in the glory of his Father with the holy angels.<br />
<br />
We Bible believing conservatives need to quit blaming social media and CIA censorship for our failures and stop censoring ourselves. <br />
<br />
I offer a way of stating evidence which no judge, news reporter, Democrat, or unbeliever can refute, along with answering objections that have crippled prolife messaging and legal strategy. But we despair of reaching those who stop their ears to evidence. “What’s the use of tightening our message? You’re preaching to the choir. We know babies are people but those other people have their opinion too.”<br />
<br />
I’m not "preaching to the choir". I’m passing out a new composition to the choir for a coming TV special.<br />
<br />
Most of those who won’t listen, won’t vote either, rendering their willful ignorance relatively benign. Stop worrying about them. All they will do is hate you, lie about you, wreck your business – childish stuff. We progress by clearly articulating to the extent possible. The same Bible which is the main reason we care about babies promises all the protection we need to finish what we are here to do.<br />
<br />
It isn’t just saving baby bodies where we self censor. Adult souls are lost. We hold back sharing what we know about God. Snap out of it. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #3 of 12: The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS====<br />
<br />
From Roe (1973) through Dobbs (2022), SCOTUS evaded that core issue.1 <br />
<br />
SCOTUS never ruled babies Non-Persons “as a Matter of Law”, as lower courts allege.2 Roe made that fact not only relevant, but dispositive with a holding which no court has disputed even though Roe’s main holding was overturned:3 <br />
<br />
“[Prolifers] argue that the fetus is a ‘person’ within the language and meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment....If this suggestion of personhood is established, the [abortionist’s] case, of course, collapses, for the fetus’ right to life would then be guaranteed specifically by the [14th] Amendment [thus outlawing abortion in EVERY state]. The [abortionist’s lawyer] conceded as much....”4<br />
<br />
Dobbs explicitly left this statement of the obvious untouched, saying “our decision is not based on any view about when a State should regard pre-natal life as having rights or legally cognizable interests....”5 Dobbs did not say babies aren’t people. Dobbs did not say voters should still decide whether babies can be murdered in the face of proof that babies are in fact people.6 Dobbs left in place Roe’s observation that “establishment” of this fact, independently of any law, ruling, or future constitutional amendment,7 dictates whether abortion is legally recognizable as a right or as a crime.8<br />
<br />
This established fact is as relevant today as when Roe said “of course” it is.<br />
<br />
This established fact is not disestablished by any judge’s alleged inability to understand it.9<br />
<br />
This established FACT is not made irrelevant by any judge’s theory that the legal right of little humans to live is “impossible” to determine so it should be decided by their value to big humans.10<br />
<br />
If only those legally recognized as “persons” were people, slavery could still be legal and the 14th Amendment would mean nothing. Slavery states would merely need to classify their victims as only 3/5 human.11 The Amendment protects those who are IN FACT people – what is irrelevant is whether babies are people “as a matter of law”.12 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 3 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #4 of 12: Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life====<br />
<br />
Detectable heartbeats and brain waves are evidence that a person has not yet died, throughout state and federal law.1 Reason demands they be accepted as evidence that a person has begun to live.2<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 4 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #5 of 12: Legislatures should regulate abortion, as Dobbs held, just as legislatures regulate the prosecution of all other murders====<br />
<br />
But not in the sense of absolute discretion to leave wholesale murders of a supposedly unwanted group of humans completely unregulated. That interpretation of Dobbs’ holding is premised on a “mistake of fact”, which is an official exception to Stare Decisis. 1<br />
<br />
The “Mistake of Fact” that is the premise of letting voters decide whether to continue judge-approved genocide according to the “value” they place on little people is that the humanity of babies of humans is either unknowable or irrelevant. That premise was explicit in Roe and Casey, and implicit in Dobbs.2 <br />
<br />
That is an “erroneous factual premise”. The fact that little unborn humans are humans is neither unknowable3 nor irrelevant. It is verifiable and dispositive.4 The consensus of court-recognized fact finders cures that knowledge deficit, canceling that interpretation of Dobbs’ holding, while reinforcing Dobbs’ other two holdings that “The Constitution does not confer a right to abortion” and “Roe and Casey are overruled”, and requiring the outlawing of baby killing in every state.5 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 5 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #6 of 12: The full humanity of a tiny physical body is hard for many to grasp. But what distinguishes us from animals isn’t physical, and has no known pre-conscious stage====<br />
<br />
DON’T READ past this 28 word paragraph unless you want <br />
an edge-of-your-seat adventure – legal ammunition <br />
against not only baby killing but also against the myth <br />
of the irrelevance of God in the reasoning of judges, <br />
lawmakers, and voters! Yet Roe v Wade, of all cases, <br />
"opened the door" with its sophomoric review of "theologians", <br />
and #6 comes charging through! <> The rest of this Statement <br />
is for lawmakers who want a stronger, clearer statement, <br />
and who have the stomach for the larger battle.<br />
<br />
Part of Roe’s definition of “person” was “infused with a soul”.1 Roe thus affirmed the belief of most of society, a belief logically demanded by the common knowledge that humans are distinguished from animals by consciousness which features a capacity for choices at variance with physical needs: to sacrifice one's interests for another,2 which is how John 15:13 defines “love”. And conversely, to destroy one’s own body.3<br />
<br />
These differences, along with self awareness and the capacity to choose between good and evil4 – to behave either as an angel or as a demon, can’t be explained by any known physical process. These differences justify greater legal protection of humans than of animals. <br />
<br />
Since a “soul” without consciousness has never been theorized and can’t be imagined, the consensus of fact finders is, in effect, that abortion kills babies with conscious souls. The lack of any physical explanation for a conscious soul rules out any reason to infer immaturity of consciousness from physical immaturity, and is consistent with the report in Luke 1:44 that a baby at 6 months heard a righteous voice [and/or felt the righteous Presence of God] and responded with joy,5 a response not everybody chooses, indicating that even the capacity for choosing between good and evil precedes birth. And also indicating that when a baby is killed by dismemberment, acid, or sucking out the brain, a self-aware conscious soul feels the pain, understands the cruelty, and if out-of-body near-death experiences are real, sees who is doing it.<br />
<br />
Even considering the body only, there is no objective line between birth and conception distinguishing “humans” from “nonpersons”, or between “meaningful life” and life which courts are free to terminate.6 Without such a line, there can be no stage of gestation at which killing a baby can be objectively distinguished from murder. No baby is safe while that line remains arbitrary. <br />
<br />
The failure of some to grasp the humanity of babies at any given stage is a dangerous basis for permitting killing, since as many fail to grasp the full humanity of quite a number of distinct groups of born persons.<br />
<br />
As Roe correctly established, it can be useful in clarifying who to count as a human with an unalienable right to life, to consult the religion from which that right was copied into America’s founding documents. But religions which oppose the foundation of American law – equal rights for all humans, merit little credibility in American courts when their claims justify destruction of an entire people group – such as the claim that souls do not enter bodies until around birth. There can be “free exercise” of religions which do not equally reverence all human life only to the extent their “exercise” does not violate the rights of others or the laws enacted to protect them.7<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] <br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #7 of 12: Congress has ''Already'' Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment already authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion, without allowing Congress to legalize it====<br />
<br />
<small>FORGET YOU READ this 32 word Statement and DON’T read farther – <br />
certainly not the footnotes – if you don’t want to question <br />
the near consensus of prolife leaders who say “we are helpless <br />
to outlaw abortion in every state before we get ANOTHER <br />
personhood law through Congress, if not a Life Amendment <br />
to the Constitution.” <> This is the 7th of 12 Statements <br />
designed to push courts out of the way of defending Life <br />
in every state when included in the Findings of Facts of <br />
prolife laws. The material below can make it clearer and stronger.</small><br />
<br />
Congress established in 2004 that: “‘unborn child’ means a child in utero, and the term ‘child in utero’...means a member of the species Homo Sapiens, at any stage of development, who is carried in the womb”, 18 U.S.C. 1841(d).1 <br />
<br />
This fact is not diminished by clause (c) which does not “permit [authorize] the prosecution of any person for...an abortion for which the consent of the pregnant woman...has been obtained.…”2 A law misaligned with facts does not block future lawmakers from making corrections, and states don’t need Congress’ “permission” to obey the 14th Amendment. <br />
<br />
The reason 18 U.S.C. 1841(d) has had no effect on the practice of legal abortion is not because of any deficiency in its authority to establish dispositive facts, but because no state law reviewed by SCOTUS has cited it to establish what Roe correctly said once “established” would “of course” require the end of legal abortion. <br />
<br />
Not only is the 2004 law unmitigated evidence of life strong enough to “collapse” legal abortion by itself, but it would not be stronger if it were an Amendment to the Constitution.3 No other Constitutional Amendment is relied on for evidence of a fact. An Amendment can bind courts. But establishment of the Facts Of Life by evidence presented, cited, and tested in court draws not only courts, but society, closer to reality.4<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #8 of 12: Roe, Dobbs, and the 14th Amendment agree: All Humans are “Persons”====<br />
<br />
<small>DON’T READ past this 11 word Statement <br />
unless you like to stare at where crazy lawyers <br />
ever got the idea that human babies aren’t people!</small><br />
<br />
Neither Roe nor Dobbs distinguished between “humans” and “persons” as if a “human” baby isn’t necessarily a “person”. [2] Nor does the 14th Amendment leave any human unprotected.<br />
<br />
Roe v. Wade equated the time an unborn child becomes “recognizably human” with the time the child becomes a “person”: “These disciplines variously approached the question [“of when life begins”] in terms of the point at which the embryo or fetus became ‘formed’ or recognizably human, or in terms of when a ‘person’ came into being, that is, infused with a ‘soul’ or ‘animated.’” 410 U.S. 113, 133(1973)<br />
<br />
Dobbs cites the belief that “a human person comes into being at conception” without distinguishing between the two words. [3] The word “person” in the 14th Amendment meant “An individual human being...man, woman, or child...consisting of body and soul.” The word “child” in that 1828 definition included unborn children, since to be “with child” meant to be pregnant. [4]<br />
<br />
Therefore the Amendment’s “nor shall any state deprive any person of life” and “equal protection” of every “person” means every human, including those unborn. Nothing about the first clause keeps later clauses from protecting unborn humans. [5]<br />
<br />
See also Wong Wing v. United States, 163 U.S.228, 242 (1896), “The term ‘person’ is broad enough to include any and every human being within the jurisdiction of the republic...This has been decided so often that the point does not require argument.” Steinberg v. Brown 321 F. Supp. 741 (N.D. Ohio, 1970) “[o]nce human life has commenced, the constitutional protections found in the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments impose upon the state a duty of safeguarding it”. [6]<br />
<br />
The word “persons” in the 14th Amendment means all who are IN FACT humans. Had it been only for those who are legally recognized as human, every deprivation of fundamental rights would be “constitutional” so long as a law or ruling questions whether its victims are “persons in the whole sense”.<br />
<br />
Although Dobbs showed by disproving the opposite that reverence for all human life from fertilization was “deeply rooted in America’s law and traditions”, that is not why rights merit 14th Amendment protection. By the “deeply rooted” test, slavery would be legal today, since freedom for slaves had zero historical support.<br />
<br />
Nor does it matter if the Amendment authors even wanted to protect all humans. In fact, it doesn’t matter if there is a 14th Amendment. If law is not equal upon its operation on all humans, which is the very definition of the word “law” as developed by Samuel Rutherford’s “Lex Rex” and Blackstone and adopted by America’s founders, to that extent there is, by definition, no “rule of law”, no restraint upon the “strong” to not tyrannize the “weak”.<br />
<br />
There is a direct test of whether babies merit 14th Amendment protection that does not require a romp through history: [7] see if their parents are humans.<br />
<br />
“To say that the test of equal protection should be the ‘legal’ rather than the biological relationship is to avoid the issue. For the Equal Protection Clause necessarily limits the authority of a State [or its judges] to draw such ‘legal’ lines as it chooses.” Glona, 391 U.S. 73, 75 (1968) [8]<br />
<br />
FOOTNOTES: see [[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
<small>The footnotes are enriched by selections from the Amicus Briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson by: Lee J. Strang <> Scholars of Jurisprudence John M. Finnis and Robert P. George <> Mary Kay Bacallao Advocating for Unborn Children <> Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide <> and by selections from the 1996 debate between Judge Robert Bork and Professor Nathan Schluetter</small><br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #9 of 12: When pregnancies develop into medical emergencies requiring separation of mother and child to save the mother, the child has an equally fundamental right to life and medical care.====<br />
<br />
A legislature’s balancing of their interests cannot, therefore, be reviewed by “strict scrutiny”.2 Nor does alleged insufficiency of a “medical emergency” exception from a general abortion ban justify a court overturning the ban in the 99% of cases where no emergency is alleged.3 Legislatures are better equipped to deliberate about and secure the rights of all citizens than courts whose focus is the parties before them.4<br />
<br />
SCOTUS never denied that a legislature’s “personhood” statements in an abortion ban are strong evidence.5 That evidence is not mitigated by a ban’s exceptions.6 It is not made irrelevant because baby killers “rely” on killing babies.7 28/130 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
Fundamental Right: This is a term not found in the Constitution but made up by SCOTUS for the rights SCOTUS makes up which often displace rights actually listed in the Constitution. Justice Clarence Thomas is eloquent on this point. More about this later.<br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: A Foundation for Moral Law <> Pennsylvania Pro-Life Federation <> 396 State Legislators from 41 States</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #10 of 12: Tyranny over any class of humans by any other is prohibited by the Constitution, and by the Declaration, which gives the purpose of the Constitution and rests its own authority on the revelation of God1 in the Bible====<br />
<br />
Roe v Wade was not out of line to consult “those trained in... theology” who study souls, as well as doctors who study bodies, to clarify who to count as human with an unalienable right to life.3 <br />
<br />
America’s Freedom springs from “all men are created equal” and “equal protection of the laws” for all humans even if their looks, language, wealth, strength, ancestry, power, or faith are different.4 These rights have proven such a blessing to the world that their source, the Bible, deserves the fair hearing owed any witness whose reliability has been confirmed, when it promises still greater blessings if we will equally protect humans whose physical size is different.5 <br />
<br />
Its testimony is not “cumulative”, but “probative”.6 It is not to be feared as dispositive or compulsory: American freedom balances human understanding of how best to apply Biblical principles to government against the willingness of voting majorities to follow those principles. Even that is a Biblical principle legitimized in 1 Samuel 8.7 <br />
<br />
The history of slavery, Prohibition, and abortion illustrate the “willingness” factor. The probative value of the testimony of God is proved by the fact that without it, slavery would never have ended, and the prolife movement would never have begun. Which makes it probative to observe that not only the 14th Amendment, but also the revelation of God, requires this state, as it does every state, to outlaw all trampling of fundamental rights of any class of people, including abortion of babies.8 Where the two authorities say the same thing, the Bible, for all its alleged ambiguity, is better understood and more trusted than the Constitution which has indeed proven “a thing of wax” in the nimble fingers of even the most scrupulous judges.9 <br />
<br />
Without God – without belief in a more objective standard of right and wrong than the “value” that voters place on “different” people through “evolving community standards”, it is impossible to understand fundamental rights.10 <br />
<br />
Courts have demonstrated this impossibility by so often confusing abominations for rights, decimating those whom Jesus said “forbid them not to come unto Me”, denying that He created them, murdering 17% of them, sodomizing 20% of the survivors, and censoring 100% of His teachings in schools.11 <br />
<br />
That destruction of the 14th Amendment (1868) began when “Substantive Due Process”, pioneered in Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857), was applied in United States v. Cruikshank 92 U. S. 542 (1876) to acquit a white Democrat mililtia of murdering “as many as 165” black Republicans and burning down the courthouse they were defending.12 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring God does not “establish religion”. It does not compel belief, action or endorsement. It simply allows judges and voters to make informed decisions. It is part of fact-finding. It is part of reasoning. Part of embracing reality. Part of examining “the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth”. Judges must stop punishing people for telling the truth just because the truth favors God.13 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring the Bible does not require equal weight for claims of religions that deny equal rights for all.14 <br />
<br />
For example, some claim “souls” don’t enter babies until long after fertilization, or even long after birth.15 Their claims do not “cancel” the mountain of consensus of court-recognized fact finders that souls are present from the beginning. Our Constitution and laws reject their unequal rights, and are appropriately wary of their rationales for their unequal rights. The credibility of every witness is not equal. Credibility is earned. <br />
There can be “free exercise” of religions hostile to “equal protection of the laws” only to the extent their “exercise” does not threaten the rights of others or violate the laws enacted to protect them – laws ultimately decided by voting majorities, hopefully well informed through the uncensoring of reality.16 39/520 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms: <br />
<br />
'''Cumulative''': testimony so redundant that it wastes the court’s time<br />
Dispositive: testimony so strong that it settles the issue with no more<br />
Probative: probative facts establish, or contribute to, proof. Probative value is the degree of relevance of evidence. <br />
<br />
'''Prohibition''': From 1920 to 1932, drinking (alcohol) was made illegal, banned by an actual Constitutional Amendment. Actual alcohol consumption dropped by about 50%, or at least that is how much Cirrhosis of the Liver cases dropped. During that time the drop in drinking led to an economic boom, called the “Roaring Twenties”, which unfortunately were not remembered for their prosperity but for their immorality. In 1928, the prosperity collapsed into a “Great Depression” due to cheating by stock market investors. In 1932 Americans wanted liquor so bad they ratified another Constitutional Amendment repealing the 1920 Amendment. <br />
<br />
'''Substantive Due Process''': As Justice Clarence Thomas eloquently explains – see Statement #11 footnotes, this phrase was made up by SCOTUS to justify making up what it calls “fundamental rights” as its tool of repealing laws it doesn’t like. It gets its name from the SCOTUS claim that the “Due Process” clause of the 14th Amendment gives SCOTUS its authority to make up rights and call them “fundamental”. But “Due Process” only meant the legal procedures which everyone must be given equally, to defend their rights in court when necessary. The phrase has nothing to do with identifying what rights are protectable. But “Substantive” means those rights we care about, that the Constitution protects. Like freedom of speech or religion. Because “substantive” means substantial, serious rights, and “due process” has nothing to do with identifying any rights, the LONANG Institute observes in Statement #11 notes that “substantive due process” is an oxymoron. <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: Foundation for Moral Law and Lutherans for Life <> Jewish Prolife Foundation <> LONANG Institute <> U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and Other Religious Organizations <> Claremont Institute’s Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #11 of 12: The 14th Amendment gives federal courts no “due process” authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the “right” to murder, and gives Congress no authority to legalize violations of Constitutional Rights, like taking a baby’s right to Life====<br />
<br />
The sole federal authority over state laws regarding the rights of their own citizens is through the 14th Amendment, Sections One and Five.1 Contrary to SCOTUS rulings, the 14th Amendment explicitly provides:<br />
<br />
* '''Congress authorized, not courts.''' Congress, not courts, determines the manner and scope of federal intervention in states whose laws don’t protect their citizens’ rights.2 Congress is not limited to enforcing only those rights of which SCOTUS approves, nor only to the extent that SCOTUS approves,3 nor only when state governments, not individuals, directly violate rights.4 <br />
<br />
* Federal courts aren’t permitted to stop either states or Congress from protecting enumerated rights (like Life), or to repeal their laws for conflicting with unenumerated [not listed in the Constitution] “rights” (like the “right” to murder babies), or to intervene in states’ protection of rights beyond prosecuting violations of federal laws.5 <br />
<br />
* Nor can Congress stop states from protecting enumerated rights. Neither Congress nor federal courts may overturn a state law protecting the lives of unborn babies from surgical abortion, chemical abortion, or contraceptives.6<br />
<br />
* The rights subject to federal enforcement are not those made up by SCOTUS allegedly based on the “Due Process” clause,7 but those listed in the Constitution, referred to as “privileges and immunities”8 (including, for unborn babies, the “privilege” of life and “immunity” from “cruel and unusual punishment” and execution “without due process of law”).9 <br />
* Enumerated Rights recognized before the Constitution existed are not excluded from Congressional intervention.10<br />
<br />
* '''“Substantive Due Process”''' is the sophistry by which SCOTUS turned the Constitution’s Authority to Define Rights, and Congress’ 14th Amendment Section 5 Authority to Enforce Rights, into its own authority to reclassify abominations as “rights”.11 It is an illegal, unconstitutional, Freedom-crushing fraud from Hell fomenting a long line of Landmark Abomination Cases.12 <br />
<br />
<small>Mini-lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Due Process:''' The duty of courts to give all parties to cases the fair and equal procedures and opportunities for defending themselves.<br />
<br />
(This argument for ending SCOTUS’ long line of Landmark Abomination Cases continues in Part Two of this book where its focus on SCOTUS-mandated murder of babies created in the Image of God is extended to SCOTUS’ censorship of God Himself.) <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amici who filed briefs in Dobbs v. Jackson: Lonang Institute <> Christian Legal Society <> AfricanAmerican, Hispanic, Roman Catholic and Protestant Religious and Civil Rights Organizations <> Senators Josh Hawley, Mike Lee, and Ted Cruz. And from Judge Robert Bork <> Nathan Schlueter, Professor of Philosophy and Religion, Hillsdale College, (when he debated Judge Bork in 2003 he was assistant professor of pre-law and political science at St. Ambrose University. Author, “Unborn Persons and the Fourteenth Amendment.” 2002.) <> Erwin Chemerinsky, Dean of Berkeley Law School <> Legal Information Institute, Cornell University <> Justice Clarence Thomas, dissents and concurrences <> justia.com <> James Gray Pope, Professor of Law and Sidney Reitman Scholar, Rutgers University School of Law <> Libby Adler professor of law and women’s, gender, and sexuality studies, Northeastern University Christmas, 2023''</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #12 of 12:Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable. The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives.====<br />
<br />
Any judge interfering with this state’s compliance with the 14th Amendment and its ancient authority to protect its people1 – the central reason governments exist, is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders,2 and is guilty of exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide through an unconstitutional ruling,3 which exceeds the judicial powers given by any Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment.4The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives, including (1) giving the state Supreme Court original jurisdiction over any challenge to a law, (2) requiring that review be expedited, (3) requiring a supermajority of the Court to suspend a law, (4) questioning justices in a public hearing about the constitutionality of their ruling, and (5) overturning the ruling with a supermajority of the legislature.5 <br />
<br />
Should any federal judge so interfere with this state’s constitutional duty, this state appeals to its congressional delegation to examine similar grounds for disciplinary action,6 along with exercising its Article III, Section 2, paragraph 2 authority to make “exceptions” and “regulations” designed to end SCOTUS’ long line of landmark abomination cases. This state also appeals to its congressional delegation to exercise its life-saving and rights-protecting authority under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment whose plain words give Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of Rights,7 which subsumes the authority to define their scope and to balance competing interests, while the “privileges and immunities” clause identifies as protectable rights those listed in the Constitution.8 <br />
<br />
Official world-wide definitions of “crimes against humanity” apply “to representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission”, whether elected representatives or unelected judges.”9<br />
<br />
Any court review of this law must be expedited, because lives are lost with each day that courts delay.10 7/230 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of Legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Malfeasance in office:''' official misconduct; violation of a public trust or obligation; specifically, the doing of an act which is positively unlawful or wrongful.<br />
<br />
'''Subsumes:''' Includes. To include or place within something larger or more comprehensive: encompass as a subordinate or component element red, green, and yellow are subsumed under the term "color" <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: 396 State Legislators from 41 States <> Melinda Thybault/Moral Outcry <> and by Matthew J. Franck, Director of the William E. and Carol G. Simon Center on Religion and the Constitution at the Witherspoon Institute and visiting lecturer in politics at Princeton University</small></div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Reversing_Landmark_Abomination_Cases&diff=50368Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases2024-01-02T04:56:56Z<p>DaveLeach: /* Statement of Facts #12 of 12: Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable */</p>
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<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters<br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion</span><br />
<br />
by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal<br />
''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal<br />
<span style="color:brown"><br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen <br />
<br />
by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 18:06, 15 October 2023 (UTC)<br />
<br />
=Introduction=<br />
<br />
This book offers twelve statements of fact about babies and abortion which I challenge any voter, lawyer, lawmaker, or judge to refute. Their footnotes contain nuggets from the 140 "Amicus" briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' (2022), the ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade. These statements are designed to soften the resistance of voters to outlawing baby murder, when presented in public, and to force judges to outlaw abortion in every state, when presented in court. <br />
<br />
They are truths designed to be so unignorable, that when any lawmaker includes them in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, in any state, prodeath fury will help publicize them with each advance through legislative deadlines. When friends of babies see them survive scrutiny, the force of these truths will grow like a snowball rolling down a hill. <br />
<br />
But murdering babies is only the most egregious of many Landmark Abomination Cases. Their common thread is usurping authority which the Constitution assigns to others, and equating the Bible with spurious religions. “Never let a crisis go to waste”, say the enemies of God, but God is the true master of turning evil into an opportunity for good. It’s time. Let’s end the Supreme Court’s war against God.<br />
<br />
The very fact that abortion is the worst of the ways the United States Supreme Court has turned American law upside down creates an opportunity to heal that branch of our government, and heal all the harm to our nation and its culture and morals that it has caused. As Professor Nathan Schluetter at Hillsdale College observes, “We must not let this opportunity pass to boldly challenge the prevailing jurisprudence and its attendant epistemological and moral skepticism with respect to abortion.”<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
It is the '''fact''' that unborn babies are living human children that makes killing them murder. It’s not what any ''law'' says about it, or even what the Constitution says about it. That’s what leaves ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' on the edge of reality, by treating this fact as something for voters to figure out, not on the basis of whether babies are ''in fact'' people but on the basis of some “value” they place on ''little'' people. <br />
<br />
That '''fact''' is what makes <u>the consensus of court-recognized fact finders</u> a stronger legal reason to end legal abortion than a Life Amendment, and a powerful social reason in the Court of Public Opinion able to soften hearts to the silent screams of Jesus' little brothers and His quiet knocking on hearts' doors. Which makes it insane for prolifers to not even mention this legally dispositive consensus in each and every prolife court case, and every “finding of fact” in prolife legislation, along with leveling with the public about the Scriptures which are the real reason we even care.<br />
<br />
[[File:Cover_Cartoon.jpg]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
Why these solutions may help even where abortion is already outlawed<br />
<br />
(1) They could defeat a national abortion legalization.<br />
<br />
(2) They could help you sue a nearby “blue state” for helping its baby killers murder your children. <br />
<br />
(3) They could help if your district judges join the courtroom rebellion against Dobbs in other states.<br />
<br />
(4) They could help meet challenges in the Court of Public Opinion, for example through a Resolution that irrefutably addresses every objection you have ever heard, as understandable to voters as it is irrefutable to judges. That would help the public see through future judicial gaslighting, and support judicial reform: ie. www.savetheworld .saltshaker.us/wiki/Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_ stop_judges_from_legislating<br />
<br />
(5) I could sure use your feedback. Proverbs 15:22. <br />
<br />
----<br />
<center>'''Ending legal abortion everywhere in close to a year<br />
(the goal of the following bill language)<br />
<br>'''requires a law whose Findings of Facts: '''<br />
</center><br />
<br />
<br />
* '''contain evidence which no judge can squarely address and keep abortion legal anywhere:''' that unborn babies are real people – established by the (unanimous) consensus of court-recognized factfinders: juries, expert witnesses, 38 states, judges, and Congress;<br />
<br />
* '''present its evidence in a way that is clear and persuasive to voters,''' to help them resist judicial and media gaslighting; (See below for “Why court-recognized fact finders persuade Voters”)<br />
<br />
* '''address misunderstandings about abortion jurisprudence''' that divide prolifers, intimidate lawyers, and blind judges;<br />
<br />
'''AND WHOSE PENALTIES'''<br />
<br />
* '''restrict some aspect of abortion substantially enough''' that THEY can't be defended as a mere regulation with some other legitimate government purpose than saving lives. The restriction must be profound enough that its only possible defense is that it saves human lives. That will force courts to address the evidence that babies are fully human;<br />
<br />
* '''provide no distractions that let judges rule on some technicality and ignore the evidence that the law would save lives.''' A perfect law that addresses everything from exceptions to contraception multiplies a judge’s opportunity to say “we don’t need to reach the issue of when life begins because the law fails on a lesser issue.” A simple yet substantial restriction, with “findings” that address the legal obstacles, will survive courts, which will get courts out of the way of saving life, which will free lawmakers to work out the challenging details with time to get a comprehensive solution right and with hope that they won’t waste their time; <br />
<br />
* '''list specific penalties for specific situations,''' rather than broadly stated goals such as “babies are to be protected as much as adults”, leaving prosecutors and judges to guess what to punish, or how, in situations where evidence and culpability are different; <br />
<br />
* '''contain a “life of the mother” exception''' whose applicability is clear enough that mothers are not denied life-saving care until doctors are assured by lawyers that said care will not put the doctors in jail; and<br />
<br />
'''THE LAW SHOULD ALSO order courts to “expedite” any review,''' “because lives are lost with each day that courts delay”. <br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate!)<br />
<br />
More ideas: [[Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_stop_judges_from_legislating]]<br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate! See below for Expedited Review federal rules.) <br />
<br />
WORD COUNTS: Using only the first boldfaced paragraph of each of these 12 Findings, in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, will total about 200 words. The complete Findings, without footnotes, total nearly 3000 words. For the advantages of including enough information in a prolife law for the Findings to defend themselves, see “Too Lengthy?” below. <br />
<br />
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: I am not a lawyer. But writing about prolife legal defenses designed to bring legal abortion to an end, and Scriptures calling for that goal, for 25 years in my Prayer * Action News, being uncertified as a lawyer, has created the opportunity for a remarkable interaction with Planned Barrenhoods priciest lawyers. Because news reporters wouldn’t report that my reasoning was designed as legal defenses in court, or that they were grounded in the Bible, what that left was their accusation that I advocated crime; whereas had my defenses been successful they would have allowed citizens to stop murderers legally, putting an end to the reason citizens took action. <br />
<br />
__TOC__<br />
<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and family, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge inaction deny themselves Life More Abundantly. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget: free wisdom, guaranteed success===<br />
<br />
'''John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
James 1:5 If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, [without finding fault]; and it shall be given him. 6 But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering.''' (Gr. διακρινω not withdrawn from, ie. by lack of support from actions, or opposed, ie. by indecision) <br />
<br />
'''Matthew 21:21 ...If ye have faith, and doubt not''' (Gr. διακρινω) ...'''ye shall say unto this mountain, Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea; it shall be done. 22 And all things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive.'''<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and families, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge their own inaction deny themselves, not just their neighbors, Life More Abundantly.<br />
<br />
If you are not satisfied with life less abundantly – ongoing slaughter of innocents – you won’t be satisfied now that the fate of babies is decided by the “value” that voters place on little people. You will keep searching for a strategy to end all the slaughter: to both outlaw it, and make it unthinkable to all but the worst of murderers. <br />
<br />
If you believe you ''will'' reach every good goal you pursue with all your being, Matthew 21:21-22, you won’t be turned from ending the slaughter in every state by experts who tell you that is impossible which rules out a strategy for achieving it. You will search until you find God’s way to do God’s will. <br />
<br />
You won’t say “I'm not smart enough to question prolife legal authorities who advise giving up”, if you believe James 1:5 which promises you all the wisdom you need to do good. Nor will you ever say you are not smart enough to read and understand legal briefs, court rulings, or to reason with lawmakers, lawyers, and prolife leaders, as necessary.<br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will not excuse yourself from God’s call because you can’t talk well, like Moses, whom God answered “Who made mouths?” Exodus 4:11. Nor will you excuse yourself to God, saying you are but a child against the world’s superbrains, like Jeremiah, whom God answered, “Stop saying that! It is MY words you will speak, and I am no child!” Jeremiah 1:6-8. <br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will shine God’s light wherever you find Darkness, Matthew 5:13-16. Since nothing is darker than murdering your own baby, you will seek God’s help as you oppose this evil, and none of these excuses will withdraw you from action.<br />
<br />
===Final Warning: read this at your own risk===<br />
<br />
Warning: read at your own risk. Rough reading Ahead, that may knock you from your TV chair.<br />
<br />
'''Findings of Facts which No Judge can Squarely Address and Keep Abortion Legal'''<br />
<br />
=Part 1: Authority of Court-Recognized Fact Finders=<br />
<br />
<span style="color:grey"><small>''Try to imagine how a judge, reviewing a prolife law with these Findings of Facts, would be able to dodge this evidence - in fact, see if you can find ANYONE who can ''refute'' these facts - as opposed to not ''caring'' about facts - that is, not caring about reality:''</small></span><br />
<br />
====Statement of Fact #1 of 12: Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let any state legalize====<br />
<br />
'''Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let ''any'' state legalize.'''<br />
<br />
No fact can be more legally established than the fact that “life begins” at fertilization, being the consensus of every American legal authority who has taken a position, in every category of court-recognized finders of facts: juries,2 thousands of expert witnesses who were not contested,3 38 state legislatures,4 individual judges,5 and Congress.6 <br />
<br />
No legal authority has ruled that any unborn baby of a human is not in fact a human person, or that “life begins” any later than fertilization.7 <br />
<br />
No state can keep abortion legal now that this fact is established. This is so obvious that even Roe v. Wade said “of course”, and the lawyer for the abortionists agreed.8 <br />
For most public issues, disagreement is over facts.9 The only disagreement about abortion is between unanimous fact finders and those who don't care about facts.10 A court that won’t address the facts that justify and necessitate a law, or hear evidence of those facts, violates Due Process and has no legitimate jurisdiction to review that law.11 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 1 + Footnotes]]<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? <br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
<br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
<br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True. <br />
<br />
<br />
</span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget #2: The Cost of Success===<br />
<br />
'''Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? '''<br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True.<br />
<br />
=====Statement of Facts #2 of 12: Courts Accept the Fact-Finding Authority of Legislatures, Juries, Experts for the same good reasons their findings persuade the public.=====<br />
<br />
SCOTUS must accept legislative findings of facts that are not obviously irrational. “..the existence of facts supporting the legislative judgment is to be presumed...not to be pronounced unconstitutional unless in the light of the facts made known or generally assumed it is of such a character as to preclude the assumption that it rests upon some rational basis within the knowledge and experience of the legislators....” U.S. v. Carolene Products, 304 U.S. 144, 152 (1938).1<br />
<br />
Besides the court-recognized fact finding authority of legislatures, courts must conform their rulings to laws until such time as courts declare laws unconstitutional. No court has overturned the “unborn victims of violence” laws (based on “human babies are people”) of 39 states and Congress, despite many challenges.2<br />
<br />
To do so would require a court to positively affirm that human life does not begin until much later, which no legal authority has done, and for which no evidence exists.<br />
<br />
'''Legislatures'''. Lawmakers are there by the choice of a majority of voters. They are bombarded by information from experts. They are scrutinized by other lawmakers. Many are lawyers, some of whom are constitutional scholars and past or future judges. They set the salaries of judges, and have the power to hold impeachment trials of judges. Congress, the national legislature, scrutinizes Supreme Court justices. <br />
<br />
Many Congressmen are equally qualified: 15 U.S. Senators have served on the Supreme Court, and more were nominated.3 <br />
<br />
'''Juries''' are tested for impartiality. They are educated by the most qualified expert witnesses available. They study as long as necessary to establish truth – sometimes for months.4<br />
<br />
'''Expert Witnesses''' are the best experts money can buy, and they are scrutinized by the other side’s experts.5 <br />
<br />
It is for strong reasons that the findings of court-recognized fact finders are as respected in court as in the Court of Public Opinion.6<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 2 + Footnotes]]<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Mark 8:38 '''Whosoever therefore shall be ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful generation; of him also shall the Son of man be ashamed''', when he cometh in the glory of his Father with the holy angels.<br />
<br />
We Bible believing conservatives need to quit blaming social media and CIA censorship for our failures and stop censoring ourselves. <br />
<br />
I offer a way of stating evidence which no judge, news reporter, Democrat, or unbeliever can refute, along with answering objections that have crippled prolife messaging and legal strategy. But we despair of reaching those who stop their ears to evidence. “What’s the use of tightening our message? You’re preaching to the choir. We know babies are people but those other people have their opinion too.”<br />
<br />
I’m not "preaching to the choir". I’m passing out a new composition to the choir for a coming TV special.<br />
<br />
Most of those who won’t listen, won’t vote either, rendering their willful ignorance relatively benign. Stop worrying about them. All they will do is hate you, lie about you, wreck your business – childish stuff. We progress by clearly articulating to the extent possible. The same Bible which is the main reason we care about babies promises all the protection we need to finish what we are here to do.<br />
<br />
It isn’t just saving baby bodies where we self censor. Adult souls are lost. We hold back sharing what we know about God. Snap out of it. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #3 of 12: The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS====<br />
<br />
From Roe (1973) through Dobbs (2022), SCOTUS evaded that core issue.1 <br />
<br />
SCOTUS never ruled babies Non-Persons “as a Matter of Law”, as lower courts allege.2 Roe made that fact not only relevant, but dispositive with a holding which no court has disputed even though Roe’s main holding was overturned:3 <br />
<br />
“[Prolifers] argue that the fetus is a ‘person’ within the language and meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment....If this suggestion of personhood is established, the [abortionist’s] case, of course, collapses, for the fetus’ right to life would then be guaranteed specifically by the [14th] Amendment [thus outlawing abortion in EVERY state]. The [abortionist’s lawyer] conceded as much....”4<br />
<br />
Dobbs explicitly left this statement of the obvious untouched, saying “our decision is not based on any view about when a State should regard pre-natal life as having rights or legally cognizable interests....”5 Dobbs did not say babies aren’t people. Dobbs did not say voters should still decide whether babies can be murdered in the face of proof that babies are in fact people.6 Dobbs left in place Roe’s observation that “establishment” of this fact, independently of any law, ruling, or future constitutional amendment,7 dictates whether abortion is legally recognizable as a right or as a crime.8<br />
<br />
This established fact is as relevant today as when Roe said “of course” it is.<br />
<br />
This established fact is not disestablished by any judge’s alleged inability to understand it.9<br />
<br />
This established FACT is not made irrelevant by any judge’s theory that the legal right of little humans to live is “impossible” to determine so it should be decided by their value to big humans.10<br />
<br />
If only those legally recognized as “persons” were people, slavery could still be legal and the 14th Amendment would mean nothing. Slavery states would merely need to classify their victims as only 3/5 human.11 The Amendment protects those who are IN FACT people – what is irrelevant is whether babies are people “as a matter of law”.12 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 3 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #4 of 12: Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life====<br />
<br />
Detectable heartbeats and brain waves are evidence that a person has not yet died, throughout state and federal law.1 Reason demands they be accepted as evidence that a person has begun to live.2<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 4 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #5 of 12: Legislatures should regulate abortion, as Dobbs held, just as legislatures regulate the prosecution of all other murders====<br />
<br />
But not in the sense of absolute discretion to leave wholesale murders of a supposedly unwanted group of humans completely unregulated. That interpretation of Dobbs’ holding is premised on a “mistake of fact”, which is an official exception to Stare Decisis. 1<br />
<br />
The “Mistake of Fact” that is the premise of letting voters decide whether to continue judge-approved genocide according to the “value” they place on little people is that the humanity of babies of humans is either unknowable or irrelevant. That premise was explicit in Roe and Casey, and implicit in Dobbs.2 <br />
<br />
That is an “erroneous factual premise”. The fact that little unborn humans are humans is neither unknowable3 nor irrelevant. It is verifiable and dispositive.4 The consensus of court-recognized fact finders cures that knowledge deficit, canceling that interpretation of Dobbs’ holding, while reinforcing Dobbs’ other two holdings that “The Constitution does not confer a right to abortion” and “Roe and Casey are overruled”, and requiring the outlawing of baby killing in every state.5 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 5 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #6 of 12: The full humanity of a tiny physical body is hard for many to grasp. But what distinguishes us from animals isn’t physical, and has no known pre-conscious stage====<br />
<br />
DON’T READ past this 28 word paragraph unless you want <br />
an edge-of-your-seat adventure – legal ammunition <br />
against not only baby killing but also against the myth <br />
of the irrelevance of God in the reasoning of judges, <br />
lawmakers, and voters! Yet Roe v Wade, of all cases, <br />
"opened the door" with its sophomoric review of "theologians", <br />
and #6 comes charging through! <> The rest of this Statement <br />
is for lawmakers who want a stronger, clearer statement, <br />
and who have the stomach for the larger battle.<br />
<br />
Part of Roe’s definition of “person” was “infused with a soul”.1 Roe thus affirmed the belief of most of society, a belief logically demanded by the common knowledge that humans are distinguished from animals by consciousness which features a capacity for choices at variance with physical needs: to sacrifice one's interests for another,2 which is how John 15:13 defines “love”. And conversely, to destroy one’s own body.3<br />
<br />
These differences, along with self awareness and the capacity to choose between good and evil4 – to behave either as an angel or as a demon, can’t be explained by any known physical process. These differences justify greater legal protection of humans than of animals. <br />
<br />
Since a “soul” without consciousness has never been theorized and can’t be imagined, the consensus of fact finders is, in effect, that abortion kills babies with conscious souls. The lack of any physical explanation for a conscious soul rules out any reason to infer immaturity of consciousness from physical immaturity, and is consistent with the report in Luke 1:44 that a baby at 6 months heard a righteous voice [and/or felt the righteous Presence of God] and responded with joy,5 a response not everybody chooses, indicating that even the capacity for choosing between good and evil precedes birth. And also indicating that when a baby is killed by dismemberment, acid, or sucking out the brain, a self-aware conscious soul feels the pain, understands the cruelty, and if out-of-body near-death experiences are real, sees who is doing it.<br />
<br />
Even considering the body only, there is no objective line between birth and conception distinguishing “humans” from “nonpersons”, or between “meaningful life” and life which courts are free to terminate.6 Without such a line, there can be no stage of gestation at which killing a baby can be objectively distinguished from murder. No baby is safe while that line remains arbitrary. <br />
<br />
The failure of some to grasp the humanity of babies at any given stage is a dangerous basis for permitting killing, since as many fail to grasp the full humanity of quite a number of distinct groups of born persons.<br />
<br />
As Roe correctly established, it can be useful in clarifying who to count as a human with an unalienable right to life, to consult the religion from which that right was copied into America’s founding documents. But religions which oppose the foundation of American law – equal rights for all humans, merit little credibility in American courts when their claims justify destruction of an entire people group – such as the claim that souls do not enter bodies until around birth. There can be “free exercise” of religions which do not equally reverence all human life only to the extent their “exercise” does not violate the rights of others or the laws enacted to protect them.7<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] <br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #7 of 12: Congress has ''Already'' Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment already authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion, without allowing Congress to legalize it====<br />
<br />
<small>FORGET YOU READ this 32 word Statement and DON’T read farther – <br />
certainly not the footnotes – if you don’t want to question <br />
the near consensus of prolife leaders who say “we are helpless <br />
to outlaw abortion in every state before we get ANOTHER <br />
personhood law through Congress, if not a Life Amendment <br />
to the Constitution.” <> This is the 7th of 12 Statements <br />
designed to push courts out of the way of defending Life <br />
in every state when included in the Findings of Facts of <br />
prolife laws. The material below can make it clearer and stronger.</small><br />
<br />
Congress established in 2004 that: “‘unborn child’ means a child in utero, and the term ‘child in utero’...means a member of the species Homo Sapiens, at any stage of development, who is carried in the womb”, 18 U.S.C. 1841(d).1 <br />
<br />
This fact is not diminished by clause (c) which does not “permit [authorize] the prosecution of any person for...an abortion for which the consent of the pregnant woman...has been obtained.…”2 A law misaligned with facts does not block future lawmakers from making corrections, and states don’t need Congress’ “permission” to obey the 14th Amendment. <br />
<br />
The reason 18 U.S.C. 1841(d) has had no effect on the practice of legal abortion is not because of any deficiency in its authority to establish dispositive facts, but because no state law reviewed by SCOTUS has cited it to establish what Roe correctly said once “established” would “of course” require the end of legal abortion. <br />
<br />
Not only is the 2004 law unmitigated evidence of life strong enough to “collapse” legal abortion by itself, but it would not be stronger if it were an Amendment to the Constitution.3 No other Constitutional Amendment is relied on for evidence of a fact. An Amendment can bind courts. But establishment of the Facts Of Life by evidence presented, cited, and tested in court draws not only courts, but society, closer to reality.4<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #8 of 12: Roe, Dobbs, and the 14th Amendment agree: All Humans are “Persons”====<br />
<br />
<small>DON’T READ past this 11 word Statement <br />
unless you like to stare at where crazy lawyers <br />
ever got the idea that human babies aren’t people!</small><br />
<br />
Neither Roe nor Dobbs distinguished between “humans” and “persons” as if a “human” baby isn’t necessarily a “person”. [2] Nor does the 14th Amendment leave any human unprotected.<br />
<br />
Roe v. Wade equated the time an unborn child becomes “recognizably human” with the time the child becomes a “person”: “These disciplines variously approached the question [“of when life begins”] in terms of the point at which the embryo or fetus became ‘formed’ or recognizably human, or in terms of when a ‘person’ came into being, that is, infused with a ‘soul’ or ‘animated.’” 410 U.S. 113, 133(1973)<br />
<br />
Dobbs cites the belief that “a human person comes into being at conception” without distinguishing between the two words. [3] The word “person” in the 14th Amendment meant “An individual human being...man, woman, or child...consisting of body and soul.” The word “child” in that 1828 definition included unborn children, since to be “with child” meant to be pregnant. [4]<br />
<br />
Therefore the Amendment’s “nor shall any state deprive any person of life” and “equal protection” of every “person” means every human, including those unborn. Nothing about the first clause keeps later clauses from protecting unborn humans. [5]<br />
<br />
See also Wong Wing v. United States, 163 U.S.228, 242 (1896), “The term ‘person’ is broad enough to include any and every human being within the jurisdiction of the republic...This has been decided so often that the point does not require argument.” Steinberg v. Brown 321 F. Supp. 741 (N.D. Ohio, 1970) “[o]nce human life has commenced, the constitutional protections found in the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments impose upon the state a duty of safeguarding it”. [6]<br />
<br />
The word “persons” in the 14th Amendment means all who are IN FACT humans. Had it been only for those who are legally recognized as human, every deprivation of fundamental rights would be “constitutional” so long as a law or ruling questions whether its victims are “persons in the whole sense”.<br />
<br />
Although Dobbs showed by disproving the opposite that reverence for all human life from fertilization was “deeply rooted in America’s law and traditions”, that is not why rights merit 14th Amendment protection. By the “deeply rooted” test, slavery would be legal today, since freedom for slaves had zero historical support.<br />
<br />
Nor does it matter if the Amendment authors even wanted to protect all humans. In fact, it doesn’t matter if there is a 14th Amendment. If law is not equal upon its operation on all humans, which is the very definition of the word “law” as developed by Samuel Rutherford’s “Lex Rex” and Blackstone and adopted by America’s founders, to that extent there is, by definition, no “rule of law”, no restraint upon the “strong” to not tyrannize the “weak”.<br />
<br />
There is a direct test of whether babies merit 14th Amendment protection that does not require a romp through history: [7] see if their parents are humans.<br />
<br />
“To say that the test of equal protection should be the ‘legal’ rather than the biological relationship is to avoid the issue. For the Equal Protection Clause necessarily limits the authority of a State [or its judges] to draw such ‘legal’ lines as it chooses.” Glona, 391 U.S. 73, 75 (1968) [8]<br />
<br />
FOOTNOTES: see [[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
<small>The footnotes are enriched by selections from the Amicus Briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson by: Lee J. Strang <> Scholars of Jurisprudence John M. Finnis and Robert P. George <> Mary Kay Bacallao Advocating for Unborn Children <> Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide <> and by selections from the 1996 debate between Judge Robert Bork and Professor Nathan Schluetter</small><br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #9 of 12: When pregnancies develop into medical emergencies requiring separation of mother and child to save the mother, the child has an equally fundamental right to life and medical care.====<br />
<br />
A legislature’s balancing of their interests cannot, therefore, be reviewed by “strict scrutiny”.2 Nor does alleged insufficiency of a “medical emergency” exception from a general abortion ban justify a court overturning the ban in the 99% of cases where no emergency is alleged.3 Legislatures are better equipped to deliberate about and secure the rights of all citizens than courts whose focus is the parties before them.4<br />
<br />
SCOTUS never denied that a legislature’s “personhood” statements in an abortion ban are strong evidence.5 That evidence is not mitigated by a ban’s exceptions.6 It is not made irrelevant because baby killers “rely” on killing babies.7 28/130 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
Fundamental Right: This is a term not found in the Constitution but made up by SCOTUS for the rights SCOTUS makes up which often displace rights actually listed in the Constitution. Justice Clarence Thomas is eloquent on this point. More about this later.<br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: A Foundation for Moral Law <> Pennsylvania Pro-Life Federation <> 396 State Legislators from 41 States</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #10 of 12: Tyranny over any class of humans by any other is prohibited by the Constitution, and by the Declaration, which gives the purpose of the Constitution and rests its own authority on the revelation of God1 in the Bible====<br />
<br />
Roe v Wade was not out of line to consult “those trained in... theology” who study souls, as well as doctors who study bodies, to clarify who to count as human with an unalienable right to life.3 <br />
<br />
America’s Freedom springs from “all men are created equal” and “equal protection of the laws” for all humans even if their looks, language, wealth, strength, ancestry, power, or faith are different.4 These rights have proven such a blessing to the world that their source, the Bible, deserves the fair hearing owed any witness whose reliability has been confirmed, when it promises still greater blessings if we will equally protect humans whose physical size is different.5 <br />
<br />
Its testimony is not “cumulative”, but “probative”.6 It is not to be feared as dispositive or compulsory: American freedom balances human understanding of how best to apply Biblical principles to government against the willingness of voting majorities to follow those principles. Even that is a Biblical principle legitimized in 1 Samuel 8.7 <br />
<br />
The history of slavery, Prohibition, and abortion illustrate the “willingness” factor. The probative value of the testimony of God is proved by the fact that without it, slavery would never have ended, and the prolife movement would never have begun. Which makes it probative to observe that not only the 14th Amendment, but also the revelation of God, requires this state, as it does every state, to outlaw all trampling of fundamental rights of any class of people, including abortion of babies.8 Where the two authorities say the same thing, the Bible, for all its alleged ambiguity, is better understood and more trusted than the Constitution which has indeed proven “a thing of wax” in the nimble fingers of even the most scrupulous judges.9 <br />
<br />
Without God – without belief in a more objective standard of right and wrong than the “value” that voters place on “different” people through “evolving community standards”, it is impossible to understand fundamental rights.10 <br />
<br />
Courts have demonstrated this impossibility by so often confusing abominations for rights, decimating those whom Jesus said “forbid them not to come unto Me”, denying that He created them, murdering 17% of them, sodomizing 20% of the survivors, and censoring 100% of His teachings in schools.11 <br />
<br />
That destruction of the 14th Amendment (1868) began when “Substantive Due Process”, pioneered in Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857), was applied in United States v. Cruikshank 92 U. S. 542 (1876) to acquit a white Democrat mililtia of murdering “as many as 165” black Republicans and burning down the courthouse they were defending.12 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring God does not “establish religion”. It does not compel belief, action or endorsement. It simply allows judges and voters to make informed decisions. It is part of fact-finding. It is part of reasoning. Part of embracing reality. Part of examining “the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth”. Judges must stop punishing people for telling the truth just because the truth favors God.13 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring the Bible does not require equal weight for claims of religions that deny equal rights for all.14 <br />
<br />
For example, some claim “souls” don’t enter babies until long after fertilization, or even long after birth.15 Their claims do not “cancel” the mountain of consensus of court-recognized fact finders that souls are present from the beginning. Our Constitution and laws reject their unequal rights, and are appropriately wary of their rationales for their unequal rights. The credibility of every witness is not equal. Credibility is earned. <br />
There can be “free exercise” of religions hostile to “equal protection of the laws” only to the extent their “exercise” does not threaten the rights of others or violate the laws enacted to protect them – laws ultimately decided by voting majorities, hopefully well informed through the uncensoring of reality.16 39/520 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms: <br />
<br />
'''Cumulative''': testimony so redundant that it wastes the court’s time<br />
Dispositive: testimony so strong that it settles the issue with no more<br />
Probative: probative facts establish, or contribute to, proof. Probative value is the degree of relevance of evidence. <br />
<br />
'''Prohibition''': From 1920 to 1932, drinking (alcohol) was made illegal, banned by an actual Constitutional Amendment. Actual alcohol consumption dropped by about 50%, or at least that is how much Cirrhosis of the Liver cases dropped. During that time the drop in drinking led to an economic boom, called the “Roaring Twenties”, which unfortunately were not remembered for their prosperity but for their immorality. In 1928, the prosperity collapsed into a “Great Depression” due to cheating by stock market investors. In 1932 Americans wanted liquor so bad they ratified another Constitutional Amendment repealing the 1920 Amendment. <br />
<br />
'''Substantive Due Process''': As Justice Clarence Thomas eloquently explains – see Statement #11 footnotes, this phrase was made up by SCOTUS to justify making up what it calls “fundamental rights” as its tool of repealing laws it doesn’t like. It gets its name from the SCOTUS claim that the “Due Process” clause of the 14th Amendment gives SCOTUS its authority to make up rights and call them “fundamental”. But “Due Process” only meant the legal procedures which everyone must be given equally, to defend their rights in court when necessary. The phrase has nothing to do with identifying what rights are protectable. But “Substantive” means those rights we care about, that the Constitution protects. Like freedom of speech or religion. Because “substantive” means substantial, serious rights, and “due process” has nothing to do with identifying any rights, the LONANG Institute observes in Statement #11 notes that “substantive due process” is an oxymoron. <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: Foundation for Moral Law and Lutherans for Life <> Jewish Prolife Foundation <> LONANG Institute <> U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and Other Religious Organizations <> Claremont Institute’s Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #11 of 12: The 14th Amendment gives federal courts no “due process” authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the “right” to murder, and gives Congress no authority to legalize violations of Constitutional Rights, like taking a baby’s right to Life====<br />
<br />
The sole federal authority over state laws regarding the rights of their own citizens is through the 14th Amendment, Sections One and Five.1 Contrary to SCOTUS rulings, the 14th Amendment explicitly provides:<br />
<br />
* '''Congress authorized, not courts.''' Congress, not courts, determines the manner and scope of federal intervention in states whose laws don’t protect their citizens’ rights.2 Congress is not limited to enforcing only those rights of which SCOTUS approves, nor only to the extent that SCOTUS approves,3 nor only when state governments, not individuals, directly violate rights.4 <br />
<br />
* Federal courts aren’t permitted to stop either states or Congress from protecting enumerated rights (like Life), or to repeal their laws for conflicting with unenumerated [not listed in the Constitution] “rights” (like the “right” to murder babies), or to intervene in states’ protection of rights beyond prosecuting violations of federal laws.5 <br />
<br />
* Nor can Congress stop states from protecting enumerated rights. Neither Congress nor federal courts may overturn a state law protecting the lives of unborn babies from surgical abortion, chemical abortion, or contraceptives.6<br />
<br />
* The rights subject to federal enforcement are not those made up by SCOTUS allegedly based on the “Due Process” clause,7 but those listed in the Constitution, referred to as “privileges and immunities”8 (including, for unborn babies, the “privilege” of life and “immunity” from “cruel and unusual punishment” and execution “without due process of law”).9 <br />
* Enumerated Rights recognized before the Constitution existed are not excluded from Congressional intervention.10<br />
<br />
* '''“Substantive Due Process”''' is the sophistry by which SCOTUS turned the Constitution’s Authority to Define Rights, and Congress’ 14th Amendment Section 5 Authority to Enforce Rights, into its own authority to reclassify abominations as “rights”.11 It is an illegal, unconstitutional, Freedom-crushing fraud from Hell fomenting a long line of Landmark Abomination Cases.12 <br />
<br />
<small>Mini-lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Due Process:''' The duty of courts to give all parties to cases the fair and equal procedures and opportunities for defending themselves.<br />
<br />
(This argument for ending SCOTUS’ long line of Landmark Abomination Cases continues in Part Two of this book where its focus on SCOTUS-mandated murder of babies created in the Image of God is extended to SCOTUS’ censorship of God Himself.) <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amici who filed briefs in Dobbs v. Jackson: Lonang Institute <> Christian Legal Society <> AfricanAmerican, Hispanic, Roman Catholic and Protestant Religious and Civil Rights Organizations <> Senators Josh Hawley, Mike Lee, and Ted Cruz. And from Judge Robert Bork <> Nathan Schlueter, Professor of Philosophy and Religion, Hillsdale College, (when he debated Judge Bork in 2003 he was assistant professor of pre-law and political science at St. Ambrose University. Author, “Unborn Persons and the Fourteenth Amendment.” 2002.) <> Erwin Chemerinsky, Dean of Berkeley Law School <> Legal Information Institute, Cornell University <> Justice Clarence Thomas, dissents and concurrences <> justia.com <> James Gray Pope, Professor of Law and Sidney Reitman Scholar, Rutgers University School of Law <> Libby Adler professor of law and women’s, gender, and sexuality studies, Northeastern University Christmas, 2023''</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #12 of 12:Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable. The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives.====<br />
<br />
Any judge interfering with this state’s compliance with the 14th Amendment and its ancient authority to protect its people1 – the central reason governments exist, is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders,2 and is guilty of exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide through an unconstitutional ruling,3 which exceeds the judicial powers given by any Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment.4The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives, including (1) giving the state Supreme Court original jurisdiction over any challenge to a law, (2) requiring that review be expedited, (3) requiring a supermajority of the Court to suspend a law, (4) questioning justices in a public hearing about the constitutionality of their ruling, and (5) overturning the ruling with a supermajority of the legislature.5 <br />
<br />
Should any federal judge so interfere with this state’s constitutional duty, this state appeals to its congressional delegation to examine similar grounds for disciplinary action,6 along with exercising its Article III, Section 2, paragraph 2 authority to make “exceptions” and “regulations” designed to end SCOTUS’ long line of landmark abomination cases. This state also appeals to its congressional delegation to exercise its life-saving and rights-protecting authority under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment whose plain words give Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of Rights,7 which subsumes the authority to define their scope and to balance competing interests, while the “privileges and immunities” clause identifies as protectable rights those listed in the Constitution.8 <br />
<br />
Official world-wide definitions of “crimes against humanity” apply “to representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission”, whether elected representatives or unelected judges.”9<br />
<br />
Any court review of this law must be expedited, because lives are lost with each day that courts delay.10 7/230 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of Legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Malfeasance in office:''' official misconduct; violation of a public trust or obligation; specifically, the doing of an act which is positively unlawful or wrongful.<br />
<br />
'''Subsumes:''' Includes. To include or place within something larger or more comprehensive: encompass as a subordinate or component element red, green, and yellow are subsumed under the term "color" <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: 396 State Legislators from 41 States <> Melinda Thybault/Moral Outcry <> and by Matthew J. Franck, Director of the William E. and Carol G. Simon Center on Religion and the Constitution at the Witherspoon Institute and visiting lecturer in politics at Princeton University</small></div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Reversing_Landmark_Abomination_Cases&diff=50367Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases2024-01-02T04:53:22Z<p>DaveLeach: /* Statement of Facts #11 of 12: The 14th Amendment gives federal courts no “due process” authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the “right” to murder, and gives Congress no authority to legalize violations of Const...</p>
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<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters<br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion</span><br />
<br />
by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal<br />
''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal<br />
<span style="color:brown"><br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen <br />
<br />
by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 18:06, 15 October 2023 (UTC)<br />
<br />
=Introduction=<br />
<br />
This book offers twelve statements of fact about babies and abortion which I challenge any voter, lawyer, lawmaker, or judge to refute. Their footnotes contain nuggets from the 140 "Amicus" briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' (2022), the ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade. These statements are designed to soften the resistance of voters to outlawing baby murder, when presented in public, and to force judges to outlaw abortion in every state, when presented in court. <br />
<br />
They are truths designed to be so unignorable, that when any lawmaker includes them in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, in any state, prodeath fury will help publicize them with each advance through legislative deadlines. When friends of babies see them survive scrutiny, the force of these truths will grow like a snowball rolling down a hill. <br />
<br />
But murdering babies is only the most egregious of many Landmark Abomination Cases. Their common thread is usurping authority which the Constitution assigns to others, and equating the Bible with spurious religions. “Never let a crisis go to waste”, say the enemies of God, but God is the true master of turning evil into an opportunity for good. It’s time. Let’s end the Supreme Court’s war against God.<br />
<br />
The very fact that abortion is the worst of the ways the United States Supreme Court has turned American law upside down creates an opportunity to heal that branch of our government, and heal all the harm to our nation and its culture and morals that it has caused. As Professor Nathan Schluetter at Hillsdale College observes, “We must not let this opportunity pass to boldly challenge the prevailing jurisprudence and its attendant epistemological and moral skepticism with respect to abortion.”<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
It is the '''fact''' that unborn babies are living human children that makes killing them murder. It’s not what any ''law'' says about it, or even what the Constitution says about it. That’s what leaves ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' on the edge of reality, by treating this fact as something for voters to figure out, not on the basis of whether babies are ''in fact'' people but on the basis of some “value” they place on ''little'' people. <br />
<br />
That '''fact''' is what makes <u>the consensus of court-recognized fact finders</u> a stronger legal reason to end legal abortion than a Life Amendment, and a powerful social reason in the Court of Public Opinion able to soften hearts to the silent screams of Jesus' little brothers and His quiet knocking on hearts' doors. Which makes it insane for prolifers to not even mention this legally dispositive consensus in each and every prolife court case, and every “finding of fact” in prolife legislation, along with leveling with the public about the Scriptures which are the real reason we even care.<br />
<br />
[[File:Cover_Cartoon.jpg]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
Why these solutions may help even where abortion is already outlawed<br />
<br />
(1) They could defeat a national abortion legalization.<br />
<br />
(2) They could help you sue a nearby “blue state” for helping its baby killers murder your children. <br />
<br />
(3) They could help if your district judges join the courtroom rebellion against Dobbs in other states.<br />
<br />
(4) They could help meet challenges in the Court of Public Opinion, for example through a Resolution that irrefutably addresses every objection you have ever heard, as understandable to voters as it is irrefutable to judges. That would help the public see through future judicial gaslighting, and support judicial reform: ie. www.savetheworld .saltshaker.us/wiki/Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_ stop_judges_from_legislating<br />
<br />
(5) I could sure use your feedback. Proverbs 15:22. <br />
<br />
----<br />
<center>'''Ending legal abortion everywhere in close to a year<br />
(the goal of the following bill language)<br />
<br>'''requires a law whose Findings of Facts: '''<br />
</center><br />
<br />
<br />
* '''contain evidence which no judge can squarely address and keep abortion legal anywhere:''' that unborn babies are real people – established by the (unanimous) consensus of court-recognized factfinders: juries, expert witnesses, 38 states, judges, and Congress;<br />
<br />
* '''present its evidence in a way that is clear and persuasive to voters,''' to help them resist judicial and media gaslighting; (See below for “Why court-recognized fact finders persuade Voters”)<br />
<br />
* '''address misunderstandings about abortion jurisprudence''' that divide prolifers, intimidate lawyers, and blind judges;<br />
<br />
'''AND WHOSE PENALTIES'''<br />
<br />
* '''restrict some aspect of abortion substantially enough''' that THEY can't be defended as a mere regulation with some other legitimate government purpose than saving lives. The restriction must be profound enough that its only possible defense is that it saves human lives. That will force courts to address the evidence that babies are fully human;<br />
<br />
* '''provide no distractions that let judges rule on some technicality and ignore the evidence that the law would save lives.''' A perfect law that addresses everything from exceptions to contraception multiplies a judge’s opportunity to say “we don’t need to reach the issue of when life begins because the law fails on a lesser issue.” A simple yet substantial restriction, with “findings” that address the legal obstacles, will survive courts, which will get courts out of the way of saving life, which will free lawmakers to work out the challenging details with time to get a comprehensive solution right and with hope that they won’t waste their time; <br />
<br />
* '''list specific penalties for specific situations,''' rather than broadly stated goals such as “babies are to be protected as much as adults”, leaving prosecutors and judges to guess what to punish, or how, in situations where evidence and culpability are different; <br />
<br />
* '''contain a “life of the mother” exception''' whose applicability is clear enough that mothers are not denied life-saving care until doctors are assured by lawyers that said care will not put the doctors in jail; and<br />
<br />
'''THE LAW SHOULD ALSO order courts to “expedite” any review,''' “because lives are lost with each day that courts delay”. <br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate!)<br />
<br />
More ideas: [[Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_stop_judges_from_legislating]]<br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate! See below for Expedited Review federal rules.) <br />
<br />
WORD COUNTS: Using only the first boldfaced paragraph of each of these 12 Findings, in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, will total about 200 words. The complete Findings, without footnotes, total nearly 3000 words. For the advantages of including enough information in a prolife law for the Findings to defend themselves, see “Too Lengthy?” below. <br />
<br />
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: I am not a lawyer. But writing about prolife legal defenses designed to bring legal abortion to an end, and Scriptures calling for that goal, for 25 years in my Prayer * Action News, being uncertified as a lawyer, has created the opportunity for a remarkable interaction with Planned Barrenhoods priciest lawyers. Because news reporters wouldn’t report that my reasoning was designed as legal defenses in court, or that they were grounded in the Bible, what that left was their accusation that I advocated crime; whereas had my defenses been successful they would have allowed citizens to stop murderers legally, putting an end to the reason citizens took action. <br />
<br />
__TOC__<br />
<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and family, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge inaction deny themselves Life More Abundantly. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget: free wisdom, guaranteed success===<br />
<br />
'''John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
James 1:5 If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, [without finding fault]; and it shall be given him. 6 But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering.''' (Gr. διακρινω not withdrawn from, ie. by lack of support from actions, or opposed, ie. by indecision) <br />
<br />
'''Matthew 21:21 ...If ye have faith, and doubt not''' (Gr. διακρινω) ...'''ye shall say unto this mountain, Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea; it shall be done. 22 And all things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive.'''<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and families, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge their own inaction deny themselves, not just their neighbors, Life More Abundantly.<br />
<br />
If you are not satisfied with life less abundantly – ongoing slaughter of innocents – you won’t be satisfied now that the fate of babies is decided by the “value” that voters place on little people. You will keep searching for a strategy to end all the slaughter: to both outlaw it, and make it unthinkable to all but the worst of murderers. <br />
<br />
If you believe you ''will'' reach every good goal you pursue with all your being, Matthew 21:21-22, you won’t be turned from ending the slaughter in every state by experts who tell you that is impossible which rules out a strategy for achieving it. You will search until you find God’s way to do God’s will. <br />
<br />
You won’t say “I'm not smart enough to question prolife legal authorities who advise giving up”, if you believe James 1:5 which promises you all the wisdom you need to do good. Nor will you ever say you are not smart enough to read and understand legal briefs, court rulings, or to reason with lawmakers, lawyers, and prolife leaders, as necessary.<br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will not excuse yourself from God’s call because you can’t talk well, like Moses, whom God answered “Who made mouths?” Exodus 4:11. Nor will you excuse yourself to God, saying you are but a child against the world’s superbrains, like Jeremiah, whom God answered, “Stop saying that! It is MY words you will speak, and I am no child!” Jeremiah 1:6-8. <br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will shine God’s light wherever you find Darkness, Matthew 5:13-16. Since nothing is darker than murdering your own baby, you will seek God’s help as you oppose this evil, and none of these excuses will withdraw you from action.<br />
<br />
===Final Warning: read this at your own risk===<br />
<br />
Warning: read at your own risk. Rough reading Ahead, that may knock you from your TV chair.<br />
<br />
'''Findings of Facts which No Judge can Squarely Address and Keep Abortion Legal'''<br />
<br />
=Part 1: Authority of Court-Recognized Fact Finders=<br />
<br />
<span style="color:grey"><small>''Try to imagine how a judge, reviewing a prolife law with these Findings of Facts, would be able to dodge this evidence - in fact, see if you can find ANYONE who can ''refute'' these facts - as opposed to not ''caring'' about facts - that is, not caring about reality:''</small></span><br />
<br />
====Statement of Fact #1 of 12: Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let any state legalize====<br />
<br />
'''Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let ''any'' state legalize.'''<br />
<br />
No fact can be more legally established than the fact that “life begins” at fertilization, being the consensus of every American legal authority who has taken a position, in every category of court-recognized finders of facts: juries,2 thousands of expert witnesses who were not contested,3 38 state legislatures,4 individual judges,5 and Congress.6 <br />
<br />
No legal authority has ruled that any unborn baby of a human is not in fact a human person, or that “life begins” any later than fertilization.7 <br />
<br />
No state can keep abortion legal now that this fact is established. This is so obvious that even Roe v. Wade said “of course”, and the lawyer for the abortionists agreed.8 <br />
For most public issues, disagreement is over facts.9 The only disagreement about abortion is between unanimous fact finders and those who don't care about facts.10 A court that won’t address the facts that justify and necessitate a law, or hear evidence of those facts, violates Due Process and has no legitimate jurisdiction to review that law.11 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 1 + Footnotes]]<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? <br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
<br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
<br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True. <br />
<br />
<br />
</span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget #2: The Cost of Success===<br />
<br />
'''Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? '''<br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True.<br />
<br />
=====Statement of Facts #2 of 12: Courts Accept the Fact-Finding Authority of Legislatures, Juries, Experts for the same good reasons their findings persuade the public.=====<br />
<br />
SCOTUS must accept legislative findings of facts that are not obviously irrational. “..the existence of facts supporting the legislative judgment is to be presumed...not to be pronounced unconstitutional unless in the light of the facts made known or generally assumed it is of such a character as to preclude the assumption that it rests upon some rational basis within the knowledge and experience of the legislators....” U.S. v. Carolene Products, 304 U.S. 144, 152 (1938).1<br />
<br />
Besides the court-recognized fact finding authority of legislatures, courts must conform their rulings to laws until such time as courts declare laws unconstitutional. No court has overturned the “unborn victims of violence” laws (based on “human babies are people”) of 39 states and Congress, despite many challenges.2<br />
<br />
To do so would require a court to positively affirm that human life does not begin until much later, which no legal authority has done, and for which no evidence exists.<br />
<br />
'''Legislatures'''. Lawmakers are there by the choice of a majority of voters. They are bombarded by information from experts. They are scrutinized by other lawmakers. Many are lawyers, some of whom are constitutional scholars and past or future judges. They set the salaries of judges, and have the power to hold impeachment trials of judges. Congress, the national legislature, scrutinizes Supreme Court justices. <br />
<br />
Many Congressmen are equally qualified: 15 U.S. Senators have served on the Supreme Court, and more were nominated.3 <br />
<br />
'''Juries''' are tested for impartiality. They are educated by the most qualified expert witnesses available. They study as long as necessary to establish truth – sometimes for months.4<br />
<br />
'''Expert Witnesses''' are the best experts money can buy, and they are scrutinized by the other side’s experts.5 <br />
<br />
It is for strong reasons that the findings of court-recognized fact finders are as respected in court as in the Court of Public Opinion.6<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 2 + Footnotes]]<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Mark 8:38 '''Whosoever therefore shall be ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful generation; of him also shall the Son of man be ashamed''', when he cometh in the glory of his Father with the holy angels.<br />
<br />
We Bible believing conservatives need to quit blaming social media and CIA censorship for our failures and stop censoring ourselves. <br />
<br />
I offer a way of stating evidence which no judge, news reporter, Democrat, or unbeliever can refute, along with answering objections that have crippled prolife messaging and legal strategy. But we despair of reaching those who stop their ears to evidence. “What’s the use of tightening our message? You’re preaching to the choir. We know babies are people but those other people have their opinion too.”<br />
<br />
I’m not "preaching to the choir". I’m passing out a new composition to the choir for a coming TV special.<br />
<br />
Most of those who won’t listen, won’t vote either, rendering their willful ignorance relatively benign. Stop worrying about them. All they will do is hate you, lie about you, wreck your business – childish stuff. We progress by clearly articulating to the extent possible. The same Bible which is the main reason we care about babies promises all the protection we need to finish what we are here to do.<br />
<br />
It isn’t just saving baby bodies where we self censor. Adult souls are lost. We hold back sharing what we know about God. Snap out of it. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #3 of 12: The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS====<br />
<br />
From Roe (1973) through Dobbs (2022), SCOTUS evaded that core issue.1 <br />
<br />
SCOTUS never ruled babies Non-Persons “as a Matter of Law”, as lower courts allege.2 Roe made that fact not only relevant, but dispositive with a holding which no court has disputed even though Roe’s main holding was overturned:3 <br />
<br />
“[Prolifers] argue that the fetus is a ‘person’ within the language and meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment....If this suggestion of personhood is established, the [abortionist’s] case, of course, collapses, for the fetus’ right to life would then be guaranteed specifically by the [14th] Amendment [thus outlawing abortion in EVERY state]. The [abortionist’s lawyer] conceded as much....”4<br />
<br />
Dobbs explicitly left this statement of the obvious untouched, saying “our decision is not based on any view about when a State should regard pre-natal life as having rights or legally cognizable interests....”5 Dobbs did not say babies aren’t people. Dobbs did not say voters should still decide whether babies can be murdered in the face of proof that babies are in fact people.6 Dobbs left in place Roe’s observation that “establishment” of this fact, independently of any law, ruling, or future constitutional amendment,7 dictates whether abortion is legally recognizable as a right or as a crime.8<br />
<br />
This established fact is as relevant today as when Roe said “of course” it is.<br />
<br />
This established fact is not disestablished by any judge’s alleged inability to understand it.9<br />
<br />
This established FACT is not made irrelevant by any judge’s theory that the legal right of little humans to live is “impossible” to determine so it should be decided by their value to big humans.10<br />
<br />
If only those legally recognized as “persons” were people, slavery could still be legal and the 14th Amendment would mean nothing. Slavery states would merely need to classify their victims as only 3/5 human.11 The Amendment protects those who are IN FACT people – what is irrelevant is whether babies are people “as a matter of law”.12 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 3 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #4 of 12: Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life====<br />
<br />
Detectable heartbeats and brain waves are evidence that a person has not yet died, throughout state and federal law.1 Reason demands they be accepted as evidence that a person has begun to live.2<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 4 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #5 of 12: Legislatures should regulate abortion, as Dobbs held, just as legislatures regulate the prosecution of all other murders====<br />
<br />
But not in the sense of absolute discretion to leave wholesale murders of a supposedly unwanted group of humans completely unregulated. That interpretation of Dobbs’ holding is premised on a “mistake of fact”, which is an official exception to Stare Decisis. 1<br />
<br />
The “Mistake of Fact” that is the premise of letting voters decide whether to continue judge-approved genocide according to the “value” they place on little people is that the humanity of babies of humans is either unknowable or irrelevant. That premise was explicit in Roe and Casey, and implicit in Dobbs.2 <br />
<br />
That is an “erroneous factual premise”. The fact that little unborn humans are humans is neither unknowable3 nor irrelevant. It is verifiable and dispositive.4 The consensus of court-recognized fact finders cures that knowledge deficit, canceling that interpretation of Dobbs’ holding, while reinforcing Dobbs’ other two holdings that “The Constitution does not confer a right to abortion” and “Roe and Casey are overruled”, and requiring the outlawing of baby killing in every state.5 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 5 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #6 of 12: The full humanity of a tiny physical body is hard for many to grasp. But what distinguishes us from animals isn’t physical, and has no known pre-conscious stage====<br />
<br />
DON’T READ past this 28 word paragraph unless you want <br />
an edge-of-your-seat adventure – legal ammunition <br />
against not only baby killing but also against the myth <br />
of the irrelevance of God in the reasoning of judges, <br />
lawmakers, and voters! Yet Roe v Wade, of all cases, <br />
"opened the door" with its sophomoric review of "theologians", <br />
and #6 comes charging through! <> The rest of this Statement <br />
is for lawmakers who want a stronger, clearer statement, <br />
and who have the stomach for the larger battle.<br />
<br />
Part of Roe’s definition of “person” was “infused with a soul”.1 Roe thus affirmed the belief of most of society, a belief logically demanded by the common knowledge that humans are distinguished from animals by consciousness which features a capacity for choices at variance with physical needs: to sacrifice one's interests for another,2 which is how John 15:13 defines “love”. And conversely, to destroy one’s own body.3<br />
<br />
These differences, along with self awareness and the capacity to choose between good and evil4 – to behave either as an angel or as a demon, can’t be explained by any known physical process. These differences justify greater legal protection of humans than of animals. <br />
<br />
Since a “soul” without consciousness has never been theorized and can’t be imagined, the consensus of fact finders is, in effect, that abortion kills babies with conscious souls. The lack of any physical explanation for a conscious soul rules out any reason to infer immaturity of consciousness from physical immaturity, and is consistent with the report in Luke 1:44 that a baby at 6 months heard a righteous voice [and/or felt the righteous Presence of God] and responded with joy,5 a response not everybody chooses, indicating that even the capacity for choosing between good and evil precedes birth. And also indicating that when a baby is killed by dismemberment, acid, or sucking out the brain, a self-aware conscious soul feels the pain, understands the cruelty, and if out-of-body near-death experiences are real, sees who is doing it.<br />
<br />
Even considering the body only, there is no objective line between birth and conception distinguishing “humans” from “nonpersons”, or between “meaningful life” and life which courts are free to terminate.6 Without such a line, there can be no stage of gestation at which killing a baby can be objectively distinguished from murder. No baby is safe while that line remains arbitrary. <br />
<br />
The failure of some to grasp the humanity of babies at any given stage is a dangerous basis for permitting killing, since as many fail to grasp the full humanity of quite a number of distinct groups of born persons.<br />
<br />
As Roe correctly established, it can be useful in clarifying who to count as a human with an unalienable right to life, to consult the religion from which that right was copied into America’s founding documents. But religions which oppose the foundation of American law – equal rights for all humans, merit little credibility in American courts when their claims justify destruction of an entire people group – such as the claim that souls do not enter bodies until around birth. There can be “free exercise” of religions which do not equally reverence all human life only to the extent their “exercise” does not violate the rights of others or the laws enacted to protect them.7<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] <br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #7 of 12: Congress has ''Already'' Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment already authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion, without allowing Congress to legalize it====<br />
<br />
<small>FORGET YOU READ this 32 word Statement and DON’T read farther – <br />
certainly not the footnotes – if you don’t want to question <br />
the near consensus of prolife leaders who say “we are helpless <br />
to outlaw abortion in every state before we get ANOTHER <br />
personhood law through Congress, if not a Life Amendment <br />
to the Constitution.” <> This is the 7th of 12 Statements <br />
designed to push courts out of the way of defending Life <br />
in every state when included in the Findings of Facts of <br />
prolife laws. The material below can make it clearer and stronger.</small><br />
<br />
Congress established in 2004 that: “‘unborn child’ means a child in utero, and the term ‘child in utero’...means a member of the species Homo Sapiens, at any stage of development, who is carried in the womb”, 18 U.S.C. 1841(d).1 <br />
<br />
This fact is not diminished by clause (c) which does not “permit [authorize] the prosecution of any person for...an abortion for which the consent of the pregnant woman...has been obtained.…”2 A law misaligned with facts does not block future lawmakers from making corrections, and states don’t need Congress’ “permission” to obey the 14th Amendment. <br />
<br />
The reason 18 U.S.C. 1841(d) has had no effect on the practice of legal abortion is not because of any deficiency in its authority to establish dispositive facts, but because no state law reviewed by SCOTUS has cited it to establish what Roe correctly said once “established” would “of course” require the end of legal abortion. <br />
<br />
Not only is the 2004 law unmitigated evidence of life strong enough to “collapse” legal abortion by itself, but it would not be stronger if it were an Amendment to the Constitution.3 No other Constitutional Amendment is relied on for evidence of a fact. An Amendment can bind courts. But establishment of the Facts Of Life by evidence presented, cited, and tested in court draws not only courts, but society, closer to reality.4<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #8 of 12: Roe, Dobbs, and the 14th Amendment agree: All Humans are “Persons”====<br />
<br />
<small>DON’T READ past this 11 word Statement <br />
unless you like to stare at where crazy lawyers <br />
ever got the idea that human babies aren’t people!</small><br />
<br />
Neither Roe nor Dobbs distinguished between “humans” and “persons” as if a “human” baby isn’t necessarily a “person”. [2] Nor does the 14th Amendment leave any human unprotected.<br />
<br />
Roe v. Wade equated the time an unborn child becomes “recognizably human” with the time the child becomes a “person”: “These disciplines variously approached the question [“of when life begins”] in terms of the point at which the embryo or fetus became ‘formed’ or recognizably human, or in terms of when a ‘person’ came into being, that is, infused with a ‘soul’ or ‘animated.’” 410 U.S. 113, 133(1973)<br />
<br />
Dobbs cites the belief that “a human person comes into being at conception” without distinguishing between the two words. [3] The word “person” in the 14th Amendment meant “An individual human being...man, woman, or child...consisting of body and soul.” The word “child” in that 1828 definition included unborn children, since to be “with child” meant to be pregnant. [4]<br />
<br />
Therefore the Amendment’s “nor shall any state deprive any person of life” and “equal protection” of every “person” means every human, including those unborn. Nothing about the first clause keeps later clauses from protecting unborn humans. [5]<br />
<br />
See also Wong Wing v. United States, 163 U.S.228, 242 (1896), “The term ‘person’ is broad enough to include any and every human being within the jurisdiction of the republic...This has been decided so often that the point does not require argument.” Steinberg v. Brown 321 F. Supp. 741 (N.D. Ohio, 1970) “[o]nce human life has commenced, the constitutional protections found in the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments impose upon the state a duty of safeguarding it”. [6]<br />
<br />
The word “persons” in the 14th Amendment means all who are IN FACT humans. Had it been only for those who are legally recognized as human, every deprivation of fundamental rights would be “constitutional” so long as a law or ruling questions whether its victims are “persons in the whole sense”.<br />
<br />
Although Dobbs showed by disproving the opposite that reverence for all human life from fertilization was “deeply rooted in America’s law and traditions”, that is not why rights merit 14th Amendment protection. By the “deeply rooted” test, slavery would be legal today, since freedom for slaves had zero historical support.<br />
<br />
Nor does it matter if the Amendment authors even wanted to protect all humans. In fact, it doesn’t matter if there is a 14th Amendment. If law is not equal upon its operation on all humans, which is the very definition of the word “law” as developed by Samuel Rutherford’s “Lex Rex” and Blackstone and adopted by America’s founders, to that extent there is, by definition, no “rule of law”, no restraint upon the “strong” to not tyrannize the “weak”.<br />
<br />
There is a direct test of whether babies merit 14th Amendment protection that does not require a romp through history: [7] see if their parents are humans.<br />
<br />
“To say that the test of equal protection should be the ‘legal’ rather than the biological relationship is to avoid the issue. For the Equal Protection Clause necessarily limits the authority of a State [or its judges] to draw such ‘legal’ lines as it chooses.” Glona, 391 U.S. 73, 75 (1968) [8]<br />
<br />
FOOTNOTES: see [[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
<small>The footnotes are enriched by selections from the Amicus Briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson by: Lee J. Strang <> Scholars of Jurisprudence John M. Finnis and Robert P. George <> Mary Kay Bacallao Advocating for Unborn Children <> Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide <> and by selections from the 1996 debate between Judge Robert Bork and Professor Nathan Schluetter</small><br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #9 of 12: When pregnancies develop into medical emergencies requiring separation of mother and child to save the mother, the child has an equally fundamental right to life and medical care.====<br />
<br />
A legislature’s balancing of their interests cannot, therefore, be reviewed by “strict scrutiny”.2 Nor does alleged insufficiency of a “medical emergency” exception from a general abortion ban justify a court overturning the ban in the 99% of cases where no emergency is alleged.3 Legislatures are better equipped to deliberate about and secure the rights of all citizens than courts whose focus is the parties before them.4<br />
<br />
SCOTUS never denied that a legislature’s “personhood” statements in an abortion ban are strong evidence.5 That evidence is not mitigated by a ban’s exceptions.6 It is not made irrelevant because baby killers “rely” on killing babies.7 28/130 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
Fundamental Right: This is a term not found in the Constitution but made up by SCOTUS for the rights SCOTUS makes up which often displace rights actually listed in the Constitution. Justice Clarence Thomas is eloquent on this point. More about this later.<br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: A Foundation for Moral Law <> Pennsylvania Pro-Life Federation <> 396 State Legislators from 41 States</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #10 of 12: Tyranny over any class of humans by any other is prohibited by the Constitution, and by the Declaration, which gives the purpose of the Constitution and rests its own authority on the revelation of God1 in the Bible====<br />
<br />
Roe v Wade was not out of line to consult “those trained in... theology” who study souls, as well as doctors who study bodies, to clarify who to count as human with an unalienable right to life.3 <br />
<br />
America’s Freedom springs from “all men are created equal” and “equal protection of the laws” for all humans even if their looks, language, wealth, strength, ancestry, power, or faith are different.4 These rights have proven such a blessing to the world that their source, the Bible, deserves the fair hearing owed any witness whose reliability has been confirmed, when it promises still greater blessings if we will equally protect humans whose physical size is different.5 <br />
<br />
Its testimony is not “cumulative”, but “probative”.6 It is not to be feared as dispositive or compulsory: American freedom balances human understanding of how best to apply Biblical principles to government against the willingness of voting majorities to follow those principles. Even that is a Biblical principle legitimized in 1 Samuel 8.7 <br />
<br />
The history of slavery, Prohibition, and abortion illustrate the “willingness” factor. The probative value of the testimony of God is proved by the fact that without it, slavery would never have ended, and the prolife movement would never have begun. Which makes it probative to observe that not only the 14th Amendment, but also the revelation of God, requires this state, as it does every state, to outlaw all trampling of fundamental rights of any class of people, including abortion of babies.8 Where the two authorities say the same thing, the Bible, for all its alleged ambiguity, is better understood and more trusted than the Constitution which has indeed proven “a thing of wax” in the nimble fingers of even the most scrupulous judges.9 <br />
<br />
Without God – without belief in a more objective standard of right and wrong than the “value” that voters place on “different” people through “evolving community standards”, it is impossible to understand fundamental rights.10 <br />
<br />
Courts have demonstrated this impossibility by so often confusing abominations for rights, decimating those whom Jesus said “forbid them not to come unto Me”, denying that He created them, murdering 17% of them, sodomizing 20% of the survivors, and censoring 100% of His teachings in schools.11 <br />
<br />
That destruction of the 14th Amendment (1868) began when “Substantive Due Process”, pioneered in Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857), was applied in United States v. Cruikshank 92 U. S. 542 (1876) to acquit a white Democrat mililtia of murdering “as many as 165” black Republicans and burning down the courthouse they were defending.12 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring God does not “establish religion”. It does not compel belief, action or endorsement. It simply allows judges and voters to make informed decisions. It is part of fact-finding. It is part of reasoning. Part of embracing reality. Part of examining “the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth”. Judges must stop punishing people for telling the truth just because the truth favors God.13 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring the Bible does not require equal weight for claims of religions that deny equal rights for all.14 <br />
<br />
For example, some claim “souls” don’t enter babies until long after fertilization, or even long after birth.15 Their claims do not “cancel” the mountain of consensus of court-recognized fact finders that souls are present from the beginning. Our Constitution and laws reject their unequal rights, and are appropriately wary of their rationales for their unequal rights. The credibility of every witness is not equal. Credibility is earned. <br />
There can be “free exercise” of religions hostile to “equal protection of the laws” only to the extent their “exercise” does not threaten the rights of others or violate the laws enacted to protect them – laws ultimately decided by voting majorities, hopefully well informed through the uncensoring of reality.16 39/520 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms: <br />
<br />
'''Cumulative''': testimony so redundant that it wastes the court’s time<br />
Dispositive: testimony so strong that it settles the issue with no more<br />
Probative: probative facts establish, or contribute to, proof. Probative value is the degree of relevance of evidence. <br />
<br />
'''Prohibition''': From 1920 to 1932, drinking (alcohol) was made illegal, banned by an actual Constitutional Amendment. Actual alcohol consumption dropped by about 50%, or at least that is how much Cirrhosis of the Liver cases dropped. During that time the drop in drinking led to an economic boom, called the “Roaring Twenties”, which unfortunately were not remembered for their prosperity but for their immorality. In 1928, the prosperity collapsed into a “Great Depression” due to cheating by stock market investors. In 1932 Americans wanted liquor so bad they ratified another Constitutional Amendment repealing the 1920 Amendment. <br />
<br />
'''Substantive Due Process''': As Justice Clarence Thomas eloquently explains – see Statement #11 footnotes, this phrase was made up by SCOTUS to justify making up what it calls “fundamental rights” as its tool of repealing laws it doesn’t like. It gets its name from the SCOTUS claim that the “Due Process” clause of the 14th Amendment gives SCOTUS its authority to make up rights and call them “fundamental”. But “Due Process” only meant the legal procedures which everyone must be given equally, to defend their rights in court when necessary. The phrase has nothing to do with identifying what rights are protectable. But “Substantive” means those rights we care about, that the Constitution protects. Like freedom of speech or religion. Because “substantive” means substantial, serious rights, and “due process” has nothing to do with identifying any rights, the LONANG Institute observes in Statement #11 notes that “substantive due process” is an oxymoron. <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: Foundation for Moral Law and Lutherans for Life <> Jewish Prolife Foundation <> LONANG Institute <> U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and Other Religious Organizations <> Claremont Institute’s Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #11 of 12: The 14th Amendment gives federal courts no “due process” authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the “right” to murder, and gives Congress no authority to legalize violations of Constitutional Rights, like taking a baby’s right to Life====<br />
<br />
The sole federal authority over state laws regarding the rights of their own citizens is through the 14th Amendment, Sections One and Five.1 Contrary to SCOTUS rulings, the 14th Amendment explicitly provides:<br />
<br />
* '''Congress authorized, not courts.''' Congress, not courts, determines the manner and scope of federal intervention in states whose laws don’t protect their citizens’ rights.2 Congress is not limited to enforcing only those rights of which SCOTUS approves, nor only to the extent that SCOTUS approves,3 nor only when state governments, not individuals, directly violate rights.4 <br />
<br />
* Federal courts aren’t permitted to stop either states or Congress from protecting enumerated rights (like Life), or to repeal their laws for conflicting with unenumerated [not listed in the Constitution] “rights” (like the “right” to murder babies), or to intervene in states’ protection of rights beyond prosecuting violations of federal laws.5 <br />
<br />
* Nor can Congress stop states from protecting enumerated rights. Neither Congress nor federal courts may overturn a state law protecting the lives of unborn babies from surgical abortion, chemical abortion, or contraceptives.6<br />
<br />
* The rights subject to federal enforcement are not those made up by SCOTUS allegedly based on the “Due Process” clause,7 but those listed in the Constitution, referred to as “privileges and immunities”8 (including, for unborn babies, the “privilege” of life and “immunity” from “cruel and unusual punishment” and execution “without due process of law”).9 <br />
* Enumerated Rights recognized before the Constitution existed are not excluded from Congressional intervention.10<br />
<br />
* '''“Substantive Due Process”''' is the sophistry by which SCOTUS turned the Constitution’s Authority to Define Rights, and Congress’ 14th Amendment Section 5 Authority to Enforce Rights, into its own authority to reclassify abominations as “rights”.11 It is an illegal, unconstitutional, Freedom-crushing fraud from Hell fomenting a long line of Landmark Abomination Cases.12 <br />
<br />
<small>Mini-lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Due Process:''' The duty of courts to give all parties to cases the fair and equal procedures and opportunities for defending themselves.<br />
<br />
(This argument for ending SCOTUS’ long line of Landmark Abomination Cases continues in Part Two of this book where its focus on SCOTUS-mandated murder of babies created in the Image of God is extended to SCOTUS’ censorship of God Himself.) <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amici who filed briefs in Dobbs v. Jackson: Lonang Institute <> Christian Legal Society <> AfricanAmerican, Hispanic, Roman Catholic and Protestant Religious and Civil Rights Organizations <> Senators Josh Hawley, Mike Lee, and Ted Cruz. And from Judge Robert Bork <> Nathan Schlueter, Professor of Philosophy and Religion, Hillsdale College, (when he debated Judge Bork in 2003 he was assistant professor of pre-law and political science at St. Ambrose University. Author, “Unborn Persons and the Fourteenth Amendment.” 2002.) <> Erwin Chemerinsky, Dean of Berkeley Law School <> Legal Information Institute, Cornell University <> Justice Clarence Thomas, dissents and concurrences <> justia.com <> James Gray Pope, Professor of Law and Sidney Reitman Scholar, Rutgers University School of Law <> Libby Adler professor of law and women’s, gender, and sexuality studies, Northeastern University Christmas, 2023''</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #12 of 12: Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable====<br />
<br />
Any state judge interfering with this state’s compliance with the 14th Amendment and its ancient authority to protect its people1 – the central reason governments exist, is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders, and is guilty of exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide through an unconstitutional ruling, which exceeds the judicial powers given by the state Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment.2<br />
<br />
Should any federal judge so interfere, this state appeals to its congressional delegation to examine similar grounds for disciplinary action.3 <br />
<br />
This state also appeals to its congressional delegation to exercise its life-saving and rights-protecting authority under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment whose plain words give Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations Rights,4 which subsumes the authority to define their scope and balance competing interests, while the “privileges and immunities” clause identifies as protectable rights those listed in the Constitution.4<br />
<br />
<br />
''Footnotes will be edited and posted soon, God willing. A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''</div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Reversing_Landmark_Abomination_Cases&diff=50366Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases2024-01-02T04:52:01Z<p>DaveLeach: /* Statement of Facts #11 of 12: The 14th Amendment requires this state, as every state, to thoroughly outlaw abortion. Restrictions of abortions for the purpose of saving mothers cannot be reviewed by strict scrutiny,1 even though the safety of mother...</p>
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<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters<br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion</span><br />
<br />
by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal<br />
''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal<br />
<span style="color:brown"><br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen <br />
<br />
by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 18:06, 15 October 2023 (UTC)<br />
<br />
=Introduction=<br />
<br />
This book offers twelve statements of fact about babies and abortion which I challenge any voter, lawyer, lawmaker, or judge to refute. Their footnotes contain nuggets from the 140 "Amicus" briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' (2022), the ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade. These statements are designed to soften the resistance of voters to outlawing baby murder, when presented in public, and to force judges to outlaw abortion in every state, when presented in court. <br />
<br />
They are truths designed to be so unignorable, that when any lawmaker includes them in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, in any state, prodeath fury will help publicize them with each advance through legislative deadlines. When friends of babies see them survive scrutiny, the force of these truths will grow like a snowball rolling down a hill. <br />
<br />
But murdering babies is only the most egregious of many Landmark Abomination Cases. Their common thread is usurping authority which the Constitution assigns to others, and equating the Bible with spurious religions. “Never let a crisis go to waste”, say the enemies of God, but God is the true master of turning evil into an opportunity for good. It’s time. Let’s end the Supreme Court’s war against God.<br />
<br />
The very fact that abortion is the worst of the ways the United States Supreme Court has turned American law upside down creates an opportunity to heal that branch of our government, and heal all the harm to our nation and its culture and morals that it has caused. As Professor Nathan Schluetter at Hillsdale College observes, “We must not let this opportunity pass to boldly challenge the prevailing jurisprudence and its attendant epistemological and moral skepticism with respect to abortion.”<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
It is the '''fact''' that unborn babies are living human children that makes killing them murder. It’s not what any ''law'' says about it, or even what the Constitution says about it. That’s what leaves ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' on the edge of reality, by treating this fact as something for voters to figure out, not on the basis of whether babies are ''in fact'' people but on the basis of some “value” they place on ''little'' people. <br />
<br />
That '''fact''' is what makes <u>the consensus of court-recognized fact finders</u> a stronger legal reason to end legal abortion than a Life Amendment, and a powerful social reason in the Court of Public Opinion able to soften hearts to the silent screams of Jesus' little brothers and His quiet knocking on hearts' doors. Which makes it insane for prolifers to not even mention this legally dispositive consensus in each and every prolife court case, and every “finding of fact” in prolife legislation, along with leveling with the public about the Scriptures which are the real reason we even care.<br />
<br />
[[File:Cover_Cartoon.jpg]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
Why these solutions may help even where abortion is already outlawed<br />
<br />
(1) They could defeat a national abortion legalization.<br />
<br />
(2) They could help you sue a nearby “blue state” for helping its baby killers murder your children. <br />
<br />
(3) They could help if your district judges join the courtroom rebellion against Dobbs in other states.<br />
<br />
(4) They could help meet challenges in the Court of Public Opinion, for example through a Resolution that irrefutably addresses every objection you have ever heard, as understandable to voters as it is irrefutable to judges. That would help the public see through future judicial gaslighting, and support judicial reform: ie. www.savetheworld .saltshaker.us/wiki/Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_ stop_judges_from_legislating<br />
<br />
(5) I could sure use your feedback. Proverbs 15:22. <br />
<br />
----<br />
<center>'''Ending legal abortion everywhere in close to a year<br />
(the goal of the following bill language)<br />
<br>'''requires a law whose Findings of Facts: '''<br />
</center><br />
<br />
<br />
* '''contain evidence which no judge can squarely address and keep abortion legal anywhere:''' that unborn babies are real people – established by the (unanimous) consensus of court-recognized factfinders: juries, expert witnesses, 38 states, judges, and Congress;<br />
<br />
* '''present its evidence in a way that is clear and persuasive to voters,''' to help them resist judicial and media gaslighting; (See below for “Why court-recognized fact finders persuade Voters”)<br />
<br />
* '''address misunderstandings about abortion jurisprudence''' that divide prolifers, intimidate lawyers, and blind judges;<br />
<br />
'''AND WHOSE PENALTIES'''<br />
<br />
* '''restrict some aspect of abortion substantially enough''' that THEY can't be defended as a mere regulation with some other legitimate government purpose than saving lives. The restriction must be profound enough that its only possible defense is that it saves human lives. That will force courts to address the evidence that babies are fully human;<br />
<br />
* '''provide no distractions that let judges rule on some technicality and ignore the evidence that the law would save lives.''' A perfect law that addresses everything from exceptions to contraception multiplies a judge’s opportunity to say “we don’t need to reach the issue of when life begins because the law fails on a lesser issue.” A simple yet substantial restriction, with “findings” that address the legal obstacles, will survive courts, which will get courts out of the way of saving life, which will free lawmakers to work out the challenging details with time to get a comprehensive solution right and with hope that they won’t waste their time; <br />
<br />
* '''list specific penalties for specific situations,''' rather than broadly stated goals such as “babies are to be protected as much as adults”, leaving prosecutors and judges to guess what to punish, or how, in situations where evidence and culpability are different; <br />
<br />
* '''contain a “life of the mother” exception''' whose applicability is clear enough that mothers are not denied life-saving care until doctors are assured by lawyers that said care will not put the doctors in jail; and<br />
<br />
'''THE LAW SHOULD ALSO order courts to “expedite” any review,''' “because lives are lost with each day that courts delay”. <br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate!)<br />
<br />
More ideas: [[Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_stop_judges_from_legislating]]<br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate! See below for Expedited Review federal rules.) <br />
<br />
WORD COUNTS: Using only the first boldfaced paragraph of each of these 12 Findings, in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, will total about 200 words. The complete Findings, without footnotes, total nearly 3000 words. For the advantages of including enough information in a prolife law for the Findings to defend themselves, see “Too Lengthy?” below. <br />
<br />
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: I am not a lawyer. But writing about prolife legal defenses designed to bring legal abortion to an end, and Scriptures calling for that goal, for 25 years in my Prayer * Action News, being uncertified as a lawyer, has created the opportunity for a remarkable interaction with Planned Barrenhoods priciest lawyers. Because news reporters wouldn’t report that my reasoning was designed as legal defenses in court, or that they were grounded in the Bible, what that left was their accusation that I advocated crime; whereas had my defenses been successful they would have allowed citizens to stop murderers legally, putting an end to the reason citizens took action. <br />
<br />
__TOC__<br />
<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and family, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge inaction deny themselves Life More Abundantly. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget: free wisdom, guaranteed success===<br />
<br />
'''John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
James 1:5 If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, [without finding fault]; and it shall be given him. 6 But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering.''' (Gr. διακρινω not withdrawn from, ie. by lack of support from actions, or opposed, ie. by indecision) <br />
<br />
'''Matthew 21:21 ...If ye have faith, and doubt not''' (Gr. διακρινω) ...'''ye shall say unto this mountain, Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea; it shall be done. 22 And all things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive.'''<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and families, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge their own inaction deny themselves, not just their neighbors, Life More Abundantly.<br />
<br />
If you are not satisfied with life less abundantly – ongoing slaughter of innocents – you won’t be satisfied now that the fate of babies is decided by the “value” that voters place on little people. You will keep searching for a strategy to end all the slaughter: to both outlaw it, and make it unthinkable to all but the worst of murderers. <br />
<br />
If you believe you ''will'' reach every good goal you pursue with all your being, Matthew 21:21-22, you won’t be turned from ending the slaughter in every state by experts who tell you that is impossible which rules out a strategy for achieving it. You will search until you find God’s way to do God’s will. <br />
<br />
You won’t say “I'm not smart enough to question prolife legal authorities who advise giving up”, if you believe James 1:5 which promises you all the wisdom you need to do good. Nor will you ever say you are not smart enough to read and understand legal briefs, court rulings, or to reason with lawmakers, lawyers, and prolife leaders, as necessary.<br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will not excuse yourself from God’s call because you can’t talk well, like Moses, whom God answered “Who made mouths?” Exodus 4:11. Nor will you excuse yourself to God, saying you are but a child against the world’s superbrains, like Jeremiah, whom God answered, “Stop saying that! It is MY words you will speak, and I am no child!” Jeremiah 1:6-8. <br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will shine God’s light wherever you find Darkness, Matthew 5:13-16. Since nothing is darker than murdering your own baby, you will seek God’s help as you oppose this evil, and none of these excuses will withdraw you from action.<br />
<br />
===Final Warning: read this at your own risk===<br />
<br />
Warning: read at your own risk. Rough reading Ahead, that may knock you from your TV chair.<br />
<br />
'''Findings of Facts which No Judge can Squarely Address and Keep Abortion Legal'''<br />
<br />
=Part 1: Authority of Court-Recognized Fact Finders=<br />
<br />
<span style="color:grey"><small>''Try to imagine how a judge, reviewing a prolife law with these Findings of Facts, would be able to dodge this evidence - in fact, see if you can find ANYONE who can ''refute'' these facts - as opposed to not ''caring'' about facts - that is, not caring about reality:''</small></span><br />
<br />
====Statement of Fact #1 of 12: Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let any state legalize====<br />
<br />
'''Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let ''any'' state legalize.'''<br />
<br />
No fact can be more legally established than the fact that “life begins” at fertilization, being the consensus of every American legal authority who has taken a position, in every category of court-recognized finders of facts: juries,2 thousands of expert witnesses who were not contested,3 38 state legislatures,4 individual judges,5 and Congress.6 <br />
<br />
No legal authority has ruled that any unborn baby of a human is not in fact a human person, or that “life begins” any later than fertilization.7 <br />
<br />
No state can keep abortion legal now that this fact is established. This is so obvious that even Roe v. Wade said “of course”, and the lawyer for the abortionists agreed.8 <br />
For most public issues, disagreement is over facts.9 The only disagreement about abortion is between unanimous fact finders and those who don't care about facts.10 A court that won’t address the facts that justify and necessitate a law, or hear evidence of those facts, violates Due Process and has no legitimate jurisdiction to review that law.11 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 1 + Footnotes]]<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? <br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
<br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
<br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True. <br />
<br />
<br />
</span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget #2: The Cost of Success===<br />
<br />
'''Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? '''<br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True.<br />
<br />
=====Statement of Facts #2 of 12: Courts Accept the Fact-Finding Authority of Legislatures, Juries, Experts for the same good reasons their findings persuade the public.=====<br />
<br />
SCOTUS must accept legislative findings of facts that are not obviously irrational. “..the existence of facts supporting the legislative judgment is to be presumed...not to be pronounced unconstitutional unless in the light of the facts made known or generally assumed it is of such a character as to preclude the assumption that it rests upon some rational basis within the knowledge and experience of the legislators....” U.S. v. Carolene Products, 304 U.S. 144, 152 (1938).1<br />
<br />
Besides the court-recognized fact finding authority of legislatures, courts must conform their rulings to laws until such time as courts declare laws unconstitutional. No court has overturned the “unborn victims of violence” laws (based on “human babies are people”) of 39 states and Congress, despite many challenges.2<br />
<br />
To do so would require a court to positively affirm that human life does not begin until much later, which no legal authority has done, and for which no evidence exists.<br />
<br />
'''Legislatures'''. Lawmakers are there by the choice of a majority of voters. They are bombarded by information from experts. They are scrutinized by other lawmakers. Many are lawyers, some of whom are constitutional scholars and past or future judges. They set the salaries of judges, and have the power to hold impeachment trials of judges. Congress, the national legislature, scrutinizes Supreme Court justices. <br />
<br />
Many Congressmen are equally qualified: 15 U.S. Senators have served on the Supreme Court, and more were nominated.3 <br />
<br />
'''Juries''' are tested for impartiality. They are educated by the most qualified expert witnesses available. They study as long as necessary to establish truth – sometimes for months.4<br />
<br />
'''Expert Witnesses''' are the best experts money can buy, and they are scrutinized by the other side’s experts.5 <br />
<br />
It is for strong reasons that the findings of court-recognized fact finders are as respected in court as in the Court of Public Opinion.6<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 2 + Footnotes]]<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Mark 8:38 '''Whosoever therefore shall be ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful generation; of him also shall the Son of man be ashamed''', when he cometh in the glory of his Father with the holy angels.<br />
<br />
We Bible believing conservatives need to quit blaming social media and CIA censorship for our failures and stop censoring ourselves. <br />
<br />
I offer a way of stating evidence which no judge, news reporter, Democrat, or unbeliever can refute, along with answering objections that have crippled prolife messaging and legal strategy. But we despair of reaching those who stop their ears to evidence. “What’s the use of tightening our message? You’re preaching to the choir. We know babies are people but those other people have their opinion too.”<br />
<br />
I’m not "preaching to the choir". I’m passing out a new composition to the choir for a coming TV special.<br />
<br />
Most of those who won’t listen, won’t vote either, rendering their willful ignorance relatively benign. Stop worrying about them. All they will do is hate you, lie about you, wreck your business – childish stuff. We progress by clearly articulating to the extent possible. The same Bible which is the main reason we care about babies promises all the protection we need to finish what we are here to do.<br />
<br />
It isn’t just saving baby bodies where we self censor. Adult souls are lost. We hold back sharing what we know about God. Snap out of it. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #3 of 12: The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS====<br />
<br />
From Roe (1973) through Dobbs (2022), SCOTUS evaded that core issue.1 <br />
<br />
SCOTUS never ruled babies Non-Persons “as a Matter of Law”, as lower courts allege.2 Roe made that fact not only relevant, but dispositive with a holding which no court has disputed even though Roe’s main holding was overturned:3 <br />
<br />
“[Prolifers] argue that the fetus is a ‘person’ within the language and meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment....If this suggestion of personhood is established, the [abortionist’s] case, of course, collapses, for the fetus’ right to life would then be guaranteed specifically by the [14th] Amendment [thus outlawing abortion in EVERY state]. The [abortionist’s lawyer] conceded as much....”4<br />
<br />
Dobbs explicitly left this statement of the obvious untouched, saying “our decision is not based on any view about when a State should regard pre-natal life as having rights or legally cognizable interests....”5 Dobbs did not say babies aren’t people. Dobbs did not say voters should still decide whether babies can be murdered in the face of proof that babies are in fact people.6 Dobbs left in place Roe’s observation that “establishment” of this fact, independently of any law, ruling, or future constitutional amendment,7 dictates whether abortion is legally recognizable as a right or as a crime.8<br />
<br />
This established fact is as relevant today as when Roe said “of course” it is.<br />
<br />
This established fact is not disestablished by any judge’s alleged inability to understand it.9<br />
<br />
This established FACT is not made irrelevant by any judge’s theory that the legal right of little humans to live is “impossible” to determine so it should be decided by their value to big humans.10<br />
<br />
If only those legally recognized as “persons” were people, slavery could still be legal and the 14th Amendment would mean nothing. Slavery states would merely need to classify their victims as only 3/5 human.11 The Amendment protects those who are IN FACT people – what is irrelevant is whether babies are people “as a matter of law”.12 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 3 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #4 of 12: Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life====<br />
<br />
Detectable heartbeats and brain waves are evidence that a person has not yet died, throughout state and federal law.1 Reason demands they be accepted as evidence that a person has begun to live.2<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 4 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #5 of 12: Legislatures should regulate abortion, as Dobbs held, just as legislatures regulate the prosecution of all other murders====<br />
<br />
But not in the sense of absolute discretion to leave wholesale murders of a supposedly unwanted group of humans completely unregulated. That interpretation of Dobbs’ holding is premised on a “mistake of fact”, which is an official exception to Stare Decisis. 1<br />
<br />
The “Mistake of Fact” that is the premise of letting voters decide whether to continue judge-approved genocide according to the “value” they place on little people is that the humanity of babies of humans is either unknowable or irrelevant. That premise was explicit in Roe and Casey, and implicit in Dobbs.2 <br />
<br />
That is an “erroneous factual premise”. The fact that little unborn humans are humans is neither unknowable3 nor irrelevant. It is verifiable and dispositive.4 The consensus of court-recognized fact finders cures that knowledge deficit, canceling that interpretation of Dobbs’ holding, while reinforcing Dobbs’ other two holdings that “The Constitution does not confer a right to abortion” and “Roe and Casey are overruled”, and requiring the outlawing of baby killing in every state.5 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 5 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #6 of 12: The full humanity of a tiny physical body is hard for many to grasp. But what distinguishes us from animals isn’t physical, and has no known pre-conscious stage====<br />
<br />
DON’T READ past this 28 word paragraph unless you want <br />
an edge-of-your-seat adventure – legal ammunition <br />
against not only baby killing but also against the myth <br />
of the irrelevance of God in the reasoning of judges, <br />
lawmakers, and voters! Yet Roe v Wade, of all cases, <br />
"opened the door" with its sophomoric review of "theologians", <br />
and #6 comes charging through! <> The rest of this Statement <br />
is for lawmakers who want a stronger, clearer statement, <br />
and who have the stomach for the larger battle.<br />
<br />
Part of Roe’s definition of “person” was “infused with a soul”.1 Roe thus affirmed the belief of most of society, a belief logically demanded by the common knowledge that humans are distinguished from animals by consciousness which features a capacity for choices at variance with physical needs: to sacrifice one's interests for another,2 which is how John 15:13 defines “love”. And conversely, to destroy one’s own body.3<br />
<br />
These differences, along with self awareness and the capacity to choose between good and evil4 – to behave either as an angel or as a demon, can’t be explained by any known physical process. These differences justify greater legal protection of humans than of animals. <br />
<br />
Since a “soul” without consciousness has never been theorized and can’t be imagined, the consensus of fact finders is, in effect, that abortion kills babies with conscious souls. The lack of any physical explanation for a conscious soul rules out any reason to infer immaturity of consciousness from physical immaturity, and is consistent with the report in Luke 1:44 that a baby at 6 months heard a righteous voice [and/or felt the righteous Presence of God] and responded with joy,5 a response not everybody chooses, indicating that even the capacity for choosing between good and evil precedes birth. And also indicating that when a baby is killed by dismemberment, acid, or sucking out the brain, a self-aware conscious soul feels the pain, understands the cruelty, and if out-of-body near-death experiences are real, sees who is doing it.<br />
<br />
Even considering the body only, there is no objective line between birth and conception distinguishing “humans” from “nonpersons”, or between “meaningful life” and life which courts are free to terminate.6 Without such a line, there can be no stage of gestation at which killing a baby can be objectively distinguished from murder. No baby is safe while that line remains arbitrary. <br />
<br />
The failure of some to grasp the humanity of babies at any given stage is a dangerous basis for permitting killing, since as many fail to grasp the full humanity of quite a number of distinct groups of born persons.<br />
<br />
As Roe correctly established, it can be useful in clarifying who to count as a human with an unalienable right to life, to consult the religion from which that right was copied into America’s founding documents. But religions which oppose the foundation of American law – equal rights for all humans, merit little credibility in American courts when their claims justify destruction of an entire people group – such as the claim that souls do not enter bodies until around birth. There can be “free exercise” of religions which do not equally reverence all human life only to the extent their “exercise” does not violate the rights of others or the laws enacted to protect them.7<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] <br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #7 of 12: Congress has ''Already'' Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment already authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion, without allowing Congress to legalize it====<br />
<br />
<small>FORGET YOU READ this 32 word Statement and DON’T read farther – <br />
certainly not the footnotes – if you don’t want to question <br />
the near consensus of prolife leaders who say “we are helpless <br />
to outlaw abortion in every state before we get ANOTHER <br />
personhood law through Congress, if not a Life Amendment <br />
to the Constitution.” <> This is the 7th of 12 Statements <br />
designed to push courts out of the way of defending Life <br />
in every state when included in the Findings of Facts of <br />
prolife laws. The material below can make it clearer and stronger.</small><br />
<br />
Congress established in 2004 that: “‘unborn child’ means a child in utero, and the term ‘child in utero’...means a member of the species Homo Sapiens, at any stage of development, who is carried in the womb”, 18 U.S.C. 1841(d).1 <br />
<br />
This fact is not diminished by clause (c) which does not “permit [authorize] the prosecution of any person for...an abortion for which the consent of the pregnant woman...has been obtained.…”2 A law misaligned with facts does not block future lawmakers from making corrections, and states don’t need Congress’ “permission” to obey the 14th Amendment. <br />
<br />
The reason 18 U.S.C. 1841(d) has had no effect on the practice of legal abortion is not because of any deficiency in its authority to establish dispositive facts, but because no state law reviewed by SCOTUS has cited it to establish what Roe correctly said once “established” would “of course” require the end of legal abortion. <br />
<br />
Not only is the 2004 law unmitigated evidence of life strong enough to “collapse” legal abortion by itself, but it would not be stronger if it were an Amendment to the Constitution.3 No other Constitutional Amendment is relied on for evidence of a fact. An Amendment can bind courts. But establishment of the Facts Of Life by evidence presented, cited, and tested in court draws not only courts, but society, closer to reality.4<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #8 of 12: Roe, Dobbs, and the 14th Amendment agree: All Humans are “Persons”====<br />
<br />
<small>DON’T READ past this 11 word Statement <br />
unless you like to stare at where crazy lawyers <br />
ever got the idea that human babies aren’t people!</small><br />
<br />
Neither Roe nor Dobbs distinguished between “humans” and “persons” as if a “human” baby isn’t necessarily a “person”. [2] Nor does the 14th Amendment leave any human unprotected.<br />
<br />
Roe v. Wade equated the time an unborn child becomes “recognizably human” with the time the child becomes a “person”: “These disciplines variously approached the question [“of when life begins”] in terms of the point at which the embryo or fetus became ‘formed’ or recognizably human, or in terms of when a ‘person’ came into being, that is, infused with a ‘soul’ or ‘animated.’” 410 U.S. 113, 133(1973)<br />
<br />
Dobbs cites the belief that “a human person comes into being at conception” without distinguishing between the two words. [3] The word “person” in the 14th Amendment meant “An individual human being...man, woman, or child...consisting of body and soul.” The word “child” in that 1828 definition included unborn children, since to be “with child” meant to be pregnant. [4]<br />
<br />
Therefore the Amendment’s “nor shall any state deprive any person of life” and “equal protection” of every “person” means every human, including those unborn. Nothing about the first clause keeps later clauses from protecting unborn humans. [5]<br />
<br />
See also Wong Wing v. United States, 163 U.S.228, 242 (1896), “The term ‘person’ is broad enough to include any and every human being within the jurisdiction of the republic...This has been decided so often that the point does not require argument.” Steinberg v. Brown 321 F. Supp. 741 (N.D. Ohio, 1970) “[o]nce human life has commenced, the constitutional protections found in the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments impose upon the state a duty of safeguarding it”. [6]<br />
<br />
The word “persons” in the 14th Amendment means all who are IN FACT humans. Had it been only for those who are legally recognized as human, every deprivation of fundamental rights would be “constitutional” so long as a law or ruling questions whether its victims are “persons in the whole sense”.<br />
<br />
Although Dobbs showed by disproving the opposite that reverence for all human life from fertilization was “deeply rooted in America’s law and traditions”, that is not why rights merit 14th Amendment protection. By the “deeply rooted” test, slavery would be legal today, since freedom for slaves had zero historical support.<br />
<br />
Nor does it matter if the Amendment authors even wanted to protect all humans. In fact, it doesn’t matter if there is a 14th Amendment. If law is not equal upon its operation on all humans, which is the very definition of the word “law” as developed by Samuel Rutherford’s “Lex Rex” and Blackstone and adopted by America’s founders, to that extent there is, by definition, no “rule of law”, no restraint upon the “strong” to not tyrannize the “weak”.<br />
<br />
There is a direct test of whether babies merit 14th Amendment protection that does not require a romp through history: [7] see if their parents are humans.<br />
<br />
“To say that the test of equal protection should be the ‘legal’ rather than the biological relationship is to avoid the issue. For the Equal Protection Clause necessarily limits the authority of a State [or its judges] to draw such ‘legal’ lines as it chooses.” Glona, 391 U.S. 73, 75 (1968) [8]<br />
<br />
FOOTNOTES: see [[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
<small>The footnotes are enriched by selections from the Amicus Briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson by: Lee J. Strang <> Scholars of Jurisprudence John M. Finnis and Robert P. George <> Mary Kay Bacallao Advocating for Unborn Children <> Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide <> and by selections from the 1996 debate between Judge Robert Bork and Professor Nathan Schluetter</small><br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #9 of 12: When pregnancies develop into medical emergencies requiring separation of mother and child to save the mother, the child has an equally fundamental right to life and medical care.====<br />
<br />
A legislature’s balancing of their interests cannot, therefore, be reviewed by “strict scrutiny”.2 Nor does alleged insufficiency of a “medical emergency” exception from a general abortion ban justify a court overturning the ban in the 99% of cases where no emergency is alleged.3 Legislatures are better equipped to deliberate about and secure the rights of all citizens than courts whose focus is the parties before them.4<br />
<br />
SCOTUS never denied that a legislature’s “personhood” statements in an abortion ban are strong evidence.5 That evidence is not mitigated by a ban’s exceptions.6 It is not made irrelevant because baby killers “rely” on killing babies.7 28/130 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
Fundamental Right: This is a term not found in the Constitution but made up by SCOTUS for the rights SCOTUS makes up which often displace rights actually listed in the Constitution. Justice Clarence Thomas is eloquent on this point. More about this later.<br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: A Foundation for Moral Law <> Pennsylvania Pro-Life Federation <> 396 State Legislators from 41 States</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #10 of 12: Tyranny over any class of humans by any other is prohibited by the Constitution, and by the Declaration, which gives the purpose of the Constitution and rests its own authority on the revelation of God1 in the Bible====<br />
<br />
Roe v Wade was not out of line to consult “those trained in... theology” who study souls, as well as doctors who study bodies, to clarify who to count as human with an unalienable right to life.3 <br />
<br />
America’s Freedom springs from “all men are created equal” and “equal protection of the laws” for all humans even if their looks, language, wealth, strength, ancestry, power, or faith are different.4 These rights have proven such a blessing to the world that their source, the Bible, deserves the fair hearing owed any witness whose reliability has been confirmed, when it promises still greater blessings if we will equally protect humans whose physical size is different.5 <br />
<br />
Its testimony is not “cumulative”, but “probative”.6 It is not to be feared as dispositive or compulsory: American freedom balances human understanding of how best to apply Biblical principles to government against the willingness of voting majorities to follow those principles. Even that is a Biblical principle legitimized in 1 Samuel 8.7 <br />
<br />
The history of slavery, Prohibition, and abortion illustrate the “willingness” factor. The probative value of the testimony of God is proved by the fact that without it, slavery would never have ended, and the prolife movement would never have begun. Which makes it probative to observe that not only the 14th Amendment, but also the revelation of God, requires this state, as it does every state, to outlaw all trampling of fundamental rights of any class of people, including abortion of babies.8 Where the two authorities say the same thing, the Bible, for all its alleged ambiguity, is better understood and more trusted than the Constitution which has indeed proven “a thing of wax” in the nimble fingers of even the most scrupulous judges.9 <br />
<br />
Without God – without belief in a more objective standard of right and wrong than the “value” that voters place on “different” people through “evolving community standards”, it is impossible to understand fundamental rights.10 <br />
<br />
Courts have demonstrated this impossibility by so often confusing abominations for rights, decimating those whom Jesus said “forbid them not to come unto Me”, denying that He created them, murdering 17% of them, sodomizing 20% of the survivors, and censoring 100% of His teachings in schools.11 <br />
<br />
That destruction of the 14th Amendment (1868) began when “Substantive Due Process”, pioneered in Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857), was applied in United States v. Cruikshank 92 U. S. 542 (1876) to acquit a white Democrat mililtia of murdering “as many as 165” black Republicans and burning down the courthouse they were defending.12 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring God does not “establish religion”. It does not compel belief, action or endorsement. It simply allows judges and voters to make informed decisions. It is part of fact-finding. It is part of reasoning. Part of embracing reality. Part of examining “the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth”. Judges must stop punishing people for telling the truth just because the truth favors God.13 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring the Bible does not require equal weight for claims of religions that deny equal rights for all.14 <br />
<br />
For example, some claim “souls” don’t enter babies until long after fertilization, or even long after birth.15 Their claims do not “cancel” the mountain of consensus of court-recognized fact finders that souls are present from the beginning. Our Constitution and laws reject their unequal rights, and are appropriately wary of their rationales for their unequal rights. The credibility of every witness is not equal. Credibility is earned. <br />
There can be “free exercise” of religions hostile to “equal protection of the laws” only to the extent their “exercise” does not threaten the rights of others or violate the laws enacted to protect them – laws ultimately decided by voting majorities, hopefully well informed through the uncensoring of reality.16 39/520 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms: <br />
<br />
'''Cumulative''': testimony so redundant that it wastes the court’s time<br />
Dispositive: testimony so strong that it settles the issue with no more<br />
Probative: probative facts establish, or contribute to, proof. Probative value is the degree of relevance of evidence. <br />
<br />
'''Prohibition''': From 1920 to 1932, drinking (alcohol) was made illegal, banned by an actual Constitutional Amendment. Actual alcohol consumption dropped by about 50%, or at least that is how much Cirrhosis of the Liver cases dropped. During that time the drop in drinking led to an economic boom, called the “Roaring Twenties”, which unfortunately were not remembered for their prosperity but for their immorality. In 1928, the prosperity collapsed into a “Great Depression” due to cheating by stock market investors. In 1932 Americans wanted liquor so bad they ratified another Constitutional Amendment repealing the 1920 Amendment. <br />
<br />
'''Substantive Due Process''': As Justice Clarence Thomas eloquently explains – see Statement #11 footnotes, this phrase was made up by SCOTUS to justify making up what it calls “fundamental rights” as its tool of repealing laws it doesn’t like. It gets its name from the SCOTUS claim that the “Due Process” clause of the 14th Amendment gives SCOTUS its authority to make up rights and call them “fundamental”. But “Due Process” only meant the legal procedures which everyone must be given equally, to defend their rights in court when necessary. The phrase has nothing to do with identifying what rights are protectable. But “Substantive” means those rights we care about, that the Constitution protects. Like freedom of speech or religion. Because “substantive” means substantial, serious rights, and “due process” has nothing to do with identifying any rights, the LONANG Institute observes in Statement #11 notes that “substantive due process” is an oxymoron. <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: Foundation for Moral Law and Lutherans for Life <> Jewish Prolife Foundation <> LONANG Institute <> U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and Other Religious Organizations <> Claremont Institute’s Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #11 of 12: The 14th Amendment gives federal courts no “due process” authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the “right” to murder, and gives Congress no authority to legalize violations of Constitutional Rights, like taking a baby’s right to Life====<br />
<br />
The sole federal authority over state laws regarding the rights of their own citizens is through the 14th Amendment, Sections One and Five.1 Contrary to SCOTUS rulings, the 14th Amendment explicitly provides:<br />
* Congress authorized, not courts. Congress, not courts, determines the manner and scope of federal intervention in states whose laws don’t protect their citizens’ rights.2 Congress is not limited to enforcing only those rights of which SCOTUS approves, nor only to the extent that SCOTUS approves,3 nor only when state governments, not individuals, directly violate rights.4 <br />
* Federal courts aren’t permitted to stop either states or Congress from protecting enumerated rights (like Life), or to repeal their laws for conflicting with unenumerated [not listed in the Constitution] “rights” (like the “right” to murder babies), or to intervene in states’ protection of rights beyond prosecuting violations of federal laws.5 <br />
* Nor can Congress stop states from protecting enumerated rights. Neither Congress nor federal courts may overturn a state law protecting the lives of unborn babies from surgical abortion, chemical abortion, or contraceptives.6<br />
* The rights subject to federal enforcement are not those made up by SCOTUS allegedly based on the “Due Process” clause,7 but those listed in the Constitution, referred to as “privileges and immunities”8 (including, for unborn babies, the “privilege” of life and “immunity” from “cruel and unusual punishment” and execution “without due process of law”).9 <br />
* Enumerated Rights recognized before the Constitution existed are not excluded from Congressional intervention.10<br />
* “Substantive Due Process” is the sophistry by which SCOTUS turned the Constitution’s Authority to Define Rights, and Congress’ 14th Amendment Section 5 Authority to Enforce Rights, into its own authority to reclassify abominations as “rights”.11 It is an illegal, unconstitutional, Freedom-crushing fraud from Hell fomenting a long line of Landmark Abomination Cases.12 <br />
<br />
<small>Mini-lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
'''Due Process:''' The duty of courts to give all parties to cases the fair and equal procedures and opportunities for defending themselves.<br />
<br />
(This argument for ending SCOTUS’ long line of Landmark Abomination Cases continues in Part Two of this book where its focus on SCOTUS-mandated murder of babies created in the Image of God is extended to SCOTUS’ censorship of God Himself.) <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amici who filed briefs in Dobbs v. Jackson: Lonang Institute <> Christian Legal Society <> AfricanAmerican, Hispanic, Roman Catholic and Protestant Religious and Civil Rights Organizations <> Senators Josh Hawley, Mike Lee, and Ted Cruz. And from Judge Robert Bork <> Nathan Schlueter, Professor of Philosophy and Religion, Hillsdale College, (when he debated Judge Bork in 2003 he was assistant professor of pre-law and political science at St. Ambrose University. Author, “Unborn Persons and the Fourteenth Amendment.” 2002.) <> Erwin Chemerinsky, Dean of Berkeley Law School <> Legal Information Institute, Cornell University <> Justice Clarence Thomas, dissents and concurrences <> justia.com <> James Gray Pope, Professor of Law and Sidney Reitman Scholar, Rutgers University School of Law <> Libby Adler professor of law and women’s, gender, and sexuality studies, Northeastern University Christmas, 2023''</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #12 of 12: Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable====<br />
<br />
Any state judge interfering with this state’s compliance with the 14th Amendment and its ancient authority to protect its people1 – the central reason governments exist, is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders, and is guilty of exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide through an unconstitutional ruling, which exceeds the judicial powers given by the state Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment.2<br />
<br />
Should any federal judge so interfere, this state appeals to its congressional delegation to examine similar grounds for disciplinary action.3 <br />
<br />
This state also appeals to its congressional delegation to exercise its life-saving and rights-protecting authority under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment whose plain words give Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations Rights,4 which subsumes the authority to define their scope and balance competing interests, while the “privileges and immunities” clause identifies as protectable rights those listed in the Constitution.4<br />
<br />
<br />
''Footnotes will be edited and posted soon, God willing. A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''</div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Reversing_Landmark_Abomination_Cases&diff=50365Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases2024-01-02T04:48:31Z<p>DaveLeach: /* Statement of Facts #10 of 12: Tyranny over any class of humans by any other is prohibited by the Constitution, and by the Declaration, which gives the purpose of the Constitution and rests its own authority on the revelation of God1 in the Bible */</p>
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<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters<br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion</span><br />
<br />
by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal<br />
''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal<br />
<span style="color:brown"><br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen <br />
<br />
by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 18:06, 15 October 2023 (UTC)<br />
<br />
=Introduction=<br />
<br />
This book offers twelve statements of fact about babies and abortion which I challenge any voter, lawyer, lawmaker, or judge to refute. Their footnotes contain nuggets from the 140 "Amicus" briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' (2022), the ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade. These statements are designed to soften the resistance of voters to outlawing baby murder, when presented in public, and to force judges to outlaw abortion in every state, when presented in court. <br />
<br />
They are truths designed to be so unignorable, that when any lawmaker includes them in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, in any state, prodeath fury will help publicize them with each advance through legislative deadlines. When friends of babies see them survive scrutiny, the force of these truths will grow like a snowball rolling down a hill. <br />
<br />
But murdering babies is only the most egregious of many Landmark Abomination Cases. Their common thread is usurping authority which the Constitution assigns to others, and equating the Bible with spurious religions. “Never let a crisis go to waste”, say the enemies of God, but God is the true master of turning evil into an opportunity for good. It’s time. Let’s end the Supreme Court’s war against God.<br />
<br />
The very fact that abortion is the worst of the ways the United States Supreme Court has turned American law upside down creates an opportunity to heal that branch of our government, and heal all the harm to our nation and its culture and morals that it has caused. As Professor Nathan Schluetter at Hillsdale College observes, “We must not let this opportunity pass to boldly challenge the prevailing jurisprudence and its attendant epistemological and moral skepticism with respect to abortion.”<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
It is the '''fact''' that unborn babies are living human children that makes killing them murder. It’s not what any ''law'' says about it, or even what the Constitution says about it. That’s what leaves ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' on the edge of reality, by treating this fact as something for voters to figure out, not on the basis of whether babies are ''in fact'' people but on the basis of some “value” they place on ''little'' people. <br />
<br />
That '''fact''' is what makes <u>the consensus of court-recognized fact finders</u> a stronger legal reason to end legal abortion than a Life Amendment, and a powerful social reason in the Court of Public Opinion able to soften hearts to the silent screams of Jesus' little brothers and His quiet knocking on hearts' doors. Which makes it insane for prolifers to not even mention this legally dispositive consensus in each and every prolife court case, and every “finding of fact” in prolife legislation, along with leveling with the public about the Scriptures which are the real reason we even care.<br />
<br />
[[File:Cover_Cartoon.jpg]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
Why these solutions may help even where abortion is already outlawed<br />
<br />
(1) They could defeat a national abortion legalization.<br />
<br />
(2) They could help you sue a nearby “blue state” for helping its baby killers murder your children. <br />
<br />
(3) They could help if your district judges join the courtroom rebellion against Dobbs in other states.<br />
<br />
(4) They could help meet challenges in the Court of Public Opinion, for example through a Resolution that irrefutably addresses every objection you have ever heard, as understandable to voters as it is irrefutable to judges. That would help the public see through future judicial gaslighting, and support judicial reform: ie. www.savetheworld .saltshaker.us/wiki/Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_ stop_judges_from_legislating<br />
<br />
(5) I could sure use your feedback. Proverbs 15:22. <br />
<br />
----<br />
<center>'''Ending legal abortion everywhere in close to a year<br />
(the goal of the following bill language)<br />
<br>'''requires a law whose Findings of Facts: '''<br />
</center><br />
<br />
<br />
* '''contain evidence which no judge can squarely address and keep abortion legal anywhere:''' that unborn babies are real people – established by the (unanimous) consensus of court-recognized factfinders: juries, expert witnesses, 38 states, judges, and Congress;<br />
<br />
* '''present its evidence in a way that is clear and persuasive to voters,''' to help them resist judicial and media gaslighting; (See below for “Why court-recognized fact finders persuade Voters”)<br />
<br />
* '''address misunderstandings about abortion jurisprudence''' that divide prolifers, intimidate lawyers, and blind judges;<br />
<br />
'''AND WHOSE PENALTIES'''<br />
<br />
* '''restrict some aspect of abortion substantially enough''' that THEY can't be defended as a mere regulation with some other legitimate government purpose than saving lives. The restriction must be profound enough that its only possible defense is that it saves human lives. That will force courts to address the evidence that babies are fully human;<br />
<br />
* '''provide no distractions that let judges rule on some technicality and ignore the evidence that the law would save lives.''' A perfect law that addresses everything from exceptions to contraception multiplies a judge’s opportunity to say “we don’t need to reach the issue of when life begins because the law fails on a lesser issue.” A simple yet substantial restriction, with “findings” that address the legal obstacles, will survive courts, which will get courts out of the way of saving life, which will free lawmakers to work out the challenging details with time to get a comprehensive solution right and with hope that they won’t waste their time; <br />
<br />
* '''list specific penalties for specific situations,''' rather than broadly stated goals such as “babies are to be protected as much as adults”, leaving prosecutors and judges to guess what to punish, or how, in situations where evidence and culpability are different; <br />
<br />
* '''contain a “life of the mother” exception''' whose applicability is clear enough that mothers are not denied life-saving care until doctors are assured by lawyers that said care will not put the doctors in jail; and<br />
<br />
'''THE LAW SHOULD ALSO order courts to “expedite” any review,''' “because lives are lost with each day that courts delay”. <br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate!)<br />
<br />
More ideas: [[Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_stop_judges_from_legislating]]<br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate! See below for Expedited Review federal rules.) <br />
<br />
WORD COUNTS: Using only the first boldfaced paragraph of each of these 12 Findings, in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, will total about 200 words. The complete Findings, without footnotes, total nearly 3000 words. For the advantages of including enough information in a prolife law for the Findings to defend themselves, see “Too Lengthy?” below. <br />
<br />
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: I am not a lawyer. But writing about prolife legal defenses designed to bring legal abortion to an end, and Scriptures calling for that goal, for 25 years in my Prayer * Action News, being uncertified as a lawyer, has created the opportunity for a remarkable interaction with Planned Barrenhoods priciest lawyers. Because news reporters wouldn’t report that my reasoning was designed as legal defenses in court, or that they were grounded in the Bible, what that left was their accusation that I advocated crime; whereas had my defenses been successful they would have allowed citizens to stop murderers legally, putting an end to the reason citizens took action. <br />
<br />
__TOC__<br />
<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and family, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge inaction deny themselves Life More Abundantly. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget: free wisdom, guaranteed success===<br />
<br />
'''John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
James 1:5 If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, [without finding fault]; and it shall be given him. 6 But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering.''' (Gr. διακρινω not withdrawn from, ie. by lack of support from actions, or opposed, ie. by indecision) <br />
<br />
'''Matthew 21:21 ...If ye have faith, and doubt not''' (Gr. διακρινω) ...'''ye shall say unto this mountain, Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea; it shall be done. 22 And all things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive.'''<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and families, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge their own inaction deny themselves, not just their neighbors, Life More Abundantly.<br />
<br />
If you are not satisfied with life less abundantly – ongoing slaughter of innocents – you won’t be satisfied now that the fate of babies is decided by the “value” that voters place on little people. You will keep searching for a strategy to end all the slaughter: to both outlaw it, and make it unthinkable to all but the worst of murderers. <br />
<br />
If you believe you ''will'' reach every good goal you pursue with all your being, Matthew 21:21-22, you won’t be turned from ending the slaughter in every state by experts who tell you that is impossible which rules out a strategy for achieving it. You will search until you find God’s way to do God’s will. <br />
<br />
You won’t say “I'm not smart enough to question prolife legal authorities who advise giving up”, if you believe James 1:5 which promises you all the wisdom you need to do good. Nor will you ever say you are not smart enough to read and understand legal briefs, court rulings, or to reason with lawmakers, lawyers, and prolife leaders, as necessary.<br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will not excuse yourself from God’s call because you can’t talk well, like Moses, whom God answered “Who made mouths?” Exodus 4:11. Nor will you excuse yourself to God, saying you are but a child against the world’s superbrains, like Jeremiah, whom God answered, “Stop saying that! It is MY words you will speak, and I am no child!” Jeremiah 1:6-8. <br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will shine God’s light wherever you find Darkness, Matthew 5:13-16. Since nothing is darker than murdering your own baby, you will seek God’s help as you oppose this evil, and none of these excuses will withdraw you from action.<br />
<br />
===Final Warning: read this at your own risk===<br />
<br />
Warning: read at your own risk. Rough reading Ahead, that may knock you from your TV chair.<br />
<br />
'''Findings of Facts which No Judge can Squarely Address and Keep Abortion Legal'''<br />
<br />
=Part 1: Authority of Court-Recognized Fact Finders=<br />
<br />
<span style="color:grey"><small>''Try to imagine how a judge, reviewing a prolife law with these Findings of Facts, would be able to dodge this evidence - in fact, see if you can find ANYONE who can ''refute'' these facts - as opposed to not ''caring'' about facts - that is, not caring about reality:''</small></span><br />
<br />
====Statement of Fact #1 of 12: Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let any state legalize====<br />
<br />
'''Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let ''any'' state legalize.'''<br />
<br />
No fact can be more legally established than the fact that “life begins” at fertilization, being the consensus of every American legal authority who has taken a position, in every category of court-recognized finders of facts: juries,2 thousands of expert witnesses who were not contested,3 38 state legislatures,4 individual judges,5 and Congress.6 <br />
<br />
No legal authority has ruled that any unborn baby of a human is not in fact a human person, or that “life begins” any later than fertilization.7 <br />
<br />
No state can keep abortion legal now that this fact is established. This is so obvious that even Roe v. Wade said “of course”, and the lawyer for the abortionists agreed.8 <br />
For most public issues, disagreement is over facts.9 The only disagreement about abortion is between unanimous fact finders and those who don't care about facts.10 A court that won’t address the facts that justify and necessitate a law, or hear evidence of those facts, violates Due Process and has no legitimate jurisdiction to review that law.11 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 1 + Footnotes]]<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? <br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
<br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
<br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True. <br />
<br />
<br />
</span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget #2: The Cost of Success===<br />
<br />
'''Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? '''<br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True.<br />
<br />
=====Statement of Facts #2 of 12: Courts Accept the Fact-Finding Authority of Legislatures, Juries, Experts for the same good reasons their findings persuade the public.=====<br />
<br />
SCOTUS must accept legislative findings of facts that are not obviously irrational. “..the existence of facts supporting the legislative judgment is to be presumed...not to be pronounced unconstitutional unless in the light of the facts made known or generally assumed it is of such a character as to preclude the assumption that it rests upon some rational basis within the knowledge and experience of the legislators....” U.S. v. Carolene Products, 304 U.S. 144, 152 (1938).1<br />
<br />
Besides the court-recognized fact finding authority of legislatures, courts must conform their rulings to laws until such time as courts declare laws unconstitutional. No court has overturned the “unborn victims of violence” laws (based on “human babies are people”) of 39 states and Congress, despite many challenges.2<br />
<br />
To do so would require a court to positively affirm that human life does not begin until much later, which no legal authority has done, and for which no evidence exists.<br />
<br />
'''Legislatures'''. Lawmakers are there by the choice of a majority of voters. They are bombarded by information from experts. They are scrutinized by other lawmakers. Many are lawyers, some of whom are constitutional scholars and past or future judges. They set the salaries of judges, and have the power to hold impeachment trials of judges. Congress, the national legislature, scrutinizes Supreme Court justices. <br />
<br />
Many Congressmen are equally qualified: 15 U.S. Senators have served on the Supreme Court, and more were nominated.3 <br />
<br />
'''Juries''' are tested for impartiality. They are educated by the most qualified expert witnesses available. They study as long as necessary to establish truth – sometimes for months.4<br />
<br />
'''Expert Witnesses''' are the best experts money can buy, and they are scrutinized by the other side’s experts.5 <br />
<br />
It is for strong reasons that the findings of court-recognized fact finders are as respected in court as in the Court of Public Opinion.6<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 2 + Footnotes]]<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Mark 8:38 '''Whosoever therefore shall be ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful generation; of him also shall the Son of man be ashamed''', when he cometh in the glory of his Father with the holy angels.<br />
<br />
We Bible believing conservatives need to quit blaming social media and CIA censorship for our failures and stop censoring ourselves. <br />
<br />
I offer a way of stating evidence which no judge, news reporter, Democrat, or unbeliever can refute, along with answering objections that have crippled prolife messaging and legal strategy. But we despair of reaching those who stop their ears to evidence. “What’s the use of tightening our message? You’re preaching to the choir. We know babies are people but those other people have their opinion too.”<br />
<br />
I’m not "preaching to the choir". I’m passing out a new composition to the choir for a coming TV special.<br />
<br />
Most of those who won’t listen, won’t vote either, rendering their willful ignorance relatively benign. Stop worrying about them. All they will do is hate you, lie about you, wreck your business – childish stuff. We progress by clearly articulating to the extent possible. The same Bible which is the main reason we care about babies promises all the protection we need to finish what we are here to do.<br />
<br />
It isn’t just saving baby bodies where we self censor. Adult souls are lost. We hold back sharing what we know about God. Snap out of it. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #3 of 12: The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS====<br />
<br />
From Roe (1973) through Dobbs (2022), SCOTUS evaded that core issue.1 <br />
<br />
SCOTUS never ruled babies Non-Persons “as a Matter of Law”, as lower courts allege.2 Roe made that fact not only relevant, but dispositive with a holding which no court has disputed even though Roe’s main holding was overturned:3 <br />
<br />
“[Prolifers] argue that the fetus is a ‘person’ within the language and meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment....If this suggestion of personhood is established, the [abortionist’s] case, of course, collapses, for the fetus’ right to life would then be guaranteed specifically by the [14th] Amendment [thus outlawing abortion in EVERY state]. The [abortionist’s lawyer] conceded as much....”4<br />
<br />
Dobbs explicitly left this statement of the obvious untouched, saying “our decision is not based on any view about when a State should regard pre-natal life as having rights or legally cognizable interests....”5 Dobbs did not say babies aren’t people. Dobbs did not say voters should still decide whether babies can be murdered in the face of proof that babies are in fact people.6 Dobbs left in place Roe’s observation that “establishment” of this fact, independently of any law, ruling, or future constitutional amendment,7 dictates whether abortion is legally recognizable as a right or as a crime.8<br />
<br />
This established fact is as relevant today as when Roe said “of course” it is.<br />
<br />
This established fact is not disestablished by any judge’s alleged inability to understand it.9<br />
<br />
This established FACT is not made irrelevant by any judge’s theory that the legal right of little humans to live is “impossible” to determine so it should be decided by their value to big humans.10<br />
<br />
If only those legally recognized as “persons” were people, slavery could still be legal and the 14th Amendment would mean nothing. Slavery states would merely need to classify their victims as only 3/5 human.11 The Amendment protects those who are IN FACT people – what is irrelevant is whether babies are people “as a matter of law”.12 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 3 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #4 of 12: Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life====<br />
<br />
Detectable heartbeats and brain waves are evidence that a person has not yet died, throughout state and federal law.1 Reason demands they be accepted as evidence that a person has begun to live.2<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 4 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #5 of 12: Legislatures should regulate abortion, as Dobbs held, just as legislatures regulate the prosecution of all other murders====<br />
<br />
But not in the sense of absolute discretion to leave wholesale murders of a supposedly unwanted group of humans completely unregulated. That interpretation of Dobbs’ holding is premised on a “mistake of fact”, which is an official exception to Stare Decisis. 1<br />
<br />
The “Mistake of Fact” that is the premise of letting voters decide whether to continue judge-approved genocide according to the “value” they place on little people is that the humanity of babies of humans is either unknowable or irrelevant. That premise was explicit in Roe and Casey, and implicit in Dobbs.2 <br />
<br />
That is an “erroneous factual premise”. The fact that little unborn humans are humans is neither unknowable3 nor irrelevant. It is verifiable and dispositive.4 The consensus of court-recognized fact finders cures that knowledge deficit, canceling that interpretation of Dobbs’ holding, while reinforcing Dobbs’ other two holdings that “The Constitution does not confer a right to abortion” and “Roe and Casey are overruled”, and requiring the outlawing of baby killing in every state.5 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 5 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #6 of 12: The full humanity of a tiny physical body is hard for many to grasp. But what distinguishes us from animals isn’t physical, and has no known pre-conscious stage====<br />
<br />
DON’T READ past this 28 word paragraph unless you want <br />
an edge-of-your-seat adventure – legal ammunition <br />
against not only baby killing but also against the myth <br />
of the irrelevance of God in the reasoning of judges, <br />
lawmakers, and voters! Yet Roe v Wade, of all cases, <br />
"opened the door" with its sophomoric review of "theologians", <br />
and #6 comes charging through! <> The rest of this Statement <br />
is for lawmakers who want a stronger, clearer statement, <br />
and who have the stomach for the larger battle.<br />
<br />
Part of Roe’s definition of “person” was “infused with a soul”.1 Roe thus affirmed the belief of most of society, a belief logically demanded by the common knowledge that humans are distinguished from animals by consciousness which features a capacity for choices at variance with physical needs: to sacrifice one's interests for another,2 which is how John 15:13 defines “love”. And conversely, to destroy one’s own body.3<br />
<br />
These differences, along with self awareness and the capacity to choose between good and evil4 – to behave either as an angel or as a demon, can’t be explained by any known physical process. These differences justify greater legal protection of humans than of animals. <br />
<br />
Since a “soul” without consciousness has never been theorized and can’t be imagined, the consensus of fact finders is, in effect, that abortion kills babies with conscious souls. The lack of any physical explanation for a conscious soul rules out any reason to infer immaturity of consciousness from physical immaturity, and is consistent with the report in Luke 1:44 that a baby at 6 months heard a righteous voice [and/or felt the righteous Presence of God] and responded with joy,5 a response not everybody chooses, indicating that even the capacity for choosing between good and evil precedes birth. And also indicating that when a baby is killed by dismemberment, acid, or sucking out the brain, a self-aware conscious soul feels the pain, understands the cruelty, and if out-of-body near-death experiences are real, sees who is doing it.<br />
<br />
Even considering the body only, there is no objective line between birth and conception distinguishing “humans” from “nonpersons”, or between “meaningful life” and life which courts are free to terminate.6 Without such a line, there can be no stage of gestation at which killing a baby can be objectively distinguished from murder. No baby is safe while that line remains arbitrary. <br />
<br />
The failure of some to grasp the humanity of babies at any given stage is a dangerous basis for permitting killing, since as many fail to grasp the full humanity of quite a number of distinct groups of born persons.<br />
<br />
As Roe correctly established, it can be useful in clarifying who to count as a human with an unalienable right to life, to consult the religion from which that right was copied into America’s founding documents. But religions which oppose the foundation of American law – equal rights for all humans, merit little credibility in American courts when their claims justify destruction of an entire people group – such as the claim that souls do not enter bodies until around birth. There can be “free exercise” of religions which do not equally reverence all human life only to the extent their “exercise” does not violate the rights of others or the laws enacted to protect them.7<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] <br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #7 of 12: Congress has ''Already'' Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment already authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion, without allowing Congress to legalize it====<br />
<br />
<small>FORGET YOU READ this 32 word Statement and DON’T read farther – <br />
certainly not the footnotes – if you don’t want to question <br />
the near consensus of prolife leaders who say “we are helpless <br />
to outlaw abortion in every state before we get ANOTHER <br />
personhood law through Congress, if not a Life Amendment <br />
to the Constitution.” <> This is the 7th of 12 Statements <br />
designed to push courts out of the way of defending Life <br />
in every state when included in the Findings of Facts of <br />
prolife laws. The material below can make it clearer and stronger.</small><br />
<br />
Congress established in 2004 that: “‘unborn child’ means a child in utero, and the term ‘child in utero’...means a member of the species Homo Sapiens, at any stage of development, who is carried in the womb”, 18 U.S.C. 1841(d).1 <br />
<br />
This fact is not diminished by clause (c) which does not “permit [authorize] the prosecution of any person for...an abortion for which the consent of the pregnant woman...has been obtained.…”2 A law misaligned with facts does not block future lawmakers from making corrections, and states don’t need Congress’ “permission” to obey the 14th Amendment. <br />
<br />
The reason 18 U.S.C. 1841(d) has had no effect on the practice of legal abortion is not because of any deficiency in its authority to establish dispositive facts, but because no state law reviewed by SCOTUS has cited it to establish what Roe correctly said once “established” would “of course” require the end of legal abortion. <br />
<br />
Not only is the 2004 law unmitigated evidence of life strong enough to “collapse” legal abortion by itself, but it would not be stronger if it were an Amendment to the Constitution.3 No other Constitutional Amendment is relied on for evidence of a fact. An Amendment can bind courts. But establishment of the Facts Of Life by evidence presented, cited, and tested in court draws not only courts, but society, closer to reality.4<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #8 of 12: Roe, Dobbs, and the 14th Amendment agree: All Humans are “Persons”====<br />
<br />
<small>DON’T READ past this 11 word Statement <br />
unless you like to stare at where crazy lawyers <br />
ever got the idea that human babies aren’t people!</small><br />
<br />
Neither Roe nor Dobbs distinguished between “humans” and “persons” as if a “human” baby isn’t necessarily a “person”. [2] Nor does the 14th Amendment leave any human unprotected.<br />
<br />
Roe v. Wade equated the time an unborn child becomes “recognizably human” with the time the child becomes a “person”: “These disciplines variously approached the question [“of when life begins”] in terms of the point at which the embryo or fetus became ‘formed’ or recognizably human, or in terms of when a ‘person’ came into being, that is, infused with a ‘soul’ or ‘animated.’” 410 U.S. 113, 133(1973)<br />
<br />
Dobbs cites the belief that “a human person comes into being at conception” without distinguishing between the two words. [3] The word “person” in the 14th Amendment meant “An individual human being...man, woman, or child...consisting of body and soul.” The word “child” in that 1828 definition included unborn children, since to be “with child” meant to be pregnant. [4]<br />
<br />
Therefore the Amendment’s “nor shall any state deprive any person of life” and “equal protection” of every “person” means every human, including those unborn. Nothing about the first clause keeps later clauses from protecting unborn humans. [5]<br />
<br />
See also Wong Wing v. United States, 163 U.S.228, 242 (1896), “The term ‘person’ is broad enough to include any and every human being within the jurisdiction of the republic...This has been decided so often that the point does not require argument.” Steinberg v. Brown 321 F. Supp. 741 (N.D. Ohio, 1970) “[o]nce human life has commenced, the constitutional protections found in the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments impose upon the state a duty of safeguarding it”. [6]<br />
<br />
The word “persons” in the 14th Amendment means all who are IN FACT humans. Had it been only for those who are legally recognized as human, every deprivation of fundamental rights would be “constitutional” so long as a law or ruling questions whether its victims are “persons in the whole sense”.<br />
<br />
Although Dobbs showed by disproving the opposite that reverence for all human life from fertilization was “deeply rooted in America’s law and traditions”, that is not why rights merit 14th Amendment protection. By the “deeply rooted” test, slavery would be legal today, since freedom for slaves had zero historical support.<br />
<br />
Nor does it matter if the Amendment authors even wanted to protect all humans. In fact, it doesn’t matter if there is a 14th Amendment. If law is not equal upon its operation on all humans, which is the very definition of the word “law” as developed by Samuel Rutherford’s “Lex Rex” and Blackstone and adopted by America’s founders, to that extent there is, by definition, no “rule of law”, no restraint upon the “strong” to not tyrannize the “weak”.<br />
<br />
There is a direct test of whether babies merit 14th Amendment protection that does not require a romp through history: [7] see if their parents are humans.<br />
<br />
“To say that the test of equal protection should be the ‘legal’ rather than the biological relationship is to avoid the issue. For the Equal Protection Clause necessarily limits the authority of a State [or its judges] to draw such ‘legal’ lines as it chooses.” Glona, 391 U.S. 73, 75 (1968) [8]<br />
<br />
FOOTNOTES: see [[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
<small>The footnotes are enriched by selections from the Amicus Briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson by: Lee J. Strang <> Scholars of Jurisprudence John M. Finnis and Robert P. George <> Mary Kay Bacallao Advocating for Unborn Children <> Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide <> and by selections from the 1996 debate between Judge Robert Bork and Professor Nathan Schluetter</small><br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #9 of 12: When pregnancies develop into medical emergencies requiring separation of mother and child to save the mother, the child has an equally fundamental right to life and medical care.====<br />
<br />
A legislature’s balancing of their interests cannot, therefore, be reviewed by “strict scrutiny”.2 Nor does alleged insufficiency of a “medical emergency” exception from a general abortion ban justify a court overturning the ban in the 99% of cases where no emergency is alleged.3 Legislatures are better equipped to deliberate about and secure the rights of all citizens than courts whose focus is the parties before them.4<br />
<br />
SCOTUS never denied that a legislature’s “personhood” statements in an abortion ban are strong evidence.5 That evidence is not mitigated by a ban’s exceptions.6 It is not made irrelevant because baby killers “rely” on killing babies.7 28/130 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
Fundamental Right: This is a term not found in the Constitution but made up by SCOTUS for the rights SCOTUS makes up which often displace rights actually listed in the Constitution. Justice Clarence Thomas is eloquent on this point. More about this later.<br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: A Foundation for Moral Law <> Pennsylvania Pro-Life Federation <> 396 State Legislators from 41 States</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #10 of 12: Tyranny over any class of humans by any other is prohibited by the Constitution, and by the Declaration, which gives the purpose of the Constitution and rests its own authority on the revelation of God1 in the Bible====<br />
<br />
Roe v Wade was not out of line to consult “those trained in... theology” who study souls, as well as doctors who study bodies, to clarify who to count as human with an unalienable right to life.3 <br />
<br />
America’s Freedom springs from “all men are created equal” and “equal protection of the laws” for all humans even if their looks, language, wealth, strength, ancestry, power, or faith are different.4 These rights have proven such a blessing to the world that their source, the Bible, deserves the fair hearing owed any witness whose reliability has been confirmed, when it promises still greater blessings if we will equally protect humans whose physical size is different.5 <br />
<br />
Its testimony is not “cumulative”, but “probative”.6 It is not to be feared as dispositive or compulsory: American freedom balances human understanding of how best to apply Biblical principles to government against the willingness of voting majorities to follow those principles. Even that is a Biblical principle legitimized in 1 Samuel 8.7 <br />
<br />
The history of slavery, Prohibition, and abortion illustrate the “willingness” factor. The probative value of the testimony of God is proved by the fact that without it, slavery would never have ended, and the prolife movement would never have begun. Which makes it probative to observe that not only the 14th Amendment, but also the revelation of God, requires this state, as it does every state, to outlaw all trampling of fundamental rights of any class of people, including abortion of babies.8 Where the two authorities say the same thing, the Bible, for all its alleged ambiguity, is better understood and more trusted than the Constitution which has indeed proven “a thing of wax” in the nimble fingers of even the most scrupulous judges.9 <br />
<br />
Without God – without belief in a more objective standard of right and wrong than the “value” that voters place on “different” people through “evolving community standards”, it is impossible to understand fundamental rights.10 <br />
<br />
Courts have demonstrated this impossibility by so often confusing abominations for rights, decimating those whom Jesus said “forbid them not to come unto Me”, denying that He created them, murdering 17% of them, sodomizing 20% of the survivors, and censoring 100% of His teachings in schools.11 <br />
<br />
That destruction of the 14th Amendment (1868) began when “Substantive Due Process”, pioneered in Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857), was applied in United States v. Cruikshank 92 U. S. 542 (1876) to acquit a white Democrat mililtia of murdering “as many as 165” black Republicans and burning down the courthouse they were defending.12 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring God does not “establish religion”. It does not compel belief, action or endorsement. It simply allows judges and voters to make informed decisions. It is part of fact-finding. It is part of reasoning. Part of embracing reality. Part of examining “the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth”. Judges must stop punishing people for telling the truth just because the truth favors God.13 <br />
<br />
Uncensoring the Bible does not require equal weight for claims of religions that deny equal rights for all.14 <br />
<br />
For example, some claim “souls” don’t enter babies until long after fertilization, or even long after birth.15 Their claims do not “cancel” the mountain of consensus of court-recognized fact finders that souls are present from the beginning. Our Constitution and laws reject their unequal rights, and are appropriately wary of their rationales for their unequal rights. The credibility of every witness is not equal. Credibility is earned. <br />
There can be “free exercise” of religions hostile to “equal protection of the laws” only to the extent their “exercise” does not threaten the rights of others or violate the laws enacted to protect them – laws ultimately decided by voting majorities, hopefully well informed through the uncensoring of reality.16 39/520 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms: <br />
<br />
'''Cumulative''': testimony so redundant that it wastes the court’s time<br />
Dispositive: testimony so strong that it settles the issue with no more<br />
Probative: probative facts establish, or contribute to, proof. Probative value is the degree of relevance of evidence. <br />
<br />
'''Prohibition''': From 1920 to 1932, drinking (alcohol) was made illegal, banned by an actual Constitutional Amendment. Actual alcohol consumption dropped by about 50%, or at least that is how much Cirrhosis of the Liver cases dropped. During that time the drop in drinking led to an economic boom, called the “Roaring Twenties”, which unfortunately were not remembered for their prosperity but for their immorality. In 1928, the prosperity collapsed into a “Great Depression” due to cheating by stock market investors. In 1932 Americans wanted liquor so bad they ratified another Constitutional Amendment repealing the 1920 Amendment. <br />
<br />
'''Substantive Due Process''': As Justice Clarence Thomas eloquently explains – see Statement #11 footnotes, this phrase was made up by SCOTUS to justify making up what it calls “fundamental rights” as its tool of repealing laws it doesn’t like. It gets its name from the SCOTUS claim that the “Due Process” clause of the 14th Amendment gives SCOTUS its authority to make up rights and call them “fundamental”. But “Due Process” only meant the legal procedures which everyone must be given equally, to defend their rights in court when necessary. The phrase has nothing to do with identifying what rights are protectable. But “Substantive” means those rights we care about, that the Constitution protects. Like freedom of speech or religion. Because “substantive” means substantial, serious rights, and “due process” has nothing to do with identifying any rights, the LONANG Institute observes in Statement #11 notes that “substantive due process” is an oxymoron. <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: Foundation for Moral Law and Lutherans for Life <> Jewish Prolife Foundation <> LONANG Institute <> U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and Other Religious Organizations <> Claremont Institute’s Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #11 of 12: The 14th Amendment requires this state, as every state, to thoroughly outlaw abortion. Restrictions of abortions for the purpose of saving mothers cannot be reviewed by strict scrutiny,1 even though the safety of mothers is a fundamental right, because the safety of their babies is an equally fundamental right. Legislatures can best delineate the most life-saving balance of harms. 2 ====<br />
<br />
The indecision of judges over whether babies of humans are humans does not neutralize the consensus of fact finders that babies are fully “human persons” – an abstention does not cancel an “aye”. <br />
<br />
That consensus makes abortion legally recognizable as killing innocent human beings, which is legally recognizable as murder, which was never constitutionally protected or legal, but is what even Roe correctly said “of course” requires abortion’s legality to end. <br />
<br />
No judge can squarely address this evidence and keep abortion legal because the 14th Amendment doesn’t let any state legalize the tyranny of any class of humans over any other.3 It made irrelevant whether their destroyers “rely” on destroying them.4 The only constitutional way to keep baby murder legal would be to repeal the 14th Amendment, returning to states the power of majorities to tyrannize minorities. Of course, that would make slavery legal again. <br />
<br />
The prohibition of tyranny over any class of humans by any other has greater authority than that of the Constitution: it is also the command of the Declaration, which lays out the purpose of the Constitution, and rests its own authority on the revelation of God5 in the Bible.6 Without God it is impossible to understand fundamental rights,7 as courts have so magnificently demonstrated by so often confusing abominations for rights, decimating those whom Jesus said “forbid them not to come unto Me”, denying that He created them, murdering 17% of them, sodomizing 20% of the survivors, and censoring 100% of His teachings in schools.8 That began with the development of the principles of “Substantive Due Process” in United States v. Cruikshank 92 U. S. 542 (1876), which were applied in that case to acquit a white Democrat mililtia of murdering “as many as 165” black Republicans and burning down the courthouse they were defending.9<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
''Footnotes will be edited and posted soon, God willing. A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023'' <br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #12 of 12: Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable====<br />
<br />
Any state judge interfering with this state’s compliance with the 14th Amendment and its ancient authority to protect its people1 – the central reason governments exist, is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders, and is guilty of exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide through an unconstitutional ruling, which exceeds the judicial powers given by the state Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment.2<br />
<br />
Should any federal judge so interfere, this state appeals to its congressional delegation to examine similar grounds for disciplinary action.3 <br />
<br />
This state also appeals to its congressional delegation to exercise its life-saving and rights-protecting authority under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment whose plain words give Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations Rights,4 which subsumes the authority to define their scope and balance competing interests, while the “privileges and immunities” clause identifies as protectable rights those listed in the Constitution.4<br />
<br />
<br />
''Footnotes will be edited and posted soon, God willing. A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''</div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Reversing_Landmark_Abomination_Cases&diff=50364Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases2024-01-02T04:47:17Z<p>DaveLeach: /* Statement of Facts #10 of 12: “Exceptions” do NOT Mitigate or Undermine Personhood Assertions */</p>
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<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters<br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion</span><br />
<br />
by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal<br />
''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal<br />
<span style="color:brown"><br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen <br />
<br />
by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 18:06, 15 October 2023 (UTC)<br />
<br />
=Introduction=<br />
<br />
This book offers twelve statements of fact about babies and abortion which I challenge any voter, lawyer, lawmaker, or judge to refute. Their footnotes contain nuggets from the 140 "Amicus" briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' (2022), the ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade. These statements are designed to soften the resistance of voters to outlawing baby murder, when presented in public, and to force judges to outlaw abortion in every state, when presented in court. <br />
<br />
They are truths designed to be so unignorable, that when any lawmaker includes them in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, in any state, prodeath fury will help publicize them with each advance through legislative deadlines. When friends of babies see them survive scrutiny, the force of these truths will grow like a snowball rolling down a hill. <br />
<br />
But murdering babies is only the most egregious of many Landmark Abomination Cases. Their common thread is usurping authority which the Constitution assigns to others, and equating the Bible with spurious religions. “Never let a crisis go to waste”, say the enemies of God, but God is the true master of turning evil into an opportunity for good. It’s time. Let’s end the Supreme Court’s war against God.<br />
<br />
The very fact that abortion is the worst of the ways the United States Supreme Court has turned American law upside down creates an opportunity to heal that branch of our government, and heal all the harm to our nation and its culture and morals that it has caused. As Professor Nathan Schluetter at Hillsdale College observes, “We must not let this opportunity pass to boldly challenge the prevailing jurisprudence and its attendant epistemological and moral skepticism with respect to abortion.”<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
It is the '''fact''' that unborn babies are living human children that makes killing them murder. It’s not what any ''law'' says about it, or even what the Constitution says about it. That’s what leaves ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' on the edge of reality, by treating this fact as something for voters to figure out, not on the basis of whether babies are ''in fact'' people but on the basis of some “value” they place on ''little'' people. <br />
<br />
That '''fact''' is what makes <u>the consensus of court-recognized fact finders</u> a stronger legal reason to end legal abortion than a Life Amendment, and a powerful social reason in the Court of Public Opinion able to soften hearts to the silent screams of Jesus' little brothers and His quiet knocking on hearts' doors. Which makes it insane for prolifers to not even mention this legally dispositive consensus in each and every prolife court case, and every “finding of fact” in prolife legislation, along with leveling with the public about the Scriptures which are the real reason we even care.<br />
<br />
[[File:Cover_Cartoon.jpg]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
Why these solutions may help even where abortion is already outlawed<br />
<br />
(1) They could defeat a national abortion legalization.<br />
<br />
(2) They could help you sue a nearby “blue state” for helping its baby killers murder your children. <br />
<br />
(3) They could help if your district judges join the courtroom rebellion against Dobbs in other states.<br />
<br />
(4) They could help meet challenges in the Court of Public Opinion, for example through a Resolution that irrefutably addresses every objection you have ever heard, as understandable to voters as it is irrefutable to judges. That would help the public see through future judicial gaslighting, and support judicial reform: ie. www.savetheworld .saltshaker.us/wiki/Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_ stop_judges_from_legislating<br />
<br />
(5) I could sure use your feedback. Proverbs 15:22. <br />
<br />
----<br />
<center>'''Ending legal abortion everywhere in close to a year<br />
(the goal of the following bill language)<br />
<br>'''requires a law whose Findings of Facts: '''<br />
</center><br />
<br />
<br />
* '''contain evidence which no judge can squarely address and keep abortion legal anywhere:''' that unborn babies are real people – established by the (unanimous) consensus of court-recognized factfinders: juries, expert witnesses, 38 states, judges, and Congress;<br />
<br />
* '''present its evidence in a way that is clear and persuasive to voters,''' to help them resist judicial and media gaslighting; (See below for “Why court-recognized fact finders persuade Voters”)<br />
<br />
* '''address misunderstandings about abortion jurisprudence''' that divide prolifers, intimidate lawyers, and blind judges;<br />
<br />
'''AND WHOSE PENALTIES'''<br />
<br />
* '''restrict some aspect of abortion substantially enough''' that THEY can't be defended as a mere regulation with some other legitimate government purpose than saving lives. The restriction must be profound enough that its only possible defense is that it saves human lives. That will force courts to address the evidence that babies are fully human;<br />
<br />
* '''provide no distractions that let judges rule on some technicality and ignore the evidence that the law would save lives.''' A perfect law that addresses everything from exceptions to contraception multiplies a judge’s opportunity to say “we don’t need to reach the issue of when life begins because the law fails on a lesser issue.” A simple yet substantial restriction, with “findings” that address the legal obstacles, will survive courts, which will get courts out of the way of saving life, which will free lawmakers to work out the challenging details with time to get a comprehensive solution right and with hope that they won’t waste their time; <br />
<br />
* '''list specific penalties for specific situations,''' rather than broadly stated goals such as “babies are to be protected as much as adults”, leaving prosecutors and judges to guess what to punish, or how, in situations where evidence and culpability are different; <br />
<br />
* '''contain a “life of the mother” exception''' whose applicability is clear enough that mothers are not denied life-saving care until doctors are assured by lawyers that said care will not put the doctors in jail; and<br />
<br />
'''THE LAW SHOULD ALSO order courts to “expedite” any review,''' “because lives are lost with each day that courts delay”. <br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate!)<br />
<br />
More ideas: [[Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_stop_judges_from_legislating]]<br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate! See below for Expedited Review federal rules.) <br />
<br />
WORD COUNTS: Using only the first boldfaced paragraph of each of these 12 Findings, in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, will total about 200 words. The complete Findings, without footnotes, total nearly 3000 words. For the advantages of including enough information in a prolife law for the Findings to defend themselves, see “Too Lengthy?” below. <br />
<br />
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: I am not a lawyer. But writing about prolife legal defenses designed to bring legal abortion to an end, and Scriptures calling for that goal, for 25 years in my Prayer * Action News, being uncertified as a lawyer, has created the opportunity for a remarkable interaction with Planned Barrenhoods priciest lawyers. Because news reporters wouldn’t report that my reasoning was designed as legal defenses in court, or that they were grounded in the Bible, what that left was their accusation that I advocated crime; whereas had my defenses been successful they would have allowed citizens to stop murderers legally, putting an end to the reason citizens took action. <br />
<br />
__TOC__<br />
<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and family, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge inaction deny themselves Life More Abundantly. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget: free wisdom, guaranteed success===<br />
<br />
'''John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
James 1:5 If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, [without finding fault]; and it shall be given him. 6 But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering.''' (Gr. διακρινω not withdrawn from, ie. by lack of support from actions, or opposed, ie. by indecision) <br />
<br />
'''Matthew 21:21 ...If ye have faith, and doubt not''' (Gr. διακρινω) ...'''ye shall say unto this mountain, Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea; it shall be done. 22 And all things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive.'''<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and families, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge their own inaction deny themselves, not just their neighbors, Life More Abundantly.<br />
<br />
If you are not satisfied with life less abundantly – ongoing slaughter of innocents – you won’t be satisfied now that the fate of babies is decided by the “value” that voters place on little people. You will keep searching for a strategy to end all the slaughter: to both outlaw it, and make it unthinkable to all but the worst of murderers. <br />
<br />
If you believe you ''will'' reach every good goal you pursue with all your being, Matthew 21:21-22, you won’t be turned from ending the slaughter in every state by experts who tell you that is impossible which rules out a strategy for achieving it. You will search until you find God’s way to do God’s will. <br />
<br />
You won’t say “I'm not smart enough to question prolife legal authorities who advise giving up”, if you believe James 1:5 which promises you all the wisdom you need to do good. Nor will you ever say you are not smart enough to read and understand legal briefs, court rulings, or to reason with lawmakers, lawyers, and prolife leaders, as necessary.<br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will not excuse yourself from God’s call because you can’t talk well, like Moses, whom God answered “Who made mouths?” Exodus 4:11. Nor will you excuse yourself to God, saying you are but a child against the world’s superbrains, like Jeremiah, whom God answered, “Stop saying that! It is MY words you will speak, and I am no child!” Jeremiah 1:6-8. <br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will shine God’s light wherever you find Darkness, Matthew 5:13-16. Since nothing is darker than murdering your own baby, you will seek God’s help as you oppose this evil, and none of these excuses will withdraw you from action.<br />
<br />
===Final Warning: read this at your own risk===<br />
<br />
Warning: read at your own risk. Rough reading Ahead, that may knock you from your TV chair.<br />
<br />
'''Findings of Facts which No Judge can Squarely Address and Keep Abortion Legal'''<br />
<br />
=Part 1: Authority of Court-Recognized Fact Finders=<br />
<br />
<span style="color:grey"><small>''Try to imagine how a judge, reviewing a prolife law with these Findings of Facts, would be able to dodge this evidence - in fact, see if you can find ANYONE who can ''refute'' these facts - as opposed to not ''caring'' about facts - that is, not caring about reality:''</small></span><br />
<br />
====Statement of Fact #1 of 12: Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let any state legalize====<br />
<br />
'''Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let ''any'' state legalize.'''<br />
<br />
No fact can be more legally established than the fact that “life begins” at fertilization, being the consensus of every American legal authority who has taken a position, in every category of court-recognized finders of facts: juries,2 thousands of expert witnesses who were not contested,3 38 state legislatures,4 individual judges,5 and Congress.6 <br />
<br />
No legal authority has ruled that any unborn baby of a human is not in fact a human person, or that “life begins” any later than fertilization.7 <br />
<br />
No state can keep abortion legal now that this fact is established. This is so obvious that even Roe v. Wade said “of course”, and the lawyer for the abortionists agreed.8 <br />
For most public issues, disagreement is over facts.9 The only disagreement about abortion is between unanimous fact finders and those who don't care about facts.10 A court that won’t address the facts that justify and necessitate a law, or hear evidence of those facts, violates Due Process and has no legitimate jurisdiction to review that law.11 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 1 + Footnotes]]<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? <br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
<br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
<br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True. <br />
<br />
<br />
</span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget #2: The Cost of Success===<br />
<br />
'''Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? '''<br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True.<br />
<br />
=====Statement of Facts #2 of 12: Courts Accept the Fact-Finding Authority of Legislatures, Juries, Experts for the same good reasons their findings persuade the public.=====<br />
<br />
SCOTUS must accept legislative findings of facts that are not obviously irrational. “..the existence of facts supporting the legislative judgment is to be presumed...not to be pronounced unconstitutional unless in the light of the facts made known or generally assumed it is of such a character as to preclude the assumption that it rests upon some rational basis within the knowledge and experience of the legislators....” U.S. v. Carolene Products, 304 U.S. 144, 152 (1938).1<br />
<br />
Besides the court-recognized fact finding authority of legislatures, courts must conform their rulings to laws until such time as courts declare laws unconstitutional. No court has overturned the “unborn victims of violence” laws (based on “human babies are people”) of 39 states and Congress, despite many challenges.2<br />
<br />
To do so would require a court to positively affirm that human life does not begin until much later, which no legal authority has done, and for which no evidence exists.<br />
<br />
'''Legislatures'''. Lawmakers are there by the choice of a majority of voters. They are bombarded by information from experts. They are scrutinized by other lawmakers. Many are lawyers, some of whom are constitutional scholars and past or future judges. They set the salaries of judges, and have the power to hold impeachment trials of judges. Congress, the national legislature, scrutinizes Supreme Court justices. <br />
<br />
Many Congressmen are equally qualified: 15 U.S. Senators have served on the Supreme Court, and more were nominated.3 <br />
<br />
'''Juries''' are tested for impartiality. They are educated by the most qualified expert witnesses available. They study as long as necessary to establish truth – sometimes for months.4<br />
<br />
'''Expert Witnesses''' are the best experts money can buy, and they are scrutinized by the other side’s experts.5 <br />
<br />
It is for strong reasons that the findings of court-recognized fact finders are as respected in court as in the Court of Public Opinion.6<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 2 + Footnotes]]<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Mark 8:38 '''Whosoever therefore shall be ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful generation; of him also shall the Son of man be ashamed''', when he cometh in the glory of his Father with the holy angels.<br />
<br />
We Bible believing conservatives need to quit blaming social media and CIA censorship for our failures and stop censoring ourselves. <br />
<br />
I offer a way of stating evidence which no judge, news reporter, Democrat, or unbeliever can refute, along with answering objections that have crippled prolife messaging and legal strategy. But we despair of reaching those who stop their ears to evidence. “What’s the use of tightening our message? You’re preaching to the choir. We know babies are people but those other people have their opinion too.”<br />
<br />
I’m not "preaching to the choir". I’m passing out a new composition to the choir for a coming TV special.<br />
<br />
Most of those who won’t listen, won’t vote either, rendering their willful ignorance relatively benign. Stop worrying about them. All they will do is hate you, lie about you, wreck your business – childish stuff. We progress by clearly articulating to the extent possible. The same Bible which is the main reason we care about babies promises all the protection we need to finish what we are here to do.<br />
<br />
It isn’t just saving baby bodies where we self censor. Adult souls are lost. We hold back sharing what we know about God. Snap out of it. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #3 of 12: The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS====<br />
<br />
From Roe (1973) through Dobbs (2022), SCOTUS evaded that core issue.1 <br />
<br />
SCOTUS never ruled babies Non-Persons “as a Matter of Law”, as lower courts allege.2 Roe made that fact not only relevant, but dispositive with a holding which no court has disputed even though Roe’s main holding was overturned:3 <br />
<br />
“[Prolifers] argue that the fetus is a ‘person’ within the language and meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment....If this suggestion of personhood is established, the [abortionist’s] case, of course, collapses, for the fetus’ right to life would then be guaranteed specifically by the [14th] Amendment [thus outlawing abortion in EVERY state]. The [abortionist’s lawyer] conceded as much....”4<br />
<br />
Dobbs explicitly left this statement of the obvious untouched, saying “our decision is not based on any view about when a State should regard pre-natal life as having rights or legally cognizable interests....”5 Dobbs did not say babies aren’t people. Dobbs did not say voters should still decide whether babies can be murdered in the face of proof that babies are in fact people.6 Dobbs left in place Roe’s observation that “establishment” of this fact, independently of any law, ruling, or future constitutional amendment,7 dictates whether abortion is legally recognizable as a right or as a crime.8<br />
<br />
This established fact is as relevant today as when Roe said “of course” it is.<br />
<br />
This established fact is not disestablished by any judge’s alleged inability to understand it.9<br />
<br />
This established FACT is not made irrelevant by any judge’s theory that the legal right of little humans to live is “impossible” to determine so it should be decided by their value to big humans.10<br />
<br />
If only those legally recognized as “persons” were people, slavery could still be legal and the 14th Amendment would mean nothing. Slavery states would merely need to classify their victims as only 3/5 human.11 The Amendment protects those who are IN FACT people – what is irrelevant is whether babies are people “as a matter of law”.12 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 3 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #4 of 12: Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life====<br />
<br />
Detectable heartbeats and brain waves are evidence that a person has not yet died, throughout state and federal law.1 Reason demands they be accepted as evidence that a person has begun to live.2<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 4 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #5 of 12: Legislatures should regulate abortion, as Dobbs held, just as legislatures regulate the prosecution of all other murders====<br />
<br />
But not in the sense of absolute discretion to leave wholesale murders of a supposedly unwanted group of humans completely unregulated. That interpretation of Dobbs’ holding is premised on a “mistake of fact”, which is an official exception to Stare Decisis. 1<br />
<br />
The “Mistake of Fact” that is the premise of letting voters decide whether to continue judge-approved genocide according to the “value” they place on little people is that the humanity of babies of humans is either unknowable or irrelevant. That premise was explicit in Roe and Casey, and implicit in Dobbs.2 <br />
<br />
That is an “erroneous factual premise”. The fact that little unborn humans are humans is neither unknowable3 nor irrelevant. It is verifiable and dispositive.4 The consensus of court-recognized fact finders cures that knowledge deficit, canceling that interpretation of Dobbs’ holding, while reinforcing Dobbs’ other two holdings that “The Constitution does not confer a right to abortion” and “Roe and Casey are overruled”, and requiring the outlawing of baby killing in every state.5 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 5 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #6 of 12: The full humanity of a tiny physical body is hard for many to grasp. But what distinguishes us from animals isn’t physical, and has no known pre-conscious stage====<br />
<br />
DON’T READ past this 28 word paragraph unless you want <br />
an edge-of-your-seat adventure – legal ammunition <br />
against not only baby killing but also against the myth <br />
of the irrelevance of God in the reasoning of judges, <br />
lawmakers, and voters! Yet Roe v Wade, of all cases, <br />
"opened the door" with its sophomoric review of "theologians", <br />
and #6 comes charging through! <> The rest of this Statement <br />
is for lawmakers who want a stronger, clearer statement, <br />
and who have the stomach for the larger battle.<br />
<br />
Part of Roe’s definition of “person” was “infused with a soul”.1 Roe thus affirmed the belief of most of society, a belief logically demanded by the common knowledge that humans are distinguished from animals by consciousness which features a capacity for choices at variance with physical needs: to sacrifice one's interests for another,2 which is how John 15:13 defines “love”. And conversely, to destroy one’s own body.3<br />
<br />
These differences, along with self awareness and the capacity to choose between good and evil4 – to behave either as an angel or as a demon, can’t be explained by any known physical process. These differences justify greater legal protection of humans than of animals. <br />
<br />
Since a “soul” without consciousness has never been theorized and can’t be imagined, the consensus of fact finders is, in effect, that abortion kills babies with conscious souls. The lack of any physical explanation for a conscious soul rules out any reason to infer immaturity of consciousness from physical immaturity, and is consistent with the report in Luke 1:44 that a baby at 6 months heard a righteous voice [and/or felt the righteous Presence of God] and responded with joy,5 a response not everybody chooses, indicating that even the capacity for choosing between good and evil precedes birth. And also indicating that when a baby is killed by dismemberment, acid, or sucking out the brain, a self-aware conscious soul feels the pain, understands the cruelty, and if out-of-body near-death experiences are real, sees who is doing it.<br />
<br />
Even considering the body only, there is no objective line between birth and conception distinguishing “humans” from “nonpersons”, or between “meaningful life” and life which courts are free to terminate.6 Without such a line, there can be no stage of gestation at which killing a baby can be objectively distinguished from murder. No baby is safe while that line remains arbitrary. <br />
<br />
The failure of some to grasp the humanity of babies at any given stage is a dangerous basis for permitting killing, since as many fail to grasp the full humanity of quite a number of distinct groups of born persons.<br />
<br />
As Roe correctly established, it can be useful in clarifying who to count as a human with an unalienable right to life, to consult the religion from which that right was copied into America’s founding documents. But religions which oppose the foundation of American law – equal rights for all humans, merit little credibility in American courts when their claims justify destruction of an entire people group – such as the claim that souls do not enter bodies until around birth. There can be “free exercise” of religions which do not equally reverence all human life only to the extent their “exercise” does not violate the rights of others or the laws enacted to protect them.7<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] <br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #7 of 12: Congress has ''Already'' Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment already authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion, without allowing Congress to legalize it====<br />
<br />
<small>FORGET YOU READ this 32 word Statement and DON’T read farther – <br />
certainly not the footnotes – if you don’t want to question <br />
the near consensus of prolife leaders who say “we are helpless <br />
to outlaw abortion in every state before we get ANOTHER <br />
personhood law through Congress, if not a Life Amendment <br />
to the Constitution.” <> This is the 7th of 12 Statements <br />
designed to push courts out of the way of defending Life <br />
in every state when included in the Findings of Facts of <br />
prolife laws. The material below can make it clearer and stronger.</small><br />
<br />
Congress established in 2004 that: “‘unborn child’ means a child in utero, and the term ‘child in utero’...means a member of the species Homo Sapiens, at any stage of development, who is carried in the womb”, 18 U.S.C. 1841(d).1 <br />
<br />
This fact is not diminished by clause (c) which does not “permit [authorize] the prosecution of any person for...an abortion for which the consent of the pregnant woman...has been obtained.…”2 A law misaligned with facts does not block future lawmakers from making corrections, and states don’t need Congress’ “permission” to obey the 14th Amendment. <br />
<br />
The reason 18 U.S.C. 1841(d) has had no effect on the practice of legal abortion is not because of any deficiency in its authority to establish dispositive facts, but because no state law reviewed by SCOTUS has cited it to establish what Roe correctly said once “established” would “of course” require the end of legal abortion. <br />
<br />
Not only is the 2004 law unmitigated evidence of life strong enough to “collapse” legal abortion by itself, but it would not be stronger if it were an Amendment to the Constitution.3 No other Constitutional Amendment is relied on for evidence of a fact. An Amendment can bind courts. But establishment of the Facts Of Life by evidence presented, cited, and tested in court draws not only courts, but society, closer to reality.4<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #8 of 12: Roe, Dobbs, and the 14th Amendment agree: All Humans are “Persons”====<br />
<br />
<small>DON’T READ past this 11 word Statement <br />
unless you like to stare at where crazy lawyers <br />
ever got the idea that human babies aren’t people!</small><br />
<br />
Neither Roe nor Dobbs distinguished between “humans” and “persons” as if a “human” baby isn’t necessarily a “person”. [2] Nor does the 14th Amendment leave any human unprotected.<br />
<br />
Roe v. Wade equated the time an unborn child becomes “recognizably human” with the time the child becomes a “person”: “These disciplines variously approached the question [“of when life begins”] in terms of the point at which the embryo or fetus became ‘formed’ or recognizably human, or in terms of when a ‘person’ came into being, that is, infused with a ‘soul’ or ‘animated.’” 410 U.S. 113, 133(1973)<br />
<br />
Dobbs cites the belief that “a human person comes into being at conception” without distinguishing between the two words. [3] The word “person” in the 14th Amendment meant “An individual human being...man, woman, or child...consisting of body and soul.” The word “child” in that 1828 definition included unborn children, since to be “with child” meant to be pregnant. [4]<br />
<br />
Therefore the Amendment’s “nor shall any state deprive any person of life” and “equal protection” of every “person” means every human, including those unborn. Nothing about the first clause keeps later clauses from protecting unborn humans. [5]<br />
<br />
See also Wong Wing v. United States, 163 U.S.228, 242 (1896), “The term ‘person’ is broad enough to include any and every human being within the jurisdiction of the republic...This has been decided so often that the point does not require argument.” Steinberg v. Brown 321 F. Supp. 741 (N.D. Ohio, 1970) “[o]nce human life has commenced, the constitutional protections found in the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments impose upon the state a duty of safeguarding it”. [6]<br />
<br />
The word “persons” in the 14th Amendment means all who are IN FACT humans. Had it been only for those who are legally recognized as human, every deprivation of fundamental rights would be “constitutional” so long as a law or ruling questions whether its victims are “persons in the whole sense”.<br />
<br />
Although Dobbs showed by disproving the opposite that reverence for all human life from fertilization was “deeply rooted in America’s law and traditions”, that is not why rights merit 14th Amendment protection. By the “deeply rooted” test, slavery would be legal today, since freedom for slaves had zero historical support.<br />
<br />
Nor does it matter if the Amendment authors even wanted to protect all humans. In fact, it doesn’t matter if there is a 14th Amendment. If law is not equal upon its operation on all humans, which is the very definition of the word “law” as developed by Samuel Rutherford’s “Lex Rex” and Blackstone and adopted by America’s founders, to that extent there is, by definition, no “rule of law”, no restraint upon the “strong” to not tyrannize the “weak”.<br />
<br />
There is a direct test of whether babies merit 14th Amendment protection that does not require a romp through history: [7] see if their parents are humans.<br />
<br />
“To say that the test of equal protection should be the ‘legal’ rather than the biological relationship is to avoid the issue. For the Equal Protection Clause necessarily limits the authority of a State [or its judges] to draw such ‘legal’ lines as it chooses.” Glona, 391 U.S. 73, 75 (1968) [8]<br />
<br />
FOOTNOTES: see [[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
<small>The footnotes are enriched by selections from the Amicus Briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson by: Lee J. Strang <> Scholars of Jurisprudence John M. Finnis and Robert P. George <> Mary Kay Bacallao Advocating for Unborn Children <> Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide <> and by selections from the 1996 debate between Judge Robert Bork and Professor Nathan Schluetter</small><br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #9 of 12: When pregnancies develop into medical emergencies requiring separation of mother and child to save the mother, the child has an equally fundamental right to life and medical care.====<br />
<br />
A legislature’s balancing of their interests cannot, therefore, be reviewed by “strict scrutiny”.2 Nor does alleged insufficiency of a “medical emergency” exception from a general abortion ban justify a court overturning the ban in the 99% of cases where no emergency is alleged.3 Legislatures are better equipped to deliberate about and secure the rights of all citizens than courts whose focus is the parties before them.4<br />
<br />
SCOTUS never denied that a legislature’s “personhood” statements in an abortion ban are strong evidence.5 That evidence is not mitigated by a ban’s exceptions.6 It is not made irrelevant because baby killers “rely” on killing babies.7 28/130 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
Fundamental Right: This is a term not found in the Constitution but made up by SCOTUS for the rights SCOTUS makes up which often displace rights actually listed in the Constitution. Justice Clarence Thomas is eloquent on this point. More about this later.<br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: A Foundation for Moral Law <> Pennsylvania Pro-Life Federation <> 396 State Legislators from 41 States</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #10 of 12: Tyranny over any class of humans by any other is prohibited by the Constitution, and by the Declaration, which gives the purpose of the Constitution and rests its own authority on the revelation of God1 in the Bible====<br />
<br />
Roe v Wade was not out of line to consult “those trained in... theology” who study souls, as well as doctors who study bodies, to clarify who to count as human with an unalienable right to life.3 <br />
America’s Freedom springs from “all men are created equal” and “equal protection of the laws” for all humans even if their looks, language, wealth, strength, ancestry, power, or faith are different.4 These rights have proven such a blessing to the world that their source, the Bible, deserves the fair hearing owed any witness whose reliability has been confirmed, when it promises still greater blessings if we will equally protect humans whose physical size is different.5 <br />
Its testimony is not “cumulative”, but “probative”.6 It is not to be feared as dispositive or compulsory: American freedom balances human understanding of how best to apply Biblical principles to government against the willingness of voting majorities to follow those principles. Even that is a Biblical principle legitimized in 1 Samuel 8.7 <br />
The history of slavery, Prohibition, and abortion illustrate the “willingness” factor. The probative value of the testimony of God is proved by the fact that without it, slavery would never have ended, and the prolife movement would never have begun. Which makes it probative to observe that not only the 14th Amendment, but also the revelation of God, requires this state, as it does every state, to outlaw all trampling of fundamental rights of any class of people, including abortion of babies.8 Where the two authorities say the same thing, the Bible, for all its alleged ambiguity, is better understood and more trusted than the Constitution which has indeed proven “a thing of wax” in the nimble fingers of even the most scrupulous judges.9 <br />
Without God – without belief in a more objective standard of right and wrong than the “value” that voters place on “different” people through “evolving community standards”, it is impossible to understand fundamental rights.10 <br />
Courts have demonstrated this impossibility by so often confusing abominations for rights, decimating those whom Jesus said “forbid them not to come unto Me”, denying that He created them, murdering 17% of them, sodomizing 20% of the survivors, and censoring 100% of His teachings in schools.11 <br />
That destruction of the 14th Amendment (1868) began when “Substantive Due Process”, pioneered in Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857), was applied in United States v. Cruikshank 92 U. S. 542 (1876) to acquit a white Democrat mililtia of murdering “as many as 165” black Republicans and burning down the courthouse they were defending.12 <br />
Uncensoring God does not “establish religion”. It does not compel belief, action or endorsement. It simply allows judges and voters to make informed decisions. It is part of fact-finding. It is part of reasoning. Part of embracing reality. Part of examining “the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth”. Judges must stop punishing people for telling the truth just because the truth favors God.13 <br />
Uncensoring the Bible does not require equal weight for claims of religions that deny equal rights for all.14 <br />
For example, some claim “souls” don’t enter babies until long after fertilization, or even long after birth.15 Their claims do not “cancel” the mountain of consensus of court-recognized fact finders that souls are present from the beginning. Our Constitution and laws reject their unequal rights, and are appropriately wary of their rationales for their unequal rights. The credibility of every witness is not equal. Credibility is earned. <br />
There can be “free exercise” of religions hostile to “equal protection of the laws” only to the extent their “exercise” does not threaten the rights of others or violate the laws enacted to protect them – laws ultimately decided by voting majorities, hopefully well informed through the uncensoring of reality.16 39/520 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms: <br />
<br />
'''Cumulative''': testimony so redundant that it wastes the court’s time<br />
Dispositive: testimony so strong that it settles the issue with no more<br />
Probative: probative facts establish, or contribute to, proof. Probative value is the degree of relevance of evidence. <br />
<br />
'''Prohibition''': From 1920 to 1932, drinking (alcohol) was made illegal, banned by an actual Constitutional Amendment. Actual alcohol consumption dropped by about 50%, or at least that is how much Cirrhosis of the Liver cases dropped. During that time the drop in drinking led to an economic boom, called the “Roaring Twenties”, which unfortunately were not remembered for their prosperity but for their immorality. In 1928, the prosperity collapsed into a “Great Depression” due to cheating by stock market investors. In 1932 Americans wanted liquor so bad they ratified another Constitutional Amendment repealing the 1920 Amendment. <br />
<br />
'''Substantive Due Process''': As Justice Clarence Thomas eloquently explains – see Statement #11 footnotes, this phrase was made up by SCOTUS to justify making up what it calls “fundamental rights” as its tool of repealing laws it doesn’t like. It gets its name from the SCOTUS claim that the “Due Process” clause of the 14th Amendment gives SCOTUS its authority to make up rights and call them “fundamental”. But “Due Process” only meant the legal procedures which everyone must be given equally, to defend their rights in court when necessary. The phrase has nothing to do with identifying what rights are protectable. But “Substantive” means those rights we care about, that the Constitution protects. Like freedom of speech or religion. Because “substantive” means substantial, serious rights, and “due process” has nothing to do with identifying any rights, the LONANG Institute observes in Statement #11 notes that “substantive due process” is an oxymoron. <br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: Foundation for Moral Law and Lutherans for Life <> Jewish Prolife Foundation <> LONANG Institute <> U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and Other Religious Organizations <> Claremont Institute’s Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #11 of 12: The 14th Amendment requires this state, as every state, to thoroughly outlaw abortion. Restrictions of abortions for the purpose of saving mothers cannot be reviewed by strict scrutiny,1 even though the safety of mothers is a fundamental right, because the safety of their babies is an equally fundamental right. Legislatures can best delineate the most life-saving balance of harms. 2 ====<br />
<br />
The indecision of judges over whether babies of humans are humans does not neutralize the consensus of fact finders that babies are fully “human persons” – an abstention does not cancel an “aye”. <br />
<br />
That consensus makes abortion legally recognizable as killing innocent human beings, which is legally recognizable as murder, which was never constitutionally protected or legal, but is what even Roe correctly said “of course” requires abortion’s legality to end. <br />
<br />
No judge can squarely address this evidence and keep abortion legal because the 14th Amendment doesn’t let any state legalize the tyranny of any class of humans over any other.3 It made irrelevant whether their destroyers “rely” on destroying them.4 The only constitutional way to keep baby murder legal would be to repeal the 14th Amendment, returning to states the power of majorities to tyrannize minorities. Of course, that would make slavery legal again. <br />
<br />
The prohibition of tyranny over any class of humans by any other has greater authority than that of the Constitution: it is also the command of the Declaration, which lays out the purpose of the Constitution, and rests its own authority on the revelation of God5 in the Bible.6 Without God it is impossible to understand fundamental rights,7 as courts have so magnificently demonstrated by so often confusing abominations for rights, decimating those whom Jesus said “forbid them not to come unto Me”, denying that He created them, murdering 17% of them, sodomizing 20% of the survivors, and censoring 100% of His teachings in schools.8 That began with the development of the principles of “Substantive Due Process” in United States v. Cruikshank 92 U. S. 542 (1876), which were applied in that case to acquit a white Democrat mililtia of murdering “as many as 165” black Republicans and burning down the courthouse they were defending.9<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
''Footnotes will be edited and posted soon, God willing. A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023'' <br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #12 of 12: Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable====<br />
<br />
Any state judge interfering with this state’s compliance with the 14th Amendment and its ancient authority to protect its people1 – the central reason governments exist, is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders, and is guilty of exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide through an unconstitutional ruling, which exceeds the judicial powers given by the state Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment.2<br />
<br />
Should any federal judge so interfere, this state appeals to its congressional delegation to examine similar grounds for disciplinary action.3 <br />
<br />
This state also appeals to its congressional delegation to exercise its life-saving and rights-protecting authority under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment whose plain words give Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations Rights,4 which subsumes the authority to define their scope and balance competing interests, while the “privileges and immunities” clause identifies as protectable rights those listed in the Constitution.4<br />
<br />
<br />
''Footnotes will be edited and posted soon, God willing. A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''</div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Reversing_Landmark_Abomination_Cases&diff=50363Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases2024-01-02T04:44:24Z<p>DaveLeach: /* Statement of Facts #9 of 12: SCOTUS never denied that state personhood laws are strong evidence in an abortion case */</p>
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<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters<br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion</span><br />
<br />
by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal<br />
''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal<br />
<span style="color:brown"><br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen <br />
<br />
by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 18:06, 15 October 2023 (UTC)<br />
<br />
=Introduction=<br />
<br />
This book offers twelve statements of fact about babies and abortion which I challenge any voter, lawyer, lawmaker, or judge to refute. Their footnotes contain nuggets from the 140 "Amicus" briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' (2022), the ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade. These statements are designed to soften the resistance of voters to outlawing baby murder, when presented in public, and to force judges to outlaw abortion in every state, when presented in court. <br />
<br />
They are truths designed to be so unignorable, that when any lawmaker includes them in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, in any state, prodeath fury will help publicize them with each advance through legislative deadlines. When friends of babies see them survive scrutiny, the force of these truths will grow like a snowball rolling down a hill. <br />
<br />
But murdering babies is only the most egregious of many Landmark Abomination Cases. Their common thread is usurping authority which the Constitution assigns to others, and equating the Bible with spurious religions. “Never let a crisis go to waste”, say the enemies of God, but God is the true master of turning evil into an opportunity for good. It’s time. Let’s end the Supreme Court’s war against God.<br />
<br />
The very fact that abortion is the worst of the ways the United States Supreme Court has turned American law upside down creates an opportunity to heal that branch of our government, and heal all the harm to our nation and its culture and morals that it has caused. As Professor Nathan Schluetter at Hillsdale College observes, “We must not let this opportunity pass to boldly challenge the prevailing jurisprudence and its attendant epistemological and moral skepticism with respect to abortion.”<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
It is the '''fact''' that unborn babies are living human children that makes killing them murder. It’s not what any ''law'' says about it, or even what the Constitution says about it. That’s what leaves ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' on the edge of reality, by treating this fact as something for voters to figure out, not on the basis of whether babies are ''in fact'' people but on the basis of some “value” they place on ''little'' people. <br />
<br />
That '''fact''' is what makes <u>the consensus of court-recognized fact finders</u> a stronger legal reason to end legal abortion than a Life Amendment, and a powerful social reason in the Court of Public Opinion able to soften hearts to the silent screams of Jesus' little brothers and His quiet knocking on hearts' doors. Which makes it insane for prolifers to not even mention this legally dispositive consensus in each and every prolife court case, and every “finding of fact” in prolife legislation, along with leveling with the public about the Scriptures which are the real reason we even care.<br />
<br />
[[File:Cover_Cartoon.jpg]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
Why these solutions may help even where abortion is already outlawed<br />
<br />
(1) They could defeat a national abortion legalization.<br />
<br />
(2) They could help you sue a nearby “blue state” for helping its baby killers murder your children. <br />
<br />
(3) They could help if your district judges join the courtroom rebellion against Dobbs in other states.<br />
<br />
(4) They could help meet challenges in the Court of Public Opinion, for example through a Resolution that irrefutably addresses every objection you have ever heard, as understandable to voters as it is irrefutable to judges. That would help the public see through future judicial gaslighting, and support judicial reform: ie. www.savetheworld .saltshaker.us/wiki/Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_ stop_judges_from_legislating<br />
<br />
(5) I could sure use your feedback. Proverbs 15:22. <br />
<br />
----<br />
<center>'''Ending legal abortion everywhere in close to a year<br />
(the goal of the following bill language)<br />
<br>'''requires a law whose Findings of Facts: '''<br />
</center><br />
<br />
<br />
* '''contain evidence which no judge can squarely address and keep abortion legal anywhere:''' that unborn babies are real people – established by the (unanimous) consensus of court-recognized factfinders: juries, expert witnesses, 38 states, judges, and Congress;<br />
<br />
* '''present its evidence in a way that is clear and persuasive to voters,''' to help them resist judicial and media gaslighting; (See below for “Why court-recognized fact finders persuade Voters”)<br />
<br />
* '''address misunderstandings about abortion jurisprudence''' that divide prolifers, intimidate lawyers, and blind judges;<br />
<br />
'''AND WHOSE PENALTIES'''<br />
<br />
* '''restrict some aspect of abortion substantially enough''' that THEY can't be defended as a mere regulation with some other legitimate government purpose than saving lives. The restriction must be profound enough that its only possible defense is that it saves human lives. That will force courts to address the evidence that babies are fully human;<br />
<br />
* '''provide no distractions that let judges rule on some technicality and ignore the evidence that the law would save lives.''' A perfect law that addresses everything from exceptions to contraception multiplies a judge’s opportunity to say “we don’t need to reach the issue of when life begins because the law fails on a lesser issue.” A simple yet substantial restriction, with “findings” that address the legal obstacles, will survive courts, which will get courts out of the way of saving life, which will free lawmakers to work out the challenging details with time to get a comprehensive solution right and with hope that they won’t waste their time; <br />
<br />
* '''list specific penalties for specific situations,''' rather than broadly stated goals such as “babies are to be protected as much as adults”, leaving prosecutors and judges to guess what to punish, or how, in situations where evidence and culpability are different; <br />
<br />
* '''contain a “life of the mother” exception''' whose applicability is clear enough that mothers are not denied life-saving care until doctors are assured by lawyers that said care will not put the doctors in jail; and<br />
<br />
'''THE LAW SHOULD ALSO order courts to “expedite” any review,''' “because lives are lost with each day that courts delay”. <br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate!)<br />
<br />
More ideas: [[Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_stop_judges_from_legislating]]<br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate! See below for Expedited Review federal rules.) <br />
<br />
WORD COUNTS: Using only the first boldfaced paragraph of each of these 12 Findings, in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, will total about 200 words. The complete Findings, without footnotes, total nearly 3000 words. For the advantages of including enough information in a prolife law for the Findings to defend themselves, see “Too Lengthy?” below. <br />
<br />
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: I am not a lawyer. But writing about prolife legal defenses designed to bring legal abortion to an end, and Scriptures calling for that goal, for 25 years in my Prayer * Action News, being uncertified as a lawyer, has created the opportunity for a remarkable interaction with Planned Barrenhoods priciest lawyers. Because news reporters wouldn’t report that my reasoning was designed as legal defenses in court, or that they were grounded in the Bible, what that left was their accusation that I advocated crime; whereas had my defenses been successful they would have allowed citizens to stop murderers legally, putting an end to the reason citizens took action. <br />
<br />
__TOC__<br />
<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and family, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge inaction deny themselves Life More Abundantly. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget: free wisdom, guaranteed success===<br />
<br />
'''John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
James 1:5 If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, [without finding fault]; and it shall be given him. 6 But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering.''' (Gr. διακρινω not withdrawn from, ie. by lack of support from actions, or opposed, ie. by indecision) <br />
<br />
'''Matthew 21:21 ...If ye have faith, and doubt not''' (Gr. διακρινω) ...'''ye shall say unto this mountain, Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea; it shall be done. 22 And all things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive.'''<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and families, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge their own inaction deny themselves, not just their neighbors, Life More Abundantly.<br />
<br />
If you are not satisfied with life less abundantly – ongoing slaughter of innocents – you won’t be satisfied now that the fate of babies is decided by the “value” that voters place on little people. You will keep searching for a strategy to end all the slaughter: to both outlaw it, and make it unthinkable to all but the worst of murderers. <br />
<br />
If you believe you ''will'' reach every good goal you pursue with all your being, Matthew 21:21-22, you won’t be turned from ending the slaughter in every state by experts who tell you that is impossible which rules out a strategy for achieving it. You will search until you find God’s way to do God’s will. <br />
<br />
You won’t say “I'm not smart enough to question prolife legal authorities who advise giving up”, if you believe James 1:5 which promises you all the wisdom you need to do good. Nor will you ever say you are not smart enough to read and understand legal briefs, court rulings, or to reason with lawmakers, lawyers, and prolife leaders, as necessary.<br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will not excuse yourself from God’s call because you can’t talk well, like Moses, whom God answered “Who made mouths?” Exodus 4:11. Nor will you excuse yourself to God, saying you are but a child against the world’s superbrains, like Jeremiah, whom God answered, “Stop saying that! It is MY words you will speak, and I am no child!” Jeremiah 1:6-8. <br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will shine God’s light wherever you find Darkness, Matthew 5:13-16. Since nothing is darker than murdering your own baby, you will seek God’s help as you oppose this evil, and none of these excuses will withdraw you from action.<br />
<br />
===Final Warning: read this at your own risk===<br />
<br />
Warning: read at your own risk. Rough reading Ahead, that may knock you from your TV chair.<br />
<br />
'''Findings of Facts which No Judge can Squarely Address and Keep Abortion Legal'''<br />
<br />
=Part 1: Authority of Court-Recognized Fact Finders=<br />
<br />
<span style="color:grey"><small>''Try to imagine how a judge, reviewing a prolife law with these Findings of Facts, would be able to dodge this evidence - in fact, see if you can find ANYONE who can ''refute'' these facts - as opposed to not ''caring'' about facts - that is, not caring about reality:''</small></span><br />
<br />
====Statement of Fact #1 of 12: Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let any state legalize====<br />
<br />
'''Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let ''any'' state legalize.'''<br />
<br />
No fact can be more legally established than the fact that “life begins” at fertilization, being the consensus of every American legal authority who has taken a position, in every category of court-recognized finders of facts: juries,2 thousands of expert witnesses who were not contested,3 38 state legislatures,4 individual judges,5 and Congress.6 <br />
<br />
No legal authority has ruled that any unborn baby of a human is not in fact a human person, or that “life begins” any later than fertilization.7 <br />
<br />
No state can keep abortion legal now that this fact is established. This is so obvious that even Roe v. Wade said “of course”, and the lawyer for the abortionists agreed.8 <br />
For most public issues, disagreement is over facts.9 The only disagreement about abortion is between unanimous fact finders and those who don't care about facts.10 A court that won’t address the facts that justify and necessitate a law, or hear evidence of those facts, violates Due Process and has no legitimate jurisdiction to review that law.11 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 1 + Footnotes]]<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? <br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
<br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
<br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True. <br />
<br />
<br />
</span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget #2: The Cost of Success===<br />
<br />
'''Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? '''<br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True.<br />
<br />
=====Statement of Facts #2 of 12: Courts Accept the Fact-Finding Authority of Legislatures, Juries, Experts for the same good reasons their findings persuade the public.=====<br />
<br />
SCOTUS must accept legislative findings of facts that are not obviously irrational. “..the existence of facts supporting the legislative judgment is to be presumed...not to be pronounced unconstitutional unless in the light of the facts made known or generally assumed it is of such a character as to preclude the assumption that it rests upon some rational basis within the knowledge and experience of the legislators....” U.S. v. Carolene Products, 304 U.S. 144, 152 (1938).1<br />
<br />
Besides the court-recognized fact finding authority of legislatures, courts must conform their rulings to laws until such time as courts declare laws unconstitutional. No court has overturned the “unborn victims of violence” laws (based on “human babies are people”) of 39 states and Congress, despite many challenges.2<br />
<br />
To do so would require a court to positively affirm that human life does not begin until much later, which no legal authority has done, and for which no evidence exists.<br />
<br />
'''Legislatures'''. Lawmakers are there by the choice of a majority of voters. They are bombarded by information from experts. They are scrutinized by other lawmakers. Many are lawyers, some of whom are constitutional scholars and past or future judges. They set the salaries of judges, and have the power to hold impeachment trials of judges. Congress, the national legislature, scrutinizes Supreme Court justices. <br />
<br />
Many Congressmen are equally qualified: 15 U.S. Senators have served on the Supreme Court, and more were nominated.3 <br />
<br />
'''Juries''' are tested for impartiality. They are educated by the most qualified expert witnesses available. They study as long as necessary to establish truth – sometimes for months.4<br />
<br />
'''Expert Witnesses''' are the best experts money can buy, and they are scrutinized by the other side’s experts.5 <br />
<br />
It is for strong reasons that the findings of court-recognized fact finders are as respected in court as in the Court of Public Opinion.6<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 2 + Footnotes]]<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Mark 8:38 '''Whosoever therefore shall be ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful generation; of him also shall the Son of man be ashamed''', when he cometh in the glory of his Father with the holy angels.<br />
<br />
We Bible believing conservatives need to quit blaming social media and CIA censorship for our failures and stop censoring ourselves. <br />
<br />
I offer a way of stating evidence which no judge, news reporter, Democrat, or unbeliever can refute, along with answering objections that have crippled prolife messaging and legal strategy. But we despair of reaching those who stop their ears to evidence. “What’s the use of tightening our message? You’re preaching to the choir. We know babies are people but those other people have their opinion too.”<br />
<br />
I’m not "preaching to the choir". I’m passing out a new composition to the choir for a coming TV special.<br />
<br />
Most of those who won’t listen, won’t vote either, rendering their willful ignorance relatively benign. Stop worrying about them. All they will do is hate you, lie about you, wreck your business – childish stuff. We progress by clearly articulating to the extent possible. The same Bible which is the main reason we care about babies promises all the protection we need to finish what we are here to do.<br />
<br />
It isn’t just saving baby bodies where we self censor. Adult souls are lost. We hold back sharing what we know about God. Snap out of it. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #3 of 12: The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS====<br />
<br />
From Roe (1973) through Dobbs (2022), SCOTUS evaded that core issue.1 <br />
<br />
SCOTUS never ruled babies Non-Persons “as a Matter of Law”, as lower courts allege.2 Roe made that fact not only relevant, but dispositive with a holding which no court has disputed even though Roe’s main holding was overturned:3 <br />
<br />
“[Prolifers] argue that the fetus is a ‘person’ within the language and meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment....If this suggestion of personhood is established, the [abortionist’s] case, of course, collapses, for the fetus’ right to life would then be guaranteed specifically by the [14th] Amendment [thus outlawing abortion in EVERY state]. The [abortionist’s lawyer] conceded as much....”4<br />
<br />
Dobbs explicitly left this statement of the obvious untouched, saying “our decision is not based on any view about when a State should regard pre-natal life as having rights or legally cognizable interests....”5 Dobbs did not say babies aren’t people. Dobbs did not say voters should still decide whether babies can be murdered in the face of proof that babies are in fact people.6 Dobbs left in place Roe’s observation that “establishment” of this fact, independently of any law, ruling, or future constitutional amendment,7 dictates whether abortion is legally recognizable as a right or as a crime.8<br />
<br />
This established fact is as relevant today as when Roe said “of course” it is.<br />
<br />
This established fact is not disestablished by any judge’s alleged inability to understand it.9<br />
<br />
This established FACT is not made irrelevant by any judge’s theory that the legal right of little humans to live is “impossible” to determine so it should be decided by their value to big humans.10<br />
<br />
If only those legally recognized as “persons” were people, slavery could still be legal and the 14th Amendment would mean nothing. Slavery states would merely need to classify their victims as only 3/5 human.11 The Amendment protects those who are IN FACT people – what is irrelevant is whether babies are people “as a matter of law”.12 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 3 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #4 of 12: Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life====<br />
<br />
Detectable heartbeats and brain waves are evidence that a person has not yet died, throughout state and federal law.1 Reason demands they be accepted as evidence that a person has begun to live.2<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 4 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #5 of 12: Legislatures should regulate abortion, as Dobbs held, just as legislatures regulate the prosecution of all other murders====<br />
<br />
But not in the sense of absolute discretion to leave wholesale murders of a supposedly unwanted group of humans completely unregulated. That interpretation of Dobbs’ holding is premised on a “mistake of fact”, which is an official exception to Stare Decisis. 1<br />
<br />
The “Mistake of Fact” that is the premise of letting voters decide whether to continue judge-approved genocide according to the “value” they place on little people is that the humanity of babies of humans is either unknowable or irrelevant. That premise was explicit in Roe and Casey, and implicit in Dobbs.2 <br />
<br />
That is an “erroneous factual premise”. The fact that little unborn humans are humans is neither unknowable3 nor irrelevant. It is verifiable and dispositive.4 The consensus of court-recognized fact finders cures that knowledge deficit, canceling that interpretation of Dobbs’ holding, while reinforcing Dobbs’ other two holdings that “The Constitution does not confer a right to abortion” and “Roe and Casey are overruled”, and requiring the outlawing of baby killing in every state.5 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 5 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #6 of 12: The full humanity of a tiny physical body is hard for many to grasp. But what distinguishes us from animals isn’t physical, and has no known pre-conscious stage====<br />
<br />
DON’T READ past this 28 word paragraph unless you want <br />
an edge-of-your-seat adventure – legal ammunition <br />
against not only baby killing but also against the myth <br />
of the irrelevance of God in the reasoning of judges, <br />
lawmakers, and voters! Yet Roe v Wade, of all cases, <br />
"opened the door" with its sophomoric review of "theologians", <br />
and #6 comes charging through! <> The rest of this Statement <br />
is for lawmakers who want a stronger, clearer statement, <br />
and who have the stomach for the larger battle.<br />
<br />
Part of Roe’s definition of “person” was “infused with a soul”.1 Roe thus affirmed the belief of most of society, a belief logically demanded by the common knowledge that humans are distinguished from animals by consciousness which features a capacity for choices at variance with physical needs: to sacrifice one's interests for another,2 which is how John 15:13 defines “love”. And conversely, to destroy one’s own body.3<br />
<br />
These differences, along with self awareness and the capacity to choose between good and evil4 – to behave either as an angel or as a demon, can’t be explained by any known physical process. These differences justify greater legal protection of humans than of animals. <br />
<br />
Since a “soul” without consciousness has never been theorized and can’t be imagined, the consensus of fact finders is, in effect, that abortion kills babies with conscious souls. The lack of any physical explanation for a conscious soul rules out any reason to infer immaturity of consciousness from physical immaturity, and is consistent with the report in Luke 1:44 that a baby at 6 months heard a righteous voice [and/or felt the righteous Presence of God] and responded with joy,5 a response not everybody chooses, indicating that even the capacity for choosing between good and evil precedes birth. And also indicating that when a baby is killed by dismemberment, acid, or sucking out the brain, a self-aware conscious soul feels the pain, understands the cruelty, and if out-of-body near-death experiences are real, sees who is doing it.<br />
<br />
Even considering the body only, there is no objective line between birth and conception distinguishing “humans” from “nonpersons”, or between “meaningful life” and life which courts are free to terminate.6 Without such a line, there can be no stage of gestation at which killing a baby can be objectively distinguished from murder. No baby is safe while that line remains arbitrary. <br />
<br />
The failure of some to grasp the humanity of babies at any given stage is a dangerous basis for permitting killing, since as many fail to grasp the full humanity of quite a number of distinct groups of born persons.<br />
<br />
As Roe correctly established, it can be useful in clarifying who to count as a human with an unalienable right to life, to consult the religion from which that right was copied into America’s founding documents. But religions which oppose the foundation of American law – equal rights for all humans, merit little credibility in American courts when their claims justify destruction of an entire people group – such as the claim that souls do not enter bodies until around birth. There can be “free exercise” of religions which do not equally reverence all human life only to the extent their “exercise” does not violate the rights of others or the laws enacted to protect them.7<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] <br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #7 of 12: Congress has ''Already'' Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment already authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion, without allowing Congress to legalize it====<br />
<br />
<small>FORGET YOU READ this 32 word Statement and DON’T read farther – <br />
certainly not the footnotes – if you don’t want to question <br />
the near consensus of prolife leaders who say “we are helpless <br />
to outlaw abortion in every state before we get ANOTHER <br />
personhood law through Congress, if not a Life Amendment <br />
to the Constitution.” <> This is the 7th of 12 Statements <br />
designed to push courts out of the way of defending Life <br />
in every state when included in the Findings of Facts of <br />
prolife laws. The material below can make it clearer and stronger.</small><br />
<br />
Congress established in 2004 that: “‘unborn child’ means a child in utero, and the term ‘child in utero’...means a member of the species Homo Sapiens, at any stage of development, who is carried in the womb”, 18 U.S.C. 1841(d).1 <br />
<br />
This fact is not diminished by clause (c) which does not “permit [authorize] the prosecution of any person for...an abortion for which the consent of the pregnant woman...has been obtained.…”2 A law misaligned with facts does not block future lawmakers from making corrections, and states don’t need Congress’ “permission” to obey the 14th Amendment. <br />
<br />
The reason 18 U.S.C. 1841(d) has had no effect on the practice of legal abortion is not because of any deficiency in its authority to establish dispositive facts, but because no state law reviewed by SCOTUS has cited it to establish what Roe correctly said once “established” would “of course” require the end of legal abortion. <br />
<br />
Not only is the 2004 law unmitigated evidence of life strong enough to “collapse” legal abortion by itself, but it would not be stronger if it were an Amendment to the Constitution.3 No other Constitutional Amendment is relied on for evidence of a fact. An Amendment can bind courts. But establishment of the Facts Of Life by evidence presented, cited, and tested in court draws not only courts, but society, closer to reality.4<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #8 of 12: Roe, Dobbs, and the 14th Amendment agree: All Humans are “Persons”====<br />
<br />
<small>DON’T READ past this 11 word Statement <br />
unless you like to stare at where crazy lawyers <br />
ever got the idea that human babies aren’t people!</small><br />
<br />
Neither Roe nor Dobbs distinguished between “humans” and “persons” as if a “human” baby isn’t necessarily a “person”. [2] Nor does the 14th Amendment leave any human unprotected.<br />
<br />
Roe v. Wade equated the time an unborn child becomes “recognizably human” with the time the child becomes a “person”: “These disciplines variously approached the question [“of when life begins”] in terms of the point at which the embryo or fetus became ‘formed’ or recognizably human, or in terms of when a ‘person’ came into being, that is, infused with a ‘soul’ or ‘animated.’” 410 U.S. 113, 133(1973)<br />
<br />
Dobbs cites the belief that “a human person comes into being at conception” without distinguishing between the two words. [3] The word “person” in the 14th Amendment meant “An individual human being...man, woman, or child...consisting of body and soul.” The word “child” in that 1828 definition included unborn children, since to be “with child” meant to be pregnant. [4]<br />
<br />
Therefore the Amendment’s “nor shall any state deprive any person of life” and “equal protection” of every “person” means every human, including those unborn. Nothing about the first clause keeps later clauses from protecting unborn humans. [5]<br />
<br />
See also Wong Wing v. United States, 163 U.S.228, 242 (1896), “The term ‘person’ is broad enough to include any and every human being within the jurisdiction of the republic...This has been decided so often that the point does not require argument.” Steinberg v. Brown 321 F. Supp. 741 (N.D. Ohio, 1970) “[o]nce human life has commenced, the constitutional protections found in the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments impose upon the state a duty of safeguarding it”. [6]<br />
<br />
The word “persons” in the 14th Amendment means all who are IN FACT humans. Had it been only for those who are legally recognized as human, every deprivation of fundamental rights would be “constitutional” so long as a law or ruling questions whether its victims are “persons in the whole sense”.<br />
<br />
Although Dobbs showed by disproving the opposite that reverence for all human life from fertilization was “deeply rooted in America’s law and traditions”, that is not why rights merit 14th Amendment protection. By the “deeply rooted” test, slavery would be legal today, since freedom for slaves had zero historical support.<br />
<br />
Nor does it matter if the Amendment authors even wanted to protect all humans. In fact, it doesn’t matter if there is a 14th Amendment. If law is not equal upon its operation on all humans, which is the very definition of the word “law” as developed by Samuel Rutherford’s “Lex Rex” and Blackstone and adopted by America’s founders, to that extent there is, by definition, no “rule of law”, no restraint upon the “strong” to not tyrannize the “weak”.<br />
<br />
There is a direct test of whether babies merit 14th Amendment protection that does not require a romp through history: [7] see if their parents are humans.<br />
<br />
“To say that the test of equal protection should be the ‘legal’ rather than the biological relationship is to avoid the issue. For the Equal Protection Clause necessarily limits the authority of a State [or its judges] to draw such ‘legal’ lines as it chooses.” Glona, 391 U.S. 73, 75 (1968) [8]<br />
<br />
FOOTNOTES: see [[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
<small>The footnotes are enriched by selections from the Amicus Briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson by: Lee J. Strang <> Scholars of Jurisprudence John M. Finnis and Robert P. George <> Mary Kay Bacallao Advocating for Unborn Children <> Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide <> and by selections from the 1996 debate between Judge Robert Bork and Professor Nathan Schluetter</small><br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #9 of 12: When pregnancies develop into medical emergencies requiring separation of mother and child to save the mother, the child has an equally fundamental right to life and medical care.====<br />
<br />
A legislature’s balancing of their interests cannot, therefore, be reviewed by “strict scrutiny”.2 Nor does alleged insufficiency of a “medical emergency” exception from a general abortion ban justify a court overturning the ban in the 99% of cases where no emergency is alleged.3 Legislatures are better equipped to deliberate about and secure the rights of all citizens than courts whose focus is the parties before them.4<br />
<br />
SCOTUS never denied that a legislature’s “personhood” statements in an abortion ban are strong evidence.5 That evidence is not mitigated by a ban’s exceptions.6 It is not made irrelevant because baby killers “rely” on killing babies.7 28/130 words<br />
<br />
<small>Mini-Lexicon of legal terms:<br />
<br />
Fundamental Right: This is a term not found in the Constitution but made up by SCOTUS for the rights SCOTUS makes up which often displace rights actually listed in the Constitution. Justice Clarence Thomas is eloquent on this point. More about this later.<br />
<br />
The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: A Foundation for Moral Law <> Pennsylvania Pro-Life Federation <> 396 State Legislators from 41 States</small><br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #10 of 12: “Exceptions” do NOT Mitigate or Undermine Personhood Assertions====<br />
<br />
Evidence of Life is not disproved by an “exception...for the purpose of saving the life of the mother” and/or by not charging the mother with being a “principal or an accomplice” to murder, as Roe’s footnote 54 was generally interpreted, and as many prolifers still believe.1<br />
<br />
Although the ideal of law is equal protection of all humans, human law is as imperfect as humans. The very legal, political, and Biblical necessity of “innocent until proved guilty” illustrates the inability of human courts to equally protect every human, without that inability proving crime victims are not fully human! <br />
<br />
Practical reasons to prosecute abortionists but not moms are (1) to get moms to testify against abortionists, and (2) the greater ease for juries of imputing culpability to adult doctors than to mothers suffering varying degrees of youth, deception (by culture, schools, pastors, and judges) and pressure (by family and fathers). <br />
<br />
Legal and moral reasons for a “life of the mother” exception are that (1) while babies have a fundamental right to live, so do mothers; and (2) while we are inspired by people who give their lives for others, we can’t require them to by law. Even our Good Samaritan laws, requiring people at accident scenes to help, are sparse and inconsistent.<br />
<br />
It would be hypocritical to charge aborting moms with being accessories to murder, without first charging judges. The degree to which laws fail to give “equal protection” to all humans is no evidence of the degree to which people are not humans. Such a legal theory is absurd, unknown outside Footnote 54,2 cannot be taken seriously, and certainly merits no attention as it faults laws for being no better than is humanly possible.<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
''Footnotes will be edited and posted soon, God willing. A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #11 of 12: The 14th Amendment requires this state, as every state, to thoroughly outlaw abortion. Restrictions of abortions for the purpose of saving mothers cannot be reviewed by strict scrutiny,1 even though the safety of mothers is a fundamental right, because the safety of their babies is an equally fundamental right. Legislatures can best delineate the most life-saving balance of harms. 2 ====<br />
<br />
The indecision of judges over whether babies of humans are humans does not neutralize the consensus of fact finders that babies are fully “human persons” – an abstention does not cancel an “aye”. <br />
<br />
That consensus makes abortion legally recognizable as killing innocent human beings, which is legally recognizable as murder, which was never constitutionally protected or legal, but is what even Roe correctly said “of course” requires abortion’s legality to end. <br />
<br />
No judge can squarely address this evidence and keep abortion legal because the 14th Amendment doesn’t let any state legalize the tyranny of any class of humans over any other.3 It made irrelevant whether their destroyers “rely” on destroying them.4 The only constitutional way to keep baby murder legal would be to repeal the 14th Amendment, returning to states the power of majorities to tyrannize minorities. Of course, that would make slavery legal again. <br />
<br />
The prohibition of tyranny over any class of humans by any other has greater authority than that of the Constitution: it is also the command of the Declaration, which lays out the purpose of the Constitution, and rests its own authority on the revelation of God5 in the Bible.6 Without God it is impossible to understand fundamental rights,7 as courts have so magnificently demonstrated by so often confusing abominations for rights, decimating those whom Jesus said “forbid them not to come unto Me”, denying that He created them, murdering 17% of them, sodomizing 20% of the survivors, and censoring 100% of His teachings in schools.8 That began with the development of the principles of “Substantive Due Process” in United States v. Cruikshank 92 U. S. 542 (1876), which were applied in that case to acquit a white Democrat mililtia of murdering “as many as 165” black Republicans and burning down the courthouse they were defending.9<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
''Footnotes will be edited and posted soon, God willing. A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023'' <br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #12 of 12: Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable====<br />
<br />
Any state judge interfering with this state’s compliance with the 14th Amendment and its ancient authority to protect its people1 – the central reason governments exist, is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders, and is guilty of exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide through an unconstitutional ruling, which exceeds the judicial powers given by the state Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment.2<br />
<br />
Should any federal judge so interfere, this state appeals to its congressional delegation to examine similar grounds for disciplinary action.3 <br />
<br />
This state also appeals to its congressional delegation to exercise its life-saving and rights-protecting authority under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment whose plain words give Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations Rights,4 which subsumes the authority to define their scope and balance competing interests, while the “privileges and immunities” clause identifies as protectable rights those listed in the Constitution.4<br />
<br />
<br />
''Footnotes will be edited and posted soon, God willing. A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''</div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Reversing_Landmark_Abomination_Cases&diff=50362Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases2024-01-02T04:38:29Z<p>DaveLeach: /* Statement of Facts #7 of 12: Congress has Already Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment already authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion */</p>
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<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters<br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion</span><br />
<br />
by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal<br />
''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal<br />
<span style="color:brown"><br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen <br />
<br />
by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 18:06, 15 October 2023 (UTC)<br />
<br />
=Introduction=<br />
<br />
This book offers twelve statements of fact about babies and abortion which I challenge any voter, lawyer, lawmaker, or judge to refute. Their footnotes contain nuggets from the 140 "Amicus" briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' (2022), the ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade. These statements are designed to soften the resistance of voters to outlawing baby murder, when presented in public, and to force judges to outlaw abortion in every state, when presented in court. <br />
<br />
They are truths designed to be so unignorable, that when any lawmaker includes them in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, in any state, prodeath fury will help publicize them with each advance through legislative deadlines. When friends of babies see them survive scrutiny, the force of these truths will grow like a snowball rolling down a hill. <br />
<br />
But murdering babies is only the most egregious of many Landmark Abomination Cases. Their common thread is usurping authority which the Constitution assigns to others, and equating the Bible with spurious religions. “Never let a crisis go to waste”, say the enemies of God, but God is the true master of turning evil into an opportunity for good. It’s time. Let’s end the Supreme Court’s war against God.<br />
<br />
The very fact that abortion is the worst of the ways the United States Supreme Court has turned American law upside down creates an opportunity to heal that branch of our government, and heal all the harm to our nation and its culture and morals that it has caused. As Professor Nathan Schluetter at Hillsdale College observes, “We must not let this opportunity pass to boldly challenge the prevailing jurisprudence and its attendant epistemological and moral skepticism with respect to abortion.”<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
It is the '''fact''' that unborn babies are living human children that makes killing them murder. It’s not what any ''law'' says about it, or even what the Constitution says about it. That’s what leaves ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' on the edge of reality, by treating this fact as something for voters to figure out, not on the basis of whether babies are ''in fact'' people but on the basis of some “value” they place on ''little'' people. <br />
<br />
That '''fact''' is what makes <u>the consensus of court-recognized fact finders</u> a stronger legal reason to end legal abortion than a Life Amendment, and a powerful social reason in the Court of Public Opinion able to soften hearts to the silent screams of Jesus' little brothers and His quiet knocking on hearts' doors. Which makes it insane for prolifers to not even mention this legally dispositive consensus in each and every prolife court case, and every “finding of fact” in prolife legislation, along with leveling with the public about the Scriptures which are the real reason we even care.<br />
<br />
[[File:Cover_Cartoon.jpg]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
Why these solutions may help even where abortion is already outlawed<br />
<br />
(1) They could defeat a national abortion legalization.<br />
<br />
(2) They could help you sue a nearby “blue state” for helping its baby killers murder your children. <br />
<br />
(3) They could help if your district judges join the courtroom rebellion against Dobbs in other states.<br />
<br />
(4) They could help meet challenges in the Court of Public Opinion, for example through a Resolution that irrefutably addresses every objection you have ever heard, as understandable to voters as it is irrefutable to judges. That would help the public see through future judicial gaslighting, and support judicial reform: ie. www.savetheworld .saltshaker.us/wiki/Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_ stop_judges_from_legislating<br />
<br />
(5) I could sure use your feedback. Proverbs 15:22. <br />
<br />
----<br />
<center>'''Ending legal abortion everywhere in close to a year<br />
(the goal of the following bill language)<br />
<br>'''requires a law whose Findings of Facts: '''<br />
</center><br />
<br />
<br />
* '''contain evidence which no judge can squarely address and keep abortion legal anywhere:''' that unborn babies are real people – established by the (unanimous) consensus of court-recognized factfinders: juries, expert witnesses, 38 states, judges, and Congress;<br />
<br />
* '''present its evidence in a way that is clear and persuasive to voters,''' to help them resist judicial and media gaslighting; (See below for “Why court-recognized fact finders persuade Voters”)<br />
<br />
* '''address misunderstandings about abortion jurisprudence''' that divide prolifers, intimidate lawyers, and blind judges;<br />
<br />
'''AND WHOSE PENALTIES'''<br />
<br />
* '''restrict some aspect of abortion substantially enough''' that THEY can't be defended as a mere regulation with some other legitimate government purpose than saving lives. The restriction must be profound enough that its only possible defense is that it saves human lives. That will force courts to address the evidence that babies are fully human;<br />
<br />
* '''provide no distractions that let judges rule on some technicality and ignore the evidence that the law would save lives.''' A perfect law that addresses everything from exceptions to contraception multiplies a judge’s opportunity to say “we don’t need to reach the issue of when life begins because the law fails on a lesser issue.” A simple yet substantial restriction, with “findings” that address the legal obstacles, will survive courts, which will get courts out of the way of saving life, which will free lawmakers to work out the challenging details with time to get a comprehensive solution right and with hope that they won’t waste their time; <br />
<br />
* '''list specific penalties for specific situations,''' rather than broadly stated goals such as “babies are to be protected as much as adults”, leaving prosecutors and judges to guess what to punish, or how, in situations where evidence and culpability are different; <br />
<br />
* '''contain a “life of the mother” exception''' whose applicability is clear enough that mothers are not denied life-saving care until doctors are assured by lawyers that said care will not put the doctors in jail; and<br />
<br />
'''THE LAW SHOULD ALSO order courts to “expedite” any review,''' “because lives are lost with each day that courts delay”. <br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate!)<br />
<br />
More ideas: [[Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_stop_judges_from_legislating]]<br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate! See below for Expedited Review federal rules.) <br />
<br />
WORD COUNTS: Using only the first boldfaced paragraph of each of these 12 Findings, in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, will total about 200 words. The complete Findings, without footnotes, total nearly 3000 words. For the advantages of including enough information in a prolife law for the Findings to defend themselves, see “Too Lengthy?” below. <br />
<br />
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: I am not a lawyer. But writing about prolife legal defenses designed to bring legal abortion to an end, and Scriptures calling for that goal, for 25 years in my Prayer * Action News, being uncertified as a lawyer, has created the opportunity for a remarkable interaction with Planned Barrenhoods priciest lawyers. Because news reporters wouldn’t report that my reasoning was designed as legal defenses in court, or that they were grounded in the Bible, what that left was their accusation that I advocated crime; whereas had my defenses been successful they would have allowed citizens to stop murderers legally, putting an end to the reason citizens took action. <br />
<br />
__TOC__<br />
<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and family, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge inaction deny themselves Life More Abundantly. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget: free wisdom, guaranteed success===<br />
<br />
'''John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
James 1:5 If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, [without finding fault]; and it shall be given him. 6 But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering.''' (Gr. διακρινω not withdrawn from, ie. by lack of support from actions, or opposed, ie. by indecision) <br />
<br />
'''Matthew 21:21 ...If ye have faith, and doubt not''' (Gr. διακρινω) ...'''ye shall say unto this mountain, Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea; it shall be done. 22 And all things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive.'''<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and families, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge their own inaction deny themselves, not just their neighbors, Life More Abundantly.<br />
<br />
If you are not satisfied with life less abundantly – ongoing slaughter of innocents – you won’t be satisfied now that the fate of babies is decided by the “value” that voters place on little people. You will keep searching for a strategy to end all the slaughter: to both outlaw it, and make it unthinkable to all but the worst of murderers. <br />
<br />
If you believe you ''will'' reach every good goal you pursue with all your being, Matthew 21:21-22, you won’t be turned from ending the slaughter in every state by experts who tell you that is impossible which rules out a strategy for achieving it. You will search until you find God’s way to do God’s will. <br />
<br />
You won’t say “I'm not smart enough to question prolife legal authorities who advise giving up”, if you believe James 1:5 which promises you all the wisdom you need to do good. Nor will you ever say you are not smart enough to read and understand legal briefs, court rulings, or to reason with lawmakers, lawyers, and prolife leaders, as necessary.<br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will not excuse yourself from God’s call because you can’t talk well, like Moses, whom God answered “Who made mouths?” Exodus 4:11. Nor will you excuse yourself to God, saying you are but a child against the world’s superbrains, like Jeremiah, whom God answered, “Stop saying that! It is MY words you will speak, and I am no child!” Jeremiah 1:6-8. <br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will shine God’s light wherever you find Darkness, Matthew 5:13-16. Since nothing is darker than murdering your own baby, you will seek God’s help as you oppose this evil, and none of these excuses will withdraw you from action.<br />
<br />
===Final Warning: read this at your own risk===<br />
<br />
Warning: read at your own risk. Rough reading Ahead, that may knock you from your TV chair.<br />
<br />
'''Findings of Facts which No Judge can Squarely Address and Keep Abortion Legal'''<br />
<br />
=Part 1: Authority of Court-Recognized Fact Finders=<br />
<br />
<span style="color:grey"><small>''Try to imagine how a judge, reviewing a prolife law with these Findings of Facts, would be able to dodge this evidence - in fact, see if you can find ANYONE who can ''refute'' these facts - as opposed to not ''caring'' about facts - that is, not caring about reality:''</small></span><br />
<br />
====Statement of Fact #1 of 12: Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let any state legalize====<br />
<br />
'''Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let ''any'' state legalize.'''<br />
<br />
No fact can be more legally established than the fact that “life begins” at fertilization, being the consensus of every American legal authority who has taken a position, in every category of court-recognized finders of facts: juries,2 thousands of expert witnesses who were not contested,3 38 state legislatures,4 individual judges,5 and Congress.6 <br />
<br />
No legal authority has ruled that any unborn baby of a human is not in fact a human person, or that “life begins” any later than fertilization.7 <br />
<br />
No state can keep abortion legal now that this fact is established. This is so obvious that even Roe v. Wade said “of course”, and the lawyer for the abortionists agreed.8 <br />
For most public issues, disagreement is over facts.9 The only disagreement about abortion is between unanimous fact finders and those who don't care about facts.10 A court that won’t address the facts that justify and necessitate a law, or hear evidence of those facts, violates Due Process and has no legitimate jurisdiction to review that law.11 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 1 + Footnotes]]<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? <br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
<br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
<br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True. <br />
<br />
<br />
</span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget #2: The Cost of Success===<br />
<br />
'''Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? '''<br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True.<br />
<br />
=====Statement of Facts #2 of 12: Courts Accept the Fact-Finding Authority of Legislatures, Juries, Experts for the same good reasons their findings persuade the public.=====<br />
<br />
SCOTUS must accept legislative findings of facts that are not obviously irrational. “..the existence of facts supporting the legislative judgment is to be presumed...not to be pronounced unconstitutional unless in the light of the facts made known or generally assumed it is of such a character as to preclude the assumption that it rests upon some rational basis within the knowledge and experience of the legislators....” U.S. v. Carolene Products, 304 U.S. 144, 152 (1938).1<br />
<br />
Besides the court-recognized fact finding authority of legislatures, courts must conform their rulings to laws until such time as courts declare laws unconstitutional. No court has overturned the “unborn victims of violence” laws (based on “human babies are people”) of 39 states and Congress, despite many challenges.2<br />
<br />
To do so would require a court to positively affirm that human life does not begin until much later, which no legal authority has done, and for which no evidence exists.<br />
<br />
'''Legislatures'''. Lawmakers are there by the choice of a majority of voters. They are bombarded by information from experts. They are scrutinized by other lawmakers. Many are lawyers, some of whom are constitutional scholars and past or future judges. They set the salaries of judges, and have the power to hold impeachment trials of judges. Congress, the national legislature, scrutinizes Supreme Court justices. <br />
<br />
Many Congressmen are equally qualified: 15 U.S. Senators have served on the Supreme Court, and more were nominated.3 <br />
<br />
'''Juries''' are tested for impartiality. They are educated by the most qualified expert witnesses available. They study as long as necessary to establish truth – sometimes for months.4<br />
<br />
'''Expert Witnesses''' are the best experts money can buy, and they are scrutinized by the other side’s experts.5 <br />
<br />
It is for strong reasons that the findings of court-recognized fact finders are as respected in court as in the Court of Public Opinion.6<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 2 + Footnotes]]<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Mark 8:38 '''Whosoever therefore shall be ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful generation; of him also shall the Son of man be ashamed''', when he cometh in the glory of his Father with the holy angels.<br />
<br />
We Bible believing conservatives need to quit blaming social media and CIA censorship for our failures and stop censoring ourselves. <br />
<br />
I offer a way of stating evidence which no judge, news reporter, Democrat, or unbeliever can refute, along with answering objections that have crippled prolife messaging and legal strategy. But we despair of reaching those who stop their ears to evidence. “What’s the use of tightening our message? You’re preaching to the choir. We know babies are people but those other people have their opinion too.”<br />
<br />
I’m not "preaching to the choir". I’m passing out a new composition to the choir for a coming TV special.<br />
<br />
Most of those who won’t listen, won’t vote either, rendering their willful ignorance relatively benign. Stop worrying about them. All they will do is hate you, lie about you, wreck your business – childish stuff. We progress by clearly articulating to the extent possible. The same Bible which is the main reason we care about babies promises all the protection we need to finish what we are here to do.<br />
<br />
It isn’t just saving baby bodies where we self censor. Adult souls are lost. We hold back sharing what we know about God. Snap out of it. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #3 of 12: The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS====<br />
<br />
From Roe (1973) through Dobbs (2022), SCOTUS evaded that core issue.1 <br />
<br />
SCOTUS never ruled babies Non-Persons “as a Matter of Law”, as lower courts allege.2 Roe made that fact not only relevant, but dispositive with a holding which no court has disputed even though Roe’s main holding was overturned:3 <br />
<br />
“[Prolifers] argue that the fetus is a ‘person’ within the language and meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment....If this suggestion of personhood is established, the [abortionist’s] case, of course, collapses, for the fetus’ right to life would then be guaranteed specifically by the [14th] Amendment [thus outlawing abortion in EVERY state]. The [abortionist’s lawyer] conceded as much....”4<br />
<br />
Dobbs explicitly left this statement of the obvious untouched, saying “our decision is not based on any view about when a State should regard pre-natal life as having rights or legally cognizable interests....”5 Dobbs did not say babies aren’t people. Dobbs did not say voters should still decide whether babies can be murdered in the face of proof that babies are in fact people.6 Dobbs left in place Roe’s observation that “establishment” of this fact, independently of any law, ruling, or future constitutional amendment,7 dictates whether abortion is legally recognizable as a right or as a crime.8<br />
<br />
This established fact is as relevant today as when Roe said “of course” it is.<br />
<br />
This established fact is not disestablished by any judge’s alleged inability to understand it.9<br />
<br />
This established FACT is not made irrelevant by any judge’s theory that the legal right of little humans to live is “impossible” to determine so it should be decided by their value to big humans.10<br />
<br />
If only those legally recognized as “persons” were people, slavery could still be legal and the 14th Amendment would mean nothing. Slavery states would merely need to classify their victims as only 3/5 human.11 The Amendment protects those who are IN FACT people – what is irrelevant is whether babies are people “as a matter of law”.12 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 3 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #4 of 12: Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life====<br />
<br />
Detectable heartbeats and brain waves are evidence that a person has not yet died, throughout state and federal law.1 Reason demands they be accepted as evidence that a person has begun to live.2<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 4 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #5 of 12: Legislatures should regulate abortion, as Dobbs held, just as legislatures regulate the prosecution of all other murders====<br />
<br />
But not in the sense of absolute discretion to leave wholesale murders of a supposedly unwanted group of humans completely unregulated. That interpretation of Dobbs’ holding is premised on a “mistake of fact”, which is an official exception to Stare Decisis. 1<br />
<br />
The “Mistake of Fact” that is the premise of letting voters decide whether to continue judge-approved genocide according to the “value” they place on little people is that the humanity of babies of humans is either unknowable or irrelevant. That premise was explicit in Roe and Casey, and implicit in Dobbs.2 <br />
<br />
That is an “erroneous factual premise”. The fact that little unborn humans are humans is neither unknowable3 nor irrelevant. It is verifiable and dispositive.4 The consensus of court-recognized fact finders cures that knowledge deficit, canceling that interpretation of Dobbs’ holding, while reinforcing Dobbs’ other two holdings that “The Constitution does not confer a right to abortion” and “Roe and Casey are overruled”, and requiring the outlawing of baby killing in every state.5 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 5 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #6 of 12: The full humanity of a tiny physical body is hard for many to grasp. But what distinguishes us from animals isn’t physical, and has no known pre-conscious stage====<br />
<br />
DON’T READ past this 28 word paragraph unless you want <br />
an edge-of-your-seat adventure – legal ammunition <br />
against not only baby killing but also against the myth <br />
of the irrelevance of God in the reasoning of judges, <br />
lawmakers, and voters! Yet Roe v Wade, of all cases, <br />
"opened the door" with its sophomoric review of "theologians", <br />
and #6 comes charging through! <> The rest of this Statement <br />
is for lawmakers who want a stronger, clearer statement, <br />
and who have the stomach for the larger battle.<br />
<br />
Part of Roe’s definition of “person” was “infused with a soul”.1 Roe thus affirmed the belief of most of society, a belief logically demanded by the common knowledge that humans are distinguished from animals by consciousness which features a capacity for choices at variance with physical needs: to sacrifice one's interests for another,2 which is how John 15:13 defines “love”. And conversely, to destroy one’s own body.3<br />
<br />
These differences, along with self awareness and the capacity to choose between good and evil4 – to behave either as an angel or as a demon, can’t be explained by any known physical process. These differences justify greater legal protection of humans than of animals. <br />
<br />
Since a “soul” without consciousness has never been theorized and can’t be imagined, the consensus of fact finders is, in effect, that abortion kills babies with conscious souls. The lack of any physical explanation for a conscious soul rules out any reason to infer immaturity of consciousness from physical immaturity, and is consistent with the report in Luke 1:44 that a baby at 6 months heard a righteous voice [and/or felt the righteous Presence of God] and responded with joy,5 a response not everybody chooses, indicating that even the capacity for choosing between good and evil precedes birth. And also indicating that when a baby is killed by dismemberment, acid, or sucking out the brain, a self-aware conscious soul feels the pain, understands the cruelty, and if out-of-body near-death experiences are real, sees who is doing it.<br />
<br />
Even considering the body only, there is no objective line between birth and conception distinguishing “humans” from “nonpersons”, or between “meaningful life” and life which courts are free to terminate.6 Without such a line, there can be no stage of gestation at which killing a baby can be objectively distinguished from murder. No baby is safe while that line remains arbitrary. <br />
<br />
The failure of some to grasp the humanity of babies at any given stage is a dangerous basis for permitting killing, since as many fail to grasp the full humanity of quite a number of distinct groups of born persons.<br />
<br />
As Roe correctly established, it can be useful in clarifying who to count as a human with an unalienable right to life, to consult the religion from which that right was copied into America’s founding documents. But religions which oppose the foundation of American law – equal rights for all humans, merit little credibility in American courts when their claims justify destruction of an entire people group – such as the claim that souls do not enter bodies until around birth. There can be “free exercise” of religions which do not equally reverence all human life only to the extent their “exercise” does not violate the rights of others or the laws enacted to protect them.7<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] <br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #7 of 12: Congress has ''Already'' Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment already authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion, without allowing Congress to legalize it====<br />
<br />
<small>FORGET YOU READ this 32 word Statement and DON’T read farther – <br />
certainly not the footnotes – if you don’t want to question <br />
the near consensus of prolife leaders who say “we are helpless <br />
to outlaw abortion in every state before we get ANOTHER <br />
personhood law through Congress, if not a Life Amendment <br />
to the Constitution.” <> This is the 7th of 12 Statements <br />
designed to push courts out of the way of defending Life <br />
in every state when included in the Findings of Facts of <br />
prolife laws. The material below can make it clearer and stronger.</small><br />
<br />
Congress established in 2004 that: “‘unborn child’ means a child in utero, and the term ‘child in utero’...means a member of the species Homo Sapiens, at any stage of development, who is carried in the womb”, 18 U.S.C. 1841(d).1 <br />
<br />
This fact is not diminished by clause (c) which does not “permit [authorize] the prosecution of any person for...an abortion for which the consent of the pregnant woman...has been obtained.…”2 A law misaligned with facts does not block future lawmakers from making corrections, and states don’t need Congress’ “permission” to obey the 14th Amendment. <br />
<br />
The reason 18 U.S.C. 1841(d) has had no effect on the practice of legal abortion is not because of any deficiency in its authority to establish dispositive facts, but because no state law reviewed by SCOTUS has cited it to establish what Roe correctly said once “established” would “of course” require the end of legal abortion. <br />
<br />
Not only is the 2004 law unmitigated evidence of life strong enough to “collapse” legal abortion by itself, but it would not be stronger if it were an Amendment to the Constitution.3 No other Constitutional Amendment is relied on for evidence of a fact. An Amendment can bind courts. But establishment of the Facts Of Life by evidence presented, cited, and tested in court draws not only courts, but society, closer to reality.4<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #8 of 12: Roe, Dobbs, and the 14th Amendment agree: All Humans are “Persons”====<br />
<br />
<small>DON’T READ past this 11 word Statement <br />
unless you like to stare at where crazy lawyers <br />
ever got the idea that human babies aren’t people!</small><br />
<br />
Neither Roe nor Dobbs distinguished between “humans” and “persons” as if a “human” baby isn’t necessarily a “person”. [2] Nor does the 14th Amendment leave any human unprotected.<br />
<br />
Roe v. Wade equated the time an unborn child becomes “recognizably human” with the time the child becomes a “person”: “These disciplines variously approached the question [“of when life begins”] in terms of the point at which the embryo or fetus became ‘formed’ or recognizably human, or in terms of when a ‘person’ came into being, that is, infused with a ‘soul’ or ‘animated.’” 410 U.S. 113, 133(1973)<br />
<br />
Dobbs cites the belief that “a human person comes into being at conception” without distinguishing between the two words. [3] The word “person” in the 14th Amendment meant “An individual human being...man, woman, or child...consisting of body and soul.” The word “child” in that 1828 definition included unborn children, since to be “with child” meant to be pregnant. [4]<br />
<br />
Therefore the Amendment’s “nor shall any state deprive any person of life” and “equal protection” of every “person” means every human, including those unborn. Nothing about the first clause keeps later clauses from protecting unborn humans. [5]<br />
<br />
See also Wong Wing v. United States, 163 U.S.228, 242 (1896), “The term ‘person’ is broad enough to include any and every human being within the jurisdiction of the republic...This has been decided so often that the point does not require argument.” Steinberg v. Brown 321 F. Supp. 741 (N.D. Ohio, 1970) “[o]nce human life has commenced, the constitutional protections found in the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments impose upon the state a duty of safeguarding it”. [6]<br />
<br />
The word “persons” in the 14th Amendment means all who are IN FACT humans. Had it been only for those who are legally recognized as human, every deprivation of fundamental rights would be “constitutional” so long as a law or ruling questions whether its victims are “persons in the whole sense”.<br />
<br />
Although Dobbs showed by disproving the opposite that reverence for all human life from fertilization was “deeply rooted in America’s law and traditions”, that is not why rights merit 14th Amendment protection. By the “deeply rooted” test, slavery would be legal today, since freedom for slaves had zero historical support.<br />
<br />
Nor does it matter if the Amendment authors even wanted to protect all humans. In fact, it doesn’t matter if there is a 14th Amendment. If law is not equal upon its operation on all humans, which is the very definition of the word “law” as developed by Samuel Rutherford’s “Lex Rex” and Blackstone and adopted by America’s founders, to that extent there is, by definition, no “rule of law”, no restraint upon the “strong” to not tyrannize the “weak”.<br />
<br />
There is a direct test of whether babies merit 14th Amendment protection that does not require a romp through history: [7] see if their parents are humans.<br />
<br />
“To say that the test of equal protection should be the ‘legal’ rather than the biological relationship is to avoid the issue. For the Equal Protection Clause necessarily limits the authority of a State [or its judges] to draw such ‘legal’ lines as it chooses.” Glona, 391 U.S. 73, 75 (1968) [8]<br />
<br />
FOOTNOTES: see [[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
<small>The footnotes are enriched by selections from the Amicus Briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson by: Lee J. Strang <> Scholars of Jurisprudence John M. Finnis and Robert P. George <> Mary Kay Bacallao Advocating for Unborn Children <> Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide <> and by selections from the 1996 debate between Judge Robert Bork and Professor Nathan Schluetter</small><br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #9 of 12: SCOTUS never denied that state personhood laws are strong evidence in an abortion case====<br />
<br />
SCOTUS never said Personhood Laws are impotent. SCOTUS only said a personhood law by itself, without penalties, (that is, a law that says ‘babies are people, but we won’t stop their murderers’) doesn’t yet restrict abortion, so it can’t yet generate a case. <br />
Webster v. Reproductive Health Services 492 U.S. 490 (1989) did not say Missouri's personhood law had no power to topple Roe, but only “...until... courts have applied the [personhood] preamble to restrict appellees’ [abortionists] activities in some concrete way, it is inappropriate for federal courts to address its meaning.” - Webster, p. 491. (First paragraph)1<br />
<br />
Similarly, Dobbs v. Jackson did not address whether Mississippi’s clear “personhood” declarations called for outlawing abortion in every state, because those declarations were not applied to any challenge to murdering those persons before 20 weeks, and because in oral arguments, Mississippi’s AG explicitly denied he was asking SCOTUS to outlaw abortion. The issue of whether babies are people who should never be murdered, at any age, was not before the court.2 <br />
<br />
Far from treating a single state personhood law as impotent, SCOTUS said that were it coupled with a clear penalty, that “will be time enough to reexamine Roe, and to do so carefully”. Concurrence by O'Conner, Id. at 526. How much more the uncontradicted findings of 38 states are enough to outlaw abortion as thoroughly as slavery!<br />
<br />
<br />
''Footnotes will be edited and posted soon, God willing. A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #10 of 12: “Exceptions” do NOT Mitigate or Undermine Personhood Assertions====<br />
<br />
Evidence of Life is not disproved by an “exception...for the purpose of saving the life of the mother” and/or by not charging the mother with being a “principal or an accomplice” to murder, as Roe’s footnote 54 was generally interpreted, and as many prolifers still believe.1<br />
<br />
Although the ideal of law is equal protection of all humans, human law is as imperfect as humans. The very legal, political, and Biblical necessity of “innocent until proved guilty” illustrates the inability of human courts to equally protect every human, without that inability proving crime victims are not fully human! <br />
<br />
Practical reasons to prosecute abortionists but not moms are (1) to get moms to testify against abortionists, and (2) the greater ease for juries of imputing culpability to adult doctors than to mothers suffering varying degrees of youth, deception (by culture, schools, pastors, and judges) and pressure (by family and fathers). <br />
<br />
Legal and moral reasons for a “life of the mother” exception are that (1) while babies have a fundamental right to live, so do mothers; and (2) while we are inspired by people who give their lives for others, we can’t require them to by law. Even our Good Samaritan laws, requiring people at accident scenes to help, are sparse and inconsistent.<br />
<br />
It would be hypocritical to charge aborting moms with being accessories to murder, without first charging judges. The degree to which laws fail to give “equal protection” to all humans is no evidence of the degree to which people are not humans. Such a legal theory is absurd, unknown outside Footnote 54,2 cannot be taken seriously, and certainly merits no attention as it faults laws for being no better than is humanly possible.<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
''Footnotes will be edited and posted soon, God willing. A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #11 of 12: The 14th Amendment requires this state, as every state, to thoroughly outlaw abortion. Restrictions of abortions for the purpose of saving mothers cannot be reviewed by strict scrutiny,1 even though the safety of mothers is a fundamental right, because the safety of their babies is an equally fundamental right. Legislatures can best delineate the most life-saving balance of harms. 2 ====<br />
<br />
The indecision of judges over whether babies of humans are humans does not neutralize the consensus of fact finders that babies are fully “human persons” – an abstention does not cancel an “aye”. <br />
<br />
That consensus makes abortion legally recognizable as killing innocent human beings, which is legally recognizable as murder, which was never constitutionally protected or legal, but is what even Roe correctly said “of course” requires abortion’s legality to end. <br />
<br />
No judge can squarely address this evidence and keep abortion legal because the 14th Amendment doesn’t let any state legalize the tyranny of any class of humans over any other.3 It made irrelevant whether their destroyers “rely” on destroying them.4 The only constitutional way to keep baby murder legal would be to repeal the 14th Amendment, returning to states the power of majorities to tyrannize minorities. Of course, that would make slavery legal again. <br />
<br />
The prohibition of tyranny over any class of humans by any other has greater authority than that of the Constitution: it is also the command of the Declaration, which lays out the purpose of the Constitution, and rests its own authority on the revelation of God5 in the Bible.6 Without God it is impossible to understand fundamental rights,7 as courts have so magnificently demonstrated by so often confusing abominations for rights, decimating those whom Jesus said “forbid them not to come unto Me”, denying that He created them, murdering 17% of them, sodomizing 20% of the survivors, and censoring 100% of His teachings in schools.8 That began with the development of the principles of “Substantive Due Process” in United States v. Cruikshank 92 U. S. 542 (1876), which were applied in that case to acquit a white Democrat mililtia of murdering “as many as 165” black Republicans and burning down the courthouse they were defending.9<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
''Footnotes will be edited and posted soon, God willing. A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023'' <br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #12 of 12: Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable====<br />
<br />
Any state judge interfering with this state’s compliance with the 14th Amendment and its ancient authority to protect its people1 – the central reason governments exist, is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders, and is guilty of exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide through an unconstitutional ruling, which exceeds the judicial powers given by the state Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment.2<br />
<br />
Should any federal judge so interfere, this state appeals to its congressional delegation to examine similar grounds for disciplinary action.3 <br />
<br />
This state also appeals to its congressional delegation to exercise its life-saving and rights-protecting authority under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment whose plain words give Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations Rights,4 which subsumes the authority to define their scope and balance competing interests, while the “privileges and immunities” clause identifies as protectable rights those listed in the Constitution.4<br />
<br />
<br />
''Footnotes will be edited and posted soon, God willing. A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''</div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Reversing_Landmark_Abomination_Cases&diff=50361Reversing Landmark Abomination Cases2024-01-02T04:14:52Z<p>DaveLeach: /* Statement of Fact #1 of 12: Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human */</p>
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<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters<br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion</span><br />
<br />
by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal<br />
''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal<br />
<span style="color:brown"><br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen <br />
<br />
by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 18:06, 15 October 2023 (UTC)<br />
<br />
=Introduction=<br />
<br />
This book offers twelve statements of fact about babies and abortion which I challenge any voter, lawyer, lawmaker, or judge to refute. Their footnotes contain nuggets from the 140 "Amicus" briefs filed in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' (2022), the ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade. These statements are designed to soften the resistance of voters to outlawing baby murder, when presented in public, and to force judges to outlaw abortion in every state, when presented in court. <br />
<br />
They are truths designed to be so unignorable, that when any lawmaker includes them in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, in any state, prodeath fury will help publicize them with each advance through legislative deadlines. When friends of babies see them survive scrutiny, the force of these truths will grow like a snowball rolling down a hill. <br />
<br />
But murdering babies is only the most egregious of many Landmark Abomination Cases. Their common thread is usurping authority which the Constitution assigns to others, and equating the Bible with spurious religions. “Never let a crisis go to waste”, say the enemies of God, but God is the true master of turning evil into an opportunity for good. It’s time. Let’s end the Supreme Court’s war against God.<br />
<br />
The very fact that abortion is the worst of the ways the United States Supreme Court has turned American law upside down creates an opportunity to heal that branch of our government, and heal all the harm to our nation and its culture and morals that it has caused. As Professor Nathan Schluetter at Hillsdale College observes, “We must not let this opportunity pass to boldly challenge the prevailing jurisprudence and its attendant epistemological and moral skepticism with respect to abortion.”<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
It is the '''fact''' that unborn babies are living human children that makes killing them murder. It’s not what any ''law'' says about it, or even what the Constitution says about it. That’s what leaves ''Dobbs v. Jackson'' on the edge of reality, by treating this fact as something for voters to figure out, not on the basis of whether babies are ''in fact'' people but on the basis of some “value” they place on ''little'' people. <br />
<br />
That '''fact''' is what makes <u>the consensus of court-recognized fact finders</u> a stronger legal reason to end legal abortion than a Life Amendment, and a powerful social reason in the Court of Public Opinion able to soften hearts to the silent screams of Jesus' little brothers and His quiet knocking on hearts' doors. Which makes it insane for prolifers to not even mention this legally dispositive consensus in each and every prolife court case, and every “finding of fact” in prolife legislation, along with leveling with the public about the Scriptures which are the real reason we even care.<br />
<br />
[[File:Cover_Cartoon.jpg]]<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
Why these solutions may help even where abortion is already outlawed<br />
<br />
(1) They could defeat a national abortion legalization.<br />
<br />
(2) They could help you sue a nearby “blue state” for helping its baby killers murder your children. <br />
<br />
(3) They could help if your district judges join the courtroom rebellion against Dobbs in other states.<br />
<br />
(4) They could help meet challenges in the Court of Public Opinion, for example through a Resolution that irrefutably addresses every objection you have ever heard, as understandable to voters as it is irrefutable to judges. That would help the public see through future judicial gaslighting, and support judicial reform: ie. www.savetheworld .saltshaker.us/wiki/Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_ stop_judges_from_legislating<br />
<br />
(5) I could sure use your feedback. Proverbs 15:22. <br />
<br />
----<br />
<center>'''Ending legal abortion everywhere in close to a year<br />
(the goal of the following bill language)<br />
<br>'''requires a law whose Findings of Facts: '''<br />
</center><br />
<br />
<br />
* '''contain evidence which no judge can squarely address and keep abortion legal anywhere:''' that unborn babies are real people – established by the (unanimous) consensus of court-recognized factfinders: juries, expert witnesses, 38 states, judges, and Congress;<br />
<br />
* '''present its evidence in a way that is clear and persuasive to voters,''' to help them resist judicial and media gaslighting; (See below for “Why court-recognized fact finders persuade Voters”)<br />
<br />
* '''address misunderstandings about abortion jurisprudence''' that divide prolifers, intimidate lawyers, and blind judges;<br />
<br />
'''AND WHOSE PENALTIES'''<br />
<br />
* '''restrict some aspect of abortion substantially enough''' that THEY can't be defended as a mere regulation with some other legitimate government purpose than saving lives. The restriction must be profound enough that its only possible defense is that it saves human lives. That will force courts to address the evidence that babies are fully human;<br />
<br />
* '''provide no distractions that let judges rule on some technicality and ignore the evidence that the law would save lives.''' A perfect law that addresses everything from exceptions to contraception multiplies a judge’s opportunity to say “we don’t need to reach the issue of when life begins because the law fails on a lesser issue.” A simple yet substantial restriction, with “findings” that address the legal obstacles, will survive courts, which will get courts out of the way of saving life, which will free lawmakers to work out the challenging details with time to get a comprehensive solution right and with hope that they won’t waste their time; <br />
<br />
* '''list specific penalties for specific situations,''' rather than broadly stated goals such as “babies are to be protected as much as adults”, leaving prosecutors and judges to guess what to punish, or how, in situations where evidence and culpability are different; <br />
<br />
* '''contain a “life of the mother” exception''' whose applicability is clear enough that mothers are not denied life-saving care until doctors are assured by lawyers that said care will not put the doctors in jail; and<br />
<br />
'''THE LAW SHOULD ALSO order courts to “expedite” any review,''' “because lives are lost with each day that courts delay”. <br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate!)<br />
<br />
More ideas: [[Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_stop_judges_from_legislating]]<br />
<br />
(A grant of expedited review will constitute tacit agreement that babies are people. To deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate! See below for Expedited Review federal rules.) <br />
<br />
WORD COUNTS: Using only the first boldfaced paragraph of each of these 12 Findings, in the “findings of facts” of a prolife law, will total about 200 words. The complete Findings, without footnotes, total nearly 3000 words. For the advantages of including enough information in a prolife law for the Findings to defend themselves, see “Too Lengthy?” below. <br />
<br />
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: I am not a lawyer. But writing about prolife legal defenses designed to bring legal abortion to an end, and Scriptures calling for that goal, for 25 years in my Prayer * Action News, being uncertified as a lawyer, has created the opportunity for a remarkable interaction with Planned Barrenhoods priciest lawyers. Because news reporters wouldn’t report that my reasoning was designed as legal defenses in court, or that they were grounded in the Bible, what that left was their accusation that I advocated crime; whereas had my defenses been successful they would have allowed citizens to stop murderers legally, putting an end to the reason citizens took action. <br />
<br />
__TOC__<br />
<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and family, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge inaction deny themselves Life More Abundantly. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget: free wisdom, guaranteed success===<br />
<br />
'''John 10:10 The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy: I am come that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.<br />
<br />
James 1:5 If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, [without finding fault]; and it shall be given him. 6 But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering.''' (Gr. διακρινω not withdrawn from, ie. by lack of support from actions, or opposed, ie. by indecision) <br />
<br />
'''Matthew 21:21 ...If ye have faith, and doubt not''' (Gr. διακρινω) ...'''ye shall say unto this mountain, Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea; it shall be done. 22 And all things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive.'''<br />
<br />
Abortion steals futures and families, kills the most innocent, and destroys economies and nations. Abortion isn’t the only Thief. The voices which self-censor to indulge their own inaction deny themselves, not just their neighbors, Life More Abundantly.<br />
<br />
If you are not satisfied with life less abundantly – ongoing slaughter of innocents – you won’t be satisfied now that the fate of babies is decided by the “value” that voters place on little people. You will keep searching for a strategy to end all the slaughter: to both outlaw it, and make it unthinkable to all but the worst of murderers. <br />
<br />
If you believe you ''will'' reach every good goal you pursue with all your being, Matthew 21:21-22, you won’t be turned from ending the slaughter in every state by experts who tell you that is impossible which rules out a strategy for achieving it. You will search until you find God’s way to do God’s will. <br />
<br />
You won’t say “I'm not smart enough to question prolife legal authorities who advise giving up”, if you believe James 1:5 which promises you all the wisdom you need to do good. Nor will you ever say you are not smart enough to read and understand legal briefs, court rulings, or to reason with lawmakers, lawyers, and prolife leaders, as necessary.<br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will not excuse yourself from God’s call because you can’t talk well, like Moses, whom God answered “Who made mouths?” Exodus 4:11. Nor will you excuse yourself to God, saying you are but a child against the world’s superbrains, like Jeremiah, whom God answered, “Stop saying that! It is MY words you will speak, and I am no child!” Jeremiah 1:6-8. <br />
<br />
If you believe God, you will shine God’s light wherever you find Darkness, Matthew 5:13-16. Since nothing is darker than murdering your own baby, you will seek God’s help as you oppose this evil, and none of these excuses will withdraw you from action.<br />
<br />
===Final Warning: read this at your own risk===<br />
<br />
Warning: read at your own risk. Rough reading Ahead, that may knock you from your TV chair.<br />
<br />
'''Findings of Facts which No Judge can Squarely Address and Keep Abortion Legal'''<br />
<br />
=Part 1: Authority of Court-Recognized Fact Finders=<br />
<br />
<span style="color:grey"><small>''Try to imagine how a judge, reviewing a prolife law with these Findings of Facts, would be able to dodge this evidence - in fact, see if you can find ANYONE who can ''refute'' these facts - as opposed to not ''caring'' about facts - that is, not caring about reality:''</small></span><br />
<br />
====Statement of Fact #1 of 12: Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let any state legalize====<br />
<br />
'''Court-recognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human, which makes killing them legally recognizable as murder, which the 14th Amendment doesn’t let ''any'' state legalize.'''<br />
<br />
No fact can be more legally established than the fact that “life begins” at fertilization, being the consensus of every American legal authority who has taken a position, in every category of court-recognized finders of facts: juries,2 thousands of expert witnesses who were not contested,3 38 state legislatures,4 individual judges,5 and Congress.6 <br />
<br />
No legal authority has ruled that any unborn baby of a human is not in fact a human person, or that “life begins” any later than fertilization.7 <br />
<br />
No state can keep abortion legal now that this fact is established. This is so obvious that even Roe v. Wade said “of course”, and the lawyer for the abortionists agreed.8 <br />
For most public issues, disagreement is over facts.9 The only disagreement about abortion is between unanimous fact finders and those who don't care about facts.10 A court that won’t address the facts that justify and necessitate a law, or hear evidence of those facts, violates Due Process and has no legitimate jurisdiction to review that law.11 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 1 + Footnotes]]<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? <br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
<br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
<br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True. <br />
<br />
<br />
</span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
===Bible Nugget #2: The Cost of Success===<br />
<br />
'''Matthew 16:24 If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me. 25 For whosoever will save his life shall lose it: and whosoever will lose his life for my sake shall find it. 26 For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul? '''<br />
<br />
Huh? How do we fit this with Jesus coming so we could have Life “more abundantly”? <br />
<br />
How from our Cross is Life discovered? <br />
How from such pain, can come such joy? <br />
The Gospel tracts say Jesus suffered<br />
so we’d need no works to employ.<br />
Then what’s this Cross we take and follow?<br />
Is there no “work” for us to do?<br />
My Cup of Love I’ll lift and swallow.<br />
I’ll “lose” false life, and find Life True.<br />
<br />
=====Statement of Facts #2 of 12: Courts Accept the Fact-Finding Authority of Legislatures, Juries, Experts for the same good reasons their findings persuade the public.=====<br />
<br />
SCOTUS must accept legislative findings of facts that are not obviously irrational. “..the existence of facts supporting the legislative judgment is to be presumed...not to be pronounced unconstitutional unless in the light of the facts made known or generally assumed it is of such a character as to preclude the assumption that it rests upon some rational basis within the knowledge and experience of the legislators....” U.S. v. Carolene Products, 304 U.S. 144, 152 (1938).1<br />
<br />
Besides the court-recognized fact finding authority of legislatures, courts must conform their rulings to laws until such time as courts declare laws unconstitutional. No court has overturned the “unborn victims of violence” laws (based on “human babies are people”) of 39 states and Congress, despite many challenges.2<br />
<br />
To do so would require a court to positively affirm that human life does not begin until much later, which no legal authority has done, and for which no evidence exists.<br />
<br />
'''Legislatures'''. Lawmakers are there by the choice of a majority of voters. They are bombarded by information from experts. They are scrutinized by other lawmakers. Many are lawyers, some of whom are constitutional scholars and past or future judges. They set the salaries of judges, and have the power to hold impeachment trials of judges. Congress, the national legislature, scrutinizes Supreme Court justices. <br />
<br />
Many Congressmen are equally qualified: 15 U.S. Senators have served on the Supreme Court, and more were nominated.3 <br />
<br />
'''Juries''' are tested for impartiality. They are educated by the most qualified expert witnesses available. They study as long as necessary to establish truth – sometimes for months.4<br />
<br />
'''Expert Witnesses''' are the best experts money can buy, and they are scrutinized by the other side’s experts.5 <br />
<br />
It is for strong reasons that the findings of court-recognized fact finders are as respected in court as in the Court of Public Opinion.6<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 2 + Footnotes]]<br />
----<br />
<span style="color:#0f0">Mark 8:38 '''Whosoever therefore shall be ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful generation; of him also shall the Son of man be ashamed''', when he cometh in the glory of his Father with the holy angels.<br />
<br />
We Bible believing conservatives need to quit blaming social media and CIA censorship for our failures and stop censoring ourselves. <br />
<br />
I offer a way of stating evidence which no judge, news reporter, Democrat, or unbeliever can refute, along with answering objections that have crippled prolife messaging and legal strategy. But we despair of reaching those who stop their ears to evidence. “What’s the use of tightening our message? You’re preaching to the choir. We know babies are people but those other people have their opinion too.”<br />
<br />
I’m not "preaching to the choir". I’m passing out a new composition to the choir for a coming TV special.<br />
<br />
Most of those who won’t listen, won’t vote either, rendering their willful ignorance relatively benign. Stop worrying about them. All they will do is hate you, lie about you, wreck your business – childish stuff. We progress by clearly articulating to the extent possible. The same Bible which is the main reason we care about babies promises all the protection we need to finish what we are here to do.<br />
<br />
It isn’t just saving baby bodies where we self censor. Adult souls are lost. We hold back sharing what we know about God. Snap out of it. </span><br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #3 of 12: The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS====<br />
<br />
From Roe (1973) through Dobbs (2022), SCOTUS evaded that core issue.1 <br />
<br />
SCOTUS never ruled babies Non-Persons “as a Matter of Law”, as lower courts allege.2 Roe made that fact not only relevant, but dispositive with a holding which no court has disputed even though Roe’s main holding was overturned:3 <br />
<br />
“[Prolifers] argue that the fetus is a ‘person’ within the language and meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment....If this suggestion of personhood is established, the [abortionist’s] case, of course, collapses, for the fetus’ right to life would then be guaranteed specifically by the [14th] Amendment [thus outlawing abortion in EVERY state]. The [abortionist’s lawyer] conceded as much....”4<br />
<br />
Dobbs explicitly left this statement of the obvious untouched, saying “our decision is not based on any view about when a State should regard pre-natal life as having rights or legally cognizable interests....”5 Dobbs did not say babies aren’t people. Dobbs did not say voters should still decide whether babies can be murdered in the face of proof that babies are in fact people.6 Dobbs left in place Roe’s observation that “establishment” of this fact, independently of any law, ruling, or future constitutional amendment,7 dictates whether abortion is legally recognizable as a right or as a crime.8<br />
<br />
This established fact is as relevant today as when Roe said “of course” it is.<br />
<br />
This established fact is not disestablished by any judge’s alleged inability to understand it.9<br />
<br />
This established FACT is not made irrelevant by any judge’s theory that the legal right of little humans to live is “impossible” to determine so it should be decided by their value to big humans.10<br />
<br />
If only those legally recognized as “persons” were people, slavery could still be legal and the 14th Amendment would mean nothing. Slavery states would merely need to classify their victims as only 3/5 human.11 The Amendment protects those who are IN FACT people – what is irrelevant is whether babies are people “as a matter of law”.12 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 3 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #4 of 12: Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life====<br />
<br />
Detectable heartbeats and brain waves are evidence that a person has not yet died, throughout state and federal law.1 Reason demands they be accepted as evidence that a person has begun to live.2<br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 4 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #5 of 12: Legislatures should regulate abortion, as Dobbs held, just as legislatures regulate the prosecution of all other murders====<br />
<br />
But not in the sense of absolute discretion to leave wholesale murders of a supposedly unwanted group of humans completely unregulated. That interpretation of Dobbs’ holding is premised on a “mistake of fact”, which is an official exception to Stare Decisis. 1<br />
<br />
The “Mistake of Fact” that is the premise of letting voters decide whether to continue judge-approved genocide according to the “value” they place on little people is that the humanity of babies of humans is either unknowable or irrelevant. That premise was explicit in Roe and Casey, and implicit in Dobbs.2 <br />
<br />
That is an “erroneous factual premise”. The fact that little unborn humans are humans is neither unknowable3 nor irrelevant. It is verifiable and dispositive.4 The consensus of court-recognized fact finders cures that knowledge deficit, canceling that interpretation of Dobbs’ holding, while reinforcing Dobbs’ other two holdings that “The Constitution does not confer a right to abortion” and “Roe and Casey are overruled”, and requiring the outlawing of baby killing in every state.5 <br />
<br />
Footnotes: see [[Statement 5 + Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #6 of 12: The full humanity of a tiny physical body is hard for many to grasp. But what distinguishes us from animals isn’t physical, and has no known pre-conscious stage====<br />
<br />
DON’T READ past this 28 word paragraph unless you want <br />
an edge-of-your-seat adventure – legal ammunition <br />
against not only baby killing but also against the myth <br />
of the irrelevance of God in the reasoning of judges, <br />
lawmakers, and voters! Yet Roe v Wade, of all cases, <br />
"opened the door" with its sophomoric review of "theologians", <br />
and #6 comes charging through! <> The rest of this Statement <br />
is for lawmakers who want a stronger, clearer statement, <br />
and who have the stomach for the larger battle.<br />
<br />
Part of Roe’s definition of “person” was “infused with a soul”.1 Roe thus affirmed the belief of most of society, a belief logically demanded by the common knowledge that humans are distinguished from animals by consciousness which features a capacity for choices at variance with physical needs: to sacrifice one's interests for another,2 which is how John 15:13 defines “love”. And conversely, to destroy one’s own body.3<br />
<br />
These differences, along with self awareness and the capacity to choose between good and evil4 – to behave either as an angel or as a demon, can’t be explained by any known physical process. These differences justify greater legal protection of humans than of animals. <br />
<br />
Since a “soul” without consciousness has never been theorized and can’t be imagined, the consensus of fact finders is, in effect, that abortion kills babies with conscious souls. The lack of any physical explanation for a conscious soul rules out any reason to infer immaturity of consciousness from physical immaturity, and is consistent with the report in Luke 1:44 that a baby at 6 months heard a righteous voice [and/or felt the righteous Presence of God] and responded with joy,5 a response not everybody chooses, indicating that even the capacity for choosing between good and evil precedes birth. And also indicating that when a baby is killed by dismemberment, acid, or sucking out the brain, a self-aware conscious soul feels the pain, understands the cruelty, and if out-of-body near-death experiences are real, sees who is doing it.<br />
<br />
Even considering the body only, there is no objective line between birth and conception distinguishing “humans” from “nonpersons”, or between “meaningful life” and life which courts are free to terminate.6 Without such a line, there can be no stage of gestation at which killing a baby can be objectively distinguished from murder. No baby is safe while that line remains arbitrary. <br />
<br />
The failure of some to grasp the humanity of babies at any given stage is a dangerous basis for permitting killing, since as many fail to grasp the full humanity of quite a number of distinct groups of born persons.<br />
<br />
As Roe correctly established, it can be useful in clarifying who to count as a human with an unalienable right to life, to consult the religion from which that right was copied into America’s founding documents. But religions which oppose the foundation of American law – equal rights for all humans, merit little credibility in American courts when their claims justify destruction of an entire people group – such as the claim that souls do not enter bodies until around birth. There can be “free exercise” of religions which do not equally reverence all human life only to the extent their “exercise” does not violate the rights of others or the laws enacted to protect them.7<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] <br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #7 of 12: Congress has ''Already'' Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment already authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion====<br />
<br />
<small>FORGET YOU READ this 32 word Statement and DON’T read farther – <br />
certainly not the footnotes – if you don’t want to question <br />
the near consensus of prolife leaders who say “we are helpless <br />
to outlaw abortion in every state before we get ANOTHER <br />
personhood law through Congress, if not a Life Amendment <br />
to the Constitution.” <> This is the 7th of 12 Statements <br />
designed to push courts out of the way of defending Life <br />
in every state when included in the Findings of Facts of <br />
prolife laws. The material below can make it clearer and stronger.</small><br />
<br />
Congress established in 2004 that: “‘unborn child’ means a child in utero, and the term ‘child in utero’...means a member of the species Homo Sapiens, at any stage of development, who is carried in the womb”, 18 U.S.C. 1841(d).1 <br />
<br />
This fact is not diminished by clause (c) which does not “permit [authorize] the prosecution of any person for...an abortion for which the consent of the pregnant woman...has been obtained.…”2 A law misaligned with facts does not block future lawmakers from making corrections, and states don’t need Congress’ “permission” to obey the 14th Amendment. <br />
<br />
The reason 18 U.S.C. 1841(d) has had no effect on the practice of legal abortion is not because of any deficiency in its authority to establish dispositive facts, but because no state law reviewed by SCOTUS has cited it to establish what Roe correctly said once “established” would “of course” require the end of legal abortion. <br />
<br />
Not only is the 2004 law unmitigated evidence of life strong enough to “collapse” legal abortion by itself, but it would not be stronger if it were an Amendment to the Constitution.3 No other Constitutional Amendment is relied on for evidence of a fact. An Amendment can bind courts. But establishment of the Facts Of Life by evidence presented, cited, and tested in court draws not only courts, but society, closer to reality.4<br />
<br />
See footnotes at: [[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #8 of 12: Roe, Dobbs, and the 14th Amendment agree: All Humans are “Persons”====<br />
<br />
<small>DON’T READ past this 11 word Statement <br />
unless you like to stare at where crazy lawyers <br />
ever got the idea that human babies aren’t people!</small><br />
<br />
Neither Roe nor Dobbs distinguished between “humans” and “persons” as if a “human” baby isn’t necessarily a “person”. [2] Nor does the 14th Amendment leave any human unprotected.<br />
<br />
Roe v. Wade equated the time an unborn child becomes “recognizably human” with the time the child becomes a “person”: “These disciplines variously approached the question [“of when life begins”] in terms of the point at which the embryo or fetus became ‘formed’ or recognizably human, or in terms of when a ‘person’ came into being, that is, infused with a ‘soul’ or ‘animated.’” 410 U.S. 113, 133(1973)<br />
<br />
Dobbs cites the belief that “a human person comes into being at conception” without distinguishing between the two words. [3] The word “person” in the 14th Amendment meant “An individual human being...man, woman, or child...consisting of body and soul.” The word “child” in that 1828 definition included unborn children, since to be “with child” meant to be pregnant. [4]<br />
<br />
Therefore the Amendment’s “nor shall any state deprive any person of life” and “equal protection” of every “person” means every human, including those unborn. Nothing about the first clause keeps later clauses from protecting unborn humans. [5]<br />
<br />
See also Wong Wing v. United States, 163 U.S.228, 242 (1896), “The term ‘person’ is broad enough to include any and every human being within the jurisdiction of the republic...This has been decided so often that the point does not require argument.” Steinberg v. Brown 321 F. Supp. 741 (N.D. Ohio, 1970) “[o]nce human life has commenced, the constitutional protections found in the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments impose upon the state a duty of safeguarding it”. [6]<br />
<br />
The word “persons” in the 14th Amendment means all who are IN FACT humans. Had it been only for those who are legally recognized as human, every deprivation of fundamental rights would be “constitutional” so long as a law or ruling questions whether its victims are “persons in the whole sense”.<br />
<br />
Although Dobbs showed by disproving the opposite that reverence for all human life from fertilization was “deeply rooted in America’s law and traditions”, that is not why rights merit 14th Amendment protection. By the “deeply rooted” test, slavery would be legal today, since freedom for slaves had zero historical support.<br />
<br />
Nor does it matter if the Amendment authors even wanted to protect all humans. In fact, it doesn’t matter if there is a 14th Amendment. If law is not equal upon its operation on all humans, which is the very definition of the word “law” as developed by Samuel Rutherford’s “Lex Rex” and Blackstone and adopted by America’s founders, to that extent there is, by definition, no “rule of law”, no restraint upon the “strong” to not tyrannize the “weak”.<br />
<br />
There is a direct test of whether babies merit 14th Amendment protection that does not require a romp through history: [7] see if their parents are humans.<br />
<br />
“To say that the test of equal protection should be the ‘legal’ rather than the biological relationship is to avoid the issue. For the Equal Protection Clause necessarily limits the authority of a State [or its judges] to draw such ‘legal’ lines as it chooses.” Glona, 391 U.S. 73, 75 (1968) [8]<br />
<br />
FOOTNOTES: see [[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]]<br />
<br />
<small>The footnotes are enriched by selections from the Amicus Briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson by: Lee J. Strang <> Scholars of Jurisprudence John M. Finnis and Robert P. George <> Mary Kay Bacallao Advocating for Unborn Children <> Center for Medical Progress and David Daleide <> and by selections from the 1996 debate between Judge Robert Bork and Professor Nathan Schluetter</small><br />
<br />
A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #9 of 12: SCOTUS never denied that state personhood laws are strong evidence in an abortion case====<br />
<br />
SCOTUS never said Personhood Laws are impotent. SCOTUS only said a personhood law by itself, without penalties, (that is, a law that says ‘babies are people, but we won’t stop their murderers’) doesn’t yet restrict abortion, so it can’t yet generate a case. <br />
Webster v. Reproductive Health Services 492 U.S. 490 (1989) did not say Missouri's personhood law had no power to topple Roe, but only “...until... courts have applied the [personhood] preamble to restrict appellees’ [abortionists] activities in some concrete way, it is inappropriate for federal courts to address its meaning.” - Webster, p. 491. (First paragraph)1<br />
<br />
Similarly, Dobbs v. Jackson did not address whether Mississippi’s clear “personhood” declarations called for outlawing abortion in every state, because those declarations were not applied to any challenge to murdering those persons before 20 weeks, and because in oral arguments, Mississippi’s AG explicitly denied he was asking SCOTUS to outlaw abortion. The issue of whether babies are people who should never be murdered, at any age, was not before the court.2 <br />
<br />
Far from treating a single state personhood law as impotent, SCOTUS said that were it coupled with a clear penalty, that “will be time enough to reexamine Roe, and to do so carefully”. Concurrence by O'Conner, Id. at 526. How much more the uncontradicted findings of 38 states are enough to outlaw abortion as thoroughly as slavery!<br />
<br />
<br />
''Footnotes will be edited and posted soon, God willing. A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #10 of 12: “Exceptions” do NOT Mitigate or Undermine Personhood Assertions====<br />
<br />
Evidence of Life is not disproved by an “exception...for the purpose of saving the life of the mother” and/or by not charging the mother with being a “principal or an accomplice” to murder, as Roe’s footnote 54 was generally interpreted, and as many prolifers still believe.1<br />
<br />
Although the ideal of law is equal protection of all humans, human law is as imperfect as humans. The very legal, political, and Biblical necessity of “innocent until proved guilty” illustrates the inability of human courts to equally protect every human, without that inability proving crime victims are not fully human! <br />
<br />
Practical reasons to prosecute abortionists but not moms are (1) to get moms to testify against abortionists, and (2) the greater ease for juries of imputing culpability to adult doctors than to mothers suffering varying degrees of youth, deception (by culture, schools, pastors, and judges) and pressure (by family and fathers). <br />
<br />
Legal and moral reasons for a “life of the mother” exception are that (1) while babies have a fundamental right to live, so do mothers; and (2) while we are inspired by people who give their lives for others, we can’t require them to by law. Even our Good Samaritan laws, requiring people at accident scenes to help, are sparse and inconsistent.<br />
<br />
It would be hypocritical to charge aborting moms with being accessories to murder, without first charging judges. The degree to which laws fail to give “equal protection” to all humans is no evidence of the degree to which people are not humans. Such a legal theory is absurd, unknown outside Footnote 54,2 cannot be taken seriously, and certainly merits no attention as it faults laws for being no better than is humanly possible.<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
''Footnotes will be edited and posted soon, God willing. A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #11 of 12: The 14th Amendment requires this state, as every state, to thoroughly outlaw abortion. Restrictions of abortions for the purpose of saving mothers cannot be reviewed by strict scrutiny,1 even though the safety of mothers is a fundamental right, because the safety of their babies is an equally fundamental right. Legislatures can best delineate the most life-saving balance of harms. 2 ====<br />
<br />
The indecision of judges over whether babies of humans are humans does not neutralize the consensus of fact finders that babies are fully “human persons” – an abstention does not cancel an “aye”. <br />
<br />
That consensus makes abortion legally recognizable as killing innocent human beings, which is legally recognizable as murder, which was never constitutionally protected or legal, but is what even Roe correctly said “of course” requires abortion’s legality to end. <br />
<br />
No judge can squarely address this evidence and keep abortion legal because the 14th Amendment doesn’t let any state legalize the tyranny of any class of humans over any other.3 It made irrelevant whether their destroyers “rely” on destroying them.4 The only constitutional way to keep baby murder legal would be to repeal the 14th Amendment, returning to states the power of majorities to tyrannize minorities. Of course, that would make slavery legal again. <br />
<br />
The prohibition of tyranny over any class of humans by any other has greater authority than that of the Constitution: it is also the command of the Declaration, which lays out the purpose of the Constitution, and rests its own authority on the revelation of God5 in the Bible.6 Without God it is impossible to understand fundamental rights,7 as courts have so magnificently demonstrated by so often confusing abominations for rights, decimating those whom Jesus said “forbid them not to come unto Me”, denying that He created them, murdering 17% of them, sodomizing 20% of the survivors, and censoring 100% of His teachings in schools.8 That began with the development of the principles of “Substantive Due Process” in United States v. Cruikshank 92 U. S. 542 (1876), which were applied in that case to acquit a white Democrat mililtia of murdering “as many as 165” black Republicans and burning down the courthouse they were defending.9<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
''Footnotes will be edited and posted soon, God willing. A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023'' <br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
====Statement of Facts #12 of 12: Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable====<br />
<br />
Any state judge interfering with this state’s compliance with the 14th Amendment and its ancient authority to protect its people1 – the central reason governments exist, is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders, and is guilty of exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide through an unconstitutional ruling, which exceeds the judicial powers given by the state Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment.2<br />
<br />
Should any federal judge so interfere, this state appeals to its congressional delegation to examine similar grounds for disciplinary action.3 <br />
<br />
This state also appeals to its congressional delegation to exercise its life-saving and rights-protecting authority under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment whose plain words give Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations Rights,4 which subsumes the authority to define their scope and balance competing interests, while the “privileges and immunities” clause identifies as protectable rights those listed in the Constitution.4<br />
<br />
<br />
''Footnotes will be edited and posted soon, God willing. A rough draft of the entire book from which this post is taken is posted at www.saltshaker.us/ReversingLandmarkAbominationCases. Target date for completion, including completion of processing nuggets from the 140 Amicus Briefs posted in ''Dobbs v. Jackson'': Christmas, 2023''</div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Statement_12_%2B_Footnotes&diff=50360Statement 12 + Footnotes2023-12-18T02:44:32Z<p>DaveLeach: </p>
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<br />
Statement of Facts #12 of 12 from: <br />
<br />
=[[Reversing_Landmark_Abomination_Cases]]=<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters<br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion</span><br />
<br />
by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal<br />
''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal<br />
<span style="color:brown"><br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen <br />
<br />
by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 18:11, 15 October 2023 (UTC)<br />
<br />
<span style="color:grey"><small>''Try to imagine how a judge, reviewing a prolife law with these Findings of Facts, would be able to dodge this evidence - in fact, see if you can find ANYONE who can ''refute'' these facts - as opposed to not ''caring'' about facts - that is, not caring about reality:''</small></span><br />
<br />
====<span style="color:blue">Statement of Fact #12 of 12:====<br />
<span style="color:blue">Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">Any state judge interfering with this state’s compliance with the 14th Amendment and its ancient authority to protect its people <br />
<ref>More about '''“the ancient authority of state legislatures...to protect the lives of all its people – an authority which no court can legitimately remove.”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Courts that overturn the prolife laws of “red states” interfere with the ancient duty and power of every government, in every generation, to protect life, points out the amicus brief filed in Dobbs v. Jackson by <u>396 State Legislators from 41 States</u>.(www.supremecourt.gov/Docket PDF/19/19-1392/185121/ 20210728125120809_Dobbs%20Amici%20brief_State%20Legislators_07272021.pdf)<br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;State legislators have the constitutional duty, and therefore the power, to protect the fundamental, civil rights of persons. The fundamental law in which those fundamental rights are found is the common law, which consists of both natural duties and those ancient, customary rights and immunities that are foundational to ordered liberty. Thus, a state legislature must declare and secure to all persons within the protection of its laws the rights that those persons have by natural and customary law. Cf. ''Washington v. Glucksberg'', 521 U.S. 702, 721-22 (1997) (upholding state legislation that prohibited assisted suicide and reasoning that the Fourteenth Amendment’s “Due Process Clause specially protects those fundamental rights and liberties which are, objectively, ‘deeply rooted in this Nation’s history and tradition’.” (quoting ''Moore v. E. Cleveland'', 431 U. S. 494, 503 (1977)). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England (1765): “Hence,” he said, “it follows, that the first and primary end of human laws is to '''maintain and regulate these absolute rights of individuals'''.” Id. Blackstone taught that the legislative power is to declare existing common-law rights and duties and to remedy any defects in the legal security for those rights. Id. at *42-43, 52-58, 86-87 <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Founders echoed this view in the Declaration of Independence, declaring that governments are instituted among men in order to secure the inalienable rights with which human beings are endowed by nature and nature’s God. They also accused the crown and Parliament of infringing the rights of “our constitution,” which in 1776 could only have been a reference to the common-law constitution of British North America. This view predicated the Constitution of the United States, which expressly secures natural rights, such as life and religious liberty, and common-law rights, such as jury trials and freedom from the quartering of soldiers in one’s home, and expressly disclaims any intent to disparage the other rights of the fundamental law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Indeed, the point of having legislatures, executives, and courts is to secure the rights that Americans already have.''' Neither state legislatures nor the Constitution of the United States create those rights. See District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570, 592 (2008) (stating that “it has always been widely understood that the '''Second Amendment, like the First and Fourth Amendments, codified a preexisting right,” that it “is not a right granted by the Constitution,” and is not “in any manner dependent upon that instrument for its existence.”'''). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Some, but not all, of the rights of natural persons are enumerated [listed] in the Constitution''' of the United States and its amendments. U.S. Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 8.; art. IV, §2; amends. I-VIII. Others are enumerated in state constitutions. See e.g., Soc’y for the Propagation of the Gospel v. Wheeler, 22 F. Cas. 756, 766 (No. 13,156) (C.C.D.N.H. 1814). Still others are declared in American constitutions but not enumerated. U.S. Const. amend. IX (“The enumeration of certain rights herein shall not be construed to deny or disparage other rights retained by the people.”) (emphasis added). '''State legislatures have a duty to declare and secure all fundamental rights, both enumerated and unenumerated.''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Fundamental rights are those that persons enjoy by fundamental law—natural law and common law— with or without any written constitution. Because the common law includes natural rights, to understand the fundamental rights declared and secured by the Constitution, it is sufficient to look to the common law, especially as explained by William Blackstone. Established common-law doctrines constitute the best evidence of the existence and meaning of both enumerated and unenumerated, fundamental rights. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The interpretation of the Constitution of the United States is necessarily influenced by the fact that its provisions are framed in the language of the English common law, and are to be read in the light of its history.” ''Smith v. Alabama'', 124 U.S. 465, 478 (1888). The terms and concepts of the common law provided the “the nomenclature of which the framers of the Constitution were familiar.” ''Minor v. Happersett'', 88 U.S. (21 Wall) 162, 167 (1875). Accord James R. Stoner, Jr., Common-Law Liberty: Rethinking American Constitutionalism 9-29 (2003). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;American constitutional rights are not philosophical abstractions. They are described in detail in common law treatises, such as those by Coke and Hale, and especially Blackstone’s Commentaries. The framers crafted American constitutions—state and federal—in common law terms. And Blackstone was their teacher and lexicographer....<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As this Court has rightly acknowledged, Blackstone’s “works constituted the preeminent authority on English law for the founding generation.” ''Alden v. Maine'', 527 U.S. 706, 715 (1999). Blackstone retained his influence through the adoption of the Civil War Amendments. James M. Ogden, Lincoln’s Early Impressions of the Law in Indiana, 7 Notre Dame L. Rev. 325, 328 (1932). And '''this Court continues to turn to Blackstone today.''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[2 A few examples from recent years include ''Gamble v. United States'', __ U.S. __, 139 S. Ct. 1960 (2019) (the Court’s opinion, the concurrence, and one dissent citing Blackstone multiple times to determine the meaning of the phrase “the same offense” in the Fifth Amendment’s double jeopardy clause); ''Department of Homeland Security v. Thuraissigiam'', __ U.S. __, 140 S. Ct. 1959, 1969 (2020) (calling Blackstone’s Commentaries a “satisfactory exposition of the common law of England”); Ramos v. Louisiana, __ U.S. __, 140 S. Ct. 1390, 1395 (2020) (citing Blackstone in explanation of the holding that '''the requirement of juror unanimity is “a vital right protected by the common law”''' and therefore the Constitution’s jury trial guarantee); ''Torres v. Madrid'', __ U.S. __, 141 S. Ct. 989, 996, 997, 998, 1000 (2021) (citing Blackstone multiple times to determine meaning of Fourth Amendment “seizure”). ]...<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But as the Ninth Amendment makes clear, the enumeration of certain common-law rights does not deny or disparage all the other rights that the American people enjoy by virtue of natural law and their ancient customs. The Ninth Amendment expressly reserves to the people those civil and fundamental rights that they enjoyed prior to ratification, which are their natural rights, other common-law rights and liberties, and some privileges enumerated in state constitutions. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Because many states refused to remedy infringements of fundamental rights [for blacks] prior to the Civil War, the Fourteenth Amendment was necessary to ensure to all persons due process of law and the equal protection of the laws, and to empower Congress to remedy infringements of those rights. It bears emphasis that the '''Fourteenth Amendment was necessary to recall state legislatures to their original task. Far from repealing the people’s retention of fundamenta'''l rights declared by the Ninth Amendment, the Fourteenth Amendment strengthened it. And far from abrogating the duty of state legislatures to declare and secure unenumerated rights, the Fourteenth Amendment reinforced that duty. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That is, the rights retained by the people but not protected by their state, such as the right of Blacks to liberty, was strengthened – at the expense of the freedom of the legislature to torpedo those rights. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And as Statement #11 and its footnotes explain, the 14th Amendment did not supplant the duty of legislatures to protect rights with that duty in courts. The only authority over state violations of rights given courts by the 14th was to enforce federal laws enacted by Congress. The authority of courts we see today, to make up “rights” not found in the Constitution and impose them on states without waiting for Congress to pass a law, was not given by the 14th, but was seized by courts in violation of the Constitution. </ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">– the central reason governments exist, is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders,<br />
<ref>More about '''“[Any judge enabling mass baby murder] is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The consensus of official fact finders is that all unborn babies are people from the beginning. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The logical extension of that consensus is that abortion is murder; that murder of 60+ million people is genocide; and that any judge blocking state protection of its people from genocide is an accessory to genocide. </ref><br />
and is guilty of exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide through an unconstitutional ruling, <br />
<ref>More about '''“...an unconstitutional ruling....”''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Oops, I just used a forbidden phrase: “unconstitutional ruling”. I just categorized a number of court rulings as “unconstitutional”. Is that allowed in America? Will that get be inside a jail? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Does ''anyone'' dare call ''any'' court ruling “unconstitutional”? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Should'' the public demand that court rulings be “constitutional”? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"But", you ask, "how is an 'unconstitutional ruling' even possible if the constitutional role of courts is to 'say what the constitution is'? If what courts say the Constitution says ''is by definition the Constitution'', then by definition it is impossible for what courts rule to be “unconstitutional”, right? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I googled “unconstitutional ruling” and got hits where Elon Musk appealed an “unconstitutional ruling” but it was the ruling of a federal agency, the SEC, not of any court. (https://thepoliticsbrief.com/elon-musk-appeals-unconstitutional-ruling-to-the-supreme-court/)<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I thought I found what I was searching for when I read “US court throws wrench in detention debate with unconstitutional ruling”. But it was about a court saying a law was unconstitutional. https://thehill.com/policy/defense/114685-us-court-throws-wrench-in-detention-debate-with-unconstitutional-ruling/<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The search turned up hits where “unconstitutional ruling” meant a ruling that says a ''law'' is unconstitutional, not that a ''court ruling'' is; that is, a ruling was an “ ‘unconstitutional’ ruling”. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;An example: “Meaning of an unconstitutional ruling...the consciousness, values, and ethics of the people living in society change with the times, and the general public changes the laws accordingly in order to support society. One of the institutions that give such a meaning to the law is the court, which can be shown in the form of an unconstitutionality ruling.” https://english-meiji.net/articles/2967/ <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The search turned up an Amicus Brief where lawyers, writing to the Supreme Court, used the dreaded phrase: “Stare Decisis Does Not Control Where a Precedent is Incorrectly Decided and Unconstitutional”. That was one of the headings of the brief. But the “Question Presented”, the first thing the justices saw, was gentler: “Whether this Court should overrule...the incorrect holding...in Hill v. Colorado....” (https://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/23/23-74/277086/20230824112814886_23-74%20Amicus%20Brief%20WFFC.pdf )<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;“Statement #11” in this book marshaled concurrences of Justice Clarence Thomas and other authorities to show that SCOTUS has no authority from the Constitution to make up “rights” not specified in the Constitution, not to mention “rights” that are actually hostile to “enumerated” (listed in the Constitution) Rights. Thomas gave gut-wrenching detail of KKK mobs slaughtering black Republicans and burning down the courthouse they were in and that they were trying to defend, acquitted by the Supreme Court, an acquittal achieved through an utter mangling of the Constitution. Thomas spoke of other rulings after that which were similarly lacking in any authority from the Constitution. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yet Thomas never called any ruling “unconstitutional”. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;One of the footnotes of Statement #11 revisited the ''Marbury v. Madison'' (1803) ruling with the help of a C-span movie about it – the case where SCOTUS came up with the idea that “the role of courts is to say what the law is”. I showed how even back then, that “holding” was based on fraud: the case said a phrase from an earlier Judiciary Act violated the Constitution. But it didn’t. A litigant asked the court to apply that phrase where the Constitution doesn’t permit it, but the law itself said it should be applied only as law permits, so it was not the law itself, but only the requested application, that was “unconstitutional”. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;My search turned up an article that articulates the irrational, absurd, outrage of the very idea of “judicial supremacy”, yet even it falls short of calling any ruling “unconstitutional”. It also falls short of recommending very much of a solution. That is, if courts are not the best final referees of the meaning of the Constitution, who is better? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Statement #11 is my answer to “who is better”. Not just “my” answer, but an answer founded on the concurrences of Justice Thomas, on several Amicus Briefs filed in ''Dobbs'', and on other authorities. The final section of this book completes the picture.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But for the rest of this footnote, let’s enjoy selections from “The Problem of Judicial Supremacy” by Matthew J. Franck, published Spring 2016 in National Affairs, and reprinted in its Fall 2023 issue, Number 57. See (www.nationalaffairs.com/publications/detail/the-problem-of-judicial-supremacy)<br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...judges, at the behest of same-sex marriage advocates, have violated one legal and constitutional norm after another.... The chief justice (in ''Obergefell v. Hodges'', a case in which the Court held that the 14th Amendment requires states to grant marriage licenses to same-sex couples,) sets a strong tone from the very start, writing that the majority has engaged in “an act of will, not of legal judgment....Nowhere is the majority's extravagant conception of judicial supremacy more evident than in its description — and dismissal — of the public debate regarding same-sex marriage.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;….What does Chief Justice Roberts ...mean by “judicial supremacy”?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(One possibility:)...a supreme authority of the federal judiciary to decide ''any'' important political or social question confronting the country — never mind whether the Constitution authentically addresses it or not. We’ll call this the ''judicial supremacy of imperial power'' for short. The justification for this understanding of the Court’s supremacy is that the Court alone is insulated from politics and self-interest, so it is peculiarly suited to use the Constitution's “majestic generalities” to generate substantive legal and policy responses to the nation’s contemporary needs.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;….(Another possibility:) the decisive right to be obeyed, which we can call the ''judicial supremacy of authoritative depth''. This means, as Charles Evans Hughes remarked before he became chief justice, that “we are under a Constitution, but the Constitution is what the judges say it is.” Hence all other citizens, but particularly those who serve in public office, are obliged to act in accordance with what the Supreme Court justices — or at least five of them — tell them the Constitution means. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''The justices of the Court, on the other hand, need not even follow the Court’s precedents.''' The Court is always right, except when five of the current justices decide it has been wrong. The Supreme Court becomes a kind of ongoing constitutional convention, authorized to alter and amend the “real” Constitution, which de facto exists only in their opinions. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Today, this understanding of judicial supremacy is virtually dogmatic in America's law schools, and it is widely embraced in the media and by the public. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But it, too, is of relatively recent origin in the Court’s own opinions, first being expressed in a 1958 case called ''Cooper v. Aaron'', in which the justices demanded the governor of Arkansas abide by their ruling in ''Brown v. Board of Education''. Their logic was this: If the Constitution is the supreme law of the land, as Article VI maintains, and if ever since ''Marbury v. Madison'' the country has understood that “the federal judiciary is supreme in the exposition of the law of the Constitution,” then '''the decisions of the Court are themselves “the supreme law of the land,” and must be followed by oath-bound public officials as equivalent to the Constitution itself.'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...it is simply not true that “the country” has believed ever since 1803 that whatever the Court ''says'' about the Constitution simply is the Constitution.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...It seems a safe bet that ''all'' the justices of the current Supreme Court believe what their predecessors said in ''Cooper v. Aaron'' about their own rulings being the supreme law of the land, effectively the same as the Constitution itself as '''far as the obligations of all other public officials are concerned.''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;….The chief justice probably intended only to denounce the first meaning above, the judicial supremacy of imperial power, which insists that the Court can be wise enough to decide all of society’s great political questions so long as they can be connected in some creative way to the Constitution. He did, after all, once famously describe the Supreme Court as an umpire calling balls and strikes — and he really meant it. No mere umpire could embrace such a capacious vision of judicial power.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...Justice Kennedy takes a commonplace truism — that no generation has a monopoly on wisdom about the meaning of freedom — and states its blandly true corollary: that “future generations” can come to “new insight” about such things. The argument then becomes a shell game for the reader, who belatedly realizes that '''Kennedy means future generations of ''judges'' are free to change the meaning of the Constitution,''' never mind our difficult but honest and democratic amendment process.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...a made-up Constitution, “evolving” from year to year according to the “new insight” of any five out of a set of nine unelected judges with life tenure? '''''That'' Constitution must be considered binding on everyone else?''' This cannot be.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...if everything the justices say about anything in the Constitution is simply to be obeyed as “the law of the land” by all other political actors — then the judicial supremacy [to the level of] imperial power follows quickly thereafter. Not logically, perhaps, but it follows politically...<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Even the dissenting justices in ''Obergefell'', then, seem unaware of how much they too are part of the problem. The late Justice Scalia, for instance, was right to say that the majority opinion represents “the furthest extension one can even imagine” of a “claimed power” on the Court’s part to “create ‘liberties’ that the Constitution and its Amendments neglect to mention.” This, he rightly said, “robs the People” of the “freedom to govern themselves” that was the whole point of fighting the American Revolution. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...we should read [the dissents] as inviting the American people to resist the decision. But if these justices — like their fellows in the majority, and typical of their kind — accept the dogma of judicial supremacy, what possible form can such resistance take?<br />
Justice Scalia, in a strident note at the end of his dissent, cites the famous Federalist No. 78 to the effect that the judiciary relies on the executive “even for the efficacy of its judgments.” He concluded: “With each decision of ours that takes from the People a question properly left to them — with each decision that is unabashedly based not on law, but on the ‘reasoned judgment’ of a bare majority of this Court — we move one step closer to being reminded of our impotence.” Here was a most daring hint from the characteristically acerbic Scalia, that '''the other branches have it in their power to frustrate the ambition of the judges to rule.'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;From inside ''the bubble created by the dogma of judicial supremacy,'' only two conventional responses to an unconstitutional ruling seem possible. One is to amend the Constitution to reverse a wrong and harmful ruling of the Court. This has been accomplished on only a few occasions in our history, and it is a Herculean undertaking. The lack of progress on a human-life amendment since ''Roe'' is a sobering reminder of the difficulty. Moreover, the route of amending the Constitution is not necessarily a challenge to judicial supremacy specifically, and might even be a concession to it. The other conventional response is to appoint better justices in the future, justices who will get the Constitution right, not abuse their authority, and perhaps even overturn abuses such as ''Obergefell''.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But how to present them with the opportunity? The pro-life movement has been maneuvering for five votes to overturn ''Roe'' for four decades now, and it has not been difficult to present the justices with opportunities to do the right thing. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[In order to create a case that would pressure judges to squarely address the evidence against ''Roe''] a state would presumably have to pass a law of exactly the kind the Court just declared unconstitutional. While the lower courts stand ready to strike down such attempts, and ''while legislators stand in thrall [slavery] to the dogma of judicial supremacy,'' this is highly improbable.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[Correcting this mess] will take some creative re-imagining of the way our institutions of government interact with one another. [Such as you can read in Statement #11 and in the final section of this book, ''Free Expression of Religion Without Establishment.'']<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...judicial supremacy today preys chiefly on the right of the people to govern themselves at the state level — and thus can be seen as an assault on the federalism of our constitutional arrangement — the growth of judicial power can be meaningfully checked only by the Court's institutional counterparts, since they alone possess the tools of checks and balances. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Here I gratefully disagree. Gratefully: I am grateful that there is much that state legislatures can do: in fact the focus of this book is on actions urged for state lawmakers. Truth is powerful, no matter who proclaims it. Especially truth about fraud so egregious that the whole nation smells the rot, even if few can figure out what is causing it and how to clean it. But here is more of the article:<br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;At first blush, some of those explicit constitutional tools — like impeachment, as Federalist No. 81 suggests — seem extreme, so we ought to treat them as something of a nuclear option.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Luckily, more modest methods exist. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Exactly! I propose some of them in a coming footnote, The Judicial Accountability Act. But this article doesn’t mention anything that specific, but rather gives historical examples of presidents ignoring courts:<br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;At various times in our history, judicial supremacy was challenged by presidents and Congress. As Princeton political scientist Keith Whittington points out in his 2007 book The Political Foundations of Judicial Supremacy, strong presidents like Jefferson, Jackson, Lincoln, Franklin Roosevelt, and even Reagan did so. Jefferson, for one, essentially nullified the Sedition Act of 1798 upon assuming office, and '''Lincoln, in express defiance of the Dred Scott decision, issued patents and passports to black Americans. The president, then, should invoke his prerogative to act in accordance with his own reading of the Constitution.'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Similarly, '''Congress passed a law in 1862 that banned slavery in U.S. territories, which was in express defiance of the Dred Scott decision. It’s not extreme, therefore, to suggest that Congress should pass laws directly contradicting the Court when''' it believes the Court has overstepped its bounds.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A kind of public education is also required...there was, for much of our history, a robust debate about the place of the Court in our constitutional structure.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Lincoln again is our true model here. As a candidate for office and emerging leader of the new Republican Party in the late 1850s, Lincoln resolutely opposed any acceptance of the Dred Scott decision as the law of the land. The decision had to be accepted as resolving the dispute for the parties in the case, but it could not be taken as instruction for other public officials. He spoke about the issue with trenchant clarity and frequency — from the ruling's immediate aftermath until he was president. As he said in his first inaugural address:'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''“[T]he candid citizen must confess that if the policy of the government, upon vital questions, affecting the whole people, is to be irrevocably fixed by decisions of the Supreme Court, the instant they are made, in ordinary litigation between parties, in personal actions, the people will have ceased, to be their own rulers, having, to that extent, practically resigned their government, into the hands of that eminent tribunal.”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Lincoln identified the stakes. Are we our own rulers? Or have we resigned our government into the hands of a tribunal of nine lawyers, any five of whom have authority to govern us? Those questions must be asked repeatedly over the coming years — '''not only in dissents,''' but also in the media, in the academy, and among citizens. It's the duty of leaders like the president, congressional representatives, and public figures to encourage us to ask such questions....<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[An example of a rather technical needed reform of the Supreme Court which Congress has power to require:] mandatory review by the Supreme Court, in cases where a state law was declared contrary to the Constitution by a federal appeals court. [Instead of just taking a few cases that interest them. Before 1925 SCOTUS heard about 600 cases a year that they were ''required'' to hear. Then that requirement was dropped, and now they might hear 75.] The justices should be required to place such cases on the docket, to receive briefs from the parties and from friends of the court, to hear oral arguments, and to publish the reasons for their decisions. Moreover, while such cases are pending, '''any adverse judgments of lower federal courts holding a state law unconstitutional could be automatically stayed in any class of cases Congress chooses to define.''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Author''' Matthew J. Franck is Director of the William E. and Carol G. Simon Center on Religion and the Constitution at the Witherspoon Institute and visiting lecturer in politics at Princeton University….</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Conclusion'''. There is apparently some law against calling any court ruling “unconstitutional”. But that is an unconstitutional law.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is also a stupid law. “Stupid” is what we say of someone, or of some human invention, whose intelligence has dipped far below its capacity. A drunk, for example, falls into a “stupor”, rendering his normal level of intelligence temporarily unavailable. There is also a pejorative aspect of the word; it is wrong to shove intelligence aside. To the extent we do – and we all do from time to time – we ought to be ashamed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is literally stupid, and American culture needs to say so, to imagine judges have no capacity to rule against the Constitution, without any constitutional authority, usurping power prohibited by the constitution. Or to imagine that no judge has ever ruled unconstitutionally, or ever will, or ever wants to. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is literally stupid to imagine that “power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely, except when given to the Supreme Court.” <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That nonsense about “the Court alone is insulated from politics and self-interest, so it is peculiarly suited to use the Constitution’s ‘majestic generalities’ to generate substantive legal and policy responses to the nation’s contemporary needs” is a grant of close enough to absolute power to drain American culture of its moral vigor, and it has been faithfully applied over the generations to that evil purpose. No greater threat to the security of our nation exists. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;We need to say so. It is the truth. We need to state the truth. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;We who are old enough to understand this evil don’t need to state this truth for our own sakes. We have lived long enough. If America utterly collapses in a few years, from an EMP attack, hyper inflation, a flood of terrorism, or invasion, we are near the end of our lives anyway. <br />
It’s for our children and grandchildren, too often poisoned against us by the SCOTUS-driven immorality resulting from our ignorance, our cowardice, our votes, and our blind obedience to the Pied Piper of First Street NE. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;To the extent we continue genuflecting to Hell, they have no chance. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Speak for the sake of judges too. Many are prisoners of their own power, not at all desiring to drag down America. They think they have no choice. The Constitution makes them do it. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As Jesus came in the flesh to our ancestors 2000+ years ago, His Word came to America 200+ years ago and shaped its Freedoms and Laws. As our distant ancestors crucified the source of Love, our recent ancestors, joined by ourselves, have His Word out in the dumpster, jumping up and down on it to pack it all in so we can shut the lid. What Peter told them yesterday, fits today, with only slight adaption:<br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Acts 3:13 The God of Abraham, and of Isaac, and of Jacob, the God of our fathers, hath glorified his Son Jesus; whom ye delivered up, and denied him in the presence of Pilate, when he was determined to let him go. 14 But ye denied the Holy One and the Just, and desired a murderer to be granted unto you; 15 And killed the Prince of life, whom God hath raised from the dead; whereof we are witnesses. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Our generation didn’t physically kill Jesus. But way before the Supreme Court took the 10 Commandments, the Bible, and prayer out of schools, our culture censored the Word of God with a “saying” that dominated our culture: “There are two things you should never talk about: religion, and politics.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Billy Graham addressed this assault on God when he was asked, “My parents always said there were two things you shouldn’t talk about—politics and religion. Well, they never did, but now I’m an adult, and I don’t have any idea what to believe. Where can I turn?” www.billygraham .org/answer/my-parents-always-said-there-were-two-things-you-shouldnt-talk-about-politics-and-religion/<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Billy’s answer began, “I’m sorry your parents never helped you discover who God is or why He is important. Perhaps their parents did the same—but whatever the reason, I hope you won’t do this with your own children. The Bible says, ‘Teach them to your children and to their children after them’ (Deuteronomy 4:9).”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;From there, Billy G. proceeded to an answer about “God loves you” and “ask Him to guide you to a church” which I’m sure most Christians will think is grand, but I wish there were more in American Christendom beyond a personal sedation to cross-bearing, God-proclaiming war against Hell out in public where the Devil devours his victims. I wish “church” were not so much a place of listening to talk, as is condemned in Titus 3:8, as a place of action, as is urged in Titus 3:9. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Just as the clamor to physically kill Jesus put more pressure on Judge Pilate than he had the courage to resist, the pressure of secularism in our time bears some of the responsibility for pushing SCOTUS away from God. <br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 And his name through faith in his name hath made this man strong, whom ye see and know: yea, the faith which is by him hath given him this perfect soundness in the presence of you all. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Then, the evidence before the crowds was that the power of Jesus whose murder they enabled could still heal a crippled man. Today the powerful evidence before 300+ million Americans, and indeed the whole world, is that the principles of the Word of God can still heal an entire nation, replacing poverty with prosperity, crime with protection, slavery with opportunity, class warfare with “equal protection of the laws”, ignorance with education, medicine shows with hospitals, and foreign invasions with the most powerful military in the whole world.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But we see also that pushing God away in preference for sex, drugs, and general ignorance invites back poverty, crime, class warfare, medical mythology, and terrorist attacks. <br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 And now, brethren, I wot [perceive] that through ignorance ye did it, as did also your rulers. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Paul says the Pharisees acted out of ignorance. This seems generous in light of Matthew 23 and other places where Jesus vigorously exposes their evil motives. Surely much of their ignorance was as willful as ignorance today. Yet surely also their willfulness succeeded in blinding them to the full evil of what they were doing, as is clearly the case today. They surely didn’t grasp that they were killing God Himself, just as courts today surely don’t grasp how fully their war against God, their perversion of the 14th Amendment “privileges and immunities” and “due process” clauses, and their arrogant view of their own “supremacy”, are turning the Constitution which authorizes their own existence into Freedom’s epitaph. <br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 But those things, which God before had shewed by the mouth of all his prophets, that Christ should suffer, he hath so fulfilled. 19 Repent ye therefore, and be converted, that your sins may be blotted out, when the times of refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord; 20 And he shall send Jesus Christ, which before was preached unto you: 21 Whom the heaven must receive until the times of restitution of all things, which God hath spoken by the mouth of all his holy prophets since the world began. 22 For Moses truly said unto the fathers, A prophet shall the Lord your God raise up unto you of your brethren, like unto me; him shall ye hear in all things whatsoever he shall say unto you. 23 And it shall come to pass, that every soul, which will not hear that prophet, shall be destroyed from among the people.</blockquote> </ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">which exceeds the judicial powers given by the state Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment.<br />
<ref>More about '''“exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide...exceeds the judicial powers given by the state Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Legislatures have considerable untapped potential for restraining their activist courts when they become confused about which branch of government they are. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Perhaps the major reason few people even think about solutions is fear of any change to the balance of powers between the legislature and the courts. “Better the devil you know than the devil you don’t.” We don’t want to just switch tyrants. A change to a real solution requires wisdom, which requires study, and who wants to study? <br />
<center>Another obstacle to restraining courts to their constitutional function is that most people, even Christians, limit their goals to what they consider “realistic”, and especially “politically realistic”, which usually means what people think they can do without God. Trust that what Jesus promised about “impossible” goals is truly “realistic”, enables us to think about not just what would be a little bit better, but about what would be perfect. and then to think about doing whatever we can think of to move in that direction, fully aware how feeble our own steps are, trusting God to open up new opportunities, in His time, as we walk with Him. </center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;My own feeble steps were drafted into a bill in Iowa in 2020. The bill is given in the next footnote, and posted at http://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/wiki/Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_stop_judges_from_legislating <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Senate Judiciary Committee Chair Brad Zaun liked the idea and got it numbered and introduced, but it came to him too late that year to get it through the “funnel”, and he was disappointed that there was no organized group helping make other lawmakers aware of it. </ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives, including (1) giving the state Supreme Court original jurisdiction over any challenge to a law, (2) requiring that review be expedited, (3) requiring a supermajority of the Court to suspend a law, (4) questioning justices in a public hearing about the constitutionality of their ruling, and (5) overturning the ruling with a supermajority of the legislature. <br />
<ref>More about '''“The authority to...codify more surgical correctives.”''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;For example:<br />
<br />
<center>'''Judicial Accountability Act: How Legislatures can stop judges from legislating'''</center><br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Summary: what the bill accomplishes'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1. '''No district court injunctions. A single district judge can't overturn a law.''' Any legislature is well within its constitutional authority to prohibit any ''district'' court (lower court) from invalidating a law – only the ''Supreme'' Court should be allowed to do it, and only within 90 days. Letting a single lower court judge overturn the work of 150 lawmakers which include several attorneys and constitutional scholars is insane. Any challenge to a law should go directly to the most experienced judges in the state.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2. '''Supermajority required. It takes 5 of the 7 justices of the Supreme Court to overturn a law.''' A simple majority of justices overturning by one vote a law produced by tens of thousands of people over several years is a scandal. It has nothing to do with wisdom, law, or the Constitution. When judges can’t even agree with each other, unanimously, whether to destroy the work of the majority of voters and their representatives, they prove they are not so much wiser than everybody else in their state to be trusted with such unbridled power. At the very least any injunction should have their unanimous support before they should have any power to shut down the will of their whole state. A supermajority that is short of unanimous may be OK if it is not the final word but is followed by further opportunities for the legislature to restore their law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3. '''Expedited. The Court has to rule in 3 months if the court blocks a new law from taking effect with a Temporary Restraining Order.''' If the court invalidates an existing law, the invalidation doesn't take effect for one year. Courts bottling up laws with injunctions for years while they make up their minds should make them ashamed. They don’t need years. No controversial law is passed without months if not years of scrutiny by attorneys for and against. Their briefs are already ready. They already know what the other side will say. They don’t need years to think of what to say or how to respond. Maybe a day. Maybe two.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Nor do judges need months to read the briefs for several weeks to bring themselves up to speed on the issue. The law has been in the news for years. There is no honor in willful ignorance of the issues until the first brief is filed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Laws are passed to correct serious wrongs. Years of work costing millions of dollars goes into fixing problems. There is no good reason to delay justice for the citizens of a state for years to wait while judges try to agree among themselves whether to allow justice as understood by the majority of voters and lawmakers. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''4. Discussion. The legislature may compel designated justices to attend a public hearing to debate the constitutionality of the law within one year of such a ruling, by passing a resolution.''' Provided a supermajority of the Supreme Court has agreed on an injunction in less than a month, the legislature should then be able, within the next year, to compel the attendance of judges under their jurisdiction to discuss and debate, with specified legislators in a public hearing, the constitutional justification for [or necessity of] that judicial exercise of the legislative function. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''5. The legislature may overturn the invalidation by a 60% vote, by a resolution, leaving the last word, the final verdict, with incredibly well informed voters''' (through ordinary elections of lawmakers and retention of justices). The resolution overturning the invalidation would give reasons responsive to the reasoning of the judicial ruling. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''The Bill: Iowa SSB3181 2020 AD''''''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A BILL FOR <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 An Act regarding legislative oversight of supreme court <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 decisions, and including applicability provisions. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF IOWA: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Introduction/Legislative Findings'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 Section 1. NEW SECTION. 602.1615 Legislative findings —— <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 challenges to the validity of a statute —— exclusive jurisdiction <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 —— public hearings —— legislative oversight. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 1. The general assembly finds and declares all of the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 following: <br />
<center>'''If the legislature can even impeach,''' <br />
<br>'''it can at least ask questions'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 a. The power to impeach subsumes reasonable less severe <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7 remedies. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Lawmakers take an oath''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''to uphold the Constitution too'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Their responsibility to uphold the Constitution'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''requires action against courts '''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''that interfere with their responsibility'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 b. The intent of this section is to provide for a mechanism <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 in which to resolve disputes regarding the constitutionality of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 laws between the courts and the legislature, both of which are <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 composed of constitutional scholars. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Jurisdiction of courts is''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''restricted by the legislature'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 c. Article 5, section 4 of the Constitution of the State <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13 of Iowa states that the supreme court is “a court for the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14 correction of errors at law, '''under such restriction as''' the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15 general assembly may, by law, prescribe . . .”. <br />
<center>'''Judicial power to invalidate laws''' <br />
<br>'''is not given by the Iowa Constitution'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 d. Article 3, section 20 of the Constitution of the State <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 of Iowa gives the legislature the power to impeach judges for <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 “malfeasance in office”, which is generally defined to include <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;19 acting without authority and abusing power. The power to <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;20 impeach subsumes all lesser remedies. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;21 e. The Constitution of the State of Iowa does not give the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;22 courts of this state the power to invalidate laws enacted by <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;23 the legislature, to require the legislature to enact different <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;24 laws, or to publish rulings that have the same effect as new <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;25 legislation. Article 3, section 1 of the Constitution of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;26 the State of Iowa states: “The powers of the government of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;27 Iowa shall be divided into three separate departments —— the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;28 '''legislative, the executive, and the judicial: and no person''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;29 '''charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to one''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;30 '''of these departments shall exercise any function appertaining''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;31 '''to either of the others,''' except in cases hereinafter expressly <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;32 directed or permitted”. <br />
<center>'''The Legislature must get involved''' <br />
<br>'''when courts legislate unconstitutionally'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;33 f. Although the courts of Iowa have usurped those powers <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;34 without constitutional authority, it has been done for reasons <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;35 which the general assembly respects. The general assembly <br />
----<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 welcomes the expertise and guidance of the courts in evaluating <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 the constitutionality of its laws. But when the reasoning of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 rulings which function as legislation appears to be not only <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 unsound, but unconstitutional, the general assembly has the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 constitutional duty and authority to determine that judges and <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 justices have abused their power and exceeded their authority, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7 which are grounds for impeachment under the malfeasance in <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 office clause. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 g. A remedy short of impeachment should advance wisdom, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 build consensus, and educate voters so that informed voters <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 may hold both judges and legislators accountable. Article 1, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 section 2 of the Constitution of the State of Iowa states: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13 '''“All political power is inherent in the people.''' Government is <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14 instituted for the protection, security, and benefit of the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15 people, and they have the right, at all times, to alter or <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 reform the same, whenever the public good may require it”. <br />
<center>'''The Meat of the Bill:''' <br />
<br>'''the Enforcement Section'''<br />
<br>'''Lower courts can't invalidate laws'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 2. The supreme court shall have discretionary and exclusive <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 original jurisdiction over any challenge to any law. A <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;19 district court or the court of appeals shall not invalidate a <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;20 law on any grounds. <br />
<center>'''Supreme Court must rule''' <br />
<br>'''within 3 months, by supermajority,'''<br />
<br>'''when the Court blocks a ''new'' law.'''<br />
<br>'''When the Court blocks an existing law'''<br />
<br>'''the block will not take effect for one year.'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;21 3. A decision of the supreme court that invalidates <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;22 '''existing''' law or has the effect of creating new law shall not <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;23 have any effect unless agreed to by five or more of the seven <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;24 justices, and otherwise shall not have any effect for one <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;25 year. The supreme court shall also have the power to suspend <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;26 implementation of '''a new law''' provided the supreme court produces <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;27 an expedited ruling within three months of the law’s enactment. <br />
<center>'''Public Hearing'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;28 4. a. Within one year of the date a supreme court decision <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;29 is published that invalidates existing law or has the effect <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;30 of creating new law, the general assembly may, by resolution, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;31 compel the attendance of specified justices to a public hearing <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;32 to discuss and debate the justification for the decision with <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;33 members of the general assembly. A public record of the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;34 hearing shall be made. <br />
<center>'''Impeachment grounds inquiry'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;35 b. During or after the hearing, the general assembly shall <br />
----<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 determine if grounds to begin impeachment exist as to any <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 of the justices present at the hearing for acting without <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 authority or malfeasance in office. <br />
<center>'''Judges may improve their ruling'''<br />
<br>'''with respect to the status of the challenged law'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 c. Based on the results of a hearing commenced pursuant to <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 this subsection, a justice whose presence was required at the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 hearing may change the justice’s vote or alter the justice’s <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7 individual contribution to the decision. <br />
<center>'''Legislature may overturn court invalidation'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 5. A supreme court decision invalidating existing law or <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 having the effect of creating new law will not take effect if <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 two-thirds of both the senate and the house of representatives <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 approve a resolution to overturn the decision within one year <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 of the date the decision was published. The resolution must <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13 specify the basis for overturning the decision, including <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14 its reasoning, not to be limited by court precedent that is <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15 responsive to the supreme court’s initial published decision, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 and must be documented by expert testimony and constitutional <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 authority. <br />
<center>'''Legislature may add statement to the ruling'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 6. The general assembly may issue its own statement to a <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;19 published supreme court decision that invalidates existing law <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;20 or has the effect of creating new law if done within one year of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;21 the date the decision was published. The statement must regard <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;22 the constitutionality of the invalidated existing law or the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;23 newly created law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;24 Sec. 2. APPLICABILITY. This Act applies to decisions <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;25 published by the supreme court on or after the effective date <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;26 of this act. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''FAQ's'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Questions and Answers''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Why are existing laws treated differently than new laws?''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The difference is for the benefit of the public, so the laws governing them do not flip back and forth from being in effect. A ''new'' law – for example, the Heartbeat law – could be suspended by courts only until the suspension is overturned by the legislature. An ''existing'' law – for example our former marriage laws requiring spouses to be of the opposite sex – could not be suspended for one year, to give the legislature time to respond. No chaotic back and forth. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Could courts suspend a new law between its effective date and the court ruling?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The legal action a court takes to invalidate a law is an Injunction. The process here doesn’t specify it, but would allow the normal process of allowing the courts to immediately suspend a new law with a TRO, Temporary Restraining Order, until their hearing, at which the temporary order could become permanent. In the case of an existing law, by contrast, allowing the court to immediately suspend the law, with the possibility of it going back into effect after the legislature acts, would subject the public to a law which is in effect, then suspended, then back into effect. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If this law removed the court’s power to put a TRO on a new law, the law would take effect until the ruling, then it would be suspended, but then the legislature might give it effect again.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;What will be the effect of a 4-3 ruling that a law is unconstitutional?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: no legal effect, but much political pressure) Although a 4-3 ruling would no longer have legal force, it would still have powerful political force. A ruling that a law is unconstitutional would be a public relations challenge for the legislature. The legislature would face pressure to refute the judges' claims point by point, or adjust the law voluntarily. A 4-3 ruling would not be powerless; and of course it would still be binding on the parties to the case. But an argument in defense of the legislature ignoring the challenge would be that after all, the justices themselves barely agree the law is unconstitutional. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Would a ruling always trigger a public hearing?<br />
That decision is made independently of a decision to vote to override the court. “Within one year, the legislature MAY, by a resolution, compel the attendance of specified Iowa judges ....”<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Is one year for the legislature to act too long? Too short?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;One year from the court’s ruling is needed to process the ruling’s reasoning, to hold hearings which would require passage of a resolution by both chambers, and then to schedule a vote, which could be while the legislature is not in session. A year is needed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;On the other hand, requiring courts to act in 3 months is reasonable, considering this is not a brand new question before them that they have never heard of before. They have had all the years of public debate on the issue to think about the issue. Plus, courts are accustomed to ruling quickly when cases are required to be “expedited”. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Would prolife laws do any better under this system?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yes, along with all other laws relating to immorality, which are targeted by the Landmark Abomination Cases of the U.S. Supreme Court. Iowa courts think themselves bound by SCOTUS precedent, but the Iowa legislature is not and should not be. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The 14th Amendment makes state legislatures subject to federal laws which protect the rights of state citizens that are listed in the Constitution, which is the meaning of the “privileges and immunities” clause of the 14th. But the 14th gives SCOTUS no authority to make up “rights” hostile to enumerated rights, much less to enforce “rights” without waiting for federal law to lay out the manner and scope of protection. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Neither federal courts nor Congress have any authority through the 14th or through anything else to block states from protecting constitutional rights. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Act laid out here will only get state courts out of the legislature’s way of protecting the rights of state citizens. When federal courts jump in the way, they can be shoved aside with the legal arguments of Clarence Thomas and others that are summarized in Statement #11 of this book. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Is a 2/3 majority requirement necessary? Shouldn't a simple majority of the legislature be enough to override courts?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: practically & legally, certainly; politically, complicated) This may be the hardest detail to muster a quick opinion. There are strong arguments for either choice; perhaps there is even a third option: a 60% vote. As this bill proceeds, perhaps it should be expected that a consensus will form later requiring amendment of this detail. The current draft requires a 2/3 majority. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''The Practical Argument:''' Currently, courts get away with a simple majority requirement (4-3) which faces zero accountability from anybody. This draft requires a 5-2 vote; another option is 6-1. Should the legislature face a similar hurdle? Several lawmakers believe a 2/3 requirement removes any practical hope of ever overturning a judicial invalidation of a law, because the Iowa legislature is incapable of agreeing by 2/3 that the sun is up. A 2/3 requirement would make restraint of lawmaking judges actually harder than passing a constitutional amendment! <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In Congress, our U.S. Constitution says a 2/3 majority is enough to send an amendment to the Constitution before the states for their ratification. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But if we let the legislature overturn the court’s invalidation with a second simple majority, it could be objected that would be almost ridiculously easy for the legislature to gather together the same “yea” votes a second time (if an election doesn’t intervene). A 60% requirement could answer that concern. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;However, that objection could also be met by pointing out that the ruling of the courts would give typically 60 pages of reasons the law should be overturned, which would put a lot of pressure on those “yea” votes to either eloquently and exhaustively justify their votes or vote “nay”. It would not be easy to secure a majority a second time under that pressure. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The public hearing option would put that 60 page ruling on a level playing field with reasoning from lawmakers. It would make both legislatures and courts accountable not only to each other, but to reason. It might even make lawmakers upset enough to reach a 2/3 agreement. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Voters, informed as has never before been possible about judges on the ballot, or about the legal skills of lawmakers, would have the last word. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''The Political Argument:''' The public is not used to legislatures having ANY power to correct unconstitutional rulings. A 2/3 requirement would be less of a shock to tradition. Were this bill to pass into law with a 2/3 requirement, and lawmakers saw how unnecessary it was, lawmakers could ease the requirement in the future - since this does not require amending the constitution, which already grants more than this power, but requires only a law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Amendment'''. Should it be decided that a simple majority of the legislature to overturn a court’s invalidation is sufficient, here is the simple change that could do it - simply strike out “two-thirds of” (or replace it with “six tenths of”): <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 A supreme court decision invalidating existing law or <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 having the effect of creating new law will not take effect if <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 <strikethrough>two-thirds of</strikethrough> both the senate and the house of representatives <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 approve a resolution to overturn the decision within one year <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 of the date the decision was published. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Is it practically possible to require courts to add a statement from the legislature up to a year after its ruling?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;When the Supreme Court first publishes its ruling, that is not the final version that will be later given an official permanent citation in the Northwest Reporter series. (Their contact information) Unpredictable delays are caused by litigants asking for rehearings, and courts taking time to respond. Even after that option is exhausted, court staff continue proofing their decisions, a process that can take months. [Iowa Supreme Court Clerk phone number: 515-348-4700] Northwest Reporter doesn’t officially publish a case, and give it a permanent citation, until a state supreme court notifies them that it is ready. That is why a new case has only an Iowa citation that does not list a page number or volume number, and doesn’t get a fancy N.W.2d permanent citation until much later. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Requiring the Court to leave the publication open for a year in case the legislature chooses to submit a statement would affect only the time the Court notifies Northwest Reporter, and it may not even affect that time at all. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The farther this bill gets, the more discussions there will be about it with the Iowa Bar Association and the Court itself. If delaying final publication that long is deemed unreasonable, an amendment could easily give the legislature an earlier deadline. It might also require the legislature to notify the court of an intent to exercise that option. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Of course, this entire final sentence of this bill is not critical to legislative correction of judicial overreach. It could be conceded if necessary to save the rest of the bill. But it is an appropriate correction of the current system. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Will an expedited hearing that begins in the Supreme Court diminish the time needed by the litigants to fully present their claims?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: anyone ready to block a law from taking effect is ready for court) A challenge to a new law means (and perhaps this bill could so specify, although I think it is already clearly implied) a challenge to a law that has not yet gone into effect, to keep it from going into effect (beginning with a Temporary Restraining Order (TRO) the day it would go into effect). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In such a case the state itself will normally be the defendant, and the petitioner will be a well funded group that tried to kill the law in the legislature but failed. In that situation the petitioner will already be prepared legally, their arguments well honed through interaction with lawmakers. It is hard to imagine that any less prepared petitioner would be ready with a TRO to stop a law before it goes into effect. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Iowa court rules already require appellants to outline their issues in their initial notice of appeal, which is more pressure on individual defendants to prepare that far ahead, in proportion to their means, than challengers to a new law will face, who will be fully primed for a court battle before the law passes the first chamber. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspCourt rules already require that any issue argued in the Supreme Court must have first been raised in the district court, so any responsible lawyer in district court will already be prepared for the Supreme Court. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspDistrict courts are needed to develop facts through witnesses in front of juries, depositions, and cross examination of expert witnesses. Supreme courts don’t do any of that. Expert witnesses can submit Amicus Briefs but the other side can’t cross examine them. Although judges can cross examine the lawyers for both parties in oral arguments, which district judges don’t do. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspThus district courts are essential in criminal trials where the guilt of the defendant needs to be proved to juries, and in civil trials between two parties. But their value in a challenge to a law is less clear. A legislature’s “findings of facts” are given deference except in the case of a “fundamental right”, under current practice, but the court practice of overturning laws that violate made-up “fundamental rights” has zero authority under the U.S. Constitution, and nothing prevents state legislatures from copying into state law the provision of the U.S. Constitution in Article III, Section 2, Paragraph 2, that court jurisdiction is subject to such “exceptions” and “regulations” as the legislature enacts. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspWere the petitioner an individual seeking relief only for himself and not for anyone else affected by the law, courts have many tools for giving relief to individuals short of invalidating whole laws. For example, extenuating circumstances, interaction with other laws affecting the individual, or necessity in order to avoid serious injury (Iowa 704). The applicability of laws to individuals is the jurisdiction of the judicial branch, with which the legislative branch has no intent to interfere, any more than the judicial branch should interfere with the jurisdiction of the legislative branch to establish laws of general application. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspAfter a law has already gone into effect, then there is no requirement to expedite. In fact, the decision to challenge a law could be made by the parties to the case, or by a judge, at any point during a years-long case: in pre-trial briefs, a district judge’s ruling, or during the appeal before the Court of Appeals or the Supreme Court. With this bill the applicability of the law to the individual defendant could still be suspended, but the law itself, as applied to everyone else, would not be suspended until after the Supreme Court so rules and then only if the legislature does not block the suspension. The legislature’s year to respond would not begin with any ruling made before the Supreme Court’s supermajority ruling. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Are there any U.S. Supreme Court precedents relevant to these half dozen powers?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: making judges answer lawmakers' questions is a staple of confirmation hearings) These proposed powers are all completely unprecedented in law, although some of them have been discussed. Probably the one never before discussed is the idea of a public hearing. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspSurely the prohibition of a district judge overturning a law, limiting that power to the state Supreme Court, and requiring a supermajority of the court to overturn, is well within the power given the legislature to limit the jurisdiction of courts. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp'''Public Hearings'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;How about public hearings? Is there any legal or constitutional principle that shields judges from having to explain their rulings any better than they do in their written opinions? Is there something nefarious about requiring judges to answer questions? <br />
Federal judges answer questions about their past rulings in confirmation hearings for appointments to higher courts. If U.S. Senators can require them to answer questions about their rulings years later, why can’t state legislatures require their state judges to answer questions at the time? Judges justify not answering questions about future potential cases, that they may remain free to rule in view of facts and arguments they might not see until then, but there is no reason to shield judges from explaining their past cases. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Especially since the Public Hearings envisioned in this bill are not only to clarify whether a law ruled unconstitutional actually is unconstitutional. The second purpose of these Public Hearings is to investigate whether there are grounds for impeachment. Because if the legislature determines that the court’s ruling of the law’s unconstitutionality is utterly lacking in merit, then judges who so ruled were legislating; they were acting without authority, exercising a power of a different branch of government than their own, which is malfeasance of office, an impeachable offense. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Obviously, in any impeachment trial, the judges would be required to answer questions. These public hearings are a power subsumed under the power of impeachment; they are a reasonable, less severe remedy. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Certainly the very idea of communication between lawmakers and judges on a “level playing field” is unheard of. Unprecedented. (Outside confirmation hearings.) Current communication, which tradition will be slow to reconsider, is somewhat like a parent trying to reason with a child who is as inarticulate as he is stubborn. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is a special challenge for a lawyer representing the legislature to reason with a judge who gives only the scantest clues to what is on his mind before he rules, after which it is too late to respond to his errors. Does any Constitutional or legal principle require such a breakdown of communication? Does this ritual serve any good purpose? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Once President Washington asked SCOTUS for its advisory interpretation of a treaty. The justices declined, saying “The lines of separation drawn by the Constitution between the three departments of government – their being in certain respects checks upon each other – and our being judges in a court of last resort – are considerations which afford strong arguments against the propriety of our extra judicially deciding the questions alluded to; especially as the Power given by the Constitution to the President of calling on the Heads of Departments for opinions, seems to have been purposely as well as expressly limited to executive departments.” https://www.mountvernon.org/library/digitalhistory/digital-encyclopedia/article/george-washington-and-the-supreme-court/<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;https://founders.archives.gov/?q=Thomas%20Recipient%3A%22Washington%2C%20George%22%20Author%3A%22Supreme%20Court%20Justices%22&s=1111311111&sa=supre&r=3&sr= <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That answer is not a precedent for keeping courts from communicatint with legislatures for two reasons: (1) it was not a sensible answer then. The Constitution puts no limit on who the President can consult for advice, while Proverbs 15:22 says “in a multitude of counsellors, purposes are established”. I can’t imagine where SCOTUS came up with the idea that the President was limited to asking his department heads. Washington asked for advice, not a binding ruling. That’s what “extrajudicial” means. (2) SCOTUS then declined to get involved in an issue which it otherwise would never face. This is different than asking a Court to make up its mind earlier than later. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is not wrong to ask judges to give advisory opinions to lawmakers so lawmakers don’t have to spend years crafting laws which judges at the last minute decide to overturn. The August 8, 1793 answer was before Americans had to worry about activist judges who leave the future of legislation, and indeed the very future of human rights, very much in doubt. <br />
However, asking judges to give an advisory opinion about a law before it is passed is probably impractical, since judges are used to taking longer to study an issue than a legislature is in session, and also since even after giving an early opinion, new evidence or argument might come later which would flip the Court’s ruling. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;An expedited three month deadline is probably the closest we can come to a timely response from courts. Certainly legal wrangling that dribbles on for years exhausts the patience of rational minds. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The subject of the public hearing is whether the law really was unconstitutional. Because if it wasn't, then the judges plainly acted outside their authority, which is grounds for impeachment. But beyond being grounds for impeachment, an order given that is beyond one's authority to give is legally invalid. So surely the legislature has the authority to investigate whether an order was invalid, and upon establishing that it is, to reverse its effects. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sheltering judges from interaction doesn’t make them free of bias. In every other human interaction, accountability is the best way to cleanse a hard heart of bias. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp'''The Two-Thirds Majority'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The only thing remotely relevant to this 2/3 vs. simple majority requirement in American constitutional law that I can think of is that to ratify a constitutional amendment, Congress has to pass it by 2/3 before states pass it by 3/4. But the solution here doesn’t change the constitution; it only defines how the legislature is choosing to exercise authority already given by the Iowa Constitution. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If anything, there is a constitutional principle favoring the power of legislatures over courts, with respect to Fundamental Rights. The 14th Amendment is the part of the Constitution which courts have taken to give them jurisdiction over states who trample fundamental rights. But who did the 14th Amendment authorize to enforce its provisions? Not courts! Rather, Congress, according to Section 5 of the Amendment. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yet here are examples of not just state laws, but even state constitutional amendments, which were overturned by courts for violating the “equal protection” clause of the 14th Amendment: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Cummings v. Missouri'', 71 U.S. 277 (1867) a Missouri oath to hold office designed to keep out former confederate soldiers was ruled an unconstitutional Bill of Attainder. <br />
''Hollingswort''h v. Perry'', 570 U.S. 693 (2013) a California same sex marriage ban. <br />
''Romer v. Evans, 517 U.S. 620 (1996) a Colorado gay rights ban. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Awad v. Ziriax'', 10th Circuit, January 10, 2012 an Oklahoma ban of the use of Sharia Law in court. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Giles v. Harris'', 1903, and Giles v. Teasley, 1904, courts winked at disenfranchising Blacks, but explicitly accepted jurisdiction over state constitutions violating the 14th and 15th Amendments. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The authority to enforce the requirements of the 14th Amendment, given to Congress and not courts, gives Congress also the authority to define and apply fundamental rights, and for anyone seriously in doubt, to clarify who is a human being and therefore deserves to have his fundamental rights protected. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;These are philosophical as well as legal questions which merit national discussion, but while courts are sheltered from having to talk to anybody the conversation has been one sided. America needs to open this up into what Proverbs 15:22 calls a “multitude of counsellors”. It does not undermine respect for the judiciary to imagine judges are able to explain their reasoning. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''If Legislatures overturn court rulings, won’t they exercise the authority of the judicial branch?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: legislative action wouldn't affect litigants; only the part of the ruling that reaches wrongfully into legislating) No. On that future day when a legislature overturns judicial rulings, the legislature’s action would not apply to the parties to the case, so the “separation of powers” aspect of the ruling is untouched. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;There are several reasons a court may exempt a litigant from the effects of a law, without invalidating the law for everyone else. The simple difference between courts and legislatures is that legislatures pass laws which apply to everybody, while courts apply those laws in specific cases, only to the parties to the case, guided by the special facts and circumstances of the case. The power given by this bill to legislatures to overturn rulings applies only to the part of the ruling where the court stepped outside its constitutional authority in order to nullify a law passed for the benefit of millions of others. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The purpose of the public hearing is only for the legislature to investigate whether their law was constitutional after all, and if so, to take back their constitutional authority to pass laws by their subsequent vote. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Lawmakers take oaths to defend the Constitution too. Courts cannot rob lawmakers of their power to obey the Constitution without violating the constitution themselves. <br />
Perhaps that is the key principle declared implicitly by this bill: judges aren’t the only branch of government authorized to understand and defend the Constitution. The other branches are too. That balance needs to be restored. The conversation needed needs to be among equals.<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Shouldn’t judges be immune from popular pressure? We don’t want our rights subject to a vote!'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Neither legislatures nor courts should have the last word over each other. We have seen what happens when legislatures had the last word, in the South, during the time of slavery. And we have seen what happens when courts had the last word, in 1857 and 1973; regarding slavery and abortion. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Even the Iowa constitution gives the last word to voters. Is that dangerous? America’s Founders talked about popular whims that could remove important protections over the weekend if the public could vote on individual issues continually. They set up 6 year terms for U.S. Senators and 4 year terms for presidents explicitly to shield our Rule of Law from whims the public might hold for only a month. Nor does this process give voters direct control over the outcome of a disputed law, but only equips them to evaluate the wisdom of their elected representatives and their judges, which is the same as our current system except this leaves voters much better informed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The 14th Amendment expanded the power of courts to overturn laws which violate “fundamental rights”. It made slave-loving southern state legislatures accountable to courts. Unaddressed was what to do when it is courts which violate fundamental rights. This measure is an attempt to restore balance. It is interesting that the 14th Amendment actually leaves its own enforcement not to courts, but to Congress. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The “independence of the judiciary” from popular whims is well protected by lifetime tenure. This measure does not change that. It only defines a remedy for Iowans when judges rule lawlessly and unconstitutionally. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Didn’t Iowa decide recently not to impeach judges for their rulings?'''<br />
Summary: “Overreaching” can only reach so far before it turns into full fledged unconstitutional legislating. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Removal from office, for just one harmful ruling which may be out of a long career of beneficial rulings, is pretty drastic; not to mention ineffective since it leaves the ruling in place that triggered the impeachment! <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That is why remedies short of impeachment are necessary, as well as remedies able to focus on the problem without cutting off talent which is mostly beneficial.<br />
If an assembly line produces an occasional klunker amongst its generally great output, we keep the assembly line and discard the klunker; we don't keep the klunker and blow up the assembly line! <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Iowans seriously considered impeaching judges for their rulings not so long ago. Highlights are discussed at the Brennan Center: <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A 2011 review by the National Center for State Courts’ Gavel to Gavel website also found numerous bills introduced in state legislatures that year to impeach judges and justices because of disagreement over specific rulings. Several of those introductions were part of a failed effort in Iowa to remove four Iowa Supreme Court Justices for their decision in a high-profile case about marriage rights for same-sex couples. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The impeachment attempt garnered significant media attention, but also widespread condemnation – even from members of the sponsors’ own party. Iowa Governor-elect Terry Brandstad (R) [sic] said at the time that disagreement over a ruling did not constitute grounds for impeachment. “There’s a difference between malfeasance and over-reaching,” said Brandstad, “the Constitution says what the grounds for impeachment are. My reading is it’s not there.” Iowa House Speaker Kraig Paulsen (R), whose chamber would have voted on the impeachment, sent the resolutions to languish in an inactive committee and said, “I disagree with this remedy,…I do not expect it to be debated on the floor of the House, and if it is, I will vote no.”<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I respectfully disagree with Governor, later Ambassador Branstad. When the Iowa Supreme Court not only struck down laws limiting marriage to opposite sex couples, but specifically ordered county clerks to solemnize “marriages” between same sex couples, that reaches beyond “overreaching”. “Overreaching” implies a mild going-a-little-too-far out of one’s proper jurisdiction. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But if the plainest example of a “person charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to” the judicial branch of government exercising “any function appertaining to” the legislative branch can be dismissed as mere “overreaching”, then it is impossible for any other judicial legislating to violate the Iowa Constitution. We might as well just give judges the password to the Iowa Code database and let them write whatever laws they please. As Rep. Matt Windschitl said January 27, 2020 on the Jeff Angelo show, “Do we really want judges deciding laws? If so, why do we even have a legislature?”<br />
Article 3 Section 1 of the Iowa Constitution says “Departments of government. The powers of the government of Iowa shall be divided into three separate departments — the legislative, the executive, and the judicial: and no person charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to one of these departments shall exercise any function appertaining to either of the others....”<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''FAQ’s: Judicial Philosophy'''<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Isn’t it unconstitutional to impeach a judge for a ruling?'''<br />
Summary: It can’t be unconstitutional to correct the part of a ruling that unconstitutionally legislates. Although it has not been established definitively, whether a judge may be impeached over a ruling, most legal discussion avers that would be unethical, and there is no precedent of a successful impeachment over the content of a ruling. <br />
Most legal discussion is of the U.S. Constitution; the Iowa Constitution specifies that judges can’t legislate, which is only implied in the U.S. Constitution. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The United States Constitution provides little guidance as to what offenses constitute grounds for the impeachment of federal judges...However, the impeachment power has historically been limited to cases of serious ethical or criminal misconduct. - Brennan Center<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is generally supposed that legislative action to correct an unconstitutional ruling, or to discipline a judge who writes one, would be unconstitutional. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Constitution does not “provide for resignation or impeachment whenever a judge makes a decision with which elected officials disagree” said four judges when President Clinton and Senator Dole urged impeachment of a judge over his ruling on admissibility of evidence. “These attacks do a grave disservice to the principle of an independent judiciary and…mislead the public as to the role of judges in a constitutional democracy.” Brennan Center<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Let’s make a distinction glossed over by those four judges: between a ruling hated because it applies existing law and facts in a way most people think is wrong, and a ruling hated because it overturns laws by a rationale that most people think is unconstitutional. I agree with the four judges that the case was correctly kept off limits to lawmakers, but the judges generalized their criticism to the extent of dismissing concerns about truly unconstitutional rulings as being mere decisions “with which elected officials disagree”. <br />
It is that degree of generalization that is “a grave disservice” by elevating “the principle of an independent judiciary” beyond the reach of the Constitution, of common sense, and of accountability of any kind from any source. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;What I have not found in law review articles is any proposed remedy for when a ruling itself is unconstitutional. I have not found it even acknowledged that it is possible for a ruling to be unconstitutional. As if to say “how could judges rule unconstitutionally? Judges ARE the constitution.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But it is judges themselves, in vigorous dissents, who stir public concern about the constitutionally of certain rulings. Judges who write dissents are as qualified as those in the majority, and their reasoning is often equally persuasive. When the public has a basis this solid for concern about the constitutionality of rulings, it is surely in the public interest, and not contrary to any known legal or constitutional principle, to hold a public hearing where those concerns can be addressed and hopefully resolved, where judges, perhaps for the first time in America history, can be compelled to interact with experts other than each other.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In fact, any time a law is overturned for being unconstitutional, but the ruling is flawed and a correct ruling would actually not find the law unconstitutional, then actually the ruling itself is unconstitutional because the ruling amounts to raw legislation. It is unconstitutional for courts to pass laws. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Let me emphasize this point. Any ruling that overturns a law is either correct because the law is in fact unconstitutional, or is itself unconstitutional because its reasoning or factual basis is flawed. Lawmakers take oaths to defend the Constitution too, and should not be unconstitutionally deprived of the power to enforce it when they see a violation. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If we may agree that it is at least theoretically possible for a ruling overturning a law to be unconstitutional, shall we insist the Constitution requires the legislature to honor every unconstitutional ruling? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Suppose there were a law against painting your house red, someone was prosecuted for painting his house red, and the court refused to convict because it is surely unconstitutional to outlaw painting your house red. Even without a formal nullification of the law, the law would be defacto nullified because prosecutors would know the court won’t convict anybody for that crime. It may be reasoned that rulings overturning laws merely formalize this natural process. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Public hearings would bring healing to our national division over issues less clear than the right to paint your house red. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As is pointed out below, the power this bill gives the legislature to overturn a judicial validation of its laws would not usurp judicial powers. It would not affect individuals who are actual parties named in the case. It would only affect that part of the ruling which wrongfully reaches into lawmaking, changing the laws which affect millions of other people who are not named in the case. <br />
</ref><br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">Should any federal judge so interfere, this state appeals to its congressional delegation to examine similar grounds for disciplinary action, <br />
<ref>More about '''“similar grounds for disciplinary action”''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;For example, see “Bringing the Courts Back Under the Constitution” at www.osaka.law.miami.edu/~schnably/GringrichContractWith America.pdf (sic)<br />
</ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">along with exercising its Article III, Section 2, paragraph 2 authority to make “exceptions” and “regulations” designed to end SCOTUS’ long line of landmark abomination cases. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">This state also appeals to its congressional delegation to exercise its life-saving and rights-protecting authority under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment whose plain words give Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of Rights,<br />
<ref>More about '''“Section 5 of the 14th Amendment gives Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of rights”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Section 5 of the 14th Amendment so plainly gives Congress, not courts, the power to correct state violations of fundamental rights, that it is an amazing story how SCOTUS has usurped that power for itself and completely denied it to Congress, and how Congress has let them.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Largely relying on the dissents and concurrences of Justice Clarence Thomas, this story is told in Statement #11 and its footnotes. See “What Happened to Unalienable Rights, and How to Get Them Back” and “ ‘Substantive Due Process’: how SCOTUS usurped the Constitution’s Authority to Define Rights, and Congress’ Authority to Enforce Rights, into its own authority to reclassify abominations as ‘rights’ ”</ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">which subsumes the authority to define their scope and balance competing interests, while the “privileges and immunities” clause identifies as protectable rights those listed in the Constitution.<br />
<ref> More about '''“Section 5 of the 14th Amendment gives Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of the Right to Life and of Equal Protection of the Laws”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Section 5 of the 14th Amendment so plainly gives Congress, not courts, the power to correct state violations of fundamental rights, that it is an amazing story how SCOTUS has usurped that power for itself and completely denied it to Congress, and how Congress has let them.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Largely relying on the dissents and concurrences of Justice Clarence Thomas, this story is told in Statement #11 and its footnotes. See “What Happened to Unalienable Rights, and How to Get Them Back” and “ ‘Substantive Due Process’: how SCOTUS usurped the Constitution’s Authority to Define Rights, and Congress’ Authority to Enforce Rights, into its own authority to reclassify abominations as ‘rights’ ”</ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">Official world-wide definitions of “crimes against humanity” apply “to representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission.”<br />
<ref>More about '''“...definitions of ‘crimes against humanity’ apply ‘to representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission.’ ”''' <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;“A crime against humanity occurs <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;when the government withdraws legal protection <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;from a class of human beings <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;resulting in severe deprivation of rights, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;up to and including death.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;- amicus in Dobbs of <u>Melinda Thybault/Moral Outcry</u><br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Melinda Thybault’s amicus brief was the 20th amicus docketed in Dobbs v. Jackson (2022). (www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184968/ 20210726175018044_41206%20pdf%20Parker%20III%20br.pdf)<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Her references, backing up that damning judgment:<br />
<blockquote>See “Crime Against Humanity” at www.law.cornell.edu/wex/ crime_against_humanity and see U.N. Office, Genocide Prevention, Crimes Against Humanity www.un.org/en/genocideprevention/crimes-against-humanity.shtml; Treaty of Rome (1957). See also Convention on the Non-Applicability of Statutory Limitations to War .</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Her characterization of international documents is not only fair, but it understates the culpability of elected representatives. Actual quotes from the documents lay responsibility at the feet, not just of impersonal “government”, but of government’s “representatives”. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Notice in the following definitions that those targeted for prosecution in international human rights tribunals include elected representatives and senators who “tolerate” crimes against humanity – who don’t actively execute their authority to criminalize these assaults on the Image of God. (Genesis 1:27) <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;“Genocide”, defined: ''“Genocide means...acts...with intent to destroy...in part, a national...group [in our case, Americans] [by] killing members of the group [in our case, babies; and by] Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group....”'' <br />
Here is the complete United Nations statement: <br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Article II: In the present Convention, '''genocide means''' any of the following '''acts committed with intent to destroy''', in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such:<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(a) '''Killing members of the group;'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(b) Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group;<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(c) Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part;<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(d) '''Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group;'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(e) Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;- Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide / Approved and proposed for signature and ratification or accession by General Assembly resolution 260 A (III) of 9 December 1948 / Entry into force: 12 January 1951, in accordance with article XII / www.un.org/en/genocideprevention/ documents/atrocity-crimes/Doc.1_Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.pdf</blockquote><br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The 1948 definition above is cited in the following 1968 United Nations General Assembly resolution (which took effect two years later) which nullifies any “statute of limitations” on “crimes against humanity”:<br />
<blockquote><br />
Article I: No statutory limitation shall apply to the following crimes, irrespective of the date of their commission:...(b) Crimes against humanity whether committed in time of war or in time of peace as they are defined in the Charter of the International Military Tribunal, Nürnberg, of 8 August 1945 and confirmed by resolutions 3 (I) of 13 February 1946 and 95 (I) of 11 December 1946 of the General Assembly of the United Nations,...the crime of genocide as defined in the 1948 Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, even if such acts do not constitute a violation of the domestic law of the country in which they were committed.</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The following Article II applies the call for prosecution at any time, not limited by a Statute of Limitations, to elected representatives. The word “elected” is not there, but the context certainly includes them, especially since one cannot “represent” another, as the word is normally defined, without their voluntary authorization. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;By not limiting the definition of “representatives” to those who are elected, the definition does not exclude judges.<br />
<blockquote>Article II: '''If any of the crimes mentioned in article I is committed, the provisions of this Convention shall apply to''' representatives of the State authority and private individuals who, as principals or accomplices, participate in or who directly incite others to the commission of any of those crimes, or who conspire to commit them, irrespective of the degree of completion, and to '''representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission.''' (Article II, Convention on the Non-Applicability of Statutory Limitations to War, ADOPTED 26 November 1968 BY General Assembly resolution 2391 (XXIII))</blockquote><br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If [genocide] is committed, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;the provisions of this Convention shall apply <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;to representatives of the State authority <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;who tolerate [its] commission. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Including judges.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And elected representatives <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; who are lax in restraining them.<br />
<br />
<u>Thybault</u> writes, “...the Court has not yet fully reversed Roe, Doe, and Casey.” She submitted this observation to the Court which finally reversed all three, technically, although the slaughter continues in most states so her observation is still timely. <br />
“No American citizen should have to live under, nor as history tragically demonstrates, should they stand by silently, while their government sanctions and even promotes crimes against humanity.” <br />
Another low point in the Supreme Court’s grasp of 14th Amendment equal rights, she mentions, was Plessy v. Ferguson, 163 U.S. 537 (1896) which, like Roe and Dred Scott, “denied legal protection to a class of human beings” and “ignored the plain language of the Fourteenth Amendment”. “Plessy accepted the gloss that ‘separate but equal’ was ‘equal’.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;She repeats, “When the government withdraws legal protection from a class of human beings, it is the classic definition of a crime against humanity.” <br />
</ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">Any court review of this law must be expedited, because lives are lost with each day that courts delay.<br />
<ref>More about “...review of this law must be expedited, because lives are lost with each day that courts delay.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;This demand actually belongs in the enforcement section of the law – the part that gives orders. But here it is in the “findings of facts” section. Courts accept the right of legislatures to demand “expedited” review in specific cases. (That is, where lawyers have to write their briefs faster and show up for hearings earlier, and judges have less time to rule.)<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is routine in cases where speedy rulings can make the difference between life and death. It is routine in much less critical cases. It can always be an option for judges, when a party to a case requests it and gives good reasons for it.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;What is remarkable about this reason for an expedited review, in an abortion case, is that the reason is itself the issue. When it is acknowledged that “lives are lost with each day that courts delay”, that settles the case in favor of babies. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A grant of expedited review will imply, if not constitute, tacit agreement that babies are people. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But to deny expedited review a judge would have to claim that lives are NOT lost with each day that courts delay; but there is simply no evidence to support such a claim! No American legal fact-finding authority in 50 years has dared such a claim! SCOTUS, from Roe to Dobbs, claims that even Supreme Court judges are incompetent to know - will a lower court judge claim superior knowledge?! Checkmate!<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Expedited Review in federal law'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Every prolife bill ought to include: Any court review of this law must be expedited, since lives are lost with each day that courts delay.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Examples: Expedited Review Grounds <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;DC Circuit Federal Court: A party seeking expedited consideration generally "must demonstrate the delay will cause irreparable injury and that the decision under review is subject to substantial challenge"; but "[t]he Court may also expedite cases . . . in which the public generally [has] an unusual interest in prompt disposition" and the reasons are "strongly compelling." - U.S. Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit, Handbook of Practice and Internal Procedures 40 (1987). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9th Circuit: The requesting party must make a showing of “good cause,” where irreparable harm might occur or an appeal might become moot. Rutter 6:149. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10th Circuit: Appeals can be expedited under 28 U.S.C. 1657 for "good cause." <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Iowa: Iowa Rule of Appellate Procedure 6.902 has special rules for children's issues (since children might not remain children through a years-long case) and lawyer disciplinary proceedings. (Babies are children.) <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3rd Circuit: Rule 4.1 says a motion for expedited appeal must set forth the exceptional reason that warrants expedition and include a proposed briefing schedule. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4th Circuit: Rule 12(c) says “A motion to expedite should state clearly the reasons supporting expedition....” <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7th Circuit: Appeals can be expedited under 28 U.S.C. § 1657 for “good cause.” (Reasons must be given.) <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Expedited Appeal Law and Legal Definition (An explanation at uslegal..com): “The court will speed up cases involving issues of child custody, support, visitation, adoption, paternity, determination that a child is in need of services, termination of parental rights, and all other appeals entitled to priority by the appellate rules or statute.” Other grounds: “the constitutionality of any law, the public revenue, and public health, or otherwise of general public concern or for other good cause,” (Source: rcfp.org lists expedited review rules for each federal circuit court and for each state's courts.) <br />
</ref><br />
<br />
<br />
<small>The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: 396 State Legislators from 41 States <> Melinda Thybault/Moral Outcry <> and by Matthew J. Franck, Director of the William E. and Carol G. Simon Center on Religion and the Constitution at the Witherspoon Institute and visiting lecturer in politics at Princeton University</small><br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Courtrecognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human<br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] Courts Accept the Fact-Finding Authority of Legislatures, Juries, Experts for the same good reasons their findings persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures should regulate abortion, as Dobbs held, just as legislatures regulate the prosecution of all other murders.<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] The full humanity of a tiny physical body is hard for many to grasp. But what distinguishes us from animals isn’t physical, and has no known pre-conscious stage.<br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress has ''Already'' Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment already authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion.<br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] Roe, Dobbs, and the 14th Amendment agree: All Humans are “Persons”.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] When pregnancies develop into medical emergencies requiring separation of mother and child to save the mother, the child has an equal fundamental right to life and medical care. <br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any class of humans by any other is prohibited by the Constitution, by the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives legislatures no authority to legalize violations of Constitutional Rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
<br />
----<br />
'''FOOTNOTES'''<br />
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<br />
<references /></div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Statement_12_%2B_Footnotes&diff=50359Statement 12 + Footnotes2023-12-18T02:36:12Z<p>DaveLeach: </p>
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<br />
Statement of Facts #12 of 12 from: <br />
<br />
=[[Reversing_Landmark_Abomination_Cases]]=<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters<br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion</span><br />
<br />
by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal<br />
''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal<br />
<span style="color:brown"><br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen <br />
<br />
by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 18:11, 15 October 2023 (UTC)<br />
<br />
<span style="color:grey"><small>''Try to imagine how a judge, reviewing a prolife law with these Findings of Facts, would be able to dodge this evidence - in fact, see if you can find ANYONE who can ''refute'' these facts - as opposed to not ''caring'' about facts - that is, not caring about reality:''</small></span><br />
<br />
====<span style="color:blue">Statement of Fact #12 of 12:====<br />
<span style="color:blue">Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">Any state judge interfering with this state’s compliance with the 14th Amendment and its ancient authority to protect its people <br />
<ref>More about '''“the ancient authority of state legislatures...to protect the lives of all its people – an authority which no court can legitimately remove.”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Courts that overturn the prolife laws of “red states” interfere with the ancient duty and power of every government, in every generation, to protect life, points out the amicus brief filed in Dobbs v. Jackson by <u>396 State Legislators from 41 States</u>.(www.supremecourt.gov/Docket PDF/19/19-1392/185121/ 20210728125120809_Dobbs%20Amici%20brief_State%20Legislators_07272021.pdf)<br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;State legislators have the constitutional duty, and therefore the power, to protect the fundamental, civil rights of persons. The fundamental law in which those fundamental rights are found is the common law, which consists of both natural duties and those ancient, customary rights and immunities that are foundational to ordered liberty. Thus, a state legislature must declare and secure to all persons within the protection of its laws the rights that those persons have by natural and customary law. Cf. ''Washington v. Glucksberg'', 521 U.S. 702, 721-22 (1997) (upholding state legislation that prohibited assisted suicide and reasoning that the Fourteenth Amendment’s “Due Process Clause specially protects those fundamental rights and liberties which are, objectively, ‘deeply rooted in this Nation’s history and tradition’.” (quoting ''Moore v. E. Cleveland'', 431 U. S. 494, 503 (1977)). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England (1765): “Hence,” he said, “it follows, that the first and primary end of human laws is to '''maintain and regulate these absolute rights of individuals'''.” Id. Blackstone taught that the legislative power is to declare existing common-law rights and duties and to remedy any defects in the legal security for those rights. Id. at *42-43, 52-58, 86-87 <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Founders echoed this view in the Declaration of Independence, declaring that governments are instituted among men in order to secure the inalienable rights with which human beings are endowed by nature and nature’s God. They also accused the crown and Parliament of infringing the rights of “our constitution,” which in 1776 could only have been a reference to the common-law constitution of British North America. This view predicated the Constitution of the United States, which expressly secures natural rights, such as life and religious liberty, and common-law rights, such as jury trials and freedom from the quartering of soldiers in one’s home, and expressly disclaims any intent to disparage the other rights of the fundamental law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Indeed, the point of having legislatures, executives, and courts is to secure the rights that Americans already have.''' Neither state legislatures nor the Constitution of the United States create those rights. See District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570, 592 (2008) (stating that “it has always been widely understood that the '''Second Amendment, like the First and Fourth Amendments, codified a preexisting right,” that it “is not a right granted by the Constitution,” and is not “in any manner dependent upon that instrument for its existence.”'''). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Some, but not all, of the rights of natural persons are enumerated [listed] in the Constitution''' of the United States and its amendments. U.S. Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 8.; art. IV, §2; amends. I-VIII. Others are enumerated in state constitutions. See e.g., Soc’y for the Propagation of the Gospel v. Wheeler, 22 F. Cas. 756, 766 (No. 13,156) (C.C.D.N.H. 1814). Still others are declared in American constitutions but not enumerated. U.S. Const. amend. IX (“The enumeration of certain rights herein shall not be construed to deny or disparage other rights retained by the people.”) (emphasis added). '''State legislatures have a duty to declare and secure all fundamental rights, both enumerated and unenumerated.''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Fundamental rights are those that persons enjoy by fundamental law—natural law and common law— with or without any written constitution. Because the common law includes natural rights, to understand the fundamental rights declared and secured by the Constitution, it is sufficient to look to the common law, especially as explained by William Blackstone. Established common-law doctrines constitute the best evidence of the existence and meaning of both enumerated and unenumerated, fundamental rights. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The interpretation of the Constitution of the United States is necessarily influenced by the fact that its provisions are framed in the language of the English common law, and are to be read in the light of its history.” ''Smith v. Alabama'', 124 U.S. 465, 478 (1888). The terms and concepts of the common law provided the “the nomenclature of which the framers of the Constitution were familiar.” ''Minor v. Happersett'', 88 U.S. (21 Wall) 162, 167 (1875). Accord James R. Stoner, Jr., Common-Law Liberty: Rethinking American Constitutionalism 9-29 (2003). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;American constitutional rights are not philosophical abstractions. They are described in detail in common law treatises, such as those by Coke and Hale, and especially Blackstone’s Commentaries. The framers crafted American constitutions—state and federal—in common law terms. And Blackstone was their teacher and lexicographer....<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As this Court has rightly acknowledged, Blackstone’s “works constituted the preeminent authority on English law for the founding generation.” ''Alden v. Maine'', 527 U.S. 706, 715 (1999). Blackstone retained his influence through the adoption of the Civil War Amendments. James M. Ogden, Lincoln’s Early Impressions of the Law in Indiana, 7 Notre Dame L. Rev. 325, 328 (1932). And '''this Court continues to turn to Blackstone today.''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[2 A few examples from recent years include ''Gamble v. United States'', __ U.S. __, 139 S. Ct. 1960 (2019) (the Court’s opinion, the concurrence, and one dissent citing Blackstone multiple times to determine the meaning of the phrase “the same offense” in the Fifth Amendment’s double jeopardy clause); ''Department of Homeland Security v. Thuraissigiam'', __ U.S. __, 140 S. Ct. 1959, 1969 (2020) (calling Blackstone’s Commentaries a “satisfactory exposition of the common law of England”); Ramos v. Louisiana, __ U.S. __, 140 S. Ct. 1390, 1395 (2020) (citing Blackstone in explanation of the holding that '''the requirement of juror unanimity is “a vital right protected by the common law”''' and therefore the Constitution’s jury trial guarantee); ''Torres v. Madrid'', __ U.S. __, 141 S. Ct. 989, 996, 997, 998, 1000 (2021) (citing Blackstone multiple times to determine meaning of Fourth Amendment “seizure”). ]...<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But as the Ninth Amendment makes clear, the enumeration of certain common-law rights does not deny or disparage all the other rights that the American people enjoy by virtue of natural law and their ancient customs. The Ninth Amendment expressly reserves to the people those civil and fundamental rights that they enjoyed prior to ratification, which are their natural rights, other common-law rights and liberties, and some privileges enumerated in state constitutions. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Because many states refused to remedy infringements of fundamental rights [for blacks] prior to the Civil War, the Fourteenth Amendment was necessary to ensure to all persons due process of law and the equal protection of the laws, and to empower Congress to remedy infringements of those rights. It bears emphasis that the '''Fourteenth Amendment was necessary to recall state legislatures to their original task. Far from repealing the people’s retention of fundamenta'''l rights declared by the Ninth Amendment, the Fourteenth Amendment strengthened it. And far from abrogating the duty of state legislatures to declare and secure unenumerated rights, the Fourteenth Amendment reinforced that duty. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That is, the rights retained by the people but not protected by their state, such as the right of Blacks to liberty, was strengthened – at the expense of the freedom of the legislature to torpedo those rights. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And as Statement #11 and its footnotes explain, the 14th Amendment did not supplant the duty of legislatures to protect rights with that duty in courts. The only authority over state violations of rights given courts by the 14th was to enforce federal laws enacted by Congress. The authority of courts we see today, to make up “rights” not found in the Constitution and impose them on states without waiting for Congress to pass a law, was not given by the 14th, but was seized by courts in violation of the Constitution. </ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">– the central reason governments exist, is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders,<br />
<ref>More about '''“[Any judge enabling mass baby murder] is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The consensus of official fact finders is that all unborn babies are people from the beginning. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The logical extension of that consensus is that abortion is murder; that murder of 60+ million people is genocide; and that any judge blocking state protection of its people from genocide is an accessory to genocide. </ref><br />
and is guilty of exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide through an unconstitutional ruling, <br />
<ref>More about '''“...an unconstitutional ruling....”''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Oops, I just used a forbidden phrase: “unconstitutional ruling”. I just categorized a number of court rulings as “unconstitutional”. Is that allowed in America? Will that get be inside a jail? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Does ''anyone'' dare call ''any'' court ruling “unconstitutional”? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Should'' the public demand that court rulings be “constitutional”? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"But", you ask, "how is an 'unconstitutional ruling' even possible if the constitutional role of courts is to 'say what the constitution is'? If what courts say the Constitution says ''is by definition the Constitution'', then by definition it is impossible for what courts rule to be “unconstitutional”, right? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I googled “unconstitutional ruling” and got hits where Elon Musk appealed an “unconstitutional ruling” but it was the ruling of a federal agency, the SEC, not of any court. (https://thepoliticsbrief.com/elon-musk-appeals-unconstitutional-ruling-to-the-supreme-court/)<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I thought I found what I was searching for when I read “US court throws wrench in detention debate with unconstitutional ruling”. But it was about a court saying a law was unconstitutional. https://thehill.com/policy/defense/114685-us-court-throws-wrench-in-detention-debate-with-unconstitutional-ruling/<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The search turned up hits where “unconstitutional ruling” meant a ruling that says a ''law'' is unconstitutional, not that a ''court ruling'' is; that is, a ruling was an “ ‘unconstitutional’ ruling”. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;An example: “Meaning of an unconstitutional ruling...the consciousness, values, and ethics of the people living in society change with the times, and the general public changes the laws accordingly in order to support society. One of the institutions that give such a meaning to the law is the court, which can be shown in the form of an unconstitutionality ruling.” https://english-meiji.net/articles/2967/ <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The search turned up an Amicus Brief where lawyers, writing to the Supreme Court, used the dreaded phrase: “Stare Decisis Does Not Control Where a Precedent is Incorrectly Decided and Unconstitutional”. That was one of the headings of the brief. But the “Question Presented”, the first thing the justices saw, was gentler: “Whether this Court should overrule...the incorrect holding...in Hill v. Colorado....” (https://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/23/23-74/277086/20230824112814886_23-74%20Amicus%20Brief%20WFFC.pdf )<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;“Statement #11” in this book marshaled concurrences of Justice Clarence Thomas and other authorities to show that SCOTUS has no authority from the Constitution to make up “rights” not specified in the Constitution, not to mention “rights” that are actually hostile to “enumerated” (listed in the Constitution) Rights. Thomas gave gut-wrenching detail of KKK mobs slaughtering black Republicans and burning down the courthouse they were in and that they were trying to defend, acquitted by the Supreme Court, an acquittal achieved through an utter mangling of the Constitution. Thomas spoke of other rulings after that which were similarly lacking in any authority from the Constitution. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yet Thomas never called any ruling “unconstitutional”. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;One of the footnotes of Statement #11 revisited the ''Marbury v. Madison'' (1803) ruling with the help of a C-span movie about it – the case where SCOTUS came up with the idea that “the role of courts is to say what the law is”. I showed how even back then, that “holding” was based on fraud: the case said a phrase from an earlier Judiciary Act violated the Constitution. But it didn’t. A litigant asked the court to apply that phrase where the Constitution doesn’t permit it, but the law itself said it should be applied only as law permits, so it was not the law itself, but only the requested application, that was “unconstitutional”. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;My search turned up an article that articulates the irrational, absurd, outrage of the very idea of “judicial supremacy”, yet even it falls short of calling any ruling “unconstitutional”. It also falls short of recommending very much of a solution. That is, if courts are not the best final referees of the meaning of the Constitution, who is better? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Statement #11 is my answer to “who is better”. Not just “my” answer, but an answer founded on the concurrences of Justice Thomas, on several Amicus Briefs filed in ''Dobbs'', and on other authorities. The final section of this book completes the picture.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But for the rest of this footnote, let’s enjoy selections from “The Problem of Judicial Supremacy” by Matthew J. Franck, published Spring 2016 in National Affairs, and reprinted in its Fall 2023 issue, Number 57. See (www.nationalaffairs.com/publications/detail/the-problem-of-judicial-supremacy)<br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...judges, at the behest of same-sex marriage advocates, have violated one legal and constitutional norm after another.... The chief justice (in ''Obergefell v. Hodges'', a case in which the Court held that the 14th Amendment requires states to grant marriage licenses to same-sex couples,) sets a strong tone from the very start, writing that the majority has engaged in “an act of will, not of legal judgment....Nowhere is the majority's extravagant conception of judicial supremacy more evident than in its description — and dismissal — of the public debate regarding same-sex marriage.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;….What does Chief Justice Roberts ...mean by “judicial supremacy”?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(One possibility:)...a supreme authority of the federal judiciary to decide ''any'' important political or social question confronting the country — never mind whether the Constitution authentically addresses it or not. We’ll call this the ''judicial supremacy of imperial power'' for short. The justification for this understanding of the Court’s supremacy is that the Court alone is insulated from politics and self-interest, so it is peculiarly suited to use the Constitution's “majestic generalities” to generate substantive legal and policy responses to the nation’s contemporary needs.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;….(Another possibility:) the decisive right to be obeyed, which we can call the ''judicial supremacy of authoritative depth''. This means, as Charles Evans Hughes remarked before he became chief justice, that “we are under a Constitution, but the Constitution is what the judges say it is.” Hence all other citizens, but particularly those who serve in public office, are obliged to act in accordance with what the Supreme Court justices — or at least five of them — tell them the Constitution means. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''The justices of the Court, on the other hand, need not even follow the Court’s precedents.''' The Court is always right, except when five of the current justices decide it has been wrong. The Supreme Court becomes a kind of ongoing constitutional convention, authorized to alter and amend the “real” Constitution, which de facto exists only in their opinions. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Today, this understanding of judicial supremacy is virtually dogmatic in America's law schools, and it is widely embraced in the media and by the public. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But it, too, is of relatively recent origin in the Court’s own opinions, first being expressed in a 1958 case called ''Cooper v. Aaron'', in which the justices demanded the governor of Arkansas abide by their ruling in ''Brown v. Board of Education''. Their logic was this: If the Constitution is the supreme law of the land, as Article VI maintains, and if ever since ''Marbury v. Madison'' the country has understood that “the federal judiciary is supreme in the exposition of the law of the Constitution,” then '''the decisions of the Court are themselves “the supreme law of the land,” and must be followed by oath-bound public officials as equivalent to the Constitution itself.'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...it is simply not true that “the country” has believed ever since 1803 that whatever the Court ''says'' about the Constitution simply is the Constitution.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...It seems a safe bet that ''all'' the justices of the current Supreme Court believe what their predecessors said in ''Cooper v. Aaron'' about their own rulings being the supreme law of the land, effectively the same as the Constitution itself as '''far as the obligations of all other public officials are concerned.''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;….The chief justice probably intended only to denounce the first meaning above, the judicial supremacy of imperial power, which insists that the Court can be wise enough to decide all of society’s great political questions so long as they can be connected in some creative way to the Constitution. He did, after all, once famously describe the Supreme Court as an umpire calling balls and strikes — and he really meant it. No mere umpire could embrace such a capacious vision of judicial power.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...Justice Kennedy takes a commonplace truism — that no generation has a monopoly on wisdom about the meaning of freedom — and states its blandly true corollary: that “future generations” can come to “new insight” about such things. The argument then becomes a shell game for the reader, who belatedly realizes that '''Kennedy means future generations of ''judges'' are free to change the meaning of the Constitution,''' never mind our difficult but honest and democratic amendment process.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...a made-up Constitution, “evolving” from year to year according to the “new insight” of any five out of a set of nine unelected judges with life tenure? '''''That'' Constitution must be considered binding on everyone else?''' This cannot be.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...if everything the justices say about anything in the Constitution is simply to be obeyed as “the law of the land” by all other political actors — then the judicial supremacy [to the level of] imperial power follows quickly thereafter. Not logically, perhaps, but it follows politically...<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Even the dissenting justices in ''Obergefell'', then, seem unaware of how much they too are part of the problem. The late Justice Scalia, for instance, was right to say that the majority opinion represents “the furthest extension one can even imagine” of a “claimed power” on the Court’s part to “create ‘liberties’ that the Constitution and its Amendments neglect to mention.” This, he rightly said, “robs the People” of the “freedom to govern themselves” that was the whole point of fighting the American Revolution. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...we should read [the dissents] as inviting the American people to resist the decision. But if these justices — like their fellows in the majority, and typical of their kind — accept the dogma of judicial supremacy, what possible form can such resistance take?<br />
Justice Scalia, in a strident note at the end of his dissent, cites the famous Federalist No. 78 to the effect that the judiciary relies on the executive “even for the efficacy of its judgments.” He concluded: “With each decision of ours that takes from the People a question properly left to them — with each decision that is unabashedly based not on law, but on the ‘reasoned judgment’ of a bare majority of this Court — we move one step closer to being reminded of our impotence.” Here was a most daring hint from the characteristically acerbic Scalia, that '''the other branches have it in their power to frustrate the ambition of the judges to rule.'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;From inside ''the bubble created by the dogma of judicial supremacy,'' only two conventional responses to an unconstitutional ruling seem possible. One is to amend the Constitution to reverse a wrong and harmful ruling of the Court. This has been accomplished on only a few occasions in our history, and it is a Herculean undertaking. The lack of progress on a human-life amendment since ''Roe'' is a sobering reminder of the difficulty. Moreover, the route of amending the Constitution is not necessarily a challenge to judicial supremacy specifically, and might even be a concession to it. The other conventional response is to appoint better justices in the future, justices who will get the Constitution right, not abuse their authority, and perhaps even overturn abuses such as ''Obergefell''.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But how to present them with the opportunity? The pro-life movement has been maneuvering for five votes to overturn ''Roe'' for four decades now, and it has not been difficult to present the justices with opportunities to do the right thing. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[In order to create a case that would pressure judges to squarely address the evidence against ''Roe''] a state would presumably have to pass a law of exactly the kind the Court just declared unconstitutional. While the lower courts stand ready to strike down such attempts, and ''while legislators stand in thrall [slavery] to the dogma of judicial supremacy,'' this is highly improbable.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[Correcting this mess] will take some creative re-imagining of the way our institutions of government interact with one another. [Such as you can read in Statement #11 and in the final section of this book, ''Free Expression of Religion Without Establishment.'']<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...judicial supremacy today preys chiefly on the right of the people to govern themselves at the state level — and thus can be seen as an assault on the federalism of our constitutional arrangement — the growth of judicial power can be meaningfully checked only by the Court's institutional counterparts, since they alone possess the tools of checks and balances. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Here I gratefully disagree. Gratefully: I am grateful that there is much that state legislatures can do: in fact the focus of this book is on actions urged for state lawmakers. Truth is powerful, no matter who proclaims it. Especially truth about fraud so egregious that the whole nation smells the rot, even if few can figure out what is causing it and how to clean it. But here is more of the article:<br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;At first blush, some of those explicit constitutional tools — like impeachment, as Federalist No. 81 suggests — seem extreme, so we ought to treat them as something of a nuclear option.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Luckily, more modest methods exist. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Exactly! I propose some of them in a coming footnote, The Judicial Accountability Act. But this article doesn’t mention anything that specific, but rather gives historical examples of presidents ignoring courts:<br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;At various times in our history, judicial supremacy was challenged by presidents and Congress. As Princeton political scientist Keith Whittington points out in his 2007 book The Political Foundations of Judicial Supremacy, strong presidents like Jefferson, Jackson, Lincoln, Franklin Roosevelt, and even Reagan did so. Jefferson, for one, essentially nullified the Sedition Act of 1798 upon assuming office, and '''Lincoln, in express defiance of the Dred Scott decision, issued patents and passports to black Americans. The president, then, should invoke his prerogative to act in accordance with his own reading of the Constitution.'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Similarly, '''Congress passed a law in 1862 that banned slavery in U.S. territories, which was in express defiance of the Dred Scott decision. It’s not extreme, therefore, to suggest that Congress should pass laws directly contradicting the Court when''' it believes the Court has overstepped its bounds.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A kind of public education is also required...there was, for much of our history, a robust debate about the place of the Court in our constitutional structure.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Lincoln again is our true model here. As a candidate for office and emerging leader of the new Republican Party in the late 1850s, Lincoln resolutely opposed any acceptance of the Dred Scott decision as the law of the land. The decision had to be accepted as resolving the dispute for the parties in the case, but it could not be taken as instruction for other public officials. He spoke about the issue with trenchant clarity and frequency — from the ruling's immediate aftermath until he was president. As he said in his first inaugural address:'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''“[T]he candid citizen must confess that if the policy of the government, upon vital questions, affecting the whole people, is to be irrevocably fixed by decisions of the Supreme Court, the instant they are made, in ordinary litigation between parties, in personal actions, the people will have ceased, to be their own rulers, having, to that extent, practically resigned their government, into the hands of that eminent tribunal.”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Lincoln identified the stakes. Are we our own rulers? Or have we resigned our government into the hands of a tribunal of nine lawyers, any five of whom have authority to govern us? Those questions must be asked repeatedly over the coming years — '''not only in dissents,''' but also in the media, in the academy, and among citizens. It's the duty of leaders like the president, congressional representatives, and public figures to encourage us to ask such questions....<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[An example of a rather technical needed reform of the Supreme Court which Congress has power to require:] mandatory review by the Supreme Court, in cases where a state law was declared contrary to the Constitution by a federal appeals court. [Instead of just taking a few cases that interest them. Before 1925 SCOTUS heard about 600 cases a year that they were ''required'' to hear. Then that requirement was dropped, and now they might hear 75.] The justices should be required to place such cases on the docket, to receive briefs from the parties and from friends of the court, to hear oral arguments, and to publish the reasons for their decisions. Moreover, while such cases are pending, '''any adverse judgments of lower federal courts holding a state law unconstitutional could be automatically stayed in any class of cases Congress chooses to define.''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Author''' Matthew J. Franck is Director of the William E. and Carol G. Simon Center on Religion and the Constitution at the Witherspoon Institute and visiting lecturer in politics at Princeton University….</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Conclusion'''. There is apparently some law against calling any court ruling “unconstitutional”. But that is an unconstitutional law.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is also a stupid law. “Stupid” is what we say of someone, or of some human invention, whose intelligence has dipped far below its capacity. A drunk, for example, falls into a “stupor”, rendering his normal level of intelligence temporarily unavailable. There is also a pejorative aspect of the word; it is wrong to shove intelligence aside. To the extent we do – and we all do from time to time – we ought to be ashamed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is literally stupid, and American culture needs to say so, to imagine judges have no capacity to rule against the Constitution, without any constitutional authority, usurping power prohibited by the constitution. Or to imagine that no judge has ever ruled unconstitutionally, or ever will, or ever wants to. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is literally stupid to imagine that “power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely, except when given to the Supreme Court.” <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That nonsense about “the Court alone is insulated from politics and self-interest, so it is peculiarly suited to use the Constitution’s ‘majestic generalities’ to generate substantive legal and policy responses to the nation’s contemporary needs” is a grant of close enough to absolute power to drain American culture of its moral vigor, and it has been faithfully applied over the generations to that evil purpose. No greater threat to the security of our nation exists. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;We need to say so. It is the truth. We need to state the truth. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;We who are old enough to understand this evil don’t need to state this truth for our own sakes. We have lived long enough. If America utterly collapses in a few years, from an EMP attack, hyper inflation, a flood of terrorism, or invasion, we are near the end of our lives anyway. <br />
It’s for our children and grandchildren, too often poisoned against us by the SCOTUS-driven immorality resulting from our ignorance, our cowardice, our votes, and our blind obedience to the Pied Piper of First Street NE. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;To the extent we continue genuflecting to Hell, they have no chance. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Speak for the sake of judges too. Many are prisoners of their own power, not at all desiring to drag down America. They think they have no choice. The Constitution makes them do it. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As Jesus came in the flesh to our ancestors 2000+ years ago, His Word came to America 200+ years ago and shaped its Freedoms and Laws. As our distant ancestors crucified the source of Love, our recent ancestors, joined by ourselves, have His Word out in the dumpster, jumping up and down on it to pack it all in so we can shut the lid. What Peter told them yesterday, fits today, with only slight adaption:<br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Acts 3:13 The God of Abraham, and of Isaac, and of Jacob, the God of our fathers, hath glorified his Son Jesus; whom ye delivered up, and denied him in the presence of Pilate, when he was determined to let him go. 14 But ye denied the Holy One and the Just, and desired a murderer to be granted unto you; 15 And killed the Prince of life, whom God hath raised from the dead; whereof we are witnesses. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Our generation didn’t physically kill Jesus. But way before the Supreme Court took the 10 Commandments, the Bible, and prayer out of schools, our culture censored the Word of God with a “saying” that dominated our culture: “There are two things you should never talk about: religion, and politics.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Billy Graham addressed this assault on God when he was asked, “My parents always said there were two things you shouldn’t talk about—politics and religion. Well, they never did, but now I’m an adult, and I don’t have any idea what to believe. Where can I turn?” www.billygraham .org/answer/my-parents-always-said-there-were-two-things-you-shouldnt-talk-about-politics-and-religion/<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Billy’s answer began, “I’m sorry your parents never helped you discover who God is or why He is important. Perhaps their parents did the same—but whatever the reason, I hope you won’t do this with your own children. The Bible says, ‘Teach them to your children and to their children after them’ (Deuteronomy 4:9).”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;From there, Billy G. proceeded to an answer about “God loves you” and “ask Him to guide you to a church” which I’m sure most Christians will think is grand, but I wish there were more in American Christendom beyond a personal sedation to cross-bearing, God-proclaiming war against Hell out in public where the Devil devours his victims. I wish “church” were not so much a place of listening to talk, as is condemned in Titus 3:8, as a place of action, as is urged in Titus 3:9. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Just as the clamor to physically kill Jesus put more pressure on Judge Pilate than he had the courage to resist, the pressure of secularism in our time bears some of the responsibility for pushing SCOTUS away from God. <br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 And his name through faith in his name hath made this man strong, whom ye see and know: yea, the faith which is by him hath given him this perfect soundness in the presence of you all. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Then, the evidence before the crowds was that the power of Jesus whose murder they enabled could still heal a crippled man. Today the powerful evidence before 300+ million Americans, and indeed the whole world, is that the principles of the Word of God can still heal an entire nation, replacing poverty with prosperity, crime with protection, slavery with opportunity, class warfare with “equal protection of the laws”, ignorance with education, medicine shows with hospitals, and foreign invasions with the most powerful military in the whole world.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But we see also that pushing God away in preference for sex, drugs, and general ignorance invites back poverty, crime, class warfare, medical mythology, and terrorist attacks. <br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 And now, brethren, I wot [perceive] that through ignorance ye did it, as did also your rulers. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Paul says the Pharisees acted out of ignorance. This seems generous in light of Matthew 23 and other places where Jesus vigorously exposes their evil motives. Surely much of their ignorance was as willful as ignorance today. Yet surely also their willfulness succeeded in blinding them to the full evil of what they were doing, as is clearly the case today. They surely didn’t grasp that they were killing God Himself, just as courts today surely don’t grasp how fully their war against God, their perversion of the 14th Amendment “privileges and immunities” and “due process” clauses, and their arrogant view of their own “supremacy”, are turning the Constitution which authorizes their own existence into Freedom’s epitaph. <br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 But those things, which God before had shewed by the mouth of all his prophets, that Christ should suffer, he hath so fulfilled. 19 Repent ye therefore, and be converted, that your sins may be blotted out, when the times of refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord; 20 And he shall send Jesus Christ, which before was preached unto you: 21 Whom the heaven must receive until the times of restitution of all things, which God hath spoken by the mouth of all his holy prophets since the world began. 22 For Moses truly said unto the fathers, A prophet shall the Lord your God raise up unto you of your brethren, like unto me; him shall ye hear in all things whatsoever he shall say unto you. 23 And it shall come to pass, that every soul, which will not hear that prophet, shall be destroyed from among the people.</blockquote> </ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">which exceeds the judicial powers given by the state Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment.<br />
<ref>More about '''“exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide...exceeds the judicial powers given by the state Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Legislatures have considerable untapped potential for restraining their activist courts when they become confused about which branch of government they are. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Perhaps the major reason few people even think about solutions is fear of any change to the balance of powers between the legislature and the courts. “Better the devil you know than the devil you don’t.” We don’t want to just switch tyrants. A change to a real solution requires wisdom, which requires study, and who wants to study? <br />
<center>Another obstacle to restraining courts to their constitutional function is that most people, even Christians, limit their goals to what they consider “realistic”, and especially “politically realistic”, which usually means what people think they can do without God. Trust that what Jesus promised about “impossible” goals is truly “realistic”, enables us to think about not just what would be a little bit better, but about what would be perfect. and then to think about doing whatever we can think of to move in that direction, fully aware how feeble our own steps are, trusting God to open up new opportunities, in His time, as we walk with Him. </center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;My own feeble steps were drafted into a bill in Iowa in 2020. The bill is given in the next footnote, and posted at http://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/wiki/Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_stop_judges_from_legislating <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Senate Judiciary Committee Chair Brad Zaun liked the idea and got it numbered and introduced, but it came to him too late that year to get it through the “funnel”, and he was disappointed that there was no organized group helping make other lawmakers aware of it. </ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives, including (1) giving the state Supreme Court original jurisdiction over any challenge to a law, (2) requiring that review be expedited, (3) requiring a supermajority of the Court to suspend a law, (4) questioning justices in a public hearing about the constitutionality of their ruling, and (5) overturning the ruling with a supermajority of the legislature. <br />
<ref>More about '''“The authority to...codify more surgical correctives.”''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;For example:<br />
<br />
<center>'''Judicial Accountability Act: How Legislatures can stop judges from legislating'''</center><br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Summary: what the bill accomplishes'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1. '''No district court injunctions. A single district judge can't overturn a law.''' Any legislature is well within its constitutional authority to prohibit any ''district'' court (lower court) from invalidating a law – only the ''Supreme'' Court should be allowed to do it, and only within 90 days. Letting a single lower court judge overturn the work of 150 lawmakers which include several attorneys and constitutional scholars is insane. Any challenge to a law should go directly to the most experienced judges in the state.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2. '''Supermajority required. It takes 5 of the 7 justices of the Supreme Court to overturn a law.''' A simple majority of justices overturning by one vote a law produced by tens of thousands of people over several years is a scandal. It has nothing to do with wisdom, law, or the Constitution. When judges can’t even agree with each other, unanimously, whether to destroy the work of the majority of voters and their representatives, they prove they are not so much wiser than everybody else in their state to be trusted with such unbridled power. At the very least any injunction should have their unanimous support before they should have any power to shut down the will of their whole state. A supermajority that is short of unanimous may be OK if it is not the final word but is followed by further opportunities for the legislature to restore their law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3. '''Expedited. The Court has to rule in 3 months if the court blocks a new law from taking effect with a Temporary Restraining Order.''' If the court invalidates an existing law, the invalidation doesn't take effect for one year. Courts bottling up laws with injunctions for years while they make up their minds should make them ashamed. They don’t need years. No controversial law is passed without months if not years of scrutiny by attorneys for and against. Their briefs are already ready. They already know what the other side will say. They don’t need years to think of what to say or how to respond. Maybe a day. Maybe two.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Nor do judges need months to read the briefs for several weeks to bring themselves up to speed on the issue. The law has been in the news for years. There is no honor in willful ignorance of the issues until the first brief is filed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Laws are passed to correct serious wrongs. Years of work costing millions of dollars goes into fixing problems. There is no good reason to delay justice for the citizens of a state for years to wait while judges try to agree among themselves whether to allow justice as understood by the majority of voters and lawmakers. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''4. Discussion. The legislature may compel designated justices to attend a public hearing to debate the constitutionality of the law within one year of such a ruling, by passing a resolution.''' Provided a supermajority of the Supreme Court has agreed on an injunction in less than a month, the legislature should then be able, within the next year, to compel the attendance of judges under their jurisdiction to discuss and debate, with specified legislators in a public hearing, the constitutional justification for [or necessity of] that judicial exercise of the legislative function. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''5. The legislature may overturn the invalidation by a 60% vote, by a resolution, leaving the last word, the final verdict, with incredibly well informed voters''' (through ordinary elections of lawmakers and retention of justices). The resolution overturning the invalidation would give reasons responsive to the reasoning of the judicial ruling. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''The Bill: Iowa SSB3181 2020 AD''''''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A BILL FOR <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 An Act regarding legislative oversight of supreme court <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 decisions, and including applicability provisions. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF IOWA: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Introduction/Legislative Findings'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 Section 1. NEW SECTION. 602.1615 Legislative findings —— <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 challenges to the validity of a statute —— exclusive jurisdiction <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 —— public hearings —— legislative oversight. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 1. The general assembly finds and declares all of the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 following: <br />
<center>'''If the legislature can even impeach,''' <br />
<br>'''it can at least ask questions'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 a. The power to impeach subsumes reasonable less severe <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7 remedies. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Lawmakers take an oath''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''to uphold the Constitution too'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Their responsibility to uphold the Constitution'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''requires action against courts '''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''that interfere with their responsibility'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 b. The intent of this section is to provide for a mechanism <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 in which to resolve disputes regarding the constitutionality of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 laws between the courts and the legislature, both of which are <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 composed of constitutional scholars. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Jurisdiction of courts is''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''restricted by the legislature'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 c. Article 5, section 4 of the Constitution of the State <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13 of Iowa states that the supreme court is “a court for the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14 correction of errors at law, '''under such restriction as''' the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15 general assembly may, by law, prescribe . . .”. <br />
<center>'''Judicial power to invalidate laws''' <br />
<br>'''is not given by the Iowa Constitution'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 d. Article 3, section 20 of the Constitution of the State <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 of Iowa gives the legislature the power to impeach judges for <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 “malfeasance in office”, which is generally defined to include <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;19 acting without authority and abusing power. The power to <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;20 impeach subsumes all lesser remedies. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;21 e. The Constitution of the State of Iowa does not give the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;22 courts of this state the power to invalidate laws enacted by <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;23 the legislature, to require the legislature to enact different <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;24 laws, or to publish rulings that have the same effect as new <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;25 legislation. Article 3, section 1 of the Constitution of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;26 the State of Iowa states: “The powers of the government of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;27 Iowa shall be divided into three separate departments —— the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;28 '''legislative, the executive, and the judicial: and no person''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;29 '''charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to one''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;30 '''of these departments shall exercise any function appertaining''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;31 '''to either of the others,''' except in cases hereinafter expressly <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;32 directed or permitted”. <br />
<center>'''The Legislature must get involved''' <br />
<br>'''when courts legislate unconstitutionally'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;33 f. Although the courts of Iowa have usurped those powers <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;34 without constitutional authority, it has been done for reasons <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;35 which the general assembly respects. The general assembly <br />
----<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 welcomes the expertise and guidance of the courts in evaluating <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 the constitutionality of its laws. But when the reasoning of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 rulings which function as legislation appears to be not only <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 unsound, but unconstitutional, the general assembly has the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 constitutional duty and authority to determine that judges and <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 justices have abused their power and exceeded their authority, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7 which are grounds for impeachment under the malfeasance in <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 office clause. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 g. A remedy short of impeachment should advance wisdom, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 build consensus, and educate voters so that informed voters <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 may hold both judges and legislators accountable. Article 1, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 section 2 of the Constitution of the State of Iowa states: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13 '''“All political power is inherent in the people.''' Government is <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14 instituted for the protection, security, and benefit of the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15 people, and they have the right, at all times, to alter or <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 reform the same, whenever the public good may require it”. <br />
<center>'''The Meat of the Bill:''' <br />
<br>'''the Enforcement Section'''<br />
<br>'''Lower courts can't invalidate laws'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 2. The supreme court shall have discretionary and exclusive <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 original jurisdiction over any challenge to any law. A <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;19 district court or the court of appeals shall not invalidate a <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;20 law on any grounds. <br />
<center>'''Supreme Court must rule''' <br />
<br>'''within 3 months, by supermajority,'''<br />
<br>'''when the Court blocks a ''new'' law.'''<br />
<br>'''When the Court blocks an existing law'''<br />
<br>'''the block will not take effect for one year.'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;21 3. A decision of the supreme court that invalidates <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;22 '''existing''' law or has the effect of creating new law shall not <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;23 have any effect unless agreed to by five or more of the seven <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;24 justices, and otherwise shall not have any effect for one <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;25 year. The supreme court shall also have the power to suspend <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;26 implementation of '''a new law''' provided the supreme court produces <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;27 an expedited ruling within three months of the law’s enactment. <br />
<center>'''Public Hearing'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;28 4. a. Within one year of the date a supreme court decision <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;29 is published that invalidates existing law or has the effect <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;30 of creating new law, the general assembly may, by resolution, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;31 compel the attendance of specified justices to a public hearing <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;32 to discuss and debate the justification for the decision with <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;33 members of the general assembly. A public record of the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;34 hearing shall be made. <br />
<center>'''Impeachment grounds inquiry'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;35 b. During or after the hearing, the general assembly shall <br />
----<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 determine if grounds to begin impeachment exist as to any <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 of the justices present at the hearing for acting without <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 authority or malfeasance in office. <br />
<center>'''Judges may improve their ruling'''<br />
<br>'''with respect to the status of the challenged law'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 c. Based on the results of a hearing commenced pursuant to <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 this subsection, a justice whose presence was required at the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 hearing may change the justice’s vote or alter the justice’s <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7 individual contribution to the decision. <br />
<center>'''Legislature may overturn court invalidation'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 5. A supreme court decision invalidating existing law or <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 having the effect of creating new law will not take effect if <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 two-thirds of both the senate and the house of representatives <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 approve a resolution to overturn the decision within one year <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 of the date the decision was published. The resolution must <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13 specify the basis for overturning the decision, including <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14 its reasoning, not to be limited by court precedent that is <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15 responsive to the supreme court’s initial published decision, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 and must be documented by expert testimony and constitutional <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 authority. <br />
<center>'''Legislature may add statement to the ruling'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 6. The general assembly may issue its own statement to a <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;19 published supreme court decision that invalidates existing law <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;20 or has the effect of creating new law if done within one year of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;21 the date the decision was published. The statement must regard <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;22 the constitutionality of the invalidated existing law or the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;23 newly created law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;24 Sec. 2. APPLICABILITY. This Act applies to decisions <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;25 published by the supreme court on or after the effective date <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;26 of this act. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''FAQ's'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Questions and Answers''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Why are existing laws treated differently than new laws?''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The difference is for the benefit of the public, so the laws governing them do not flip back and forth from being in effect. A ''new'' law – for example, the Heartbeat law – could be suspended by courts only until the suspension is overturned by the legislature. An ''existing'' law – for example our former marriage laws requiring spouses to be of the opposite sex – could not be suspended for one year, to give the legislature time to respond. No chaotic back and forth. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Could courts suspend a new law between its effective date and the court ruling?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The legal action a court takes to invalidate a law is an Injunction. The process here doesn’t specify it, but would allow the normal process of allowing the courts to immediately suspend a new law with a TRO, Temporary Restraining Order, until their hearing, at which the temporary order could become permanent. In the case of an existing law, by contrast, allowing the court to immediately suspend the law, with the possibility of it going back into effect after the legislature acts, would subject the public to a law which is in effect, then suspended, then back into effect. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If this law removed the court’s power to put a TRO on a new law, the law would take effect until the ruling, then it would be suspended, but then the legislature might give it effect again.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;What will be the effect of a 4-3 ruling that a law is unconstitutional?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: no legal effect, but much political pressure) Although a 4-3 ruling would no longer have legal force, it would still have powerful political force. A ruling that a law is unconstitutional would be a public relations challenge for the legislature. The legislature would face pressure to refute the judges' claims point by point, or adjust the law voluntarily. A 4-3 ruling would not be powerless; and of course it would still be binding on the parties to the case. But an argument in defense of the legislature ignoring the challenge would be that after all, the justices themselves barely agree the law is unconstitutional. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Would a ruling always trigger a public hearing?<br />
That decision is made independently of a decision to vote to override the court. “Within one year, the legislature MAY, by a resolution, compel the attendance of specified Iowa judges ....”<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Is one year for the legislature to act too long? Too short?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;One year from the court’s ruling is needed to process the ruling’s reasoning, to hold hearings which would require passage of a resolution by both chambers, and then to schedule a vote, which could be while the legislature is not in session. A year is needed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;On the other hand, requiring courts to act in 3 months is reasonable, considering this is not a brand new question before them that they have never heard of before. They have had all the years of public debate on the issue to think about the issue. Plus, courts are accustomed to ruling quickly when cases are required to be “expedited”. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Would prolife laws do any better under this system?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yes, along with all other laws relating to immorality, which are targeted by the Landmark Abomination Cases of the U.S. Supreme Court. Iowa courts think themselves bound by SCOTUS precedent, but the Iowa legislature is not and should not be. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The 14th Amendment makes state legislatures subject to federal laws which protect the rights of state citizens that are listed in the Constitution, which is the meaning of the “privileges and immunities” clause of the 14th. But the 14th gives SCOTUS no authority to make up “rights” hostile to enumerated rights, much less to enforce “rights” without waiting for federal law to lay out the manner and scope of protection. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Neither federal courts nor Congress have any authority through the 14th or through anything else to block states from protecting constitutional rights. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Act laid out here will only get state courts out of the legislature’s way of protecting the rights of state citizens. When federal courts jump in the way, they can be shoved aside with the legal arguments of Clarence Thomas and others that are summarized in Statement #11 of this book. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Is a 2/3 majority requirement necessary? Shouldn't a simple majority of the legislature be enough to override courts?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: practically & legally, certainly; politically, complicated) This may be the hardest detail to muster a quick opinion. There are strong arguments for either choice; perhaps there is even a third option: a 60% vote. As this bill proceeds, perhaps it should be expected that a consensus will form later requiring amendment of this detail. The current draft requires a 2/3 majority. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''The Practical Argument:''' Currently, courts get away with a simple majority requirement (4-3) which faces zero accountability from anybody. This draft requires a 5-2 vote; another option is 6-1. Should the legislature face a similar hurdle? Several lawmakers believe a 2/3 requirement removes any practical hope of ever overturning a judicial invalidation of a law, because the Iowa legislature is incapable of agreeing by 2/3 that the sun is up. A 2/3 requirement would make restraint of lawmaking judges actually harder than passing a constitutional amendment! <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In Congress, our U.S. Constitution says a 2/3 majority is enough to send an amendment to the Constitution before the states for their ratification. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But if we let the legislature overturn the court’s invalidation with a second simple majority, it could be objected that would be almost ridiculously easy for the legislature to gather together the same “yea” votes a second time (if an election doesn’t intervene). A 60% requirement could answer that concern. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;However, that objection could also be met by pointing out that the ruling of the courts would give typically 60 pages of reasons the law should be overturned, which would put a lot of pressure on those “yea” votes to either eloquently and exhaustively justify their votes or vote “nay”. It would not be easy to secure a majority a second time under that pressure. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The public hearing option would put that 60 page ruling on a level playing field with reasoning from lawmakers. It would make both legislatures and courts accountable not only to each other, but to reason. It might even make lawmakers upset enough to reach a 2/3 agreement. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Voters, informed as has never before been possible about judges on the ballot, or about the legal skills of lawmakers, would have the last word. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''The Political Argument:''' The public is not used to legislatures having ANY power to correct unconstitutional rulings. A 2/3 requirement would be less of a shock to tradition. Were this bill to pass into law with a 2/3 requirement, and lawmakers saw how unnecessary it was, lawmakers could ease the requirement in the future - since this does not require amending the constitution, which already grants more than this power, but requires only a law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Amendment'''. Should it be decided that a simple majority of the legislature to overturn a court’s invalidation is sufficient, here is the simple change that could do it - simply strike out “two-thirds of” (or replace it with “six tenths of”): <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 A supreme court decision invalidating existing law or <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 having the effect of creating new law will not take effect if <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 <strikethrough>two-thirds of</strikethrough> both the senate and the house of representatives <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 approve a resolution to overturn the decision within one year <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 of the date the decision was published. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Is it practically possible to require courts to add a statement from the legislature up to a year after its ruling?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;When the Supreme Court first publishes its ruling, that is not the final version that will be later given an official permanent citation in the Northwest Reporter series. (Their contact information) Unpredictable delays are caused by litigants asking for rehearings, and courts taking time to respond. Even after that option is exhausted, court staff continue proofing their decisions, a process that can take months. [Iowa Supreme Court Clerk phone number: 515-348-4700] Northwest Reporter doesn’t officially publish a case, and give it a permanent citation, until a state supreme court notifies them that it is ready. That is why a new case has only an Iowa citation that does not list a page number or volume number, and doesn’t get a fancy N.W.2d permanent citation until much later. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Requiring the Court to leave the publication open for a year in case the legislature chooses to submit a statement would affect only the time the Court notifies Northwest Reporter, and it may not even affect that time at all. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The farther this bill gets, the more discussions there will be about it with the Iowa Bar Association and the Court itself. If delaying final publication that long is deemed unreasonable, an amendment could easily give the legislature an earlier deadline. It might also require the legislature to notify the court of an intent to exercise that option. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Of course, this entire final sentence of this bill is not critical to legislative correction of judicial overreach. It could be conceded if necessary to save the rest of the bill. But it is an appropriate correction of the current system. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Will an expedited hearing that begins in the Supreme Court diminish the time needed by the litigants to fully present their claims?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: anyone ready to block a law from taking effect is ready for court) A challenge to a new law means (and perhaps this bill could so specify, although I think it is already clearly implied) a challenge to a law that has not yet gone into effect, to keep it from going into effect (beginning with a Temporary Restraining Order (TRO) the day it would go into effect). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In such a case the state itself will normally be the defendant, and the petitioner will be a well funded group that tried to kill the law in the legislature but failed. In that situation the petitioner will already be prepared legally, their arguments well honed through interaction with lawmakers. It is hard to imagine that any less prepared petitioner would be ready with a TRO to stop a law before it goes into effect. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Iowa court rules already require appellants to outline their issues in their initial notice of appeal, which is more pressure on individual defendants to prepare that far ahead, in proportion to their means, than challengers to a new law will face, who will be fully primed for a court battle before the law passes the first chamber. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspCourt rules already require that any issue argued in the Supreme Court must have first been raised in the district court, so any responsible lawyer in district court will already be prepared for the Supreme Court. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspDistrict courts are needed to develop facts through witnesses in front of juries, depositions, and cross examination of expert witnesses. Supreme courts don’t do any of that. Expert witnesses can submit Amicus Briefs but the other side can’t cross examine them. Although judges can cross examine the lawyers for both parties in oral arguments, which district judges don’t do. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspThus district courts are essential in criminal trials where the guilt of the defendant needs to be proved to juries, and in civil trials between two parties. But their value in a challenge to a law is less clear. A legislature’s “findings of facts” are given deference except in the case of a “fundamental right”, under current practice, but the court practice of overturning laws that violate made-up “fundamental rights” has zero authority under the U.S. Constitution, and nothing prevents state legislatures from copying into state law the provision of the U.S. Constitution in Article III, Section 2, Paragraph 2, that court jurisdiction is subject to such “exceptions” and “regulations” as the legislature enacts. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspWere the petitioner an individual seeking relief only for himself and not for anyone else affected by the law, courts have many tools for giving relief to individuals short of invalidating whole laws. For example, extenuating circumstances, interaction with other laws affecting the individual, or necessity in order to avoid serious injury (Iowa 704). The applicability of laws to individuals is the jurisdiction of the judicial branch, with which the legislative branch has no intent to interfere, any more than the judicial branch should interfere with the jurisdiction of the legislative branch to establish laws of general application. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspAfter a law has already gone into effect, then there is no requirement to expedite. In fact, the decision to challenge a law could be made by the parties to the case, or by a judge, at any point during a years-long case: in pre-trial briefs, a district judge’s ruling, or during the appeal before the Court of Appeals or the Supreme Court. With this bill the applicability of the law to the individual defendant could still be suspended, but the law itself, as applied to everyone else, would not be suspended until after the Supreme Court so rules and then only if the legislature does not block the suspension. The legislature’s year to respond would not begin with any ruling made before the Supreme Court’s supermajority ruling. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Are there any U.S. Supreme Court precedents relevant to these half dozen powers?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: making judges answer lawmakers' questions is a staple of confirmation hearings) These proposed powers are all completely unprecedented in law, although some of them have been discussed. Probably the one never before discussed is the idea of a public hearing. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspSurely the prohibition of a district judge overturning a law, limiting that power to the state Supreme Court, and requiring a supermajority of the court to overturn, is well within the power given the legislature to limit the jurisdiction of courts. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp'''Public Hearings'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;How about public hearings? Is there any legal or constitutional principle that shields judges from having to explain their rulings any better than they do in their written opinions? Is there something nefarious about requiring judges to answer questions? <br />
Federal judges answer questions about their past rulings in confirmation hearings for appointments to higher courts. If U.S. Senators can require them to answer questions about their rulings years later, why can’t state legislatures require their state judges to answer questions at the time? Judges justify not answering questions about future potential cases, that they may remain free to rule in view of facts and arguments they might not see until then, but there is no reason to shield judges from explaining their past cases. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Especially since the Public Hearings envisioned in this bill are not only to clarify whether a law ruled unconstitutional actually is unconstitutional. The second purpose of these Public Hearings is to investigate whether there are grounds for impeachment. Because if the legislature determines that the court’s ruling of the law’s unconstitutionality is utterly lacking in merit, then judges who so ruled were legislating; they were acting without authority, exercising a power of a different branch of government than their own, which is malfeasance of office, an impeachable offense. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Obviously, in any impeachment trial, the judges would be required to answer questions. These public hearings are a power subsumed under the power of impeachment; they are a reasonable, less severe remedy. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Certainly the very idea of communication between lawmakers and judges on a “level playing field” is unheard of. Unprecedented. (Outside confirmation hearings.) Current communication, which tradition will be slow to reconsider, is somewhat like a parent trying to reason with a child who is as inarticulate as he is stubborn. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is a special challenge for a lawyer representing the legislature to reason with a judge who gives only the scantest clues to what is on his mind before he rules, after which it is too late to respond to his errors. Does any Constitutional or legal principle require such a breakdown of communication? Does this ritual serve any good purpose? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Once President Washington asked SCOTUS for its advisory interpretation of a treaty. The justices declined, saying “The lines of separation drawn by the Constitution between the three departments of government – their being in certain respects checks upon each other – and our being judges in a court of last resort – are considerations which afford strong arguments against the propriety of our extra judicially deciding the questions alluded to; especially as the Power given by the Constitution to the President of calling on the Heads of Departments for opinions, seems to have been purposely as well as expressly limited to executive departments.” https://www.mountvernon.org/library/digitalhistory/digital-encyclopedia/article/george-washington-and-the-supreme-court/<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;https://founders.archives.gov/?q=Thomas%20Recipient%3A%22Washington%2C%20George%22%20Author%3A%22Supreme%20Court%20Justices%22&s=1111311111&sa=supre&r=3&sr= <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That answer is not a precedent for keeping courts from communicatint with legislatures for two reasons: (1) it was not a sensible answer then. The Constitution puts no limit on who the President can consult for advice, while Proverbs 15:22 says “in a multitude of counsellors, purposes are established”. I can’t imagine where SCOTUS came up with the idea that the President was limited to asking his department heads. Washington asked for advice, not a binding ruling. That’s what “extrajudicial” means. (2) SCOTUS then declined to get involved in an issue which it otherwise would never face. This is different than asking a Court to make up its mind earlier than later. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is not wrong to ask judges to give advisory opinions to lawmakers so lawmakers don’t have to spend years crafting laws which judges at the last minute decide to overturn. The August 8, 1793 answer was before Americans had to worry about activist judges who leave the future of legislation, and indeed the very future of human rights, very much in doubt. <br />
However, asking judges to give an advisory opinion about a law before it is passed is probably impractical, since judges are used to taking longer to study an issue than a legislature is in session, and also since even after giving an early opinion, new evidence or argument might come later which would flip the Court’s ruling. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;An expedited three month deadline is probably the closest we can come to a timely response from courts. Certainly legal wrangling that dribbles on for years exhausts the patience of rational minds. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The subject of the public hearing is whether the law really was unconstitutional. Because if it wasn't, then the judges plainly acted outside their authority, which is grounds for impeachment. But beyond being grounds for impeachment, an order given that is beyond one's authority to give is legally invalid. So surely the legislature has the authority to investigate whether an order was invalid, and upon establishing that it is, to reverse its effects. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sheltering judges from interaction doesn’t make them free of bias. In every other human interaction, accountability is the best way to cleanse a hard heart of bias. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp'''The Two-Thirds Majority'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The only thing remotely relevant to this 2/3 vs. simple majority requirement in American constitutional law that I can think of is that to ratify a constitutional amendment, Congress has to pass it by 2/3 before states pass it by 3/4. But the solution here doesn’t change the constitution; it only defines how the legislature is choosing to exercise authority already given by the Iowa Constitution. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If anything, there is a constitutional principle favoring the power of legislatures over courts, with respect to Fundamental Rights. The 14th Amendment is the part of the Constitution which courts have taken to give them jurisdiction over states who trample fundamental rights. But who did the 14th Amendment authorize to enforce its provisions? Not courts! Rather, Congress, according to Section 5 of the Amendment. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yet here are examples of not just state laws, but even state constitutional amendments, which were overturned by courts for violating the “equal protection” clause of the 14th Amendment: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Cummings v. Missouri'', 71 U.S. 277 (1867) a Missouri oath to hold office designed to keep out former confederate soldiers was ruled an unconstitutional Bill of Attainder. <br />
''Hollingswort''h v. Perry'', 570 U.S. 693 (2013) a California same sex marriage ban. <br />
''Romer v. Evans, 517 U.S. 620 (1996) a Colorado gay rights ban. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Awad v. Ziriax'', 10th Circuit, January 10, 2012 an Oklahoma ban of the use of Sharia Law in court. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Giles v. Harris'', 1903, and Giles v. Teasley, 1904, courts winked at disenfranchising Blacks, but explicitly accepted jurisdiction over state constitutions violating the 14th and 15th Amendments. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The authority to enforce the requirements of the 14th Amendment, given to Congress and not courts, gives Congress also the authority to define and apply fundamental rights, and for anyone seriously in doubt, to clarify who is a human being and therefore deserves to have his fundamental rights protected. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;These are philosophical as well as legal questions which merit national discussion, but while courts are sheltered from having to talk to anybody the conversation has been one sided. America needs to open this up into what Proverbs 15:22 calls a “multitude of counsellors”. It does not undermine respect for the judiciary to imagine judges are able to explain their reasoning. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''If Legislatures overturn court rulings, won’t they exercise the authority of the judicial branch?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: legislative action wouldn't affect litigants; only the part of the ruling that reaches wrongfully into legislating) No. On that future day when a legislature overturns judicial rulings, the legislature’s action would not apply to the parties to the case, so the “separation of powers” aspect of the ruling is untouched. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;There are several reasons a court may exempt a litigant from the effects of a law, without invalidating the law for everyone else. The simple difference between courts and legislatures is that legislatures pass laws which apply to everybody, while courts apply those laws in specific cases, only to the parties to the case, guided by the special facts and circumstances of the case. The power given by this bill to legislatures to overturn rulings applies only to the part of the ruling where the court stepped outside its constitutional authority in order to nullify a law passed for the benefit of millions of others. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The purpose of the public hearing is only for the legislature to investigate whether their law was constitutional after all, and if so, to take back their constitutional authority to pass laws by their subsequent vote. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Lawmakers take oaths to defend the Constitution too. Courts cannot rob lawmakers of their power to obey the Constitution without violating the constitution themselves. <br />
Perhaps that is the key principle declared implicitly by this bill: judges aren’t the only branch of government authorized to understand and defend the Constitution. The other branches are too. That balance needs to be restored. The conversation needed needs to be among equals.<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Shouldn’t judges be immune from popular pressure? We don’t want our rights subject to a vote!'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Neither legislatures nor courts should have the last word over each other. We have seen what happens when legislatures had the last word, in the South, during the time of slavery. And we have seen what happens when courts had the last word, in 1857 and 1973; regarding slavery and abortion. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Even the Iowa constitution gives the last word to voters. Is that dangerous? America’s Founders talked about popular whims that could remove important protections over the weekend if the public could vote on individual issues continually. They set up 6 year terms for U.S. Senators and 4 year terms for presidents explicitly to shield our Rule of Law from whims the public might hold for only a month. Nor does this process give voters direct control over the outcome of a disputed law, but only equips them to evaluate the wisdom of their elected representatives and their judges, which is the same as our current system except this leaves voters much better informed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The 14th Amendment expanded the power of courts to overturn laws which violate “fundamental rights”. It made slave-loving southern state legislatures accountable to courts. Unaddressed was what to do when it is courts which violate fundamental rights. This measure is an attempt to restore balance. It is interesting that the 14th Amendment actually leaves its own enforcement not to courts, but to Congress. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The “independence of the judiciary” from popular whims is well protected by lifetime tenure. This measure does not change that. It only defines a remedy for Iowans when judges rule lawlessly and unconstitutionally. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Didn’t Iowa decide recently not to impeach judges for their rulings?'''<br />
Summary: “Overreaching” can only reach so far before it turns into full fledged unconstitutional legislating. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Removal from office, for just one harmful ruling which may be out of a long career of beneficial rulings, is pretty drastic; not to mention ineffective since it leaves the ruling in place that triggered the impeachment! <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That is why remedies short of impeachment are necessary, as well as remedies able to focus on the problem without cutting off talent which is mostly beneficial.<br />
If an assembly line produces an occasional klunker amongst its generally great output, we keep the assembly line and discard the klunker; we don't keep the klunker and blow up the assembly line! <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Iowans seriously considered impeaching judges for their rulings not so long ago. Highlights are discussed at the Brennan Center: <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A 2011 review by the National Center for State Courts’ Gavel to Gavel website also found numerous bills introduced in state legislatures that year to impeach judges and justices because of disagreement over specific rulings. Several of those introductions were part of a failed effort in Iowa to remove four Iowa Supreme Court Justices for their decision in a high-profile case about marriage rights for same-sex couples. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The impeachment attempt garnered significant media attention, but also widespread condemnation – even from members of the sponsors’ own party. Iowa Governor-elect Terry Brandstad (R) [sic] said at the time that disagreement over a ruling did not constitute grounds for impeachment. “There’s a difference between malfeasance and over-reaching,” said Brandstad, “the Constitution says what the grounds for impeachment are. My reading is it’s not there.” Iowa House Speaker Kraig Paulsen (R), whose chamber would have voted on the impeachment, sent the resolutions to languish in an inactive committee and said, “I disagree with this remedy,…I do not expect it to be debated on the floor of the House, and if it is, I will vote no.”<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I respectfully disagree with Governor, later Ambassador Branstad. When the Iowa Supreme Court not only struck down laws limiting marriage to opposite sex couples, but specifically ordered county clerks to solemnize “marriages” between same sex couples, that reaches beyond “overreaching”. “Overreaching” implies a mild going-a-little-too-far out of one’s proper jurisdiction. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But if the plainest example of a “person charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to” the judicial branch of government exercising “any function appertaining to” the legislative branch can be dismissed as mere “overreaching”, then it is impossible for any other judicial legislating to violate the Iowa Constitution. We might as well just give judges the password to the Iowa Code database and let them write whatever laws they please. As Rep. Matt Windschitl said January 27, 2020 on the Jeff Angelo show, “Do we really want judges deciding laws? If so, why do we even have a legislature?”<br />
Article 3 Section 1 of the Iowa Constitution says “Departments of government. The powers of the government of Iowa shall be divided into three separate departments — the legislative, the executive, and the judicial: and no person charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to one of these departments shall exercise any function appertaining to either of the others....”<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''FAQ’s: Judicial Philosophy'''<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Isn’t it unconstitutional to impeach a judge for a ruling?'''<br />
Summary: It can’t be unconstitutional to correct the part of a ruling that unconstitutionally legislates. Although it has not been established definitively, whether a judge may be impeached over a ruling, most legal discussion avers that would be unethical, and there is no precedent of a successful impeachment over the content of a ruling. <br />
Most legal discussion is of the U.S. Constitution; the Iowa Constitution specifies that judges can’t legislate, which is only implied in the U.S. Constitution. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The United States Constitution provides little guidance as to what offenses constitute grounds for the impeachment of federal judges...However, the impeachment power has historically been limited to cases of serious ethical or criminal misconduct. - Brennan Center<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is generally supposed that legislative action to correct an unconstitutional ruling, or to discipline a judge who writes one, would be unconstitutional. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Constitution does not “provide for resignation or impeachment whenever a judge makes a decision with which elected officials disagree” said four judges when President Clinton and Senator Dole urged impeachment of a judge over his ruling on admissibility of evidence. “These attacks do a grave disservice to the principle of an independent judiciary and…mislead the public as to the role of judges in a constitutional democracy.” Brennan Center<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Let’s make a distinction glossed over by those four judges: between a ruling hated because it applies existing law and facts in a way most people think is wrong, and a ruling hated because it overturns laws by a rationale that most people think is unconstitutional. I agree with the four judges that the case was correctly kept off limits to lawmakers, but the judges generalized their criticism to the extent of dismissing concerns about truly unconstitutional rulings as being mere decisions “with which elected officials disagree”. <br />
It is that degree of generalization that is “a grave disservice” by elevating “the principle of an independent judiciary” beyond the reach of the Constitution, of common sense, and of accountability of any kind from any source. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;What I have not found in law review articles is any proposed remedy for when a ruling itself is unconstitutional. I have not found it even acknowledged that it is possible for a ruling to be unconstitutional. As if to say “how could judges rule unconstitutionally? Judges ARE the constitution.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But it is judges themselves, in vigorous dissents, who stir public concern about the constitutionally of certain rulings. Judges who write dissents are as qualified as those in the majority, and their reasoning is often equally persuasive. When the public has a basis this solid for concern about the constitutionality of rulings, it is surely in the public interest, and not contrary to any known legal or constitutional principle, to hold a public hearing where those concerns can be addressed and hopefully resolved, where judges, perhaps for the first time in America history, can be compelled to interact with experts other than each other.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In fact, any time a law is overturned for being unconstitutional, but the ruling is flawed and a correct ruling would actually not find the law unconstitutional, then actually the ruling itself is unconstitutional because the ruling amounts to raw legislation. It is unconstitutional for courts to pass laws. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Let me emphasize this point. Any ruling that overturns a law is either correct because the law is in fact unconstitutional, or is itself unconstitutional because its reasoning or factual basis is flawed. Lawmakers take oaths to defend the Constitution too, and should not be unconstitutionally deprived of the power to enforce it when they see a violation. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If we may agree that it is at least theoretically possible for a ruling overturning a law to be unconstitutional, shall we insist the Constitution requires the legislature to honor every unconstitutional ruling? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Suppose there were a law against painting your house red, someone was prosecuted for painting his house red, and the court refused to convict because it is surely unconstitutional to outlaw painting your house red. Even without a formal nullification of the law, the law would be defacto nullified because prosecutors would know the court won’t convict anybody for that crime. It may be reasoned that rulings overturning laws merely formalize this natural process. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Public hearings would bring healing to our national division over issues less clear than the right to paint your house red. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As is pointed out below, the power this bill gives the legislature to overturn a judicial validation of its laws would not usurp judicial powers. It would not affect individuals who are actual parties named in the case. It would only affect that part of the ruling which wrongfully reaches into lawmaking, changing the laws which affect millions of other people who are not named in the case. <br />
</ref><br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">Should any federal judge so interfere, this state appeals to its congressional delegation to examine similar grounds for disciplinary action, <br />
<ref>More about '''“similar grounds for disciplinary action”''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;For example, see “Bringing the Courts Back Under the Constitution” at www.osaka.law.miami.edu/~schnably/GringrichContractWith America.pdf (sic)<br />
</ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">along with exercising its Article III, Section 2, paragraph 2 authority to make “exceptions” and “regulations” designed to end SCOTUS’ long line of landmark abomination cases. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">This state also appeals to its congressional delegation to exercise its life-saving and rights-protecting authority under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment whose plain words give Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of Rights,<br />
<ref>More about '''“Section 5 of the 14th Amendment gives Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of rights”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Section 5 of the 14th Amendment so plainly gives Congress, not courts, the power to correct state violations of fundamental rights, that it is an amazing story how SCOTUS has usurped that power for itself and completely denied it to Congress, and how Congress has let them.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Largely relying on the dissents and concurrences of Justice Clarence Thomas, this story is told in Statement #11 and its footnotes. See “What Happened to Unalienable Rights, and How to Get Them Back” and “ ‘Substantive Due Process’: how SCOTUS usurped the Constitution’s Authority to Define Rights, and Congress’ Authority to Enforce Rights, into its own authority to reclassify abominations as ‘rights’ ”</ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">which subsumes the authority to define their scope and balance competing interests, while the “privileges and immunities” clause identifies as protectable rights those listed in the Constitution.<br />
<ref> More about '''“Section 5 of the 14th Amendment gives Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of the Right to Life and of Equal Protection of the Laws”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Section 5 of the 14th Amendment so plainly gives Congress, not courts, the power to correct state violations of fundamental rights, that it is an amazing story how SCOTUS has usurped that power for itself and completely denied it to Congress, and how Congress has let them.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Largely relying on the dissents and concurrences of Justice Clarence Thomas, this story is told in Statement #11 and its footnotes. See “What Happened to Unalienable Rights, and How to Get Them Back” and “ ‘Substantive Due Process’: how SCOTUS usurped the Constitution’s Authority to Define Rights, and Congress’ Authority to Enforce Rights, into its own authority to reclassify abominations as ‘rights’ ”</ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">Official world-wide definitions of “crimes against humanity” apply “to representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission.”<br />
<ref>More about '''“...definitions of ‘crimes against humanity’ apply ‘to representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission.’ ”''' <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;“A crime against humanity occurs <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;when the government withdraws legal protection <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;from a class of human beings <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;resulting in severe deprivation of rights, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;up to and including death.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;- amicus in Dobbs of <u>Melinda Thybault/Moral Outcry</u><br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Melinda Thybault’s amicus brief was the 20th amicus docketed in Dobbs v. Jackson (2022). (www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184968/ 20210726175018044_41206%20pdf%20Parker%20III%20br.pdf)<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Her references, backing up that damning judgment:<br />
<blockquote>See “Crime Against Humanity” at www.law.cornell.edu/wex/ crime_against_humanity and see U.N. Office, Genocide Prevention, Crimes Against Humanity www.un.org/en/genocideprevention/crimes-against-humanity.shtml; Treaty of Rome (1957). See also Convention on the Non-Applicability of Statutory Limitations to War .</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Her characterization of international documents is not only fair, but it understates the culpability of elected representatives. Actual quotes from the documents lay responsibility at the feet, not just of impersonal “government”, but of government’s “representatives”. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Notice in the following definitions that those targeted for prosecution in international human rights tribunals include elected representatives and senators who “tolerate” crimes against humanity – who don’t actively execute their authority to criminalize these assaults on the Image of God. (Genesis 1:27) <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;“Genocide”, defined: ''“Genocide means...acts...with intent to destroy...in part, a national...group [in our case, Americans] [by] killing members of the group [in our case, babies; and by] Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group....”'' <br />
Here is the complete United Nations statement: <br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Article II: In the present Convention, '''genocide means''' any of the following '''acts committed with intent to destroy''', in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such:<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(a) '''Killing members of the group;'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(b) Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group;<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(c) Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part;<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(d) '''Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group;'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(e) Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;- Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide / Approved and proposed for signature and ratification or accession by General Assembly resolution 260 A (III) of 9 December 1948 / Entry into force: 12 January 1951, in accordance with article XII / www.un.org/en/genocideprevention/ documents/atrocity-crimes/Doc.1_Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.pdf</blockquote><br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The 1948 definition above is cited in the following 1968 United Nations General Assembly resolution (which took effect two years later) which nullifies any “statute of limitations” on “crimes against humanity”:<br />
<blockquote><br />
Article I: No statutory limitation shall apply to the following crimes, irrespective of the date of their commission:...(b) Crimes against humanity whether committed in time of war or in time of peace as they are defined in the Charter of the International Military Tribunal, Nürnberg, of 8 August 1945 and confirmed by resolutions 3 (I) of 13 February 1946 and 95 (I) of 11 December 1946 of the General Assembly of the United Nations,...the crime of genocide as defined in the 1948 Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, even if such acts do not constitute a violation of the domestic law of the country in which they were committed.</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The following Article II applies the call for prosecution at any time, not limited by a Statute of Limitations, to elected representatives. The word “elected” is not there, but the context certainly includes them, especially since one cannot “represent” another, as the word is normally defined, without their voluntary authorization. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;By not limiting the definition of “representatives” to those who are elected, the definition does not exclude judges.<br />
<blockquote>Article II: '''If any of the crimes mentioned in article I is committed, the provisions of this Convention shall apply to''' representatives of the State authority and private individuals who, as principals or accomplices, participate in or who directly incite others to the commission of any of those crimes, or who conspire to commit them, irrespective of the degree of completion, and to '''representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission.''' (Article II, Convention on the Non-Applicability of Statutory Limitations to War, ADOPTED 26 November 1968 BY General Assembly resolution 2391 (XXIII))</blockquote><br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If [genocide] is committed, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;the provisions of this Convention shall apply <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;to representatives of the State authority <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;who tolerate [its] commission. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Including judges.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And elected representatives <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; who are lax in restraining them.<br />
<br />
<u>Thybault</u> writes, “...the Court has not yet fully reversed Roe, Doe, and Casey.” She submitted this observation to the Court which finally reversed all three, technically, although the slaughter continues in most states so her observation is still timely. <br />
“No American citizen should have to live under, nor as history tragically demonstrates, should they stand by silently, while their government sanctions and even promotes crimes against humanity.” <br />
Another low point in the Supreme Court’s grasp of 14th Amendment equal rights, she mentions, was Plessy v. Ferguson, 163 U.S. 537 (1896) which, like Roe and Dred Scott, “denied legal protection to a class of human beings” and “ignored the plain language of the Fourteenth Amendment”. “Plessy accepted the gloss that ‘separate but equal’ was ‘equal’.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;She repeats, “When the government withdraws legal protection from a class of human beings, it is the classic definition of a crime against humanity.” <br />
</ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">Any court review of this law must be expedited, because lives are lost with each day that courts delay.<br />
<br />
<br />
<small>The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: 396 State Legislators from 41 States <> Melinda Thybault/Moral Outcry</small><br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Courtrecognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human<br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] Courts Accept the Fact-Finding Authority of Legislatures, Juries, Experts for the same good reasons their findings persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures should regulate abortion, as Dobbs held, just as legislatures regulate the prosecution of all other murders.<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] The full humanity of a tiny physical body is hard for many to grasp. But what distinguishes us from animals isn’t physical, and has no known pre-conscious stage.<br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress has ''Already'' Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment already authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion.<br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] Roe, Dobbs, and the 14th Amendment agree: All Humans are “Persons”.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] When pregnancies develop into medical emergencies requiring separation of mother and child to save the mother, the child has an equal fundamental right to life and medical care. <br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any class of humans by any other is prohibited by the Constitution, by the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives legislatures no authority to legalize violations of Constitutional Rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
<br />
----<br />
'''FOOTNOTES'''<br />
----<br />
<br />
<references /></div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Statement_12_%2B_Footnotes&diff=50358Statement 12 + Footnotes2023-12-18T02:29:07Z<p>DaveLeach: </p>
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<br />
Statement of Facts #12 of 12 from: <br />
<br />
=[[Reversing_Landmark_Abomination_Cases]]=<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters<br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion</span><br />
<br />
by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal<br />
''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal<br />
<span style="color:brown"><br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen <br />
<br />
by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 18:11, 15 October 2023 (UTC)<br />
<br />
<span style="color:grey"><small>''Try to imagine how a judge, reviewing a prolife law with these Findings of Facts, would be able to dodge this evidence - in fact, see if you can find ANYONE who can ''refute'' these facts - as opposed to not ''caring'' about facts - that is, not caring about reality:''</small></span><br />
<br />
====<span style="color:blue">Statement of Fact #12 of 12:====<br />
<span style="color:blue">Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">Any state judge interfering with this state’s compliance with the 14th Amendment and its ancient authority to protect its people <br />
<ref>More about '''“the ancient authority of state legislatures...to protect the lives of all its people – an authority which no court can legitimately remove.”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Courts that overturn the prolife laws of “red states” interfere with the ancient duty and power of every government, in every generation, to protect life, points out the amicus brief filed in Dobbs v. Jackson by <u>396 State Legislators from 41 States</u>.(www.supremecourt.gov/Docket PDF/19/19-1392/185121/ 20210728125120809_Dobbs%20Amici%20brief_State%20Legislators_07272021.pdf)<br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;State legislators have the constitutional duty, and therefore the power, to protect the fundamental, civil rights of persons. The fundamental law in which those fundamental rights are found is the common law, which consists of both natural duties and those ancient, customary rights and immunities that are foundational to ordered liberty. Thus, a state legislature must declare and secure to all persons within the protection of its laws the rights that those persons have by natural and customary law. Cf. ''Washington v. Glucksberg'', 521 U.S. 702, 721-22 (1997) (upholding state legislation that prohibited assisted suicide and reasoning that the Fourteenth Amendment’s “Due Process Clause specially protects those fundamental rights and liberties which are, objectively, ‘deeply rooted in this Nation’s history and tradition’.” (quoting ''Moore v. E. Cleveland'', 431 U. S. 494, 503 (1977)). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England (1765): “Hence,” he said, “it follows, that the first and primary end of human laws is to '''maintain and regulate these absolute rights of individuals'''.” Id. Blackstone taught that the legislative power is to declare existing common-law rights and duties and to remedy any defects in the legal security for those rights. Id. at *42-43, 52-58, 86-87 <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Founders echoed this view in the Declaration of Independence, declaring that governments are instituted among men in order to secure the inalienable rights with which human beings are endowed by nature and nature’s God. They also accused the crown and Parliament of infringing the rights of “our constitution,” which in 1776 could only have been a reference to the common-law constitution of British North America. This view predicated the Constitution of the United States, which expressly secures natural rights, such as life and religious liberty, and common-law rights, such as jury trials and freedom from the quartering of soldiers in one’s home, and expressly disclaims any intent to disparage the other rights of the fundamental law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Indeed, the point of having legislatures, executives, and courts is to secure the rights that Americans already have.''' Neither state legislatures nor the Constitution of the United States create those rights. See District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570, 592 (2008) (stating that “it has always been widely understood that the '''Second Amendment, like the First and Fourth Amendments, codified a preexisting right,” that it “is not a right granted by the Constitution,” and is not “in any manner dependent upon that instrument for its existence.”'''). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Some, but not all, of the rights of natural persons are enumerated [listed] in the Constitution''' of the United States and its amendments. U.S. Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 8.; art. IV, §2; amends. I-VIII. Others are enumerated in state constitutions. See e.g., Soc’y for the Propagation of the Gospel v. Wheeler, 22 F. Cas. 756, 766 (No. 13,156) (C.C.D.N.H. 1814). Still others are declared in American constitutions but not enumerated. U.S. Const. amend. IX (“The enumeration of certain rights herein shall not be construed to deny or disparage other rights retained by the people.”) (emphasis added). '''State legislatures have a duty to declare and secure all fundamental rights, both enumerated and unenumerated.''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Fundamental rights are those that persons enjoy by fundamental law—natural law and common law— with or without any written constitution. Because the common law includes natural rights, to understand the fundamental rights declared and secured by the Constitution, it is sufficient to look to the common law, especially as explained by William Blackstone. Established common-law doctrines constitute the best evidence of the existence and meaning of both enumerated and unenumerated, fundamental rights. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The interpretation of the Constitution of the United States is necessarily influenced by the fact that its provisions are framed in the language of the English common law, and are to be read in the light of its history.” ''Smith v. Alabama'', 124 U.S. 465, 478 (1888). The terms and concepts of the common law provided the “the nomenclature of which the framers of the Constitution were familiar.” ''Minor v. Happersett'', 88 U.S. (21 Wall) 162, 167 (1875). Accord James R. Stoner, Jr., Common-Law Liberty: Rethinking American Constitutionalism 9-29 (2003). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;American constitutional rights are not philosophical abstractions. They are described in detail in common law treatises, such as those by Coke and Hale, and especially Blackstone’s Commentaries. The framers crafted American constitutions—state and federal—in common law terms. And Blackstone was their teacher and lexicographer....<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As this Court has rightly acknowledged, Blackstone’s “works constituted the preeminent authority on English law for the founding generation.” ''Alden v. Maine'', 527 U.S. 706, 715 (1999). Blackstone retained his influence through the adoption of the Civil War Amendments. James M. Ogden, Lincoln’s Early Impressions of the Law in Indiana, 7 Notre Dame L. Rev. 325, 328 (1932). And '''this Court continues to turn to Blackstone today.''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[2 A few examples from recent years include ''Gamble v. United States'', __ U.S. __, 139 S. Ct. 1960 (2019) (the Court’s opinion, the concurrence, and one dissent citing Blackstone multiple times to determine the meaning of the phrase “the same offense” in the Fifth Amendment’s double jeopardy clause); ''Department of Homeland Security v. Thuraissigiam'', __ U.S. __, 140 S. Ct. 1959, 1969 (2020) (calling Blackstone’s Commentaries a “satisfactory exposition of the common law of England”); Ramos v. Louisiana, __ U.S. __, 140 S. Ct. 1390, 1395 (2020) (citing Blackstone in explanation of the holding that '''the requirement of juror unanimity is “a vital right protected by the common law”''' and therefore the Constitution’s jury trial guarantee); ''Torres v. Madrid'', __ U.S. __, 141 S. Ct. 989, 996, 997, 998, 1000 (2021) (citing Blackstone multiple times to determine meaning of Fourth Amendment “seizure”). ]...<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But as the Ninth Amendment makes clear, the enumeration of certain common-law rights does not deny or disparage all the other rights that the American people enjoy by virtue of natural law and their ancient customs. The Ninth Amendment expressly reserves to the people those civil and fundamental rights that they enjoyed prior to ratification, which are their natural rights, other common-law rights and liberties, and some privileges enumerated in state constitutions. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Because many states refused to remedy infringements of fundamental rights [for blacks] prior to the Civil War, the Fourteenth Amendment was necessary to ensure to all persons due process of law and the equal protection of the laws, and to empower Congress to remedy infringements of those rights. It bears emphasis that the '''Fourteenth Amendment was necessary to recall state legislatures to their original task. Far from repealing the people’s retention of fundamenta'''l rights declared by the Ninth Amendment, the Fourteenth Amendment strengthened it. And far from abrogating the duty of state legislatures to declare and secure unenumerated rights, the Fourteenth Amendment reinforced that duty. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That is, the rights retained by the people but not protected by their state, such as the right of Blacks to liberty, was strengthened – at the expense of the freedom of the legislature to torpedo those rights. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And as Statement #11 and its footnotes explain, the 14th Amendment did not supplant the duty of legislatures to protect rights with that duty in courts. The only authority over state violations of rights given courts by the 14th was to enforce federal laws enacted by Congress. The authority of courts we see today, to make up “rights” not found in the Constitution and impose them on states without waiting for Congress to pass a law, was not given by the 14th, but was seized by courts in violation of the Constitution. </ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">– the central reason governments exist, is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders,<br />
<ref>More about '''“[Any judge enabling mass baby murder] is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The consensus of official fact finders is that all unborn babies are people from the beginning. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The logical extension of that consensus is that abortion is murder; that murder of 60+ million people is genocide; and that any judge blocking state protection of its people from genocide is an accessory to genocide. </ref><br />
and is guilty of exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide through an unconstitutional ruling, <br />
<ref>More about '''“...an unconstitutional ruling....”''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Oops, I just used a forbidden phrase: “unconstitutional ruling”. I just categorized a number of court rulings as “unconstitutional”. Is that allowed in America? Will that get be inside a jail? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Does ''anyone'' dare call ''any'' court ruling “unconstitutional”? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Should'' the public demand that court rulings be “constitutional”? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"But", you ask, "how is an 'unconstitutional ruling' even possible if the constitutional role of courts is to 'say what the constitution is'? If what courts say the Constitution says ''is by definition the Constitution'', then by definition it is impossible for what courts rule to be “unconstitutional”, right? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I googled “unconstitutional ruling” and got hits where Elon Musk appealed an “unconstitutional ruling” but it was the ruling of a federal agency, the SEC, not of any court. (https://thepoliticsbrief.com/elon-musk-appeals-unconstitutional-ruling-to-the-supreme-court/)<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I thought I found what I was searching for when I read “US court throws wrench in detention debate with unconstitutional ruling”. But it was about a court saying a law was unconstitutional. https://thehill.com/policy/defense/114685-us-court-throws-wrench-in-detention-debate-with-unconstitutional-ruling/<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The search turned up hits where “unconstitutional ruling” meant a ruling that says a ''law'' is unconstitutional, not that a ''court ruling'' is; that is, a ruling was an “ ‘unconstitutional’ ruling”. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;An example: “Meaning of an unconstitutional ruling...the consciousness, values, and ethics of the people living in society change with the times, and the general public changes the laws accordingly in order to support society. One of the institutions that give such a meaning to the law is the court, which can be shown in the form of an unconstitutionality ruling.” https://english-meiji.net/articles/2967/ <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The search turned up an Amicus Brief where lawyers, writing to the Supreme Court, used the dreaded phrase: “Stare Decisis Does Not Control Where a Precedent is Incorrectly Decided and Unconstitutional”. That was one of the headings of the brief. But the “Question Presented”, the first thing the justices saw, was gentler: “Whether this Court should overrule...the incorrect holding...in Hill v. Colorado....” (https://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/23/23-74/277086/20230824112814886_23-74%20Amicus%20Brief%20WFFC.pdf )<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;“Statement #11” in this book marshaled concurrences of Justice Clarence Thomas and other authorities to show that SCOTUS has no authority from the Constitution to make up “rights” not specified in the Constitution, not to mention “rights” that are actually hostile to “enumerated” (listed in the Constitution) Rights. Thomas gave gut-wrenching detail of KKK mobs slaughtering black Republicans and burning down the courthouse they were in and that they were trying to defend, acquitted by the Supreme Court, an acquittal achieved through an utter mangling of the Constitution. Thomas spoke of other rulings after that which were similarly lacking in any authority from the Constitution. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yet Thomas never called any ruling “unconstitutional”. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;One of the footnotes of Statement #11 revisited the ''Marbury v. Madison'' (1803) ruling with the help of a C-span movie about it – the case where SCOTUS came up with the idea that “the role of courts is to say what the law is”. I showed how even back then, that “holding” was based on fraud: the case said a phrase from an earlier Judiciary Act violated the Constitution. But it didn’t. A litigant asked the court to apply that phrase where the Constitution doesn’t permit it, but the law itself said it should be applied only as law permits, so it was not the law itself, but only the requested application, that was “unconstitutional”. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;My search turned up an article that articulates the irrational, absurd, outrage of the very idea of “judicial supremacy”, yet even it falls short of calling any ruling “unconstitutional”. It also falls short of recommending very much of a solution. That is, if courts are not the best final referees of the meaning of the Constitution, who is better? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Statement #11 is my answer to “who is better”. Not just “my” answer, but an answer founded on the concurrences of Justice Thomas, on several Amicus Briefs filed in ''Dobbs'', and on other authorities. The final section of this book completes the picture.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But for the rest of this footnote, let’s enjoy selections from “The Problem of Judicial Supremacy” by Matthew J. Franck, published Spring 2016 in National Affairs, and reprinted in its Fall 2023 issue, Number 57. See (www.nationalaffairs.com/publications/detail/the-problem-of-judicial-supremacy)<br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...judges, at the behest of same-sex marriage advocates, have violated one legal and constitutional norm after another.... The chief justice (in ''Obergefell v. Hodges'', a case in which the Court held that the 14th Amendment requires states to grant marriage licenses to same-sex couples,) sets a strong tone from the very start, writing that the majority has engaged in “an act of will, not of legal judgment....Nowhere is the majority's extravagant conception of judicial supremacy more evident than in its description — and dismissal — of the public debate regarding same-sex marriage.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;….What does Chief Justice Roberts ...mean by “judicial supremacy”?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(One possibility:)...a supreme authority of the federal judiciary to decide ''any'' important political or social question confronting the country — never mind whether the Constitution authentically addresses it or not. We’ll call this the ''judicial supremacy of imperial power'' for short. The justification for this understanding of the Court’s supremacy is that the Court alone is insulated from politics and self-interest, so it is peculiarly suited to use the Constitution's “majestic generalities” to generate substantive legal and policy responses to the nation’s contemporary needs.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;….(Another possibility:) the decisive right to be obeyed, which we can call the ''judicial supremacy of authoritative depth''. This means, as Charles Evans Hughes remarked before he became chief justice, that “we are under a Constitution, but the Constitution is what the judges say it is.” Hence all other citizens, but particularly those who serve in public office, are obliged to act in accordance with what the Supreme Court justices — or at least five of them — tell them the Constitution means. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''The justices of the Court, on the other hand, need not even follow the Court’s precedents.''' The Court is always right, except when five of the current justices decide it has been wrong. The Supreme Court becomes a kind of ongoing constitutional convention, authorized to alter and amend the “real” Constitution, which de facto exists only in their opinions. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Today, this understanding of judicial supremacy is virtually dogmatic in America's law schools, and it is widely embraced in the media and by the public. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But it, too, is of relatively recent origin in the Court’s own opinions, first being expressed in a 1958 case called ''Cooper v. Aaron'', in which the justices demanded the governor of Arkansas abide by their ruling in ''Brown v. Board of Education''. Their logic was this: If the Constitution is the supreme law of the land, as Article VI maintains, and if ever since ''Marbury v. Madison'' the country has understood that “the federal judiciary is supreme in the exposition of the law of the Constitution,” then '''the decisions of the Court are themselves “the supreme law of the land,” and must be followed by oath-bound public officials as equivalent to the Constitution itself.'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...it is simply not true that “the country” has believed ever since 1803 that whatever the Court ''says'' about the Constitution simply is the Constitution.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...It seems a safe bet that ''all'' the justices of the current Supreme Court believe what their predecessors said in ''Cooper v. Aaron'' about their own rulings being the supreme law of the land, effectively the same as the Constitution itself as '''far as the obligations of all other public officials are concerned.''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;….The chief justice probably intended only to denounce the first meaning above, the judicial supremacy of imperial power, which insists that the Court can be wise enough to decide all of society’s great political questions so long as they can be connected in some creative way to the Constitution. He did, after all, once famously describe the Supreme Court as an umpire calling balls and strikes — and he really meant it. No mere umpire could embrace such a capacious vision of judicial power.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...Justice Kennedy takes a commonplace truism — that no generation has a monopoly on wisdom about the meaning of freedom — and states its blandly true corollary: that “future generations” can come to “new insight” about such things. The argument then becomes a shell game for the reader, who belatedly realizes that '''Kennedy means future generations of ''judges'' are free to change the meaning of the Constitution,''' never mind our difficult but honest and democratic amendment process.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...a made-up Constitution, “evolving” from year to year according to the “new insight” of any five out of a set of nine unelected judges with life tenure? '''''That'' Constitution must be considered binding on everyone else?''' This cannot be.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...if everything the justices say about anything in the Constitution is simply to be obeyed as “the law of the land” by all other political actors — then the judicial supremacy [to the level of] imperial power follows quickly thereafter. Not logically, perhaps, but it follows politically...<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Even the dissenting justices in ''Obergefell'', then, seem unaware of how much they too are part of the problem. The late Justice Scalia, for instance, was right to say that the majority opinion represents “the furthest extension one can even imagine” of a “claimed power” on the Court’s part to “create ‘liberties’ that the Constitution and its Amendments neglect to mention.” This, he rightly said, “robs the People” of the “freedom to govern themselves” that was the whole point of fighting the American Revolution. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...we should read [the dissents] as inviting the American people to resist the decision. But if these justices — like their fellows in the majority, and typical of their kind — accept the dogma of judicial supremacy, what possible form can such resistance take?<br />
Justice Scalia, in a strident note at the end of his dissent, cites the famous Federalist No. 78 to the effect that the judiciary relies on the executive “even for the efficacy of its judgments.” He concluded: “With each decision of ours that takes from the People a question properly left to them — with each decision that is unabashedly based not on law, but on the ‘reasoned judgment’ of a bare majority of this Court — we move one step closer to being reminded of our impotence.” Here was a most daring hint from the characteristically acerbic Scalia, that '''the other branches have it in their power to frustrate the ambition of the judges to rule.'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;From inside ''the bubble created by the dogma of judicial supremacy,'' only two conventional responses to an unconstitutional ruling seem possible. One is to amend the Constitution to reverse a wrong and harmful ruling of the Court. This has been accomplished on only a few occasions in our history, and it is a Herculean undertaking. The lack of progress on a human-life amendment since ''Roe'' is a sobering reminder of the difficulty. Moreover, the route of amending the Constitution is not necessarily a challenge to judicial supremacy specifically, and might even be a concession to it. The other conventional response is to appoint better justices in the future, justices who will get the Constitution right, not abuse their authority, and perhaps even overturn abuses such as ''Obergefell''.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But how to present them with the opportunity? The pro-life movement has been maneuvering for five votes to overturn ''Roe'' for four decades now, and it has not been difficult to present the justices with opportunities to do the right thing. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[In order to create a case that would pressure judges to squarely address the evidence against ''Roe''] a state would presumably have to pass a law of exactly the kind the Court just declared unconstitutional. While the lower courts stand ready to strike down such attempts, and ''while legislators stand in thrall [slavery] to the dogma of judicial supremacy,'' this is highly improbable.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[Correcting this mess] will take some creative re-imagining of the way our institutions of government interact with one another. [Such as you can read in Statement #11 and in the final section of this book, ''Free Expression of Religion Without Establishment.'']<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...judicial supremacy today preys chiefly on the right of the people to govern themselves at the state level — and thus can be seen as an assault on the federalism of our constitutional arrangement — the growth of judicial power can be meaningfully checked only by the Court's institutional counterparts, since they alone possess the tools of checks and balances. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Here I gratefully disagree. Gratefully: I am grateful that there is much that state legislatures can do: in fact the focus of this book is on actions urged for state lawmakers. Truth is powerful, no matter who proclaims it. Especially truth about fraud so egregious that the whole nation smells the rot, even if few can figure out what is causing it and how to clean it. But here is more of the article:<br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;At first blush, some of those explicit constitutional tools — like impeachment, as Federalist No. 81 suggests — seem extreme, so we ought to treat them as something of a nuclear option.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Luckily, more modest methods exist. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Exactly! I propose some of them in a coming footnote, The Judicial Accountability Act. But this article doesn’t mention anything that specific, but rather gives historical examples of presidents ignoring courts:<br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;At various times in our history, judicial supremacy was challenged by presidents and Congress. As Princeton political scientist Keith Whittington points out in his 2007 book The Political Foundations of Judicial Supremacy, strong presidents like Jefferson, Jackson, Lincoln, Franklin Roosevelt, and even Reagan did so. Jefferson, for one, essentially nullified the Sedition Act of 1798 upon assuming office, and '''Lincoln, in express defiance of the Dred Scott decision, issued patents and passports to black Americans. The president, then, should invoke his prerogative to act in accordance with his own reading of the Constitution.'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Similarly, '''Congress passed a law in 1862 that banned slavery in U.S. territories, which was in express defiance of the Dred Scott decision. It’s not extreme, therefore, to suggest that Congress should pass laws directly contradicting the Court when''' it believes the Court has overstepped its bounds.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A kind of public education is also required...there was, for much of our history, a robust debate about the place of the Court in our constitutional structure.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Lincoln again is our true model here. As a candidate for office and emerging leader of the new Republican Party in the late 1850s, Lincoln resolutely opposed any acceptance of the Dred Scott decision as the law of the land. The decision had to be accepted as resolving the dispute for the parties in the case, but it could not be taken as instruction for other public officials. He spoke about the issue with trenchant clarity and frequency — from the ruling's immediate aftermath until he was president. As he said in his first inaugural address:'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''“[T]he candid citizen must confess that if the policy of the government, upon vital questions, affecting the whole people, is to be irrevocably fixed by decisions of the Supreme Court, the instant they are made, in ordinary litigation between parties, in personal actions, the people will have ceased, to be their own rulers, having, to that extent, practically resigned their government, into the hands of that eminent tribunal.”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Lincoln identified the stakes. Are we our own rulers? Or have we resigned our government into the hands of a tribunal of nine lawyers, any five of whom have authority to govern us? Those questions must be asked repeatedly over the coming years — '''not only in dissents,''' but also in the media, in the academy, and among citizens. It's the duty of leaders like the president, congressional representatives, and public figures to encourage us to ask such questions....<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[An example of a rather technical needed reform of the Supreme Court which Congress has power to require:] mandatory review by the Supreme Court, in cases where a state law was declared contrary to the Constitution by a federal appeals court. [Instead of just taking a few cases that interest them. Before 1925 SCOTUS heard about 600 cases a year that they were ''required'' to hear. Then that requirement was dropped, and now they might hear 75.] The justices should be required to place such cases on the docket, to receive briefs from the parties and from friends of the court, to hear oral arguments, and to publish the reasons for their decisions. Moreover, while such cases are pending, '''any adverse judgments of lower federal courts holding a state law unconstitutional could be automatically stayed in any class of cases Congress chooses to define.''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Author''' Matthew J. Franck is Director of the William E. and Carol G. Simon Center on Religion and the Constitution at the Witherspoon Institute and visiting lecturer in politics at Princeton University….</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Conclusion'''. There is apparently some law against calling any court ruling “unconstitutional”. But that is an unconstitutional law.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is also a stupid law. “Stupid” is what we say of someone, or of some human invention, whose intelligence has dipped far below its capacity. A drunk, for example, falls into a “stupor”, rendering his normal level of intelligence temporarily unavailable. There is also a pejorative aspect of the word; it is wrong to shove intelligence aside. To the extent we do – and we all do from time to time – we ought to be ashamed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is literally stupid, and American culture needs to say so, to imagine judges have no capacity to rule against the Constitution, without any constitutional authority, usurping power prohibited by the constitution. Or to imagine that no judge has ever ruled unconstitutionally, or ever will, or ever wants to. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is literally stupid to imagine that “power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely, except when given to the Supreme Court.” <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That nonsense about “the Court alone is insulated from politics and self-interest, so it is peculiarly suited to use the Constitution’s ‘majestic generalities’ to generate substantive legal and policy responses to the nation’s contemporary needs” is a grant of close enough to absolute power to drain American culture of its moral vigor, and it has been faithfully applied over the generations to that evil purpose. No greater threat to the security of our nation exists. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;We need to say so. It is the truth. We need to state the truth. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;We who are old enough to understand this evil don’t need to state this truth for our own sakes. We have lived long enough. If America utterly collapses in a few years, from an EMP attack, hyper inflation, a flood of terrorism, or invasion, we are near the end of our lives anyway. <br />
It’s for our children and grandchildren, too often poisoned against us by the SCOTUS-driven immorality resulting from our ignorance, our cowardice, our votes, and our blind obedience to the Pied Piper of First Street NE. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;To the extent we continue genuflecting to Hell, they have no chance. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Speak for the sake of judges too. Many are prisoners of their own power, not at all desiring to drag down America. They think they have no choice. The Constitution makes them do it. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As Jesus came in the flesh to our ancestors 2000+ years ago, His Word came to America 200+ years ago and shaped its Freedoms and Laws. As our distant ancestors crucified the source of Love, our recent ancestors, joined by ourselves, have His Word out in the dumpster, jumping up and down on it to pack it all in so we can shut the lid. What Peter told them yesterday, fits today, with only slight adaption:<br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Acts 3:13 The God of Abraham, and of Isaac, and of Jacob, the God of our fathers, hath glorified his Son Jesus; whom ye delivered up, and denied him in the presence of Pilate, when he was determined to let him go. 14 But ye denied the Holy One and the Just, and desired a murderer to be granted unto you; 15 And killed the Prince of life, whom God hath raised from the dead; whereof we are witnesses. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Our generation didn’t physically kill Jesus. But way before the Supreme Court took the 10 Commandments, the Bible, and prayer out of schools, our culture censored the Word of God with a “saying” that dominated our culture: “There are two things you should never talk about: religion, and politics.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Billy Graham addressed this assault on God when he was asked, “My parents always said there were two things you shouldn’t talk about—politics and religion. Well, they never did, but now I’m an adult, and I don’t have any idea what to believe. Where can I turn?” www.billygraham .org/answer/my-parents-always-said-there-were-two-things-you-shouldnt-talk-about-politics-and-religion/<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Billy’s answer began, “I’m sorry your parents never helped you discover who God is or why He is important. Perhaps their parents did the same—but whatever the reason, I hope you won’t do this with your own children. The Bible says, ‘Teach them to your children and to their children after them’ (Deuteronomy 4:9).”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;From there, Billy G. proceeded to an answer about “God loves you” and “ask Him to guide you to a church” which I’m sure most Christians will think is grand, but I wish there were more in American Christendom beyond a personal sedation to cross-bearing, God-proclaiming war against Hell out in public where the Devil devours his victims. I wish “church” were not so much a place of listening to talk, as is condemned in Titus 3:8, as a place of action, as is urged in Titus 3:9. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Just as the clamor to physically kill Jesus put more pressure on Judge Pilate than he had the courage to resist, the pressure of secularism in our time bears some of the responsibility for pushing SCOTUS away from God. <br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 And his name through faith in his name hath made this man strong, whom ye see and know: yea, the faith which is by him hath given him this perfect soundness in the presence of you all. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Then, the evidence before the crowds was that the power of Jesus whose murder they enabled could still heal a crippled man. Today the powerful evidence before 300+ million Americans, and indeed the whole world, is that the principles of the Word of God can still heal an entire nation, replacing poverty with prosperity, crime with protection, slavery with opportunity, class warfare with “equal protection of the laws”, ignorance with education, medicine shows with hospitals, and foreign invasions with the most powerful military in the whole world.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But we see also that pushing God away in preference for sex, drugs, and general ignorance invites back poverty, crime, class warfare, medical mythology, and terrorist attacks. <br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 And now, brethren, I wot [perceive] that through ignorance ye did it, as did also your rulers. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Paul says the Pharisees acted out of ignorance. This seems generous in light of Matthew 23 and other places where Jesus vigorously exposes their evil motives. Surely much of their ignorance was as willful as ignorance today. Yet surely also their willfulness succeeded in blinding them to the full evil of what they were doing, as is clearly the case today. They surely didn’t grasp that they were killing God Himself, just as courts today surely don’t grasp how fully their war against God, their perversion of the 14th Amendment “privileges and immunities” and “due process” clauses, and their arrogant view of their own “supremacy”, are turning the Constitution which authorizes their own existence into Freedom’s epitaph. <br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 But those things, which God before had shewed by the mouth of all his prophets, that Christ should suffer, he hath so fulfilled. 19 Repent ye therefore, and be converted, that your sins may be blotted out, when the times of refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord; 20 And he shall send Jesus Christ, which before was preached unto you: 21 Whom the heaven must receive until the times of restitution of all things, which God hath spoken by the mouth of all his holy prophets since the world began. 22 For Moses truly said unto the fathers, A prophet shall the Lord your God raise up unto you of your brethren, like unto me; him shall ye hear in all things whatsoever he shall say unto you. 23 And it shall come to pass, that every soul, which will not hear that prophet, shall be destroyed from among the people.</blockquote> </ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">which exceeds the judicial powers given by the state Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment.<br />
<ref>More about '''“exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide...exceeds the judicial powers given by the state Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Legislatures have considerable untapped potential for restraining their activist courts when they become confused about which branch of government they are. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Perhaps the major reason few people even think about solutions is fear of any change to the balance of powers between the legislature and the courts. “Better the devil you know than the devil you don’t.” We don’t want to just switch tyrants. A change to a real solution requires wisdom, which requires study, and who wants to study? <br />
<center>Another obstacle to restraining courts to their constitutional function is that most people, even Christians, limit their goals to what they consider “realistic”, and especially “politically realistic”, which usually means what people think they can do without God. Trust that what Jesus promised about “impossible” goals is truly “realistic”, enables us to think about not just what would be a little bit better, but about what would be perfect. and then to think about doing whatever we can think of to move in that direction, fully aware how feeble our own steps are, trusting God to open up new opportunities, in His time, as we walk with Him. </center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;My own feeble steps were drafted into a bill in Iowa in 2020. The bill is given in the next footnote, and posted at http://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/wiki/Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_stop_judges_from_legislating <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Senate Judiciary Committee Chair Brad Zaun liked the idea and got it numbered and introduced, but it came to him too late that year to get it through the “funnel”, and he was disappointed that there was no organized group helping make other lawmakers aware of it. </ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives, including (1) giving the state Supreme Court original jurisdiction over any challenge to a law, (2) requiring that review be expedited, (3) requiring a supermajority of the Court to suspend a law, (4) questioning justices in a public hearing about the constitutionality of their ruling, and (5) overturning the ruling with a supermajority of the legislature. <br />
<ref>More about '''“The authority to...codify more surgical correctives.”''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;For example:<br />
<br />
<center>'''Judicial Accountability Act: How Legislatures can stop judges from legislating'''</center><br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Summary: what the bill accomplishes'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1. '''No district court injunctions. A single district judge can't overturn a law.''' Any legislature is well within its constitutional authority to prohibit any ''district'' court (lower court) from invalidating a law – only the ''Supreme'' Court should be allowed to do it, and only within 90 days. Letting a single lower court judge overturn the work of 150 lawmakers which include several attorneys and constitutional scholars is insane. Any challenge to a law should go directly to the most experienced judges in the state.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2. '''Supermajority required. It takes 5 of the 7 justices of the Supreme Court to overturn a law.''' A simple majority of justices overturning by one vote a law produced by tens of thousands of people over several years is a scandal. It has nothing to do with wisdom, law, or the Constitution. When judges can’t even agree with each other, unanimously, whether to destroy the work of the majority of voters and their representatives, they prove they are not so much wiser than everybody else in their state to be trusted with such unbridled power. At the very least any injunction should have their unanimous support before they should have any power to shut down the will of their whole state. A supermajority that is short of unanimous may be OK if it is not the final word but is followed by further opportunities for the legislature to restore their law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3. '''Expedited. The Court has to rule in 3 months if the court blocks a new law from taking effect with a Temporary Restraining Order.''' If the court invalidates an existing law, the invalidation doesn't take effect for one year. Courts bottling up laws with injunctions for years while they make up their minds should make them ashamed. They don’t need years. No controversial law is passed without months if not years of scrutiny by attorneys for and against. Their briefs are already ready. They already know what the other side will say. They don’t need years to think of what to say or how to respond. Maybe a day. Maybe two.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Nor do judges need months to read the briefs for several weeks to bring themselves up to speed on the issue. The law has been in the news for years. There is no honor in willful ignorance of the issues until the first brief is filed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Laws are passed to correct serious wrongs. Years of work costing millions of dollars goes into fixing problems. There is no good reason to delay justice for the citizens of a state for years to wait while judges try to agree among themselves whether to allow justice as understood by the majority of voters and lawmakers. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''4. Discussion. The legislature may compel designated justices to attend a public hearing to debate the constitutionality of the law within one year of such a ruling, by passing a resolution.''' Provided a supermajority of the Supreme Court has agreed on an injunction in less than a month, the legislature should then be able, within the next year, to compel the attendance of judges under their jurisdiction to discuss and debate, with specified legislators in a public hearing, the constitutional justification for [or necessity of] that judicial exercise of the legislative function. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''5. The legislature may overturn the invalidation by a 60% vote, by a resolution, leaving the last word, the final verdict, with incredibly well informed voters''' (through ordinary elections of lawmakers and retention of justices). The resolution overturning the invalidation would give reasons responsive to the reasoning of the judicial ruling. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''The Bill: Iowa SSB3181 2020 AD''''''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A BILL FOR <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 An Act regarding legislative oversight of supreme court <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 decisions, and including applicability provisions. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF IOWA: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Introduction/Legislative Findings'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 Section 1. NEW SECTION. 602.1615 Legislative findings —— <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 challenges to the validity of a statute —— exclusive jurisdiction <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 —— public hearings —— legislative oversight. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 1. The general assembly finds and declares all of the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 following: <br />
<center>'''If the legislature can even impeach,''' <br />
<br>'''it can at least ask questions'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 a. The power to impeach subsumes reasonable less severe <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7 remedies. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Lawmakers take an oath''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''to uphold the Constitution too'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Their responsibility to uphold the Constitution'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''requires action against courts '''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''that interfere with their responsibility'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 b. The intent of this section is to provide for a mechanism <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 in which to resolve disputes regarding the constitutionality of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 laws between the courts and the legislature, both of which are <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 composed of constitutional scholars. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Jurisdiction of courts is''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''restricted by the legislature'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 c. Article 5, section 4 of the Constitution of the State <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13 of Iowa states that the supreme court is “a court for the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14 correction of errors at law, '''under such restriction as''' the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15 general assembly may, by law, prescribe . . .”. <br />
<center>'''Judicial power to invalidate laws''' <br />
<br>'''is not given by the Iowa Constitution'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 d. Article 3, section 20 of the Constitution of the State <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 of Iowa gives the legislature the power to impeach judges for <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 “malfeasance in office”, which is generally defined to include <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;19 acting without authority and abusing power. The power to <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;20 impeach subsumes all lesser remedies. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;21 e. The Constitution of the State of Iowa does not give the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;22 courts of this state the power to invalidate laws enacted by <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;23 the legislature, to require the legislature to enact different <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;24 laws, or to publish rulings that have the same effect as new <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;25 legislation. Article 3, section 1 of the Constitution of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;26 the State of Iowa states: “The powers of the government of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;27 Iowa shall be divided into three separate departments —— the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;28 '''legislative, the executive, and the judicial: and no person''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;29 '''charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to one''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;30 '''of these departments shall exercise any function appertaining''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;31 '''to either of the others,''' except in cases hereinafter expressly <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;32 directed or permitted”. <br />
<center>'''The Legislature must get involved''' <br />
<br>'''when courts legislate unconstitutionally'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;33 f. Although the courts of Iowa have usurped those powers <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;34 without constitutional authority, it has been done for reasons <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;35 which the general assembly respects. The general assembly <br />
----<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 welcomes the expertise and guidance of the courts in evaluating <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 the constitutionality of its laws. But when the reasoning of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 rulings which function as legislation appears to be not only <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 unsound, but unconstitutional, the general assembly has the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 constitutional duty and authority to determine that judges and <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 justices have abused their power and exceeded their authority, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7 which are grounds for impeachment under the malfeasance in <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 office clause. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 g. A remedy short of impeachment should advance wisdom, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 build consensus, and educate voters so that informed voters <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 may hold both judges and legislators accountable. Article 1, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 section 2 of the Constitution of the State of Iowa states: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13 '''“All political power is inherent in the people.''' Government is <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14 instituted for the protection, security, and benefit of the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15 people, and they have the right, at all times, to alter or <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 reform the same, whenever the public good may require it”. <br />
<center>'''The Meat of the Bill:''' <br />
<br>'''the Enforcement Section'''<br />
<br>'''Lower courts can't invalidate laws'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 2. The supreme court shall have discretionary and exclusive <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 original jurisdiction over any challenge to any law. A <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;19 district court or the court of appeals shall not invalidate a <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;20 law on any grounds. <br />
<center>'''Supreme Court must rule''' <br />
<br>'''within 3 months, by supermajority,'''<br />
<br>'''when the Court blocks a ''new'' law.'''<br />
<br>'''When the Court blocks an existing law'''<br />
<br>'''the block will not take effect for one year.'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;21 3. A decision of the supreme court that invalidates <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;22 '''existing''' law or has the effect of creating new law shall not <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;23 have any effect unless agreed to by five or more of the seven <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;24 justices, and otherwise shall not have any effect for one <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;25 year. The supreme court shall also have the power to suspend <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;26 implementation of '''a new law''' provided the supreme court produces <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;27 an expedited ruling within three months of the law’s enactment. <br />
<center>'''Public Hearing'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;28 4. a. Within one year of the date a supreme court decision <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;29 is published that invalidates existing law or has the effect <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;30 of creating new law, the general assembly may, by resolution, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;31 compel the attendance of specified justices to a public hearing <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;32 to discuss and debate the justification for the decision with <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;33 members of the general assembly. A public record of the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;34 hearing shall be made. <br />
<center>'''Impeachment grounds inquiry'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;35 b. During or after the hearing, the general assembly shall <br />
----<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 determine if grounds to begin impeachment exist as to any <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 of the justices present at the hearing for acting without <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 authority or malfeasance in office. <br />
<center>'''Judges may improve their ruling'''<br />
<br>'''with respect to the status of the challenged law'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 c. Based on the results of a hearing commenced pursuant to <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 this subsection, a justice whose presence was required at the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 hearing may change the justice’s vote or alter the justice’s <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7 individual contribution to the decision. <br />
<center>'''Legislature may overturn court invalidation'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 5. A supreme court decision invalidating existing law or <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 having the effect of creating new law will not take effect if <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 two-thirds of both the senate and the house of representatives <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 approve a resolution to overturn the decision within one year <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 of the date the decision was published. The resolution must <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13 specify the basis for overturning the decision, including <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14 its reasoning, not to be limited by court precedent that is <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15 responsive to the supreme court’s initial published decision, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 and must be documented by expert testimony and constitutional <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 authority. <br />
<center>'''Legislature may add statement to the ruling'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 6. The general assembly may issue its own statement to a <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;19 published supreme court decision that invalidates existing law <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;20 or has the effect of creating new law if done within one year of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;21 the date the decision was published. The statement must regard <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;22 the constitutionality of the invalidated existing law or the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;23 newly created law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;24 Sec. 2. APPLICABILITY. This Act applies to decisions <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;25 published by the supreme court on or after the effective date <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;26 of this act. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''FAQ's'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Questions and Answers''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Why are existing laws treated differently than new laws?''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The difference is for the benefit of the public, so the laws governing them do not flip back and forth from being in effect. A ''new'' law – for example, the Heartbeat law – could be suspended by courts only until the suspension is overturned by the legislature. An ''existing'' law – for example our former marriage laws requiring spouses to be of the opposite sex – could not be suspended for one year, to give the legislature time to respond. No chaotic back and forth. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Could courts suspend a new law between its effective date and the court ruling?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The legal action a court takes to invalidate a law is an Injunction. The process here doesn’t specify it, but would allow the normal process of allowing the courts to immediately suspend a new law with a TRO, Temporary Restraining Order, until their hearing, at which the temporary order could become permanent. In the case of an existing law, by contrast, allowing the court to immediately suspend the law, with the possibility of it going back into effect after the legislature acts, would subject the public to a law which is in effect, then suspended, then back into effect. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If this law removed the court’s power to put a TRO on a new law, the law would take effect until the ruling, then it would be suspended, but then the legislature might give it effect again.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;What will be the effect of a 4-3 ruling that a law is unconstitutional?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: no legal effect, but much political pressure) Although a 4-3 ruling would no longer have legal force, it would still have powerful political force. A ruling that a law is unconstitutional would be a public relations challenge for the legislature. The legislature would face pressure to refute the judges' claims point by point, or adjust the law voluntarily. A 4-3 ruling would not be powerless; and of course it would still be binding on the parties to the case. But an argument in defense of the legislature ignoring the challenge would be that after all, the justices themselves barely agree the law is unconstitutional. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Would a ruling always trigger a public hearing?<br />
That decision is made independently of a decision to vote to override the court. “Within one year, the legislature MAY, by a resolution, compel the attendance of specified Iowa judges ....”<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Is one year for the legislature to act too long? Too short?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;One year from the court’s ruling is needed to process the ruling’s reasoning, to hold hearings which would require passage of a resolution by both chambers, and then to schedule a vote, which could be while the legislature is not in session. A year is needed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;On the other hand, requiring courts to act in 3 months is reasonable, considering this is not a brand new question before them that they have never heard of before. They have had all the years of public debate on the issue to think about the issue. Plus, courts are accustomed to ruling quickly when cases are required to be “expedited”. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Would prolife laws do any better under this system?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yes, along with all other laws relating to immorality, which are targeted by the Landmark Abomination Cases of the U.S. Supreme Court. Iowa courts think themselves bound by SCOTUS precedent, but the Iowa legislature is not and should not be. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The 14th Amendment makes state legislatures subject to federal laws which protect the rights of state citizens that are listed in the Constitution, which is the meaning of the “privileges and immunities” clause of the 14th. But the 14th gives SCOTUS no authority to make up “rights” hostile to enumerated rights, much less to enforce “rights” without waiting for federal law to lay out the manner and scope of protection. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Neither federal courts nor Congress have any authority through the 14th or through anything else to block states from protecting constitutional rights. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Act laid out here will only get state courts out of the legislature’s way of protecting the rights of state citizens. When federal courts jump in the way, they can be shoved aside with the legal arguments of Clarence Thomas and others that are summarized in Statement #11 of this book. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Is a 2/3 majority requirement necessary? Shouldn't a simple majority of the legislature be enough to override courts?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: practically & legally, certainly; politically, complicated) This may be the hardest detail to muster a quick opinion. There are strong arguments for either choice; perhaps there is even a third option: a 60% vote. As this bill proceeds, perhaps it should be expected that a consensus will form later requiring amendment of this detail. The current draft requires a 2/3 majority. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''The Practical Argument:''' Currently, courts get away with a simple majority requirement (4-3) which faces zero accountability from anybody. This draft requires a 5-2 vote; another option is 6-1. Should the legislature face a similar hurdle? Several lawmakers believe a 2/3 requirement removes any practical hope of ever overturning a judicial invalidation of a law, because the Iowa legislature is incapable of agreeing by 2/3 that the sun is up. A 2/3 requirement would make restraint of lawmaking judges actually harder than passing a constitutional amendment! <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In Congress, our U.S. Constitution says a 2/3 majority is enough to send an amendment to the Constitution before the states for their ratification. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But if we let the legislature overturn the court’s invalidation with a second simple majority, it could be objected that would be almost ridiculously easy for the legislature to gather together the same “yea” votes a second time (if an election doesn’t intervene). A 60% requirement could answer that concern. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;However, that objection could also be met by pointing out that the ruling of the courts would give typically 60 pages of reasons the law should be overturned, which would put a lot of pressure on those “yea” votes to either eloquently and exhaustively justify their votes or vote “nay”. It would not be easy to secure a majority a second time under that pressure. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The public hearing option would put that 60 page ruling on a level playing field with reasoning from lawmakers. It would make both legislatures and courts accountable not only to each other, but to reason. It might even make lawmakers upset enough to reach a 2/3 agreement. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Voters, informed as has never before been possible about judges on the ballot, or about the legal skills of lawmakers, would have the last word. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''The Political Argument:''' The public is not used to legislatures having ANY power to correct unconstitutional rulings. A 2/3 requirement would be less of a shock to tradition. Were this bill to pass into law with a 2/3 requirement, and lawmakers saw how unnecessary it was, lawmakers could ease the requirement in the future - since this does not require amending the constitution, which already grants more than this power, but requires only a law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Amendment'''. Should it be decided that a simple majority of the legislature to overturn a court’s invalidation is sufficient, here is the simple change that could do it - simply strike out “two-thirds of” (or replace it with “six tenths of”): <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 A supreme court decision invalidating existing law or <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 having the effect of creating new law will not take effect if <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 <strikethrough>two-thirds of</strikethrough> both the senate and the house of representatives <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 approve a resolution to overturn the decision within one year <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 of the date the decision was published. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Is it practically possible to require courts to add a statement from the legislature up to a year after its ruling?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;When the Supreme Court first publishes its ruling, that is not the final version that will be later given an official permanent citation in the Northwest Reporter series. (Their contact information) Unpredictable delays are caused by litigants asking for rehearings, and courts taking time to respond. Even after that option is exhausted, court staff continue proofing their decisions, a process that can take months. [Iowa Supreme Court Clerk phone number: 515-348-4700] Northwest Reporter doesn’t officially publish a case, and give it a permanent citation, until a state supreme court notifies them that it is ready. That is why a new case has only an Iowa citation that does not list a page number or volume number, and doesn’t get a fancy N.W.2d permanent citation until much later. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Requiring the Court to leave the publication open for a year in case the legislature chooses to submit a statement would affect only the time the Court notifies Northwest Reporter, and it may not even affect that time at all. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The farther this bill gets, the more discussions there will be about it with the Iowa Bar Association and the Court itself. If delaying final publication that long is deemed unreasonable, an amendment could easily give the legislature an earlier deadline. It might also require the legislature to notify the court of an intent to exercise that option. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Of course, this entire final sentence of this bill is not critical to legislative correction of judicial overreach. It could be conceded if necessary to save the rest of the bill. But it is an appropriate correction of the current system. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Will an expedited hearing that begins in the Supreme Court diminish the time needed by the litigants to fully present their claims?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: anyone ready to block a law from taking effect is ready for court) A challenge to a new law means (and perhaps this bill could so specify, although I think it is already clearly implied) a challenge to a law that has not yet gone into effect, to keep it from going into effect (beginning with a Temporary Restraining Order (TRO) the day it would go into effect). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In such a case the state itself will normally be the defendant, and the petitioner will be a well funded group that tried to kill the law in the legislature but failed. In that situation the petitioner will already be prepared legally, their arguments well honed through interaction with lawmakers. It is hard to imagine that any less prepared petitioner would be ready with a TRO to stop a law before it goes into effect. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Iowa court rules already require appellants to outline their issues in their initial notice of appeal, which is more pressure on individual defendants to prepare that far ahead, in proportion to their means, than challengers to a new law will face, who will be fully primed for a court battle before the law passes the first chamber. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspCourt rules already require that any issue argued in the Supreme Court must have first been raised in the district court, so any responsible lawyer in district court will already be prepared for the Supreme Court. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspDistrict courts are needed to develop facts through witnesses in front of juries, depositions, and cross examination of expert witnesses. Supreme courts don’t do any of that. Expert witnesses can submit Amicus Briefs but the other side can’t cross examine them. Although judges can cross examine the lawyers for both parties in oral arguments, which district judges don’t do. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspThus district courts are essential in criminal trials where the guilt of the defendant needs to be proved to juries, and in civil trials between two parties. But their value in a challenge to a law is less clear. A legislature’s “findings of facts” are given deference except in the case of a “fundamental right”, under current practice, but the court practice of overturning laws that violate made-up “fundamental rights” has zero authority under the U.S. Constitution, and nothing prevents state legislatures from copying into state law the provision of the U.S. Constitution in Article III, Section 2, Paragraph 2, that court jurisdiction is subject to such “exceptions” and “regulations” as the legislature enacts. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspWere the petitioner an individual seeking relief only for himself and not for anyone else affected by the law, courts have many tools for giving relief to individuals short of invalidating whole laws. For example, extenuating circumstances, interaction with other laws affecting the individual, or necessity in order to avoid serious injury (Iowa 704). The applicability of laws to individuals is the jurisdiction of the judicial branch, with which the legislative branch has no intent to interfere, any more than the judicial branch should interfere with the jurisdiction of the legislative branch to establish laws of general application. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspAfter a law has already gone into effect, then there is no requirement to expedite. In fact, the decision to challenge a law could be made by the parties to the case, or by a judge, at any point during a years-long case: in pre-trial briefs, a district judge’s ruling, or during the appeal before the Court of Appeals or the Supreme Court. With this bill the applicability of the law to the individual defendant could still be suspended, but the law itself, as applied to everyone else, would not be suspended until after the Supreme Court so rules and then only if the legislature does not block the suspension. The legislature’s year to respond would not begin with any ruling made before the Supreme Court’s supermajority ruling. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Are there any U.S. Supreme Court precedents relevant to these half dozen powers?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: making judges answer lawmakers' questions is a staple of confirmation hearings) These proposed powers are all completely unprecedented in law, although some of them have been discussed. Probably the one never before discussed is the idea of a public hearing. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspSurely the prohibition of a district judge overturning a law, limiting that power to the state Supreme Court, and requiring a supermajority of the court to overturn, is well within the power given the legislature to limit the jurisdiction of courts. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp'''Public Hearings'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;How about public hearings? Is there any legal or constitutional principle that shields judges from having to explain their rulings any better than they do in their written opinions? Is there something nefarious about requiring judges to answer questions? <br />
Federal judges answer questions about their past rulings in confirmation hearings for appointments to higher courts. If U.S. Senators can require them to answer questions about their rulings years later, why can’t state legislatures require their state judges to answer questions at the time? Judges justify not answering questions about future potential cases, that they may remain free to rule in view of facts and arguments they might not see until then, but there is no reason to shield judges from explaining their past cases. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Especially since the Public Hearings envisioned in this bill are not only to clarify whether a law ruled unconstitutional actually is unconstitutional. The second purpose of these Public Hearings is to investigate whether there are grounds for impeachment. Because if the legislature determines that the court’s ruling of the law’s unconstitutionality is utterly lacking in merit, then judges who so ruled were legislating; they were acting without authority, exercising a power of a different branch of government than their own, which is malfeasance of office, an impeachable offense. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Obviously, in any impeachment trial, the judges would be required to answer questions. These public hearings are a power subsumed under the power of impeachment; they are a reasonable, less severe remedy. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Certainly the very idea of communication between lawmakers and judges on a “level playing field” is unheard of. Unprecedented. (Outside confirmation hearings.) Current communication, which tradition will be slow to reconsider, is somewhat like a parent trying to reason with a child who is as inarticulate as he is stubborn. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is a special challenge for a lawyer representing the legislature to reason with a judge who gives only the scantest clues to what is on his mind before he rules, after which it is too late to respond to his errors. Does any Constitutional or legal principle require such a breakdown of communication? Does this ritual serve any good purpose? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Once President Washington asked SCOTUS for its advisory interpretation of a treaty. The justices declined, saying “The lines of separation drawn by the Constitution between the three departments of government – their being in certain respects checks upon each other – and our being judges in a court of last resort – are considerations which afford strong arguments against the propriety of our extra judicially deciding the questions alluded to; especially as the Power given by the Constitution to the President of calling on the Heads of Departments for opinions, seems to have been purposely as well as expressly limited to executive departments.” https://www.mountvernon.org/library/digitalhistory/digital-encyclopedia/article/george-washington-and-the-supreme-court/<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;https://founders.archives.gov/?q=Thomas%20Recipient%3A%22Washington%2C%20George%22%20Author%3A%22Supreme%20Court%20Justices%22&s=1111311111&sa=supre&r=3&sr= <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That answer is not a precedent for keeping courts from communicatint with legislatures for two reasons: (1) it was not a sensible answer then. The Constitution puts no limit on who the President can consult for advice, while Proverbs 15:22 says “in a multitude of counsellors, purposes are established”. I can’t imagine where SCOTUS came up with the idea that the President was limited to asking his department heads. Washington asked for advice, not a binding ruling. That’s what “extrajudicial” means. (2) SCOTUS then declined to get involved in an issue which it otherwise would never face. This is different than asking a Court to make up its mind earlier than later. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is not wrong to ask judges to give advisory opinions to lawmakers so lawmakers don’t have to spend years crafting laws which judges at the last minute decide to overturn. The August 8, 1793 answer was before Americans had to worry about activist judges who leave the future of legislation, and indeed the very future of human rights, very much in doubt. <br />
However, asking judges to give an advisory opinion about a law before it is passed is probably impractical, since judges are used to taking longer to study an issue than a legislature is in session, and also since even after giving an early opinion, new evidence or argument might come later which would flip the Court’s ruling. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;An expedited three month deadline is probably the closest we can come to a timely response from courts. Certainly legal wrangling that dribbles on for years exhausts the patience of rational minds. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The subject of the public hearing is whether the law really was unconstitutional. Because if it wasn't, then the judges plainly acted outside their authority, which is grounds for impeachment. But beyond being grounds for impeachment, an order given that is beyond one's authority to give is legally invalid. So surely the legislature has the authority to investigate whether an order was invalid, and upon establishing that it is, to reverse its effects. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sheltering judges from interaction doesn’t make them free of bias. In every other human interaction, accountability is the best way to cleanse a hard heart of bias. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp'''The Two-Thirds Majority'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The only thing remotely relevant to this 2/3 vs. simple majority requirement in American constitutional law that I can think of is that to ratify a constitutional amendment, Congress has to pass it by 2/3 before states pass it by 3/4. But the solution here doesn’t change the constitution; it only defines how the legislature is choosing to exercise authority already given by the Iowa Constitution. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If anything, there is a constitutional principle favoring the power of legislatures over courts, with respect to Fundamental Rights. The 14th Amendment is the part of the Constitution which courts have taken to give them jurisdiction over states who trample fundamental rights. But who did the 14th Amendment authorize to enforce its provisions? Not courts! Rather, Congress, according to Section 5 of the Amendment. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yet here are examples of not just state laws, but even state constitutional amendments, which were overturned by courts for violating the “equal protection” clause of the 14th Amendment: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Cummings v. Missouri'', 71 U.S. 277 (1867) a Missouri oath to hold office designed to keep out former confederate soldiers was ruled an unconstitutional Bill of Attainder. <br />
''Hollingswort''h v. Perry'', 570 U.S. 693 (2013) a California same sex marriage ban. <br />
''Romer v. Evans, 517 U.S. 620 (1996) a Colorado gay rights ban. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Awad v. Ziriax'', 10th Circuit, January 10, 2012 an Oklahoma ban of the use of Sharia Law in court. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Giles v. Harris'', 1903, and Giles v. Teasley, 1904, courts winked at disenfranchising Blacks, but explicitly accepted jurisdiction over state constitutions violating the 14th and 15th Amendments. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The authority to enforce the requirements of the 14th Amendment, given to Congress and not courts, gives Congress also the authority to define and apply fundamental rights, and for anyone seriously in doubt, to clarify who is a human being and therefore deserves to have his fundamental rights protected. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;These are philosophical as well as legal questions which merit national discussion, but while courts are sheltered from having to talk to anybody the conversation has been one sided. America needs to open this up into what Proverbs 15:22 calls a “multitude of counsellors”. It does not undermine respect for the judiciary to imagine judges are able to explain their reasoning. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''If Legislatures overturn court rulings, won’t they exercise the authority of the judicial branch?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: legislative action wouldn't affect litigants; only the part of the ruling that reaches wrongfully into legislating) No. On that future day when a legislature overturns judicial rulings, the legislature’s action would not apply to the parties to the case, so the “separation of powers” aspect of the ruling is untouched. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;There are several reasons a court may exempt a litigant from the effects of a law, without invalidating the law for everyone else. The simple difference between courts and legislatures is that legislatures pass laws which apply to everybody, while courts apply those laws in specific cases, only to the parties to the case, guided by the special facts and circumstances of the case. The power given by this bill to legislatures to overturn rulings applies only to the part of the ruling where the court stepped outside its constitutional authority in order to nullify a law passed for the benefit of millions of others. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The purpose of the public hearing is only for the legislature to investigate whether their law was constitutional after all, and if so, to take back their constitutional authority to pass laws by their subsequent vote. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Lawmakers take oaths to defend the Constitution too. Courts cannot rob lawmakers of their power to obey the Constitution without violating the constitution themselves. <br />
Perhaps that is the key principle declared implicitly by this bill: judges aren’t the only branch of government authorized to understand and defend the Constitution. The other branches are too. That balance needs to be restored. The conversation needed needs to be among equals.<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Shouldn’t judges be immune from popular pressure? We don’t want our rights subject to a vote!'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Neither legislatures nor courts should have the last word over each other. We have seen what happens when legislatures had the last word, in the South, during the time of slavery. And we have seen what happens when courts had the last word, in 1857 and 1973; regarding slavery and abortion. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Even the Iowa constitution gives the last word to voters. Is that dangerous? America’s Founders talked about popular whims that could remove important protections over the weekend if the public could vote on individual issues continually. They set up 6 year terms for U.S. Senators and 4 year terms for presidents explicitly to shield our Rule of Law from whims the public might hold for only a month. Nor does this process give voters direct control over the outcome of a disputed law, but only equips them to evaluate the wisdom of their elected representatives and their judges, which is the same as our current system except this leaves voters much better informed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The 14th Amendment expanded the power of courts to overturn laws which violate “fundamental rights”. It made slave-loving southern state legislatures accountable to courts. Unaddressed was what to do when it is courts which violate fundamental rights. This measure is an attempt to restore balance. It is interesting that the 14th Amendment actually leaves its own enforcement not to courts, but to Congress. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The “independence of the judiciary” from popular whims is well protected by lifetime tenure. This measure does not change that. It only defines a remedy for Iowans when judges rule lawlessly and unconstitutionally. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Didn’t Iowa decide recently not to impeach judges for their rulings?'''<br />
Summary: “Overreaching” can only reach so far before it turns into full fledged unconstitutional legislating. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Removal from office, for just one harmful ruling which may be out of a long career of beneficial rulings, is pretty drastic; not to mention ineffective since it leaves the ruling in place that triggered the impeachment! <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That is why remedies short of impeachment are necessary, as well as remedies able to focus on the problem without cutting off talent which is mostly beneficial.<br />
If an assembly line produces an occasional klunker amongst its generally great output, we keep the assembly line and discard the klunker; we don't keep the klunker and blow up the assembly line! <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Iowans seriously considered impeaching judges for their rulings not so long ago. Highlights are discussed at the Brennan Center: <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A 2011 review by the National Center for State Courts’ Gavel to Gavel website also found numerous bills introduced in state legislatures that year to impeach judges and justices because of disagreement over specific rulings. Several of those introductions were part of a failed effort in Iowa to remove four Iowa Supreme Court Justices for their decision in a high-profile case about marriage rights for same-sex couples. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The impeachment attempt garnered significant media attention, but also widespread condemnation – even from members of the sponsors’ own party. Iowa Governor-elect Terry Brandstad (R) [sic] said at the time that disagreement over a ruling did not constitute grounds for impeachment. “There’s a difference between malfeasance and over-reaching,” said Brandstad, “the Constitution says what the grounds for impeachment are. My reading is it’s not there.” Iowa House Speaker Kraig Paulsen (R), whose chamber would have voted on the impeachment, sent the resolutions to languish in an inactive committee and said, “I disagree with this remedy,…I do not expect it to be debated on the floor of the House, and if it is, I will vote no.”<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I respectfully disagree with Governor, later Ambassador Branstad. When the Iowa Supreme Court not only struck down laws limiting marriage to opposite sex couples, but specifically ordered county clerks to solemnize “marriages” between same sex couples, that reaches beyond “overreaching”. “Overreaching” implies a mild going-a-little-too-far out of one’s proper jurisdiction. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But if the plainest example of a “person charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to” the judicial branch of government exercising “any function appertaining to” the legislative branch can be dismissed as mere “overreaching”, then it is impossible for any other judicial legislating to violate the Iowa Constitution. We might as well just give judges the password to the Iowa Code database and let them write whatever laws they please. As Rep. Matt Windschitl said January 27, 2020 on the Jeff Angelo show, “Do we really want judges deciding laws? If so, why do we even have a legislature?”<br />
Article 3 Section 1 of the Iowa Constitution says “Departments of government. The powers of the government of Iowa shall be divided into three separate departments — the legislative, the executive, and the judicial: and no person charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to one of these departments shall exercise any function appertaining to either of the others....”<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''FAQ’s: Judicial Philosophy'''<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Isn’t it unconstitutional to impeach a judge for a ruling?'''<br />
Summary: It can’t be unconstitutional to correct the part of a ruling that unconstitutionally legislates. Although it has not been established definitively, whether a judge may be impeached over a ruling, most legal discussion avers that would be unethical, and there is no precedent of a successful impeachment over the content of a ruling. <br />
Most legal discussion is of the U.S. Constitution; the Iowa Constitution specifies that judges can’t legislate, which is only implied in the U.S. Constitution. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The United States Constitution provides little guidance as to what offenses constitute grounds for the impeachment of federal judges...However, the impeachment power has historically been limited to cases of serious ethical or criminal misconduct. - Brennan Center<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is generally supposed that legislative action to correct an unconstitutional ruling, or to discipline a judge who writes one, would be unconstitutional. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Constitution does not “provide for resignation or impeachment whenever a judge makes a decision with which elected officials disagree” said four judges when President Clinton and Senator Dole urged impeachment of a judge over his ruling on admissibility of evidence. “These attacks do a grave disservice to the principle of an independent judiciary and…mislead the public as to the role of judges in a constitutional democracy.” Brennan Center<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Let’s make a distinction glossed over by those four judges: between a ruling hated because it applies existing law and facts in a way most people think is wrong, and a ruling hated because it overturns laws by a rationale that most people think is unconstitutional. I agree with the four judges that the case was correctly kept off limits to lawmakers, but the judges generalized their criticism to the extent of dismissing concerns about truly unconstitutional rulings as being mere decisions “with which elected officials disagree”. <br />
It is that degree of generalization that is “a grave disservice” by elevating “the principle of an independent judiciary” beyond the reach of the Constitution, of common sense, and of accountability of any kind from any source. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;What I have not found in law review articles is any proposed remedy for when a ruling itself is unconstitutional. I have not found it even acknowledged that it is possible for a ruling to be unconstitutional. As if to say “how could judges rule unconstitutionally? Judges ARE the constitution.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But it is judges themselves, in vigorous dissents, who stir public concern about the constitutionally of certain rulings. Judges who write dissents are as qualified as those in the majority, and their reasoning is often equally persuasive. When the public has a basis this solid for concern about the constitutionality of rulings, it is surely in the public interest, and not contrary to any known legal or constitutional principle, to hold a public hearing where those concerns can be addressed and hopefully resolved, where judges, perhaps for the first time in America history, can be compelled to interact with experts other than each other.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In fact, any time a law is overturned for being unconstitutional, but the ruling is flawed and a correct ruling would actually not find the law unconstitutional, then actually the ruling itself is unconstitutional because the ruling amounts to raw legislation. It is unconstitutional for courts to pass laws. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Let me emphasize this point. Any ruling that overturns a law is either correct because the law is in fact unconstitutional, or is itself unconstitutional because its reasoning or factual basis is flawed. Lawmakers take oaths to defend the Constitution too, and should not be unconstitutionally deprived of the power to enforce it when they see a violation. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If we may agree that it is at least theoretically possible for a ruling overturning a law to be unconstitutional, shall we insist the Constitution requires the legislature to honor every unconstitutional ruling? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Suppose there were a law against painting your house red, someone was prosecuted for painting his house red, and the court refused to convict because it is surely unconstitutional to outlaw painting your house red. Even without a formal nullification of the law, the law would be defacto nullified because prosecutors would know the court won’t convict anybody for that crime. It may be reasoned that rulings overturning laws merely formalize this natural process. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Public hearings would bring healing to our national division over issues less clear than the right to paint your house red. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As is pointed out below, the power this bill gives the legislature to overturn a judicial validation of its laws would not usurp judicial powers. It would not affect individuals who are actual parties named in the case. It would only affect that part of the ruling which wrongfully reaches into lawmaking, changing the laws which affect millions of other people who are not named in the case. <br />
</ref><br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">Should any federal judge so interfere, this state appeals to its congressional delegation to examine similar grounds for disciplinary action, <br />
<ref>More about '''“similar grounds for disciplinary action”''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;For example, see “Bringing the Courts Back Under the Constitution” at www.osaka.law.miami.edu/~schnably/GringrichContractWith America.pdf (sic)<br />
</ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">along with exercising its Article III, Section 2, paragraph 2 authority to make “exceptions” and “regulations” designed to end SCOTUS’ long line of landmark abomination cases. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">This state also appeals to its congressional delegation to exercise its life-saving and rights-protecting authority under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment whose plain words give Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of Rights,4 which subsumes the authority to define their scope and balance competing interests, while the “privileges and immunities” clause identifies as protectable rights those listed in the Constitution.<br />
<ref> More about '''“Section 5 of the 14th Amendment gives Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of the Right to Life and of Equal Protection of the Laws”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Section 5 of the 14th Amendment so plainly gives Congress, not courts, the power to correct state violations of fundamental rights, that it is an amazing story how SCOTUS has usurped that power for itself and completely denied it to Congress, and how Congress has let them.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Largely relying on the dissents and concurrences of Justice Clarence Thomas, this story is told in Statement #11 and its footnotes. See “What Happened to Unalienable Rights, and How to Get Them Back” and “ ‘Substantive Due Process’: how SCOTUS usurped the Constitution’s Authority to Define Rights, and Congress’ Authority to Enforce Rights, into its own authority to reclassify abominations as ‘rights’ ”</ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">Official world-wide definitions of “crimes against humanity” apply “to representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission.”<br />
<ref>More about '''“...definitions of ‘crimes against humanity’ apply ‘to representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission.’ ”''' <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;“A crime against humanity occurs <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;when the government withdraws legal protection <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;from a class of human beings <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;resulting in severe deprivation of rights, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;up to and including death.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;- amicus in Dobbs of <u>Melinda Thybault/Moral Outcry</u><br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Melinda Thybault’s amicus brief was the 20th amicus docketed in Dobbs v. Jackson (2022). (www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184968/ 20210726175018044_41206%20pdf%20Parker%20III%20br.pdf)<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Her references, backing up that damning judgment:<br />
<blockquote>See “Crime Against Humanity” at www.law.cornell.edu/wex/ crime_against_humanity and see U.N. Office, Genocide Prevention, Crimes Against Humanity www.un.org/en/genocideprevention/crimes-against-humanity.shtml; Treaty of Rome (1957). See also Convention on the Non-Applicability of Statutory Limitations to War .</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Her characterization of international documents is not only fair, but it understates the culpability of elected representatives. Actual quotes from the documents lay responsibility at the feet, not just of impersonal “government”, but of government’s “representatives”. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Notice in the following definitions that those targeted for prosecution in international human rights tribunals include elected representatives and senators who “tolerate” crimes against humanity – who don’t actively execute their authority to criminalize these assaults on the Image of God. (Genesis 1:27) <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;“Genocide”, defined: ''“Genocide means...acts...with intent to destroy...in part, a national...group [in our case, Americans] [by] killing members of the group [in our case, babies; and by] Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group....”'' <br />
Here is the complete United Nations statement: <br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Article II: In the present Convention, '''genocide means''' any of the following '''acts committed with intent to destroy''', in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such:<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(a) '''Killing members of the group;'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(b) Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group;<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(c) Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part;<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(d) '''Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group;'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(e) Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;- Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide / Approved and proposed for signature and ratification or accession by General Assembly resolution 260 A (III) of 9 December 1948 / Entry into force: 12 January 1951, in accordance with article XII / www.un.org/en/genocideprevention/ documents/atrocity-crimes/Doc.1_Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.pdf</blockquote><br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The 1948 definition above is cited in the following 1968 United Nations General Assembly resolution (which took effect two years later) which nullifies any “statute of limitations” on “crimes against humanity”:<br />
<blockquote><br />
Article I: No statutory limitation shall apply to the following crimes, irrespective of the date of their commission:...(b) Crimes against humanity whether committed in time of war or in time of peace as they are defined in the Charter of the International Military Tribunal, Nürnberg, of 8 August 1945 and confirmed by resolutions 3 (I) of 13 February 1946 and 95 (I) of 11 December 1946 of the General Assembly of the United Nations,...the crime of genocide as defined in the 1948 Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, even if such acts do not constitute a violation of the domestic law of the country in which they were committed.</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The following Article II applies the call for prosecution at any time, not limited by a Statute of Limitations, to elected representatives. The word “elected” is not there, but the context certainly includes them, especially since one cannot “represent” another, as the word is normally defined, without their voluntary authorization. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;By not limiting the definition of “representatives” to those who are elected, the definition does not exclude judges.<br />
<blockquote>Article II: '''If any of the crimes mentioned in article I is committed, the provisions of this Convention shall apply to''' representatives of the State authority and private individuals who, as principals or accomplices, participate in or who directly incite others to the commission of any of those crimes, or who conspire to commit them, irrespective of the degree of completion, and to '''representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission.''' (Article II, Convention on the Non-Applicability of Statutory Limitations to War, ADOPTED 26 November 1968 BY General Assembly resolution 2391 (XXIII))</blockquote><br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If [genocide] is committed, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;the provisions of this Convention shall apply <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;to representatives of the State authority <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;who tolerate [its] commission. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Including judges.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And elected representatives <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; who are lax in restraining them.<br />
<br />
<u>Thybault</u> writes, “...the Court has not yet fully reversed Roe, Doe, and Casey.” She submitted this observation to the Court which finally reversed all three, technically, although the slaughter continues in most states so her observation is still timely. <br />
“No American citizen should have to live under, nor as history tragically demonstrates, should they stand by silently, while their government sanctions and even promotes crimes against humanity.” <br />
Another low point in the Supreme Court’s grasp of 14th Amendment equal rights, she mentions, was Plessy v. Ferguson, 163 U.S. 537 (1896) which, like Roe and Dred Scott, “denied legal protection to a class of human beings” and “ignored the plain language of the Fourteenth Amendment”. “Plessy accepted the gloss that ‘separate but equal’ was ‘equal’.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;She repeats, “When the government withdraws legal protection from a class of human beings, it is the classic definition of a crime against humanity.” <br />
</ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">Any court review of this law must be expedited, because lives are lost with each day that courts delay.<br />
<br />
<br />
<small>The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: 396 State Legislators from 41 States <> Melinda Thybault/Moral Outcry</small><br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Courtrecognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human<br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] Courts Accept the Fact-Finding Authority of Legislatures, Juries, Experts for the same good reasons their findings persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures should regulate abortion, as Dobbs held, just as legislatures regulate the prosecution of all other murders.<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] The full humanity of a tiny physical body is hard for many to grasp. But what distinguishes us from animals isn’t physical, and has no known pre-conscious stage.<br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress has ''Already'' Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment already authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion.<br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] Roe, Dobbs, and the 14th Amendment agree: All Humans are “Persons”.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] When pregnancies develop into medical emergencies requiring separation of mother and child to save the mother, the child has an equal fundamental right to life and medical care. <br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any class of humans by any other is prohibited by the Constitution, by the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives legislatures no authority to legalize violations of Constitutional Rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
<br />
----<br />
'''FOOTNOTES'''<br />
----<br />
<br />
<references /></div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Statement_12_%2B_Footnotes&diff=50357Statement 12 + Footnotes2023-12-18T02:23:24Z<p>DaveLeach: </p>
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<br />
Statement of Facts #12 of 12 from: <br />
<br />
=[[Reversing_Landmark_Abomination_Cases]]=<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters<br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion</span><br />
<br />
by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal<br />
''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal<br />
<span style="color:brown"><br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen <br />
<br />
by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 18:11, 15 October 2023 (UTC)<br />
<br />
<span style="color:grey"><small>''Try to imagine how a judge, reviewing a prolife law with these Findings of Facts, would be able to dodge this evidence - in fact, see if you can find ANYONE who can ''refute'' these facts - as opposed to not ''caring'' about facts - that is, not caring about reality:''</small></span><br />
<br />
====<span style="color:blue">Statement of Fact #12 of 12:====<br />
<span style="color:blue">Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">Any state judge interfering with this state’s compliance with the 14th Amendment and its ancient authority to protect its people <br />
<ref>More about '''“the ancient authority of state legislatures...to protect the lives of all its people – an authority which no court can legitimately remove.”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Courts that overturn the prolife laws of “red states” interfere with the ancient duty and power of every government, in every generation, to protect life, points out the amicus brief filed in Dobbs v. Jackson by <u>396 State Legislators from 41 States</u>.(www.supremecourt.gov/Docket PDF/19/19-1392/185121/ 20210728125120809_Dobbs%20Amici%20brief_State%20Legislators_07272021.pdf)<br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;State legislators have the constitutional duty, and therefore the power, to protect the fundamental, civil rights of persons. The fundamental law in which those fundamental rights are found is the common law, which consists of both natural duties and those ancient, customary rights and immunities that are foundational to ordered liberty. Thus, a state legislature must declare and secure to all persons within the protection of its laws the rights that those persons have by natural and customary law. Cf. ''Washington v. Glucksberg'', 521 U.S. 702, 721-22 (1997) (upholding state legislation that prohibited assisted suicide and reasoning that the Fourteenth Amendment’s “Due Process Clause specially protects those fundamental rights and liberties which are, objectively, ‘deeply rooted in this Nation’s history and tradition’.” (quoting ''Moore v. E. Cleveland'', 431 U. S. 494, 503 (1977)). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England (1765): “Hence,” he said, “it follows, that the first and primary end of human laws is to '''maintain and regulate these absolute rights of individuals'''.” Id. Blackstone taught that the legislative power is to declare existing common-law rights and duties and to remedy any defects in the legal security for those rights. Id. at *42-43, 52-58, 86-87 <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Founders echoed this view in the Declaration of Independence, declaring that governments are instituted among men in order to secure the inalienable rights with which human beings are endowed by nature and nature’s God. They also accused the crown and Parliament of infringing the rights of “our constitution,” which in 1776 could only have been a reference to the common-law constitution of British North America. This view predicated the Constitution of the United States, which expressly secures natural rights, such as life and religious liberty, and common-law rights, such as jury trials and freedom from the quartering of soldiers in one’s home, and expressly disclaims any intent to disparage the other rights of the fundamental law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Indeed, the point of having legislatures, executives, and courts is to secure the rights that Americans already have.''' Neither state legislatures nor the Constitution of the United States create those rights. See District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570, 592 (2008) (stating that “it has always been widely understood that the '''Second Amendment, like the First and Fourth Amendments, codified a preexisting right,” that it “is not a right granted by the Constitution,” and is not “in any manner dependent upon that instrument for its existence.”'''). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Some, but not all, of the rights of natural persons are enumerated [listed] in the Constitution''' of the United States and its amendments. U.S. Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 8.; art. IV, §2; amends. I-VIII. Others are enumerated in state constitutions. See e.g., Soc’y for the Propagation of the Gospel v. Wheeler, 22 F. Cas. 756, 766 (No. 13,156) (C.C.D.N.H. 1814). Still others are declared in American constitutions but not enumerated. U.S. Const. amend. IX (“The enumeration of certain rights herein shall not be construed to deny or disparage other rights retained by the people.”) (emphasis added). '''State legislatures have a duty to declare and secure all fundamental rights, both enumerated and unenumerated.''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Fundamental rights are those that persons enjoy by fundamental law—natural law and common law— with or without any written constitution. Because the common law includes natural rights, to understand the fundamental rights declared and secured by the Constitution, it is sufficient to look to the common law, especially as explained by William Blackstone. Established common-law doctrines constitute the best evidence of the existence and meaning of both enumerated and unenumerated, fundamental rights. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The interpretation of the Constitution of the United States is necessarily influenced by the fact that its provisions are framed in the language of the English common law, and are to be read in the light of its history.” ''Smith v. Alabama'', 124 U.S. 465, 478 (1888). The terms and concepts of the common law provided the “the nomenclature of which the framers of the Constitution were familiar.” ''Minor v. Happersett'', 88 U.S. (21 Wall) 162, 167 (1875). Accord James R. Stoner, Jr., Common-Law Liberty: Rethinking American Constitutionalism 9-29 (2003). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;American constitutional rights are not philosophical abstractions. They are described in detail in common law treatises, such as those by Coke and Hale, and especially Blackstone’s Commentaries. The framers crafted American constitutions—state and federal—in common law terms. And Blackstone was their teacher and lexicographer....<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As this Court has rightly acknowledged, Blackstone’s “works constituted the preeminent authority on English law for the founding generation.” ''Alden v. Maine'', 527 U.S. 706, 715 (1999). Blackstone retained his influence through the adoption of the Civil War Amendments. James M. Ogden, Lincoln’s Early Impressions of the Law in Indiana, 7 Notre Dame L. Rev. 325, 328 (1932). And '''this Court continues to turn to Blackstone today.''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[2 A few examples from recent years include ''Gamble v. United States'', __ U.S. __, 139 S. Ct. 1960 (2019) (the Court’s opinion, the concurrence, and one dissent citing Blackstone multiple times to determine the meaning of the phrase “the same offense” in the Fifth Amendment’s double jeopardy clause); ''Department of Homeland Security v. Thuraissigiam'', __ U.S. __, 140 S. Ct. 1959, 1969 (2020) (calling Blackstone’s Commentaries a “satisfactory exposition of the common law of England”); Ramos v. Louisiana, __ U.S. __, 140 S. Ct. 1390, 1395 (2020) (citing Blackstone in explanation of the holding that '''the requirement of juror unanimity is “a vital right protected by the common law”''' and therefore the Constitution’s jury trial guarantee); ''Torres v. Madrid'', __ U.S. __, 141 S. Ct. 989, 996, 997, 998, 1000 (2021) (citing Blackstone multiple times to determine meaning of Fourth Amendment “seizure”). ]...<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But as the Ninth Amendment makes clear, the enumeration of certain common-law rights does not deny or disparage all the other rights that the American people enjoy by virtue of natural law and their ancient customs. The Ninth Amendment expressly reserves to the people those civil and fundamental rights that they enjoyed prior to ratification, which are their natural rights, other common-law rights and liberties, and some privileges enumerated in state constitutions. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Because many states refused to remedy infringements of fundamental rights [for blacks] prior to the Civil War, the Fourteenth Amendment was necessary to ensure to all persons due process of law and the equal protection of the laws, and to empower Congress to remedy infringements of those rights. It bears emphasis that the '''Fourteenth Amendment was necessary to recall state legislatures to their original task. Far from repealing the people’s retention of fundamenta'''l rights declared by the Ninth Amendment, the Fourteenth Amendment strengthened it. And far from abrogating the duty of state legislatures to declare and secure unenumerated rights, the Fourteenth Amendment reinforced that duty. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That is, the rights retained by the people but not protected by their state, such as the right of Blacks to liberty, was strengthened – at the expense of the freedom of the legislature to torpedo those rights. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And as Statement #11 and its footnotes explain, the 14th Amendment did not supplant the duty of legislatures to protect rights with that duty in courts. The only authority over state violations of rights given courts by the 14th was to enforce federal laws enacted by Congress. The authority of courts we see today, to make up “rights” not found in the Constitution and impose them on states without waiting for Congress to pass a law, was not given by the 14th, but was seized by courts in violation of the Constitution. </ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">– the central reason governments exist, is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders,<br />
<ref>More about '''“[Any judge enabling mass baby murder] is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The consensus of official fact finders is that all unborn babies are people from the beginning. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The logical extension of that consensus is that abortion is murder; that murder of 60+ million people is genocide; and that any judge blocking state protection of its people from genocide is an accessory to genocide. </ref><br />
and is guilty of exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide through an unconstitutional ruling, <br />
<ref>More about '''“...an unconstitutional ruling....”''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Oops, I just used a forbidden phrase: “unconstitutional ruling”. I just categorized a number of court rulings as “unconstitutional”. Is that allowed in America? Will that get be inside a jail? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Does ''anyone'' dare call ''any'' court ruling “unconstitutional”? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Should'' the public demand that court rulings be “constitutional”? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"But", you ask, "how is an 'unconstitutional ruling' even possible if the constitutional role of courts is to 'say what the constitution is'? If what courts say the Constitution says ''is by definition the Constitution'', then by definition it is impossible for what courts rule to be “unconstitutional”, right? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I googled “unconstitutional ruling” and got hits where Elon Musk appealed an “unconstitutional ruling” but it was the ruling of a federal agency, the SEC, not of any court. (https://thepoliticsbrief.com/elon-musk-appeals-unconstitutional-ruling-to-the-supreme-court/)<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I thought I found what I was searching for when I read “US court throws wrench in detention debate with unconstitutional ruling”. But it was about a court saying a law was unconstitutional. https://thehill.com/policy/defense/114685-us-court-throws-wrench-in-detention-debate-with-unconstitutional-ruling/<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The search turned up hits where “unconstitutional ruling” meant a ruling that says a ''law'' is unconstitutional, not that a ''court ruling'' is; that is, a ruling was an “ ‘unconstitutional’ ruling”. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;An example: “Meaning of an unconstitutional ruling...the consciousness, values, and ethics of the people living in society change with the times, and the general public changes the laws accordingly in order to support society. One of the institutions that give such a meaning to the law is the court, which can be shown in the form of an unconstitutionality ruling.” https://english-meiji.net/articles/2967/ <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The search turned up an Amicus Brief where lawyers, writing to the Supreme Court, used the dreaded phrase: “Stare Decisis Does Not Control Where a Precedent is Incorrectly Decided and Unconstitutional”. That was one of the headings of the brief. But the “Question Presented”, the first thing the justices saw, was gentler: “Whether this Court should overrule...the incorrect holding...in Hill v. Colorado....” (https://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/23/23-74/277086/20230824112814886_23-74%20Amicus%20Brief%20WFFC.pdf )<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;“Statement #11” in this book marshaled concurrences of Justice Clarence Thomas and other authorities to show that SCOTUS has no authority from the Constitution to make up “rights” not specified in the Constitution, not to mention “rights” that are actually hostile to “enumerated” (listed in the Constitution) Rights. Thomas gave gut-wrenching detail of KKK mobs slaughtering black Republicans and burning down the courthouse they were in and that they were trying to defend, acquitted by the Supreme Court, an acquittal achieved through an utter mangling of the Constitution. Thomas spoke of other rulings after that which were similarly lacking in any authority from the Constitution. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yet Thomas never called any ruling “unconstitutional”. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;One of the footnotes of Statement #11 revisited the ''Marbury v. Madison'' (1803) ruling with the help of a C-span movie about it – the case where SCOTUS came up with the idea that “the role of courts is to say what the law is”. I showed how even back then, that “holding” was based on fraud: the case said a phrase from an earlier Judiciary Act violated the Constitution. But it didn’t. A litigant asked the court to apply that phrase where the Constitution doesn’t permit it, but the law itself said it should be applied only as law permits, so it was not the law itself, but only the requested application, that was “unconstitutional”. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;My search turned up an article that articulates the irrational, absurd, outrage of the very idea of “judicial supremacy”, yet even it falls short of calling any ruling “unconstitutional”. It also falls short of recommending very much of a solution. That is, if courts are not the best final referees of the meaning of the Constitution, who is better? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Statement #11 is my answer to “who is better”. Not just “my” answer, but an answer founded on the concurrences of Justice Thomas, on several Amicus Briefs filed in ''Dobbs'', and on other authorities. The final section of this book completes the picture.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But for the rest of this footnote, let’s enjoy selections from “The Problem of Judicial Supremacy” by Matthew J. Franck, published Spring 2016 in National Affairs, and reprinted in its Fall 2023 issue, Number 57. See (www.nationalaffairs.com/publications/detail/the-problem-of-judicial-supremacy)<br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...judges, at the behest of same-sex marriage advocates, have violated one legal and constitutional norm after another.... The chief justice (in ''Obergefell v. Hodges'', a case in which the Court held that the 14th Amendment requires states to grant marriage licenses to same-sex couples,) sets a strong tone from the very start, writing that the majority has engaged in “an act of will, not of legal judgment....Nowhere is the majority's extravagant conception of judicial supremacy more evident than in its description — and dismissal — of the public debate regarding same-sex marriage.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;….What does Chief Justice Roberts ...mean by “judicial supremacy”?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(One possibility:)...a supreme authority of the federal judiciary to decide ''any'' important political or social question confronting the country — never mind whether the Constitution authentically addresses it or not. We’ll call this the ''judicial supremacy of imperial power'' for short. The justification for this understanding of the Court’s supremacy is that the Court alone is insulated from politics and self-interest, so it is peculiarly suited to use the Constitution's “majestic generalities” to generate substantive legal and policy responses to the nation’s contemporary needs.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;….(Another possibility:) the decisive right to be obeyed, which we can call the ''judicial supremacy of authoritative depth''. This means, as Charles Evans Hughes remarked before he became chief justice, that “we are under a Constitution, but the Constitution is what the judges say it is.” Hence all other citizens, but particularly those who serve in public office, are obliged to act in accordance with what the Supreme Court justices — or at least five of them — tell them the Constitution means. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''The justices of the Court, on the other hand, need not even follow the Court’s precedents.''' The Court is always right, except when five of the current justices decide it has been wrong. The Supreme Court becomes a kind of ongoing constitutional convention, authorized to alter and amend the “real” Constitution, which de facto exists only in their opinions. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Today, this understanding of judicial supremacy is virtually dogmatic in America's law schools, and it is widely embraced in the media and by the public. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But it, too, is of relatively recent origin in the Court’s own opinions, first being expressed in a 1958 case called ''Cooper v. Aaron'', in which the justices demanded the governor of Arkansas abide by their ruling in ''Brown v. Board of Education''. Their logic was this: If the Constitution is the supreme law of the land, as Article VI maintains, and if ever since ''Marbury v. Madison'' the country has understood that “the federal judiciary is supreme in the exposition of the law of the Constitution,” then '''the decisions of the Court are themselves “the supreme law of the land,” and must be followed by oath-bound public officials as equivalent to the Constitution itself.'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...it is simply not true that “the country” has believed ever since 1803 that whatever the Court ''says'' about the Constitution simply is the Constitution.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...It seems a safe bet that ''all'' the justices of the current Supreme Court believe what their predecessors said in ''Cooper v. Aaron'' about their own rulings being the supreme law of the land, effectively the same as the Constitution itself as '''far as the obligations of all other public officials are concerned.''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;….The chief justice probably intended only to denounce the first meaning above, the judicial supremacy of imperial power, which insists that the Court can be wise enough to decide all of society’s great political questions so long as they can be connected in some creative way to the Constitution. He did, after all, once famously describe the Supreme Court as an umpire calling balls and strikes — and he really meant it. No mere umpire could embrace such a capacious vision of judicial power.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...Justice Kennedy takes a commonplace truism — that no generation has a monopoly on wisdom about the meaning of freedom — and states its blandly true corollary: that “future generations” can come to “new insight” about such things. The argument then becomes a shell game for the reader, who belatedly realizes that '''Kennedy means future generations of ''judges'' are free to change the meaning of the Constitution,''' never mind our difficult but honest and democratic amendment process.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...a made-up Constitution, “evolving” from year to year according to the “new insight” of any five out of a set of nine unelected judges with life tenure? '''''That'' Constitution must be considered binding on everyone else?''' This cannot be.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...if everything the justices say about anything in the Constitution is simply to be obeyed as “the law of the land” by all other political actors — then the judicial supremacy [to the level of] imperial power follows quickly thereafter. Not logically, perhaps, but it follows politically...<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Even the dissenting justices in ''Obergefell'', then, seem unaware of how much they too are part of the problem. The late Justice Scalia, for instance, was right to say that the majority opinion represents “the furthest extension one can even imagine” of a “claimed power” on the Court’s part to “create ‘liberties’ that the Constitution and its Amendments neglect to mention.” This, he rightly said, “robs the People” of the “freedom to govern themselves” that was the whole point of fighting the American Revolution. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...we should read [the dissents] as inviting the American people to resist the decision. But if these justices — like their fellows in the majority, and typical of their kind — accept the dogma of judicial supremacy, what possible form can such resistance take?<br />
Justice Scalia, in a strident note at the end of his dissent, cites the famous Federalist No. 78 to the effect that the judiciary relies on the executive “even for the efficacy of its judgments.” He concluded: “With each decision of ours that takes from the People a question properly left to them — with each decision that is unabashedly based not on law, but on the ‘reasoned judgment’ of a bare majority of this Court — we move one step closer to being reminded of our impotence.” Here was a most daring hint from the characteristically acerbic Scalia, that '''the other branches have it in their power to frustrate the ambition of the judges to rule.'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;From inside ''the bubble created by the dogma of judicial supremacy,'' only two conventional responses to an unconstitutional ruling seem possible. One is to amend the Constitution to reverse a wrong and harmful ruling of the Court. This has been accomplished on only a few occasions in our history, and it is a Herculean undertaking. The lack of progress on a human-life amendment since ''Roe'' is a sobering reminder of the difficulty. Moreover, the route of amending the Constitution is not necessarily a challenge to judicial supremacy specifically, and might even be a concession to it. The other conventional response is to appoint better justices in the future, justices who will get the Constitution right, not abuse their authority, and perhaps even overturn abuses such as ''Obergefell''.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But how to present them with the opportunity? The pro-life movement has been maneuvering for five votes to overturn ''Roe'' for four decades now, and it has not been difficult to present the justices with opportunities to do the right thing. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[In order to create a case that would pressure judges to squarely address the evidence against ''Roe''] a state would presumably have to pass a law of exactly the kind the Court just declared unconstitutional. While the lower courts stand ready to strike down such attempts, and ''while legislators stand in thrall [slavery] to the dogma of judicial supremacy,'' this is highly improbable.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[Correcting this mess] will take some creative re-imagining of the way our institutions of government interact with one another. [Such as you can read in Statement #11 and in the final section of this book, ''Free Expression of Religion Without Establishment.'']<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...judicial supremacy today preys chiefly on the right of the people to govern themselves at the state level — and thus can be seen as an assault on the federalism of our constitutional arrangement — the growth of judicial power can be meaningfully checked only by the Court's institutional counterparts, since they alone possess the tools of checks and balances. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Here I gratefully disagree. Gratefully: I am grateful that there is much that state legislatures can do: in fact the focus of this book is on actions urged for state lawmakers. Truth is powerful, no matter who proclaims it. Especially truth about fraud so egregious that the whole nation smells the rot, even if few can figure out what is causing it and how to clean it. But here is more of the article:<br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;At first blush, some of those explicit constitutional tools — like impeachment, as Federalist No. 81 suggests — seem extreme, so we ought to treat them as something of a nuclear option.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Luckily, more modest methods exist. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Exactly! I propose some of them in a coming footnote, The Judicial Accountability Act. But this article doesn’t mention anything that specific, but rather gives historical examples of presidents ignoring courts:<br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;At various times in our history, judicial supremacy was challenged by presidents and Congress. As Princeton political scientist Keith Whittington points out in his 2007 book The Political Foundations of Judicial Supremacy, strong presidents like Jefferson, Jackson, Lincoln, Franklin Roosevelt, and even Reagan did so. Jefferson, for one, essentially nullified the Sedition Act of 1798 upon assuming office, and '''Lincoln, in express defiance of the Dred Scott decision, issued patents and passports to black Americans. The president, then, should invoke his prerogative to act in accordance with his own reading of the Constitution.'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Similarly, '''Congress passed a law in 1862 that banned slavery in U.S. territories, which was in express defiance of the Dred Scott decision. It’s not extreme, therefore, to suggest that Congress should pass laws directly contradicting the Court when''' it believes the Court has overstepped its bounds.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A kind of public education is also required...there was, for much of our history, a robust debate about the place of the Court in our constitutional structure.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Lincoln again is our true model here. As a candidate for office and emerging leader of the new Republican Party in the late 1850s, Lincoln resolutely opposed any acceptance of the Dred Scott decision as the law of the land. The decision had to be accepted as resolving the dispute for the parties in the case, but it could not be taken as instruction for other public officials. He spoke about the issue with trenchant clarity and frequency — from the ruling's immediate aftermath until he was president. As he said in his first inaugural address:'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''“[T]he candid citizen must confess that if the policy of the government, upon vital questions, affecting the whole people, is to be irrevocably fixed by decisions of the Supreme Court, the instant they are made, in ordinary litigation between parties, in personal actions, the people will have ceased, to be their own rulers, having, to that extent, practically resigned their government, into the hands of that eminent tribunal.”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Lincoln identified the stakes. Are we our own rulers? Or have we resigned our government into the hands of a tribunal of nine lawyers, any five of whom have authority to govern us? Those questions must be asked repeatedly over the coming years — '''not only in dissents,''' but also in the media, in the academy, and among citizens. It's the duty of leaders like the president, congressional representatives, and public figures to encourage us to ask such questions....<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[An example of a rather technical needed reform of the Supreme Court which Congress has power to require:] mandatory review by the Supreme Court, in cases where a state law was declared contrary to the Constitution by a federal appeals court. [Instead of just taking a few cases that interest them. Before 1925 SCOTUS heard about 600 cases a year that they were ''required'' to hear. Then that requirement was dropped, and now they might hear 75.] The justices should be required to place such cases on the docket, to receive briefs from the parties and from friends of the court, to hear oral arguments, and to publish the reasons for their decisions. Moreover, while such cases are pending, '''any adverse judgments of lower federal courts holding a state law unconstitutional could be automatically stayed in any class of cases Congress chooses to define.''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Author''' Matthew J. Franck is Director of the William E. and Carol G. Simon Center on Religion and the Constitution at the Witherspoon Institute and visiting lecturer in politics at Princeton University….</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Conclusion'''. There is apparently some law against calling any court ruling “unconstitutional”. But that is an unconstitutional law.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is also a stupid law. “Stupid” is what we say of someone, or of some human invention, whose intelligence has dipped far below its capacity. A drunk, for example, falls into a “stupor”, rendering his normal level of intelligence temporarily unavailable. There is also a pejorative aspect of the word; it is wrong to shove intelligence aside. To the extent we do – and we all do from time to time – we ought to be ashamed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is literally stupid, and American culture needs to say so, to imagine judges have no capacity to rule against the Constitution, without any constitutional authority, usurping power prohibited by the constitution. Or to imagine that no judge has ever ruled unconstitutionally, or ever will, or ever wants to. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is literally stupid to imagine that “power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely, except when given to the Supreme Court.” <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That nonsense about “the Court alone is insulated from politics and self-interest, so it is peculiarly suited to use the Constitution’s ‘majestic generalities’ to generate substantive legal and policy responses to the nation’s contemporary needs” is a grant of close enough to absolute power to drain American culture of its moral vigor, and it has been faithfully applied over the generations to that evil purpose. No greater threat to the security of our nation exists. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;We need to say so. It is the truth. We need to state the truth. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;We who are old enough to understand this evil don’t need to state this truth for our own sakes. We have lived long enough. If America utterly collapses in a few years, from an EMP attack, hyper inflation, a flood of terrorism, or invasion, we are near the end of our lives anyway. <br />
It’s for our children and grandchildren, too often poisoned against us by the SCOTUS-driven immorality resulting from our ignorance, our cowardice, our votes, and our blind obedience to the Pied Piper of First Street NE. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;To the extent we continue genuflecting to Hell, they have no chance. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Speak for the sake of judges too. Many are prisoners of their own power, not at all desiring to drag down America. They think they have no choice. The Constitution makes them do it. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As Jesus came in the flesh to our ancestors 2000+ years ago, His Word came to America 200+ years ago and shaped its Freedoms and Laws. As our distant ancestors crucified the source of Love, our recent ancestors, joined by ourselves, have His Word out in the dumpster, jumping up and down on it to pack it all in so we can shut the lid. What Peter told them yesterday, fits today, with only slight adaption:<br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Acts 3:13 The God of Abraham, and of Isaac, and of Jacob, the God of our fathers, hath glorified his Son Jesus; whom ye delivered up, and denied him in the presence of Pilate, when he was determined to let him go. 14 But ye denied the Holy One and the Just, and desired a murderer to be granted unto you; 15 And killed the Prince of life, whom God hath raised from the dead; whereof we are witnesses. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Our generation didn’t physically kill Jesus. But way before the Supreme Court took the 10 Commandments, the Bible, and prayer out of schools, our culture censored the Word of God with a “saying” that dominated our culture: “There are two things you should never talk about: religion, and politics.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Billy Graham addressed this assault on God when he was asked, “My parents always said there were two things you shouldn’t talk about—politics and religion. Well, they never did, but now I’m an adult, and I don’t have any idea what to believe. Where can I turn?” www.billygraham .org/answer/my-parents-always-said-there-were-two-things-you-shouldnt-talk-about-politics-and-religion/<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Billy’s answer began, “I’m sorry your parents never helped you discover who God is or why He is important. Perhaps their parents did the same—but whatever the reason, I hope you won’t do this with your own children. The Bible says, ‘Teach them to your children and to their children after them’ (Deuteronomy 4:9).”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;From there, Billy G. proceeded to an answer about “God loves you” and “ask Him to guide you to a church” which I’m sure most Christians will think is grand, but I wish there were more in American Christendom beyond a personal sedation to cross-bearing, God-proclaiming war against Hell out in public where the Devil devours his victims. I wish “church” were not so much a place of listening to talk, as is condemned in Titus 3:8, as a place of action, as is urged in Titus 3:9. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Just as the clamor to physically kill Jesus put more pressure on Judge Pilate than he had the courage to resist, the pressure of secularism in our time bears some of the responsibility for pushing SCOTUS away from God. <br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 And his name through faith in his name hath made this man strong, whom ye see and know: yea, the faith which is by him hath given him this perfect soundness in the presence of you all. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Then, the evidence before the crowds was that the power of Jesus whose murder they enabled could still heal a crippled man. Today the powerful evidence before 300+ million Americans, and indeed the whole world, is that the principles of the Word of God can still heal an entire nation, replacing poverty with prosperity, crime with protection, slavery with opportunity, class warfare with “equal protection of the laws”, ignorance with education, medicine shows with hospitals, and foreign invasions with the most powerful military in the whole world.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But we see also that pushing God away in preference for sex, drugs, and general ignorance invites back poverty, crime, class warfare, medical mythology, and terrorist attacks. <br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 And now, brethren, I wot [perceive] that through ignorance ye did it, as did also your rulers. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Paul says the Pharisees acted out of ignorance. This seems generous in light of Matthew 23 and other places where Jesus vigorously exposes their evil motives. Surely much of their ignorance was as willful as ignorance today. Yet surely also their willfulness succeeded in blinding them to the full evil of what they were doing, as is clearly the case today. They surely didn’t grasp that they were killing God Himself, just as courts today surely don’t grasp how fully their war against God, their perversion of the 14th Amendment “privileges and immunities” and “due process” clauses, and their arrogant view of their own “supremacy”, are turning the Constitution which authorizes their own existence into Freedom’s epitaph. <br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 But those things, which God before had shewed by the mouth of all his prophets, that Christ should suffer, he hath so fulfilled. 19 Repent ye therefore, and be converted, that your sins may be blotted out, when the times of refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord; 20 And he shall send Jesus Christ, which before was preached unto you: 21 Whom the heaven must receive until the times of restitution of all things, which God hath spoken by the mouth of all his holy prophets since the world began. 22 For Moses truly said unto the fathers, A prophet shall the Lord your God raise up unto you of your brethren, like unto me; him shall ye hear in all things whatsoever he shall say unto you. 23 And it shall come to pass, that every soul, which will not hear that prophet, shall be destroyed from among the people.</blockquote> </ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">which exceeds the judicial powers given by the state Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment.<br />
<ref>More about '''“exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide...exceeds the judicial powers given by the state Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Legislatures have considerable untapped potential for restraining their activist courts when they become confused about which branch of government they are. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Perhaps the major reason few people even think about solutions is fear of any change to the balance of powers between the legislature and the courts. “Better the devil you know than the devil you don’t.” We don’t want to just switch tyrants. A change to a real solution requires wisdom, which requires study, and who wants to study? <br />
<center>Another obstacle to restraining courts to their constitutional function is that most people, even Christians, limit their goals to what they consider “realistic”, and especially “politically realistic”, which usually means what people think they can do without God. Trust that what Jesus promised about “impossible” goals is truly “realistic”, enables us to think about not just what would be a little bit better, but about what would be perfect. and then to think about doing whatever we can think of to move in that direction, fully aware how feeble our own steps are, trusting God to open up new opportunities, in His time, as we walk with Him. </center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;My own feeble steps were drafted into a bill in Iowa in 2020. The bill is given in the next footnote, and posted at http://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/wiki/Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_stop_judges_from_legislating <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Senate Judiciary Committee Chair Brad Zaun liked the idea and got it numbered and introduced, but it came to him too late that year to get it through the “funnel”, and he was disappointed that there was no organized group helping make other lawmakers aware of it. </ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">The authority to impeach subsumes the authority to codify more surgical correctives, including (1) giving the state Supreme Court original jurisdiction over any challenge to a law, (2) requiring that review be expedited, (3) requiring a supermajority of the Court to suspend a law, (4) questioning justices in a public hearing about the constitutionality of their ruling, and (5) overturning the ruling with a supermajority of the legislature. <br />
<ref>More about '''“The authority to...codify more surgical correctives.”''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;For example:<br />
<br />
<center>'''Judicial Accountability Act: How Legislatures can stop judges from legislating'''</center><br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Summary: what the bill accomplishes'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1. '''No district court injunctions. A single district judge can't overturn a law.''' Any legislature is well within its constitutional authority to prohibit any ''district'' court (lower court) from invalidating a law – only the ''Supreme'' Court should be allowed to do it, and only within 90 days. Letting a single lower court judge overturn the work of 150 lawmakers which include several attorneys and constitutional scholars is insane. Any challenge to a law should go directly to the most experienced judges in the state.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2. '''Supermajority required. It takes 5 of the 7 justices of the Supreme Court to overturn a law.''' A simple majority of justices overturning by one vote a law produced by tens of thousands of people over several years is a scandal. It has nothing to do with wisdom, law, or the Constitution. When judges can’t even agree with each other, unanimously, whether to destroy the work of the majority of voters and their representatives, they prove they are not so much wiser than everybody else in their state to be trusted with such unbridled power. At the very least any injunction should have their unanimous support before they should have any power to shut down the will of their whole state. A supermajority that is short of unanimous may be OK if it is not the final word but is followed by further opportunities for the legislature to restore their law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3. '''Expedited. The Court has to rule in 3 months if the court blocks a new law from taking effect with a Temporary Restraining Order.''' If the court invalidates an existing law, the invalidation doesn't take effect for one year. Courts bottling up laws with injunctions for years while they make up their minds should make them ashamed. They don’t need years. No controversial law is passed without months if not years of scrutiny by attorneys for and against. Their briefs are already ready. They already know what the other side will say. They don’t need years to think of what to say or how to respond. Maybe a day. Maybe two.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Nor do judges need months to read the briefs for several weeks to bring themselves up to speed on the issue. The law has been in the news for years. There is no honor in willful ignorance of the issues until the first brief is filed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Laws are passed to correct serious wrongs. Years of work costing millions of dollars goes into fixing problems. There is no good reason to delay justice for the citizens of a state for years to wait while judges try to agree among themselves whether to allow justice as understood by the majority of voters and lawmakers. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''4. Discussion. The legislature may compel designated justices to attend a public hearing to debate the constitutionality of the law within one year of such a ruling, by passing a resolution.''' Provided a supermajority of the Supreme Court has agreed on an injunction in less than a month, the legislature should then be able, within the next year, to compel the attendance of judges under their jurisdiction to discuss and debate, with specified legislators in a public hearing, the constitutional justification for [or necessity of] that judicial exercise of the legislative function. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''5. The legislature may overturn the invalidation by a 60% vote, by a resolution, leaving the last word, the final verdict, with incredibly well informed voters''' (through ordinary elections of lawmakers and retention of justices). The resolution overturning the invalidation would give reasons responsive to the reasoning of the judicial ruling. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''The Bill: Iowa SSB3181 2020 AD''''''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A BILL FOR <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 An Act regarding legislative oversight of supreme court <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 decisions, and including applicability provisions. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF IOWA: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Introduction/Legislative Findings'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 Section 1. NEW SECTION. 602.1615 Legislative findings —— <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 challenges to the validity of a statute —— exclusive jurisdiction <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 —— public hearings —— legislative oversight. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 1. The general assembly finds and declares all of the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 following: <br />
<center>'''If the legislature can even impeach,''' <br />
<br>'''it can at least ask questions'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 a. The power to impeach subsumes reasonable less severe <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7 remedies. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Lawmakers take an oath''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''to uphold the Constitution too'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Their responsibility to uphold the Constitution'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''requires action against courts '''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''that interfere with their responsibility'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 b. The intent of this section is to provide for a mechanism <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 in which to resolve disputes regarding the constitutionality of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 laws between the courts and the legislature, both of which are <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 composed of constitutional scholars. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Jurisdiction of courts is''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''restricted by the legislature'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 c. Article 5, section 4 of the Constitution of the State <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13 of Iowa states that the supreme court is “a court for the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14 correction of errors at law, '''under such restriction as''' the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15 general assembly may, by law, prescribe . . .”. <br />
<center>'''Judicial power to invalidate laws''' <br />
<br>'''is not given by the Iowa Constitution'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 d. Article 3, section 20 of the Constitution of the State <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 of Iowa gives the legislature the power to impeach judges for <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 “malfeasance in office”, which is generally defined to include <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;19 acting without authority and abusing power. The power to <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;20 impeach subsumes all lesser remedies. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;21 e. The Constitution of the State of Iowa does not give the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;22 courts of this state the power to invalidate laws enacted by <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;23 the legislature, to require the legislature to enact different <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;24 laws, or to publish rulings that have the same effect as new <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;25 legislation. Article 3, section 1 of the Constitution of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;26 the State of Iowa states: “The powers of the government of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;27 Iowa shall be divided into three separate departments —— the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;28 '''legislative, the executive, and the judicial: and no person''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;29 '''charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to one''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;30 '''of these departments shall exercise any function appertaining''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;31 '''to either of the others,''' except in cases hereinafter expressly <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;32 directed or permitted”. <br />
<center>'''The Legislature must get involved''' <br />
<br>'''when courts legislate unconstitutionally'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;33 f. Although the courts of Iowa have usurped those powers <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;34 without constitutional authority, it has been done for reasons <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;35 which the general assembly respects. The general assembly <br />
----<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 welcomes the expertise and guidance of the courts in evaluating <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 the constitutionality of its laws. But when the reasoning of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 rulings which function as legislation appears to be not only <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 unsound, but unconstitutional, the general assembly has the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 constitutional duty and authority to determine that judges and <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 justices have abused their power and exceeded their authority, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7 which are grounds for impeachment under the malfeasance in <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 office clause. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 g. A remedy short of impeachment should advance wisdom, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 build consensus, and educate voters so that informed voters <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 may hold both judges and legislators accountable. Article 1, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 section 2 of the Constitution of the State of Iowa states: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13 '''“All political power is inherent in the people.''' Government is <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14 instituted for the protection, security, and benefit of the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15 people, and they have the right, at all times, to alter or <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 reform the same, whenever the public good may require it”. <br />
<center>'''The Meat of the Bill:''' <br />
<br>'''the Enforcement Section'''<br />
<br>'''Lower courts can't invalidate laws'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 2. The supreme court shall have discretionary and exclusive <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 original jurisdiction over any challenge to any law. A <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;19 district court or the court of appeals shall not invalidate a <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;20 law on any grounds. <br />
<center>'''Supreme Court must rule''' <br />
<br>'''within 3 months, by supermajority,'''<br />
<br>'''when the Court blocks a ''new'' law.'''<br />
<br>'''When the Court blocks an existing law'''<br />
<br>'''the block will not take effect for one year.'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;21 3. A decision of the supreme court that invalidates <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;22 '''existing''' law or has the effect of creating new law shall not <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;23 have any effect unless agreed to by five or more of the seven <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;24 justices, and otherwise shall not have any effect for one <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;25 year. The supreme court shall also have the power to suspend <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;26 implementation of '''a new law''' provided the supreme court produces <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;27 an expedited ruling within three months of the law’s enactment. <br />
<center>'''Public Hearing'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;28 4. a. Within one year of the date a supreme court decision <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;29 is published that invalidates existing law or has the effect <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;30 of creating new law, the general assembly may, by resolution, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;31 compel the attendance of specified justices to a public hearing <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;32 to discuss and debate the justification for the decision with <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;33 members of the general assembly. A public record of the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;34 hearing shall be made. <br />
<center>'''Impeachment grounds inquiry'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;35 b. During or after the hearing, the general assembly shall <br />
----<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 determine if grounds to begin impeachment exist as to any <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 of the justices present at the hearing for acting without <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 authority or malfeasance in office. <br />
<center>'''Judges may improve their ruling'''<br />
<br>'''with respect to the status of the challenged law'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 c. Based on the results of a hearing commenced pursuant to <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 this subsection, a justice whose presence was required at the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 hearing may change the justice’s vote or alter the justice’s <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7 individual contribution to the decision. <br />
<center>'''Legislature may overturn court invalidation'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 5. A supreme court decision invalidating existing law or <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 having the effect of creating new law will not take effect if <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 two-thirds of both the senate and the house of representatives <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 approve a resolution to overturn the decision within one year <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 of the date the decision was published. The resolution must <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13 specify the basis for overturning the decision, including <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14 its reasoning, not to be limited by court precedent that is <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15 responsive to the supreme court’s initial published decision, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 and must be documented by expert testimony and constitutional <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 authority. <br />
<center>'''Legislature may add statement to the ruling'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 6. The general assembly may issue its own statement to a <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;19 published supreme court decision that invalidates existing law <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;20 or has the effect of creating new law if done within one year of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;21 the date the decision was published. The statement must regard <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;22 the constitutionality of the invalidated existing law or the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;23 newly created law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;24 Sec. 2. APPLICABILITY. This Act applies to decisions <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;25 published by the supreme court on or after the effective date <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;26 of this act. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''FAQ's'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Questions and Answers''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Why are existing laws treated differently than new laws?''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The difference is for the benefit of the public, so the laws governing them do not flip back and forth from being in effect. A ''new'' law – for example, the Heartbeat law – could be suspended by courts only until the suspension is overturned by the legislature. An ''existing'' law – for example our former marriage laws requiring spouses to be of the opposite sex – could not be suspended for one year, to give the legislature time to respond. No chaotic back and forth. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Could courts suspend a new law between its effective date and the court ruling?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The legal action a court takes to invalidate a law is an Injunction. The process here doesn’t specify it, but would allow the normal process of allowing the courts to immediately suspend a new law with a TRO, Temporary Restraining Order, until their hearing, at which the temporary order could become permanent. In the case of an existing law, by contrast, allowing the court to immediately suspend the law, with the possibility of it going back into effect after the legislature acts, would subject the public to a law which is in effect, then suspended, then back into effect. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If this law removed the court’s power to put a TRO on a new law, the law would take effect until the ruling, then it would be suspended, but then the legislature might give it effect again.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;What will be the effect of a 4-3 ruling that a law is unconstitutional?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: no legal effect, but much political pressure) Although a 4-3 ruling would no longer have legal force, it would still have powerful political force. A ruling that a law is unconstitutional would be a public relations challenge for the legislature. The legislature would face pressure to refute the judges' claims point by point, or adjust the law voluntarily. A 4-3 ruling would not be powerless; and of course it would still be binding on the parties to the case. But an argument in defense of the legislature ignoring the challenge would be that after all, the justices themselves barely agree the law is unconstitutional. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Would a ruling always trigger a public hearing?<br />
That decision is made independently of a decision to vote to override the court. “Within one year, the legislature MAY, by a resolution, compel the attendance of specified Iowa judges ....”<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Is one year for the legislature to act too long? Too short?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;One year from the court’s ruling is needed to process the ruling’s reasoning, to hold hearings which would require passage of a resolution by both chambers, and then to schedule a vote, which could be while the legislature is not in session. A year is needed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;On the other hand, requiring courts to act in 3 months is reasonable, considering this is not a brand new question before them that they have never heard of before. They have had all the years of public debate on the issue to think about the issue. Plus, courts are accustomed to ruling quickly when cases are required to be “expedited”. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Would prolife laws do any better under this system?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yes, along with all other laws relating to immorality, which are targeted by the Landmark Abomination Cases of the U.S. Supreme Court. Iowa courts think themselves bound by SCOTUS precedent, but the Iowa legislature is not and should not be. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The 14th Amendment makes state legislatures subject to federal laws which protect the rights of state citizens that are listed in the Constitution, which is the meaning of the “privileges and immunities” clause of the 14th. But the 14th gives SCOTUS no authority to make up “rights” hostile to enumerated rights, much less to enforce “rights” without waiting for federal law to lay out the manner and scope of protection. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Neither federal courts nor Congress have any authority through the 14th or through anything else to block states from protecting constitutional rights. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Act laid out here will only get state courts out of the legislature’s way of protecting the rights of state citizens. When federal courts jump in the way, they can be shoved aside with the legal arguments of Clarence Thomas and others that are summarized in Statement #11 of this book. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Is a 2/3 majority requirement necessary? Shouldn't a simple majority of the legislature be enough to override courts?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: practically & legally, certainly; politically, complicated) This may be the hardest detail to muster a quick opinion. There are strong arguments for either choice; perhaps there is even a third option: a 60% vote. As this bill proceeds, perhaps it should be expected that a consensus will form later requiring amendment of this detail. The current draft requires a 2/3 majority. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''The Practical Argument:''' Currently, courts get away with a simple majority requirement (4-3) which faces zero accountability from anybody. This draft requires a 5-2 vote; another option is 6-1. Should the legislature face a similar hurdle? Several lawmakers believe a 2/3 requirement removes any practical hope of ever overturning a judicial invalidation of a law, because the Iowa legislature is incapable of agreeing by 2/3 that the sun is up. A 2/3 requirement would make restraint of lawmaking judges actually harder than passing a constitutional amendment! <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In Congress, our U.S. Constitution says a 2/3 majority is enough to send an amendment to the Constitution before the states for their ratification. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But if we let the legislature overturn the court’s invalidation with a second simple majority, it could be objected that would be almost ridiculously easy for the legislature to gather together the same “yea” votes a second time (if an election doesn’t intervene). A 60% requirement could answer that concern. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;However, that objection could also be met by pointing out that the ruling of the courts would give typically 60 pages of reasons the law should be overturned, which would put a lot of pressure on those “yea” votes to either eloquently and exhaustively justify their votes or vote “nay”. It would not be easy to secure a majority a second time under that pressure. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The public hearing option would put that 60 page ruling on a level playing field with reasoning from lawmakers. It would make both legislatures and courts accountable not only to each other, but to reason. It might even make lawmakers upset enough to reach a 2/3 agreement. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Voters, informed as has never before been possible about judges on the ballot, or about the legal skills of lawmakers, would have the last word. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''The Political Argument:''' The public is not used to legislatures having ANY power to correct unconstitutional rulings. A 2/3 requirement would be less of a shock to tradition. Were this bill to pass into law with a 2/3 requirement, and lawmakers saw how unnecessary it was, lawmakers could ease the requirement in the future - since this does not require amending the constitution, which already grants more than this power, but requires only a law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Amendment'''. Should it be decided that a simple majority of the legislature to overturn a court’s invalidation is sufficient, here is the simple change that could do it - simply strike out “two-thirds of” (or replace it with “six tenths of”): <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 A supreme court decision invalidating existing law or <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 having the effect of creating new law will not take effect if <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 <strikethrough>two-thirds of</strikethrough> both the senate and the house of representatives <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 approve a resolution to overturn the decision within one year <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 of the date the decision was published. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Is it practically possible to require courts to add a statement from the legislature up to a year after its ruling?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;When the Supreme Court first publishes its ruling, that is not the final version that will be later given an official permanent citation in the Northwest Reporter series. (Their contact information) Unpredictable delays are caused by litigants asking for rehearings, and courts taking time to respond. Even after that option is exhausted, court staff continue proofing their decisions, a process that can take months. [Iowa Supreme Court Clerk phone number: 515-348-4700] Northwest Reporter doesn’t officially publish a case, and give it a permanent citation, until a state supreme court notifies them that it is ready. That is why a new case has only an Iowa citation that does not list a page number or volume number, and doesn’t get a fancy N.W.2d permanent citation until much later. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Requiring the Court to leave the publication open for a year in case the legislature chooses to submit a statement would affect only the time the Court notifies Northwest Reporter, and it may not even affect that time at all. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The farther this bill gets, the more discussions there will be about it with the Iowa Bar Association and the Court itself. If delaying final publication that long is deemed unreasonable, an amendment could easily give the legislature an earlier deadline. It might also require the legislature to notify the court of an intent to exercise that option. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Of course, this entire final sentence of this bill is not critical to legislative correction of judicial overreach. It could be conceded if necessary to save the rest of the bill. But it is an appropriate correction of the current system. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Will an expedited hearing that begins in the Supreme Court diminish the time needed by the litigants to fully present their claims?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: anyone ready to block a law from taking effect is ready for court) A challenge to a new law means (and perhaps this bill could so specify, although I think it is already clearly implied) a challenge to a law that has not yet gone into effect, to keep it from going into effect (beginning with a Temporary Restraining Order (TRO) the day it would go into effect). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In such a case the state itself will normally be the defendant, and the petitioner will be a well funded group that tried to kill the law in the legislature but failed. In that situation the petitioner will already be prepared legally, their arguments well honed through interaction with lawmakers. It is hard to imagine that any less prepared petitioner would be ready with a TRO to stop a law before it goes into effect. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Iowa court rules already require appellants to outline their issues in their initial notice of appeal, which is more pressure on individual defendants to prepare that far ahead, in proportion to their means, than challengers to a new law will face, who will be fully primed for a court battle before the law passes the first chamber. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspCourt rules already require that any issue argued in the Supreme Court must have first been raised in the district court, so any responsible lawyer in district court will already be prepared for the Supreme Court. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspDistrict courts are needed to develop facts through witnesses in front of juries, depositions, and cross examination of expert witnesses. Supreme courts don’t do any of that. Expert witnesses can submit Amicus Briefs but the other side can’t cross examine them. Although judges can cross examine the lawyers for both parties in oral arguments, which district judges don’t do. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspThus district courts are essential in criminal trials where the guilt of the defendant needs to be proved to juries, and in civil trials between two parties. But their value in a challenge to a law is less clear. A legislature’s “findings of facts” are given deference except in the case of a “fundamental right”, under current practice, but the court practice of overturning laws that violate made-up “fundamental rights” has zero authority under the U.S. Constitution, and nothing prevents state legislatures from copying into state law the provision of the U.S. Constitution in Article III, Section 2, Paragraph 2, that court jurisdiction is subject to such “exceptions” and “regulations” as the legislature enacts. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspWere the petitioner an individual seeking relief only for himself and not for anyone else affected by the law, courts have many tools for giving relief to individuals short of invalidating whole laws. For example, extenuating circumstances, interaction with other laws affecting the individual, or necessity in order to avoid serious injury (Iowa 704). The applicability of laws to individuals is the jurisdiction of the judicial branch, with which the legislative branch has no intent to interfere, any more than the judicial branch should interfere with the jurisdiction of the legislative branch to establish laws of general application. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspAfter a law has already gone into effect, then there is no requirement to expedite. In fact, the decision to challenge a law could be made by the parties to the case, or by a judge, at any point during a years-long case: in pre-trial briefs, a district judge’s ruling, or during the appeal before the Court of Appeals or the Supreme Court. With this bill the applicability of the law to the individual defendant could still be suspended, but the law itself, as applied to everyone else, would not be suspended until after the Supreme Court so rules and then only if the legislature does not block the suspension. The legislature’s year to respond would not begin with any ruling made before the Supreme Court’s supermajority ruling. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Are there any U.S. Supreme Court precedents relevant to these half dozen powers?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: making judges answer lawmakers' questions is a staple of confirmation hearings) These proposed powers are all completely unprecedented in law, although some of them have been discussed. Probably the one never before discussed is the idea of a public hearing. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspSurely the prohibition of a district judge overturning a law, limiting that power to the state Supreme Court, and requiring a supermajority of the court to overturn, is well within the power given the legislature to limit the jurisdiction of courts. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp'''Public Hearings'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;How about public hearings? Is there any legal or constitutional principle that shields judges from having to explain their rulings any better than they do in their written opinions? Is there something nefarious about requiring judges to answer questions? <br />
Federal judges answer questions about their past rulings in confirmation hearings for appointments to higher courts. If U.S. Senators can require them to answer questions about their rulings years later, why can’t state legislatures require their state judges to answer questions at the time? Judges justify not answering questions about future potential cases, that they may remain free to rule in view of facts and arguments they might not see until then, but there is no reason to shield judges from explaining their past cases. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Especially since the Public Hearings envisioned in this bill are not only to clarify whether a law ruled unconstitutional actually is unconstitutional. The second purpose of these Public Hearings is to investigate whether there are grounds for impeachment. Because if the legislature determines that the court’s ruling of the law’s unconstitutionality is utterly lacking in merit, then judges who so ruled were legislating; they were acting without authority, exercising a power of a different branch of government than their own, which is malfeasance of office, an impeachable offense. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Obviously, in any impeachment trial, the judges would be required to answer questions. These public hearings are a power subsumed under the power of impeachment; they are a reasonable, less severe remedy. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Certainly the very idea of communication between lawmakers and judges on a “level playing field” is unheard of. Unprecedented. (Outside confirmation hearings.) Current communication, which tradition will be slow to reconsider, is somewhat like a parent trying to reason with a child who is as inarticulate as he is stubborn. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is a special challenge for a lawyer representing the legislature to reason with a judge who gives only the scantest clues to what is on his mind before he rules, after which it is too late to respond to his errors. Does any Constitutional or legal principle require such a breakdown of communication? Does this ritual serve any good purpose? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Once President Washington asked SCOTUS for its advisory interpretation of a treaty. The justices declined, saying “The lines of separation drawn by the Constitution between the three departments of government – their being in certain respects checks upon each other – and our being judges in a court of last resort – are considerations which afford strong arguments against the propriety of our extra judicially deciding the questions alluded to; especially as the Power given by the Constitution to the President of calling on the Heads of Departments for opinions, seems to have been purposely as well as expressly limited to executive departments.” https://www.mountvernon.org/library/digitalhistory/digital-encyclopedia/article/george-washington-and-the-supreme-court/<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;https://founders.archives.gov/?q=Thomas%20Recipient%3A%22Washington%2C%20George%22%20Author%3A%22Supreme%20Court%20Justices%22&s=1111311111&sa=supre&r=3&sr= <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That answer is not a precedent for keeping courts from communicatint with legislatures for two reasons: (1) it was not a sensible answer then. The Constitution puts no limit on who the President can consult for advice, while Proverbs 15:22 says “in a multitude of counsellors, purposes are established”. I can’t imagine where SCOTUS came up with the idea that the President was limited to asking his department heads. Washington asked for advice, not a binding ruling. That’s what “extrajudicial” means. (2) SCOTUS then declined to get involved in an issue which it otherwise would never face. This is different than asking a Court to make up its mind earlier than later. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is not wrong to ask judges to give advisory opinions to lawmakers so lawmakers don’t have to spend years crafting laws which judges at the last minute decide to overturn. The August 8, 1793 answer was before Americans had to worry about activist judges who leave the future of legislation, and indeed the very future of human rights, very much in doubt. <br />
However, asking judges to give an advisory opinion about a law before it is passed is probably impractical, since judges are used to taking longer to study an issue than a legislature is in session, and also since even after giving an early opinion, new evidence or argument might come later which would flip the Court’s ruling. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;An expedited three month deadline is probably the closest we can come to a timely response from courts. Certainly legal wrangling that dribbles on for years exhausts the patience of rational minds. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The subject of the public hearing is whether the law really was unconstitutional. Because if it wasn't, then the judges plainly acted outside their authority, which is grounds for impeachment. But beyond being grounds for impeachment, an order given that is beyond one's authority to give is legally invalid. So surely the legislature has the authority to investigate whether an order was invalid, and upon establishing that it is, to reverse its effects. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sheltering judges from interaction doesn’t make them free of bias. In every other human interaction, accountability is the best way to cleanse a hard heart of bias. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp'''The Two-Thirds Majority'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The only thing remotely relevant to this 2/3 vs. simple majority requirement in American constitutional law that I can think of is that to ratify a constitutional amendment, Congress has to pass it by 2/3 before states pass it by 3/4. But the solution here doesn’t change the constitution; it only defines how the legislature is choosing to exercise authority already given by the Iowa Constitution. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If anything, there is a constitutional principle favoring the power of legislatures over courts, with respect to Fundamental Rights. The 14th Amendment is the part of the Constitution which courts have taken to give them jurisdiction over states who trample fundamental rights. But who did the 14th Amendment authorize to enforce its provisions? Not courts! Rather, Congress, according to Section 5 of the Amendment. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yet here are examples of not just state laws, but even state constitutional amendments, which were overturned by courts for violating the “equal protection” clause of the 14th Amendment: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Cummings v. Missouri'', 71 U.S. 277 (1867) a Missouri oath to hold office designed to keep out former confederate soldiers was ruled an unconstitutional Bill of Attainder. <br />
''Hollingswort''h v. Perry'', 570 U.S. 693 (2013) a California same sex marriage ban. <br />
''Romer v. Evans, 517 U.S. 620 (1996) a Colorado gay rights ban. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Awad v. Ziriax'', 10th Circuit, January 10, 2012 an Oklahoma ban of the use of Sharia Law in court. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Giles v. Harris'', 1903, and Giles v. Teasley, 1904, courts winked at disenfranchising Blacks, but explicitly accepted jurisdiction over state constitutions violating the 14th and 15th Amendments. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The authority to enforce the requirements of the 14th Amendment, given to Congress and not courts, gives Congress also the authority to define and apply fundamental rights, and for anyone seriously in doubt, to clarify who is a human being and therefore deserves to have his fundamental rights protected. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;These are philosophical as well as legal questions which merit national discussion, but while courts are sheltered from having to talk to anybody the conversation has been one sided. America needs to open this up into what Proverbs 15:22 calls a “multitude of counsellors”. It does not undermine respect for the judiciary to imagine judges are able to explain their reasoning. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''If Legislatures overturn court rulings, won’t they exercise the authority of the judicial branch?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: legislative action wouldn't affect litigants; only the part of the ruling that reaches wrongfully into legislating) No. On that future day when a legislature overturns judicial rulings, the legislature’s action would not apply to the parties to the case, so the “separation of powers” aspect of the ruling is untouched. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;There are several reasons a court may exempt a litigant from the effects of a law, without invalidating the law for everyone else. The simple difference between courts and legislatures is that legislatures pass laws which apply to everybody, while courts apply those laws in specific cases, only to the parties to the case, guided by the special facts and circumstances of the case. The power given by this bill to legislatures to overturn rulings applies only to the part of the ruling where the court stepped outside its constitutional authority in order to nullify a law passed for the benefit of millions of others. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The purpose of the public hearing is only for the legislature to investigate whether their law was constitutional after all, and if so, to take back their constitutional authority to pass laws by their subsequent vote. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Lawmakers take oaths to defend the Constitution too. Courts cannot rob lawmakers of their power to obey the Constitution without violating the constitution themselves. <br />
Perhaps that is the key principle declared implicitly by this bill: judges aren’t the only branch of government authorized to understand and defend the Constitution. The other branches are too. That balance needs to be restored. The conversation needed needs to be among equals.<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Shouldn’t judges be immune from popular pressure? We don’t want our rights subject to a vote!'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Neither legislatures nor courts should have the last word over each other. We have seen what happens when legislatures had the last word, in the South, during the time of slavery. And we have seen what happens when courts had the last word, in 1857 and 1973; regarding slavery and abortion. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Even the Iowa constitution gives the last word to voters. Is that dangerous? America’s Founders talked about popular whims that could remove important protections over the weekend if the public could vote on individual issues continually. They set up 6 year terms for U.S. Senators and 4 year terms for presidents explicitly to shield our Rule of Law from whims the public might hold for only a month. Nor does this process give voters direct control over the outcome of a disputed law, but only equips them to evaluate the wisdom of their elected representatives and their judges, which is the same as our current system except this leaves voters much better informed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The 14th Amendment expanded the power of courts to overturn laws which violate “fundamental rights”. It made slave-loving southern state legislatures accountable to courts. Unaddressed was what to do when it is courts which violate fundamental rights. This measure is an attempt to restore balance. It is interesting that the 14th Amendment actually leaves its own enforcement not to courts, but to Congress. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The “independence of the judiciary” from popular whims is well protected by lifetime tenure. This measure does not change that. It only defines a remedy for Iowans when judges rule lawlessly and unconstitutionally. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Didn’t Iowa decide recently not to impeach judges for their rulings?'''<br />
Summary: “Overreaching” can only reach so far before it turns into full fledged unconstitutional legislating. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Removal from office, for just one harmful ruling which may be out of a long career of beneficial rulings, is pretty drastic; not to mention ineffective since it leaves the ruling in place that triggered the impeachment! <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That is why remedies short of impeachment are necessary, as well as remedies able to focus on the problem without cutting off talent which is mostly beneficial.<br />
If an assembly line produces an occasional klunker amongst its generally great output, we keep the assembly line and discard the klunker; we don't keep the klunker and blow up the assembly line! <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Iowans seriously considered impeaching judges for their rulings not so long ago. Highlights are discussed at the Brennan Center: <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A 2011 review by the National Center for State Courts’ Gavel to Gavel website also found numerous bills introduced in state legislatures that year to impeach judges and justices because of disagreement over specific rulings. Several of those introductions were part of a failed effort in Iowa to remove four Iowa Supreme Court Justices for their decision in a high-profile case about marriage rights for same-sex couples. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The impeachment attempt garnered significant media attention, but also widespread condemnation – even from members of the sponsors’ own party. Iowa Governor-elect Terry Brandstad (R) [sic] said at the time that disagreement over a ruling did not constitute grounds for impeachment. “There’s a difference between malfeasance and over-reaching,” said Brandstad, “the Constitution says what the grounds for impeachment are. My reading is it’s not there.” Iowa House Speaker Kraig Paulsen (R), whose chamber would have voted on the impeachment, sent the resolutions to languish in an inactive committee and said, “I disagree with this remedy,…I do not expect it to be debated on the floor of the House, and if it is, I will vote no.”<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I respectfully disagree with Governor, later Ambassador Branstad. When the Iowa Supreme Court not only struck down laws limiting marriage to opposite sex couples, but specifically ordered county clerks to solemnize “marriages” between same sex couples, that reaches beyond “overreaching”. “Overreaching” implies a mild going-a-little-too-far out of one’s proper jurisdiction. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But if the plainest example of a “person charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to” the judicial branch of government exercising “any function appertaining to” the legislative branch can be dismissed as mere “overreaching”, then it is impossible for any other judicial legislating to violate the Iowa Constitution. We might as well just give judges the password to the Iowa Code database and let them write whatever laws they please. As Rep. Matt Windschitl said January 27, 2020 on the Jeff Angelo show, “Do we really want judges deciding laws? If so, why do we even have a legislature?”<br />
Article 3 Section 1 of the Iowa Constitution says “Departments of government. The powers of the government of Iowa shall be divided into three separate departments — the legislative, the executive, and the judicial: and no person charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to one of these departments shall exercise any function appertaining to either of the others....”<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''FAQ’s: Judicial Philosophy'''<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Isn’t it unconstitutional to impeach a judge for a ruling?'''<br />
Summary: It can’t be unconstitutional to correct the part of a ruling that unconstitutionally legislates. Although it has not been established definitively, whether a judge may be impeached over a ruling, most legal discussion avers that would be unethical, and there is no precedent of a successful impeachment over the content of a ruling. <br />
Most legal discussion is of the U.S. Constitution; the Iowa Constitution specifies that judges can’t legislate, which is only implied in the U.S. Constitution. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The United States Constitution provides little guidance as to what offenses constitute grounds for the impeachment of federal judges...However, the impeachment power has historically been limited to cases of serious ethical or criminal misconduct. - Brennan Center<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is generally supposed that legislative action to correct an unconstitutional ruling, or to discipline a judge who writes one, would be unconstitutional. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Constitution does not “provide for resignation or impeachment whenever a judge makes a decision with which elected officials disagree” said four judges when President Clinton and Senator Dole urged impeachment of a judge over his ruling on admissibility of evidence. “These attacks do a grave disservice to the principle of an independent judiciary and…mislead the public as to the role of judges in a constitutional democracy.” Brennan Center<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Let’s make a distinction glossed over by those four judges: between a ruling hated because it applies existing law and facts in a way most people think is wrong, and a ruling hated because it overturns laws by a rationale that most people think is unconstitutional. I agree with the four judges that the case was correctly kept off limits to lawmakers, but the judges generalized their criticism to the extent of dismissing concerns about truly unconstitutional rulings as being mere decisions “with which elected officials disagree”. <br />
It is that degree of generalization that is “a grave disservice” by elevating “the principle of an independent judiciary” beyond the reach of the Constitution, of common sense, and of accountability of any kind from any source. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;What I have not found in law review articles is any proposed remedy for when a ruling itself is unconstitutional. I have not found it even acknowledged that it is possible for a ruling to be unconstitutional. As if to say “how could judges rule unconstitutionally? Judges ARE the constitution.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But it is judges themselves, in vigorous dissents, who stir public concern about the constitutionally of certain rulings. Judges who write dissents are as qualified as those in the majority, and their reasoning is often equally persuasive. When the public has a basis this solid for concern about the constitutionality of rulings, it is surely in the public interest, and not contrary to any known legal or constitutional principle, to hold a public hearing where those concerns can be addressed and hopefully resolved, where judges, perhaps for the first time in America history, can be compelled to interact with experts other than each other.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In fact, any time a law is overturned for being unconstitutional, but the ruling is flawed and a correct ruling would actually not find the law unconstitutional, then actually the ruling itself is unconstitutional because the ruling amounts to raw legislation. It is unconstitutional for courts to pass laws. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Let me emphasize this point. Any ruling that overturns a law is either correct because the law is in fact unconstitutional, or is itself unconstitutional because its reasoning or factual basis is flawed. Lawmakers take oaths to defend the Constitution too, and should not be unconstitutionally deprived of the power to enforce it when they see a violation. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If we may agree that it is at least theoretically possible for a ruling overturning a law to be unconstitutional, shall we insist the Constitution requires the legislature to honor every unconstitutional ruling? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Suppose there were a law against painting your house red, someone was prosecuted for painting his house red, and the court refused to convict because it is surely unconstitutional to outlaw painting your house red. Even without a formal nullification of the law, the law would be defacto nullified because prosecutors would know the court won’t convict anybody for that crime. It may be reasoned that rulings overturning laws merely formalize this natural process. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Public hearings would bring healing to our national division over issues less clear than the right to paint your house red. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As is pointed out below, the power this bill gives the legislature to overturn a judicial validation of its laws would not usurp judicial powers. It would not affect individuals who are actual parties named in the case. It would only affect that part of the ruling which wrongfully reaches into lawmaking, changing the laws which affect millions of other people who are not named in the case. <br />
</ref><br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">Should any federal judge so interfere, this state appeals to its congressional delegation to examine similar grounds for disciplinary action, along with exercising its Article III, Section 2, paragraph 2 authority to make “exceptions” and “regulations” designed to end SCOTUS’ long line of landmark abomination cases. <br />
<ref>More about '''“similar grounds for disciplinary action”''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;For example, see “Bringing the Courts Back Under the Constitution” at www.osaka.law.miami.edu/~schnably/GringrichContractWith America.pdf (sic)<br />
</ref><br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">This state also appeals to its congressional delegation to exercise its life-saving and rights-protecting authority under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment whose plain words give Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of Rights,4 which subsumes the authority to define their scope and balance competing interests, while the “privileges and immunities” clause identifies as protectable rights those listed in the Constitution.<br />
<ref> More about '''“Section 5 of the 14th Amendment gives Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of the Right to Life and of Equal Protection of the Laws”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Section 5 of the 14th Amendment so plainly gives Congress, not courts, the power to correct state violations of fundamental rights, that it is an amazing story how SCOTUS has usurped that power for itself and completely denied it to Congress, and how Congress has let them.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Largely relying on the dissents and concurrences of Justice Clarence Thomas, this story is told in Statement #11 and its footnotes. See “What Happened to Unalienable Rights, and How to Get Them Back” and “ ‘Substantive Due Process’: how SCOTUS usurped the Constitution’s Authority to Define Rights, and Congress’ Authority to Enforce Rights, into its own authority to reclassify abominations as ‘rights’ ”</ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">Official world-wide definitions of “crimes against humanity” apply “to representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission.”<br />
<ref>More about '''“...definitions of ‘crimes against humanity’ apply ‘to representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission.’ ”''' <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;“A crime against humanity occurs <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;when the government withdraws legal protection <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;from a class of human beings <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;resulting in severe deprivation of rights, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;up to and including death.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;- amicus in Dobbs of <u>Melinda Thybault/Moral Outcry</u><br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Melinda Thybault’s amicus brief was the 20th amicus docketed in Dobbs v. Jackson (2022). (www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184968/ 20210726175018044_41206%20pdf%20Parker%20III%20br.pdf)<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Her references, backing up that damning judgment:<br />
<blockquote>See “Crime Against Humanity” at www.law.cornell.edu/wex/ crime_against_humanity and see U.N. Office, Genocide Prevention, Crimes Against Humanity www.un.org/en/genocideprevention/crimes-against-humanity.shtml; Treaty of Rome (1957). See also Convention on the Non-Applicability of Statutory Limitations to War .</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Her characterization of international documents is not only fair, but it understates the culpability of elected representatives. Actual quotes from the documents lay responsibility at the feet, not just of impersonal “government”, but of government’s “representatives”. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Notice in the following definitions that those targeted for prosecution in international human rights tribunals include elected representatives and senators who “tolerate” crimes against humanity – who don’t actively execute their authority to criminalize these assaults on the Image of God. (Genesis 1:27) <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;“Genocide”, defined: ''“Genocide means...acts...with intent to destroy...in part, a national...group [in our case, Americans] [by] killing members of the group [in our case, babies; and by] Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group....”'' <br />
Here is the complete United Nations statement: <br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Article II: In the present Convention, '''genocide means''' any of the following '''acts committed with intent to destroy''', in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such:<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(a) '''Killing members of the group;'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(b) Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group;<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(c) Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part;<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(d) '''Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group;'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(e) Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;- Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide / Approved and proposed for signature and ratification or accession by General Assembly resolution 260 A (III) of 9 December 1948 / Entry into force: 12 January 1951, in accordance with article XII / www.un.org/en/genocideprevention/ documents/atrocity-crimes/Doc.1_Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.pdf</blockquote><br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The 1948 definition above is cited in the following 1968 United Nations General Assembly resolution (which took effect two years later) which nullifies any “statute of limitations” on “crimes against humanity”:<br />
<blockquote><br />
Article I: No statutory limitation shall apply to the following crimes, irrespective of the date of their commission:...(b) Crimes against humanity whether committed in time of war or in time of peace as they are defined in the Charter of the International Military Tribunal, Nürnberg, of 8 August 1945 and confirmed by resolutions 3 (I) of 13 February 1946 and 95 (I) of 11 December 1946 of the General Assembly of the United Nations,...the crime of genocide as defined in the 1948 Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, even if such acts do not constitute a violation of the domestic law of the country in which they were committed.</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The following Article II applies the call for prosecution at any time, not limited by a Statute of Limitations, to elected representatives. The word “elected” is not there, but the context certainly includes them, especially since one cannot “represent” another, as the word is normally defined, without their voluntary authorization. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;By not limiting the definition of “representatives” to those who are elected, the definition does not exclude judges.<br />
<blockquote>Article II: '''If any of the crimes mentioned in article I is committed, the provisions of this Convention shall apply to''' representatives of the State authority and private individuals who, as principals or accomplices, participate in or who directly incite others to the commission of any of those crimes, or who conspire to commit them, irrespective of the degree of completion, and to '''representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission.''' (Article II, Convention on the Non-Applicability of Statutory Limitations to War, ADOPTED 26 November 1968 BY General Assembly resolution 2391 (XXIII))</blockquote><br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If [genocide] is committed, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;the provisions of this Convention shall apply <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;to representatives of the State authority <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;who tolerate [its] commission. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Including judges.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And elected representatives <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; who are lax in restraining them.<br />
<br />
<u>Thybault</u> writes, “...the Court has not yet fully reversed Roe, Doe, and Casey.” She submitted this observation to the Court which finally reversed all three, technically, although the slaughter continues in most states so her observation is still timely. <br />
“No American citizen should have to live under, nor as history tragically demonstrates, should they stand by silently, while their government sanctions and even promotes crimes against humanity.” <br />
Another low point in the Supreme Court’s grasp of 14th Amendment equal rights, she mentions, was Plessy v. Ferguson, 163 U.S. 537 (1896) which, like Roe and Dred Scott, “denied legal protection to a class of human beings” and “ignored the plain language of the Fourteenth Amendment”. “Plessy accepted the gloss that ‘separate but equal’ was ‘equal’.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;She repeats, “When the government withdraws legal protection from a class of human beings, it is the classic definition of a crime against humanity.” <br />
</ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">Any court review of this law must be expedited, because lives are lost with each day that courts delay.<br />
<br />
<br />
<small>The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: 396 State Legislators from 41 States <> Melinda Thybault/Moral Outcry</small><br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Courtrecognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human<br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] Courts Accept the Fact-Finding Authority of Legislatures, Juries, Experts for the same good reasons their findings persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures should regulate abortion, as Dobbs held, just as legislatures regulate the prosecution of all other murders.<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] The full humanity of a tiny physical body is hard for many to grasp. But what distinguishes us from animals isn’t physical, and has no known pre-conscious stage.<br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress has ''Already'' Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment already authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion.<br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] Roe, Dobbs, and the 14th Amendment agree: All Humans are “Persons”.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] When pregnancies develop into medical emergencies requiring separation of mother and child to save the mother, the child has an equal fundamental right to life and medical care. <br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any class of humans by any other is prohibited by the Constitution, by the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives legislatures no authority to legalize violations of Constitutional Rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
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'''FOOTNOTES'''<br />
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<references /></div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Statement_12_%2B_Footnotes&diff=50356Statement 12 + Footnotes2023-12-18T02:12:10Z<p>DaveLeach: </p>
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Statement of Facts #12 of 12 from: <br />
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=[[Reversing_Landmark_Abomination_Cases]]=<br />
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<span style="color:red">'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters<br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion</span><br />
<br />
by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal<br />
''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal<br />
<span style="color:brown"><br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen <br />
<br />
by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 18:11, 15 October 2023 (UTC)<br />
<br />
<span style="color:grey"><small>''Try to imagine how a judge, reviewing a prolife law with these Findings of Facts, would be able to dodge this evidence - in fact, see if you can find ANYONE who can ''refute'' these facts - as opposed to not ''caring'' about facts - that is, not caring about reality:''</small></span><br />
<br />
====<span style="color:blue">Statement of Fact #12 of 12:====<br />
<span style="color:blue">Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">Any state judge interfering with this state’s compliance with the 14th Amendment and its ancient authority to protect its people <br />
<ref>More about '''“the ancient authority of state legislatures...to protect the lives of all its people – an authority which no court can legitimately remove.”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Courts that overturn the prolife laws of “red states” interfere with the ancient duty and power of every government, in every generation, to protect life, points out the amicus brief filed in Dobbs v. Jackson by <u>396 State Legislators from 41 States</u>.(www.supremecourt.gov/Docket PDF/19/19-1392/185121/ 20210728125120809_Dobbs%20Amici%20brief_State%20Legislators_07272021.pdf)<br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;State legislators have the constitutional duty, and therefore the power, to protect the fundamental, civil rights of persons. The fundamental law in which those fundamental rights are found is the common law, which consists of both natural duties and those ancient, customary rights and immunities that are foundational to ordered liberty. Thus, a state legislature must declare and secure to all persons within the protection of its laws the rights that those persons have by natural and customary law. Cf. ''Washington v. Glucksberg'', 521 U.S. 702, 721-22 (1997) (upholding state legislation that prohibited assisted suicide and reasoning that the Fourteenth Amendment’s “Due Process Clause specially protects those fundamental rights and liberties which are, objectively, ‘deeply rooted in this Nation’s history and tradition’.” (quoting ''Moore v. E. Cleveland'', 431 U. S. 494, 503 (1977)). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England (1765): “Hence,” he said, “it follows, that the first and primary end of human laws is to '''maintain and regulate these absolute rights of individuals'''.” Id. Blackstone taught that the legislative power is to declare existing common-law rights and duties and to remedy any defects in the legal security for those rights. Id. at *42-43, 52-58, 86-87 <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Founders echoed this view in the Declaration of Independence, declaring that governments are instituted among men in order to secure the inalienable rights with which human beings are endowed by nature and nature’s God. They also accused the crown and Parliament of infringing the rights of “our constitution,” which in 1776 could only have been a reference to the common-law constitution of British North America. This view predicated the Constitution of the United States, which expressly secures natural rights, such as life and religious liberty, and common-law rights, such as jury trials and freedom from the quartering of soldiers in one’s home, and expressly disclaims any intent to disparage the other rights of the fundamental law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Indeed, the point of having legislatures, executives, and courts is to secure the rights that Americans already have.''' Neither state legislatures nor the Constitution of the United States create those rights. See District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570, 592 (2008) (stating that “it has always been widely understood that the '''Second Amendment, like the First and Fourth Amendments, codified a preexisting right,” that it “is not a right granted by the Constitution,” and is not “in any manner dependent upon that instrument for its existence.”'''). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Some, but not all, of the rights of natural persons are enumerated [listed] in the Constitution''' of the United States and its amendments. U.S. Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 8.; art. IV, §2; amends. I-VIII. Others are enumerated in state constitutions. See e.g., Soc’y for the Propagation of the Gospel v. Wheeler, 22 F. Cas. 756, 766 (No. 13,156) (C.C.D.N.H. 1814). Still others are declared in American constitutions but not enumerated. U.S. Const. amend. IX (“The enumeration of certain rights herein shall not be construed to deny or disparage other rights retained by the people.”) (emphasis added). '''State legislatures have a duty to declare and secure all fundamental rights, both enumerated and unenumerated.''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Fundamental rights are those that persons enjoy by fundamental law—natural law and common law— with or without any written constitution. Because the common law includes natural rights, to understand the fundamental rights declared and secured by the Constitution, it is sufficient to look to the common law, especially as explained by William Blackstone. Established common-law doctrines constitute the best evidence of the existence and meaning of both enumerated and unenumerated, fundamental rights. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The interpretation of the Constitution of the United States is necessarily influenced by the fact that its provisions are framed in the language of the English common law, and are to be read in the light of its history.” ''Smith v. Alabama'', 124 U.S. 465, 478 (1888). The terms and concepts of the common law provided the “the nomenclature of which the framers of the Constitution were familiar.” ''Minor v. Happersett'', 88 U.S. (21 Wall) 162, 167 (1875). Accord James R. Stoner, Jr., Common-Law Liberty: Rethinking American Constitutionalism 9-29 (2003). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;American constitutional rights are not philosophical abstractions. They are described in detail in common law treatises, such as those by Coke and Hale, and especially Blackstone’s Commentaries. The framers crafted American constitutions—state and federal—in common law terms. And Blackstone was their teacher and lexicographer....<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As this Court has rightly acknowledged, Blackstone’s “works constituted the preeminent authority on English law for the founding generation.” ''Alden v. Maine'', 527 U.S. 706, 715 (1999). Blackstone retained his influence through the adoption of the Civil War Amendments. James M. Ogden, Lincoln’s Early Impressions of the Law in Indiana, 7 Notre Dame L. Rev. 325, 328 (1932). And '''this Court continues to turn to Blackstone today.''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[2 A few examples from recent years include ''Gamble v. United States'', __ U.S. __, 139 S. Ct. 1960 (2019) (the Court’s opinion, the concurrence, and one dissent citing Blackstone multiple times to determine the meaning of the phrase “the same offense” in the Fifth Amendment’s double jeopardy clause); ''Department of Homeland Security v. Thuraissigiam'', __ U.S. __, 140 S. Ct. 1959, 1969 (2020) (calling Blackstone’s Commentaries a “satisfactory exposition of the common law of England”); Ramos v. Louisiana, __ U.S. __, 140 S. Ct. 1390, 1395 (2020) (citing Blackstone in explanation of the holding that '''the requirement of juror unanimity is “a vital right protected by the common law”''' and therefore the Constitution’s jury trial guarantee); ''Torres v. Madrid'', __ U.S. __, 141 S. Ct. 989, 996, 997, 998, 1000 (2021) (citing Blackstone multiple times to determine meaning of Fourth Amendment “seizure”). ]...<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But as the Ninth Amendment makes clear, the enumeration of certain common-law rights does not deny or disparage all the other rights that the American people enjoy by virtue of natural law and their ancient customs. The Ninth Amendment expressly reserves to the people those civil and fundamental rights that they enjoyed prior to ratification, which are their natural rights, other common-law rights and liberties, and some privileges enumerated in state constitutions. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Because many states refused to remedy infringements of fundamental rights [for blacks] prior to the Civil War, the Fourteenth Amendment was necessary to ensure to all persons due process of law and the equal protection of the laws, and to empower Congress to remedy infringements of those rights. It bears emphasis that the '''Fourteenth Amendment was necessary to recall state legislatures to their original task. Far from repealing the people’s retention of fundamenta'''l rights declared by the Ninth Amendment, the Fourteenth Amendment strengthened it. And far from abrogating the duty of state legislatures to declare and secure unenumerated rights, the Fourteenth Amendment reinforced that duty. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That is, the rights retained by the people but not protected by their state, such as the right of Blacks to liberty, was strengthened – at the expense of the freedom of the legislature to torpedo those rights. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And as Statement #11 and its footnotes explain, the 14th Amendment did not supplant the duty of legislatures to protect rights with that duty in courts. The only authority over state violations of rights given courts by the 14th was to enforce federal laws enacted by Congress. The authority of courts we see today, to make up “rights” not found in the Constitution and impose them on states without waiting for Congress to pass a law, was not given by the 14th, but was seized by courts in violation of the Constitution. </ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">– the central reason governments exist, is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders,<br />
<ref>More about '''“[Any judge enabling mass baby murder] is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The consensus of official fact finders is that all unborn babies are people from the beginning. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The logical extension of that consensus is that abortion is murder; that murder of 60+ million people is genocide; and that any judge blocking state protection of its people from genocide is an accessory to genocide. </ref><br />
and is guilty of exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide through an unconstitutional ruling, <br />
<ref>More about '''“...an unconstitutional ruling....”''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Oops, I just used a forbidden phrase: “unconstitutional ruling”. I just categorized a number of court rulings as “unconstitutional”. Is that allowed in America? Will that get be inside a jail? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Does ''anyone'' dare call ''any'' court ruling “unconstitutional”? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Should'' the public demand that court rulings be “constitutional”? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"But", you ask, "how is an 'unconstitutional ruling' even possible if the constitutional role of courts is to 'say what the constitution is'? If what courts say the Constitution says ''is by definition the Constitution'', then by definition it is impossible for what courts rule to be “unconstitutional”, right? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I googled “unconstitutional ruling” and got hits where Elon Musk appealed an “unconstitutional ruling” but it was the ruling of a federal agency, the SEC, not of any court. (https://thepoliticsbrief.com/elon-musk-appeals-unconstitutional-ruling-to-the-supreme-court/)<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I thought I found what I was searching for when I read “US court throws wrench in detention debate with unconstitutional ruling”. But it was about a court saying a law was unconstitutional. https://thehill.com/policy/defense/114685-us-court-throws-wrench-in-detention-debate-with-unconstitutional-ruling/<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The search turned up hits where “unconstitutional ruling” meant a ruling that says a ''law'' is unconstitutional, not that a ''court ruling'' is; that is, a ruling was an “ ‘unconstitutional’ ruling”. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;An example: “Meaning of an unconstitutional ruling...the consciousness, values, and ethics of the people living in society change with the times, and the general public changes the laws accordingly in order to support society. One of the institutions that give such a meaning to the law is the court, which can be shown in the form of an unconstitutionality ruling.” https://english-meiji.net/articles/2967/ <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The search turned up an Amicus Brief where lawyers, writing to the Supreme Court, used the dreaded phrase: “Stare Decisis Does Not Control Where a Precedent is Incorrectly Decided and Unconstitutional”. That was one of the headings of the brief. But the “Question Presented”, the first thing the justices saw, was gentler: “Whether this Court should overrule...the incorrect holding...in Hill v. Colorado....” (https://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/23/23-74/277086/20230824112814886_23-74%20Amicus%20Brief%20WFFC.pdf )<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;“Statement #11” in this book marshaled concurrences of Justice Clarence Thomas and other authorities to show that SCOTUS has no authority from the Constitution to make up “rights” not specified in the Constitution, not to mention “rights” that are actually hostile to “enumerated” (listed in the Constitution) Rights. Thomas gave gut-wrenching detail of KKK mobs slaughtering black Republicans and burning down the courthouse they were in and that they were trying to defend, acquitted by the Supreme Court, an acquittal achieved through an utter mangling of the Constitution. Thomas spoke of other rulings after that which were similarly lacking in any authority from the Constitution. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yet Thomas never called any ruling “unconstitutional”. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;One of the footnotes of Statement #11 revisited the ''Marbury v. Madison'' (1803) ruling with the help of a C-span movie about it – the case where SCOTUS came up with the idea that “the role of courts is to say what the law is”. I showed how even back then, that “holding” was based on fraud: the case said a phrase from an earlier Judiciary Act violated the Constitution. But it didn’t. A litigant asked the court to apply that phrase where the Constitution doesn’t permit it, but the law itself said it should be applied only as law permits, so it was not the law itself, but only the requested application, that was “unconstitutional”. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;My search turned up an article that articulates the irrational, absurd, outrage of the very idea of “judicial supremacy”, yet even it falls short of calling any ruling “unconstitutional”. It also falls short of recommending very much of a solution. That is, if courts are not the best final referees of the meaning of the Constitution, who is better? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Statement #11 is my answer to “who is better”. Not just “my” answer, but an answer founded on the concurrences of Justice Thomas, on several Amicus Briefs filed in ''Dobbs'', and on other authorities. The final section of this book completes the picture.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But for the rest of this footnote, let’s enjoy selections from “The Problem of Judicial Supremacy” by Matthew J. Franck, published Spring 2016 in National Affairs, and reprinted in its Fall 2023 issue, Number 57. See (www.nationalaffairs.com/publications/detail/the-problem-of-judicial-supremacy)<br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...judges, at the behest of same-sex marriage advocates, have violated one legal and constitutional norm after another.... The chief justice (in ''Obergefell v. Hodges'', a case in which the Court held that the 14th Amendment requires states to grant marriage licenses to same-sex couples,) sets a strong tone from the very start, writing that the majority has engaged in “an act of will, not of legal judgment....Nowhere is the majority's extravagant conception of judicial supremacy more evident than in its description — and dismissal — of the public debate regarding same-sex marriage.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;….What does Chief Justice Roberts ...mean by “judicial supremacy”?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(One possibility:)...a supreme authority of the federal judiciary to decide ''any'' important political or social question confronting the country — never mind whether the Constitution authentically addresses it or not. We’ll call this the ''judicial supremacy of imperial power'' for short. The justification for this understanding of the Court’s supremacy is that the Court alone is insulated from politics and self-interest, so it is peculiarly suited to use the Constitution's “majestic generalities” to generate substantive legal and policy responses to the nation’s contemporary needs.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;….(Another possibility:) the decisive right to be obeyed, which we can call the ''judicial supremacy of authoritative depth''. This means, as Charles Evans Hughes remarked before he became chief justice, that “we are under a Constitution, but the Constitution is what the judges say it is.” Hence all other citizens, but particularly those who serve in public office, are obliged to act in accordance with what the Supreme Court justices — or at least five of them — tell them the Constitution means. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''The justices of the Court, on the other hand, need not even follow the Court’s precedents.''' The Court is always right, except when five of the current justices decide it has been wrong. The Supreme Court becomes a kind of ongoing constitutional convention, authorized to alter and amend the “real” Constitution, which de facto exists only in their opinions. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Today, this understanding of judicial supremacy is virtually dogmatic in America's law schools, and it is widely embraced in the media and by the public. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But it, too, is of relatively recent origin in the Court’s own opinions, first being expressed in a 1958 case called ''Cooper v. Aaron'', in which the justices demanded the governor of Arkansas abide by their ruling in ''Brown v. Board of Education''. Their logic was this: If the Constitution is the supreme law of the land, as Article VI maintains, and if ever since ''Marbury v. Madison'' the country has understood that “the federal judiciary is supreme in the exposition of the law of the Constitution,” then '''the decisions of the Court are themselves “the supreme law of the land,” and must be followed by oath-bound public officials as equivalent to the Constitution itself.'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...it is simply not true that “the country” has believed ever since 1803 that whatever the Court ''says'' about the Constitution simply is the Constitution.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...It seems a safe bet that ''all'' the justices of the current Supreme Court believe what their predecessors said in ''Cooper v. Aaron'' about their own rulings being the supreme law of the land, effectively the same as the Constitution itself as '''far as the obligations of all other public officials are concerned.''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;….The chief justice probably intended only to denounce the first meaning above, the judicial supremacy of imperial power, which insists that the Court can be wise enough to decide all of society’s great political questions so long as they can be connected in some creative way to the Constitution. He did, after all, once famously describe the Supreme Court as an umpire calling balls and strikes — and he really meant it. No mere umpire could embrace such a capacious vision of judicial power.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...Justice Kennedy takes a commonplace truism — that no generation has a monopoly on wisdom about the meaning of freedom — and states its blandly true corollary: that “future generations” can come to “new insight” about such things. The argument then becomes a shell game for the reader, who belatedly realizes that '''Kennedy means future generations of ''judges'' are free to change the meaning of the Constitution,''' never mind our difficult but honest and democratic amendment process.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...a made-up Constitution, “evolving” from year to year according to the “new insight” of any five out of a set of nine unelected judges with life tenure? '''''That'' Constitution must be considered binding on everyone else?''' This cannot be.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...if everything the justices say about anything in the Constitution is simply to be obeyed as “the law of the land” by all other political actors — then the judicial supremacy [to the level of] imperial power follows quickly thereafter. Not logically, perhaps, but it follows politically...<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Even the dissenting justices in ''Obergefell'', then, seem unaware of how much they too are part of the problem. The late Justice Scalia, for instance, was right to say that the majority opinion represents “the furthest extension one can even imagine” of a “claimed power” on the Court’s part to “create ‘liberties’ that the Constitution and its Amendments neglect to mention.” This, he rightly said, “robs the People” of the “freedom to govern themselves” that was the whole point of fighting the American Revolution. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...we should read [the dissents] as inviting the American people to resist the decision. But if these justices — like their fellows in the majority, and typical of their kind — accept the dogma of judicial supremacy, what possible form can such resistance take?<br />
Justice Scalia, in a strident note at the end of his dissent, cites the famous Federalist No. 78 to the effect that the judiciary relies on the executive “even for the efficacy of its judgments.” He concluded: “With each decision of ours that takes from the People a question properly left to them — with each decision that is unabashedly based not on law, but on the ‘reasoned judgment’ of a bare majority of this Court — we move one step closer to being reminded of our impotence.” Here was a most daring hint from the characteristically acerbic Scalia, that '''the other branches have it in their power to frustrate the ambition of the judges to rule.'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;From inside ''the bubble created by the dogma of judicial supremacy,'' only two conventional responses to an unconstitutional ruling seem possible. One is to amend the Constitution to reverse a wrong and harmful ruling of the Court. This has been accomplished on only a few occasions in our history, and it is a Herculean undertaking. The lack of progress on a human-life amendment since ''Roe'' is a sobering reminder of the difficulty. Moreover, the route of amending the Constitution is not necessarily a challenge to judicial supremacy specifically, and might even be a concession to it. The other conventional response is to appoint better justices in the future, justices who will get the Constitution right, not abuse their authority, and perhaps even overturn abuses such as ''Obergefell''.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But how to present them with the opportunity? The pro-life movement has been maneuvering for five votes to overturn ''Roe'' for four decades now, and it has not been difficult to present the justices with opportunities to do the right thing. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[In order to create a case that would pressure judges to squarely address the evidence against ''Roe''] a state would presumably have to pass a law of exactly the kind the Court just declared unconstitutional. While the lower courts stand ready to strike down such attempts, and ''while legislators stand in thrall [slavery] to the dogma of judicial supremacy,'' this is highly improbable.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[Correcting this mess] will take some creative re-imagining of the way our institutions of government interact with one another. [Such as you can read in Statement #11 and in the final section of this book, ''Free Expression of Religion Without Establishment.'']<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...judicial supremacy today preys chiefly on the right of the people to govern themselves at the state level — and thus can be seen as an assault on the federalism of our constitutional arrangement — the growth of judicial power can be meaningfully checked only by the Court's institutional counterparts, since they alone possess the tools of checks and balances. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Here I gratefully disagree. Gratefully: I am grateful that there is much that state legislatures can do: in fact the focus of this book is on actions urged for state lawmakers. Truth is powerful, no matter who proclaims it. Especially truth about fraud so egregious that the whole nation smells the rot, even if few can figure out what is causing it and how to clean it. But here is more of the article:<br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;At first blush, some of those explicit constitutional tools — like impeachment, as Federalist No. 81 suggests — seem extreme, so we ought to treat them as something of a nuclear option.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Luckily, more modest methods exist. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Exactly! I propose some of them in a coming footnote, The Judicial Accountability Act. But this article doesn’t mention anything that specific, but rather gives historical examples of presidents ignoring courts:<br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;At various times in our history, judicial supremacy was challenged by presidents and Congress. As Princeton political scientist Keith Whittington points out in his 2007 book The Political Foundations of Judicial Supremacy, strong presidents like Jefferson, Jackson, Lincoln, Franklin Roosevelt, and even Reagan did so. Jefferson, for one, essentially nullified the Sedition Act of 1798 upon assuming office, and '''Lincoln, in express defiance of the Dred Scott decision, issued patents and passports to black Americans. The president, then, should invoke his prerogative to act in accordance with his own reading of the Constitution.'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Similarly, '''Congress passed a law in 1862 that banned slavery in U.S. territories, which was in express defiance of the Dred Scott decision. It’s not extreme, therefore, to suggest that Congress should pass laws directly contradicting the Court when''' it believes the Court has overstepped its bounds.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A kind of public education is also required...there was, for much of our history, a robust debate about the place of the Court in our constitutional structure.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Lincoln again is our true model here. As a candidate for office and emerging leader of the new Republican Party in the late 1850s, Lincoln resolutely opposed any acceptance of the Dred Scott decision as the law of the land. The decision had to be accepted as resolving the dispute for the parties in the case, but it could not be taken as instruction for other public officials. He spoke about the issue with trenchant clarity and frequency — from the ruling's immediate aftermath until he was president. As he said in his first inaugural address:'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''“[T]he candid citizen must confess that if the policy of the government, upon vital questions, affecting the whole people, is to be irrevocably fixed by decisions of the Supreme Court, the instant they are made, in ordinary litigation between parties, in personal actions, the people will have ceased, to be their own rulers, having, to that extent, practically resigned their government, into the hands of that eminent tribunal.”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Lincoln identified the stakes. Are we our own rulers? Or have we resigned our government into the hands of a tribunal of nine lawyers, any five of whom have authority to govern us? Those questions must be asked repeatedly over the coming years — '''not only in dissents,''' but also in the media, in the academy, and among citizens. It's the duty of leaders like the president, congressional representatives, and public figures to encourage us to ask such questions....<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[An example of a rather technical needed reform of the Supreme Court which Congress has power to require:] mandatory review by the Supreme Court, in cases where a state law was declared contrary to the Constitution by a federal appeals court. [Instead of just taking a few cases that interest them. Before 1925 SCOTUS heard about 600 cases a year that they were ''required'' to hear. Then that requirement was dropped, and now they might hear 75.] The justices should be required to place such cases on the docket, to receive briefs from the parties and from friends of the court, to hear oral arguments, and to publish the reasons for their decisions. Moreover, while such cases are pending, '''any adverse judgments of lower federal courts holding a state law unconstitutional could be automatically stayed in any class of cases Congress chooses to define.''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Author''' Matthew J. Franck is Director of the William E. and Carol G. Simon Center on Religion and the Constitution at the Witherspoon Institute and visiting lecturer in politics at Princeton University….</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Conclusion'''. There is apparently some law against calling any court ruling “unconstitutional”. But that is an unconstitutional law.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is also a stupid law. “Stupid” is what we say of someone, or of some human invention, whose intelligence has dipped far below its capacity. A drunk, for example, falls into a “stupor”, rendering his normal level of intelligence temporarily unavailable. There is also a pejorative aspect of the word; it is wrong to shove intelligence aside. To the extent we do – and we all do from time to time – we ought to be ashamed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is literally stupid, and American culture needs to say so, to imagine judges have no capacity to rule against the Constitution, without any constitutional authority, usurping power prohibited by the constitution. Or to imagine that no judge has ever ruled unconstitutionally, or ever will, or ever wants to. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is literally stupid to imagine that “power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely, except when given to the Supreme Court.” <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That nonsense about “the Court alone is insulated from politics and self-interest, so it is peculiarly suited to use the Constitution’s ‘majestic generalities’ to generate substantive legal and policy responses to the nation’s contemporary needs” is a grant of close enough to absolute power to drain American culture of its moral vigor, and it has been faithfully applied over the generations to that evil purpose. No greater threat to the security of our nation exists. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;We need to say so. It is the truth. We need to state the truth. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;We who are old enough to understand this evil don’t need to state this truth for our own sakes. We have lived long enough. If America utterly collapses in a few years, from an EMP attack, hyper inflation, a flood of terrorism, or invasion, we are near the end of our lives anyway. <br />
It’s for our children and grandchildren, too often poisoned against us by the SCOTUS-driven immorality resulting from our ignorance, our cowardice, our votes, and our blind obedience to the Pied Piper of First Street NE. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;To the extent we continue genuflecting to Hell, they have no chance. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Speak for the sake of judges too. Many are prisoners of their own power, not at all desiring to drag down America. They think they have no choice. The Constitution makes them do it. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As Jesus came in the flesh to our ancestors 2000+ years ago, His Word came to America 200+ years ago and shaped its Freedoms and Laws. As our distant ancestors crucified the source of Love, our recent ancestors, joined by ourselves, have His Word out in the dumpster, jumping up and down on it to pack it all in so we can shut the lid. What Peter told them yesterday, fits today, with only slight adaption:<br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Acts 3:13 The God of Abraham, and of Isaac, and of Jacob, the God of our fathers, hath glorified his Son Jesus; whom ye delivered up, and denied him in the presence of Pilate, when he was determined to let him go. 14 But ye denied the Holy One and the Just, and desired a murderer to be granted unto you; 15 And killed the Prince of life, whom God hath raised from the dead; whereof we are witnesses. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Our generation didn’t physically kill Jesus. But way before the Supreme Court took the 10 Commandments, the Bible, and prayer out of schools, our culture censored the Word of God with a “saying” that dominated our culture: “There are two things you should never talk about: religion, and politics.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Billy Graham addressed this assault on God when he was asked, “My parents always said there were two things you shouldn’t talk about—politics and religion. Well, they never did, but now I’m an adult, and I don’t have any idea what to believe. Where can I turn?” www.billygraham .org/answer/my-parents-always-said-there-were-two-things-you-shouldnt-talk-about-politics-and-religion/<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Billy’s answer began, “I’m sorry your parents never helped you discover who God is or why He is important. Perhaps their parents did the same—but whatever the reason, I hope you won’t do this with your own children. The Bible says, ‘Teach them to your children and to their children after them’ (Deuteronomy 4:9).”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;From there, Billy G. proceeded to an answer about “God loves you” and “ask Him to guide you to a church” which I’m sure most Christians will think is grand, but I wish there were more in American Christendom beyond a personal sedation to cross-bearing, God-proclaiming war against Hell out in public where the Devil devours his victims. I wish “church” were not so much a place of listening to talk, as is condemned in Titus 3:8, as a place of action, as is urged in Titus 3:9. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Just as the clamor to physically kill Jesus put more pressure on Judge Pilate than he had the courage to resist, the pressure of secularism in our time bears some of the responsibility for pushing SCOTUS away from God. <br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 And his name through faith in his name hath made this man strong, whom ye see and know: yea, the faith which is by him hath given him this perfect soundness in the presence of you all. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Then, the evidence before the crowds was that the power of Jesus whose murder they enabled could still heal a crippled man. Today the powerful evidence before 300+ million Americans, and indeed the whole world, is that the principles of the Word of God can still heal an entire nation, replacing poverty with prosperity, crime with protection, slavery with opportunity, class warfare with “equal protection of the laws”, ignorance with education, medicine shows with hospitals, and foreign invasions with the most powerful military in the whole world.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But we see also that pushing God away in preference for sex, drugs, and general ignorance invites back poverty, crime, class warfare, medical mythology, and terrorist attacks. <br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 And now, brethren, I wot [perceive] that through ignorance ye did it, as did also your rulers. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Paul says the Pharisees acted out of ignorance. This seems generous in light of Matthew 23 and other places where Jesus vigorously exposes their evil motives. Surely much of their ignorance was as willful as ignorance today. Yet surely also their willfulness succeeded in blinding them to the full evil of what they were doing, as is clearly the case today. They surely didn’t grasp that they were killing God Himself, just as courts today surely don’t grasp how fully their war against God, their perversion of the 14th Amendment “privileges and immunities” and “due process” clauses, and their arrogant view of their own “supremacy”, are turning the Constitution which authorizes their own existence into Freedom’s epitaph. <br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 But those things, which God before had shewed by the mouth of all his prophets, that Christ should suffer, he hath so fulfilled. 19 Repent ye therefore, and be converted, that your sins may be blotted out, when the times of refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord; 20 And he shall send Jesus Christ, which before was preached unto you: 21 Whom the heaven must receive until the times of restitution of all things, which God hath spoken by the mouth of all his holy prophets since the world began. 22 For Moses truly said unto the fathers, A prophet shall the Lord your God raise up unto you of your brethren, like unto me; him shall ye hear in all things whatsoever he shall say unto you. 23 And it shall come to pass, that every soul, which will not hear that prophet, shall be destroyed from among the people.</blockquote> </ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">which exceeds the judicial powers given by the state Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment.<br />
<ref>More about '''“exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide...exceeds the judicial powers given by the state Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Legislatures have considerable untapped potential for restraining their activist courts when they become confused about which branch of government they are. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Perhaps the major reason few people even think about solutions is fear of any change to the balance of powers between the legislature and the courts. “Better the devil you know than the devil you don’t.” We don’t want to just switch tyrants. A change to a real solution requires wisdom, which requires study, and who wants to study? <br />
<center>Another obstacle to restraining courts to their constitutional function is that most people, even Christians, limit their goals to what they consider “realistic”, and especially “politically realistic”, which usually means what people think they can do without God. Trust that what Jesus promised about “impossible” goals is truly “realistic”, enables us to think about not just what would be a little bit better, but about what would be perfect. and then to think about doing whatever we can think of to move in that direction, fully aware how feeble our own steps are, trusting God to open up new opportunities, in His time, as we walk with Him. </center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;My own feeble steps were drafted into a bill in Iowa in 2020. The bill is posted at http://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/wiki/ <br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_stop_judges_from_legislating <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Senate Judiciary Committee Chair Brad Zaun liked the idea and got it numbered and introduced, but it came to him too late that year to get it through the “funnel”, and he was disappointed that there was no organized group helping make other lawmakers aware of it. <br />
<center>'''Judicial Accountability Act: How Legislatures can stop judges from legislating'''</center><br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Summary: what the bill accomplishes'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1. '''No district court injunctions. A single district judge can't overturn a law.''' Any legislature is well within its constitutional authority to prohibit any ''district'' court (lower court) from invalidating a law – only the ''Supreme'' Court should be allowed to do it, and only within 90 days. Letting a single lower court judge overturn the work of 150 lawmakers which include several attorneys and constitutional scholars is insane. Any challenge to a law should go directly to the most experienced judges in the state.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2. '''Supermajority required. It takes 5 of the 7 justices of the Supreme Court to overturn a law.''' A simple majority of justices overturning by one vote a law produced by tens of thousands of people over several years is a scandal. It has nothing to do with wisdom, law, or the Constitution. When judges can’t even agree with each other, unanimously, whether to destroy the work of the majority of voters and their representatives, they prove they are not so much wiser than everybody else in their state to be trusted with such unbridled power. At the very least any injunction should have their unanimous support before they should have any power to shut down the will of their whole state. A supermajority that is short of unanimous may be OK if it is not the final word but is followed by further opportunities for the legislature to restore their law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3. '''Expedited. The Court has to rule in 3 months if the court blocks a new law from taking effect with a Temporary Restraining Order.''' If the court invalidates an existing law, the invalidation doesn't take effect for one year. Courts bottling up laws with injunctions for years while they make up their minds should make them ashamed. They don’t need years. No controversial law is passed without months if not years of scrutiny by attorneys for and against. Their briefs are already ready. They already know what the other side will say. They don’t need years to think of what to say or how to respond. Maybe a day. Maybe two.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Nor do judges need months to read the briefs for several weeks to bring themselves up to speed on the issue. The law has been in the news for years. There is no honor in willful ignorance of the issues until the first brief is filed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Laws are passed to correct serious wrongs. Years of work costing millions of dollars goes into fixing problems. There is no good reason to delay justice for the citizens of a state for years to wait while judges try to agree among themselves whether to allow justice as understood by the majority of voters and lawmakers. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''4. Discussion. The legislature may compel designated justices to attend a public hearing to debate the constitutionality of the law within one year of such a ruling, by passing a resolution.''' Provided a supermajority of the Supreme Court has agreed on an injunction in less than a month, the legislature should then be able, within the next year, to compel the attendance of judges under their jurisdiction to discuss and debate, with specified legislators in a public hearing, the constitutional justification for [or necessity of] that judicial exercise of the legislative function. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''5. The legislature may overturn the invalidation by a 60% vote, by a resolution, leaving the last word, the final verdict, with incredibly well informed voters''' (through ordinary elections of lawmakers and retention of justices). The resolution overturning the invalidation would give reasons responsive to the reasoning of the judicial ruling. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''The Bill: Iowa SSB3181 2020 AD''''''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A BILL FOR <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 An Act regarding legislative oversight of supreme court <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 decisions, and including applicability provisions. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF IOWA: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Introduction/Legislative Findings'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 Section 1. NEW SECTION. 602.1615 Legislative findings —— <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 challenges to the validity of a statute —— exclusive jurisdiction <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 —— public hearings —— legislative oversight. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 1. The general assembly finds and declares all of the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 following: <br />
<center>'''If the legislature can even impeach,''' <br />
<br>'''it can at least ask questions'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 a. The power to impeach subsumes reasonable less severe <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7 remedies. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Lawmakers take an oath''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''to uphold the Constitution too'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Their responsibility to uphold the Constitution'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''requires action against courts '''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''that interfere with their responsibility'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 b. The intent of this section is to provide for a mechanism <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 in which to resolve disputes regarding the constitutionality of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 laws between the courts and the legislature, both of which are <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 composed of constitutional scholars. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Jurisdiction of courts is''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''restricted by the legislature'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 c. Article 5, section 4 of the Constitution of the State <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13 of Iowa states that the supreme court is “a court for the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14 correction of errors at law, '''under such restriction as''' the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15 general assembly may, by law, prescribe . . .”. <br />
<center>'''Judicial power to invalidate laws''' <br />
<br>'''is not given by the Iowa Constitution'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 d. Article 3, section 20 of the Constitution of the State <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 of Iowa gives the legislature the power to impeach judges for <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 “malfeasance in office”, which is generally defined to include <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;19 acting without authority and abusing power. The power to <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;20 impeach subsumes all lesser remedies. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;21 e. The Constitution of the State of Iowa does not give the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;22 courts of this state the power to invalidate laws enacted by <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;23 the legislature, to require the legislature to enact different <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;24 laws, or to publish rulings that have the same effect as new <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;25 legislation. Article 3, section 1 of the Constitution of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;26 the State of Iowa states: “The powers of the government of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;27 Iowa shall be divided into three separate departments —— the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;28 '''legislative, the executive, and the judicial: and no person''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;29 '''charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to one''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;30 '''of these departments shall exercise any function appertaining''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;31 '''to either of the others,''' except in cases hereinafter expressly <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;32 directed or permitted”. <br />
<center>'''The Legislature must get involved''' <br />
<br>'''when courts legislate unconstitutionally'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;33 f. Although the courts of Iowa have usurped those powers <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;34 without constitutional authority, it has been done for reasons <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;35 which the general assembly respects. The general assembly <br />
----<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 welcomes the expertise and guidance of the courts in evaluating <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 the constitutionality of its laws. But when the reasoning of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 rulings which function as legislation appears to be not only <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 unsound, but unconstitutional, the general assembly has the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 constitutional duty and authority to determine that judges and <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 justices have abused their power and exceeded their authority, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7 which are grounds for impeachment under the malfeasance in <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 office clause. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 g. A remedy short of impeachment should advance wisdom, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 build consensus, and educate voters so that informed voters <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 may hold both judges and legislators accountable. Article 1, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 section 2 of the Constitution of the State of Iowa states: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13 '''“All political power is inherent in the people.''' Government is <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14 instituted for the protection, security, and benefit of the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15 people, and they have the right, at all times, to alter or <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 reform the same, whenever the public good may require it”. <br />
<center>'''The Meat of the Bill:''' <br />
<br>'''the Enforcement Section'''<br />
<br>'''Lower courts can't invalidate laws'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 2. The supreme court shall have discretionary and exclusive <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 original jurisdiction over any challenge to any law. A <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;19 district court or the court of appeals shall not invalidate a <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;20 law on any grounds. <br />
<center>'''Supreme Court must rule''' <br />
<br>'''within 3 months, by supermajority,'''<br />
<br>'''when the Court blocks a ''new'' law.'''<br />
<br>'''When the Court blocks an existing law'''<br />
<br>'''the block will not take effect for one year.'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;21 3. A decision of the supreme court that invalidates <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;22 '''existing''' law or has the effect of creating new law shall not <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;23 have any effect unless agreed to by five or more of the seven <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;24 justices, and otherwise shall not have any effect for one <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;25 year. The supreme court shall also have the power to suspend <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;26 implementation of '''a new law''' provided the supreme court produces <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;27 an expedited ruling within three months of the law’s enactment. <br />
<center>'''Public Hearing'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;28 4. a. Within one year of the date a supreme court decision <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;29 is published that invalidates existing law or has the effect <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;30 of creating new law, the general assembly may, by resolution, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;31 compel the attendance of specified justices to a public hearing <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;32 to discuss and debate the justification for the decision with <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;33 members of the general assembly. A public record of the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;34 hearing shall be made. <br />
<center>'''Impeachment grounds inquiry'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;35 b. During or after the hearing, the general assembly shall <br />
----<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 determine if grounds to begin impeachment exist as to any <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 of the justices present at the hearing for acting without <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 authority or malfeasance in office. <br />
<center>'''Judges may improve their ruling'''<br />
<br>'''with respect to the status of the challenged law'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 c. Based on the results of a hearing commenced pursuant to <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 this subsection, a justice whose presence was required at the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 hearing may change the justice’s vote or alter the justice’s <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7 individual contribution to the decision. <br />
<center>'''Legislature may overturn court invalidation'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 5. A supreme court decision invalidating existing law or <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 having the effect of creating new law will not take effect if <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 two-thirds of both the senate and the house of representatives <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 approve a resolution to overturn the decision within one year <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 of the date the decision was published. The resolution must <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13 specify the basis for overturning the decision, including <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14 its reasoning, not to be limited by court precedent that is <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15 responsive to the supreme court’s initial published decision, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 and must be documented by expert testimony and constitutional <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 authority. <br />
<center>'''Legislature may add statement to the ruling'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 6. The general assembly may issue its own statement to a <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;19 published supreme court decision that invalidates existing law <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;20 or has the effect of creating new law if done within one year of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;21 the date the decision was published. The statement must regard <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;22 the constitutionality of the invalidated existing law or the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;23 newly created law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;24 Sec. 2. APPLICABILITY. This Act applies to decisions <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;25 published by the supreme court on or after the effective date <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;26 of this act. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''FAQ's'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Questions and Answers''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Why are existing laws treated differently than new laws?''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The difference is for the benefit of the public, so the laws governing them do not flip back and forth from being in effect. A ''new'' law – for example, the Heartbeat law – could be suspended by courts only until the suspension is overturned by the legislature. An ''existing'' law – for example our former marriage laws requiring spouses to be of the opposite sex – could not be suspended for one year, to give the legislature time to respond. No chaotic back and forth. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Could courts suspend a new law between its effective date and the court ruling?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The legal action a court takes to invalidate a law is an Injunction. The process here doesn’t specify it, but would allow the normal process of allowing the courts to immediately suspend a new law with a TRO, Temporary Restraining Order, until their hearing, at which the temporary order could become permanent. In the case of an existing law, by contrast, allowing the court to immediately suspend the law, with the possibility of it going back into effect after the legislature acts, would subject the public to a law which is in effect, then suspended, then back into effect. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If this law removed the court’s power to put a TRO on a new law, the law would take effect until the ruling, then it would be suspended, but then the legislature might give it effect again.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;What will be the effect of a 4-3 ruling that a law is unconstitutional?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: no legal effect, but much political pressure) Although a 4-3 ruling would no longer have legal force, it would still have powerful political force. A ruling that a law is unconstitutional would be a public relations challenge for the legislature. The legislature would face pressure to refute the judges' claims point by point, or adjust the law voluntarily. A 4-3 ruling would not be powerless; and of course it would still be binding on the parties to the case. But an argument in defense of the legislature ignoring the challenge would be that after all, the justices themselves barely agree the law is unconstitutional. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Would a ruling always trigger a public hearing?<br />
That decision is made independently of a decision to vote to override the court. “Within one year, the legislature MAY, by a resolution, compel the attendance of specified Iowa judges ....”<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Is one year for the legislature to act too long? Too short?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;One year from the court’s ruling is needed to process the ruling’s reasoning, to hold hearings which would require passage of a resolution by both chambers, and then to schedule a vote, which could be while the legislature is not in session. A year is needed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;On the other hand, requiring courts to act in 3 months is reasonable, considering this is not a brand new question before them that they have never heard of before. They have had all the years of public debate on the issue to think about the issue. Plus, courts are accustomed to ruling quickly when cases are required to be “expedited”. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Would prolife laws do any better under this system?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yes, along with all other laws relating to immorality, which are targeted by the Landmark Abomination Cases of the U.S. Supreme Court. Iowa courts think themselves bound by SCOTUS precedent, but the Iowa legislature is not and should not be. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The 14th Amendment makes state legislatures subject to federal laws which protect the rights of state citizens that are listed in the Constitution, which is the meaning of the “privileges and immunities” clause of the 14th. But the 14th gives SCOTUS no authority to make up “rights” hostile to enumerated rights, much less to enforce “rights” without waiting for federal law to lay out the manner and scope of protection. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Neither federal courts nor Congress have any authority through the 14th or through anything else to block states from protecting constitutional rights. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Act laid out here will only get state courts out of the legislature’s way of protecting the rights of state citizens. When federal courts jump in the way, they can be shoved aside with the legal arguments of Clarence Thomas and others that are summarized in Statement #11 of this book. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Is a 2/3 majority requirement necessary? Shouldn't a simple majority of the legislature be enough to override courts?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: practically & legally, certainly; politically, complicated) This may be the hardest detail to muster a quick opinion. There are strong arguments for either choice; perhaps there is even a third option: a 60% vote. As this bill proceeds, perhaps it should be expected that a consensus will form later requiring amendment of this detail. The current draft requires a 2/3 majority. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''The Practical Argument:''' Currently, courts get away with a simple majority requirement (4-3) which faces zero accountability from anybody. This draft requires a 5-2 vote; another option is 6-1. Should the legislature face a similar hurdle? Several lawmakers believe a 2/3 requirement removes any practical hope of ever overturning a judicial invalidation of a law, because the Iowa legislature is incapable of agreeing by 2/3 that the sun is up. A 2/3 requirement would make restraint of lawmaking judges actually harder than passing a constitutional amendment! <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In Congress, our U.S. Constitution says a 2/3 majority is enough to send an amendment to the Constitution before the states for their ratification. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But if we let the legislature overturn the court’s invalidation with a second simple majority, it could be objected that would be almost ridiculously easy for the legislature to gather together the same “yea” votes a second time (if an election doesn’t intervene). A 60% requirement could answer that concern. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;However, that objection could also be met by pointing out that the ruling of the courts would give typically 60 pages of reasons the law should be overturned, which would put a lot of pressure on those “yea” votes to either eloquently and exhaustively justify their votes or vote “nay”. It would not be easy to secure a majority a second time under that pressure. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The public hearing option would put that 60 page ruling on a level playing field with reasoning from lawmakers. It would make both legislatures and courts accountable not only to each other, but to reason. It might even make lawmakers upset enough to reach a 2/3 agreement. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Voters, informed as has never before been possible about judges on the ballot, or about the legal skills of lawmakers, would have the last word. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''The Political Argument:''' The public is not used to legislatures having ANY power to correct unconstitutional rulings. A 2/3 requirement would be less of a shock to tradition. Were this bill to pass into law with a 2/3 requirement, and lawmakers saw how unnecessary it was, lawmakers could ease the requirement in the future - since this does not require amending the constitution, which already grants more than this power, but requires only a law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Amendment'''. Should it be decided that a simple majority of the legislature to overturn a court’s invalidation is sufficient, here is the simple change that could do it - simply strike out “two-thirds of” (or replace it with “six tenths of”): <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 A supreme court decision invalidating existing law or <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 having the effect of creating new law will not take effect if <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 <strikethrough>two-thirds of</strikethrough> both the senate and the house of representatives <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 approve a resolution to overturn the decision within one year <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 of the date the decision was published. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Is it practically possible to require courts to add a statement from the legislature up to a year after its ruling?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;When the Supreme Court first publishes its ruling, that is not the final version that will be later given an official permanent citation in the Northwest Reporter series. (Their contact information) Unpredictable delays are caused by litigants asking for rehearings, and courts taking time to respond. Even after that option is exhausted, court staff continue proofing their decisions, a process that can take months. [Iowa Supreme Court Clerk phone number: 515-348-4700] Northwest Reporter doesn’t officially publish a case, and give it a permanent citation, until a state supreme court notifies them that it is ready. That is why a new case has only an Iowa citation that does not list a page number or volume number, and doesn’t get a fancy N.W.2d permanent citation until much later. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Requiring the Court to leave the publication open for a year in case the legislature chooses to submit a statement would affect only the time the Court notifies Northwest Reporter, and it may not even affect that time at all. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The farther this bill gets, the more discussions there will be about it with the Iowa Bar Association and the Court itself. If delaying final publication that long is deemed unreasonable, an amendment could easily give the legislature an earlier deadline. It might also require the legislature to notify the court of an intent to exercise that option. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Of course, this entire final sentence of this bill is not critical to legislative correction of judicial overreach. It could be conceded if necessary to save the rest of the bill. But it is an appropriate correction of the current system. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Will an expedited hearing that begins in the Supreme Court diminish the time needed by the litigants to fully present their claims?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: anyone ready to block a law from taking effect is ready for court) A challenge to a new law means (and perhaps this bill could so specify, although I think it is already clearly implied) a challenge to a law that has not yet gone into effect, to keep it from going into effect (beginning with a Temporary Restraining Order (TRO) the day it would go into effect). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In such a case the state itself will normally be the defendant, and the petitioner will be a well funded group that tried to kill the law in the legislature but failed. In that situation the petitioner will already be prepared legally, their arguments well honed through interaction with lawmakers. It is hard to imagine that any less prepared petitioner would be ready with a TRO to stop a law before it goes into effect. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Iowa court rules already require appellants to outline their issues in their initial notice of appeal, which is more pressure on individual defendants to prepare that far ahead, in proportion to their means, than challengers to a new law will face, who will be fully primed for a court battle before the law passes the first chamber. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspCourt rules already require that any issue argued in the Supreme Court must have first been raised in the district court, so any responsible lawyer in district court will already be prepared for the Supreme Court. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspDistrict courts are needed to develop facts through witnesses in front of juries, depositions, and cross examination of expert witnesses. Supreme courts don’t do any of that. Expert witnesses can submit Amicus Briefs but the other side can’t cross examine them. Although judges can cross examine the lawyers for both parties in oral arguments, which district judges don’t do. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspThus district courts are essential in criminal trials where the guilt of the defendant needs to be proved to juries, and in civil trials between two parties. But their value in a challenge to a law is less clear. A legislature’s “findings of facts” are given deference except in the case of a “fundamental right”, under current practice, but the court practice of overturning laws that violate made-up “fundamental rights” has zero authority under the U.S. Constitution, and nothing prevents state legislatures from copying into state law the provision of the U.S. Constitution in Article III, Section 2, Paragraph 2, that court jurisdiction is subject to such “exceptions” and “regulations” as the legislature enacts. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspWere the petitioner an individual seeking relief only for himself and not for anyone else affected by the law, courts have many tools for giving relief to individuals short of invalidating whole laws. For example, extenuating circumstances, interaction with other laws affecting the individual, or necessity in order to avoid serious injury (Iowa 704). The applicability of laws to individuals is the jurisdiction of the judicial branch, with which the legislative branch has no intent to interfere, any more than the judicial branch should interfere with the jurisdiction of the legislative branch to establish laws of general application. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspAfter a law has already gone into effect, then there is no requirement to expedite. In fact, the decision to challenge a law could be made by the parties to the case, or by a judge, at any point during a years-long case: in pre-trial briefs, a district judge’s ruling, or during the appeal before the Court of Appeals or the Supreme Court. With this bill the applicability of the law to the individual defendant could still be suspended, but the law itself, as applied to everyone else, would not be suspended until after the Supreme Court so rules and then only if the legislature does not block the suspension. The legislature’s year to respond would not begin with any ruling made before the Supreme Court’s supermajority ruling. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Are there any U.S. Supreme Court precedents relevant to these half dozen powers?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: making judges answer lawmakers' questions is a staple of confirmation hearings) These proposed powers are all completely unprecedented in law, although some of them have been discussed. Probably the one never before discussed is the idea of a public hearing. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspSurely the prohibition of a district judge overturning a law, limiting that power to the state Supreme Court, and requiring a supermajority of the court to overturn, is well within the power given the legislature to limit the jurisdiction of courts. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp'''Public Hearings'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;How about public hearings? Is there any legal or constitutional principle that shields judges from having to explain their rulings any better than they do in their written opinions? Is there something nefarious about requiring judges to answer questions? <br />
Federal judges answer questions about their past rulings in confirmation hearings for appointments to higher courts. If U.S. Senators can require them to answer questions about their rulings years later, why can’t state legislatures require their state judges to answer questions at the time? Judges justify not answering questions about future potential cases, that they may remain free to rule in view of facts and arguments they might not see until then, but there is no reason to shield judges from explaining their past cases. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Especially since the Public Hearings envisioned in this bill are not only to clarify whether a law ruled unconstitutional actually is unconstitutional. The second purpose of these Public Hearings is to investigate whether there are grounds for impeachment. Because if the legislature determines that the court’s ruling of the law’s unconstitutionality is utterly lacking in merit, then judges who so ruled were legislating; they were acting without authority, exercising a power of a different branch of government than their own, which is malfeasance of office, an impeachable offense. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Obviously, in any impeachment trial, the judges would be required to answer questions. These public hearings are a power subsumed under the power of impeachment; they are a reasonable, less severe remedy. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Certainly the very idea of communication between lawmakers and judges on a “level playing field” is unheard of. Unprecedented. (Outside confirmation hearings.) Current communication, which tradition will be slow to reconsider, is somewhat like a parent trying to reason with a child who is as inarticulate as he is stubborn. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is a special challenge for a lawyer representing the legislature to reason with a judge who gives only the scantest clues to what is on his mind before he rules, after which it is too late to respond to his errors. Does any Constitutional or legal principle require such a breakdown of communication? Does this ritual serve any good purpose? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Once President Washington asked SCOTUS for its advisory interpretation of a treaty. The justices declined, saying “The lines of separation drawn by the Constitution between the three departments of government – their being in certain respects checks upon each other – and our being judges in a court of last resort – are considerations which afford strong arguments against the propriety of our extra judicially deciding the questions alluded to; especially as the Power given by the Constitution to the President of calling on the Heads of Departments for opinions, seems to have been purposely as well as expressly limited to executive departments.” https://www.mountvernon.org/library/digitalhistory/digital-encyclopedia/article/george-washington-and-the-supreme-court/<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;https://founders.archives.gov/?q=Thomas%20Recipient%3A%22Washington%2C%20George%22%20Author%3A%22Supreme%20Court%20Justices%22&s=1111311111&sa=supre&r=3&sr= <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That answer is not a precedent for keeping courts from communicatint with legislatures for two reasons: (1) it was not a sensible answer then. The Constitution puts no limit on who the President can consult for advice, while Proverbs 15:22 says “in a multitude of counsellors, purposes are established”. I can’t imagine where SCOTUS came up with the idea that the President was limited to asking his department heads. Washington asked for advice, not a binding ruling. That’s what “extrajudicial” means. (2) SCOTUS then declined to get involved in an issue which it otherwise would never face. This is different than asking a Court to make up its mind earlier than later. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is not wrong to ask judges to give advisory opinions to lawmakers so lawmakers don’t have to spend years crafting laws which judges at the last minute decide to overturn. The August 8, 1793 answer was before Americans had to worry about activist judges who leave the future of legislation, and indeed the very future of human rights, very much in doubt. <br />
However, asking judges to give an advisory opinion about a law before it is passed is probably impractical, since judges are used to taking longer to study an issue than a legislature is in session, and also since even after giving an early opinion, new evidence or argument might come later which would flip the Court’s ruling. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;An expedited three month deadline is probably the closest we can come to a timely response from courts. Certainly legal wrangling that dribbles on for years exhausts the patience of rational minds. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The subject of the public hearing is whether the law really was unconstitutional. Because if it wasn't, then the judges plainly acted outside their authority, which is grounds for impeachment. But beyond being grounds for impeachment, an order given that is beyond one's authority to give is legally invalid. So surely the legislature has the authority to investigate whether an order was invalid, and upon establishing that it is, to reverse its effects. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sheltering judges from interaction doesn’t make them free of bias. In every other human interaction, accountability is the best way to cleanse a hard heart of bias. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp'''The Two-Thirds Majority'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The only thing remotely relevant to this 2/3 vs. simple majority requirement in American constitutional law that I can think of is that to ratify a constitutional amendment, Congress has to pass it by 2/3 before states pass it by 3/4. But the solution here doesn’t change the constitution; it only defines how the legislature is choosing to exercise authority already given by the Iowa Constitution. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If anything, there is a constitutional principle favoring the power of legislatures over courts, with respect to Fundamental Rights. The 14th Amendment is the part of the Constitution which courts have taken to give them jurisdiction over states who trample fundamental rights. But who did the 14th Amendment authorize to enforce its provisions? Not courts! Rather, Congress, according to Section 5 of the Amendment. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yet here are examples of not just state laws, but even state constitutional amendments, which were overturned by courts for violating the “equal protection” clause of the 14th Amendment: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Cummings v. Missouri'', 71 U.S. 277 (1867) a Missouri oath to hold office designed to keep out former confederate soldiers was ruled an unconstitutional Bill of Attainder. <br />
''Hollingswort''h v. Perry'', 570 U.S. 693 (2013) a California same sex marriage ban. <br />
''Romer v. Evans, 517 U.S. 620 (1996) a Colorado gay rights ban. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Awad v. Ziriax'', 10th Circuit, January 10, 2012 an Oklahoma ban of the use of Sharia Law in court. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Giles v. Harris'', 1903, and Giles v. Teasley, 1904, courts winked at disenfranchising Blacks, but explicitly accepted jurisdiction over state constitutions violating the 14th and 15th Amendments. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The authority to enforce the requirements of the 14th Amendment, given to Congress and not courts, gives Congress also the authority to define and apply fundamental rights, and for anyone seriously in doubt, to clarify who is a human being and therefore deserves to have his fundamental rights protected. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;These are philosophical as well as legal questions which merit national discussion, but while courts are sheltered from having to talk to anybody the conversation has been one sided. America needs to open this up into what Proverbs 15:22 calls a “multitude of counsellors”. It does not undermine respect for the judiciary to imagine judges are able to explain their reasoning. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''If Legislatures overturn court rulings, won’t they exercise the authority of the judicial branch?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: legislative action wouldn't affect litigants; only the part of the ruling that reaches wrongfully into legislating) No. On that future day when a legislature overturns judicial rulings, the legislature’s action would not apply to the parties to the case, so the “separation of powers” aspect of the ruling is untouched. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;There are several reasons a court may exempt a litigant from the effects of a law, without invalidating the law for everyone else. The simple difference between courts and legislatures is that legislatures pass laws which apply to everybody, while courts apply those laws in specific cases, only to the parties to the case, guided by the special facts and circumstances of the case. The power given by this bill to legislatures to overturn rulings applies only to the part of the ruling where the court stepped outside its constitutional authority in order to nullify a law passed for the benefit of millions of others. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The purpose of the public hearing is only for the legislature to investigate whether their law was constitutional after all, and if so, to take back their constitutional authority to pass laws by their subsequent vote. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Lawmakers take oaths to defend the Constitution too. Courts cannot rob lawmakers of their power to obey the Constitution without violating the constitution themselves. <br />
Perhaps that is the key principle declared implicitly by this bill: judges aren’t the only branch of government authorized to understand and defend the Constitution. The other branches are too. That balance needs to be restored. The conversation needed needs to be among equals.<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Shouldn’t judges be immune from popular pressure? We don’t want our rights subject to a vote!'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Neither legislatures nor courts should have the last word over each other. We have seen what happens when legislatures had the last word, in the South, during the time of slavery. And we have seen what happens when courts had the last word, in 1857 and 1973; regarding slavery and abortion. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Even the Iowa constitution gives the last word to voters. Is that dangerous? America’s Founders talked about popular whims that could remove important protections over the weekend if the public could vote on individual issues continually. They set up 6 year terms for U.S. Senators and 4 year terms for presidents explicitly to shield our Rule of Law from whims the public might hold for only a month. Nor does this process give voters direct control over the outcome of a disputed law, but only equips them to evaluate the wisdom of their elected representatives and their judges, which is the same as our current system except this leaves voters much better informed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The 14th Amendment expanded the power of courts to overturn laws which violate “fundamental rights”. It made slave-loving southern state legislatures accountable to courts. Unaddressed was what to do when it is courts which violate fundamental rights. This measure is an attempt to restore balance. It is interesting that the 14th Amendment actually leaves its own enforcement not to courts, but to Congress. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The “independence of the judiciary” from popular whims is well protected by lifetime tenure. This measure does not change that. It only defines a remedy for Iowans when judges rule lawlessly and unconstitutionally. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Didn’t Iowa decide recently not to impeach judges for their rulings?'''<br />
Summary: “Overreaching” can only reach so far before it turns into full fledged unconstitutional legislating. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Removal from office, for just one harmful ruling which may be out of a long career of beneficial rulings, is pretty drastic; not to mention ineffective since it leaves the ruling in place that triggered the impeachment! <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That is why remedies short of impeachment are necessary, as well as remedies able to focus on the problem without cutting off talent which is mostly beneficial.<br />
If an assembly line produces an occasional klunker amongst its generally great output, we keep the assembly line and discard the klunker; we don't keep the klunker and blow up the assembly line! <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Iowans seriously considered impeaching judges for their rulings not so long ago. Highlights are discussed at the Brennan Center: <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A 2011 review by the National Center for State Courts’ Gavel to Gavel website also found numerous bills introduced in state legislatures that year to impeach judges and justices because of disagreement over specific rulings. Several of those introductions were part of a failed effort in Iowa to remove four Iowa Supreme Court Justices for their decision in a high-profile case about marriage rights for same-sex couples. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The impeachment attempt garnered significant media attention, but also widespread condemnation – even from members of the sponsors’ own party. Iowa Governor-elect Terry Brandstad (R) [sic] said at the time that disagreement over a ruling did not constitute grounds for impeachment. “There’s a difference between malfeasance and over-reaching,” said Brandstad, “the Constitution says what the grounds for impeachment are. My reading is it’s not there.” Iowa House Speaker Kraig Paulsen (R), whose chamber would have voted on the impeachment, sent the resolutions to languish in an inactive committee and said, “I disagree with this remedy,…I do not expect it to be debated on the floor of the House, and if it is, I will vote no.”<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I respectfully disagree with Governor, later Ambassador Branstad. When the Iowa Supreme Court not only struck down laws limiting marriage to opposite sex couples, but specifically ordered county clerks to solemnize “marriages” between same sex couples, that reaches beyond “overreaching”. “Overreaching” implies a mild going-a-little-too-far out of one’s proper jurisdiction. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But if the plainest example of a “person charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to” the judicial branch of government exercising “any function appertaining to” the legislative branch can be dismissed as mere “overreaching”, then it is impossible for any other judicial legislating to violate the Iowa Constitution. We might as well just give judges the password to the Iowa Code database and let them write whatever laws they please. As Rep. Matt Windschitl said January 27, 2020 on the Jeff Angelo show, “Do we really want judges deciding laws? If so, why do we even have a legislature?”<br />
Article 3 Section 1 of the Iowa Constitution says “Departments of government. The powers of the government of Iowa shall be divided into three separate departments — the legislative, the executive, and the judicial: and no person charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to one of these departments shall exercise any function appertaining to either of the others....”<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''FAQ’s: Judicial Philosophy'''<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Isn’t it unconstitutional to impeach a judge for a ruling?'''<br />
Summary: It can’t be unconstitutional to correct the part of a ruling that unconstitutionally legislates. Although it has not been established definitively, whether a judge may be impeached over a ruling, most legal discussion avers that would be unethical, and there is no precedent of a successful impeachment over the content of a ruling. <br />
Most legal discussion is of the U.S. Constitution; the Iowa Constitution specifies that judges can’t legislate, which is only implied in the U.S. Constitution. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The United States Constitution provides little guidance as to what offenses constitute grounds for the impeachment of federal judges...However, the impeachment power has historically been limited to cases of serious ethical or criminal misconduct. - Brennan Center<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is generally supposed that legislative action to correct an unconstitutional ruling, or to discipline a judge who writes one, would be unconstitutional. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Constitution does not “provide for resignation or impeachment whenever a judge makes a decision with which elected officials disagree” said four judges when President Clinton and Senator Dole urged impeachment of a judge over his ruling on admissibility of evidence. “These attacks do a grave disservice to the principle of an independent judiciary and…mislead the public as to the role of judges in a constitutional democracy.” Brennan Center<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Let’s make a distinction glossed over by those four judges: between a ruling hated because it applies existing law and facts in a way most people think is wrong, and a ruling hated because it overturns laws by a rationale that most people think is unconstitutional. I agree with the four judges that the case was correctly kept off limits to lawmakers, but the judges generalized their criticism to the extent of dismissing concerns about truly unconstitutional rulings as being mere decisions “with which elected officials disagree”. <br />
It is that degree of generalization that is “a grave disservice” by elevating “the principle of an independent judiciary” beyond the reach of the Constitution, of common sense, and of accountability of any kind from any source. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;What I have not found in law review articles is any proposed remedy for when a ruling itself is unconstitutional. I have not found it even acknowledged that it is possible for a ruling to be unconstitutional. As if to say “how could judges rule unconstitutionally? Judges ARE the constitution.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But it is judges themselves, in vigorous dissents, who stir public concern about the constitutionally of certain rulings. Judges who write dissents are as qualified as those in the majority, and their reasoning is often equally persuasive. When the public has a basis this solid for concern about the constitutionality of rulings, it is surely in the public interest, and not contrary to any known legal or constitutional principle, to hold a public hearing where those concerns can be addressed and hopefully resolved, where judges, perhaps for the first time in America history, can be compelled to interact with experts other than each other.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In fact, any time a law is overturned for being unconstitutional, but the ruling is flawed and a correct ruling would actually not find the law unconstitutional, then actually the ruling itself is unconstitutional because the ruling amounts to raw legislation. It is unconstitutional for courts to pass laws. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Let me emphasize this point. Any ruling that overturns a law is either correct because the law is in fact unconstitutional, or is itself unconstitutional because its reasoning or factual basis is flawed. Lawmakers take oaths to defend the Constitution too, and should not be unconstitutionally deprived of the power to enforce it when they see a violation. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If we may agree that it is at least theoretically possible for a ruling overturning a law to be unconstitutional, shall we insist the Constitution requires the legislature to honor every unconstitutional ruling? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Suppose there were a law against painting your house red, someone was prosecuted for painting his house red, and the court refused to convict because it is surely unconstitutional to outlaw painting your house red. Even without a formal nullification of the law, the law would be defacto nullified because prosecutors would know the court won’t convict anybody for that crime. It may be reasoned that rulings overturning laws merely formalize this natural process. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Public hearings would bring healing to our national division over issues less clear than the right to paint your house red. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As is pointed out below, the power this bill gives the legislature to overturn a judicial validation of its laws would not usurp judicial powers. It would not affect individuals who are actual parties named in the case. It would only affect that part of the ruling which wrongfully reaches into lawmaking, changing the laws which affect millions of other people who are not named in the case. <br />
</ref><br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">Should any federal judge so interfere, this state appeals to its congressional delegation to examine similar grounds for disciplinary action, along with exercising its Article III, Section 2, paragraph 2 authority to make “exceptions” and “regulations” designed to end SCOTUS’ long line of landmark abomination cases. <br />
<ref>More about '''“similar grounds for disciplinary action”''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;For example, see “Bringing the Courts Back Under the Constitution” at www.osaka.law.miami.edu/~schnably/GringrichContractWith America.pdf (sic)<br />
</ref><br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">This state also appeals to its congressional delegation to exercise its life-saving and rights-protecting authority under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment whose plain words give Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of Rights,4 which subsumes the authority to define their scope and balance competing interests, while the “privileges and immunities” clause identifies as protectable rights those listed in the Constitution.<br />
<ref> More about '''“Section 5 of the 14th Amendment gives Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of the Right to Life and of Equal Protection of the Laws”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Section 5 of the 14th Amendment so plainly gives Congress, not courts, the power to correct state violations of fundamental rights, that it is an amazing story how SCOTUS has usurped that power for itself and completely denied it to Congress, and how Congress has let them.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Largely relying on the dissents and concurrences of Justice Clarence Thomas, this story is told in Statement #11 and its footnotes. See “What Happened to Unalienable Rights, and How to Get Them Back” and “ ‘Substantive Due Process’: how SCOTUS usurped the Constitution’s Authority to Define Rights, and Congress’ Authority to Enforce Rights, into its own authority to reclassify abominations as ‘rights’ ”</ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">Official world-wide definitions of “crimes against humanity” apply “to representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission.”<br />
<ref>More about '''“...definitions of ‘crimes against humanity’ apply ‘to representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission.’ ”''' <br />
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<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;“A crime against humanity occurs <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;when the government withdraws legal protection <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;from a class of human beings <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;resulting in severe deprivation of rights, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;up to and including death.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;- amicus in Dobbs of <u>Melinda Thybault/Moral Outcry</u><br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Melinda Thybault’s amicus brief was the 20th amicus docketed in Dobbs v. Jackson (2022). (www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184968/ 20210726175018044_41206%20pdf%20Parker%20III%20br.pdf)<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Her references, backing up that damning judgment:<br />
<blockquote>See “Crime Against Humanity” at www.law.cornell.edu/wex/ crime_against_humanity and see U.N. Office, Genocide Prevention, Crimes Against Humanity www.un.org/en/genocideprevention/crimes-against-humanity.shtml; Treaty of Rome (1957). See also Convention on the Non-Applicability of Statutory Limitations to War .</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Her characterization of international documents is not only fair, but it understates the culpability of elected representatives. Actual quotes from the documents lay responsibility at the feet, not just of impersonal “government”, but of government’s “representatives”. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Notice in the following definitions that those targeted for prosecution in international human rights tribunals include elected representatives and senators who “tolerate” crimes against humanity – who don’t actively execute their authority to criminalize these assaults on the Image of God. (Genesis 1:27) <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;“Genocide”, defined: ''“Genocide means...acts...with intent to destroy...in part, a national...group [in our case, Americans] [by] killing members of the group [in our case, babies; and by] Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group....”'' <br />
Here is the complete United Nations statement: <br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Article II: In the present Convention, '''genocide means''' any of the following '''acts committed with intent to destroy''', in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such:<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(a) '''Killing members of the group;'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(b) Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group;<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(c) Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part;<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(d) '''Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group;'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(e) Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;- Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide / Approved and proposed for signature and ratification or accession by General Assembly resolution 260 A (III) of 9 December 1948 / Entry into force: 12 January 1951, in accordance with article XII / www.un.org/en/genocideprevention/ documents/atrocity-crimes/Doc.1_Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.pdf</blockquote><br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The 1948 definition above is cited in the following 1968 United Nations General Assembly resolution (which took effect two years later) which nullifies any “statute of limitations” on “crimes against humanity”:<br />
<blockquote><br />
Article I: No statutory limitation shall apply to the following crimes, irrespective of the date of their commission:...(b) Crimes against humanity whether committed in time of war or in time of peace as they are defined in the Charter of the International Military Tribunal, Nürnberg, of 8 August 1945 and confirmed by resolutions 3 (I) of 13 February 1946 and 95 (I) of 11 December 1946 of the General Assembly of the United Nations,...the crime of genocide as defined in the 1948 Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, even if such acts do not constitute a violation of the domestic law of the country in which they were committed.</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The following Article II applies the call for prosecution at any time, not limited by a Statute of Limitations, to elected representatives. The word “elected” is not there, but the context certainly includes them, especially since one cannot “represent” another, as the word is normally defined, without their voluntary authorization. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;By not limiting the definition of “representatives” to those who are elected, the definition does not exclude judges.<br />
<blockquote>Article II: '''If any of the crimes mentioned in article I is committed, the provisions of this Convention shall apply to''' representatives of the State authority and private individuals who, as principals or accomplices, participate in or who directly incite others to the commission of any of those crimes, or who conspire to commit them, irrespective of the degree of completion, and to '''representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission.''' (Article II, Convention on the Non-Applicability of Statutory Limitations to War, ADOPTED 26 November 1968 BY General Assembly resolution 2391 (XXIII))</blockquote><br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If [genocide] is committed, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;the provisions of this Convention shall apply <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;to representatives of the State authority <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;who tolerate [its] commission. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Including judges.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And elected representatives <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; who are lax in restraining them.<br />
<br />
<u>Thybault</u> writes, “...the Court has not yet fully reversed Roe, Doe, and Casey.” She submitted this observation to the Court which finally reversed all three, technically, although the slaughter continues in most states so her observation is still timely. <br />
“No American citizen should have to live under, nor as history tragically demonstrates, should they stand by silently, while their government sanctions and even promotes crimes against humanity.” <br />
Another low point in the Supreme Court’s grasp of 14th Amendment equal rights, she mentions, was Plessy v. Ferguson, 163 U.S. 537 (1896) which, like Roe and Dred Scott, “denied legal protection to a class of human beings” and “ignored the plain language of the Fourteenth Amendment”. “Plessy accepted the gloss that ‘separate but equal’ was ‘equal’.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;She repeats, “When the government withdraws legal protection from a class of human beings, it is the classic definition of a crime against humanity.” <br />
</ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">Any court review of this law must be expedited, because lives are lost with each day that courts delay.<br />
<br />
<br />
<small>The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: 396 State Legislators from 41 States <> Melinda Thybault/Moral Outcry</small><br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Courtrecognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human<br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] Courts Accept the Fact-Finding Authority of Legislatures, Juries, Experts for the same good reasons their findings persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures should regulate abortion, as Dobbs held, just as legislatures regulate the prosecution of all other murders.<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] The full humanity of a tiny physical body is hard for many to grasp. But what distinguishes us from animals isn’t physical, and has no known pre-conscious stage.<br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress has ''Already'' Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment already authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion.<br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] Roe, Dobbs, and the 14th Amendment agree: All Humans are “Persons”.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] When pregnancies develop into medical emergencies requiring separation of mother and child to save the mother, the child has an equal fundamental right to life and medical care. <br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any class of humans by any other is prohibited by the Constitution, by the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives legislatures no authority to legalize violations of Constitutional Rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
<br />
----<br />
'''FOOTNOTES'''<br />
----<br />
<br />
<references /></div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Statement_12_%2B_Footnotes&diff=50355Statement 12 + Footnotes2023-12-18T00:31:56Z<p>DaveLeach: </p>
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<br />
Statement of Facts #12 of 12 from: <br />
<br />
=[[Reversing_Landmark_Abomination_Cases]]=<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters<br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion</span><br />
<br />
by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal<br />
''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal<br />
<span style="color:brown"><br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen <br />
<br />
by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 18:11, 15 October 2023 (UTC)<br />
<br />
<span style="color:grey"><small>''Try to imagine how a judge, reviewing a prolife law with these Findings of Facts, would be able to dodge this evidence - in fact, see if you can find ANYONE who can ''refute'' these facts - as opposed to not ''caring'' about facts - that is, not caring about reality:''</small></span><br />
<br />
====<span style="color:blue">Statement of Fact #12 of 12:====<br />
<span style="color:blue">Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">Any state judge interfering with this state’s compliance with the 14th Amendment and its ancient authority to protect its people <br />
<ref>More about '''“the ancient authority of state legislatures...to protect the lives of all its people – an authority which no court can legitimately remove.”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Courts that overturn the prolife laws of “red states” interfere with the ancient duty and power of every government, in every generation, to protect life, points out the amicus brief filed in Dobbs v. Jackson by <u>396 State Legislators from 41 States</u>.(www.supremecourt.gov/Docket PDF/19/19-1392/185121/ 20210728125120809_Dobbs%20Amici%20brief_State%20Legislators_07272021.pdf)<br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;State legislators have the constitutional duty, and therefore the power, to protect the fundamental, civil rights of persons. The fundamental law in which those fundamental rights are found is the common law, which consists of both natural duties and those ancient, customary rights and immunities that are foundational to ordered liberty. Thus, a state legislature must declare and secure to all persons within the protection of its laws the rights that those persons have by natural and customary law. Cf. ''Washington v. Glucksberg'', 521 U.S. 702, 721-22 (1997) (upholding state legislation that prohibited assisted suicide and reasoning that the Fourteenth Amendment’s “Due Process Clause specially protects those fundamental rights and liberties which are, objectively, ‘deeply rooted in this Nation’s history and tradition’.” (quoting ''Moore v. E. Cleveland'', 431 U. S. 494, 503 (1977)). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England (1765): “Hence,” he said, “it follows, that the first and primary end of human laws is to '''maintain and regulate these absolute rights of individuals'''.” Id. Blackstone taught that the legislative power is to declare existing common-law rights and duties and to remedy any defects in the legal security for those rights. Id. at *42-43, 52-58, 86-87 <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Founders echoed this view in the Declaration of Independence, declaring that governments are instituted among men in order to secure the inalienable rights with which human beings are endowed by nature and nature’s God. They also accused the crown and Parliament of infringing the rights of “our constitution,” which in 1776 could only have been a reference to the common-law constitution of British North America. This view predicated the Constitution of the United States, which expressly secures natural rights, such as life and religious liberty, and common-law rights, such as jury trials and freedom from the quartering of soldiers in one’s home, and expressly disclaims any intent to disparage the other rights of the fundamental law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Indeed, the point of having legislatures, executives, and courts is to secure the rights that Americans already have.''' Neither state legislatures nor the Constitution of the United States create those rights. See District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570, 592 (2008) (stating that “it has always been widely understood that the '''Second Amendment, like the First and Fourth Amendments, codified a preexisting right,” that it “is not a right granted by the Constitution,” and is not “in any manner dependent upon that instrument for its existence.”'''). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Some, but not all, of the rights of natural persons are enumerated [listed] in the Constitution''' of the United States and its amendments. U.S. Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 8.; art. IV, §2; amends. I-VIII. Others are enumerated in state constitutions. See e.g., Soc’y for the Propagation of the Gospel v. Wheeler, 22 F. Cas. 756, 766 (No. 13,156) (C.C.D.N.H. 1814). Still others are declared in American constitutions but not enumerated. U.S. Const. amend. IX (“The enumeration of certain rights herein shall not be construed to deny or disparage other rights retained by the people.”) (emphasis added). '''State legislatures have a duty to declare and secure all fundamental rights, both enumerated and unenumerated.''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Fundamental rights are those that persons enjoy by fundamental law—natural law and common law— with or without any written constitution. Because the common law includes natural rights, to understand the fundamental rights declared and secured by the Constitution, it is sufficient to look to the common law, especially as explained by William Blackstone. Established common-law doctrines constitute the best evidence of the existence and meaning of both enumerated and unenumerated, fundamental rights. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The interpretation of the Constitution of the United States is necessarily influenced by the fact that its provisions are framed in the language of the English common law, and are to be read in the light of its history.” ''Smith v. Alabama'', 124 U.S. 465, 478 (1888). The terms and concepts of the common law provided the “the nomenclature of which the framers of the Constitution were familiar.” ''Minor v. Happersett'', 88 U.S. (21 Wall) 162, 167 (1875). Accord James R. Stoner, Jr., Common-Law Liberty: Rethinking American Constitutionalism 9-29 (2003). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;American constitutional rights are not philosophical abstractions. They are described in detail in common law treatises, such as those by Coke and Hale, and especially Blackstone’s Commentaries. The framers crafted American constitutions—state and federal—in common law terms. And Blackstone was their teacher and lexicographer....<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As this Court has rightly acknowledged, Blackstone’s “works constituted the preeminent authority on English law for the founding generation.” ''Alden v. Maine'', 527 U.S. 706, 715 (1999). Blackstone retained his influence through the adoption of the Civil War Amendments. James M. Ogden, Lincoln’s Early Impressions of the Law in Indiana, 7 Notre Dame L. Rev. 325, 328 (1932). And '''this Court continues to turn to Blackstone today.''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[2 A few examples from recent years include ''Gamble v. United States'', __ U.S. __, 139 S. Ct. 1960 (2019) (the Court’s opinion, the concurrence, and one dissent citing Blackstone multiple times to determine the meaning of the phrase “the same offense” in the Fifth Amendment’s double jeopardy clause); ''Department of Homeland Security v. Thuraissigiam'', __ U.S. __, 140 S. Ct. 1959, 1969 (2020) (calling Blackstone’s Commentaries a “satisfactory exposition of the common law of England”); Ramos v. Louisiana, __ U.S. __, 140 S. Ct. 1390, 1395 (2020) (citing Blackstone in explanation of the holding that '''the requirement of juror unanimity is “a vital right protected by the common law”''' and therefore the Constitution’s jury trial guarantee); ''Torres v. Madrid'', __ U.S. __, 141 S. Ct. 989, 996, 997, 998, 1000 (2021) (citing Blackstone multiple times to determine meaning of Fourth Amendment “seizure”). ]...<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But as the Ninth Amendment makes clear, the enumeration of certain common-law rights does not deny or disparage all the other rights that the American people enjoy by virtue of natural law and their ancient customs. The Ninth Amendment expressly reserves to the people those civil and fundamental rights that they enjoyed prior to ratification, which are their natural rights, other common-law rights and liberties, and some privileges enumerated in state constitutions. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Because many states refused to remedy infringements of fundamental rights [for blacks] prior to the Civil War, the Fourteenth Amendment was necessary to ensure to all persons due process of law and the equal protection of the laws, and to empower Congress to remedy infringements of those rights. It bears emphasis that the '''Fourteenth Amendment was necessary to recall state legislatures to their original task. Far from repealing the people’s retention of fundamenta'''l rights declared by the Ninth Amendment, the Fourteenth Amendment strengthened it. And far from abrogating the duty of state legislatures to declare and secure unenumerated rights, the Fourteenth Amendment reinforced that duty. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That is, the rights retained by the people but not protected by their state, such as the right of Blacks to liberty, was strengthened – at the expense of the freedom of the legislature to torpedo those rights. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And as Statement #11 and its footnotes explain, the 14th Amendment did not supplant the duty of legislatures to protect rights with that duty in courts. The only authority over state violations of rights given courts by the 14th was to enforce federal laws enacted by Congress. The authority of courts we see today, to make up “rights” not found in the Constitution and impose them on states without waiting for Congress to pass a law, was not given by the 14th, but was seized by courts in violation of the Constitution. </ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">– the central reason governments exist, is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders,<br />
<ref>More about '''“[Any judge enabling mass baby murder] is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The consensus of official fact finders is that all unborn babies are people from the beginning. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The logical extension of that consensus is that abortion is murder; that murder of 60+ million people is genocide; and that any judge blocking state protection of its people from genocide is an accessory to genocide. </ref><br />
and is guilty of exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide through an unconstitutional ruling, <br />
<ref>More about '''“...an unconstitutional ruling....”''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Oops, I just used a forbidden phrase: “unconstitutional ruling”. I just categorized a number of court rulings as “unconstitutional”. Is that allowed in America? Will that get be inside a jail? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Does anyone dare call any court ruling “unconstitutional”? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Should the public demand that court rulings be “constitutional”? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But how is an “unconstitutional ruling” even possible if the constitutional role of courts is to “say what the constitution is”? If what courts say the Constitution says is by definition the Constitution, then by definition it is impossible for what courts rule to be “unconstitutional”, right? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I googled “unconstitutional ruling” and got hits where Elon Musk appealed an “unconstitutional ruling” but it was the ruling of a federal agency, the SEC, not of any court. (https://thepoliticsbrief.com/elon-musk-appeals-unconstitutional-ruling-to-the-supreme-court/)<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I thought I found what I was searching for when I read “US court throws wrench in detention debate with unconstitutional ruling”. But it was about a court saying a law was unconstitutional. https://thehill.com/policy/defense/114685-us-court-throws-wrench-in-detention-debate-with-unconstitutional-ruling/<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The search turned up hits where “unconstitutional ruling” meant a ruling that says a law is unconstitutional, not that a court ruling is; that is, a ruling was an “ ‘unconstitutional’ ruling”. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;An example: “Meaning of an unconstitutional ruling...the consciousness, values, and ethics of the people living in society change with the times, and the general public changes the laws accordingly in order to support society. One of the institutions that give such a meaning to the law is the court, which can be shown in the form of an unconstitutionality ruling.” https://english-meiji.net/articles/2967/ <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The search turned up an Amicus Brief where lawyers, writing to the Supreme Court, used the dreaded phrase: “Stare Decisis Does Not Control Where a Precedent is Incorrectly Decided and Unconstitutional”. That was one of the headings of the brief. But the “Question Presented”, the first thing the justices saw, was gentler: “Whether this Court should overrule...the incorrect holding...in Hill v. Colorado....” (https://www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/23/23-74/277086/20230824112814886_23-74%20Amicus%20Brief%20WFFC.pdf )<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;“Statement #11” in this book marshaled concurrences of Justice Clarence Thomas and other authorities to show that SCOTUS has no authority from the Constitution to make up “rights” not specified in the Constitution, not to mention “rights” that are actually hostile to “enumerated” (listed in the Constitution) Rights. Thomas gave gut-wrenching detail of KKK mobs slaughtering black Republicans and burning down the courthouse they were in and that they were trying to defend, acquitted by the Supreme Court, an acquittal achieved through an utter mangling of the Constitution. Thomas spoke of other rulings after that which were similarly lacking in any authority from the Constitution. <br />
Yet Thomas never called any ruling “unconstitutional”. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;One of the footnotes of Statement #11 revisited the Marbury v. Madison (1803) ruling with the help of a C-span movie about it – the case where SCOTUS came up with the idea that “the role of courts is to say what the law is”. I showed how even back then, that “holding” was based on fraud: the case said a phrase from an earlier Judiciary Act violated the Constitution. But it didn’t. A litigant asked the court to apply that phrase where the Constitution doesn’t permit it, but the law itself said it should be applied only as law permits, so it was not the law itself, but only the requested application, that was “unconstitutional”. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;My search turned up an article that articulates the irrational, absurd, outrage of the very idea of “judicial supremacy”, yet even it falls short of calling any ruling “unconstitutional”. It also falls short of recommending very much of a solution. That is, if courts are not the best final referees of the meaning of the Constitution, who is better? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Statement #11 is my answer to “who is better”. Not just “my” answer, but an answer founded on the concurrences of Justice Thomas, on several Amicus Briefs filed in Dobbs, and on other authorities. The final section of this book completes the picture.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But for the rest of this footnote, let’s enjoy selections from “The Problem of Judicial Supremacy” by Matthew J. Franck, published Spring 2016 in National Affairs, and reprinted in its Fall 2023 issue, Number 57. See (www.nationalaffairs.com/publications/detail/the-problem-of-judicial-supremacy)<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...judges, at the behest of same-sex marriage advocates, have violated one legal and constitutional norm after another.... The chief justice (in Obergefell v. Hodges, a case in which the Court held that the 14th Amendment requires states to grant marriage licenses to same-sex couples,) sets a strong tone from the very start, writing that the majority has engaged in “an act of will, not of legal judgment....Nowhere is the majority's extravagant conception of judicial supremacy more evident than in its description — and dismissal — of the public debate regarding same-sex marriage.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;….What does Chief Justice Roberts ...mean by “judicial supremacy”?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(One possibility:)...a supreme authority of the federal judiciary to decide any important political or social question confronting the country — never mind whether the Constitution authentically addresses it or not. We’ll call this the judicial supremacy of imperial power for short. The justification for this understanding of the Court’s supremacy is that the Court alone is insulated from politics and self-interest, so it is peculiarly suited to use the Constitution's “majestic generalities” to generate substantive legal and policy responses to the nation’s contemporary needs.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;….(Another possibility:) the decisive right to be obeyed, which we can call the judicial supremacy of authoritative depth. This means, as Charles Evans Hughes remarked before he became chief justice, that “we are under a Constitution, but the Constitution is what the judges say it is.” Hence all other citizens, but particularly those who serve in public office, are obliged to act in accordance with what the Supreme Court justices — or at least five of them — tell them the Constitution means. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The justices of the Court, on the other hand, need not even follow the Court’s precedents. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Court is always right, except when five of the current justices decide it has been wrong. The Supreme Court becomes a kind of ongoing constitutional convention, authorized to alter and amend the “real” Constitution, which de facto exists only in their opinions. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Today, this understanding of judicial supremacy is virtually dogmatic in America's law schools, and it is widely embraced in the media and by the public. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But it, too, is of relatively recent origin in the Court’s own opinions, first being expressed in a 1958 case called Cooper v. Aaron, in which the justices demanded the governor of Arkansas abide by their ruling in Brown v. Board of Education. Their logic was this: If the Constitution is the supreme law of the land, as Article VI maintains, and if ever since Marbury v. Madison the country has understood that “the federal judiciary is supreme in the exposition of the law of the Constitution,” then the decisions of the Court are themselves “the supreme law of the land,” and must be followed by oath-bound public officials as equivalent to the Constitution itself.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...it is simply not true that “the country” has believed ever since 1803 that whatever the Court says about the Constitution simply is the Constitution.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...It seems a safe bet that all the justices of the current Supreme Court believe what their predecessors said in Cooper v. Aaron about their own rulings being the supreme law of the land, effectively the same as the Constitution itself as far as the obligations of all other public officials are concerned. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;….The chief justice probably intended only to denounce the first meaning above, the judicial supremacy of imperial power, which insists that the Court can be wise enough to decide all of society’s great political questions so long as they can be connected in some creative way to the Constitution. He did, after all, once famously describe the Supreme Court as an umpire calling balls and strikes — and he really meant it. No mere umpire could embrace such a capacious vision of judicial power.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...Justice Kennedy takes a commonplace truism — that no generation has a monopoly on wisdom about the meaning of freedom — and states its blandly true corollary: that “future generations” can come to “new insight” about such things. The argument then becomes a shell game for the reader, who belatedly realizes that Kennedy means future generations of judges are free to change the meaning of the Constitution, never mind our difficult but honest and democratic amendment process.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...a made-up Constitution, “evolving” from year to year according to the “new insight” of any five out of a set of nine unelected judges with life tenure? That Constitution must be considered binding on everyone else? This cannot be.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...if everything the justices say about anything in the Constitution is simply to be obeyed as “the law of the land” by all other political actors — then the judicial supremacy [to the level of] imperial power follows quickly thereafter. Not logically, perhaps, but it follows politically...<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Even the dissenting justices in Obergefell, then, seem unaware of how much they too are part of the problem. The late Justice Scalia, for instance, was right to say that the majority opinion represents “the furthest extension one can even imagine” of a “claimed power” on the Court’s part to “create ‘liberties’ that the Constitution and its Amendments neglect to mention.” This, he rightly said, “robs the People” of the “freedom to govern themselves” that was the whole point of fighting the American Revolution. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;...we should read [the dissents] as inviting the American people to resist the decision. But if these justices — like their fellows in the majority, and typical of their kind — accept the dogma of judicial supremacy, what possible form can such resistance take?<br />
Justice Scalia, in a strident note at the end of his dissent, cites the famous Federalist No. 78 to the effect that the judiciary relies on the executive “even for the efficacy of its judgments.” He concluded: “With each decision of ours that takes from the People a question properly left to them — with each decision that is unabashedly based not on law, but on the ‘reasoned judgment’ of a bare majority of this Court — we move one step closer to being reminded of our impotence.” Here was a most daring hint from the characteristically acerbic Scalia, that the other branches have it in their power to frustrate the ambition of the judges to rule.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;From inside the bubble created by the dogma of judicial supremacy, only two conventional responses to an unconstitutional ruling seem possible. One is to amend the Constitution to reverse a wrong and harmful ruling of the Court. This has been accomplished on only a few occasions in our history, and it is a Herculean undertaking. The lack of progress on a human-life amendment since Roe is a sobering reminder of the difficulty. Moreover, the route of amending the Constitution is not necessarily a challenge to judicial supremacy specifically, and might even be a concession to it. The other conventional response is to appoint better justices in the future, justices who will get the Constitution right, not abuse their authority, and perhaps even overturn abuses such as Obergefell.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But how to present them with the opportunity? The pro-life movement has been maneuvering for five votes to overturn Roe for four decades now, and it has not been difficult to present the justices with opportunities to do the right thing. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[In order to create a case that would pressure judges to squarely address the evidence against Roe] a state would presumably have to pass a law of exactly the kind the Court just declared unconstitutional. While the lower courts stand ready to strike down such attempts, and while legislators stand in thrall to the dogma of judicial supremacy, this is highly improbable.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[Correcting this mess] will take some creative re-imagining of the way our institutions of government interact with one another. [Such as you can read in Statement #11 and in the final section of this book, Free Expression of Religion Without Establishment.]<br />
...judicial supremacy today preys chiefly on the right of the people to govern themselves at the state level — and thus can be seen as an assault on the federalism of our constitutional arrangement — the growth of judicial power can be meaningfully checked only by the Court's institutional counterparts, since they alone possess the tools of checks and balances. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Here I gratefully disagree. Gratefully: I am grateful that there is much that state legislatures can do: in fact the focus of this book is on actions urged for state lawmakers. Truth is powerful, no matter who proclaims it. Especially truth about fraud so egregious that the whole nation smells the rot, even if few can figure out what is causing it and how to clean it. But here is more of the article:<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;At first blush, some of those explicit constitutional tools — like impeachment, as Federalist No. 81 suggests — seem extreme, so we ought to treat them as something of a nuclear option.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Luckily, more modest methods exist. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Exactly! I propose some of them in a coming footnote, The Judicial Accountability Act. But this article doesn’t mention anything that specific, but rather gives historical examples of presidents ignoring courts:<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;At various times in our history, judicial supremacy was challenged by presidents and Congress. As Princeton political scientist Keith Whittington points out in his 2007 book The Political Foundations of Judicial Supremacy, strong presidents like Jefferson, Jackson, Lincoln, Franklin Roosevelt, and even Reagan did so. Jefferson, for one, essentially nullified the Sedition Act of 1798 upon assuming office, and Lincoln, in express defiance of the Dred Scott decision, issued patents and passports to black Americans. The president, then, should invoke his prerogative to act in accordance with his own reading of the Constitution.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Similarly, Congress passed a law in 1862 that banned slavery in U.S. territories, which was in express defiance of the Dred Scott decision. It’s not extreme, therefore, to suggest that Congress should pass laws directly contradicting the Court when it believes the Court has overstepped its bounds.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A kind of public education is also required...there was, for much of our history, a robust debate about the place of the Court in our constitutional structure.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Lincoln again is our true model here. As a candidate for office and emerging leader of the new Republican Party in the late 1850s, Lincoln resolutely opposed any acceptance of the Dred Scott decision as the law of the land. The decision had to be accepted as resolving the dispute for the parties in the case, but it could not be taken as instruction for other public officials. He spoke about the issue with trenchant clarity and frequency — from the ruling's immediate aftermath until he was president. As he said in his first inaugural address:<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;“[T]he candid citizen must confess that if the policy of the government, upon vital questions, affecting the whole people, is to be irrevocably fixed by decisions of the Supreme Court, the instant they are made, in ordinary litigation between parties, in personal actions, the people will have ceased, to be their own rulers, having, to that extent, practically resigned their government, into the hands of that eminent tribunal.”<br />
Lincoln identified the stakes. Are we our own rulers? Or have we resigned our government into the hands of a tribunal of nine lawyers, any five of whom have authority to govern us? Those questions must be asked repeatedly over the coming years — not only in dissents, but also in the media, in the academy, and among citizens. It's the duty of leaders like the president, congressional representatives, and public figures to encourage us to ask such questions....<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[An example of a rather technical needed reform of the Supreme Court which Congress has power to require:] mandatory review by the Supreme Court, in cases where a state law was declared contrary to the Constitution by a federal appeals court. [Instead of just taking a few cases that interest them. Before 1925 SCOTUS heard about 600 cases a year that they were required to hear. Then that requirement was dropped, and now they might hear 75.] The justices should be required to place such cases on the docket, to receive briefs from the parties and from friends of the court, to hear oral arguments, and to publish the reasons for their decisions. Moreover, while such cases are pending, any adverse judgments of lower federal courts holding a state law unconstitutional could be automatically stayed in any class of cases Congress chooses to define. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Author Matthew J. Franck is Director of the William E. and Carol G. Simon Center on Religion and the Constitution at the Witherspoon Institute and visiting lecturer in politics at Princeton University….<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Conclusion. There is apparently some law against calling any court ruling “unconstitutional”. But that is an unconstitutional law.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is also a stupid law. “Stupid” is what we say of someone, or of some human invention, whose intelligence has dipped far below its capacity. A drunk, for example, falls into a “stupor”, rendering his normal level of intelligence temporarily unavailable. There is also a pejorative aspect of the word; it is wrong to shove intelligence aside. To the extent we do – and we all do from time to time – we ought to be ashamed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is literally stupid, and American culture needs to say so, to imagine judges have no capacity to rule against the Constitution, without any constitutional authority, usurping power prohibited by the constitution. Or to imagine that no judge has ever ruled unconstitutionally, or ever will, or ever wants to. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is literally stupid to imagine that “power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely, except when given to the Supreme Court.” <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That nonsense about “the Court alone is insulated from politics and self-interest, so it is peculiarly suited to use the Constitution’s ‘majestic generalities’ to generate substantive legal and policy responses to the nation’s contemporary needs” is a grant of close enough to absolute power to drain American culture of its moral vigor, and it has been faithfully applied over the generations to that evil purpose. No greater threat to the security of our nation exists. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;We need to say so. It is the truth. We need to state the truth. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;We who are old enough to understand this evil don’t need to state this truth for our own sakes. We have lived long enough. If America utterly collapses in a few years, from an EMP attack, hyper inflation, a flood of terrorism, or invasion, we are near the end of our lives anyway. <br />
It’s for our children and grandchildren, too often poisoned against us by the SCOTUS-driven immorality resulting from our ignorance, our cowardice, our votes, and our blind obedience to the Pied Piper of First Street NE. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;To the extent we continue genuflecting to Hell, they have no chance. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Speak for the sake of judges too. Many are prisoners of their own power, not at all desiring to drag down America. They think they have no choice. The Constitution makes them do it. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As Jesus came in the flesh to our ancestors 2000+ years ago, His Word came to America 200+ years ago and shaped its Freedoms and Laws. As our distant ancestors crucified the source of Love, our recent ancestors, joined by ourselves, have His Word out in the dumpster, jumping up and down on it to pack it all in so we can shut the lid. What Peter told them yesterday, fits today, with only slight adaption:<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Acts 3:13 The God of Abraham, and of Isaac, and of Jacob, the God of our fathers, hath glorified his Son Jesus; whom ye delivered up, and denied him in the presence of Pilate, when he was determined to let him go. 14 But ye denied the Holy One and the Just, and desired a murderer to be granted unto you; 15 And killed the Prince of life, whom God hath raised from the dead; whereof we are witnesses. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Our generation didn’t physically kill Jesus. But way before the Supreme Court took the 10 Commandments, the Bible, and prayer out of schools, our culture censored the Word of God with a “saying” that dominated our culture: “There are two things you should never talk about: religion, and politics.”<br />
<br />
Billy Graham addressed this assault on God when he was asked, “My parents always said there were two things you shouldn’t talk about—politics and religion. Well, they never did, but now I’m an adult, and I don’t have any idea what to believe. Where can I turn?” www.billygraham .org/answer/my-parents-always-said-there-were-two-things-you-shouldnt-talk-about-politics-and-religion/<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Billy’s answer began, “I’m sorry your parents never helped you discover who God is or why He is important. Perhaps their parents did the same—but whatever the reason, I hope you won’t do this with your own children. The Bible says, ‘Teach them to your children and to their children after them’ (Deuteronomy 4:9).”<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;From there, Billy G. proceeded to an answer about “God loves you” and “ask Him to guide you to a church” which I’m sure most Christians will think is grand, but I wish there were more in American Christendom beyond a personal sedation to cross-bearing, God-proclaiming war against Hell out in public where the Devil devours his victims. I wish “church” were not so much a place of listening to talk, as is condemned in Titus 3:8, as a place of action, as is urged in Titus 3:9. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Just as the clamor to physically kill Jesus put more pressure on Judge Pilate than he had the courage to resist, the pressure of secularism in our time pushed SCOTUS away from God. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 And his name through faith in his name hath made this man strong, whom ye see and know: yea, the faith which is by him hath given him this perfect soundness in the presence of you all. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Then, the evidence before the crowds was that the power of Jesus whose murder they enabled could still heal a crippled man. Today the powerful evidence before 300+ million Americans, and indeed the whole world, is that the principles of the Word of God can still heal an entire nation, replacing poverty with prosperity, crime with protection, slavery with opportunity, class warfare with “equal protection of the laws”, ignorance with education, medicine shows with hospitals, and foreign invasions with the most powerful military in the whole world.<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But we see also that pushing God away in preference for sex, drugs, and general ignorance invites back poverty, crime, class warfare, medical mythology, and terrorist attacks. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 And now, brethren, I wot [perceive] that through ignorance ye did it, as did also your rulers. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Paul says the Pharisees acted out of ignorance. This seems generous in light of Matthew 23 and other places where Jesus vigorously exposes their evil motives. Surely much of their ignorance was as willful as ignorance today. Yet surely also their willfulness succeeded in blinding them to the full evil of what they were doing, as is clearly the case today. They surely didn’t grasp that they were killing God Himself, just as courts today surely don’t grasp how fully their war against God, their perversion of the 14th Amendment “privileges and immunities” and “due process” clauses, and their arrogant view of their own “supremacy”, are turning the Constitution which authorizes their own existence into Freedom’s epitaph. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 But those things, which God before had shewed by the mouth of all his prophets, that Christ should suffer, he hath so fulfilled. 19 Repent ye therefore, and be converted, that your sins may be blotted out, when the times of refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord; 20 And he shall send Jesus Christ, which before was preached unto you: 21 Whom the heaven must receive until the times of restitution of all things, which God hath spoken by the mouth of all his holy prophets since the world began. 22 For Moses truly said unto the fathers, A prophet shall the Lord your God raise up unto you of your brethren, like unto me; him shall ye hear in all things whatsoever he shall say unto you. 23 And it shall come to pass, that every soul, which will not hear that prophet, shall be destroyed from among the people. </ref><br />
<br />
<br />
which exceeds the judicial powers given by the state Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment.<br />
<ref>More about '''“exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide...exceeds the judicial powers given by the state Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Legislatures have considerable untapped potential for restraining their activist courts when they become confused about which branch of government they are. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Perhaps the major reason few people even think about solutions is fear of any change to the balance of powers between the legislature and the courts. “Better the devil you know than the devil you don’t.” We don’t want to just switch tyrants. A change to a real solution requires wisdom, which requires study, and who wants to study? <br />
<center>Another obstacle to restraining courts to their constitutional function is that most people, even Christians, limit their goals to what they consider “realistic”, and especially “politically realistic”, which usually means what people think they can do without God. Trust that what Jesus promised about “impossible” goals is truly “realistic”, enables us to think about not just what would be a little bit better, but about what would be perfect. and then to think about doing whatever we can think of to move in that direction, fully aware how feeble our own steps are, trusting God to open up new opportunities, in His time, as we walk with Him. </center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;My own feeble steps were drafted into a bill in Iowa in 2020. The bill is posted at http://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/wiki/ <br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_stop_judges_from_legislating <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Senate Judiciary Committee Chair Brad Zaun liked the idea and got it numbered and introduced, but it came to him too late that year to get it through the “funnel”, and he was disappointed that there was no organized group helping make other lawmakers aware of it. <br />
<center>'''Judicial Accountability Act: How Legislatures can stop judges from legislating'''</center><br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Summary: what the bill accomplishes'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1. '''No district court injunctions. A single district judge can't overturn a law.''' Any legislature is well within its constitutional authority to prohibit any ''district'' court (lower court) from invalidating a law – only the ''Supreme'' Court should be allowed to do it, and only within 90 days. Letting a single lower court judge overturn the work of 150 lawmakers which include several attorneys and constitutional scholars is insane. Any challenge to a law should go directly to the most experienced judges in the state.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2. '''Supermajority required. It takes 5 of the 7 justices of the Supreme Court to overturn a law.''' A simple majority of justices overturning by one vote a law produced by tens of thousands of people over several years is a scandal. It has nothing to do with wisdom, law, or the Constitution. When judges can’t even agree with each other, unanimously, whether to destroy the work of the majority of voters and their representatives, they prove they are not so much wiser than everybody else in their state to be trusted with such unbridled power. At the very least any injunction should have their unanimous support before they should have any power to shut down the will of their whole state. A supermajority that is short of unanimous may be OK if it is not the final word but is followed by further opportunities for the legislature to restore their law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3. '''Expedited. The Court has to rule in 3 months if the court blocks a new law from taking effect with a Temporary Restraining Order.''' If the court invalidates an existing law, the invalidation doesn't take effect for one year. Courts bottling up laws with injunctions for years while they make up their minds should make them ashamed. They don’t need years. No controversial law is passed without months if not years of scrutiny by attorneys for and against. Their briefs are already ready. They already know what the other side will say. They don’t need years to think of what to say or how to respond. Maybe a day. Maybe two.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Nor do judges need months to read the briefs for several weeks to bring themselves up to speed on the issue. The law has been in the news for years. There is no honor in willful ignorance of the issues until the first brief is filed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Laws are passed to correct serious wrongs. Years of work costing millions of dollars goes into fixing problems. There is no good reason to delay justice for the citizens of a state for years to wait while judges try to agree among themselves whether to allow justice as understood by the majority of voters and lawmakers. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''4. Discussion. The legislature may compel designated justices to attend a public hearing to debate the constitutionality of the law within one year of such a ruling, by passing a resolution.''' Provided a supermajority of the Supreme Court has agreed on an injunction in less than a month, the legislature should then be able, within the next year, to compel the attendance of judges under their jurisdiction to discuss and debate, with specified legislators in a public hearing, the constitutional justification for [or necessity of] that judicial exercise of the legislative function. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''5. The legislature may overturn the invalidation by a 60% vote, by a resolution, leaving the last word, the final verdict, with incredibly well informed voters''' (through ordinary elections of lawmakers and retention of justices). The resolution overturning the invalidation would give reasons responsive to the reasoning of the judicial ruling. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''The Bill: Iowa SSB3181 2020 AD''''''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A BILL FOR <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 An Act regarding legislative oversight of supreme court <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 decisions, and including applicability provisions. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF IOWA: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Introduction/Legislative Findings'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 Section 1. NEW SECTION. 602.1615 Legislative findings —— <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 challenges to the validity of a statute —— exclusive jurisdiction <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 —— public hearings —— legislative oversight. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 1. The general assembly finds and declares all of the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 following: <br />
<center>'''If the legislature can even impeach,''' <br />
<br>'''it can at least ask questions'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 a. The power to impeach subsumes reasonable less severe <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7 remedies. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Lawmakers take an oath''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''to uphold the Constitution too'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Their responsibility to uphold the Constitution'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''requires action against courts '''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''that interfere with their responsibility'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 b. The intent of this section is to provide for a mechanism <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 in which to resolve disputes regarding the constitutionality of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 laws between the courts and the legislature, both of which are <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 composed of constitutional scholars. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Jurisdiction of courts is''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''restricted by the legislature'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 c. Article 5, section 4 of the Constitution of the State <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13 of Iowa states that the supreme court is “a court for the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14 correction of errors at law, '''under such restriction as''' the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15 general assembly may, by law, prescribe . . .”. <br />
<center>'''Judicial power to invalidate laws''' <br />
<br>'''is not given by the Iowa Constitution'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 d. Article 3, section 20 of the Constitution of the State <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 of Iowa gives the legislature the power to impeach judges for <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 “malfeasance in office”, which is generally defined to include <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;19 acting without authority and abusing power. The power to <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;20 impeach subsumes all lesser remedies. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;21 e. The Constitution of the State of Iowa does not give the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;22 courts of this state the power to invalidate laws enacted by <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;23 the legislature, to require the legislature to enact different <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;24 laws, or to publish rulings that have the same effect as new <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;25 legislation. Article 3, section 1 of the Constitution of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;26 the State of Iowa states: “The powers of the government of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;27 Iowa shall be divided into three separate departments —— the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;28 '''legislative, the executive, and the judicial: and no person''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;29 '''charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to one''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;30 '''of these departments shall exercise any function appertaining''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;31 '''to either of the others,''' except in cases hereinafter expressly <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;32 directed or permitted”. <br />
<center>'''The Legislature must get involved''' <br />
<br>'''when courts legislate unconstitutionally'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;33 f. Although the courts of Iowa have usurped those powers <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;34 without constitutional authority, it has been done for reasons <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;35 which the general assembly respects. The general assembly <br />
----<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 welcomes the expertise and guidance of the courts in evaluating <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 the constitutionality of its laws. But when the reasoning of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 rulings which function as legislation appears to be not only <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 unsound, but unconstitutional, the general assembly has the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 constitutional duty and authority to determine that judges and <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 justices have abused their power and exceeded their authority, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7 which are grounds for impeachment under the malfeasance in <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 office clause. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 g. A remedy short of impeachment should advance wisdom, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 build consensus, and educate voters so that informed voters <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 may hold both judges and legislators accountable. Article 1, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 section 2 of the Constitution of the State of Iowa states: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13 '''“All political power is inherent in the people.''' Government is <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14 instituted for the protection, security, and benefit of the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15 people, and they have the right, at all times, to alter or <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 reform the same, whenever the public good may require it”. <br />
<center>'''The Meat of the Bill:''' <br />
<br>'''the Enforcement Section'''<br />
<br>'''Lower courts can't invalidate laws'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 2. The supreme court shall have discretionary and exclusive <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 original jurisdiction over any challenge to any law. A <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;19 district court or the court of appeals shall not invalidate a <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;20 law on any grounds. <br />
<center>'''Supreme Court must rule''' <br />
<br>'''within 3 months, by supermajority,'''<br />
<br>'''when the Court blocks a ''new'' law.'''<br />
<br>'''When the Court blocks an existing law'''<br />
<br>'''the block will not take effect for one year.'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;21 3. A decision of the supreme court that invalidates <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;22 '''existing''' law or has the effect of creating new law shall not <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;23 have any effect unless agreed to by five or more of the seven <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;24 justices, and otherwise shall not have any effect for one <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;25 year. The supreme court shall also have the power to suspend <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;26 implementation of '''a new law''' provided the supreme court produces <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;27 an expedited ruling within three months of the law’s enactment. <br />
<center>'''Public Hearing'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;28 4. a. Within one year of the date a supreme court decision <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;29 is published that invalidates existing law or has the effect <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;30 of creating new law, the general assembly may, by resolution, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;31 compel the attendance of specified justices to a public hearing <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;32 to discuss and debate the justification for the decision with <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;33 members of the general assembly. A public record of the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;34 hearing shall be made. <br />
<center>'''Impeachment grounds inquiry'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;35 b. During or after the hearing, the general assembly shall <br />
----<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 determine if grounds to begin impeachment exist as to any <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 of the justices present at the hearing for acting without <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 authority or malfeasance in office. <br />
<center>'''Judges may improve their ruling'''<br />
<br>'''with respect to the status of the challenged law'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 c. Based on the results of a hearing commenced pursuant to <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 this subsection, a justice whose presence was required at the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 hearing may change the justice’s vote or alter the justice’s <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7 individual contribution to the decision. <br />
<center>'''Legislature may overturn court invalidation'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 5. A supreme court decision invalidating existing law or <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 having the effect of creating new law will not take effect if <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 two-thirds of both the senate and the house of representatives <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 approve a resolution to overturn the decision within one year <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 of the date the decision was published. The resolution must <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13 specify the basis for overturning the decision, including <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14 its reasoning, not to be limited by court precedent that is <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15 responsive to the supreme court’s initial published decision, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 and must be documented by expert testimony and constitutional <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 authority. <br />
<center>'''Legislature may add statement to the ruling'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 6. The general assembly may issue its own statement to a <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;19 published supreme court decision that invalidates existing law <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;20 or has the effect of creating new law if done within one year of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;21 the date the decision was published. The statement must regard <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;22 the constitutionality of the invalidated existing law or the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;23 newly created law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;24 Sec. 2. APPLICABILITY. This Act applies to decisions <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;25 published by the supreme court on or after the effective date <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;26 of this act. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''FAQ's'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Questions and Answers''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Why are existing laws treated differently than new laws?''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The difference is for the benefit of the public, so the laws governing them do not flip back and forth from being in effect. A ''new'' law – for example, the Heartbeat law – could be suspended by courts only until the suspension is overturned by the legislature. An ''existing'' law – for example our former marriage laws requiring spouses to be of the opposite sex – could not be suspended for one year, to give the legislature time to respond. No chaotic back and forth. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Could courts suspend a new law between its effective date and the court ruling?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The legal action a court takes to invalidate a law is an Injunction. The process here doesn’t specify it, but would allow the normal process of allowing the courts to immediately suspend a new law with a TRO, Temporary Restraining Order, until their hearing, at which the temporary order could become permanent. In the case of an existing law, by contrast, allowing the court to immediately suspend the law, with the possibility of it going back into effect after the legislature acts, would subject the public to a law which is in effect, then suspended, then back into effect. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If this law removed the court’s power to put a TRO on a new law, the law would take effect until the ruling, then it would be suspended, but then the legislature might give it effect again.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;What will be the effect of a 4-3 ruling that a law is unconstitutional?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: no legal effect, but much political pressure) Although a 4-3 ruling would no longer have legal force, it would still have powerful political force. A ruling that a law is unconstitutional would be a public relations challenge for the legislature. The legislature would face pressure to refute the judges' claims point by point, or adjust the law voluntarily. A 4-3 ruling would not be powerless; and of course it would still be binding on the parties to the case. But an argument in defense of the legislature ignoring the challenge would be that after all, the justices themselves barely agree the law is unconstitutional. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Would a ruling always trigger a public hearing?<br />
That decision is made independently of a decision to vote to override the court. “Within one year, the legislature MAY, by a resolution, compel the attendance of specified Iowa judges ....”<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Is one year for the legislature to act too long? Too short?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;One year from the court’s ruling is needed to process the ruling’s reasoning, to hold hearings which would require passage of a resolution by both chambers, and then to schedule a vote, which could be while the legislature is not in session. A year is needed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;On the other hand, requiring courts to act in 3 months is reasonable, considering this is not a brand new question before them that they have never heard of before. They have had all the years of public debate on the issue to think about the issue. Plus, courts are accustomed to ruling quickly when cases are required to be “expedited”. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Would prolife laws do any better under this system?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yes, along with all other laws relating to immorality, which are targeted by the Landmark Abomination Cases of the U.S. Supreme Court. Iowa courts think themselves bound by SCOTUS precedent, but the Iowa legislature is not and should not be. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The 14th Amendment makes state legislatures subject to federal laws which protect the rights of state citizens that are listed in the Constitution, which is the meaning of the “privileges and immunities” clause of the 14th. But the 14th gives SCOTUS no authority to make up “rights” hostile to enumerated rights, much less to enforce “rights” without waiting for federal law to lay out the manner and scope of protection. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Neither federal courts nor Congress have any authority through the 14th or through anything else to block states from protecting constitutional rights. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Act laid out here will only get state courts out of the legislature’s way of protecting the rights of state citizens. When federal courts jump in the way, they can be shoved aside with the legal arguments of Clarence Thomas and others that are summarized in Statement #11 of this book. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Is a 2/3 majority requirement necessary? Shouldn't a simple majority of the legislature be enough to override courts?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: practically & legally, certainly; politically, complicated) This may be the hardest detail to muster a quick opinion. There are strong arguments for either choice; perhaps there is even a third option: a 60% vote. As this bill proceeds, perhaps it should be expected that a consensus will form later requiring amendment of this detail. The current draft requires a 2/3 majority. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''The Practical Argument:''' Currently, courts get away with a simple majority requirement (4-3) which faces zero accountability from anybody. This draft requires a 5-2 vote; another option is 6-1. Should the legislature face a similar hurdle? Several lawmakers believe a 2/3 requirement removes any practical hope of ever overturning a judicial invalidation of a law, because the Iowa legislature is incapable of agreeing by 2/3 that the sun is up. A 2/3 requirement would make restraint of lawmaking judges actually harder than passing a constitutional amendment! <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In Congress, our U.S. Constitution says a 2/3 majority is enough to send an amendment to the Constitution before the states for their ratification. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But if we let the legislature overturn the court’s invalidation with a second simple majority, it could be objected that would be almost ridiculously easy for the legislature to gather together the same “yea” votes a second time (if an election doesn’t intervene). A 60% requirement could answer that concern. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;However, that objection could also be met by pointing out that the ruling of the courts would give typically 60 pages of reasons the law should be overturned, which would put a lot of pressure on those “yea” votes to either eloquently and exhaustively justify their votes or vote “nay”. It would not be easy to secure a majority a second time under that pressure. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The public hearing option would put that 60 page ruling on a level playing field with reasoning from lawmakers. It would make both legislatures and courts accountable not only to each other, but to reason. It might even make lawmakers upset enough to reach a 2/3 agreement. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Voters, informed as has never before been possible about judges on the ballot, or about the legal skills of lawmakers, would have the last word. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''The Political Argument:''' The public is not used to legislatures having ANY power to correct unconstitutional rulings. A 2/3 requirement would be less of a shock to tradition. Were this bill to pass into law with a 2/3 requirement, and lawmakers saw how unnecessary it was, lawmakers could ease the requirement in the future - since this does not require amending the constitution, which already grants more than this power, but requires only a law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Amendment'''. Should it be decided that a simple majority of the legislature to overturn a court’s invalidation is sufficient, here is the simple change that could do it - simply strike out “two-thirds of” (or replace it with “six tenths of”): <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 A supreme court decision invalidating existing law or <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 having the effect of creating new law will not take effect if <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 <strikethrough>two-thirds of</strikethrough> both the senate and the house of representatives <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 approve a resolution to overturn the decision within one year <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 of the date the decision was published. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Is it practically possible to require courts to add a statement from the legislature up to a year after its ruling?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;When the Supreme Court first publishes its ruling, that is not the final version that will be later given an official permanent citation in the Northwest Reporter series. (Their contact information) Unpredictable delays are caused by litigants asking for rehearings, and courts taking time to respond. Even after that option is exhausted, court staff continue proofing their decisions, a process that can take months. [Iowa Supreme Court Clerk phone number: 515-348-4700] Northwest Reporter doesn’t officially publish a case, and give it a permanent citation, until a state supreme court notifies them that it is ready. That is why a new case has only an Iowa citation that does not list a page number or volume number, and doesn’t get a fancy N.W.2d permanent citation until much later. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Requiring the Court to leave the publication open for a year in case the legislature chooses to submit a statement would affect only the time the Court notifies Northwest Reporter, and it may not even affect that time at all. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The farther this bill gets, the more discussions there will be about it with the Iowa Bar Association and the Court itself. If delaying final publication that long is deemed unreasonable, an amendment could easily give the legislature an earlier deadline. It might also require the legislature to notify the court of an intent to exercise that option. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Of course, this entire final sentence of this bill is not critical to legislative correction of judicial overreach. It could be conceded if necessary to save the rest of the bill. But it is an appropriate correction of the current system. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Will an expedited hearing that begins in the Supreme Court diminish the time needed by the litigants to fully present their claims?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: anyone ready to block a law from taking effect is ready for court) A challenge to a new law means (and perhaps this bill could so specify, although I think it is already clearly implied) a challenge to a law that has not yet gone into effect, to keep it from going into effect (beginning with a Temporary Restraining Order (TRO) the day it would go into effect). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In such a case the state itself will normally be the defendant, and the petitioner will be a well funded group that tried to kill the law in the legislature but failed. In that situation the petitioner will already be prepared legally, their arguments well honed through interaction with lawmakers. It is hard to imagine that any less prepared petitioner would be ready with a TRO to stop a law before it goes into effect. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Iowa court rules already require appellants to outline their issues in their initial notice of appeal, which is more pressure on individual defendants to prepare that far ahead, in proportion to their means, than challengers to a new law will face, who will be fully primed for a court battle before the law passes the first chamber. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspCourt rules already require that any issue argued in the Supreme Court must have first been raised in the district court, so any responsible lawyer in district court will already be prepared for the Supreme Court. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspDistrict courts are needed to develop facts through witnesses in front of juries, depositions, and cross examination of expert witnesses. Supreme courts don’t do any of that. Expert witnesses can submit Amicus Briefs but the other side can’t cross examine them. Although judges can cross examine the lawyers for both parties in oral arguments, which district judges don’t do. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspThus district courts are essential in criminal trials where the guilt of the defendant needs to be proved to juries, and in civil trials between two parties. But their value in a challenge to a law is less clear. A legislature’s “findings of facts” are given deference except in the case of a “fundamental right”, under current practice, but the court practice of overturning laws that violate made-up “fundamental rights” has zero authority under the U.S. Constitution, and nothing prevents state legislatures from copying into state law the provision of the U.S. Constitution in Article III, Section 2, Paragraph 2, that court jurisdiction is subject to such “exceptions” and “regulations” as the legislature enacts. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspWere the petitioner an individual seeking relief only for himself and not for anyone else affected by the law, courts have many tools for giving relief to individuals short of invalidating whole laws. For example, extenuating circumstances, interaction with other laws affecting the individual, or necessity in order to avoid serious injury (Iowa 704). The applicability of laws to individuals is the jurisdiction of the judicial branch, with which the legislative branch has no intent to interfere, any more than the judicial branch should interfere with the jurisdiction of the legislative branch to establish laws of general application. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspAfter a law has already gone into effect, then there is no requirement to expedite. In fact, the decision to challenge a law could be made by the parties to the case, or by a judge, at any point during a years-long case: in pre-trial briefs, a district judge’s ruling, or during the appeal before the Court of Appeals or the Supreme Court. With this bill the applicability of the law to the individual defendant could still be suspended, but the law itself, as applied to everyone else, would not be suspended until after the Supreme Court so rules and then only if the legislature does not block the suspension. The legislature’s year to respond would not begin with any ruling made before the Supreme Court’s supermajority ruling. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Are there any U.S. Supreme Court precedents relevant to these half dozen powers?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: making judges answer lawmakers' questions is a staple of confirmation hearings) These proposed powers are all completely unprecedented in law, although some of them have been discussed. Probably the one never before discussed is the idea of a public hearing. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspSurely the prohibition of a district judge overturning a law, limiting that power to the state Supreme Court, and requiring a supermajority of the court to overturn, is well within the power given the legislature to limit the jurisdiction of courts. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp'''Public Hearings'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;How about public hearings? Is there any legal or constitutional principle that shields judges from having to explain their rulings any better than they do in their written opinions? Is there something nefarious about requiring judges to answer questions? <br />
Federal judges answer questions about their past rulings in confirmation hearings for appointments to higher courts. If U.S. Senators can require them to answer questions about their rulings years later, why can’t state legislatures require their state judges to answer questions at the time? Judges justify not answering questions about future potential cases, that they may remain free to rule in view of facts and arguments they might not see until then, but there is no reason to shield judges from explaining their past cases. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Especially since the Public Hearings envisioned in this bill are not only to clarify whether a law ruled unconstitutional actually is unconstitutional. The second purpose of these Public Hearings is to investigate whether there are grounds for impeachment. Because if the legislature determines that the court’s ruling of the law’s unconstitutionality is utterly lacking in merit, then judges who so ruled were legislating; they were acting without authority, exercising a power of a different branch of government than their own, which is malfeasance of office, an impeachable offense. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Obviously, in any impeachment trial, the judges would be required to answer questions. These public hearings are a power subsumed under the power of impeachment; they are a reasonable, less severe remedy. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Certainly the very idea of communication between lawmakers and judges on a “level playing field” is unheard of. Unprecedented. (Outside confirmation hearings.) Current communication, which tradition will be slow to reconsider, is somewhat like a parent trying to reason with a child who is as inarticulate as he is stubborn. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is a special challenge for a lawyer representing the legislature to reason with a judge who gives only the scantest clues to what is on his mind before he rules, after which it is too late to respond to his errors. Does any Constitutional or legal principle require such a breakdown of communication? Does this ritual serve any good purpose? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Once President Washington asked SCOTUS for its advisory interpretation of a treaty. The justices declined, saying “The lines of separation drawn by the Constitution between the three departments of government – their being in certain respects checks upon each other – and our being judges in a court of last resort – are considerations which afford strong arguments against the propriety of our extra judicially deciding the questions alluded to; especially as the Power given by the Constitution to the President of calling on the Heads of Departments for opinions, seems to have been purposely as well as expressly limited to executive departments.” https://www.mountvernon.org/library/digitalhistory/digital-encyclopedia/article/george-washington-and-the-supreme-court/<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;https://founders.archives.gov/?q=Thomas%20Recipient%3A%22Washington%2C%20George%22%20Author%3A%22Supreme%20Court%20Justices%22&s=1111311111&sa=supre&r=3&sr= <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That answer is not a precedent for keeping courts from communicatint with legislatures for two reasons: (1) it was not a sensible answer then. The Constitution puts no limit on who the President can consult for advice, while Proverbs 15:22 says “in a multitude of counsellors, purposes are established”. I can’t imagine where SCOTUS came up with the idea that the President was limited to asking his department heads. Washington asked for advice, not a binding ruling. That’s what “extrajudicial” means. (2) SCOTUS then declined to get involved in an issue which it otherwise would never face. This is different than asking a Court to make up its mind earlier than later. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is not wrong to ask judges to give advisory opinions to lawmakers so lawmakers don’t have to spend years crafting laws which judges at the last minute decide to overturn. The August 8, 1793 answer was before Americans had to worry about activist judges who leave the future of legislation, and indeed the very future of human rights, very much in doubt. <br />
However, asking judges to give an advisory opinion about a law before it is passed is probably impractical, since judges are used to taking longer to study an issue than a legislature is in session, and also since even after giving an early opinion, new evidence or argument might come later which would flip the Court’s ruling. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;An expedited three month deadline is probably the closest we can come to a timely response from courts. Certainly legal wrangling that dribbles on for years exhausts the patience of rational minds. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The subject of the public hearing is whether the law really was unconstitutional. Because if it wasn't, then the judges plainly acted outside their authority, which is grounds for impeachment. But beyond being grounds for impeachment, an order given that is beyond one's authority to give is legally invalid. So surely the legislature has the authority to investigate whether an order was invalid, and upon establishing that it is, to reverse its effects. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sheltering judges from interaction doesn’t make them free of bias. In every other human interaction, accountability is the best way to cleanse a hard heart of bias. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp'''The Two-Thirds Majority'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The only thing remotely relevant to this 2/3 vs. simple majority requirement in American constitutional law that I can think of is that to ratify a constitutional amendment, Congress has to pass it by 2/3 before states pass it by 3/4. But the solution here doesn’t change the constitution; it only defines how the legislature is choosing to exercise authority already given by the Iowa Constitution. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If anything, there is a constitutional principle favoring the power of legislatures over courts, with respect to Fundamental Rights. The 14th Amendment is the part of the Constitution which courts have taken to give them jurisdiction over states who trample fundamental rights. But who did the 14th Amendment authorize to enforce its provisions? Not courts! Rather, Congress, according to Section 5 of the Amendment. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yet here are examples of not just state laws, but even state constitutional amendments, which were overturned by courts for violating the “equal protection” clause of the 14th Amendment: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Cummings v. Missouri'', 71 U.S. 277 (1867) a Missouri oath to hold office designed to keep out former confederate soldiers was ruled an unconstitutional Bill of Attainder. <br />
''Hollingswort''h v. Perry'', 570 U.S. 693 (2013) a California same sex marriage ban. <br />
''Romer v. Evans, 517 U.S. 620 (1996) a Colorado gay rights ban. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Awad v. Ziriax'', 10th Circuit, January 10, 2012 an Oklahoma ban of the use of Sharia Law in court. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Giles v. Harris'', 1903, and Giles v. Teasley, 1904, courts winked at disenfranchising Blacks, but explicitly accepted jurisdiction over state constitutions violating the 14th and 15th Amendments. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The authority to enforce the requirements of the 14th Amendment, given to Congress and not courts, gives Congress also the authority to define and apply fundamental rights, and for anyone seriously in doubt, to clarify who is a human being and therefore deserves to have his fundamental rights protected. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;These are philosophical as well as legal questions which merit national discussion, but while courts are sheltered from having to talk to anybody the conversation has been one sided. America needs to open this up into what Proverbs 15:22 calls a “multitude of counsellors”. It does not undermine respect for the judiciary to imagine judges are able to explain their reasoning. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''If Legislatures overturn court rulings, won’t they exercise the authority of the judicial branch?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: legislative action wouldn't affect litigants; only the part of the ruling that reaches wrongfully into legislating) No. On that future day when a legislature overturns judicial rulings, the legislature’s action would not apply to the parties to the case, so the “separation of powers” aspect of the ruling is untouched. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;There are several reasons a court may exempt a litigant from the effects of a law, without invalidating the law for everyone else. The simple difference between courts and legislatures is that legislatures pass laws which apply to everybody, while courts apply those laws in specific cases, only to the parties to the case, guided by the special facts and circumstances of the case. The power given by this bill to legislatures to overturn rulings applies only to the part of the ruling where the court stepped outside its constitutional authority in order to nullify a law passed for the benefit of millions of others. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The purpose of the public hearing is only for the legislature to investigate whether their law was constitutional after all, and if so, to take back their constitutional authority to pass laws by their subsequent vote. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Lawmakers take oaths to defend the Constitution too. Courts cannot rob lawmakers of their power to obey the Constitution without violating the constitution themselves. <br />
Perhaps that is the key principle declared implicitly by this bill: judges aren’t the only branch of government authorized to understand and defend the Constitution. The other branches are too. That balance needs to be restored. The conversation needed needs to be among equals.<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Shouldn’t judges be immune from popular pressure? We don’t want our rights subject to a vote!'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Neither legislatures nor courts should have the last word over each other. We have seen what happens when legislatures had the last word, in the South, during the time of slavery. And we have seen what happens when courts had the last word, in 1857 and 1973; regarding slavery and abortion. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Even the Iowa constitution gives the last word to voters. Is that dangerous? America’s Founders talked about popular whims that could remove important protections over the weekend if the public could vote on individual issues continually. They set up 6 year terms for U.S. Senators and 4 year terms for presidents explicitly to shield our Rule of Law from whims the public might hold for only a month. Nor does this process give voters direct control over the outcome of a disputed law, but only equips them to evaluate the wisdom of their elected representatives and their judges, which is the same as our current system except this leaves voters much better informed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The 14th Amendment expanded the power of courts to overturn laws which violate “fundamental rights”. It made slave-loving southern state legislatures accountable to courts. Unaddressed was what to do when it is courts which violate fundamental rights. This measure is an attempt to restore balance. It is interesting that the 14th Amendment actually leaves its own enforcement not to courts, but to Congress. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The “independence of the judiciary” from popular whims is well protected by lifetime tenure. This measure does not change that. It only defines a remedy for Iowans when judges rule lawlessly and unconstitutionally. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Didn’t Iowa decide recently not to impeach judges for their rulings?'''<br />
Summary: “Overreaching” can only reach so far before it turns into full fledged unconstitutional legislating. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Removal from office, for just one harmful ruling which may be out of a long career of beneficial rulings, is pretty drastic; not to mention ineffective since it leaves the ruling in place that triggered the impeachment! <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That is why remedies short of impeachment are necessary, as well as remedies able to focus on the problem without cutting off talent which is mostly beneficial.<br />
If an assembly line produces an occasional klunker amongst its generally great output, we keep the assembly line and discard the klunker; we don't keep the klunker and blow up the assembly line! <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Iowans seriously considered impeaching judges for their rulings not so long ago. Highlights are discussed at the Brennan Center: <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A 2011 review by the National Center for State Courts’ Gavel to Gavel website also found numerous bills introduced in state legislatures that year to impeach judges and justices because of disagreement over specific rulings. Several of those introductions were part of a failed effort in Iowa to remove four Iowa Supreme Court Justices for their decision in a high-profile case about marriage rights for same-sex couples. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The impeachment attempt garnered significant media attention, but also widespread condemnation – even from members of the sponsors’ own party. Iowa Governor-elect Terry Brandstad (R) [sic] said at the time that disagreement over a ruling did not constitute grounds for impeachment. “There’s a difference between malfeasance and over-reaching,” said Brandstad, “the Constitution says what the grounds for impeachment are. My reading is it’s not there.” Iowa House Speaker Kraig Paulsen (R), whose chamber would have voted on the impeachment, sent the resolutions to languish in an inactive committee and said, “I disagree with this remedy,…I do not expect it to be debated on the floor of the House, and if it is, I will vote no.”<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I respectfully disagree with Governor, later Ambassador Branstad. When the Iowa Supreme Court not only struck down laws limiting marriage to opposite sex couples, but specifically ordered county clerks to solemnize “marriages” between same sex couples, that reaches beyond “overreaching”. “Overreaching” implies a mild going-a-little-too-far out of one’s proper jurisdiction. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But if the plainest example of a “person charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to” the judicial branch of government exercising “any function appertaining to” the legislative branch can be dismissed as mere “overreaching”, then it is impossible for any other judicial legislating to violate the Iowa Constitution. We might as well just give judges the password to the Iowa Code database and let them write whatever laws they please. As Rep. Matt Windschitl said January 27, 2020 on the Jeff Angelo show, “Do we really want judges deciding laws? If so, why do we even have a legislature?”<br />
Article 3 Section 1 of the Iowa Constitution says “Departments of government. The powers of the government of Iowa shall be divided into three separate departments — the legislative, the executive, and the judicial: and no person charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to one of these departments shall exercise any function appertaining to either of the others....”<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''FAQ’s: Judicial Philosophy'''<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Isn’t it unconstitutional to impeach a judge for a ruling?'''<br />
Summary: It can’t be unconstitutional to correct the part of a ruling that unconstitutionally legislates. Although it has not been established definitively, whether a judge may be impeached over a ruling, most legal discussion avers that would be unethical, and there is no precedent of a successful impeachment over the content of a ruling. <br />
Most legal discussion is of the U.S. Constitution; the Iowa Constitution specifies that judges can’t legislate, which is only implied in the U.S. Constitution. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The United States Constitution provides little guidance as to what offenses constitute grounds for the impeachment of federal judges...However, the impeachment power has historically been limited to cases of serious ethical or criminal misconduct. - Brennan Center<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is generally supposed that legislative action to correct an unconstitutional ruling, or to discipline a judge who writes one, would be unconstitutional. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Constitution does not “provide for resignation or impeachment whenever a judge makes a decision with which elected officials disagree” said four judges when President Clinton and Senator Dole urged impeachment of a judge over his ruling on admissibility of evidence. “These attacks do a grave disservice to the principle of an independent judiciary and…mislead the public as to the role of judges in a constitutional democracy.” Brennan Center<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Let’s make a distinction glossed over by those four judges: between a ruling hated because it applies existing law and facts in a way most people think is wrong, and a ruling hated because it overturns laws by a rationale that most people think is unconstitutional. I agree with the four judges that the case was correctly kept off limits to lawmakers, but the judges generalized their criticism to the extent of dismissing concerns about truly unconstitutional rulings as being mere decisions “with which elected officials disagree”. <br />
It is that degree of generalization that is “a grave disservice” by elevating “the principle of an independent judiciary” beyond the reach of the Constitution, of common sense, and of accountability of any kind from any source. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;What I have not found in law review articles is any proposed remedy for when a ruling itself is unconstitutional. I have not found it even acknowledged that it is possible for a ruling to be unconstitutional. As if to say “how could judges rule unconstitutionally? Judges ARE the constitution.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But it is judges themselves, in vigorous dissents, who stir public concern about the constitutionally of certain rulings. Judges who write dissents are as qualified as those in the majority, and their reasoning is often equally persuasive. When the public has a basis this solid for concern about the constitutionality of rulings, it is surely in the public interest, and not contrary to any known legal or constitutional principle, to hold a public hearing where those concerns can be addressed and hopefully resolved, where judges, perhaps for the first time in America history, can be compelled to interact with experts other than each other.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In fact, any time a law is overturned for being unconstitutional, but the ruling is flawed and a correct ruling would actually not find the law unconstitutional, then actually the ruling itself is unconstitutional because the ruling amounts to raw legislation. It is unconstitutional for courts to pass laws. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Let me emphasize this point. Any ruling that overturns a law is either correct because the law is in fact unconstitutional, or is itself unconstitutional because its reasoning or factual basis is flawed. Lawmakers take oaths to defend the Constitution too, and should not be unconstitutionally deprived of the power to enforce it when they see a violation. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If we may agree that it is at least theoretically possible for a ruling overturning a law to be unconstitutional, shall we insist the Constitution requires the legislature to honor every unconstitutional ruling? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Suppose there were a law against painting your house red, someone was prosecuted for painting his house red, and the court refused to convict because it is surely unconstitutional to outlaw painting your house red. Even without a formal nullification of the law, the law would be defacto nullified because prosecutors would know the court won’t convict anybody for that crime. It may be reasoned that rulings overturning laws merely formalize this natural process. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Public hearings would bring healing to our national division over issues less clear than the right to paint your house red. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As is pointed out below, the power this bill gives the legislature to overturn a judicial validation of its laws would not usurp judicial powers. It would not affect individuals who are actual parties named in the case. It would only affect that part of the ruling which wrongfully reaches into lawmaking, changing the laws which affect millions of other people who are not named in the case. <br />
</ref><br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">Should any federal judge so interfere, this state appeals to its congressional delegation to examine similar grounds for disciplinary action, along with exercising its Article III, Section 2, paragraph 2 authority to make “exceptions” and “regulations” designed to end SCOTUS’ long line of landmark abomination cases. <br />
<ref>More about '''“similar grounds for disciplinary action”''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;For example, see “Bringing the Courts Back Under the Constitution” at www.osaka.law.miami.edu/~schnably/GringrichContractWith America.pdf (sic)<br />
</ref><br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">This state also appeals to its congressional delegation to exercise its life-saving and rights-protecting authority under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment whose plain words give Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of Rights,4 which subsumes the authority to define their scope and balance competing interests, while the “privileges and immunities” clause identifies as protectable rights those listed in the Constitution.<br />
<ref> More about '''“Section 5 of the 14th Amendment gives Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of the Right to Life and of Equal Protection of the Laws”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Section 5 of the 14th Amendment so plainly gives Congress, not courts, the power to correct state violations of fundamental rights, that it is an amazing story how SCOTUS has usurped that power for itself and completely denied it to Congress, and how Congress has let them.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Largely relying on the dissents and concurrences of Justice Clarence Thomas, this story is told in Statement #11 and its footnotes. See “What Happened to Unalienable Rights, and How to Get Them Back” and “ ‘Substantive Due Process’: how SCOTUS usurped the Constitution’s Authority to Define Rights, and Congress’ Authority to Enforce Rights, into its own authority to reclassify abominations as ‘rights’ ”</ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">Official world-wide definitions of “crimes against humanity” apply “to representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission.”<br />
<ref>More about '''“...definitions of ‘crimes against humanity’ apply ‘to representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission.’ ”''' <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;“A crime against humanity occurs <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;when the government withdraws legal protection <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;from a class of human beings <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;resulting in severe deprivation of rights, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;up to and including death.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;- amicus in Dobbs of <u>Melinda Thybault/Moral Outcry</u><br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Melinda Thybault’s amicus brief was the 20th amicus docketed in Dobbs v. Jackson (2022). (www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184968/ 20210726175018044_41206%20pdf%20Parker%20III%20br.pdf)<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Her references, backing up that damning judgment:<br />
<blockquote>See “Crime Against Humanity” at www.law.cornell.edu/wex/ crime_against_humanity and see U.N. Office, Genocide Prevention, Crimes Against Humanity www.un.org/en/genocideprevention/crimes-against-humanity.shtml; Treaty of Rome (1957). See also Convention on the Non-Applicability of Statutory Limitations to War .</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Her characterization of international documents is not only fair, but it understates the culpability of elected representatives. Actual quotes from the documents lay responsibility at the feet, not just of impersonal “government”, but of government’s “representatives”. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Notice in the following definitions that those targeted for prosecution in international human rights tribunals include elected representatives and senators who “tolerate” crimes against humanity – who don’t actively execute their authority to criminalize these assaults on the Image of God. (Genesis 1:27) <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;“Genocide”, defined: ''“Genocide means...acts...with intent to destroy...in part, a national...group [in our case, Americans] [by] killing members of the group [in our case, babies; and by] Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group....”'' <br />
Here is the complete United Nations statement: <br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Article II: In the present Convention, '''genocide means''' any of the following '''acts committed with intent to destroy''', in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such:<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(a) '''Killing members of the group;'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(b) Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group;<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(c) Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part;<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(d) '''Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group;'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(e) Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;- Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide / Approved and proposed for signature and ratification or accession by General Assembly resolution 260 A (III) of 9 December 1948 / Entry into force: 12 January 1951, in accordance with article XII / www.un.org/en/genocideprevention/ documents/atrocity-crimes/Doc.1_Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.pdf</blockquote><br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The 1948 definition above is cited in the following 1968 United Nations General Assembly resolution (which took effect two years later) which nullifies any “statute of limitations” on “crimes against humanity”:<br />
<blockquote><br />
Article I: No statutory limitation shall apply to the following crimes, irrespective of the date of their commission:...(b) Crimes against humanity whether committed in time of war or in time of peace as they are defined in the Charter of the International Military Tribunal, Nürnberg, of 8 August 1945 and confirmed by resolutions 3 (I) of 13 February 1946 and 95 (I) of 11 December 1946 of the General Assembly of the United Nations,...the crime of genocide as defined in the 1948 Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, even if such acts do not constitute a violation of the domestic law of the country in which they were committed.</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The following Article II applies the call for prosecution at any time, not limited by a Statute of Limitations, to elected representatives. The word “elected” is not there, but the context certainly includes them, especially since one cannot “represent” another, as the word is normally defined, without their voluntary authorization. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;By not limiting the definition of “representatives” to those who are elected, the definition does not exclude judges.<br />
<blockquote>Article II: '''If any of the crimes mentioned in article I is committed, the provisions of this Convention shall apply to''' representatives of the State authority and private individuals who, as principals or accomplices, participate in or who directly incite others to the commission of any of those crimes, or who conspire to commit them, irrespective of the degree of completion, and to '''representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission.''' (Article II, Convention on the Non-Applicability of Statutory Limitations to War, ADOPTED 26 November 1968 BY General Assembly resolution 2391 (XXIII))</blockquote><br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If [genocide] is committed, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;the provisions of this Convention shall apply <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;to representatives of the State authority <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;who tolerate [its] commission. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Including judges.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And elected representatives <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; who are lax in restraining them.<br />
<br />
<u>Thybault</u> writes, “...the Court has not yet fully reversed Roe, Doe, and Casey.” She submitted this observation to the Court which finally reversed all three, technically, although the slaughter continues in most states so her observation is still timely. <br />
“No American citizen should have to live under, nor as history tragically demonstrates, should they stand by silently, while their government sanctions and even promotes crimes against humanity.” <br />
Another low point in the Supreme Court’s grasp of 14th Amendment equal rights, she mentions, was Plessy v. Ferguson, 163 U.S. 537 (1896) which, like Roe and Dred Scott, “denied legal protection to a class of human beings” and “ignored the plain language of the Fourteenth Amendment”. “Plessy accepted the gloss that ‘separate but equal’ was ‘equal’.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;She repeats, “When the government withdraws legal protection from a class of human beings, it is the classic definition of a crime against humanity.” <br />
</ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">Any court review of this law must be expedited, because lives are lost with each day that courts delay.<br />
<br />
<br />
<small>The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: 396 State Legislators from 41 States <> Melinda Thybault/Moral Outcry</small><br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Courtrecognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human<br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] Courts Accept the Fact-Finding Authority of Legislatures, Juries, Experts for the same good reasons their findings persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures should regulate abortion, as Dobbs held, just as legislatures regulate the prosecution of all other murders.<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] The full humanity of a tiny physical body is hard for many to grasp. But what distinguishes us from animals isn’t physical, and has no known pre-conscious stage.<br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress has ''Already'' Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment already authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion.<br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] Roe, Dobbs, and the 14th Amendment agree: All Humans are “Persons”.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] When pregnancies develop into medical emergencies requiring separation of mother and child to save the mother, the child has an equal fundamental right to life and medical care. <br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any class of humans by any other is prohibited by the Constitution, by the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives legislatures no authority to legalize violations of Constitutional Rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
<br />
----<br />
'''FOOTNOTES'''<br />
----<br />
<br />
<references /></div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Statement_12_%2B_Footnotes&diff=50354Statement 12 + Footnotes2023-12-13T05:03:34Z<p>DaveLeach: /* == */</p>
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<br />
Statement of Facts #12 of 12 from: <br />
<br />
=[[Reversing_Landmark_Abomination_Cases]]=<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters<br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion</span><br />
<br />
by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal<br />
''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal<br />
<span style="color:brown"><br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen <br />
<br />
by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 18:11, 15 October 2023 (UTC)<br />
<br />
<span style="color:grey"><small>''Try to imagine how a judge, reviewing a prolife law with these Findings of Facts, would be able to dodge this evidence - in fact, see if you can find ANYONE who can ''refute'' these facts - as opposed to not ''caring'' about facts - that is, not caring about reality:''</small></span><br />
<br />
====<span style="color:blue">Statement of Fact #12 of 12:====<br />
<span style="color:blue">Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">Any state judge interfering with this state’s compliance with the 14th Amendment and its ancient authority to protect its people <br />
<ref>More about '''“the ancient authority of state legislatures...to protect the lives of all its people – an authority which no court can legitimately remove.”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Courts that overturn the prolife laws of “red states” interfere with the ancient duty and power of every government, in every generation, to protect life, points out the amicus brief filed in Dobbs v. Jackson by <u>396 State Legislators from 41 States</u>.(www.supremecourt.gov/Docket PDF/19/19-1392/185121/ 20210728125120809_Dobbs%20Amici%20brief_State%20Legislators_07272021.pdf)<br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;State legislators have the constitutional duty, and therefore the power, to protect the fundamental, civil rights of persons. The fundamental law in which those fundamental rights are found is the common law, which consists of both natural duties and those ancient, customary rights and immunities that are foundational to ordered liberty. Thus, a state legislature must declare and secure to all persons within the protection of its laws the rights that those persons have by natural and customary law. Cf. ''Washington v. Glucksberg'', 521 U.S. 702, 721-22 (1997) (upholding state legislation that prohibited assisted suicide and reasoning that the Fourteenth Amendment’s “Due Process Clause specially protects those fundamental rights and liberties which are, objectively, ‘deeply rooted in this Nation’s history and tradition’.” (quoting ''Moore v. E. Cleveland'', 431 U. S. 494, 503 (1977)). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England (1765): “Hence,” he said, “it follows, that the first and primary end of human laws is to '''maintain and regulate these absolute rights of individuals'''.” Id. Blackstone taught that the legislative power is to declare existing common-law rights and duties and to remedy any defects in the legal security for those rights. Id. at *42-43, 52-58, 86-87 <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Founders echoed this view in the Declaration of Independence, declaring that governments are instituted among men in order to secure the inalienable rights with which human beings are endowed by nature and nature’s God. They also accused the crown and Parliament of infringing the rights of “our constitution,” which in 1776 could only have been a reference to the common-law constitution of British North America. This view predicated the Constitution of the United States, which expressly secures natural rights, such as life and religious liberty, and common-law rights, such as jury trials and freedom from the quartering of soldiers in one’s home, and expressly disclaims any intent to disparage the other rights of the fundamental law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Indeed, the point of having legislatures, executives, and courts is to secure the rights that Americans already have.''' Neither state legislatures nor the Constitution of the United States create those rights. See District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570, 592 (2008) (stating that “it has always been widely understood that the '''Second Amendment, like the First and Fourth Amendments, codified a preexisting right,” that it “is not a right granted by the Constitution,” and is not “in any manner dependent upon that instrument for its existence.”'''). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Some, but not all, of the rights of natural persons are enumerated [listed] in the Constitution''' of the United States and its amendments. U.S. Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 8.; art. IV, §2; amends. I-VIII. Others are enumerated in state constitutions. See e.g., Soc’y for the Propagation of the Gospel v. Wheeler, 22 F. Cas. 756, 766 (No. 13,156) (C.C.D.N.H. 1814). Still others are declared in American constitutions but not enumerated. U.S. Const. amend. IX (“The enumeration of certain rights herein shall not be construed to deny or disparage other rights retained by the people.”) (emphasis added). '''State legislatures have a duty to declare and secure all fundamental rights, both enumerated and unenumerated.''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Fundamental rights are those that persons enjoy by fundamental law—natural law and common law— with or without any written constitution. Because the common law includes natural rights, to understand the fundamental rights declared and secured by the Constitution, it is sufficient to look to the common law, especially as explained by William Blackstone. Established common-law doctrines constitute the best evidence of the existence and meaning of both enumerated and unenumerated, fundamental rights. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The interpretation of the Constitution of the United States is necessarily influenced by the fact that its provisions are framed in the language of the English common law, and are to be read in the light of its history.” ''Smith v. Alabama'', 124 U.S. 465, 478 (1888). The terms and concepts of the common law provided the “the nomenclature of which the framers of the Constitution were familiar.” ''Minor v. Happersett'', 88 U.S. (21 Wall) 162, 167 (1875). Accord James R. Stoner, Jr., Common-Law Liberty: Rethinking American Constitutionalism 9-29 (2003). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;American constitutional rights are not philosophical abstractions. They are described in detail in common law treatises, such as those by Coke and Hale, and especially Blackstone’s Commentaries. The framers crafted American constitutions—state and federal—in common law terms. And Blackstone was their teacher and lexicographer....<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As this Court has rightly acknowledged, Blackstone’s “works constituted the preeminent authority on English law for the founding generation.” ''Alden v. Maine'', 527 U.S. 706, 715 (1999). Blackstone retained his influence through the adoption of the Civil War Amendments. James M. Ogden, Lincoln’s Early Impressions of the Law in Indiana, 7 Notre Dame L. Rev. 325, 328 (1932). And '''this Court continues to turn to Blackstone today.''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[2 A few examples from recent years include ''Gamble v. United States'', __ U.S. __, 139 S. Ct. 1960 (2019) (the Court’s opinion, the concurrence, and one dissent citing Blackstone multiple times to determine the meaning of the phrase “the same offense” in the Fifth Amendment’s double jeopardy clause); ''Department of Homeland Security v. Thuraissigiam'', __ U.S. __, 140 S. Ct. 1959, 1969 (2020) (calling Blackstone’s Commentaries a “satisfactory exposition of the common law of England”); Ramos v. Louisiana, __ U.S. __, 140 S. Ct. 1390, 1395 (2020) (citing Blackstone in explanation of the holding that '''the requirement of juror unanimity is “a vital right protected by the common law”''' and therefore the Constitution’s jury trial guarantee); ''Torres v. Madrid'', __ U.S. __, 141 S. Ct. 989, 996, 997, 998, 1000 (2021) (citing Blackstone multiple times to determine meaning of Fourth Amendment “seizure”). ]...<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But as the Ninth Amendment makes clear, the enumeration of certain common-law rights does not deny or disparage all the other rights that the American people enjoy by virtue of natural law and their ancient customs. The Ninth Amendment expressly reserves to the people those civil and fundamental rights that they enjoyed prior to ratification, which are their natural rights, other common-law rights and liberties, and some privileges enumerated in state constitutions. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Because many states refused to remedy infringements of fundamental rights [for blacks] prior to the Civil War, the Fourteenth Amendment was necessary to ensure to all persons due process of law and the equal protection of the laws, and to empower Congress to remedy infringements of those rights. It bears emphasis that the '''Fourteenth Amendment was necessary to recall state legislatures to their original task. Far from repealing the people’s retention of fundamenta'''l rights declared by the Ninth Amendment, the Fourteenth Amendment strengthened it. And far from abrogating the duty of state legislatures to declare and secure unenumerated rights, the Fourteenth Amendment reinforced that duty. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That is, the rights retained by the people but not protected by their state, such as the right of Blacks to liberty, was strengthened – at the expense of the freedom of the legislature to torpedo those rights. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And as Statement #11 and its footnotes explain, the 14th Amendment did not supplant the duty of legislatures to protect rights with that duty in courts. The only authority over state violations of rights given courts by the 14th was to enforce federal laws enacted by Congress. The authority of courts we see today, to make up “rights” not found in the Constitution and impose them on states without waiting for Congress to pass a law, was not given by the 14th, but was seized by courts in violation of the Constitution. </ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">– the central reason governments exist, is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders, and is guilty of exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide through an unconstitutional ruling, which exceeds the judicial powers given by the state Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment.<br />
<ref>More about '''“exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide...exceeds the judicial powers given by the state Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Legislatures have considerable untapped potential for restraining their activist courts when they become confused about which branch of government they are. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Perhaps the major reason few people even think about solutions is fear of any change to the balance of powers between the legislature and the courts. “Better the devil you know than the devil you don’t.” We don’t want to just switch tyrants. A change to a real solution requires wisdom, which requires study, and who wants to study? <br />
<center>Another obstacle to restraining courts to their constitutional function is that most people, even Christians, limit their goals to what they consider “realistic”, and especially “politically realistic”, which usually means what people think they can do without God. Trust that what Jesus promised about “impossible” goals is truly “realistic”, enables us to think about not just what would be a little bit better, but about what would be perfect. and then to think about doing whatever we can think of to move in that direction, fully aware how feeble our own steps are, trusting God to open up new opportunities, in His time, as we walk with Him. </center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;My own feeble steps were drafted into a bill in Iowa in 2020. The bill is posted at http://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/wiki/ <br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_stop_judges_from_legislating <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Senate Judiciary Committee Chair Brad Zaun liked the idea and got it numbered and introduced, but it came to him too late that year to get it through the “funnel”, and he was disappointed that there was no organized group helping make other lawmakers aware of it. <br />
<center>'''Judicial Accountability Act: How Legislatures can stop judges from legislating'''</center><br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Summary: what the bill accomplishes'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1. '''No district court injunctions. A single district judge can't overturn a law.''' Any legislature is well within its constitutional authority to prohibit any ''district'' court (lower court) from invalidating a law – only the ''Supreme'' Court should be allowed to do it, and only within 90 days. Letting a single lower court judge overturn the work of 150 lawmakers which include several attorneys and constitutional scholars is insane. Any challenge to a law should go directly to the most experienced judges in the state.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2. '''Supermajority required. It takes 5 of the 7 justices of the Supreme Court to overturn a law.''' A simple majority of justices overturning by one vote a law produced by tens of thousands of people over several years is a scandal. It has nothing to do with wisdom, law, or the Constitution. When judges can’t even agree with each other, unanimously, whether to destroy the work of the majority of voters and their representatives, they prove they are not so much wiser than everybody else in their state to be trusted with such unbridled power. At the very least any injunction should have their unanimous support before they should have any power to shut down the will of their whole state. A supermajority that is short of unanimous may be OK if it is not the final word but is followed by further opportunities for the legislature to restore their law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3. '''Expedited. The Court has to rule in 3 months if the court blocks a new law from taking effect with a Temporary Restraining Order.''' If the court invalidates an existing law, the invalidation doesn't take effect for one year. Courts bottling up laws with injunctions for years while they make up their minds should make them ashamed. They don’t need years. No controversial law is passed without months if not years of scrutiny by attorneys for and against. Their briefs are already ready. They already know what the other side will say. They don’t need years to think of what to say or how to respond. Maybe a day. Maybe two.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Nor do judges need months to read the briefs for several weeks to bring themselves up to speed on the issue. The law has been in the news for years. There is no honor in willful ignorance of the issues until the first brief is filed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Laws are passed to correct serious wrongs. Years of work costing millions of dollars goes into fixing problems. There is no good reason to delay justice for the citizens of a state for years to wait while judges try to agree among themselves whether to allow justice as understood by the majority of voters and lawmakers. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''4. Discussion. The legislature may compel designated justices to attend a public hearing to debate the constitutionality of the law within one year of such a ruling, by passing a resolution.''' Provided a supermajority of the Supreme Court has agreed on an injunction in less than a month, the legislature should then be able, within the next year, to compel the attendance of judges under their jurisdiction to discuss and debate, with specified legislators in a public hearing, the constitutional justification for [or necessity of] that judicial exercise of the legislative function. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''5. The legislature may overturn the invalidation by a 60% vote, by a resolution, leaving the last word, the final verdict, with incredibly well informed voters''' (through ordinary elections of lawmakers and retention of justices). The resolution overturning the invalidation would give reasons responsive to the reasoning of the judicial ruling. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''The Bill: Iowa SSB3181 2020 AD''''''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A BILL FOR <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 An Act regarding legislative oversight of supreme court <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 decisions, and including applicability provisions. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF IOWA: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Introduction/Legislative Findings'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 Section 1. NEW SECTION. 602.1615 Legislative findings —— <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 challenges to the validity of a statute —— exclusive jurisdiction <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 —— public hearings —— legislative oversight. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 1. The general assembly finds and declares all of the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 following: <br />
<center>'''If the legislature can even impeach,''' <br />
<br>'''it can at least ask questions'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 a. The power to impeach subsumes reasonable less severe <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7 remedies. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Lawmakers take an oath''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''to uphold the Constitution too'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Their responsibility to uphold the Constitution'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''requires action against courts '''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''that interfere with their responsibility'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 b. The intent of this section is to provide for a mechanism <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 in which to resolve disputes regarding the constitutionality of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 laws between the courts and the legislature, both of which are <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 composed of constitutional scholars. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Jurisdiction of courts is''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''restricted by the legislature'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 c. Article 5, section 4 of the Constitution of the State <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13 of Iowa states that the supreme court is “a court for the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14 correction of errors at law, '''under such restriction as''' the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15 general assembly may, by law, prescribe . . .”. <br />
<center>'''Judicial power to invalidate laws''' <br />
<br>'''is not given by the Iowa Constitution'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 d. Article 3, section 20 of the Constitution of the State <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 of Iowa gives the legislature the power to impeach judges for <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 “malfeasance in office”, which is generally defined to include <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;19 acting without authority and abusing power. The power to <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;20 impeach subsumes all lesser remedies. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;21 e. The Constitution of the State of Iowa does not give the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;22 courts of this state the power to invalidate laws enacted by <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;23 the legislature, to require the legislature to enact different <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;24 laws, or to publish rulings that have the same effect as new <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;25 legislation. Article 3, section 1 of the Constitution of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;26 the State of Iowa states: “The powers of the government of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;27 Iowa shall be divided into three separate departments —— the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;28 '''legislative, the executive, and the judicial: and no person''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;29 '''charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to one''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;30 '''of these departments shall exercise any function appertaining''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;31 '''to either of the others,''' except in cases hereinafter expressly <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;32 directed or permitted”. <br />
<center>'''The Legislature must get involved''' <br />
<br>'''when courts legislate unconstitutionally'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;33 f. Although the courts of Iowa have usurped those powers <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;34 without constitutional authority, it has been done for reasons <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;35 which the general assembly respects. The general assembly <br />
----<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 welcomes the expertise and guidance of the courts in evaluating <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 the constitutionality of its laws. But when the reasoning of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 rulings which function as legislation appears to be not only <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 unsound, but unconstitutional, the general assembly has the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 constitutional duty and authority to determine that judges and <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 justices have abused their power and exceeded their authority, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7 which are grounds for impeachment under the malfeasance in <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 office clause. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 g. A remedy short of impeachment should advance wisdom, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 build consensus, and educate voters so that informed voters <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 may hold both judges and legislators accountable. Article 1, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 section 2 of the Constitution of the State of Iowa states: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13 '''“All political power is inherent in the people.''' Government is <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14 instituted for the protection, security, and benefit of the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15 people, and they have the right, at all times, to alter or <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 reform the same, whenever the public good may require it”. <br />
<center>'''The Meat of the Bill:''' <br />
<br>'''the Enforcement Section'''<br />
<br>'''Lower courts can't invalidate laws'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 2. The supreme court shall have discretionary and exclusive <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 original jurisdiction over any challenge to any law. A <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;19 district court or the court of appeals shall not invalidate a <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;20 law on any grounds. <br />
<center>'''Supreme Court must rule''' <br />
<br>'''within 3 months, by supermajority,'''<br />
<br>'''when the Court blocks a ''new'' law.'''<br />
<br>'''When the Court blocks an existing law'''<br />
<br>'''the block will not take effect for one year.'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;21 3. A decision of the supreme court that invalidates <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;22 '''existing''' law or has the effect of creating new law shall not <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;23 have any effect unless agreed to by five or more of the seven <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;24 justices, and otherwise shall not have any effect for one <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;25 year. The supreme court shall also have the power to suspend <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;26 implementation of '''a new law''' provided the supreme court produces <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;27 an expedited ruling within three months of the law’s enactment. <br />
<center>'''Public Hearing'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;28 4. a. Within one year of the date a supreme court decision <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;29 is published that invalidates existing law or has the effect <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;30 of creating new law, the general assembly may, by resolution, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;31 compel the attendance of specified justices to a public hearing <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;32 to discuss and debate the justification for the decision with <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;33 members of the general assembly. A public record of the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;34 hearing shall be made. <br />
<center>'''Impeachment grounds inquiry'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;35 b. During or after the hearing, the general assembly shall <br />
----<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 determine if grounds to begin impeachment exist as to any <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 of the justices present at the hearing for acting without <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 authority or malfeasance in office. <br />
<center>'''Judges may improve their ruling'''<br />
<br>'''with respect to the status of the challenged law'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 c. Based on the results of a hearing commenced pursuant to <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 this subsection, a justice whose presence was required at the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 hearing may change the justice’s vote or alter the justice’s <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7 individual contribution to the decision. <br />
<center>'''Legislature may overturn court invalidation'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 5. A supreme court decision invalidating existing law or <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 having the effect of creating new law will not take effect if <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 two-thirds of both the senate and the house of representatives <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 approve a resolution to overturn the decision within one year <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 of the date the decision was published. The resolution must <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13 specify the basis for overturning the decision, including <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14 its reasoning, not to be limited by court precedent that is <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15 responsive to the supreme court’s initial published decision, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 and must be documented by expert testimony and constitutional <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 authority. <br />
<center>'''Legislature may add statement to the ruling'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 6. The general assembly may issue its own statement to a <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;19 published supreme court decision that invalidates existing law <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;20 or has the effect of creating new law if done within one year of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;21 the date the decision was published. The statement must regard <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;22 the constitutionality of the invalidated existing law or the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;23 newly created law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;24 Sec. 2. APPLICABILITY. This Act applies to decisions <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;25 published by the supreme court on or after the effective date <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;26 of this act. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''FAQ's'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Questions and Answers''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Why are existing laws treated differently than new laws?''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The difference is for the benefit of the public, so the laws governing them do not flip back and forth from being in effect. A ''new'' law – for example, the Heartbeat law – could be suspended by courts only until the suspension is overturned by the legislature. An ''existing'' law – for example our former marriage laws requiring spouses to be of the opposite sex – could not be suspended for one year, to give the legislature time to respond. No chaotic back and forth. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Could courts suspend a new law between its effective date and the court ruling?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The legal action a court takes to invalidate a law is an Injunction. The process here doesn’t specify it, but would allow the normal process of allowing the courts to immediately suspend a new law with a TRO, Temporary Restraining Order, until their hearing, at which the temporary order could become permanent. In the case of an existing law, by contrast, allowing the court to immediately suspend the law, with the possibility of it going back into effect after the legislature acts, would subject the public to a law which is in effect, then suspended, then back into effect. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If this law removed the court’s power to put a TRO on a new law, the law would take effect until the ruling, then it would be suspended, but then the legislature might give it effect again.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;What will be the effect of a 4-3 ruling that a law is unconstitutional?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: no legal effect, but much political pressure) Although a 4-3 ruling would no longer have legal force, it would still have powerful political force. A ruling that a law is unconstitutional would be a public relations challenge for the legislature. The legislature would face pressure to refute the judges' claims point by point, or adjust the law voluntarily. A 4-3 ruling would not be powerless; and of course it would still be binding on the parties to the case. But an argument in defense of the legislature ignoring the challenge would be that after all, the justices themselves barely agree the law is unconstitutional. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Would a ruling always trigger a public hearing?<br />
That decision is made independently of a decision to vote to override the court. “Within one year, the legislature MAY, by a resolution, compel the attendance of specified Iowa judges ....”<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Is one year for the legislature to act too long? Too short?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;One year from the court’s ruling is needed to process the ruling’s reasoning, to hold hearings which would require passage of a resolution by both chambers, and then to schedule a vote, which could be while the legislature is not in session. A year is needed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;On the other hand, requiring courts to act in 3 months is reasonable, considering this is not a brand new question before them that they have never heard of before. They have had all the years of public debate on the issue to think about the issue. Plus, courts are accustomed to ruling quickly when cases are required to be “expedited”. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Would prolife laws do any better under this system?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yes, along with all other laws relating to immorality, which are targeted by the Landmark Abomination Cases of the U.S. Supreme Court. Iowa courts think themselves bound by SCOTUS precedent, but the Iowa legislature is not and should not be. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The 14th Amendment makes state legislatures subject to federal laws which protect the rights of state citizens that are listed in the Constitution, which is the meaning of the “privileges and immunities” clause of the 14th. But the 14th gives SCOTUS no authority to make up “rights” hostile to enumerated rights, much less to enforce “rights” without waiting for federal law to lay out the manner and scope of protection. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Neither federal courts nor Congress have any authority through the 14th or through anything else to block states from protecting constitutional rights. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Act laid out here will only get state courts out of the legislature’s way of protecting the rights of state citizens. When federal courts jump in the way, they can be shoved aside with the legal arguments of Clarence Thomas and others that are summarized in Statement #11 of this book. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Is a 2/3 majority requirement necessary? Shouldn't a simple majority of the legislature be enough to override courts?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: practically & legally, certainly; politically, complicated) This may be the hardest detail to muster a quick opinion. There are strong arguments for either choice; perhaps there is even a third option: a 60% vote. As this bill proceeds, perhaps it should be expected that a consensus will form later requiring amendment of this detail. The current draft requires a 2/3 majority. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''The Practical Argument:''' Currently, courts get away with a simple majority requirement (4-3) which faces zero accountability from anybody. This draft requires a 5-2 vote; another option is 6-1. Should the legislature face a similar hurdle? Several lawmakers believe a 2/3 requirement removes any practical hope of ever overturning a judicial invalidation of a law, because the Iowa legislature is incapable of agreeing by 2/3 that the sun is up. A 2/3 requirement would make restraint of lawmaking judges actually harder than passing a constitutional amendment! <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In Congress, our U.S. Constitution says a 2/3 majority is enough to send an amendment to the Constitution before the states for their ratification. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But if we let the legislature overturn the court’s invalidation with a second simple majority, it could be objected that would be almost ridiculously easy for the legislature to gather together the same “yea” votes a second time (if an election doesn’t intervene). A 60% requirement could answer that concern. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;However, that objection could also be met by pointing out that the ruling of the courts would give typically 60 pages of reasons the law should be overturned, which would put a lot of pressure on those “yea” votes to either eloquently and exhaustively justify their votes or vote “nay”. It would not be easy to secure a majority a second time under that pressure. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The public hearing option would put that 60 page ruling on a level playing field with reasoning from lawmakers. It would make both legislatures and courts accountable not only to each other, but to reason. It might even make lawmakers upset enough to reach a 2/3 agreement. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Voters, informed as has never before been possible about judges on the ballot, or about the legal skills of lawmakers, would have the last word. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''The Political Argument:''' The public is not used to legislatures having ANY power to correct unconstitutional rulings. A 2/3 requirement would be less of a shock to tradition. Were this bill to pass into law with a 2/3 requirement, and lawmakers saw how unnecessary it was, lawmakers could ease the requirement in the future - since this does not require amending the constitution, which already grants more than this power, but requires only a law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Amendment'''. Should it be decided that a simple majority of the legislature to overturn a court’s invalidation is sufficient, here is the simple change that could do it - simply strike out “two-thirds of” (or replace it with “six tenths of”): <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 A supreme court decision invalidating existing law or <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 having the effect of creating new law will not take effect if <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 <strikethrough>two-thirds of</strikethrough> both the senate and the house of representatives <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 approve a resolution to overturn the decision within one year <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 of the date the decision was published. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Is it practically possible to require courts to add a statement from the legislature up to a year after its ruling?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;When the Supreme Court first publishes its ruling, that is not the final version that will be later given an official permanent citation in the Northwest Reporter series. (Their contact information) Unpredictable delays are caused by litigants asking for rehearings, and courts taking time to respond. Even after that option is exhausted, court staff continue proofing their decisions, a process that can take months. [Iowa Supreme Court Clerk phone number: 515-348-4700] Northwest Reporter doesn’t officially publish a case, and give it a permanent citation, until a state supreme court notifies them that it is ready. That is why a new case has only an Iowa citation that does not list a page number or volume number, and doesn’t get a fancy N.W.2d permanent citation until much later. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Requiring the Court to leave the publication open for a year in case the legislature chooses to submit a statement would affect only the time the Court notifies Northwest Reporter, and it may not even affect that time at all. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The farther this bill gets, the more discussions there will be about it with the Iowa Bar Association and the Court itself. If delaying final publication that long is deemed unreasonable, an amendment could easily give the legislature an earlier deadline. It might also require the legislature to notify the court of an intent to exercise that option. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Of course, this entire final sentence of this bill is not critical to legislative correction of judicial overreach. It could be conceded if necessary to save the rest of the bill. But it is an appropriate correction of the current system. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Will an expedited hearing that begins in the Supreme Court diminish the time needed by the litigants to fully present their claims?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: anyone ready to block a law from taking effect is ready for court) A challenge to a new law means (and perhaps this bill could so specify, although I think it is already clearly implied) a challenge to a law that has not yet gone into effect, to keep it from going into effect (beginning with a Temporary Restraining Order (TRO) the day it would go into effect). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In such a case the state itself will normally be the defendant, and the petitioner will be a well funded group that tried to kill the law in the legislature but failed. In that situation the petitioner will already be prepared legally, their arguments well honed through interaction with lawmakers. It is hard to imagine that any less prepared petitioner would be ready with a TRO to stop a law before it goes into effect. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Iowa court rules already require appellants to outline their issues in their initial notice of appeal, which is more pressure on individual defendants to prepare that far ahead, in proportion to their means, than challengers to a new law will face, who will be fully primed for a court battle before the law passes the first chamber. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspCourt rules already require that any issue argued in the Supreme Court must have first been raised in the district court, so any responsible lawyer in district court will already be prepared for the Supreme Court. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspDistrict courts are needed to develop facts through witnesses in front of juries, depositions, and cross examination of expert witnesses. Supreme courts don’t do any of that. Expert witnesses can submit Amicus Briefs but the other side can’t cross examine them. Although judges can cross examine the lawyers for both parties in oral arguments, which district judges don’t do. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspThus district courts are essential in criminal trials where the guilt of the defendant needs to be proved to juries, and in civil trials between two parties. But their value in a challenge to a law is less clear. A legislature’s “findings of facts” are given deference except in the case of a “fundamental right”, under current practice, but the court practice of overturning laws that violate made-up “fundamental rights” has zero authority under the U.S. Constitution, and nothing prevents state legislatures from copying into state law the provision of the U.S. Constitution in Article III, Section 2, Paragraph 2, that court jurisdiction is subject to such “exceptions” and “regulations” as the legislature enacts. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspWere the petitioner an individual seeking relief only for himself and not for anyone else affected by the law, courts have many tools for giving relief to individuals short of invalidating whole laws. For example, extenuating circumstances, interaction with other laws affecting the individual, or necessity in order to avoid serious injury (Iowa 704). The applicability of laws to individuals is the jurisdiction of the judicial branch, with which the legislative branch has no intent to interfere, any more than the judicial branch should interfere with the jurisdiction of the legislative branch to establish laws of general application. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspAfter a law has already gone into effect, then there is no requirement to expedite. In fact, the decision to challenge a law could be made by the parties to the case, or by a judge, at any point during a years-long case: in pre-trial briefs, a district judge’s ruling, or during the appeal before the Court of Appeals or the Supreme Court. With this bill the applicability of the law to the individual defendant could still be suspended, but the law itself, as applied to everyone else, would not be suspended until after the Supreme Court so rules and then only if the legislature does not block the suspension. The legislature’s year to respond would not begin with any ruling made before the Supreme Court’s supermajority ruling. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Are there any U.S. Supreme Court precedents relevant to these half dozen powers?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: making judges answer lawmakers' questions is a staple of confirmation hearings) These proposed powers are all completely unprecedented in law, although some of them have been discussed. Probably the one never before discussed is the idea of a public hearing. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspSurely the prohibition of a district judge overturning a law, limiting that power to the state Supreme Court, and requiring a supermajority of the court to overturn, is well within the power given the legislature to limit the jurisdiction of courts. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp'''Public Hearings'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;How about public hearings? Is there any legal or constitutional principle that shields judges from having to explain their rulings any better than they do in their written opinions? Is there something nefarious about requiring judges to answer questions? <br />
Federal judges answer questions about their past rulings in confirmation hearings for appointments to higher courts. If U.S. Senators can require them to answer questions about their rulings years later, why can’t state legislatures require their state judges to answer questions at the time? Judges justify not answering questions about future potential cases, that they may remain free to rule in view of facts and arguments they might not see until then, but there is no reason to shield judges from explaining their past cases. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Especially since the Public Hearings envisioned in this bill are not only to clarify whether a law ruled unconstitutional actually is unconstitutional. The second purpose of these Public Hearings is to investigate whether there are grounds for impeachment. Because if the legislature determines that the court’s ruling of the law’s unconstitutionality is utterly lacking in merit, then judges who so ruled were legislating; they were acting without authority, exercising a power of a different branch of government than their own, which is malfeasance of office, an impeachable offense. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Obviously, in any impeachment trial, the judges would be required to answer questions. These public hearings are a power subsumed under the power of impeachment; they are a reasonable, less severe remedy. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Certainly the very idea of communication between lawmakers and judges on a “level playing field” is unheard of. Unprecedented. (Outside confirmation hearings.) Current communication, which tradition will be slow to reconsider, is somewhat like a parent trying to reason with a child who is as inarticulate as he is stubborn. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is a special challenge for a lawyer representing the legislature to reason with a judge who gives only the scantest clues to what is on his mind before he rules, after which it is too late to respond to his errors. Does any Constitutional or legal principle require such a breakdown of communication? Does this ritual serve any good purpose? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Once President Washington asked SCOTUS for its advisory interpretation of a treaty. The justices declined, saying “The lines of separation drawn by the Constitution between the three departments of government – their being in certain respects checks upon each other – and our being judges in a court of last resort – are considerations which afford strong arguments against the propriety of our extra judicially deciding the questions alluded to; especially as the Power given by the Constitution to the President of calling on the Heads of Departments for opinions, seems to have been purposely as well as expressly limited to executive departments.” https://www.mountvernon.org/library/digitalhistory/digital-encyclopedia/article/george-washington-and-the-supreme-court/<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;https://founders.archives.gov/?q=Thomas%20Recipient%3A%22Washington%2C%20George%22%20Author%3A%22Supreme%20Court%20Justices%22&s=1111311111&sa=supre&r=3&sr= <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That answer is not a precedent for keeping courts from communicatint with legislatures for two reasons: (1) it was not a sensible answer then. The Constitution puts no limit on who the President can consult for advice, while Proverbs 15:22 says “in a multitude of counsellors, purposes are established”. I can’t imagine where SCOTUS came up with the idea that the President was limited to asking his department heads. Washington asked for advice, not a binding ruling. That’s what “extrajudicial” means. (2) SCOTUS then declined to get involved in an issue which it otherwise would never face. This is different than asking a Court to make up its mind earlier than later. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is not wrong to ask judges to give advisory opinions to lawmakers so lawmakers don’t have to spend years crafting laws which judges at the last minute decide to overturn. The August 8, 1793 answer was before Americans had to worry about activist judges who leave the future of legislation, and indeed the very future of human rights, very much in doubt. <br />
However, asking judges to give an advisory opinion about a law before it is passed is probably impractical, since judges are used to taking longer to study an issue than a legislature is in session, and also since even after giving an early opinion, new evidence or argument might come later which would flip the Court’s ruling. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;An expedited three month deadline is probably the closest we can come to a timely response from courts. Certainly legal wrangling that dribbles on for years exhausts the patience of rational minds. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The subject of the public hearing is whether the law really was unconstitutional. Because if it wasn't, then the judges plainly acted outside their authority, which is grounds for impeachment. But beyond being grounds for impeachment, an order given that is beyond one's authority to give is legally invalid. So surely the legislature has the authority to investigate whether an order was invalid, and upon establishing that it is, to reverse its effects. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sheltering judges from interaction doesn’t make them free of bias. In every other human interaction, accountability is the best way to cleanse a hard heart of bias. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp'''The Two-Thirds Majority'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The only thing remotely relevant to this 2/3 vs. simple majority requirement in American constitutional law that I can think of is that to ratify a constitutional amendment, Congress has to pass it by 2/3 before states pass it by 3/4. But the solution here doesn’t change the constitution; it only defines how the legislature is choosing to exercise authority already given by the Iowa Constitution. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If anything, there is a constitutional principle favoring the power of legislatures over courts, with respect to Fundamental Rights. The 14th Amendment is the part of the Constitution which courts have taken to give them jurisdiction over states who trample fundamental rights. But who did the 14th Amendment authorize to enforce its provisions? Not courts! Rather, Congress, according to Section 5 of the Amendment. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yet here are examples of not just state laws, but even state constitutional amendments, which were overturned by courts for violating the “equal protection” clause of the 14th Amendment: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Cummings v. Missouri'', 71 U.S. 277 (1867) a Missouri oath to hold office designed to keep out former confederate soldiers was ruled an unconstitutional Bill of Attainder. <br />
''Hollingswort''h v. Perry'', 570 U.S. 693 (2013) a California same sex marriage ban. <br />
''Romer v. Evans, 517 U.S. 620 (1996) a Colorado gay rights ban. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Awad v. Ziriax'', 10th Circuit, January 10, 2012 an Oklahoma ban of the use of Sharia Law in court. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Giles v. Harris'', 1903, and Giles v. Teasley, 1904, courts winked at disenfranchising Blacks, but explicitly accepted jurisdiction over state constitutions violating the 14th and 15th Amendments. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The authority to enforce the requirements of the 14th Amendment, given to Congress and not courts, gives Congress also the authority to define and apply fundamental rights, and for anyone seriously in doubt, to clarify who is a human being and therefore deserves to have his fundamental rights protected. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;These are philosophical as well as legal questions which merit national discussion, but while courts are sheltered from having to talk to anybody the conversation has been one sided. America needs to open this up into what Proverbs 15:22 calls a “multitude of counsellors”. It does not undermine respect for the judiciary to imagine judges are able to explain their reasoning. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''If Legislatures overturn court rulings, won’t they exercise the authority of the judicial branch?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: legislative action wouldn't affect litigants; only the part of the ruling that reaches wrongfully into legislating) No. On that future day when a legislature overturns judicial rulings, the legislature’s action would not apply to the parties to the case, so the “separation of powers” aspect of the ruling is untouched. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;There are several reasons a court may exempt a litigant from the effects of a law, without invalidating the law for everyone else. The simple difference between courts and legislatures is that legislatures pass laws which apply to everybody, while courts apply those laws in specific cases, only to the parties to the case, guided by the special facts and circumstances of the case. The power given by this bill to legislatures to overturn rulings applies only to the part of the ruling where the court stepped outside its constitutional authority in order to nullify a law passed for the benefit of millions of others. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The purpose of the public hearing is only for the legislature to investigate whether their law was constitutional after all, and if so, to take back their constitutional authority to pass laws by their subsequent vote. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Lawmakers take oaths to defend the Constitution too. Courts cannot rob lawmakers of their power to obey the Constitution without violating the constitution themselves. <br />
Perhaps that is the key principle declared implicitly by this bill: judges aren’t the only branch of government authorized to understand and defend the Constitution. The other branches are too. That balance needs to be restored. The conversation needed needs to be among equals.<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Shouldn’t judges be immune from popular pressure? We don’t want our rights subject to a vote!'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Neither legislatures nor courts should have the last word over each other. We have seen what happens when legislatures had the last word, in the South, during the time of slavery. And we have seen what happens when courts had the last word, in 1857 and 1973; regarding slavery and abortion. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Even the Iowa constitution gives the last word to voters. Is that dangerous? America’s Founders talked about popular whims that could remove important protections over the weekend if the public could vote on individual issues continually. They set up 6 year terms for U.S. Senators and 4 year terms for presidents explicitly to shield our Rule of Law from whims the public might hold for only a month. Nor does this process give voters direct control over the outcome of a disputed law, but only equips them to evaluate the wisdom of their elected representatives and their judges, which is the same as our current system except this leaves voters much better informed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The 14th Amendment expanded the power of courts to overturn laws which violate “fundamental rights”. It made slave-loving southern state legislatures accountable to courts. Unaddressed was what to do when it is courts which violate fundamental rights. This measure is an attempt to restore balance. It is interesting that the 14th Amendment actually leaves its own enforcement not to courts, but to Congress. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The “independence of the judiciary” from popular whims is well protected by lifetime tenure. This measure does not change that. It only defines a remedy for Iowans when judges rule lawlessly and unconstitutionally. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Didn’t Iowa decide recently not to impeach judges for their rulings?'''<br />
Summary: “Overreaching” can only reach so far before it turns into full fledged unconstitutional legislating. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Removal from office, for just one harmful ruling which may be out of a long career of beneficial rulings, is pretty drastic; not to mention ineffective since it leaves the ruling in place that triggered the impeachment! <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That is why remedies short of impeachment are necessary, as well as remedies able to focus on the problem without cutting off talent which is mostly beneficial.<br />
If an assembly line produces an occasional klunker amongst its generally great output, we keep the assembly line and discard the klunker; we don't keep the klunker and blow up the assembly line! <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Iowans seriously considered impeaching judges for their rulings not so long ago. Highlights are discussed at the Brennan Center: <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A 2011 review by the National Center for State Courts’ Gavel to Gavel website also found numerous bills introduced in state legislatures that year to impeach judges and justices because of disagreement over specific rulings. Several of those introductions were part of a failed effort in Iowa to remove four Iowa Supreme Court Justices for their decision in a high-profile case about marriage rights for same-sex couples. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The impeachment attempt garnered significant media attention, but also widespread condemnation – even from members of the sponsors’ own party. Iowa Governor-elect Terry Brandstad (R) [sic] said at the time that disagreement over a ruling did not constitute grounds for impeachment. “There’s a difference between malfeasance and over-reaching,” said Brandstad, “the Constitution says what the grounds for impeachment are. My reading is it’s not there.” Iowa House Speaker Kraig Paulsen (R), whose chamber would have voted on the impeachment, sent the resolutions to languish in an inactive committee and said, “I disagree with this remedy,…I do not expect it to be debated on the floor of the House, and if it is, I will vote no.”<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I respectfully disagree with Governor, later Ambassador Branstad. When the Iowa Supreme Court not only struck down laws limiting marriage to opposite sex couples, but specifically ordered county clerks to solemnize “marriages” between same sex couples, that reaches beyond “overreaching”. “Overreaching” implies a mild going-a-little-too-far out of one’s proper jurisdiction. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But if the plainest example of a “person charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to” the judicial branch of government exercising “any function appertaining to” the legislative branch can be dismissed as mere “overreaching”, then it is impossible for any other judicial legislating to violate the Iowa Constitution. We might as well just give judges the password to the Iowa Code database and let them write whatever laws they please. As Rep. Matt Windschitl said January 27, 2020 on the Jeff Angelo show, “Do we really want judges deciding laws? If so, why do we even have a legislature?”<br />
Article 3 Section 1 of the Iowa Constitution says “Departments of government. The powers of the government of Iowa shall be divided into three separate departments — the legislative, the executive, and the judicial: and no person charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to one of these departments shall exercise any function appertaining to either of the others....”<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''FAQ’s: Judicial Philosophy'''<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Isn’t it unconstitutional to impeach a judge for a ruling?'''<br />
Summary: It can’t be unconstitutional to correct the part of a ruling that unconstitutionally legislates. Although it has not been established definitively, whether a judge may be impeached over a ruling, most legal discussion avers that would be unethical, and there is no precedent of a successful impeachment over the content of a ruling. <br />
Most legal discussion is of the U.S. Constitution; the Iowa Constitution specifies that judges can’t legislate, which is only implied in the U.S. Constitution. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The United States Constitution provides little guidance as to what offenses constitute grounds for the impeachment of federal judges...However, the impeachment power has historically been limited to cases of serious ethical or criminal misconduct. - Brennan Center<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is generally supposed that legislative action to correct an unconstitutional ruling, or to discipline a judge who writes one, would be unconstitutional. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Constitution does not “provide for resignation or impeachment whenever a judge makes a decision with which elected officials disagree” said four judges when President Clinton and Senator Dole urged impeachment of a judge over his ruling on admissibility of evidence. “These attacks do a grave disservice to the principle of an independent judiciary and…mislead the public as to the role of judges in a constitutional democracy.” Brennan Center<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Let’s make a distinction glossed over by those four judges: between a ruling hated because it applies existing law and facts in a way most people think is wrong, and a ruling hated because it overturns laws by a rationale that most people think is unconstitutional. I agree with the four judges that the case was correctly kept off limits to lawmakers, but the judges generalized their criticism to the extent of dismissing concerns about truly unconstitutional rulings as being mere decisions “with which elected officials disagree”. <br />
It is that degree of generalization that is “a grave disservice” by elevating “the principle of an independent judiciary” beyond the reach of the Constitution, of common sense, and of accountability of any kind from any source. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;What I have not found in law review articles is any proposed remedy for when a ruling itself is unconstitutional. I have not found it even acknowledged that it is possible for a ruling to be unconstitutional. As if to say “how could judges rule unconstitutionally? Judges ARE the constitution.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But it is judges themselves, in vigorous dissents, who stir public concern about the constitutionally of certain rulings. Judges who write dissents are as qualified as those in the majority, and their reasoning is often equally persuasive. When the public has a basis this solid for concern about the constitutionality of rulings, it is surely in the public interest, and not contrary to any known legal or constitutional principle, to hold a public hearing where those concerns can be addressed and hopefully resolved, where judges, perhaps for the first time in America history, can be compelled to interact with experts other than each other.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In fact, any time a law is overturned for being unconstitutional, but the ruling is flawed and a correct ruling would actually not find the law unconstitutional, then actually the ruling itself is unconstitutional because the ruling amounts to raw legislation. It is unconstitutional for courts to pass laws. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Let me emphasize this point. Any ruling that overturns a law is either correct because the law is in fact unconstitutional, or is itself unconstitutional because its reasoning or factual basis is flawed. Lawmakers take oaths to defend the Constitution too, and should not be unconstitutionally deprived of the power to enforce it when they see a violation. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If we may agree that it is at least theoretically possible for a ruling overturning a law to be unconstitutional, shall we insist the Constitution requires the legislature to honor every unconstitutional ruling? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Suppose there were a law against painting your house red, someone was prosecuted for painting his house red, and the court refused to convict because it is surely unconstitutional to outlaw painting your house red. Even without a formal nullification of the law, the law would be defacto nullified because prosecutors would know the court won’t convict anybody for that crime. It may be reasoned that rulings overturning laws merely formalize this natural process. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Public hearings would bring healing to our national division over issues less clear than the right to paint your house red. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As is pointed out below, the power this bill gives the legislature to overturn a judicial validation of its laws would not usurp judicial powers. It would not affect individuals who are actual parties named in the case. It would only affect that part of the ruling which wrongfully reaches into lawmaking, changing the laws which affect millions of other people who are not named in the case. <br />
</ref><br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">Should any federal judge so interfere, this state appeals to its congressional delegation to examine similar grounds for disciplinary action, along with exercising its Article III, Section 2, paragraph 2 authority to make “exceptions” and “regulations” designed to end SCOTUS’ long line of landmark abomination cases. <br />
<ref>More about '''“similar grounds for disciplinary action”''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;For example, see “Bringing the Courts Back Under the Constitution” at www.osaka.law.miami.edu/~schnably/GringrichContractWith America.pdf (sic)<br />
</ref><br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">This state also appeals to its congressional delegation to exercise its life-saving and rights-protecting authority under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment whose plain words give Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of Rights,4 which subsumes the authority to define their scope and balance competing interests, while the “privileges and immunities” clause identifies as protectable rights those listed in the Constitution.<br />
<ref> More about '''“Section 5 of the 14th Amendment gives Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of the Right to Life and of Equal Protection of the Laws”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Section 5 of the 14th Amendment so plainly gives Congress, not courts, the power to correct state violations of fundamental rights, that it is an amazing story how SCOTUS has usurped that power for itself and completely denied it to Congress, and how Congress has let them.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Largely relying on the dissents and concurrences of Justice Clarence Thomas, this story is told in Statement #11 and its footnotes. See “What Happened to Unalienable Rights, and How to Get Them Back” and “ ‘Substantive Due Process’: how SCOTUS usurped the Constitution’s Authority to Define Rights, and Congress’ Authority to Enforce Rights, into its own authority to reclassify abominations as ‘rights’ ”</ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">Official world-wide definitions of “crimes against humanity” apply “to representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission.”<br />
<ref>More about '''“...definitions of ‘crimes against humanity’ apply ‘to representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission.’ ”''' <br />
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<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;“A crime against humanity occurs <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;when the government withdraws legal protection <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;from a class of human beings <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;resulting in severe deprivation of rights, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;up to and including death.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;- amicus in Dobbs of <u>Melinda Thybault/Moral Outcry</u><br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Melinda Thybault’s amicus brief was the 20th amicus docketed in Dobbs v. Jackson (2022). (www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184968/ 20210726175018044_41206%20pdf%20Parker%20III%20br.pdf)<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Her references, backing up that damning judgment:<br />
<blockquote>See “Crime Against Humanity” at www.law.cornell.edu/wex/ crime_against_humanity and see U.N. Office, Genocide Prevention, Crimes Against Humanity www.un.org/en/genocideprevention/crimes-against-humanity.shtml; Treaty of Rome (1957). See also Convention on the Non-Applicability of Statutory Limitations to War .</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Her characterization of international documents is not only fair, but it understates the culpability of elected representatives. Actual quotes from the documents lay responsibility at the feet, not just of impersonal “government”, but of government’s “representatives”. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Notice in the following definitions that those targeted for prosecution in international human rights tribunals include elected representatives and senators who “tolerate” crimes against humanity – who don’t actively execute their authority to criminalize these assaults on the Image of God. (Genesis 1:27) <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;“Genocide”, defined: ''“Genocide means...acts...with intent to destroy...in part, a national...group [in our case, Americans] [by] killing members of the group [in our case, babies; and by] Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group....”'' <br />
Here is the complete United Nations statement: <br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Article II: In the present Convention, '''genocide means''' any of the following '''acts committed with intent to destroy''', in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such:<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(a) '''Killing members of the group;'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(b) Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group;<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(c) Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part;<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(d) '''Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group;'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(e) Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;- Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide / Approved and proposed for signature and ratification or accession by General Assembly resolution 260 A (III) of 9 December 1948 / Entry into force: 12 January 1951, in accordance with article XII / www.un.org/en/genocideprevention/ documents/atrocity-crimes/Doc.1_Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.pdf</blockquote><br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The 1948 definition above is cited in the following 1968 United Nations General Assembly resolution (which took effect two years later) which nullifies any “statute of limitations” on “crimes against humanity”:<br />
<blockquote><br />
Article I: No statutory limitation shall apply to the following crimes, irrespective of the date of their commission:...(b) Crimes against humanity whether committed in time of war or in time of peace as they are defined in the Charter of the International Military Tribunal, Nürnberg, of 8 August 1945 and confirmed by resolutions 3 (I) of 13 February 1946 and 95 (I) of 11 December 1946 of the General Assembly of the United Nations,...the crime of genocide as defined in the 1948 Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, even if such acts do not constitute a violation of the domestic law of the country in which they were committed.</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The following Article II applies the call for prosecution at any time, not limited by a Statute of Limitations, to elected representatives. The word “elected” is not there, but the context certainly includes them, especially since one cannot “represent” another, as the word is normally defined, without their voluntary authorization. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;By not limiting the definition of “representatives” to those who are elected, the definition does not exclude judges.<br />
<blockquote>Article II: '''If any of the crimes mentioned in article I is committed, the provisions of this Convention shall apply to''' representatives of the State authority and private individuals who, as principals or accomplices, participate in or who directly incite others to the commission of any of those crimes, or who conspire to commit them, irrespective of the degree of completion, and to '''representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission.''' (Article II, Convention on the Non-Applicability of Statutory Limitations to War, ADOPTED 26 November 1968 BY General Assembly resolution 2391 (XXIII))</blockquote><br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If [genocide] is committed, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;the provisions of this Convention shall apply <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;to representatives of the State authority <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;who tolerate [its] commission. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Including judges.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And elected representatives <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; who are lax in restraining them.<br />
<br />
<u>Thybault</u> writes, “...the Court has not yet fully reversed Roe, Doe, and Casey.” She submitted this observation to the Court which finally reversed all three, technically, although the slaughter continues in most states so her observation is still timely. <br />
“No American citizen should have to live under, nor as history tragically demonstrates, should they stand by silently, while their government sanctions and even promotes crimes against humanity.” <br />
Another low point in the Supreme Court’s grasp of 14th Amendment equal rights, she mentions, was Plessy v. Ferguson, 163 U.S. 537 (1896) which, like Roe and Dred Scott, “denied legal protection to a class of human beings” and “ignored the plain language of the Fourteenth Amendment”. “Plessy accepted the gloss that ‘separate but equal’ was ‘equal’.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;She repeats, “When the government withdraws legal protection from a class of human beings, it is the classic definition of a crime against humanity.” <br />
</ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">Any court review of this law must be expedited, because lives are lost with each day that courts delay.<br />
<br />
<br />
<small>The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: 396 State Legislators from 41 States <> Melinda Thybault/Moral Outcry</small><br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Courtrecognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human<br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] Courts Accept the Fact-Finding Authority of Legislatures, Juries, Experts for the same good reasons their findings persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures should regulate abortion, as Dobbs held, just as legislatures regulate the prosecution of all other murders.<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] The full humanity of a tiny physical body is hard for many to grasp. But what distinguishes us from animals isn’t physical, and has no known pre-conscious stage.<br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress has ''Already'' Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment already authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion.<br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] Roe, Dobbs, and the 14th Amendment agree: All Humans are “Persons”.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] When pregnancies develop into medical emergencies requiring separation of mother and child to save the mother, the child has an equal fundamental right to life and medical care. <br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any class of humans by any other is prohibited by the Constitution, by the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives legislatures no authority to legalize violations of Constitutional Rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
<br />
----<br />
'''FOOTNOTES'''<br />
----<br />
<br />
<references /></div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Statement_12_%2B_Footnotes&diff=50353Statement 12 + Footnotes2023-12-13T05:01:45Z<p>DaveLeach: </p>
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<br />
Statement of Facts #12 of 12 from: <br />
<br />
=[[Reversing_Landmark_Abomination_Cases]]=<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters<br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion</span><br />
<br />
by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal<br />
''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal<br />
<span style="color:brown"><br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen <br />
<br />
by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 18:11, 15 October 2023 (UTC)<br />
<br />
<span style="color:grey"><small>''Try to imagine how a judge, reviewing a prolife law with these Findings of Facts, would be able to dodge this evidence - in fact, see if you can find ANYONE who can ''refute'' these facts - as opposed to not ''caring'' about facts - that is, not caring about reality:''</small></span><br />
<br />
====<span style="color:blue">Statement of Fact #12 of 12:====<br />
<span style="color:blue">Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">Any state judge interfering with this state’s compliance with the 14th Amendment and its ancient authority to protect its people <br />
<ref>More about '''“the ancient authority of state legislatures...to protect the lives of all its people – an authority which no court can legitimately remove.”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Courts that overturn the prolife laws of “red states” interfere with the ancient duty and power of every government, in every generation, to protect life, points out the amicus brief filed in Dobbs v. Jackson by <u>396 State Legislators from 41 States</u>.(www.supremecourt.gov/Docket PDF/19/19-1392/185121/ 20210728125120809_Dobbs%20Amici%20brief_State%20Legislators_07272021.pdf)<br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;State legislators have the constitutional duty, and therefore the power, to protect the fundamental, civil rights of persons. The fundamental law in which those fundamental rights are found is the common law, which consists of both natural duties and those ancient, customary rights and immunities that are foundational to ordered liberty. Thus, a state legislature must declare and secure to all persons within the protection of its laws the rights that those persons have by natural and customary law. Cf. ''Washington v. Glucksberg'', 521 U.S. 702, 721-22 (1997) (upholding state legislation that prohibited assisted suicide and reasoning that the Fourteenth Amendment’s “Due Process Clause specially protects those fundamental rights and liberties which are, objectively, ‘deeply rooted in this Nation’s history and tradition’.” (quoting ''Moore v. E. Cleveland'', 431 U. S. 494, 503 (1977)). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England (1765): “Hence,” he said, “it follows, that the first and primary end of human laws is to '''maintain and regulate these absolute rights of individuals'''.” Id. Blackstone taught that the legislative power is to declare existing common-law rights and duties and to remedy any defects in the legal security for those rights. Id. at *42-43, 52-58, 86-87 <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Founders echoed this view in the Declaration of Independence, declaring that governments are instituted among men in order to secure the inalienable rights with which human beings are endowed by nature and nature’s God. They also accused the crown and Parliament of infringing the rights of “our constitution,” which in 1776 could only have been a reference to the common-law constitution of British North America. This view predicated the Constitution of the United States, which expressly secures natural rights, such as life and religious liberty, and common-law rights, such as jury trials and freedom from the quartering of soldiers in one’s home, and expressly disclaims any intent to disparage the other rights of the fundamental law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Indeed, the point of having legislatures, executives, and courts is to secure the rights that Americans already have.''' Neither state legislatures nor the Constitution of the United States create those rights. See District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570, 592 (2008) (stating that “it has always been widely understood that the '''Second Amendment, like the First and Fourth Amendments, codified a preexisting right,” that it “is not a right granted by the Constitution,” and is not “in any manner dependent upon that instrument for its existence.”'''). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Some, but not all, of the rights of natural persons are enumerated [listed] in the Constitution''' of the United States and its amendments. U.S. Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 8.; art. IV, §2; amends. I-VIII. Others are enumerated in state constitutions. See e.g., Soc’y for the Propagation of the Gospel v. Wheeler, 22 F. Cas. 756, 766 (No. 13,156) (C.C.D.N.H. 1814). Still others are declared in American constitutions but not enumerated. U.S. Const. amend. IX (“The enumeration of certain rights herein shall not be construed to deny or disparage other rights retained by the people.”) (emphasis added). '''State legislatures have a duty to declare and secure all fundamental rights, both enumerated and unenumerated.''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Fundamental rights are those that persons enjoy by fundamental law—natural law and common law— with or without any written constitution. Because the common law includes natural rights, to understand the fundamental rights declared and secured by the Constitution, it is sufficient to look to the common law, especially as explained by William Blackstone. Established common-law doctrines constitute the best evidence of the existence and meaning of both enumerated and unenumerated, fundamental rights. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The interpretation of the Constitution of the United States is necessarily influenced by the fact that its provisions are framed in the language of the English common law, and are to be read in the light of its history.” ''Smith v. Alabama'', 124 U.S. 465, 478 (1888). The terms and concepts of the common law provided the “the nomenclature of which the framers of the Constitution were familiar.” ''Minor v. Happersett'', 88 U.S. (21 Wall) 162, 167 (1875). Accord James R. Stoner, Jr., Common-Law Liberty: Rethinking American Constitutionalism 9-29 (2003). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;American constitutional rights are not philosophical abstractions. They are described in detail in common law treatises, such as those by Coke and Hale, and especially Blackstone’s Commentaries. The framers crafted American constitutions—state and federal—in common law terms. And Blackstone was their teacher and lexicographer....<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As this Court has rightly acknowledged, Blackstone’s “works constituted the preeminent authority on English law for the founding generation.” ''Alden v. Maine'', 527 U.S. 706, 715 (1999). Blackstone retained his influence through the adoption of the Civil War Amendments. James M. Ogden, Lincoln’s Early Impressions of the Law in Indiana, 7 Notre Dame L. Rev. 325, 328 (1932). And '''this Court continues to turn to Blackstone today.''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[2 A few examples from recent years include ''Gamble v. United States'', __ U.S. __, 139 S. Ct. 1960 (2019) (the Court’s opinion, the concurrence, and one dissent citing Blackstone multiple times to determine the meaning of the phrase “the same offense” in the Fifth Amendment’s double jeopardy clause); ''Department of Homeland Security v. Thuraissigiam'', __ U.S. __, 140 S. Ct. 1959, 1969 (2020) (calling Blackstone’s Commentaries a “satisfactory exposition of the common law of England”); Ramos v. Louisiana, __ U.S. __, 140 S. Ct. 1390, 1395 (2020) (citing Blackstone in explanation of the holding that '''the requirement of juror unanimity is “a vital right protected by the common law”''' and therefore the Constitution’s jury trial guarantee); ''Torres v. Madrid'', __ U.S. __, 141 S. Ct. 989, 996, 997, 998, 1000 (2021) (citing Blackstone multiple times to determine meaning of Fourth Amendment “seizure”). ]...<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But as the Ninth Amendment makes clear, the enumeration of certain common-law rights does not deny or disparage all the other rights that the American people enjoy by virtue of natural law and their ancient customs. The Ninth Amendment expressly reserves to the people those civil and fundamental rights that they enjoyed prior to ratification, which are their natural rights, other common-law rights and liberties, and some privileges enumerated in state constitutions. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Because many states refused to remedy infringements of fundamental rights [for blacks] prior to the Civil War, the Fourteenth Amendment was necessary to ensure to all persons due process of law and the equal protection of the laws, and to empower Congress to remedy infringements of those rights. It bears emphasis that the '''Fourteenth Amendment was necessary to recall state legislatures to their original task. Far from repealing the people’s retention of fundamenta'''l rights declared by the Ninth Amendment, the Fourteenth Amendment strengthened it. And far from abrogating the duty of state legislatures to declare and secure unenumerated rights, the Fourteenth Amendment reinforced that duty. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That is, the rights retained by the people but not protected by their state, such as the right of Blacks to liberty, was strengthened – at the expense of the freedom of the legislature to torpedo those rights. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And as Statement #11 and its footnotes explain, the 14th Amendment did not supplant the duty of legislatures to protect rights with that duty in courts. The only authority over state violations of rights given courts by the 14th was to enforce federal laws enacted by Congress. The authority of courts we see today, to make up “rights” not found in the Constitution and impose them on states without waiting for Congress to pass a law, was not given by the 14th, but was seized by courts in violation of the Constitution. </ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">– the central reason governments exist, is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders, and is guilty of exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide through an unconstitutional ruling, which exceeds the judicial powers given by the state Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment.<br />
<ref>More about '''“exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide...exceeds the judicial powers given by the state Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Legislatures have considerable untapped potential for restraining their activist courts when they become confused about which branch of government they are. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Perhaps the major reason few people even think about solutions is fear of any change to the balance of powers between the legislature and the courts. “Better the devil you know than the devil you don’t.” We don’t want to just switch tyrants. A change to a real solution requires wisdom, which requires study, and who wants to study? <br />
<center>Another obstacle to restraining courts to their constitutional function is that most people, even Christians, limit their goals to what they consider “realistic”, and especially “politically realistic”, which usually means what people think they can do without God. Trust that what Jesus promised about “impossible” goals is truly “realistic”, enables us to think about not just what would be a little bit better, but about what would be perfect. and then to think about doing whatever we can think of to move in that direction, fully aware how feeble our own steps are, trusting God to open up new opportunities, in His time, as we walk with Him. </center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;My own feeble steps were drafted into a bill in Iowa in 2020. The bill is posted at http://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/wiki/ <br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_stop_judges_from_legislating <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Senate Judiciary Committee Chair Brad Zaun liked the idea and got it numbered and introduced, but it came to him too late that year to get it through the “funnel”, and he was disappointed that there was no organized group helping make other lawmakers aware of it. <br />
<center>'''Judicial Accountability Act: How Legislatures can stop judges from legislating'''</center><br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Summary: what the bill accomplishes'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1. '''No district court injunctions. A single district judge can't overturn a law.''' Any legislature is well within its constitutional authority to prohibit any ''district'' court (lower court) from invalidating a law – only the ''Supreme'' Court should be allowed to do it, and only within 90 days. Letting a single lower court judge overturn the work of 150 lawmakers which include several attorneys and constitutional scholars is insane. Any challenge to a law should go directly to the most experienced judges in the state.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2. '''Supermajority required. It takes 5 of the 7 justices of the Supreme Court to overturn a law.''' A simple majority of justices overturning by one vote a law produced by tens of thousands of people over several years is a scandal. It has nothing to do with wisdom, law, or the Constitution. When judges can’t even agree with each other, unanimously, whether to destroy the work of the majority of voters and their representatives, they prove they are not so much wiser than everybody else in their state to be trusted with such unbridled power. At the very least any injunction should have their unanimous support before they should have any power to shut down the will of their whole state. A supermajority that is short of unanimous may be OK if it is not the final word but is followed by further opportunities for the legislature to restore their law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3. '''Expedited. The Court has to rule in 3 months if the court blocks a new law from taking effect with a Temporary Restraining Order.''' If the court invalidates an existing law, the invalidation doesn't take effect for one year. Courts bottling up laws with injunctions for years while they make up their minds should make them ashamed. They don’t need years. No controversial law is passed without months if not years of scrutiny by attorneys for and against. Their briefs are already ready. They already know what the other side will say. They don’t need years to think of what to say or how to respond. Maybe a day. Maybe two.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Nor do judges need months to read the briefs for several weeks to bring themselves up to speed on the issue. The law has been in the news for years. There is no honor in willful ignorance of the issues until the first brief is filed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Laws are passed to correct serious wrongs. Years of work costing millions of dollars goes into fixing problems. There is no good reason to delay justice for the citizens of a state for years to wait while judges try to agree among themselves whether to allow justice as understood by the majority of voters and lawmakers. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''4. Discussion. The legislature may compel designated justices to attend a public hearing to debate the constitutionality of the law within one year of such a ruling, by passing a resolution.''' Provided a supermajority of the Supreme Court has agreed on an injunction in less than a month, the legislature should then be able, within the next year, to compel the attendance of judges under their jurisdiction to discuss and debate, with specified legislators in a public hearing, the constitutional justification for [or necessity of] that judicial exercise of the legislative function. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''5. The legislature may overturn the invalidation by a 60% vote, by a resolution, leaving the last word, the final verdict, with incredibly well informed voters''' (through ordinary elections of lawmakers and retention of justices). The resolution overturning the invalidation would give reasons responsive to the reasoning of the judicial ruling. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''The Bill: Iowa SSB3181 2020 AD''''''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A BILL FOR <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 An Act regarding legislative oversight of supreme court <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 decisions, and including applicability provisions. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF IOWA: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Introduction/Legislative Findings'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 Section 1. NEW SECTION. 602.1615 Legislative findings —— <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 challenges to the validity of a statute —— exclusive jurisdiction <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 —— public hearings —— legislative oversight. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 1. The general assembly finds and declares all of the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 following: <br />
<center>'''If the legislature can even impeach,''' <br />
<br>'''it can at least ask questions'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 a. The power to impeach subsumes reasonable less severe <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7 remedies. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Lawmakers take an oath''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''to uphold the Constitution too'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Their responsibility to uphold the Constitution'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''requires action against courts '''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''that interfere with their responsibility'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 b. The intent of this section is to provide for a mechanism <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 in which to resolve disputes regarding the constitutionality of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 laws between the courts and the legislature, both of which are <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 composed of constitutional scholars. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Jurisdiction of courts is''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''restricted by the legislature'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 c. Article 5, section 4 of the Constitution of the State <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13 of Iowa states that the supreme court is “a court for the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14 correction of errors at law, '''under such restriction as''' the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15 general assembly may, by law, prescribe . . .”. <br />
<center>'''Judicial power to invalidate laws''' <br />
<br>'''is not given by the Iowa Constitution'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 d. Article 3, section 20 of the Constitution of the State <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 of Iowa gives the legislature the power to impeach judges for <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 “malfeasance in office”, which is generally defined to include <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;19 acting without authority and abusing power. The power to <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;20 impeach subsumes all lesser remedies. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;21 e. The Constitution of the State of Iowa does not give the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;22 courts of this state the power to invalidate laws enacted by <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;23 the legislature, to require the legislature to enact different <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;24 laws, or to publish rulings that have the same effect as new <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;25 legislation. Article 3, section 1 of the Constitution of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;26 the State of Iowa states: “The powers of the government of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;27 Iowa shall be divided into three separate departments —— the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;28 '''legislative, the executive, and the judicial: and no person''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;29 '''charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to one''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;30 '''of these departments shall exercise any function appertaining''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;31 '''to either of the others,''' except in cases hereinafter expressly <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;32 directed or permitted”. <br />
<center>'''The Legislature must get involved''' <br />
<br>'''when courts legislate unconstitutionally'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;33 f. Although the courts of Iowa have usurped those powers <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;34 without constitutional authority, it has been done for reasons <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;35 which the general assembly respects. The general assembly <br />
----<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 welcomes the expertise and guidance of the courts in evaluating <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 the constitutionality of its laws. But when the reasoning of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 rulings which function as legislation appears to be not only <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 unsound, but unconstitutional, the general assembly has the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 constitutional duty and authority to determine that judges and <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 justices have abused their power and exceeded their authority, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7 which are grounds for impeachment under the malfeasance in <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 office clause. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 g. A remedy short of impeachment should advance wisdom, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 build consensus, and educate voters so that informed voters <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 may hold both judges and legislators accountable. Article 1, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 section 2 of the Constitution of the State of Iowa states: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13 '''“All political power is inherent in the people.''' Government is <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14 instituted for the protection, security, and benefit of the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15 people, and they have the right, at all times, to alter or <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 reform the same, whenever the public good may require it”. <br />
<center>'''The Meat of the Bill:''' <br />
<br>'''the Enforcement Section'''<br />
<br>'''Lower courts can't invalidate laws'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 2. The supreme court shall have discretionary and exclusive <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 original jurisdiction over any challenge to any law. A <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;19 district court or the court of appeals shall not invalidate a <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;20 law on any grounds. <br />
<center>'''Supreme Court must rule''' <br />
<br>'''within 3 months, by supermajority,'''<br />
<br>'''when the Court blocks a ''new'' law.'''<br />
<br>'''When the Court blocks an existing law'''<br />
<br>'''the block will not take effect for one year.'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;21 3. A decision of the supreme court that invalidates <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;22 '''existing''' law or has the effect of creating new law shall not <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;23 have any effect unless agreed to by five or more of the seven <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;24 justices, and otherwise shall not have any effect for one <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;25 year. The supreme court shall also have the power to suspend <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;26 implementation of '''a new law''' provided the supreme court produces <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;27 an expedited ruling within three months of the law’s enactment. <br />
<center>'''Public Hearing'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;28 4. a. Within one year of the date a supreme court decision <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;29 is published that invalidates existing law or has the effect <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;30 of creating new law, the general assembly may, by resolution, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;31 compel the attendance of specified justices to a public hearing <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;32 to discuss and debate the justification for the decision with <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;33 members of the general assembly. A public record of the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;34 hearing shall be made. <br />
<center>'''Impeachment grounds inquiry'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;35 b. During or after the hearing, the general assembly shall <br />
----<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 determine if grounds to begin impeachment exist as to any <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 of the justices present at the hearing for acting without <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 authority or malfeasance in office. <br />
<center>'''Judges may improve their ruling'''<br />
<br>'''with respect to the status of the challenged law'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 c. Based on the results of a hearing commenced pursuant to <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 this subsection, a justice whose presence was required at the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 hearing may change the justice’s vote or alter the justice’s <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7 individual contribution to the decision. <br />
<center>'''Legislature may overturn court invalidation'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 5. A supreme court decision invalidating existing law or <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 having the effect of creating new law will not take effect if <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 two-thirds of both the senate and the house of representatives <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 approve a resolution to overturn the decision within one year <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 of the date the decision was published. The resolution must <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13 specify the basis for overturning the decision, including <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14 its reasoning, not to be limited by court precedent that is <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15 responsive to the supreme court’s initial published decision, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 and must be documented by expert testimony and constitutional <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 authority. <br />
<center>'''Legislature may add statement to the ruling'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 6. The general assembly may issue its own statement to a <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;19 published supreme court decision that invalidates existing law <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;20 or has the effect of creating new law if done within one year of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;21 the date the decision was published. The statement must regard <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;22 the constitutionality of the invalidated existing law or the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;23 newly created law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;24 Sec. 2. APPLICABILITY. This Act applies to decisions <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;25 published by the supreme court on or after the effective date <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;26 of this act. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''FAQ's'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Questions and Answers''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Why are existing laws treated differently than new laws?''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The difference is for the benefit of the public, so the laws governing them do not flip back and forth from being in effect. A ''new'' law – for example, the Heartbeat law – could be suspended by courts only until the suspension is overturned by the legislature. An ''existing'' law – for example our former marriage laws requiring spouses to be of the opposite sex – could not be suspended for one year, to give the legislature time to respond. No chaotic back and forth. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Could courts suspend a new law between its effective date and the court ruling?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The legal action a court takes to invalidate a law is an Injunction. The process here doesn’t specify it, but would allow the normal process of allowing the courts to immediately suspend a new law with a TRO, Temporary Restraining Order, until their hearing, at which the temporary order could become permanent. In the case of an existing law, by contrast, allowing the court to immediately suspend the law, with the possibility of it going back into effect after the legislature acts, would subject the public to a law which is in effect, then suspended, then back into effect. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If this law removed the court’s power to put a TRO on a new law, the law would take effect until the ruling, then it would be suspended, but then the legislature might give it effect again.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;What will be the effect of a 4-3 ruling that a law is unconstitutional?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: no legal effect, but much political pressure) Although a 4-3 ruling would no longer have legal force, it would still have powerful political force. A ruling that a law is unconstitutional would be a public relations challenge for the legislature. The legislature would face pressure to refute the judges' claims point by point, or adjust the law voluntarily. A 4-3 ruling would not be powerless; and of course it would still be binding on the parties to the case. But an argument in defense of the legislature ignoring the challenge would be that after all, the justices themselves barely agree the law is unconstitutional. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Would a ruling always trigger a public hearing?<br />
That decision is made independently of a decision to vote to override the court. “Within one year, the legislature MAY, by a resolution, compel the attendance of specified Iowa judges ....”<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Is one year for the legislature to act too long? Too short?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;One year from the court’s ruling is needed to process the ruling’s reasoning, to hold hearings which would require passage of a resolution by both chambers, and then to schedule a vote, which could be while the legislature is not in session. A year is needed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;On the other hand, requiring courts to act in 3 months is reasonable, considering this is not a brand new question before them that they have never heard of before. They have had all the years of public debate on the issue to think about the issue. Plus, courts are accustomed to ruling quickly when cases are required to be “expedited”. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Would prolife laws do any better under this system?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yes, along with all other laws relating to immorality, which are targeted by the Landmark Abomination Cases of the U.S. Supreme Court. Iowa courts think themselves bound by SCOTUS precedent, but the Iowa legislature is not and should not be. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The 14th Amendment makes state legislatures subject to federal laws which protect the rights of state citizens that are listed in the Constitution, which is the meaning of the “privileges and immunities” clause of the 14th. But the 14th gives SCOTUS no authority to make up “rights” hostile to enumerated rights, much less to enforce “rights” without waiting for federal law to lay out the manner and scope of protection. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Neither federal courts nor Congress have any authority through the 14th or through anything else to block states from protecting constitutional rights. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Act laid out here will only get state courts out of the legislature’s way of protecting the rights of state citizens. When federal courts jump in the way, they can be shoved aside with the legal arguments of Clarence Thomas and others that are summarized in Statement #11 of this book. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Is a 2/3 majority requirement necessary? Shouldn't a simple majority of the legislature be enough to override courts?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: practically & legally, certainly; politically, complicated) This may be the hardest detail to muster a quick opinion. There are strong arguments for either choice; perhaps there is even a third option: a 60% vote. As this bill proceeds, perhaps it should be expected that a consensus will form later requiring amendment of this detail. The current draft requires a 2/3 majority. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''The Practical Argument:''' Currently, courts get away with a simple majority requirement (4-3) which faces zero accountability from anybody. This draft requires a 5-2 vote; another option is 6-1. Should the legislature face a similar hurdle? Several lawmakers believe a 2/3 requirement removes any practical hope of ever overturning a judicial invalidation of a law, because the Iowa legislature is incapable of agreeing by 2/3 that the sun is up. A 2/3 requirement would make restraint of lawmaking judges actually harder than passing a constitutional amendment! <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In Congress, our U.S. Constitution says a 2/3 majority is enough to send an amendment to the Constitution before the states for their ratification. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But if we let the legislature overturn the court’s invalidation with a second simple majority, it could be objected that would be almost ridiculously easy for the legislature to gather together the same “yea” votes a second time (if an election doesn’t intervene). A 60% requirement could answer that concern. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;However, that objection could also be met by pointing out that the ruling of the courts would give typically 60 pages of reasons the law should be overturned, which would put a lot of pressure on those “yea” votes to either eloquently and exhaustively justify their votes or vote “nay”. It would not be easy to secure a majority a second time under that pressure. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The public hearing option would put that 60 page ruling on a level playing field with reasoning from lawmakers. It would make both legislatures and courts accountable not only to each other, but to reason. It might even make lawmakers upset enough to reach a 2/3 agreement. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Voters, informed as has never before been possible about judges on the ballot, or about the legal skills of lawmakers, would have the last word. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''The Political Argument:''' The public is not used to legislatures having ANY power to correct unconstitutional rulings. A 2/3 requirement would be less of a shock to tradition. Were this bill to pass into law with a 2/3 requirement, and lawmakers saw how unnecessary it was, lawmakers could ease the requirement in the future - since this does not require amending the constitution, which already grants more than this power, but requires only a law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Amendment'''. Should it be decided that a simple majority of the legislature to overturn a court’s invalidation is sufficient, here is the simple change that could do it - simply strike out “two-thirds of” (or replace it with “six tenths of”): <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 A supreme court decision invalidating existing law or <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 having the effect of creating new law will not take effect if <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 <strikethrough>two-thirds of</strikethrough> both the senate and the house of representatives <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 approve a resolution to overturn the decision within one year <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 of the date the decision was published. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Is it practically possible to require courts to add a statement from the legislature up to a year after its ruling?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;When the Supreme Court first publishes its ruling, that is not the final version that will be later given an official permanent citation in the Northwest Reporter series. (Their contact information) Unpredictable delays are caused by litigants asking for rehearings, and courts taking time to respond. Even after that option is exhausted, court staff continue proofing their decisions, a process that can take months. [Iowa Supreme Court Clerk phone number: 515-348-4700] Northwest Reporter doesn’t officially publish a case, and give it a permanent citation, until a state supreme court notifies them that it is ready. That is why a new case has only an Iowa citation that does not list a page number or volume number, and doesn’t get a fancy N.W.2d permanent citation until much later. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Requiring the Court to leave the publication open for a year in case the legislature chooses to submit a statement would affect only the time the Court notifies Northwest Reporter, and it may not even affect that time at all. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The farther this bill gets, the more discussions there will be about it with the Iowa Bar Association and the Court itself. If delaying final publication that long is deemed unreasonable, an amendment could easily give the legislature an earlier deadline. It might also require the legislature to notify the court of an intent to exercise that option. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Of course, this entire final sentence of this bill is not critical to legislative correction of judicial overreach. It could be conceded if necessary to save the rest of the bill. But it is an appropriate correction of the current system. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Will an expedited hearing that begins in the Supreme Court diminish the time needed by the litigants to fully present their claims?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: anyone ready to block a law from taking effect is ready for court) A challenge to a new law means (and perhaps this bill could so specify, although I think it is already clearly implied) a challenge to a law that has not yet gone into effect, to keep it from going into effect (beginning with a Temporary Restraining Order (TRO) the day it would go into effect). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In such a case the state itself will normally be the defendant, and the petitioner will be a well funded group that tried to kill the law in the legislature but failed. In that situation the petitioner will already be prepared legally, their arguments well honed through interaction with lawmakers. It is hard to imagine that any less prepared petitioner would be ready with a TRO to stop a law before it goes into effect. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Iowa court rules already require appellants to outline their issues in their initial notice of appeal, which is more pressure on individual defendants to prepare that far ahead, in proportion to their means, than challengers to a new law will face, who will be fully primed for a court battle before the law passes the first chamber. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspCourt rules already require that any issue argued in the Supreme Court must have first been raised in the district court, so any responsible lawyer in district court will already be prepared for the Supreme Court. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspDistrict courts are needed to develop facts through witnesses in front of juries, depositions, and cross examination of expert witnesses. Supreme courts don’t do any of that. Expert witnesses can submit Amicus Briefs but the other side can’t cross examine them. Although judges can cross examine the lawyers for both parties in oral arguments, which district judges don’t do. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspThus district courts are essential in criminal trials where the guilt of the defendant needs to be proved to juries, and in civil trials between two parties. But their value in a challenge to a law is less clear. A legislature’s “findings of facts” are given deference except in the case of a “fundamental right”, under current practice, but the court practice of overturning laws that violate made-up “fundamental rights” has zero authority under the U.S. Constitution, and nothing prevents state legislatures from copying into state law the provision of the U.S. Constitution in Article III, Section 2, Paragraph 2, that court jurisdiction is subject to such “exceptions” and “regulations” as the legislature enacts. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspWere the petitioner an individual seeking relief only for himself and not for anyone else affected by the law, courts have many tools for giving relief to individuals short of invalidating whole laws. For example, extenuating circumstances, interaction with other laws affecting the individual, or necessity in order to avoid serious injury (Iowa 704). The applicability of laws to individuals is the jurisdiction of the judicial branch, with which the legislative branch has no intent to interfere, any more than the judicial branch should interfere with the jurisdiction of the legislative branch to establish laws of general application. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspAfter a law has already gone into effect, then there is no requirement to expedite. In fact, the decision to challenge a law could be made by the parties to the case, or by a judge, at any point during a years-long case: in pre-trial briefs, a district judge’s ruling, or during the appeal before the Court of Appeals or the Supreme Court. With this bill the applicability of the law to the individual defendant could still be suspended, but the law itself, as applied to everyone else, would not be suspended until after the Supreme Court so rules and then only if the legislature does not block the suspension. The legislature’s year to respond would not begin with any ruling made before the Supreme Court’s supermajority ruling. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Are there any U.S. Supreme Court precedents relevant to these half dozen powers?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: making judges answer lawmakers' questions is a staple of confirmation hearings) These proposed powers are all completely unprecedented in law, although some of them have been discussed. Probably the one never before discussed is the idea of a public hearing. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspSurely the prohibition of a district judge overturning a law, limiting that power to the state Supreme Court, and requiring a supermajority of the court to overturn, is well within the power given the legislature to limit the jurisdiction of courts. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp'''Public Hearings'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;How about public hearings? Is there any legal or constitutional principle that shields judges from having to explain their rulings any better than they do in their written opinions? Is there something nefarious about requiring judges to answer questions? <br />
Federal judges answer questions about their past rulings in confirmation hearings for appointments to higher courts. If U.S. Senators can require them to answer questions about their rulings years later, why can’t state legislatures require their state judges to answer questions at the time? Judges justify not answering questions about future potential cases, that they may remain free to rule in view of facts and arguments they might not see until then, but there is no reason to shield judges from explaining their past cases. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Especially since the Public Hearings envisioned in this bill are not only to clarify whether a law ruled unconstitutional actually is unconstitutional. The second purpose of these Public Hearings is to investigate whether there are grounds for impeachment. Because if the legislature determines that the court’s ruling of the law’s unconstitutionality is utterly lacking in merit, then judges who so ruled were legislating; they were acting without authority, exercising a power of a different branch of government than their own, which is malfeasance of office, an impeachable offense. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Obviously, in any impeachment trial, the judges would be required to answer questions. These public hearings are a power subsumed under the power of impeachment; they are a reasonable, less severe remedy. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Certainly the very idea of communication between lawmakers and judges on a “level playing field” is unheard of. Unprecedented. (Outside confirmation hearings.) Current communication, which tradition will be slow to reconsider, is somewhat like a parent trying to reason with a child who is as inarticulate as he is stubborn. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is a special challenge for a lawyer representing the legislature to reason with a judge who gives only the scantest clues to what is on his mind before he rules, after which it is too late to respond to his errors. Does any Constitutional or legal principle require such a breakdown of communication? Does this ritual serve any good purpose? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Once President Washington asked SCOTUS for its advisory interpretation of a treaty. The justices declined, saying “The lines of separation drawn by the Constitution between the three departments of government – their being in certain respects checks upon each other – and our being judges in a court of last resort – are considerations which afford strong arguments against the propriety of our extra judicially deciding the questions alluded to; especially as the Power given by the Constitution to the President of calling on the Heads of Departments for opinions, seems to have been purposely as well as expressly limited to executive departments.” https://www.mountvernon.org/library/digitalhistory/digital-encyclopedia/article/george-washington-and-the-supreme-court/<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;https://founders.archives.gov/?q=Thomas%20Recipient%3A%22Washington%2C%20George%22%20Author%3A%22Supreme%20Court%20Justices%22&s=1111311111&sa=supre&r=3&sr= <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That answer is not a precedent for keeping courts from communicatint with legislatures for two reasons: (1) it was not a sensible answer then. The Constitution puts no limit on who the President can consult for advice, while Proverbs 15:22 says “in a multitude of counsellors, purposes are established”. I can’t imagine where SCOTUS came up with the idea that the President was limited to asking his department heads. Washington asked for advice, not a binding ruling. That’s what “extrajudicial” means. (2) SCOTUS then declined to get involved in an issue which it otherwise would never face. This is different than asking a Court to make up its mind earlier than later. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is not wrong to ask judges to give advisory opinions to lawmakers so lawmakers don’t have to spend years crafting laws which judges at the last minute decide to overturn. The August 8, 1793 answer was before Americans had to worry about activist judges who leave the future of legislation, and indeed the very future of human rights, very much in doubt. <br />
However, asking judges to give an advisory opinion about a law before it is passed is probably impractical, since judges are used to taking longer to study an issue than a legislature is in session, and also since even after giving an early opinion, new evidence or argument might come later which would flip the Court’s ruling. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;An expedited three month deadline is probably the closest we can come to a timely response from courts. Certainly legal wrangling that dribbles on for years exhausts the patience of rational minds. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The subject of the public hearing is whether the law really was unconstitutional. Because if it wasn't, then the judges plainly acted outside their authority, which is grounds for impeachment. But beyond being grounds for impeachment, an order given that is beyond one's authority to give is legally invalid. So surely the legislature has the authority to investigate whether an order was invalid, and upon establishing that it is, to reverse its effects. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sheltering judges from interaction doesn’t make them free of bias. In every other human interaction, accountability is the best way to cleanse a hard heart of bias. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp'''The Two-Thirds Majority'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The only thing remotely relevant to this 2/3 vs. simple majority requirement in American constitutional law that I can think of is that to ratify a constitutional amendment, Congress has to pass it by 2/3 before states pass it by 3/4. But the solution here doesn’t change the constitution; it only defines how the legislature is choosing to exercise authority already given by the Iowa Constitution. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If anything, there is a constitutional principle favoring the power of legislatures over courts, with respect to Fundamental Rights. The 14th Amendment is the part of the Constitution which courts have taken to give them jurisdiction over states who trample fundamental rights. But who did the 14th Amendment authorize to enforce its provisions? Not courts! Rather, Congress, according to Section 5 of the Amendment. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yet here are examples of not just state laws, but even state constitutional amendments, which were overturned by courts for violating the “equal protection” clause of the 14th Amendment: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Cummings v. Missouri'', 71 U.S. 277 (1867) a Missouri oath to hold office designed to keep out former confederate soldiers was ruled an unconstitutional Bill of Attainder. <br />
''Hollingswort''h v. Perry'', 570 U.S. 693 (2013) a California same sex marriage ban. <br />
''Romer v. Evans, 517 U.S. 620 (1996) a Colorado gay rights ban. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Awad v. Ziriax'', 10th Circuit, January 10, 2012 an Oklahoma ban of the use of Sharia Law in court. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Giles v. Harris'', 1903, and Giles v. Teasley, 1904, courts winked at disenfranchising Blacks, but explicitly accepted jurisdiction over state constitutions violating the 14th and 15th Amendments. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The authority to enforce the requirements of the 14th Amendment, given to Congress and not courts, gives Congress also the authority to define and apply fundamental rights, and for anyone seriously in doubt, to clarify who is a human being and therefore deserves to have his fundamental rights protected. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;These are philosophical as well as legal questions which merit national discussion, but while courts are sheltered from having to talk to anybody the conversation has been one sided. America needs to open this up into what Proverbs 15:22 calls a “multitude of counsellors”. It does not undermine respect for the judiciary to imagine judges are able to explain their reasoning. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''If Legislatures overturn court rulings, won’t they exercise the authority of the judicial branch?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: legislative action wouldn't affect litigants; only the part of the ruling that reaches wrongfully into legislating) No. On that future day when a legislature overturns judicial rulings, the legislature’s action would not apply to the parties to the case, so the “separation of powers” aspect of the ruling is untouched. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;There are several reasons a court may exempt a litigant from the effects of a law, without invalidating the law for everyone else. The simple difference between courts and legislatures is that legislatures pass laws which apply to everybody, while courts apply those laws in specific cases, only to the parties to the case, guided by the special facts and circumstances of the case. The power given by this bill to legislatures to overturn rulings applies only to the part of the ruling where the court stepped outside its constitutional authority in order to nullify a law passed for the benefit of millions of others. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The purpose of the public hearing is only for the legislature to investigate whether their law was constitutional after all, and if so, to take back their constitutional authority to pass laws by their subsequent vote. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Lawmakers take oaths to defend the Constitution too. Courts cannot rob lawmakers of their power to obey the Constitution without violating the constitution themselves. <br />
Perhaps that is the key principle declared implicitly by this bill: judges aren’t the only branch of government authorized to understand and defend the Constitution. The other branches are too. That balance needs to be restored. The conversation needed needs to be among equals.<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Shouldn’t judges be immune from popular pressure? We don’t want our rights subject to a vote!'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Neither legislatures nor courts should have the last word over each other. We have seen what happens when legislatures had the last word, in the South, during the time of slavery. And we have seen what happens when courts had the last word, in 1857 and 1973; regarding slavery and abortion. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Even the Iowa constitution gives the last word to voters. Is that dangerous? America’s Founders talked about popular whims that could remove important protections over the weekend if the public could vote on individual issues continually. They set up 6 year terms for U.S. Senators and 4 year terms for presidents explicitly to shield our Rule of Law from whims the public might hold for only a month. Nor does this process give voters direct control over the outcome of a disputed law, but only equips them to evaluate the wisdom of their elected representatives and their judges, which is the same as our current system except this leaves voters much better informed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The 14th Amendment expanded the power of courts to overturn laws which violate “fundamental rights”. It made slave-loving southern state legislatures accountable to courts. Unaddressed was what to do when it is courts which violate fundamental rights. This measure is an attempt to restore balance. It is interesting that the 14th Amendment actually leaves its own enforcement not to courts, but to Congress. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The “independence of the judiciary” from popular whims is well protected by lifetime tenure. This measure does not change that. It only defines a remedy for Iowans when judges rule lawlessly and unconstitutionally. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Didn’t Iowa decide recently not to impeach judges for their rulings?'''<br />
Summary: “Overreaching” can only reach so far before it turns into full fledged unconstitutional legislating. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Removal from office, for just one harmful ruling which may be out of a long career of beneficial rulings, is pretty drastic; not to mention ineffective since it leaves the ruling in place that triggered the impeachment! <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That is why remedies short of impeachment are necessary, as well as remedies able to focus on the problem without cutting off talent which is mostly beneficial.<br />
If an assembly line produces an occasional klunker amongst its generally great output, we keep the assembly line and discard the klunker; we don't keep the klunker and blow up the assembly line! <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Iowans seriously considered impeaching judges for their rulings not so long ago. Highlights are discussed at the Brennan Center: <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A 2011 review by the National Center for State Courts’ Gavel to Gavel website also found numerous bills introduced in state legislatures that year to impeach judges and justices because of disagreement over specific rulings. Several of those introductions were part of a failed effort in Iowa to remove four Iowa Supreme Court Justices for their decision in a high-profile case about marriage rights for same-sex couples. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The impeachment attempt garnered significant media attention, but also widespread condemnation – even from members of the sponsors’ own party. Iowa Governor-elect Terry Brandstad (R) [sic] said at the time that disagreement over a ruling did not constitute grounds for impeachment. “There’s a difference between malfeasance and over-reaching,” said Brandstad, “the Constitution says what the grounds for impeachment are. My reading is it’s not there.” Iowa House Speaker Kraig Paulsen (R), whose chamber would have voted on the impeachment, sent the resolutions to languish in an inactive committee and said, “I disagree with this remedy,…I do not expect it to be debated on the floor of the House, and if it is, I will vote no.”<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I respectfully disagree with Governor, later Ambassador Branstad. When the Iowa Supreme Court not only struck down laws limiting marriage to opposite sex couples, but specifically ordered county clerks to solemnize “marriages” between same sex couples, that reaches beyond “overreaching”. “Overreaching” implies a mild going-a-little-too-far out of one’s proper jurisdiction. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But if the plainest example of a “person charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to” the judicial branch of government exercising “any function appertaining to” the legislative branch can be dismissed as mere “overreaching”, then it is impossible for any other judicial legislating to violate the Iowa Constitution. We might as well just give judges the password to the Iowa Code database and let them write whatever laws they please. As Rep. Matt Windschitl said January 27, 2020 on the Jeff Angelo show, “Do we really want judges deciding laws? If so, why do we even have a legislature?”<br />
Article 3 Section 1 of the Iowa Constitution says “Departments of government. The powers of the government of Iowa shall be divided into three separate departments — the legislative, the executive, and the judicial: and no person charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to one of these departments shall exercise any function appertaining to either of the others....”<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''FAQ’s: Judicial Philosophy'''<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Isn’t it unconstitutional to impeach a judge for a ruling?'''<br />
Summary: It can’t be unconstitutional to correct the part of a ruling that unconstitutionally legislates. Although it has not been established definitively, whether a judge may be impeached over a ruling, most legal discussion avers that would be unethical, and there is no precedent of a successful impeachment over the content of a ruling. <br />
Most legal discussion is of the U.S. Constitution; the Iowa Constitution specifies that judges can’t legislate, which is only implied in the U.S. Constitution. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The United States Constitution provides little guidance as to what offenses constitute grounds for the impeachment of federal judges...However, the impeachment power has historically been limited to cases of serious ethical or criminal misconduct. - Brennan Center<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is generally supposed that legislative action to correct an unconstitutional ruling, or to discipline a judge who writes one, would be unconstitutional. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Constitution does not “provide for resignation or impeachment whenever a judge makes a decision with which elected officials disagree” said four judges when President Clinton and Senator Dole urged impeachment of a judge over his ruling on admissibility of evidence. “These attacks do a grave disservice to the principle of an independent judiciary and…mislead the public as to the role of judges in a constitutional democracy.” Brennan Center<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Let’s make a distinction glossed over by those four judges: between a ruling hated because it applies existing law and facts in a way most people think is wrong, and a ruling hated because it overturns laws by a rationale that most people think is unconstitutional. I agree with the four judges that the case was correctly kept off limits to lawmakers, but the judges generalized their criticism to the extent of dismissing concerns about truly unconstitutional rulings as being mere decisions “with which elected officials disagree”. <br />
It is that degree of generalization that is “a grave disservice” by elevating “the principle of an independent judiciary” beyond the reach of the Constitution, of common sense, and of accountability of any kind from any source. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;What I have not found in law review articles is any proposed remedy for when a ruling itself is unconstitutional. I have not found it even acknowledged that it is possible for a ruling to be unconstitutional. As if to say “how could judges rule unconstitutionally? Judges ARE the constitution.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But it is judges themselves, in vigorous dissents, who stir public concern about the constitutionally of certain rulings. Judges who write dissents are as qualified as those in the majority, and their reasoning is often equally persuasive. When the public has a basis this solid for concern about the constitutionality of rulings, it is surely in the public interest, and not contrary to any known legal or constitutional principle, to hold a public hearing where those concerns can be addressed and hopefully resolved, where judges, perhaps for the first time in America history, can be compelled to interact with experts other than each other.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In fact, any time a law is overturned for being unconstitutional, but the ruling is flawed and a correct ruling would actually not find the law unconstitutional, then actually the ruling itself is unconstitutional because the ruling amounts to raw legislation. It is unconstitutional for courts to pass laws. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Let me emphasize this point. Any ruling that overturns a law is either correct because the law is in fact unconstitutional, or is itself unconstitutional because its reasoning or factual basis is flawed. Lawmakers take oaths to defend the Constitution too, and should not be unconstitutionally deprived of the power to enforce it when they see a violation. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If we may agree that it is at least theoretically possible for a ruling overturning a law to be unconstitutional, shall we insist the Constitution requires the legislature to honor every unconstitutional ruling? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Suppose there were a law against painting your house red, someone was prosecuted for painting his house red, and the court refused to convict because it is surely unconstitutional to outlaw painting your house red. Even without a formal nullification of the law, the law would be defacto nullified because prosecutors would know the court won’t convict anybody for that crime. It may be reasoned that rulings overturning laws merely formalize this natural process. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Public hearings would bring healing to our national division over issues less clear than the right to paint your house red. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As is pointed out below, the power this bill gives the legislature to overturn a judicial validation of its laws would not usurp judicial powers. It would not affect individuals who are actual parties named in the case. It would only affect that part of the ruling which wrongfully reaches into lawmaking, changing the laws which affect millions of other people who are not named in the case. <br />
</ref><br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">Should any federal judge so interfere, this state appeals to its congressional delegation to examine similar grounds for disciplinary action, along with exercising its Article III, Section 2, paragraph 2 authority to make “exceptions” and “regulations” designed to end SCOTUS’ long line of landmark abomination cases. <br />
<ref>More about '''“similar grounds for disciplinary action”''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;For example, see “Bringing the Courts Back Under the Constitution” at www.osaka.law.miami.edu/~schnably/GringrichContractWith America.pdf (sic)<br />
</ref><br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">This state also appeals to its congressional delegation to exercise its life-saving and rights-protecting authority under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment whose plain words give Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of Rights,4 which subsumes the authority to define their scope and balance competing interests, while the “privileges and immunities” clause identifies as protectable rights those listed in the Constitution.<br />
<ref> More about '''“Section 5 of the 14th Amendment gives Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of the Right to Life and of Equal Protection of the Laws”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Section 5 of the 14th Amendment so plainly gives Congress, not courts, the power to correct state violations of fundamental rights, that it is an amazing story how SCOTUS has usurped that power for itself and completely denied it to Congress, and how Congress has let them.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Largely relying on the dissents and concurrences of Justice Clarence Thomas, this story is told in Statement #11 and its footnotes. See “What Happened to Unalienable Rights, and How to Get Them Back” and “ ‘Substantive Due Process’: how SCOTUS usurped the Constitution’s Authority to Define Rights, and Congress’ Authority to Enforce Rights, into its own authority to reclassify abominations as ‘rights’ ”</ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">Official world-wide definitions of “crimes against humanity” apply “to representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission.”<br />
<ref>More about '''“...definitions of ‘crimes against humanity’ apply ‘to representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission.’ ”''' <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;“A crime against humanity occurs <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;when the government withdraws legal protection <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;from a class of human beings <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;resulting in severe deprivation of rights, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;up to and including death.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;- amicus in Dobbs of <u>Melinda Thybault/Moral Outcry</u><br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Melinda Thybault’s amicus brief was the 20th amicus docketed in Dobbs v. Jackson (2022). (www.supremecourt.gov/DocketPDF/19/19-1392/184968/ 20210726175018044_41206%20pdf%20Parker%20III%20br.pdf)<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Her references, backing up that damning judgment:<br />
<blockquote>See “Crime Against Humanity” at www.law.cornell.edu/wex/ crime_against_humanity and see U.N. Office, Genocide Prevention, Crimes Against Humanity www.un.org/en/genocideprevention/crimes-against-humanity.shtml; Treaty of Rome (1957). See also Convention on the Non-Applicability of Statutory Limitations to War .</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Her characterization of international documents is not only fair, but it understates the culpability of elected representatives. Actual quotes from the documents lay responsibility at the feet, not just of impersonal “government”, but of government’s “representatives”. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Notice in the following definitions that those targeted for prosecution in international human rights tribunals include elected representatives and senators who “tolerate” crimes against humanity – who don’t actively execute their authority to criminalize these assaults on the Image of God. (Genesis 1:27) <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;“Genocide”, defined: ''“Genocide means...acts...with intent to destroy...in part, a national...group [in our case, Americans] [by] killing members of the group [in our case, babies; and by] Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group....”'' <br />
Here is the complete United Nations statement: <br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Article II: In the present Convention, '''genocide means''' any of the following '''acts committed with intent to destroy''', in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such:<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(a) '''Killing members of the group;'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(b) Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group;<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(c) Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part;<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(d) '''Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group;'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(e) Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;- Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide / Approved and proposed for signature and ratification or accession by General Assembly resolution 260 A (III) of 9 December 1948 / Entry into force: 12 January 1951, in accordance with article XII / www.un.org/en/genocideprevention/ documents/atrocity-crimes/Doc.1_Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.pdf</blockquote><br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The 1948 definition above is cited in the following 1968 United Nations General Assembly resolution (which took effect two years later) which nullifies any “statute of limitations” on “crimes against humanity”:<br />
<blockquote><br />
Article I: No statutory limitation shall apply to the following crimes, irrespective of the date of their commission:...(b) Crimes against humanity whether committed in time of war or in time of peace as they are defined in the Charter of the International Military Tribunal, Nürnberg, of 8 August 1945 and confirmed by resolutions 3 (I) of 13 February 1946 and 95 (I) of 11 December 1946 of the General Assembly of the United Nations,...the crime of genocide as defined in the 1948 Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, even if such acts do not constitute a violation of the domestic law of the country in which they were committed.</blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The following Article II applies the call for prosecution at any time, not limited by a Statute of Limitations, to elected representatives. The word “elected” is not there, but the context certainly includes them, especially since one cannot “represent” another, as the word is normally defined, without their voluntary authorization. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;By not limiting the definition of “representatives” to those who are elected, the definition does not exclude judges.<br />
<blockquote>Article II: '''If any of the crimes mentioned in article I is committed, the provisions of this Convention shall apply to''' representatives of the State authority and private individuals who, as principals or accomplices, participate in or who directly incite others to the commission of any of those crimes, or who conspire to commit them, irrespective of the degree of completion, and to '''representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission.''' (Article II, Convention on the Non-Applicability of Statutory Limitations to War, ADOPTED 26 November 1968 BY General Assembly resolution 2391 (XXIII))</blockquote><br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If [genocide] is committed, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;the provisions of this Convention shall apply <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;to representatives of the State authority <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;who tolerate [its] commission. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Including judges.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And elected representatives <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; who are lax in restraining them.<br />
<br />
<u>Thybault</u> writes, “...the Court has not yet fully reversed Roe, Doe, and Casey.” She submitted this observation to the Court which finally reversed all three, technically, although the slaughter continues in most states so her observation is still timely. <br />
“No American citizen should have to live under, nor as history tragically demonstrates, should they stand by silently, while their government sanctions and even promotes crimes against humanity.” <br />
Another low point in the Supreme Court’s grasp of 14th Amendment equal rights, she mentions, was Plessy v. Ferguson, 163 U.S. 537 (1896) which, like Roe and Dred Scott, “denied legal protection to a class of human beings” and “ignored the plain language of the Fourteenth Amendment”. “Plessy accepted the gloss that ‘separate but equal’ was ‘equal’.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;She repeats, “When the government withdraws legal protection from a class of human beings, it is the classic definition of a crime against humanity.” <br />
</ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">Any court review of this law must be expedited, because lives are lost with each day that courts delay.<br />
<br />
<br />
<small>The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: 396 State Legislators from 41 States <> Melinda Thybault/Moral Outcry</small><br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
----<br />
INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Courtrecognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human<br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] Courts Accept the Fact-Finding Authority of Legislatures, Juries, Experts for the same good reasons their findings persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures should regulate abortion, as Dobbs held, just as legislatures regulate the prosecution of all other murders.<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] The full humanity of a tiny physical body is hard for many to grasp. But what distinguishes us from animals isn’t physical, and has no known pre-conscious stage.<br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress has ''Already'' Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment already authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion.<br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] Roe, Dobbs, and the 14th Amendment agree: All Humans are “Persons”.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] When pregnancies develop into medical emergencies requiring separation of mother and child to save the mother, the child has an equal fundamental right to life and medical care. <br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any class of humans by any other is prohibited by the Constitution, by the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives legislatures no authority to legalize violations of Constitutional Rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
<br />
====<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
----<br />
'''FOOTNOTES'''<br />
----<br />
<br />
<references /></div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Statement_12_%2B_Footnotes&diff=50352Statement 12 + Footnotes2023-12-13T04:46:41Z<p>DaveLeach: </p>
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<br />
Statement of Facts #12 of 12 from: <br />
<br />
=[[Reversing_Landmark_Abomination_Cases]]=<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters<br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion</span><br />
<br />
by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal<br />
''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal<br />
<span style="color:brown"><br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen <br />
<br />
by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 18:11, 15 October 2023 (UTC)<br />
<br />
<span style="color:grey"><small>''Try to imagine how a judge, reviewing a prolife law with these Findings of Facts, would be able to dodge this evidence - in fact, see if you can find ANYONE who can ''refute'' these facts - as opposed to not ''caring'' about facts - that is, not caring about reality:''</small></span><br />
<br />
====<span style="color:blue">Statement of Fact #12 of 12:====<br />
<span style="color:blue">Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">Any state judge interfering with this state’s compliance with the 14th Amendment and its ancient authority to protect its people <br />
<ref>More about '''“the ancient authority of state legislatures...to protect the lives of all its people – an authority which no court can legitimately remove.”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Courts that overturn the prolife laws of “red states” interfere with the ancient duty and power of every government, in every generation, to protect life, points out the amicus brief filed in Dobbs v. Jackson by <u>396 State Legislators from 41 States</u>.(www.supremecourt.gov/Docket PDF/19/19-1392/185121/ 20210728125120809_Dobbs%20Amici%20brief_State%20Legislators_07272021.pdf)<br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;State legislators have the constitutional duty, and therefore the power, to protect the fundamental, civil rights of persons. The fundamental law in which those fundamental rights are found is the common law, which consists of both natural duties and those ancient, customary rights and immunities that are foundational to ordered liberty. Thus, a state legislature must declare and secure to all persons within the protection of its laws the rights that those persons have by natural and customary law. Cf. ''Washington v. Glucksberg'', 521 U.S. 702, 721-22 (1997) (upholding state legislation that prohibited assisted suicide and reasoning that the Fourteenth Amendment’s “Due Process Clause specially protects those fundamental rights and liberties which are, objectively, ‘deeply rooted in this Nation’s history and tradition’.” (quoting ''Moore v. E. Cleveland'', 431 U. S. 494, 503 (1977)). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England (1765): “Hence,” he said, “it follows, that the first and primary end of human laws is to '''maintain and regulate these absolute rights of individuals'''.” Id. Blackstone taught that the legislative power is to declare existing common-law rights and duties and to remedy any defects in the legal security for those rights. Id. at *42-43, 52-58, 86-87 <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Founders echoed this view in the Declaration of Independence, declaring that governments are instituted among men in order to secure the inalienable rights with which human beings are endowed by nature and nature’s God. They also accused the crown and Parliament of infringing the rights of “our constitution,” which in 1776 could only have been a reference to the common-law constitution of British North America. This view predicated the Constitution of the United States, which expressly secures natural rights, such as life and religious liberty, and common-law rights, such as jury trials and freedom from the quartering of soldiers in one’s home, and expressly disclaims any intent to disparage the other rights of the fundamental law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Indeed, the point of having legislatures, executives, and courts is to secure the rights that Americans already have.''' Neither state legislatures nor the Constitution of the United States create those rights. See District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570, 592 (2008) (stating that “it has always been widely understood that the '''Second Amendment, like the First and Fourth Amendments, codified a preexisting right,” that it “is not a right granted by the Constitution,” and is not “in any manner dependent upon that instrument for its existence.”'''). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Some, but not all, of the rights of natural persons are enumerated [listed] in the Constitution''' of the United States and its amendments. U.S. Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 8.; art. IV, §2; amends. I-VIII. Others are enumerated in state constitutions. See e.g., Soc’y for the Propagation of the Gospel v. Wheeler, 22 F. Cas. 756, 766 (No. 13,156) (C.C.D.N.H. 1814). Still others are declared in American constitutions but not enumerated. U.S. Const. amend. IX (“The enumeration of certain rights herein shall not be construed to deny or disparage other rights retained by the people.”) (emphasis added). '''State legislatures have a duty to declare and secure all fundamental rights, both enumerated and unenumerated.''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Fundamental rights are those that persons enjoy by fundamental law—natural law and common law— with or without any written constitution. Because the common law includes natural rights, to understand the fundamental rights declared and secured by the Constitution, it is sufficient to look to the common law, especially as explained by William Blackstone. Established common-law doctrines constitute the best evidence of the existence and meaning of both enumerated and unenumerated, fundamental rights. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The interpretation of the Constitution of the United States is necessarily influenced by the fact that its provisions are framed in the language of the English common law, and are to be read in the light of its history.” ''Smith v. Alabama'', 124 U.S. 465, 478 (1888). The terms and concepts of the common law provided the “the nomenclature of which the framers of the Constitution were familiar.” ''Minor v. Happersett'', 88 U.S. (21 Wall) 162, 167 (1875). Accord James R. Stoner, Jr., Common-Law Liberty: Rethinking American Constitutionalism 9-29 (2003). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;American constitutional rights are not philosophical abstractions. They are described in detail in common law treatises, such as those by Coke and Hale, and especially Blackstone’s Commentaries. The framers crafted American constitutions—state and federal—in common law terms. And Blackstone was their teacher and lexicographer....<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As this Court has rightly acknowledged, Blackstone’s “works constituted the preeminent authority on English law for the founding generation.” ''Alden v. Maine'', 527 U.S. 706, 715 (1999). Blackstone retained his influence through the adoption of the Civil War Amendments. James M. Ogden, Lincoln’s Early Impressions of the Law in Indiana, 7 Notre Dame L. Rev. 325, 328 (1932). And '''this Court continues to turn to Blackstone today.''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[2 A few examples from recent years include ''Gamble v. United States'', __ U.S. __, 139 S. Ct. 1960 (2019) (the Court’s opinion, the concurrence, and one dissent citing Blackstone multiple times to determine the meaning of the phrase “the same offense” in the Fifth Amendment’s double jeopardy clause); ''Department of Homeland Security v. Thuraissigiam'', __ U.S. __, 140 S. Ct. 1959, 1969 (2020) (calling Blackstone’s Commentaries a “satisfactory exposition of the common law of England”); Ramos v. Louisiana, __ U.S. __, 140 S. Ct. 1390, 1395 (2020) (citing Blackstone in explanation of the holding that '''the requirement of juror unanimity is “a vital right protected by the common law”''' and therefore the Constitution’s jury trial guarantee); ''Torres v. Madrid'', __ U.S. __, 141 S. Ct. 989, 996, 997, 998, 1000 (2021) (citing Blackstone multiple times to determine meaning of Fourth Amendment “seizure”). ]...<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But as the Ninth Amendment makes clear, the enumeration of certain common-law rights does not deny or disparage all the other rights that the American people enjoy by virtue of natural law and their ancient customs. The Ninth Amendment expressly reserves to the people those civil and fundamental rights that they enjoyed prior to ratification, which are their natural rights, other common-law rights and liberties, and some privileges enumerated in state constitutions. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Because many states refused to remedy infringements of fundamental rights [for blacks] prior to the Civil War, the Fourteenth Amendment was necessary to ensure to all persons due process of law and the equal protection of the laws, and to empower Congress to remedy infringements of those rights. It bears emphasis that the '''Fourteenth Amendment was necessary to recall state legislatures to their original task. Far from repealing the people’s retention of fundamenta'''l rights declared by the Ninth Amendment, the Fourteenth Amendment strengthened it. And far from abrogating the duty of state legislatures to declare and secure unenumerated rights, the Fourteenth Amendment reinforced that duty. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That is, the rights retained by the people but not protected by their state, such as the right of Blacks to liberty, was strengthened – at the expense of the freedom of the legislature to torpedo those rights. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And as Statement #11 and its footnotes explain, the 14th Amendment did not supplant the duty of legislatures to protect rights with that duty in courts. The only authority over state violations of rights given courts by the 14th was to enforce federal laws enacted by Congress. The authority of courts we see today, to make up “rights” not found in the Constitution and impose them on states without waiting for Congress to pass a law, was not given by the 14th, but was seized by courts in violation of the Constitution. </ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">– the central reason governments exist, is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders, and is guilty of exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide through an unconstitutional ruling, which exceeds the judicial powers given by the state Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment.<br />
<ref>More about '''“exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide...exceeds the judicial powers given by the state Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Legislatures have considerable untapped potential for restraining their activist courts when they become confused about which branch of government they are. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Perhaps the major reason few people even think about solutions is fear of any change to the balance of powers between the legislature and the courts. “Better the devil you know than the devil you don’t.” We don’t want to just switch tyrants. A change to a real solution requires wisdom, which requires study, and who wants to study? <br />
<center>Another obstacle to restraining courts to their constitutional function is that most people, even Christians, limit their goals to what they consider “realistic”, and especially “politically realistic”, which usually means what people think they can do without God. Trust that what Jesus promised about “impossible” goals is truly “realistic”, enables us to think about not just what would be a little bit better, but about what would be perfect. and then to think about doing whatever we can think of to move in that direction, fully aware how feeble our own steps are, trusting God to open up new opportunities, in His time, as we walk with Him. </center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;My own feeble steps were drafted into a bill in Iowa in 2020. The bill is posted at http://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/wiki/ <br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_stop_judges_from_legislating <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Senate Judiciary Committee Chair Brad Zaun liked the idea and got it numbered and introduced, but it came to him too late that year to get it through the “funnel”, and he was disappointed that there was no organized group helping make other lawmakers aware of it. <br />
<center>'''Judicial Accountability Act: How Legislatures can stop judges from legislating'''</center><br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Summary: what the bill accomplishes'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1. '''No district court injunctions. A single district judge can't overturn a law.''' Any legislature is well within its constitutional authority to prohibit any ''district'' court (lower court) from invalidating a law – only the ''Supreme'' Court should be allowed to do it, and only within 90 days. Letting a single lower court judge overturn the work of 150 lawmakers which include several attorneys and constitutional scholars is insane. Any challenge to a law should go directly to the most experienced judges in the state.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2. '''Supermajority required. It takes 5 of the 7 justices of the Supreme Court to overturn a law.''' A simple majority of justices overturning by one vote a law produced by tens of thousands of people over several years is a scandal. It has nothing to do with wisdom, law, or the Constitution. When judges can’t even agree with each other, unanimously, whether to destroy the work of the majority of voters and their representatives, they prove they are not so much wiser than everybody else in their state to be trusted with such unbridled power. At the very least any injunction should have their unanimous support before they should have any power to shut down the will of their whole state. A supermajority that is short of unanimous may be OK if it is not the final word but is followed by further opportunities for the legislature to restore their law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3. '''Expedited. The Court has to rule in 3 months if the court blocks a new law from taking effect with a Temporary Restraining Order.''' If the court invalidates an existing law, the invalidation doesn't take effect for one year. Courts bottling up laws with injunctions for years while they make up their minds should make them ashamed. They don’t need years. No controversial law is passed without months if not years of scrutiny by attorneys for and against. Their briefs are already ready. They already know what the other side will say. They don’t need years to think of what to say or how to respond. Maybe a day. Maybe two.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Nor do judges need months to read the briefs for several weeks to bring themselves up to speed on the issue. The law has been in the news for years. There is no honor in willful ignorance of the issues until the first brief is filed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Laws are passed to correct serious wrongs. Years of work costing millions of dollars goes into fixing problems. There is no good reason to delay justice for the citizens of a state for years to wait while judges try to agree among themselves whether to allow justice as understood by the majority of voters and lawmakers. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''4. Discussion. The legislature may compel designated justices to attend a public hearing to debate the constitutionality of the law within one year of such a ruling, by passing a resolution.''' Provided a supermajority of the Supreme Court has agreed on an injunction in less than a month, the legislature should then be able, within the next year, to compel the attendance of judges under their jurisdiction to discuss and debate, with specified legislators in a public hearing, the constitutional justification for [or necessity of] that judicial exercise of the legislative function. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''5. The legislature may overturn the invalidation by a 60% vote, by a resolution, leaving the last word, the final verdict, with incredibly well informed voters''' (through ordinary elections of lawmakers and retention of justices). The resolution overturning the invalidation would give reasons responsive to the reasoning of the judicial ruling. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''The Bill: Iowa SSB3181 2020 AD''''''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A BILL FOR <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 An Act regarding legislative oversight of supreme court <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 decisions, and including applicability provisions. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF IOWA: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Introduction/Legislative Findings'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 Section 1. NEW SECTION. 602.1615 Legislative findings —— <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 challenges to the validity of a statute —— exclusive jurisdiction <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 —— public hearings —— legislative oversight. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 1. The general assembly finds and declares all of the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 following: <br />
<center>'''If the legislature can even impeach,''' <br />
<br>'''it can at least ask questions'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 a. The power to impeach subsumes reasonable less severe <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7 remedies. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Lawmakers take an oath''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''to uphold the Constitution too'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Their responsibility to uphold the Constitution'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''requires action against courts '''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''that interfere with their responsibility'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 b. The intent of this section is to provide for a mechanism <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 in which to resolve disputes regarding the constitutionality of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 laws between the courts and the legislature, both of which are <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 composed of constitutional scholars. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Jurisdiction of courts is''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''restricted by the legislature'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 c. Article 5, section 4 of the Constitution of the State <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13 of Iowa states that the supreme court is “a court for the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14 correction of errors at law, '''under such restriction as''' the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15 general assembly may, by law, prescribe . . .”. <br />
<center>'''Judicial power to invalidate laws''' <br />
<br>'''is not given by the Iowa Constitution'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 d. Article 3, section 20 of the Constitution of the State <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 of Iowa gives the legislature the power to impeach judges for <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 “malfeasance in office”, which is generally defined to include <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;19 acting without authority and abusing power. The power to <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;20 impeach subsumes all lesser remedies. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;21 e. The Constitution of the State of Iowa does not give the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;22 courts of this state the power to invalidate laws enacted by <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;23 the legislature, to require the legislature to enact different <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;24 laws, or to publish rulings that have the same effect as new <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;25 legislation. Article 3, section 1 of the Constitution of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;26 the State of Iowa states: “The powers of the government of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;27 Iowa shall be divided into three separate departments —— the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;28 '''legislative, the executive, and the judicial: and no person''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;29 '''charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to one''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;30 '''of these departments shall exercise any function appertaining''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;31 '''to either of the others,''' except in cases hereinafter expressly <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;32 directed or permitted”. <br />
<center>'''The Legislature must get involved''' <br />
<br>'''when courts legislate unconstitutionally'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;33 f. Although the courts of Iowa have usurped those powers <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;34 without constitutional authority, it has been done for reasons <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;35 which the general assembly respects. The general assembly <br />
----<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 welcomes the expertise and guidance of the courts in evaluating <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 the constitutionality of its laws. But when the reasoning of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 rulings which function as legislation appears to be not only <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 unsound, but unconstitutional, the general assembly has the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 constitutional duty and authority to determine that judges and <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 justices have abused their power and exceeded their authority, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7 which are grounds for impeachment under the malfeasance in <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 office clause. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 g. A remedy short of impeachment should advance wisdom, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 build consensus, and educate voters so that informed voters <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 may hold both judges and legislators accountable. Article 1, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 section 2 of the Constitution of the State of Iowa states: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13 '''“All political power is inherent in the people.''' Government is <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14 instituted for the protection, security, and benefit of the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15 people, and they have the right, at all times, to alter or <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 reform the same, whenever the public good may require it”. <br />
<center>'''The Meat of the Bill:''' <br />
<br>'''the Enforcement Section'''<br />
<br>'''Lower courts can't invalidate laws'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 2. The supreme court shall have discretionary and exclusive <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 original jurisdiction over any challenge to any law. A <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;19 district court or the court of appeals shall not invalidate a <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;20 law on any grounds. <br />
<center>'''Supreme Court must rule''' <br />
<br>'''within 3 months, by supermajority,'''<br />
<br>'''when the Court blocks a ''new'' law.'''<br />
<br>'''When the Court blocks an existing law'''<br />
<br>'''the block will not take effect for one year.'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;21 3. A decision of the supreme court that invalidates <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;22 '''existing''' law or has the effect of creating new law shall not <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;23 have any effect unless agreed to by five or more of the seven <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;24 justices, and otherwise shall not have any effect for one <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;25 year. The supreme court shall also have the power to suspend <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;26 implementation of '''a new law''' provided the supreme court produces <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;27 an expedited ruling within three months of the law’s enactment. <br />
<center>'''Public Hearing'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;28 4. a. Within one year of the date a supreme court decision <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;29 is published that invalidates existing law or has the effect <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;30 of creating new law, the general assembly may, by resolution, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;31 compel the attendance of specified justices to a public hearing <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;32 to discuss and debate the justification for the decision with <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;33 members of the general assembly. A public record of the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;34 hearing shall be made. <br />
<center>'''Impeachment grounds inquiry'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;35 b. During or after the hearing, the general assembly shall <br />
----<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 determine if grounds to begin impeachment exist as to any <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 of the justices present at the hearing for acting without <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 authority or malfeasance in office. <br />
<center>'''Judges may improve their ruling'''<br />
<br>'''with respect to the status of the challenged law'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 c. Based on the results of a hearing commenced pursuant to <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 this subsection, a justice whose presence was required at the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 hearing may change the justice’s vote or alter the justice’s <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7 individual contribution to the decision. <br />
<center>'''Legislature may overturn court invalidation'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 5. A supreme court decision invalidating existing law or <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 having the effect of creating new law will not take effect if <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 two-thirds of both the senate and the house of representatives <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 approve a resolution to overturn the decision within one year <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 of the date the decision was published. The resolution must <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13 specify the basis for overturning the decision, including <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14 its reasoning, not to be limited by court precedent that is <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15 responsive to the supreme court’s initial published decision, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 and must be documented by expert testimony and constitutional <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 authority. <br />
<center>'''Legislature may add statement to the ruling'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 6. The general assembly may issue its own statement to a <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;19 published supreme court decision that invalidates existing law <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;20 or has the effect of creating new law if done within one year of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;21 the date the decision was published. The statement must regard <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;22 the constitutionality of the invalidated existing law or the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;23 newly created law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;24 Sec. 2. APPLICABILITY. This Act applies to decisions <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;25 published by the supreme court on or after the effective date <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;26 of this act. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''FAQ's'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Questions and Answers''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Why are existing laws treated differently than new laws?''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The difference is for the benefit of the public, so the laws governing them do not flip back and forth from being in effect. A ''new'' law – for example, the Heartbeat law – could be suspended by courts only until the suspension is overturned by the legislature. An ''existing'' law – for example our former marriage laws requiring spouses to be of the opposite sex – could not be suspended for one year, to give the legislature time to respond. No chaotic back and forth. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Could courts suspend a new law between its effective date and the court ruling?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The legal action a court takes to invalidate a law is an Injunction. The process here doesn’t specify it, but would allow the normal process of allowing the courts to immediately suspend a new law with a TRO, Temporary Restraining Order, until their hearing, at which the temporary order could become permanent. In the case of an existing law, by contrast, allowing the court to immediately suspend the law, with the possibility of it going back into effect after the legislature acts, would subject the public to a law which is in effect, then suspended, then back into effect. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If this law removed the court’s power to put a TRO on a new law, the law would take effect until the ruling, then it would be suspended, but then the legislature might give it effect again.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;What will be the effect of a 4-3 ruling that a law is unconstitutional?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: no legal effect, but much political pressure) Although a 4-3 ruling would no longer have legal force, it would still have powerful political force. A ruling that a law is unconstitutional would be a public relations challenge for the legislature. The legislature would face pressure to refute the judges' claims point by point, or adjust the law voluntarily. A 4-3 ruling would not be powerless; and of course it would still be binding on the parties to the case. But an argument in defense of the legislature ignoring the challenge would be that after all, the justices themselves barely agree the law is unconstitutional. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Would a ruling always trigger a public hearing?<br />
That decision is made independently of a decision to vote to override the court. “Within one year, the legislature MAY, by a resolution, compel the attendance of specified Iowa judges ....”<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Is one year for the legislature to act too long? Too short?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;One year from the court’s ruling is needed to process the ruling’s reasoning, to hold hearings which would require passage of a resolution by both chambers, and then to schedule a vote, which could be while the legislature is not in session. A year is needed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;On the other hand, requiring courts to act in 3 months is reasonable, considering this is not a brand new question before them that they have never heard of before. They have had all the years of public debate on the issue to think about the issue. Plus, courts are accustomed to ruling quickly when cases are required to be “expedited”. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Would prolife laws do any better under this system?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yes, along with all other laws relating to immorality, which are targeted by the Landmark Abomination Cases of the U.S. Supreme Court. Iowa courts think themselves bound by SCOTUS precedent, but the Iowa legislature is not and should not be. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The 14th Amendment makes state legislatures subject to federal laws which protect the rights of state citizens that are listed in the Constitution, which is the meaning of the “privileges and immunities” clause of the 14th. But the 14th gives SCOTUS no authority to make up “rights” hostile to enumerated rights, much less to enforce “rights” without waiting for federal law to lay out the manner and scope of protection. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Neither federal courts nor Congress have any authority through the 14th or through anything else to block states from protecting constitutional rights. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Act laid out here will only get state courts out of the legislature’s way of protecting the rights of state citizens. When federal courts jump in the way, they can be shoved aside with the legal arguments of Clarence Thomas and others that are summarized in Statement #11 of this book. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Is a 2/3 majority requirement necessary? Shouldn't a simple majority of the legislature be enough to override courts?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: practically & legally, certainly; politically, complicated) This may be the hardest detail to muster a quick opinion. There are strong arguments for either choice; perhaps there is even a third option: a 60% vote. As this bill proceeds, perhaps it should be expected that a consensus will form later requiring amendment of this detail. The current draft requires a 2/3 majority. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''The Practical Argument:''' Currently, courts get away with a simple majority requirement (4-3) which faces zero accountability from anybody. This draft requires a 5-2 vote; another option is 6-1. Should the legislature face a similar hurdle? Several lawmakers believe a 2/3 requirement removes any practical hope of ever overturning a judicial invalidation of a law, because the Iowa legislature is incapable of agreeing by 2/3 that the sun is up. A 2/3 requirement would make restraint of lawmaking judges actually harder than passing a constitutional amendment! <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In Congress, our U.S. Constitution says a 2/3 majority is enough to send an amendment to the Constitution before the states for their ratification. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But if we let the legislature overturn the court’s invalidation with a second simple majority, it could be objected that would be almost ridiculously easy for the legislature to gather together the same “yea” votes a second time (if an election doesn’t intervene). A 60% requirement could answer that concern. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;However, that objection could also be met by pointing out that the ruling of the courts would give typically 60 pages of reasons the law should be overturned, which would put a lot of pressure on those “yea” votes to either eloquently and exhaustively justify their votes or vote “nay”. It would not be easy to secure a majority a second time under that pressure. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The public hearing option would put that 60 page ruling on a level playing field with reasoning from lawmakers. It would make both legislatures and courts accountable not only to each other, but to reason. It might even make lawmakers upset enough to reach a 2/3 agreement. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Voters, informed as has never before been possible about judges on the ballot, or about the legal skills of lawmakers, would have the last word. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''The Political Argument:''' The public is not used to legislatures having ANY power to correct unconstitutional rulings. A 2/3 requirement would be less of a shock to tradition. Were this bill to pass into law with a 2/3 requirement, and lawmakers saw how unnecessary it was, lawmakers could ease the requirement in the future - since this does not require amending the constitution, which already grants more than this power, but requires only a law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Amendment'''. Should it be decided that a simple majority of the legislature to overturn a court’s invalidation is sufficient, here is the simple change that could do it - simply strike out “two-thirds of” (or replace it with “six tenths of”): <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 A supreme court decision invalidating existing law or <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 having the effect of creating new law will not take effect if <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 <strikethrough>two-thirds of</strikethrough> both the senate and the house of representatives <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 approve a resolution to overturn the decision within one year <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 of the date the decision was published. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Is it practically possible to require courts to add a statement from the legislature up to a year after its ruling?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;When the Supreme Court first publishes its ruling, that is not the final version that will be later given an official permanent citation in the Northwest Reporter series. (Their contact information) Unpredictable delays are caused by litigants asking for rehearings, and courts taking time to respond. Even after that option is exhausted, court staff continue proofing their decisions, a process that can take months. [Iowa Supreme Court Clerk phone number: 515-348-4700] Northwest Reporter doesn’t officially publish a case, and give it a permanent citation, until a state supreme court notifies them that it is ready. That is why a new case has only an Iowa citation that does not list a page number or volume number, and doesn’t get a fancy N.W.2d permanent citation until much later. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Requiring the Court to leave the publication open for a year in case the legislature chooses to submit a statement would affect only the time the Court notifies Northwest Reporter, and it may not even affect that time at all. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The farther this bill gets, the more discussions there will be about it with the Iowa Bar Association and the Court itself. If delaying final publication that long is deemed unreasonable, an amendment could easily give the legislature an earlier deadline. It might also require the legislature to notify the court of an intent to exercise that option. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Of course, this entire final sentence of this bill is not critical to legislative correction of judicial overreach. It could be conceded if necessary to save the rest of the bill. But it is an appropriate correction of the current system. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Will an expedited hearing that begins in the Supreme Court diminish the time needed by the litigants to fully present their claims?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: anyone ready to block a law from taking effect is ready for court) A challenge to a new law means (and perhaps this bill could so specify, although I think it is already clearly implied) a challenge to a law that has not yet gone into effect, to keep it from going into effect (beginning with a Temporary Restraining Order (TRO) the day it would go into effect). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In such a case the state itself will normally be the defendant, and the petitioner will be a well funded group that tried to kill the law in the legislature but failed. In that situation the petitioner will already be prepared legally, their arguments well honed through interaction with lawmakers. It is hard to imagine that any less prepared petitioner would be ready with a TRO to stop a law before it goes into effect. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Iowa court rules already require appellants to outline their issues in their initial notice of appeal, which is more pressure on individual defendants to prepare that far ahead, in proportion to their means, than challengers to a new law will face, who will be fully primed for a court battle before the law passes the first chamber. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspCourt rules already require that any issue argued in the Supreme Court must have first been raised in the district court, so any responsible lawyer in district court will already be prepared for the Supreme Court. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspDistrict courts are needed to develop facts through witnesses in front of juries, depositions, and cross examination of expert witnesses. Supreme courts don’t do any of that. Expert witnesses can submit Amicus Briefs but the other side can’t cross examine them. Although judges can cross examine the lawyers for both parties in oral arguments, which district judges don’t do. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspThus district courts are essential in criminal trials where the guilt of the defendant needs to be proved to juries, and in civil trials between two parties. But their value in a challenge to a law is less clear. A legislature’s “findings of facts” are given deference except in the case of a “fundamental right”, under current practice, but the court practice of overturning laws that violate made-up “fundamental rights” has zero authority under the U.S. Constitution, and nothing prevents state legislatures from copying into state law the provision of the U.S. Constitution in Article III, Section 2, Paragraph 2, that court jurisdiction is subject to such “exceptions” and “regulations” as the legislature enacts. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspWere the petitioner an individual seeking relief only for himself and not for anyone else affected by the law, courts have many tools for giving relief to individuals short of invalidating whole laws. For example, extenuating circumstances, interaction with other laws affecting the individual, or necessity in order to avoid serious injury (Iowa 704). The applicability of laws to individuals is the jurisdiction of the judicial branch, with which the legislative branch has no intent to interfere, any more than the judicial branch should interfere with the jurisdiction of the legislative branch to establish laws of general application. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspAfter a law has already gone into effect, then there is no requirement to expedite. In fact, the decision to challenge a law could be made by the parties to the case, or by a judge, at any point during a years-long case: in pre-trial briefs, a district judge’s ruling, or during the appeal before the Court of Appeals or the Supreme Court. With this bill the applicability of the law to the individual defendant could still be suspended, but the law itself, as applied to everyone else, would not be suspended until after the Supreme Court so rules and then only if the legislature does not block the suspension. The legislature’s year to respond would not begin with any ruling made before the Supreme Court’s supermajority ruling. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Are there any U.S. Supreme Court precedents relevant to these half dozen powers?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: making judges answer lawmakers' questions is a staple of confirmation hearings) These proposed powers are all completely unprecedented in law, although some of them have been discussed. Probably the one never before discussed is the idea of a public hearing. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbspSurely the prohibition of a district judge overturning a law, limiting that power to the state Supreme Court, and requiring a supermajority of the court to overturn, is well within the power given the legislature to limit the jurisdiction of courts. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp'''Public Hearings'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;How about public hearings? Is there any legal or constitutional principle that shields judges from having to explain their rulings any better than they do in their written opinions? Is there something nefarious about requiring judges to answer questions? <br />
Federal judges answer questions about their past rulings in confirmation hearings for appointments to higher courts. If U.S. Senators can require them to answer questions about their rulings years later, why can’t state legislatures require their state judges to answer questions at the time? Judges justify not answering questions about future potential cases, that they may remain free to rule in view of facts and arguments they might not see until then, but there is no reason to shield judges from explaining their past cases. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Especially since the Public Hearings envisioned in this bill are not only to clarify whether a law ruled unconstitutional actually is unconstitutional. The second purpose of these Public Hearings is to investigate whether there are grounds for impeachment. Because if the legislature determines that the court’s ruling of the law’s unconstitutionality is utterly lacking in merit, then judges who so ruled were legislating; they were acting without authority, exercising a power of a different branch of government than their own, which is malfeasance of office, an impeachable offense. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Obviously, in any impeachment trial, the judges would be required to answer questions. These public hearings are a power subsumed under the power of impeachment; they are a reasonable, less severe remedy. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Certainly the very idea of communication between lawmakers and judges on a “level playing field” is unheard of. Unprecedented. (Outside confirmation hearings.) Current communication, which tradition will be slow to reconsider, is somewhat like a parent trying to reason with a child who is as inarticulate as he is stubborn. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is a special challenge for a lawyer representing the legislature to reason with a judge who gives only the scantest clues to what is on his mind before he rules, after which it is too late to respond to his errors. Does any Constitutional or legal principle require such a breakdown of communication? Does this ritual serve any good purpose? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Once President Washington asked SCOTUS for its advisory interpretation of a treaty. The justices declined, saying “The lines of separation drawn by the Constitution between the three departments of government – their being in certain respects checks upon each other – and our being judges in a court of last resort – are considerations which afford strong arguments against the propriety of our extra judicially deciding the questions alluded to; especially as the Power given by the Constitution to the President of calling on the Heads of Departments for opinions, seems to have been purposely as well as expressly limited to executive departments.” https://www.mountvernon.org/library/digitalhistory/digital-encyclopedia/article/george-washington-and-the-supreme-court/<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;https://founders.archives.gov/?q=Thomas%20Recipient%3A%22Washington%2C%20George%22%20Author%3A%22Supreme%20Court%20Justices%22&s=1111311111&sa=supre&r=3&sr= <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That answer is not a precedent for keeping courts from communicatint with legislatures for two reasons: (1) it was not a sensible answer then. The Constitution puts no limit on who the President can consult for advice, while Proverbs 15:22 says “in a multitude of counsellors, purposes are established”. I can’t imagine where SCOTUS came up with the idea that the President was limited to asking his department heads. Washington asked for advice, not a binding ruling. That’s what “extrajudicial” means. (2) SCOTUS then declined to get involved in an issue which it otherwise would never face. This is different than asking a Court to make up its mind earlier than later. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is not wrong to ask judges to give advisory opinions to lawmakers so lawmakers don’t have to spend years crafting laws which judges at the last minute decide to overturn. The August 8, 1793 answer was before Americans had to worry about activist judges who leave the future of legislation, and indeed the very future of human rights, very much in doubt. <br />
However, asking judges to give an advisory opinion about a law before it is passed is probably impractical, since judges are used to taking longer to study an issue than a legislature is in session, and also since even after giving an early opinion, new evidence or argument might come later which would flip the Court’s ruling. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;An expedited three month deadline is probably the closest we can come to a timely response from courts. Certainly legal wrangling that dribbles on for years exhausts the patience of rational minds. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The subject of the public hearing is whether the law really was unconstitutional. Because if it wasn't, then the judges plainly acted outside their authority, which is grounds for impeachment. But beyond being grounds for impeachment, an order given that is beyond one's authority to give is legally invalid. So surely the legislature has the authority to investigate whether an order was invalid, and upon establishing that it is, to reverse its effects. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sheltering judges from interaction doesn’t make them free of bias. In every other human interaction, accountability is the best way to cleanse a hard heart of bias. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp'''The Two-Thirds Majority'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The only thing remotely relevant to this 2/3 vs. simple majority requirement in American constitutional law that I can think of is that to ratify a constitutional amendment, Congress has to pass it by 2/3 before states pass it by 3/4. But the solution here doesn’t change the constitution; it only defines how the legislature is choosing to exercise authority already given by the Iowa Constitution. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If anything, there is a constitutional principle favoring the power of legislatures over courts, with respect to Fundamental Rights. The 14th Amendment is the part of the Constitution which courts have taken to give them jurisdiction over states who trample fundamental rights. But who did the 14th Amendment authorize to enforce its provisions? Not courts! Rather, Congress, according to Section 5 of the Amendment. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yet here are examples of not just state laws, but even state constitutional amendments, which were overturned by courts for violating the “equal protection” clause of the 14th Amendment: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Cummings v. Missouri'', 71 U.S. 277 (1867) a Missouri oath to hold office designed to keep out former confederate soldiers was ruled an unconstitutional Bill of Attainder. <br />
''Hollingswort''h v. Perry'', 570 U.S. 693 (2013) a California same sex marriage ban. <br />
''Romer v. Evans, 517 U.S. 620 (1996) a Colorado gay rights ban. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Awad v. Ziriax'', 10th Circuit, January 10, 2012 an Oklahoma ban of the use of Sharia Law in court. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Giles v. Harris'', 1903, and Giles v. Teasley, 1904, courts winked at disenfranchising Blacks, but explicitly accepted jurisdiction over state constitutions violating the 14th and 15th Amendments. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The authority to enforce the requirements of the 14th Amendment, given to Congress and not courts, gives Congress also the authority to define and apply fundamental rights, and for anyone seriously in doubt, to clarify who is a human being and therefore deserves to have his fundamental rights protected. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;These are philosophical as well as legal questions which merit national discussion, but while courts are sheltered from having to talk to anybody the conversation has been one sided. America needs to open this up into what Proverbs 15:22 calls a “multitude of counsellors”. It does not undermine respect for the judiciary to imagine judges are able to explain their reasoning. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''If Legislatures overturn court rulings, won’t they exercise the authority of the judicial branch?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: legislative action wouldn't affect litigants; only the part of the ruling that reaches wrongfully into legislating) No. On that future day when a legislature overturns judicial rulings, the legislature’s action would not apply to the parties to the case, so the “separation of powers” aspect of the ruling is untouched. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;There are several reasons a court may exempt a litigant from the effects of a law, without invalidating the law for everyone else. The simple difference between courts and legislatures is that legislatures pass laws which apply to everybody, while courts apply those laws in specific cases, only to the parties to the case, guided by the special facts and circumstances of the case. The power given by this bill to legislatures to overturn rulings applies only to the part of the ruling where the court stepped outside its constitutional authority in order to nullify a law passed for the benefit of millions of others. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The purpose of the public hearing is only for the legislature to investigate whether their law was constitutional after all, and if so, to take back their constitutional authority to pass laws by their subsequent vote. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Lawmakers take oaths to defend the Constitution too. Courts cannot rob lawmakers of their power to obey the Constitution without violating the constitution themselves. <br />
Perhaps that is the key principle declared implicitly by this bill: judges aren’t the only branch of government authorized to understand and defend the Constitution. The other branches are too. That balance needs to be restored. The conversation needed needs to be among equals.<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Shouldn’t judges be immune from popular pressure? We don’t want our rights subject to a vote!'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Neither legislatures nor courts should have the last word over each other. We have seen what happens when legislatures had the last word, in the South, during the time of slavery. And we have seen what happens when courts had the last word, in 1857 and 1973; regarding slavery and abortion. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Even the Iowa constitution gives the last word to voters. Is that dangerous? America’s Founders talked about popular whims that could remove important protections over the weekend if the public could vote on individual issues continually. They set up 6 year terms for U.S. Senators and 4 year terms for presidents explicitly to shield our Rule of Law from whims the public might hold for only a month. Nor does this process give voters direct control over the outcome of a disputed law, but only equips them to evaluate the wisdom of their elected representatives and their judges, which is the same as our current system except this leaves voters much better informed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The 14th Amendment expanded the power of courts to overturn laws which violate “fundamental rights”. It made slave-loving southern state legislatures accountable to courts. Unaddressed was what to do when it is courts which violate fundamental rights. This measure is an attempt to restore balance. It is interesting that the 14th Amendment actually leaves its own enforcement not to courts, but to Congress. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The “independence of the judiciary” from popular whims is well protected by lifetime tenure. This measure does not change that. It only defines a remedy for Iowans when judges rule lawlessly and unconstitutionally. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Didn’t Iowa decide recently not to impeach judges for their rulings?'''<br />
Summary: “Overreaching” can only reach so far before it turns into full fledged unconstitutional legislating. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Removal from office, for just one harmful ruling which may be out of a long career of beneficial rulings, is pretty drastic; not to mention ineffective since it leaves the ruling in place that triggered the impeachment! <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That is why remedies short of impeachment are necessary, as well as remedies able to focus on the problem without cutting off talent which is mostly beneficial.<br />
If an assembly line produces an occasional klunker amongst its generally great output, we keep the assembly line and discard the klunker; we don't keep the klunker and blow up the assembly line! <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Iowans seriously considered impeaching judges for their rulings not so long ago. Highlights are discussed at the Brennan Center: <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A 2011 review by the National Center for State Courts’ Gavel to Gavel website also found numerous bills introduced in state legislatures that year to impeach judges and justices because of disagreement over specific rulings. Several of those introductions were part of a failed effort in Iowa to remove four Iowa Supreme Court Justices for their decision in a high-profile case about marriage rights for same-sex couples. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The impeachment attempt garnered significant media attention, but also widespread condemnation – even from members of the sponsors’ own party. Iowa Governor-elect Terry Brandstad (R) [sic] said at the time that disagreement over a ruling did not constitute grounds for impeachment. “There’s a difference between malfeasance and over-reaching,” said Brandstad, “the Constitution says what the grounds for impeachment are. My reading is it’s not there.” Iowa House Speaker Kraig Paulsen (R), whose chamber would have voted on the impeachment, sent the resolutions to languish in an inactive committee and said, “I disagree with this remedy,…I do not expect it to be debated on the floor of the House, and if it is, I will vote no.”<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I respectfully disagree with Governor, later Ambassador Branstad. When the Iowa Supreme Court not only struck down laws limiting marriage to opposite sex couples, but specifically ordered county clerks to solemnize “marriages” between same sex couples, that reaches beyond “overreaching”. “Overreaching” implies a mild going-a-little-too-far out of one’s proper jurisdiction. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But if the plainest example of a “person charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to” the judicial branch of government exercising “any function appertaining to” the legislative branch can be dismissed as mere “overreaching”, then it is impossible for any other judicial legislating to violate the Iowa Constitution. We might as well just give judges the password to the Iowa Code database and let them write whatever laws they please. As Rep. Matt Windschitl said January 27, 2020 on the Jeff Angelo show, “Do we really want judges deciding laws? If so, why do we even have a legislature?”<br />
Article 3 Section 1 of the Iowa Constitution says “Departments of government. The powers of the government of Iowa shall be divided into three separate departments — the legislative, the executive, and the judicial: and no person charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to one of these departments shall exercise any function appertaining to either of the others....”<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''FAQ’s: Judicial Philosophy'''<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Isn’t it unconstitutional to impeach a judge for a ruling?'''<br />
Summary: It can’t be unconstitutional to correct the part of a ruling that unconstitutionally legislates. Although it has not been established definitively, whether a judge may be impeached over a ruling, most legal discussion avers that would be unethical, and there is no precedent of a successful impeachment over the content of a ruling. <br />
Most legal discussion is of the U.S. Constitution; the Iowa Constitution specifies that judges can’t legislate, which is only implied in the U.S. Constitution. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The United States Constitution provides little guidance as to what offenses constitute grounds for the impeachment of federal judges...However, the impeachment power has historically been limited to cases of serious ethical or criminal misconduct. - Brennan Center<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is generally supposed that legislative action to correct an unconstitutional ruling, or to discipline a judge who writes one, would be unconstitutional. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Constitution does not “provide for resignation or impeachment whenever a judge makes a decision with which elected officials disagree” said four judges when President Clinton and Senator Dole urged impeachment of a judge over his ruling on admissibility of evidence. “These attacks do a grave disservice to the principle of an independent judiciary and…mislead the public as to the role of judges in a constitutional democracy.” Brennan Center<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Let’s make a distinction glossed over by those four judges: between a ruling hated because it applies existing law and facts in a way most people think is wrong, and a ruling hated because it overturns laws by a rationale that most people think is unconstitutional. I agree with the four judges that the case was correctly kept off limits to lawmakers, but the judges generalized their criticism to the extent of dismissing concerns about truly unconstitutional rulings as being mere decisions “with which elected officials disagree”. <br />
It is that degree of generalization that is “a grave disservice” by elevating “the principle of an independent judiciary” beyond the reach of the Constitution, of common sense, and of accountability of any kind from any source. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;What I have not found in law review articles is any proposed remedy for when a ruling itself is unconstitutional. I have not found it even acknowledged that it is possible for a ruling to be unconstitutional. As if to say “how could judges rule unconstitutionally? Judges ARE the constitution.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But it is judges themselves, in vigorous dissents, who stir public concern about the constitutionally of certain rulings. Judges who write dissents are as qualified as those in the majority, and their reasoning is often equally persuasive. When the public has a basis this solid for concern about the constitutionality of rulings, it is surely in the public interest, and not contrary to any known legal or constitutional principle, to hold a public hearing where those concerns can be addressed and hopefully resolved, where judges, perhaps for the first time in America history, can be compelled to interact with experts other than each other.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In fact, any time a law is overturned for being unconstitutional, but the ruling is flawed and a correct ruling would actually not find the law unconstitutional, then actually the ruling itself is unconstitutional because the ruling amounts to raw legislation. It is unconstitutional for courts to pass laws. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Let me emphasize this point. Any ruling that overturns a law is either correct because the law is in fact unconstitutional, or is itself unconstitutional because its reasoning or factual basis is flawed. Lawmakers take oaths to defend the Constitution too, and should not be unconstitutionally deprived of the power to enforce it when they see a violation. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If we may agree that it is at least theoretically possible for a ruling overturning a law to be unconstitutional, shall we insist the Constitution requires the legislature to honor every unconstitutional ruling? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Suppose there were a law against painting your house red, someone was prosecuted for painting his house red, and the court refused to convict because it is surely unconstitutional to outlaw painting your house red. Even without a formal nullification of the law, the law would be defacto nullified because prosecutors would know the court won’t convict anybody for that crime. It may be reasoned that rulings overturning laws merely formalize this natural process. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Public hearings would bring healing to our national division over issues less clear than the right to paint your house red. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As is pointed out below, the power this bill gives the legislature to overturn a judicial validation of its laws would not usurp judicial powers. It would not affect individuals who are actual parties named in the case. It would only affect that part of the ruling which wrongfully reaches into lawmaking, changing the laws which affect millions of other people who are not named in the case. <br />
</ref><br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">Should any federal judge so interfere, this state appeals to its congressional delegation to examine similar grounds for disciplinary action, along with exercising its Article III, Section 2, paragraph 2 authority to make “exceptions” and “regulations” designed to end SCOTUS’ long line of landmark abomination cases.3 <br />
<ref><br />
</ref><br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">This state also appeals to its congressional delegation to exercise its life-saving and rights-protecting authority under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment whose plain words give Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of Rights,4 which subsumes the authority to define their scope and balance competing interests, while the “privileges and immunities” clause identifies as protectable rights those listed in the Constitution.4 <br />
<ref><br />
</ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">Official world-wide definitions of “crimes against humanity” apply “to representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission.”5<br />
<ref><br />
</ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">Any court review of this law must be expedited, because lives are lost with each day that courts delay.<br />
<br />
<br />
<small>The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: 396 State Legislators from 41 States <> Melinda Thybault/Moral Outcry</small><br />
<br />
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INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Courtrecognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human<br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] Courts Accept the Fact-Finding Authority of Legislatures, Juries, Experts for the same good reasons their findings persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures should regulate abortion, as Dobbs held, just as legislatures regulate the prosecution of all other murders.<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] The full humanity of a tiny physical body is hard for many to grasp. But what distinguishes us from animals isn’t physical, and has no known pre-conscious stage.<br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress has ''Already'' Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment already authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion.<br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] Roe, Dobbs, and the 14th Amendment agree: All Humans are “Persons”.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] When pregnancies develop into medical emergencies requiring separation of mother and child to save the mother, the child has an equal fundamental right to life and medical care. <br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any class of humans by any other is prohibited by the Constitution, by the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives legislatures no authority to legalize violations of Constitutional Rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
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====<br />
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'''FOOTNOTES'''<br />
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<references /></div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Statement_12_%2B_Footnotes&diff=50351Statement 12 + Footnotes2023-12-12T18:06:18Z<p>DaveLeach: </p>
<hr />
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<br />
Statement of Facts #12 of 12 from: <br />
<br />
=[[Reversing_Landmark_Abomination_Cases]]=<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters<br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion</span><br />
<br />
by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal<br />
''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal<br />
<span style="color:brown"><br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen <br />
<br />
by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 18:11, 15 October 2023 (UTC)<br />
<br />
<span style="color:grey"><small>''Try to imagine how a judge, reviewing a prolife law with these Findings of Facts, would be able to dodge this evidence - in fact, see if you can find ANYONE who can ''refute'' these facts - as opposed to not ''caring'' about facts - that is, not caring about reality:''</small></span><br />
<br />
====<span style="color:blue">Statement of Fact #12 of 12:====<br />
<span style="color:blue">Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">Any state judge interfering with this state’s compliance with the 14th Amendment and its ancient authority to protect its people <br />
<ref>More about '''“the ancient authority of state legislatures...to protect the lives of all its people – an authority which no court can legitimately remove.”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Courts that overturn the prolife laws of “red states” interfere with the ancient duty and power of every government, in every generation, to protect life, points out the amicus brief filed in Dobbs v. Jackson by <u>396 State Legislators from 41 States</u>.(www.supremecourt.gov/Docket PDF/19/19-1392/185121/ 20210728125120809_Dobbs%20Amici%20brief_State%20Legislators_07272021.pdf)<br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;State legislators have the constitutional duty, and therefore the power, to protect the fundamental, civil rights of persons. The fundamental law in which those fundamental rights are found is the common law, which consists of both natural duties and those ancient, customary rights and immunities that are foundational to ordered liberty. Thus, a state legislature must declare and secure to all persons within the protection of its laws the rights that those persons have by natural and customary law. Cf. ''Washington v. Glucksberg'', 521 U.S. 702, 721-22 (1997) (upholding state legislation that prohibited assisted suicide and reasoning that the Fourteenth Amendment’s “Due Process Clause specially protects those fundamental rights and liberties which are, objectively, ‘deeply rooted in this Nation’s history and tradition’.” (quoting ''Moore v. E. Cleveland'', 431 U. S. 494, 503 (1977)). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England (1765): “Hence,” he said, “it follows, that the first and primary end of human laws is to '''maintain and regulate these absolute rights of individuals'''.” Id. Blackstone taught that the legislative power is to declare existing common-law rights and duties and to remedy any defects in the legal security for those rights. Id. at *42-43, 52-58, 86-87 <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Founders echoed this view in the Declaration of Independence, declaring that governments are instituted among men in order to secure the inalienable rights with which human beings are endowed by nature and nature’s God. They also accused the crown and Parliament of infringing the rights of “our constitution,” which in 1776 could only have been a reference to the common-law constitution of British North America. This view predicated the Constitution of the United States, which expressly secures natural rights, such as life and religious liberty, and common-law rights, such as jury trials and freedom from the quartering of soldiers in one’s home, and expressly disclaims any intent to disparage the other rights of the fundamental law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Indeed, the point of having legislatures, executives, and courts is to secure the rights that Americans already have.''' Neither state legislatures nor the Constitution of the United States create those rights. See District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570, 592 (2008) (stating that “it has always been widely understood that the '''Second Amendment, like the First and Fourth Amendments, codified a preexisting right,” that it “is not a right granted by the Constitution,” and is not “in any manner dependent upon that instrument for its existence.”'''). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Some, but not all, of the rights of natural persons are enumerated [listed] in the Constitution''' of the United States and its amendments. U.S. Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 8.; art. IV, §2; amends. I-VIII. Others are enumerated in state constitutions. See e.g., Soc’y for the Propagation of the Gospel v. Wheeler, 22 F. Cas. 756, 766 (No. 13,156) (C.C.D.N.H. 1814). Still others are declared in American constitutions but not enumerated. U.S. Const. amend. IX (“The enumeration of certain rights herein shall not be construed to deny or disparage other rights retained by the people.”) (emphasis added). '''State legislatures have a duty to declare and secure all fundamental rights, both enumerated and unenumerated.''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Fundamental rights are those that persons enjoy by fundamental law—natural law and common law— with or without any written constitution. Because the common law includes natural rights, to understand the fundamental rights declared and secured by the Constitution, it is sufficient to look to the common law, especially as explained by William Blackstone. Established common-law doctrines constitute the best evidence of the existence and meaning of both enumerated and unenumerated, fundamental rights. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The interpretation of the Constitution of the United States is necessarily influenced by the fact that its provisions are framed in the language of the English common law, and are to be read in the light of its history.” ''Smith v. Alabama'', 124 U.S. 465, 478 (1888). The terms and concepts of the common law provided the “the nomenclature of which the framers of the Constitution were familiar.” ''Minor v. Happersett'', 88 U.S. (21 Wall) 162, 167 (1875). Accord James R. Stoner, Jr., Common-Law Liberty: Rethinking American Constitutionalism 9-29 (2003). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;American constitutional rights are not philosophical abstractions. They are described in detail in common law treatises, such as those by Coke and Hale, and especially Blackstone’s Commentaries. The framers crafted American constitutions—state and federal—in common law terms. And Blackstone was their teacher and lexicographer....<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As this Court has rightly acknowledged, Blackstone’s “works constituted the preeminent authority on English law for the founding generation.” ''Alden v. Maine'', 527 U.S. 706, 715 (1999). Blackstone retained his influence through the adoption of the Civil War Amendments. James M. Ogden, Lincoln’s Early Impressions of the Law in Indiana, 7 Notre Dame L. Rev. 325, 328 (1932). And '''this Court continues to turn to Blackstone today.''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[2 A few examples from recent years include ''Gamble v. United States'', __ U.S. __, 139 S. Ct. 1960 (2019) (the Court’s opinion, the concurrence, and one dissent citing Blackstone multiple times to determine the meaning of the phrase “the same offense” in the Fifth Amendment’s double jeopardy clause); ''Department of Homeland Security v. Thuraissigiam'', __ U.S. __, 140 S. Ct. 1959, 1969 (2020) (calling Blackstone’s Commentaries a “satisfactory exposition of the common law of England”); Ramos v. Louisiana, __ U.S. __, 140 S. Ct. 1390, 1395 (2020) (citing Blackstone in explanation of the holding that '''the requirement of juror unanimity is “a vital right protected by the common law”''' and therefore the Constitution’s jury trial guarantee); ''Torres v. Madrid'', __ U.S. __, 141 S. Ct. 989, 996, 997, 998, 1000 (2021) (citing Blackstone multiple times to determine meaning of Fourth Amendment “seizure”). ]...<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But as the Ninth Amendment makes clear, the enumeration of certain common-law rights does not deny or disparage all the other rights that the American people enjoy by virtue of natural law and their ancient customs. The Ninth Amendment expressly reserves to the people those civil and fundamental rights that they enjoyed prior to ratification, which are their natural rights, other common-law rights and liberties, and some privileges enumerated in state constitutions. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Because many states refused to remedy infringements of fundamental rights [for blacks] prior to the Civil War, the Fourteenth Amendment was necessary to ensure to all persons due process of law and the equal protection of the laws, and to empower Congress to remedy infringements of those rights. It bears emphasis that the '''Fourteenth Amendment was necessary to recall state legislatures to their original task. Far from repealing the people’s retention of fundamenta'''l rights declared by the Ninth Amendment, the Fourteenth Amendment strengthened it. And far from abrogating the duty of state legislatures to declare and secure unenumerated rights, the Fourteenth Amendment reinforced that duty. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That is, the rights retained by the people but not protected by their state, such as the right of Blacks to liberty, was strengthened – at the expense of the freedom of the legislature to torpedo those rights. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And as Statement #11 and its footnotes explain, the 14th Amendment did not supplant the duty of legislatures to protect rights with that duty in courts. The only authority over state violations of rights given courts by the 14th was to enforce federal laws enacted by Congress. The authority of courts we see today, to make up “rights” not found in the Constitution and impose them on states without waiting for Congress to pass a law, was not given by the 14th, but was seized by courts in violation of the Constitution. </ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">– the central reason governments exist, is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders, and is guilty of exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide through an unconstitutional ruling, which exceeds the judicial powers given by the state Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment.<br />
<ref>More about '''“exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide...exceeds the judicial powers given by the state Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Legislatures have considerable untapped potential for restraining their activist courts when they become confused about which branch of government they are. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Perhaps the major reason few people even think about solutions is fear of any change to the balance of powers between the legislature and the courts. “Better the devil you know than the devil you don’t.” We don’t want to just switch tyrants. A change to a real solution requires wisdom, which requires study, and who wants to study? <br />
<center>Another obstacle to restraining courts to their constitutional function is that most people, even Christians, limit their goals to what they consider “realistic”, and especially “politically realistic”, which usually means what people think they can do without God. Trust that what Jesus promised about “impossible” goals is truly “realistic”, enables us to think about not just what would be a little bit better, but about what would be perfect. and then to think about doing whatever we can think of to move in that direction, fully aware how feeble our own steps are, trusting God to open up new opportunities, in His time, as we walk with Him. </center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;My own feeble steps were drafted into a bill in Iowa in 2020. The bill is posted at http://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/wiki/ <br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_stop_judges_from_legislating <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Senate Judiciary Committee Chair Brad Zaun liked the idea and got it numbered and introduced, but it came to him too late that year to get it through the “funnel”, and he was disappointed that there was no organized group helping make other lawmakers aware of it. <br />
<center>'''Judicial Accountability Act: How Legislatures can stop judges from legislating'''</center><br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Summary: what the bill accomplishes'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1. '''No district court injunctions. A single district judge can't overturn a law.''' Any legislature is well within its constitutional authority to prohibit any ''district'' court (lower court) from invalidating a law – only the ''Supreme'' Court should be allowed to do it, and only within 90 days. Letting a single lower court judge overturn the work of 150 lawmakers which include several attorneys and constitutional scholars is insane. Any challenge to a law should go directly to the most experienced judges in the state.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2. '''Supermajority required. It takes 5 of the 7 justices of the Supreme Court to overturn a law.''' A simple majority of justices overturning by one vote a law produced by tens of thousands of people over several years is a scandal. It has nothing to do with wisdom, law, or the Constitution. When judges can’t even agree with each other, unanimously, whether to destroy the work of the majority of voters and their representatives, they prove they are not so much wiser than everybody else in their state to be trusted with such unbridled power. At the very least any injunction should have their unanimous support before they should have any power to shut down the will of their whole state. A supermajority that is short of unanimous may be OK if it is not the final word but is followed by further opportunities for the legislature to restore their law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3. '''Expedited. The Court has to rule in 3 months if the court blocks a new law from taking effect with a Temporary Restraining Order.''' If the court invalidates an existing law, the invalidation doesn't take effect for one year. Courts bottling up laws with injunctions for years while they make up their minds should make them ashamed. They don’t need years. No controversial law is passed without months if not years of scrutiny by attorneys for and against. Their briefs are already ready. They already know what the other side will say. They don’t need years to think of what to say or how to respond. Maybe a day. Maybe two.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Nor do judges need months to read the briefs for several weeks to bring themselves up to speed on the issue. The law has been in the news for years. There is no honor in willful ignorance of the issues until the first brief is filed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Laws are passed to correct serious wrongs. Years of work costing millions of dollars goes into fixing problems. There is no good reason to delay justice for the citizens of a state for years to wait while judges try to agree among themselves whether to allow justice as understood by the majority of voters and lawmakers. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''4. Discussion. The legislature may compel designated justices to attend a public hearing to debate the constitutionality of the law within one year of such a ruling, by passing a resolution.''' Provided a supermajority of the Supreme Court has agreed on an injunction in less than a month, the legislature should then be able, within the next year, to compel the attendance of judges under their jurisdiction to discuss and debate, with specified legislators in a public hearing, the constitutional justification for [or necessity of] that judicial exercise of the legislative function. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''5. The legislature may overturn the invalidation by a 60% vote, by a resolution, leaving the last word, the final verdict, with incredibly well informed voters''' (through ordinary elections of lawmakers and retention of justices). The resolution overturning the invalidation would give reasons responsive to the reasoning of the judicial ruling. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''The Bill: Iowa SSB3181 2020 AD''''''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A BILL FOR <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 An Act regarding legislative oversight of supreme court <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 decisions, and including applicability provisions. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF IOWA: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Introduction/Legislative Findings'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 Section 1. NEW SECTION. 602.1615 Legislative findings —— <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 challenges to the validity of a statute —— exclusive jurisdiction <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 —— public hearings —— legislative oversight. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 1. The general assembly finds and declares all of the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 following: <br />
<center>'''If the legislature can even impeach,''' <br />
<br>'''it can at least ask questions'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 a. The power to impeach subsumes reasonable less severe <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7 remedies. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Lawmakers take an oath''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''to uphold the Constitution too'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Their responsibility to uphold the Constitution'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''requires action against courts '''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''that interfere with their responsibility'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 b. The intent of this section is to provide for a mechanism <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 in which to resolve disputes regarding the constitutionality of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 laws between the courts and the legislature, both of which are <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 composed of constitutional scholars. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Jurisdiction of courts is''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''restricted by the legislature'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 c. Article 5, section 4 of the Constitution of the State <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13 of Iowa states that the supreme court is “a court for the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14 correction of errors at law, '''under such restriction as''' the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15 general assembly may, by law, prescribe . . .”. <br />
<center>'''Judicial power to invalidate laws''' <br />
<br>'''is not given by the Iowa Constitution'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 d. Article 3, section 20 of the Constitution of the State <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 of Iowa gives the legislature the power to impeach judges for <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 “malfeasance in office”, which is generally defined to include <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;19 acting without authority and abusing power. The power to <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;20 impeach subsumes all lesser remedies. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;21 e. The Constitution of the State of Iowa does not give the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;22 courts of this state the power to invalidate laws enacted by <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;23 the legislature, to require the legislature to enact different <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;24 laws, or to publish rulings that have the same effect as new <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;25 legislation. Article 3, section 1 of the Constitution of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;26 the State of Iowa states: “The powers of the government of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;27 Iowa shall be divided into three separate departments —— the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;28 '''legislative, the executive, and the judicial: and no person''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;29 '''charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to one''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;30 '''of these departments shall exercise any function appertaining''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;31 '''to either of the others,''' except in cases hereinafter expressly <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;32 directed or permitted”. <br />
<center>'''The Legislature must get involved''' <br />
<br>'''when courts legislate unconstitutionally'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;33 f. Although the courts of Iowa have usurped those powers <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;34 without constitutional authority, it has been done for reasons <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;35 which the general assembly respects. The general assembly <br />
----<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 welcomes the expertise and guidance of the courts in evaluating <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 the constitutionality of its laws. But when the reasoning of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 rulings which function as legislation appears to be not only <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 unsound, but unconstitutional, the general assembly has the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 constitutional duty and authority to determine that judges and <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 justices have abused their power and exceeded their authority, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7 which are grounds for impeachment under the malfeasance in <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 office clause. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 g. A remedy short of impeachment should advance wisdom, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 build consensus, and educate voters so that informed voters <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 may hold both judges and legislators accountable. Article 1, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 section 2 of the Constitution of the State of Iowa states: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13 '''“All political power is inherent in the people.''' Government is <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14 instituted for the protection, security, and benefit of the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15 people, and they have the right, at all times, to alter or <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 reform the same, whenever the public good may require it”. <br />
<center>'''The Meat of the Bill:''' <br />
<br>'''the Enforcement Section'''<br />
<br>'''Lower courts can't invalidate laws'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 2. The supreme court shall have discretionary and exclusive <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 original jurisdiction over any challenge to any law. A <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;19 district court or the court of appeals shall not invalidate a <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;20 law on any grounds. <br />
<center>'''Supreme Court must rule''' <br />
<br>'''within 3 months, by supermajority,'''<br />
<br>'''when the Court blocks a ''new'' law.'''<br />
<br>'''When the Court blocks an existing law'''<br />
<br>'''the block will not take effect for one year.'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;21 3. A decision of the supreme court that invalidates <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;22 '''existing''' law or has the effect of creating new law shall not <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;23 have any effect unless agreed to by five or more of the seven <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;24 justices, and otherwise shall not have any effect for one <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;25 year. The supreme court shall also have the power to suspend <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;26 implementation of '''a new law''' provided the supreme court produces <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;27 an expedited ruling within three months of the law’s enactment. <br />
<center>'''Public Hearing'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;28 4. a. Within one year of the date a supreme court decision <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;29 is published that invalidates existing law or has the effect <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;30 of creating new law, the general assembly may, by resolution, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;31 compel the attendance of specified justices to a public hearing <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;32 to discuss and debate the justification for the decision with <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;33 members of the general assembly. A public record of the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;34 hearing shall be made. <br />
<center>'''Impeachment grounds inquiry'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;35 b. During or after the hearing, the general assembly shall <br />
----<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 determine if grounds to begin impeachment exist as to any <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 of the justices present at the hearing for acting without <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 authority or malfeasance in office. <br />
<center>'''Judges may improve their ruling'''<br />
<br>'''with respect to the status of the challenged law'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 c. Based on the results of a hearing commenced pursuant to <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 this subsection, a justice whose presence was required at the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 hearing may change the justice’s vote or alter the justice’s <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7 individual contribution to the decision. <br />
<center>'''Legislature may overturn court invalidation'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 5. A supreme court decision invalidating existing law or <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 having the effect of creating new law will not take effect if <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 two-thirds of both the senate and the house of representatives <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 approve a resolution to overturn the decision within one year <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 of the date the decision was published. The resolution must <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13 specify the basis for overturning the decision, including <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14 its reasoning, not to be limited by court precedent that is <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15 responsive to the supreme court’s initial published decision, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 and must be documented by expert testimony and constitutional <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 authority. <br />
<center>'''Legislature may add statement to the ruling'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 6. The general assembly may issue its own statement to a <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;19 published supreme court decision that invalidates existing law <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;20 or has the effect of creating new law if done within one year of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;21 the date the decision was published. The statement must regard <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;22 the constitutionality of the invalidated existing law or the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;23 newly created law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;24 Sec. 2. APPLICABILITY. This Act applies to decisions <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;25 published by the supreme court on or after the effective date <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;26 of this act. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''FAQ's'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Questions and Answers''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;''Why are existing laws treated differently than new laws?''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The difference is for the benefit of the public, so the laws governing them do not flip back and forth from being in effect. A ''new'' law – for example, the Heartbeat law – could be suspended by courts only until the suspension is overturned by the legislature. An ''existing'' law – for example our former marriage laws requiring spouses to be of the opposite sex – could not be suspended for one year, to give the legislature time to respond. No chaotic back and forth. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Could courts suspend a new law between its effective date and the court ruling?'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The legal action a court takes to invalidate a law is an Injunction. The process here doesn’t specify it, but would allow the normal process of allowing the courts to immediately suspend a new law with a TRO, Temporary Restraining Order, until their hearing, at which the temporary order could become permanent. In the case of an existing law, by contrast, allowing the court to immediately suspend the law, with the possibility of it going back into effect after the legislature acts, would subject the public to a law which is in effect, then suspended, then back into effect. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If this law removed the court’s power to put a TRO on a new law, the law would take effect until the ruling, then it would be suspended, but then the legislature might give it effect again.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;What will be the effect of a 4-3 ruling that a law is unconstitutional?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: no legal effect, but much political pressure) Although a 4-3 ruling would no longer have legal force, it would still have powerful political force. A ruling that a law is unconstitutional would be a public relations challenge for the legislature. The legislature would face pressure to refute the judges' claims point by point, or adjust the law voluntarily. A 4-3 ruling would not be powerless; and of course it would still be binding on the parties to the case. But an argument in defense of the legislature ignoring the challenge would be that after all, the justices themselves barely agree the law is unconstitutional. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Would a ruling always trigger a public hearing?<br />
That decision is made independently of a decision to vote to override the court. “Within one year, the legislature MAY, by a resolution, compel the attendance of specified Iowa judges ....”<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Is one year for the legislature to act too long? Too short?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;One year from the court’s ruling is needed to process the ruling’s reasoning, to hold hearings which would require passage of a resolution by both chambers, and then to schedule a vote, which could be while the legislature is not in session. A year is needed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;On the other hand, requiring courts to act in 3 months is reasonable, considering this is not a brand new question before them that they have never heard of before. They have had all the years of public debate on the issue to think about the issue. Plus, courts are accustomed to ruling quickly when cases are required to be “expedited”. <br />
Would prolife laws do any better under this system?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: Good news for Democrats!) No, at least not by much. Prolife laws would have a brighter future in Iowa courts, but in federal courts there would be no difference from a state law. That is, until such time as Congress adopts these reforms. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;However, it might give prolife bills as much help as a “no right to abortion” state constitutional amendment would, although a different kind of help. And although there seems little concern that a Constitutional Amendment might be overturned, (even though constitutional amendments have been overturned in other states by their courts), this act would further reduce that possibility. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Is a 2/3 majority requirement necessary? Shouldn't a simple majority of the legislature be enough to override courts?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: practically & legally, certainly; politically, complicated) This may be the hardest detail to muster a quick opinion. There are strong arguments for either choice; perhaps there is even a third option: a 60% vote. As this bill proceeds, perhaps it should be expected that a consensus will form later requiring amendment of this detail. The current draft requires a 2/3 majority. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Practical Argument: Currently, courts get away with a simple majority requirement (4-3) which faces zero accountability from anybody. This draft requires a 5-2 vote; another option is 6-1. Should the legislature face a similar hurdle? Several lawmakers believe a 2/3 requirement removes any practical hope of ever overturning a judicial invalidation of a law, because the Iowa legislature is incapable of agreeing by 2/3 that the sun is up. A 2/3 requirement would make restraint of lawmaking judges actually harder than passing a constitutional amendment! <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In Congress, our U.S. Constitution says a 2/3 majority is enough to send an amendment to the Constitution before the states for their ratification. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But if we let the legislature overturn the court’s invalidation with a second simple majority, it could be objected that would be almost ridiculously easy for the legislature to gather together the same “yea” votes a second time (if an election doesn’t intervene). A 60% requirement could answer that concern. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;However, that objection could also be met by pointing out that the ruling of the courts would give typically 60 pages of reasons the law should be overturned, which would put a lot of pressure on those “yea” votes to either eloquently and exhaustively justify their votes or vote “nay”. It would not be easy to secure a majority a second time under that pressure. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The public hearing option would put that 60 page ruling on a level playing field with reasoning from lawmakers. It would make both legislatures and courts accountable not only to each other, but to reason. It might even make lawmakers upset enough to reach a 2/3 agreement. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Voters, informed as has never before been possible about judges on the ballot, or about the legal skills of lawmakers, would have the last word. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Political Argument: The public is not used to legislatures having ANY power to correct unconstitutional rulings. A 2/3 requirement would be less of a shock to tradition. Were this bill to pass into law with a 2/3 requirement, and lawmakers saw how unnecessary it was, lawmakers could ease the requirement in the future - since this does not require amending the constitution, which already grants more than this power, but requires only a law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Amendment. Should it be decided that a simple majority of the legislature to overturn a court’s invalidation is sufficient, here is the simple change that could do it - simply strike out “two-thirds of” (or replace it with “six tenths of”): <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 A supreme court decision invalidating existing law or <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 having the effect of creating new law will not take effect if <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 two-thirds of both the senate and the house of representatives <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 approve a resolution to overturn the decision within one year <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 of the date the decision was published. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Is it practically possible to require courts to add a statement from the legislature up to a year after its ruling?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;When the Supreme Court first publishes its ruling, that is not the final version that will be later given an official permanent citation in the Northwest Reporter series. (Their contact information) Unpredictable delays are caused by litigants asking for rehearings, and courts taking time to respond. Even after that option is exhausted, court staff continue proofing their decisions, a process that can take months. [Iowa Supreme Court Clerk phone number: 515-348-4700] Northwest Reporter doesn’t officially publish a case, and give it a permanent citation, until a state supreme court notifies them that it is ready. That is why a new case has only an Iowa citation that does not list a page number or volume number, and doesn’t get a fancy N.W.2d permanent citation until much later. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Requiring the Court to leave the publication open for a year in case the legislature chooses to submit a statement would affect only the time the Court notifies Northwest Reporter, and it may not even affect that time at all. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The farther this bill gets, the more discussions there will be about it with the Iowa Bar Association and the Court itself. If delaying final publication that long is deemed unreasonable, an amendment could easily give the legislature an earlier deadline. It might also require the legislature to notify the court of an intent to exercise that option. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Of course, this entire final sentence of this bill is not critical to legislative correction of judicial overreach. It could be conceded if necessary to save the rest of the bill. But it is an appropriate correction of the current system. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Will an expedited hearing that begins in the Supreme Court diminish the time needed by the litigants to fully present their claims?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: anyone ready to block a law from taking effect is ready for court) A challenge to a new law means (and perhaps this bill could so specify, although I think it is already clearly implied) a challenge to a law that has not yet gone into effect, to keep it from going into effect (beginning with a Temporary Restraining Order (TRO) the day it would go into effect). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In such a case the state itself will normally be the defendant, and the petitioner will be a well funded group that tried to kill the law in the legislature but failed. In that situation the petitioner will already be prepared legally, their arguments well honed through interaction with lawmakers. It is hard to imagine that any less prepared petitioner would be ready with a TRO to stop a law before it goes into effect. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Iowa court rules already require appellants to outline their issues in their initial notice of appeal, which is more pressure on individual defendants to prepare that far ahead, in proportion to their means, than challengers to a new law will face, who will be fully primed for a court battle before the law passes the first chamber. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Were the petitioner an individual seeking relief only for himself and not for anyone else affected by the law, courts have many tools for giving relief to individuals short of invalidating whole laws. Extenuating circumstances, interaction with other laws affecting the individual, necessity in order to avoid serious injury (Iowa 704) for example. The applicability of laws to individuals is the jurisdiction of the judicial branch, with which the legislative branch has no intent to interfere, any more than the judicial branch should interfere with the jurisdiction of the legislative branch to establish laws of general application. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;After a law has already gone into effect, then there is no requirement to expedite. In fact, the decision to challenge a law could be made by the parties to the case, or by a judge, at any point during a years-long case: in pre-trial briefs, a district judge’s ruling, or during the appeal before the Court of Appeals or the Supreme Court. With this bill the applicability of the law to the individual defendant could still be suspended, but the law itself, as applied to everyone else, would not be suspended until after the Supreme Court so rules and then only if the legislature does not block the suspension. The legislature’s year to respond would not begin with any ruling made before the Supreme Court’s supermajority ruling. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Are there any U.S. Supreme Court precedents relevant to these half dozen powers?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: making judges answer lawmakers' questions is a staple of confirmation hearings) These proposed powers are all completely unprecedented in law, although some of them have been discussed. Probably the one never before discussed is the idea of a public hearing. <br />
Surely the prohibition of a district judge overturning a law, limiting that power to the state Supreme Court, and requiring a supermajority of the court to overturn, is well within the power given the legislature to limit the jurisdiction of courts. <br />
Public Hearings<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;How about public hearings? Is there any legal or constitutional principle that shields judges from having to explain their rulings any better than they do in their written opinions? Is there something nefarious about requiring judges to answer questions? <br />
Federal judges answer questions about their past rulings in confirmation hearings for appointments to higher courts. If U.S. Senators can require them to answer questions about their rulings years later, why can’t state legislatures require their state judges to answer questions at the time? Judges justify not answering questions about future potential cases, that they may remain free to rule in view of facts and arguments they might not see until then, but there is no reason to shield judges from explaining their past cases. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Especially since the Public Hearings envisioned in this bill are not only to clarify whether a law ruled unconstitutional actually is unconstitutional. The second purpose of these Public Hearings is to investigate whether there are grounds for impeachment. Because if the legislature determines that the court’s ruling of the law’s unconstitutionality is utterly lacking in merit, then judges who so ruled were legislating; they were acting without authority, exercising a power of a different branch of government than their own, which is malfeasance of office, an impeachable offense. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Obviously, in any impeachment trial, the judges would be required to answer questions. These public hearings are a power subsumed under the power of impeachment; they are a reasonable, less severe remedy. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Certainly the very idea of communication between lawmakers and judges on a “level playing field” is unheard of. Unprecedented. (Outside confirmation hearings.) Current communication, which tradition will be slow to reconsider, is somewhat like a parent trying to reason with a child who is as inarticulate as he is stubborn. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is a special challenge for a lawyer representing the legislature to reason with a judge who gives only the scantest clues to what is on his mind before he rules, after which it is too late to respond to his errors. Does any Constitutional or legal principle require such a breakdown of communication? Does this ritual serve any good purpose? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Once President Washington asked SCOTUS for its advisory interpretation of a treaty. The justices declined, saying “The lines of separation drawn by the Constitution between the three departments of government – their being in certain respects checks upon each other – and our being judges in a court of last resort – are considerations which afford strong arguments against the propriety of our extra judicially deciding the questions alluded to; especially as the Power given by the Constitution to the President of calling on the Heads of Departments for opinions, seems to have been purposely as well as expressly limited to executive departments.” https://www.mountvernon.org/library/digitalhistory/digital-encyclopedia/article/george-washington-and-the-supreme-court/<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;https://founders.archives.gov/?q=Thomas%20Recipient%3A%22Washington%2C%20George%22%20Author%3A%22Supreme%20Court%20Justices%22&s=1111311111&sa=supre&r=3&sr= <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That answer is not a precedent for keeping courts from communicatint with legislatures for two reasons: (1) it was not a sensible answer then. The Constitution puts no limit on who the President can consult for advice, while Proverbs 15:22 says “in a multitude of counsellors, purposes are established”. I can’t imagine where SCOTUS came up with the idea that the President was limited to asking his department heads. Washington asked for advice, not a binding ruling. That’s what “extrajudicial” means. (2) SCOTUS then declined to get involved in an issue which it otherwise would never face. This is different than asking a Court to make up its mind earlier than later. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is not wrong to ask judges to give advisory opinions to lawmakers so lawmakers don’t have to spend years crafting laws which judges at the last minute decide to overturn. The August 8, 1793 answer was before Americans had to worry about activist judges who leave the future of legislation, and indeed the very future of human rights, very much in doubt. <br />
However, asking judges to give an advisory opinion about a law before it is passed is probably impractical, since judges are used to taking longer to study an issue than a legislature is in session, and also since even after giving an early opinion, new evidence or argument might come later which would flip the Court’s ruling. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;An expedited three month deadline is probably the closest we can come to a timely response from courts. Certainly legal wrangling that dribbles on for years exhausts the patience of rational minds. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The subject of the public hearing is whether the law really was unconstitutional. Because if it wasn't, then the judges plainly acted outside their authority, which is grounds for impeachment. But beyond being grounds for impeachment, an order given that is beyond one's authority to give is legally invalid. So surely the legislature has the authority to investigate whether an order was invalid, and upon establishing that it is, to reverse its effects. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sheltering judges from interaction doesn’t make them free of bias. In every other human interaction, accountability is the best way to cleanse a hard heart of bias. <br />
The Two-Thirds Majority<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The only thing remotely relevant to this 2/3 vs. simple majority requirement in American constitutional law that I can think of is that to ratify a constitutional amendment, Congress has to pass it by 2/3 before states pass it by 3/4. But the solution here doesn’t change the constitution; it only defines how the legislature is choosing to exercise authority already given by the Iowa Constitution. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If anything, there is a constitutional principle favoring the power of legislatures over courts, with respect to Fundamental Rights. The 14th Amendment is the part of the Constitution which courts have taken to give them jurisdiction over states who trample fundamental rights. But who did the 14th Amendment authorize to enforce its provisions? Not courts! Rather, Congress, according to Section 5 of the Amendment. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yet here are examples of not just state laws, but even state constitutional amendments, which were overturned by courts for violating the “equal protection” clause of the 14th Amendment: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Cummings v. Missouri, 71 U.S. 277 (1867) a Missouri oath to hold office designed to keep out former confederate soldiers was ruled an unconstitutional Bill of Attainder. <br />
Hollingsworth v. Perry, 570 U.S. 693 (2013) a California same sex marriage ban. <br />
Romer v. Evans, 517 U.S. 620 (1996) a Colorado gay rights ban. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Awad v. Ziriax, 10th Circuit, January 10, 2012 an Oklahoma ban of the use of Sharia Law in court. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Giles v. Harris, 1903, and Giles v. Teasley, 1904, courts winked at disenfranchising Blacks, but explicitly accepted jurisdiction over state constitutions violating the 14th and 15th Amendments. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The authority to enforce the requirements of the 14th Amendment, given to Congress and not courts, gives Congress also the authority to define and apply fundamental rights, and for anyone seriously in doubt, to clarify who is a human being and therefore deserves to have his fundamental rights protected. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;These are philosophical as well as legal questions which merit national discussion, but while courts are sheltered from having to talk to anybody the conversation has been one sided. America needs to open this up into what Proverbs 15:22 calls a “multitude of counsellors”. It does not undermine respect for the judiciary to imagine judges are able to explain their reasoning. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If Legislatures overturn court rulings, won’t they exercise the authority of the judicial branch?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: legislative action wouldn't affect litigants; only the part of the ruling that reaches wrongfully into legislating) No. On that future day when a legislature overturns judicial rulings, the legislature’s action would not apply to the parties to the case, so the “separation of powers” aspect of the ruling is untouched. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;There are several reasons a court may exempt a litigant from the effects of a law, without invalidating the law for everyone else. The simple difference between courts and legislatures is that legislatures pass laws which apply to everybody, while courts apply those laws in specific cases, only to the parties to the case, guided by the special facts and circumstances of the case. The power given by this bill to legislatures to overturn rulings applies only to the part of the ruling where the court stepped outside its constitutional authority in order to nullify a law passed for the benefit of millions of others. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The purpose of the public hearing is only for the legislature to investigate whether their law was constitutional after all, and if so, to take back their constitutional authority to pass laws by their subsequent vote. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Lawmakers take oaths to defend the Constitution too. Courts cannot rob lawmakers of their power to obey the Constitution without violating the constitution themselves. <br />
Perhaps that is the key principle declared implicitly by this bill: judges aren’t the only branch of government authorized to understand and defend the Constitution. The other branches are too. That balance needs to be restored. The conversation needed needs to be among equals.<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Shouldn’t judges be immune from popular pressure? We don’t want our rights subject to a vote!<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Neither legislatures nor courts should have the last word over each other. We have seen what happens when legislatures had the last word, in the South, during the time of slavery. And we have seen what happens when courts had the last word, in 1857 and 1973; regarding slavery and abortion. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Even the Iowa constitution gives the last word to voters. Is that dangerous? America’s Founders talked about popular whims that could remove important protections over the weekend if the public could vote on individual issues continually. They set up 6 year terms for U.S. Senators and 4 year terms for presidents explicitly to shield our Rule of Law from whims the public might hold for only a month. Nor does this process give voters direct control over the outcome of a disputed law, but only equips them to evaluate the wisdom of their elected representatives and their judges, which is the same as our current system except this leaves voters much better informed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The 14th Amendment expanded the power of courts to overturn laws which violate “fundamental rights”. It made slave-loving southern state legislatures accountable to courts. Unaddressed was what to do when it is courts which violate fundamental rights. This measure is an attempt to restore balance. It is interesting that the 14th Amendment actually leaves its own enforcement not to courts, but to Congress. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The “independence of the judiciary” from popular whims is well protected by lifetime tenure. This measure does not change that. It only defines a remedy for Iowans when judges rule lawlessly and unconstitutionally. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Didn’t Iowa decide recently not to impeach judges for their rulings?<br />
Summary: “Overreaching” can only reach so far before it turns into full fledged unconstitutional legislating. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Removal from office, for just one harmful ruling which may be out of a long career of beneficial rulings, is pretty drastic; not to mention ineffective since it leaves the ruling in place that triggered the impeachment! <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That is why remedies short of impeachment are necessary, as well as remedies able to focus on the problem without cutting off talent which is mostly beneficial.<br />
If an assembly line produces an occasional klunker amongst its generally great output, we keep the assembly line and discard the klunker; we don't keep the klunker and blow up the assembly line! <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Iowans seriously considered impeaching judges for their rulings not so long ago. Highlights are discussed at the Brennan Center: <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A 2011 review by the National Center for State Courts’ Gavel to Gavel website also found numerous bills introduced in state legislatures that year to impeach judges and justices because of disagreement over specific rulings. Several of those introductions were part of a failed effort in Iowa to remove four Iowa Supreme Court Justices for their decision in a high-profile case about marriage rights for same-sex couples. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The impeachment attempt garnered significant media attention, but also widespread condemnation – even from members of the sponsors’ own party. Iowa Governor-elect Terry Brandstad (R) [sic] said at the time that disagreement over a ruling did not constitute grounds for impeachment. “There’s a difference between malfeasance and over-reaching,” said Brandstad, “the Constitution says what the grounds for impeachment are. My reading is it’s not there.” Iowa House Speaker Kraig Paulsen (R), whose chamber would have voted on the impeachment, sent the resolutions to languish in an inactive committee and said, “I disagree with this remedy,…I do not expect it to be debated on the floor of the House, and if it is, I will vote no.”<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I respectfully disagree with Governor, later Ambassador Branstad. When the Iowa Supreme Court not only struck down laws limiting marriage to opposite sex couples, but specifically ordered county clerks to solemnize “marriages” between same sex couples, that reaches beyond “overreaching”. “Overreaching” implies a mild going-a-little-too-far out of one’s proper jurisdiction. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But if the plainest example of a “person charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to” the judicial branch of government exercising “any function appertaining to” the legislative branch can be dismissed as mere “overreaching”, then it is impossible for any other judicial legislating to violate the Iowa Constitution. We might as well just give judges the password to the Iowa Code database and let them write whatever laws they please. As Rep. Matt Windschitl said January 27, 2020 on the Jeff Angelo show, “Do we really want judges deciding laws? If so, why do we even have a legislature?”<br />
Article 3 Section 1 of the Iowa Constitution says “Departments of government. The powers of the government of Iowa shall be divided into three separate departments — the legislative, the executive, and the judicial: and no person charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to one of these departments shall exercise any function appertaining to either of the others....”<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;FAQ’s: Judicial Philosophy<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Isn’t it unconstitutional to impeach a judge for a ruling?<br />
Summary: It can’t be unconstitutional to correct the part of a ruling that unconstitutionally legislates. Although it has not been established definitively, whether a judge may be impeached over a ruling, most legal discussion avers that would be unethical, and there is no precedent of a successful impeachment over the content of a ruling. <br />
Most legal discussion is of the U.S. Constitution; the Iowa Constitution specifies that judges can’t legislate, which is only implied in the U.S. Constitution. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The United States Constitution provides little guidance as to what offenses constitute grounds for the impeachment of federal judges...However, the impeachment power has historically been limited to cases of serious ethical or criminal misconduct. - Brennan Center<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is generally supposed that legislative action to correct an unconstitutional ruling, or to discipline a judge who writes one, would be unconstitutional. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Constitution does not “provide for resignation or impeachment whenever a judge makes a decision with which elected officials disagree” said four judges when President Clinton and Senator Dole urged impeachment of a judge over his ruling on admissibility of evidence. “These attacks do a grave disservice to the principle of an independent judiciary and…mislead the public as to the role of judges in a constitutional democracy.” Brennan Center<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Let’s make a distinction glossed over by those four judges: between a ruling hated because it applies existing law and facts in a way most people think is wrong, and a ruling hated because it overturns laws by a rationale that most people think is unconstitutional. I agree with the four judges that the case was correctly kept off limits to lawmakers, but the judges generalized their criticism to the extent of dismissing concerns about truly unconstitutional rulings as being mere decisions “with which elected officials disagree”. <br />
It is that degree of generalization that is “a grave disservice” by elevating “the principle of an independent judiciary” beyond the reach of the Constitution, of common sense, and of accountability of any kind from any source. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;What I have not found in law review articles is any proposed remedy for when a ruling itself is unconstitutional. I have not found it even acknowledged that it is possible for a ruling to be unconstitutional. As if to say “how could judges rule unconstitutionally? Judges ARE the constitution.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But it is judges themselves, in vigorous dissents, who stir public concern about the constitutionally of certain rulings. Judges who write dissents are as qualified as those in the majority, and their reasoning is often equally persuasive. When the public has a basis this solid for concern about the constitutionality of rulings, it is surely in the public interest, and not contrary to any known legal or constitutional principle, to hold a public hearing where those concerns can be addressed and hopefully resolved, where judges, perhaps for the first time in America history, can be compelled to interact with experts other than each other.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In fact, any time a law is overturned for being unconstitutional, but the ruling is flawed and a correct ruling would actually not find the law unconstitutional, then actually the ruling itself is unconstitutional because the ruling amounts to raw legislation. It is unconstitutional for courts to pass laws. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Let me emphasize this point. Any ruling that overturns a law is either correct because the law is in fact unconstitutional, or is itself unconstitutional because its reasoning or factual basis is flawed. Lawmakers take oaths to defend the Constitution too, and should not be unconstitutionally deprived of the power to enforce it when they see a violation. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If we may agree that it is at least theoretically possible for a ruling overturning a law to be unconstitutional, shall we insist the Constitution requires the legislature to honor every unconstitutional ruling? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Suppose there were a law against painting your house red, someone was prosecuted for painting his house red, and the court refused to convict because it is surely unconstitutional to outlaw painting your house red. Even without a formal nullification of the law, the law would be defacto nullified because prosecutors would know the court won’t convict anybody for that crime. It may be reasoned that rulings overturning laws merely formalize this natural process. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Public hearings would bring healing to our national division over issues less clear than the right to paint your house red. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As is pointed out below, the power this bill gives the legislature to overturn a judicial validation of its laws would not usurp judicial powers. It would not affect individuals who are actual parties named in the case. It would only affect that part of the ruling which wrongfully reaches into lawmaking, changing the laws which affect millions of other people who are not named in the case. <br />
</ref><br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">Should any federal judge so interfere, this state appeals to its congressional delegation to examine similar grounds for disciplinary action, along with exercising its Article III, Section 2, paragraph 2 authority to make “exceptions” and “regulations” designed to end SCOTUS’ long line of landmark abomination cases.3 <br />
<ref><br />
</ref><br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">This state also appeals to its congressional delegation to exercise its life-saving and rights-protecting authority under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment whose plain words give Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of Rights,4 which subsumes the authority to define their scope and balance competing interests, while the “privileges and immunities” clause identifies as protectable rights those listed in the Constitution.4 <br />
<ref><br />
</ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">Official world-wide definitions of “crimes against humanity” apply “to representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission.”5<br />
<ref><br />
</ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">Any court review of this law must be expedited, because lives are lost with each day that courts delay.<br />
<br />
<br />
<small>The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: 396 State Legislators from 41 States <> Melinda Thybault/Moral Outcry</small><br />
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INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Courtrecognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human<br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] Courts Accept the Fact-Finding Authority of Legislatures, Juries, Experts for the same good reasons their findings persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures should regulate abortion, as Dobbs held, just as legislatures regulate the prosecution of all other murders.<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] The full humanity of a tiny physical body is hard for many to grasp. But what distinguishes us from animals isn’t physical, and has no known pre-conscious stage.<br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress has ''Already'' Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment already authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion.<br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] Roe, Dobbs, and the 14th Amendment agree: All Humans are “Persons”.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] When pregnancies develop into medical emergencies requiring separation of mother and child to save the mother, the child has an equal fundamental right to life and medical care. <br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any class of humans by any other is prohibited by the Constitution, by the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives legislatures no authority to legalize violations of Constitutional Rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
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'''FOOTNOTES'''<br />
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<references /></div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Statement_12_%2B_Footnotes&diff=50350Statement 12 + Footnotes2023-12-12T17:15:16Z<p>DaveLeach: </p>
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<br />
Statement of Facts #12 of 12 from: <br />
<br />
=[[Reversing_Landmark_Abomination_Cases]]=<br />
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<span style="color:red">'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters<br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion</span><br />
<br />
by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal<br />
''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal<br />
<span style="color:brown"><br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen <br />
<br />
by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 18:11, 15 October 2023 (UTC)<br />
<br />
<span style="color:grey"><small>''Try to imagine how a judge, reviewing a prolife law with these Findings of Facts, would be able to dodge this evidence - in fact, see if you can find ANYONE who can ''refute'' these facts - as opposed to not ''caring'' about facts - that is, not caring about reality:''</small></span><br />
<br />
====<span style="color:blue">Statement of Fact #12 of 12:====<br />
<span style="color:blue">Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">Any state judge interfering with this state’s compliance with the 14th Amendment and its ancient authority to protect its people <br />
<ref>More about '''“the ancient authority of state legislatures...to protect the lives of all its people – an authority which no court can legitimately remove.”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Courts that overturn the prolife laws of “red states” interfere with the ancient duty and power of every government, in every generation, to protect life, points out the amicus brief filed in Dobbs v. Jackson by <u>396 State Legislators from 41 States</u>.(www.supremecourt.gov/Docket PDF/19/19-1392/185121/ 20210728125120809_Dobbs%20Amici%20brief_State%20Legislators_07272021.pdf)<br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;State legislators have the constitutional duty, and therefore the power, to protect the fundamental, civil rights of persons. The fundamental law in which those fundamental rights are found is the common law, which consists of both natural duties and those ancient, customary rights and immunities that are foundational to ordered liberty. Thus, a state legislature must declare and secure to all persons within the protection of its laws the rights that those persons have by natural and customary law. Cf. ''Washington v. Glucksberg'', 521 U.S. 702, 721-22 (1997) (upholding state legislation that prohibited assisted suicide and reasoning that the Fourteenth Amendment’s “Due Process Clause specially protects those fundamental rights and liberties which are, objectively, ‘deeply rooted in this Nation’s history and tradition’.” (quoting ''Moore v. E. Cleveland'', 431 U. S. 494, 503 (1977)). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England (1765): “Hence,” he said, “it follows, that the first and primary end of human laws is to '''maintain and regulate these absolute rights of individuals'''.” Id. Blackstone taught that the legislative power is to declare existing common-law rights and duties and to remedy any defects in the legal security for those rights. Id. at *42-43, 52-58, 86-87 <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Founders echoed this view in the Declaration of Independence, declaring that governments are instituted among men in order to secure the inalienable rights with which human beings are endowed by nature and nature’s God. They also accused the crown and Parliament of infringing the rights of “our constitution,” which in 1776 could only have been a reference to the common-law constitution of British North America. This view predicated the Constitution of the United States, which expressly secures natural rights, such as life and religious liberty, and common-law rights, such as jury trials and freedom from the quartering of soldiers in one’s home, and expressly disclaims any intent to disparage the other rights of the fundamental law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Indeed, the point of having legislatures, executives, and courts is to secure the rights that Americans already have.''' Neither state legislatures nor the Constitution of the United States create those rights. See District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570, 592 (2008) (stating that “it has always been widely understood that the '''Second Amendment, like the First and Fourth Amendments, codified a preexisting right,” that it “is not a right granted by the Constitution,” and is not “in any manner dependent upon that instrument for its existence.”'''). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Some, but not all, of the rights of natural persons are enumerated [listed] in the Constitution''' of the United States and its amendments. U.S. Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 8.; art. IV, §2; amends. I-VIII. Others are enumerated in state constitutions. See e.g., Soc’y for the Propagation of the Gospel v. Wheeler, 22 F. Cas. 756, 766 (No. 13,156) (C.C.D.N.H. 1814). Still others are declared in American constitutions but not enumerated. U.S. Const. amend. IX (“The enumeration of certain rights herein shall not be construed to deny or disparage other rights retained by the people.”) (emphasis added). '''State legislatures have a duty to declare and secure all fundamental rights, both enumerated and unenumerated.''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Fundamental rights are those that persons enjoy by fundamental law—natural law and common law— with or without any written constitution. Because the common law includes natural rights, to understand the fundamental rights declared and secured by the Constitution, it is sufficient to look to the common law, especially as explained by William Blackstone. Established common-law doctrines constitute the best evidence of the existence and meaning of both enumerated and unenumerated, fundamental rights. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The interpretation of the Constitution of the United States is necessarily influenced by the fact that its provisions are framed in the language of the English common law, and are to be read in the light of its history.” ''Smith v. Alabama'', 124 U.S. 465, 478 (1888). The terms and concepts of the common law provided the “the nomenclature of which the framers of the Constitution were familiar.” ''Minor v. Happersett'', 88 U.S. (21 Wall) 162, 167 (1875). Accord James R. Stoner, Jr., Common-Law Liberty: Rethinking American Constitutionalism 9-29 (2003). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;American constitutional rights are not philosophical abstractions. They are described in detail in common law treatises, such as those by Coke and Hale, and especially Blackstone’s Commentaries. The framers crafted American constitutions—state and federal—in common law terms. And Blackstone was their teacher and lexicographer....<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As this Court has rightly acknowledged, Blackstone’s “works constituted the preeminent authority on English law for the founding generation.” ''Alden v. Maine'', 527 U.S. 706, 715 (1999). Blackstone retained his influence through the adoption of the Civil War Amendments. James M. Ogden, Lincoln’s Early Impressions of the Law in Indiana, 7 Notre Dame L. Rev. 325, 328 (1932). And '''this Court continues to turn to Blackstone today.''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[2 A few examples from recent years include ''Gamble v. United States'', __ U.S. __, 139 S. Ct. 1960 (2019) (the Court’s opinion, the concurrence, and one dissent citing Blackstone multiple times to determine the meaning of the phrase “the same offense” in the Fifth Amendment’s double jeopardy clause); ''Department of Homeland Security v. Thuraissigiam'', __ U.S. __, 140 S. Ct. 1959, 1969 (2020) (calling Blackstone’s Commentaries a “satisfactory exposition of the common law of England”); Ramos v. Louisiana, __ U.S. __, 140 S. Ct. 1390, 1395 (2020) (citing Blackstone in explanation of the holding that '''the requirement of juror unanimity is “a vital right protected by the common law”''' and therefore the Constitution’s jury trial guarantee); ''Torres v. Madrid'', __ U.S. __, 141 S. Ct. 989, 996, 997, 998, 1000 (2021) (citing Blackstone multiple times to determine meaning of Fourth Amendment “seizure”). ]...<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But as the Ninth Amendment makes clear, the enumeration of certain common-law rights does not deny or disparage all the other rights that the American people enjoy by virtue of natural law and their ancient customs. The Ninth Amendment expressly reserves to the people those civil and fundamental rights that they enjoyed prior to ratification, which are their natural rights, other common-law rights and liberties, and some privileges enumerated in state constitutions. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Because many states refused to remedy infringements of fundamental rights [for blacks] prior to the Civil War, the Fourteenth Amendment was necessary to ensure to all persons due process of law and the equal protection of the laws, and to empower Congress to remedy infringements of those rights. It bears emphasis that the '''Fourteenth Amendment was necessary to recall state legislatures to their original task. Far from repealing the people’s retention of fundamenta'''l rights declared by the Ninth Amendment, the Fourteenth Amendment strengthened it. And far from abrogating the duty of state legislatures to declare and secure unenumerated rights, the Fourteenth Amendment reinforced that duty. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That is, the rights retained by the people but not protected by their state, such as the right of Blacks to liberty, was strengthened – at the expense of the freedom of the legislature to torpedo those rights. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And as Statement #11 and its footnotes explain, the 14th Amendment did not supplant the duty of legislatures to protect rights with that duty in courts. The only authority over state violations of rights given courts by the 14th was to enforce federal laws enacted by Congress. The authority of courts we see today, to make up “rights” not found in the Constitution and impose them on states without waiting for Congress to pass a law, was not given by the 14th, but was seized by courts in violation of the Constitution. </ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">– the central reason governments exist, is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders, and is guilty of exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide through an unconstitutional ruling, which exceeds the judicial powers given by the state Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment.<br />
<ref>More about '''“exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide...exceeds the judicial powers given by the state Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Legislatures have considerable untapped potential for restraining their activist courts when they become confused about which branch of government they are. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Perhaps the major reason few people even think about solutions is fear of any change to the balance of powers between the legislature and the courts. “Better the devil you know than the devil you don’t.” We don’t want to just switch tyrants. A change to a real solution requires wisdom, which requires study, and who wants to study? <br />
<center>Another obstacle to restraining courts to their constitutional function is that most people, even Christians, limit their goals to what they consider “realistic”, and especially “politically realistic”, which usually means what people think they can do without God. Trust that what Jesus promised about “impossible” goals is truly “realistic”, enables us to think about not just what would be a little bit better, but about what would be perfect. and then to think about doing whatever we can think of to move in that direction, fully aware how feeble our own steps are, trusting God to open up new opportunities, in His time, as we walk with Him. </center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;My own feeble steps were drafted into a bill in Iowa in 2020. The bill is posted at http://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/wiki/ <br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_stop_judges_from_legislating <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Senate Judiciary Committee Chair Brad Zaun liked the idea and got it numbered and introduced, but it came to him too late that year to get it through the “funnel”, and he was disappointed that there was no organized group helping make other lawmakers aware of it. <br />
<center>'''Judicial Accountability Act: How Legislatures can stop judges from legislating'''</center><br />
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<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Summary: what the bill accomplishes'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1. '''No district court injunctions. A single district judge can't overturn a law.''' Any legislature is well within its constitutional authority to prohibit any ''district'' court (lower court) from invalidating a law – only the ''Supreme'' Court should be allowed to do it, and only within 90 days. Letting a single lower court judge overturn the work of 150 lawmakers which include several attorneys and constitutional scholars is insane. Any challenge to a law should go directly to the most experienced judges in the state.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2. '''Supermajority required. It takes 5 of the 7 justices of the Supreme Court to overturn a law.''' A simple majority of justices overturning by one vote a law produced by tens of thousands of people over several years is a scandal. It has nothing to do with wisdom, law, or the Constitution. When judges can’t even agree with each other, unanimously, whether to destroy the work of the majority of voters and their representatives, they prove they are not so much wiser than everybody else in their state to be trusted with such unbridled power. At the very least any injunction should have their unanimous support before they should have any power to shut down the will of their whole state. A supermajority that is short of unanimous may be OK if it is not the final word but is followed by further opportunities for the legislature to restore their law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3. '''Expedited. The Court has to rule in 3 months if the court blocks a new law from taking effect with a Temporary Restraining Order.''' If the court invalidates an existing law, the invalidation doesn't take effect for one year. Courts bottling up laws with injunctions for years while they make up their minds should make them ashamed. They don’t need years. No controversial law is passed without months if not years of scrutiny by attorneys for and against. Their briefs are already ready. They already know what the other side will say. They don’t need years to think of what to say or how to respond. Maybe a day. Maybe two.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Nor do judges need months to read the briefs for several weeks to bring themselves up to speed on the issue. The law has been in the news for years. There is no honor in willful ignorance of the issues until the first brief is filed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Laws are passed to correct serious wrongs. Years of work costing millions of dollars goes into fixing problems. There is no good reason to delay justice for the citizens of a state for years to wait while judges try to agree among themselves whether to allow justice as understood by the majority of voters and lawmakers. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''4. Discussion. The legislature may compel designated justices to attend a public hearing to debate the constitutionality of the law within one year of such a ruling, by passing a resolution.''' Provided a supermajority of the Supreme Court has agreed on an injunction in less than a month, the legislature should then be able, within the next year, to compel the attendance of judges under their jurisdiction to discuss and debate, with specified legislators in a public hearing, the constitutional justification for [or necessity of] that judicial exercise of the legislative function. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''5. The legislature may overturn the invalidation by a 60% vote, by a resolution, leaving the last word, the final verdict, with incredibly well informed voters''' (through ordinary elections of lawmakers and retention of justices). The resolution overturning the invalidation would give reasons responsive to the reasoning of the judicial ruling. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''The Bill: Iowa SSB3181 2020 AD''''''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A BILL FOR <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 An Act regarding legislative oversight of supreme court <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 decisions, and including applicability provisions. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF IOWA: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Introduction/Legislative Findings'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 Section 1. NEW SECTION. 602.1615 Legislative findings —— <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 challenges to the validity of a statute —— exclusive jurisdiction <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 —— public hearings —— legislative oversight. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 1. The general assembly finds and declares all of the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 following: <br />
<center>'''If the legislature can even impeach,''' <br />
<br>'''it can at least ask questions'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 a. The power to impeach subsumes reasonable less severe <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7 remedies. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Lawmakers take an oath''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''to uphold the Constitution too'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Their responsibility to uphold the Constitution'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''requires action against courts '''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''that interfere with their responsibility'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 b. The intent of this section is to provide for a mechanism <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 in which to resolve disputes regarding the constitutionality of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 laws between the courts and the legislature, both of which are <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 composed of constitutional scholars. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Jurisdiction of courts is''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''restricted by the legislature'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 c. Article 5, section 4 of the Constitution of the State <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13 of Iowa states that the supreme court is “a court for the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14 correction of errors at law, '''under such restriction as''' the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15 general assembly may, by law, prescribe . . .”. <br />
<center>'''Judicial power to invalidate laws''' <br />
<br>'''is not given by the Iowa Constitution'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 d. Article 3, section 20 of the Constitution of the State <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 of Iowa gives the legislature the power to impeach judges for <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 “malfeasance in office”, which is generally defined to include <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;19 acting without authority and abusing power. The power to <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;20 impeach subsumes all lesser remedies. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;21 e. The Constitution of the State of Iowa does not give the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;22 courts of this state the power to invalidate laws enacted by <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;23 the legislature, to require the legislature to enact different <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;24 laws, or to publish rulings that have the same effect as new <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;25 legislation. Article 3, section 1 of the Constitution of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;26 the State of Iowa states: “The powers of the government of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;27 Iowa shall be divided into three separate departments —— the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;28 '''legislative, the executive, and the judicial: and no person''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;29 '''charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to one''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;30 '''of these departments shall exercise any function appertaining''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;31 '''to either of the others,''' except in cases hereinafter expressly <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;32 directed or permitted”. <br />
<center>'''The Legislature must get involved''' <br />
<br>'''when courts legislate unconstitutionally'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;33 f. Although the courts of Iowa have usurped those powers <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;34 without constitutional authority, it has been done for reasons <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;35 which the general assembly respects. The general assembly <br />
----<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 welcomes the expertise and guidance of the courts in evaluating <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 the constitutionality of its laws. But when the reasoning of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 rulings which function as legislation appears to be not only <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 unsound, but unconstitutional, the general assembly has the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 constitutional duty and authority to determine that judges and <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 justices have abused their power and exceeded their authority, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7 which are grounds for impeachment under the malfeasance in <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 office clause. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 g. A remedy short of impeachment should advance wisdom, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 build consensus, and educate voters so that informed voters <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 may hold both judges and legislators accountable. Article 1, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 section 2 of the Constitution of the State of Iowa states: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13 '''“All political power is inherent in the people.''' Government is <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14 instituted for the protection, security, and benefit of the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15 people, and they have the right, at all times, to alter or <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 reform the same, whenever the public good may require it”. <br />
<center>'''The Meat of the Bill:''' <br />
<br>'''the Enforcement Section'''<br />
<br>'''Lower courts can't invalidate laws'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 2. The supreme court shall have discretionary and exclusive <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 original jurisdiction over any challenge to any law. A <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;19 district court or the court of appeals shall not invalidate a <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;20 law on any grounds. <br />
<center>'''Supreme Court must rule''' <br />
<br>'''within 3 months, by supermajority,'''<br />
<br>'''when the Court blocks a ''new'' law.'''<br />
<br>'''When the Court blocks an existing law'''<br />
<br>'''the block will not take effect for one year.'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;21 3. A decision of the supreme court that invalidates <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;22 '''existing''' law or has the effect of creating new law shall not <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;23 have any effect unless agreed to by five or more of the seven <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;24 justices, and otherwise shall not have any effect for one <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;25 year. The supreme court shall also have the power to suspend <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;26 implementation of '''a new law''' provided the supreme court produces <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;27 an expedited ruling within three months of the law’s enactment. <br />
Public Hearing<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;28 4. a. Within one year of the date a supreme court decision <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;29 is published that invalidates existing law or has the effect <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;30 of creating new law, the general assembly may, by resolution, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;31 compel the attendance of specified justices to a public hearing <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;32 to discuss and debate the justification for the decision with <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;33 members of the general assembly. A public record of the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;34 hearing shall be made. <br />
Impeachment grounds inquiry<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;35 b. During or after the hearing, the general assembly shall <br />
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<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 determine if grounds to begin impeachment exist as to any <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 of the justices present at the hearing for acting without <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 authority or malfeasance in office. <br />
Judges may improve their ruling<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 c. Based on the results of a hearing commenced pursuant to <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 this subsection, a justice whose presence was required at the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 hearing may change the justice’s vote or alter the justice’s <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7 individual contribution to the decision. <br />
Legislature may overturn court invalidation<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 5. A supreme court decision invalidating existing law or <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 having the effect of creating new law will not take effect if <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 two-thirds of both the senate and the house of representatives <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 approve a resolution to overturn the decision within one year <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 of the date the decision was published. The resolution must <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13 specify the basis for overturning the decision, including <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14 its reasoning, not to be limited by court precedent that is <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15 responsive to the supreme court’s initial published decision, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 and must be documented by expert testimony and constitutional <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 authority. <br />
Legislature may add statement to the ruling<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 6. The general assembly may issue its own statement to a <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;19 published supreme court decision that invalidates existing law <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;20 or has the effect of creating new law if done within one year of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;21 the date the decision was published. The statement must regard <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;22 the constitutionality of the invalidated existing law or the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;23 newly created law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;24 Sec. 2. APPLICABILITY. This Act applies to decisions <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;25 published by the supreme court on or after the effective date <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;26 of this act. <br />
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<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;FAQ's<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Questions and Answers <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Why are existing laws treated differently than new laws?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The difference is for the benefit of the public, so the laws governing them do not flip back and forth from being in effect. A new law – for example, the Heartbeat law – could be suspended until the suspension is overturned by the legislature. An existing law – for example our former marriage laws requiring spouses to be of the opposite sex – could not be suspended for one year, to give the legislature time to respond. No chaotic back and forth. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Could courts suspend a new law between its effective date and the court ruling?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The legal action a court takes to invalidate a law is an Injunction. The process here doesn’t specify it, but would allow the normal process of allowing the courts to immediately suspend a new law with a TRO, Temporary Restraining Order, until their hearing, at which the temporary order could become permanent. In the case of an existing law, by contrast, allowing the court to immediately suspend the law, with the possibility of it going back into effect after the legislature acts, would subject the public to a law which is in effect, then suspended, then back into effect. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If this law removed the court’s power to put a TRO on a new law, the law would take effect until the ruling, then it would be suspended, but then the legislature might give it effect again.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;What will be the effect of a 4-3 ruling that a law is unconstitutional?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: no legal effect, but much political pressure) Although a 4-3 ruling would no longer have legal force, it would still have powerful political force. A ruling that a law is unconstitutional would be a public relations challenge for the legislature. The legislature would face pressure to refute the judges' claims point by point, or adjust the law voluntarily. A 4-3 ruling would not be powerless; and of course it would still be binding on the parties to the case. But an argument in defense of the legislature ignoring the challenge would be that after all, the justices themselves barely agree the law is unconstitutional. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Would a ruling always trigger a public hearing?<br />
That decision is made independently of a decision to vote to override the court. “Within one year, the legislature MAY, by a resolution, compel the attendance of specified Iowa judges ....”<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Is one year for the legislature to act too long? Too short?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;One year from the court’s ruling is needed to process the ruling’s reasoning, to hold hearings which would require passage of a resolution by both chambers, and then to schedule a vote, which could be while the legislature is not in session. A year is needed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;On the other hand, requiring courts to act in 3 months is reasonable, considering this is not a brand new question before them that they have never heard of before. They have had all the years of public debate on the issue to think about the issue. Plus, courts are accustomed to ruling quickly when cases are required to be “expedited”. <br />
Would prolife laws do any better under this system?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: Good news for Democrats!) No, at least not by much. Prolife laws would have a brighter future in Iowa courts, but in federal courts there would be no difference from a state law. That is, until such time as Congress adopts these reforms. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;However, it might give prolife bills as much help as a “no right to abortion” state constitutional amendment would, although a different kind of help. And although there seems little concern that a Constitutional Amendment might be overturned, (even though constitutional amendments have been overturned in other states by their courts), this act would further reduce that possibility. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Is a 2/3 majority requirement necessary? Shouldn't a simple majority of the legislature be enough to override courts?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: practically & legally, certainly; politically, complicated) This may be the hardest detail to muster a quick opinion. There are strong arguments for either choice; perhaps there is even a third option: a 60% vote. As this bill proceeds, perhaps it should be expected that a consensus will form later requiring amendment of this detail. The current draft requires a 2/3 majority. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Practical Argument: Currently, courts get away with a simple majority requirement (4-3) which faces zero accountability from anybody. This draft requires a 5-2 vote; another option is 6-1. Should the legislature face a similar hurdle? Several lawmakers believe a 2/3 requirement removes any practical hope of ever overturning a judicial invalidation of a law, because the Iowa legislature is incapable of agreeing by 2/3 that the sun is up. A 2/3 requirement would make restraint of lawmaking judges actually harder than passing a constitutional amendment! <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In Congress, our U.S. Constitution says a 2/3 majority is enough to send an amendment to the Constitution before the states for their ratification. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But if we let the legislature overturn the court’s invalidation with a second simple majority, it could be objected that would be almost ridiculously easy for the legislature to gather together the same “yea” votes a second time (if an election doesn’t intervene). A 60% requirement could answer that concern. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;However, that objection could also be met by pointing out that the ruling of the courts would give typically 60 pages of reasons the law should be overturned, which would put a lot of pressure on those “yea” votes to either eloquently and exhaustively justify their votes or vote “nay”. It would not be easy to secure a majority a second time under that pressure. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The public hearing option would put that 60 page ruling on a level playing field with reasoning from lawmakers. It would make both legislatures and courts accountable not only to each other, but to reason. It might even make lawmakers upset enough to reach a 2/3 agreement. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Voters, informed as has never before been possible about judges on the ballot, or about the legal skills of lawmakers, would have the last word. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Political Argument: The public is not used to legislatures having ANY power to correct unconstitutional rulings. A 2/3 requirement would be less of a shock to tradition. Were this bill to pass into law with a 2/3 requirement, and lawmakers saw how unnecessary it was, lawmakers could ease the requirement in the future - since this does not require amending the constitution, which already grants more than this power, but requires only a law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Amendment. Should it be decided that a simple majority of the legislature to overturn a court’s invalidation is sufficient, here is the simple change that could do it - simply strike out “two-thirds of” (or replace it with “six tenths of”): <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 A supreme court decision invalidating existing law or <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 having the effect of creating new law will not take effect if <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 two-thirds of both the senate and the house of representatives <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 approve a resolution to overturn the decision within one year <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 of the date the decision was published. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Is it practically possible to require courts to add a statement from the legislature up to a year after its ruling?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;When the Supreme Court first publishes its ruling, that is not the final version that will be later given an official permanent citation in the Northwest Reporter series. (Their contact information) Unpredictable delays are caused by litigants asking for rehearings, and courts taking time to respond. Even after that option is exhausted, court staff continue proofing their decisions, a process that can take months. [Iowa Supreme Court Clerk phone number: 515-348-4700] Northwest Reporter doesn’t officially publish a case, and give it a permanent citation, until a state supreme court notifies them that it is ready. That is why a new case has only an Iowa citation that does not list a page number or volume number, and doesn’t get a fancy N.W.2d permanent citation until much later. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Requiring the Court to leave the publication open for a year in case the legislature chooses to submit a statement would affect only the time the Court notifies Northwest Reporter, and it may not even affect that time at all. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The farther this bill gets, the more discussions there will be about it with the Iowa Bar Association and the Court itself. If delaying final publication that long is deemed unreasonable, an amendment could easily give the legislature an earlier deadline. It might also require the legislature to notify the court of an intent to exercise that option. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Of course, this entire final sentence of this bill is not critical to legislative correction of judicial overreach. It could be conceded if necessary to save the rest of the bill. But it is an appropriate correction of the current system. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Will an expedited hearing that begins in the Supreme Court diminish the time needed by the litigants to fully present their claims?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: anyone ready to block a law from taking effect is ready for court) A challenge to a new law means (and perhaps this bill could so specify, although I think it is already clearly implied) a challenge to a law that has not yet gone into effect, to keep it from going into effect (beginning with a Temporary Restraining Order (TRO) the day it would go into effect). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In such a case the state itself will normally be the defendant, and the petitioner will be a well funded group that tried to kill the law in the legislature but failed. In that situation the petitioner will already be prepared legally, their arguments well honed through interaction with lawmakers. It is hard to imagine that any less prepared petitioner would be ready with a TRO to stop a law before it goes into effect. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Iowa court rules already require appellants to outline their issues in their initial notice of appeal, which is more pressure on individual defendants to prepare that far ahead, in proportion to their means, than challengers to a new law will face, who will be fully primed for a court battle before the law passes the first chamber. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Were the petitioner an individual seeking relief only for himself and not for anyone else affected by the law, courts have many tools for giving relief to individuals short of invalidating whole laws. Extenuating circumstances, interaction with other laws affecting the individual, necessity in order to avoid serious injury (Iowa 704) for example. The applicability of laws to individuals is the jurisdiction of the judicial branch, with which the legislative branch has no intent to interfere, any more than the judicial branch should interfere with the jurisdiction of the legislative branch to establish laws of general application. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;After a law has already gone into effect, then there is no requirement to expedite. In fact, the decision to challenge a law could be made by the parties to the case, or by a judge, at any point during a years-long case: in pre-trial briefs, a district judge’s ruling, or during the appeal before the Court of Appeals or the Supreme Court. With this bill the applicability of the law to the individual defendant could still be suspended, but the law itself, as applied to everyone else, would not be suspended until after the Supreme Court so rules and then only if the legislature does not block the suspension. The legislature’s year to respond would not begin with any ruling made before the Supreme Court’s supermajority ruling. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Are there any U.S. Supreme Court precedents relevant to these half dozen powers?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: making judges answer lawmakers' questions is a staple of confirmation hearings) These proposed powers are all completely unprecedented in law, although some of them have been discussed. Probably the one never before discussed is the idea of a public hearing. <br />
Surely the prohibition of a district judge overturning a law, limiting that power to the state Supreme Court, and requiring a supermajority of the court to overturn, is well within the power given the legislature to limit the jurisdiction of courts. <br />
Public Hearings<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;How about public hearings? Is there any legal or constitutional principle that shields judges from having to explain their rulings any better than they do in their written opinions? Is there something nefarious about requiring judges to answer questions? <br />
Federal judges answer questions about their past rulings in confirmation hearings for appointments to higher courts. If U.S. Senators can require them to answer questions about their rulings years later, why can’t state legislatures require their state judges to answer questions at the time? Judges justify not answering questions about future potential cases, that they may remain free to rule in view of facts and arguments they might not see until then, but there is no reason to shield judges from explaining their past cases. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Especially since the Public Hearings envisioned in this bill are not only to clarify whether a law ruled unconstitutional actually is unconstitutional. The second purpose of these Public Hearings is to investigate whether there are grounds for impeachment. Because if the legislature determines that the court’s ruling of the law’s unconstitutionality is utterly lacking in merit, then judges who so ruled were legislating; they were acting without authority, exercising a power of a different branch of government than their own, which is malfeasance of office, an impeachable offense. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Obviously, in any impeachment trial, the judges would be required to answer questions. These public hearings are a power subsumed under the power of impeachment; they are a reasonable, less severe remedy. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Certainly the very idea of communication between lawmakers and judges on a “level playing field” is unheard of. Unprecedented. (Outside confirmation hearings.) Current communication, which tradition will be slow to reconsider, is somewhat like a parent trying to reason with a child who is as inarticulate as he is stubborn. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is a special challenge for a lawyer representing the legislature to reason with a judge who gives only the scantest clues to what is on his mind before he rules, after which it is too late to respond to his errors. Does any Constitutional or legal principle require such a breakdown of communication? Does this ritual serve any good purpose? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Once President Washington asked SCOTUS for its advisory interpretation of a treaty. The justices declined, saying “The lines of separation drawn by the Constitution between the three departments of government – their being in certain respects checks upon each other – and our being judges in a court of last resort – are considerations which afford strong arguments against the propriety of our extra judicially deciding the questions alluded to; especially as the Power given by the Constitution to the President of calling on the Heads of Departments for opinions, seems to have been purposely as well as expressly limited to executive departments.” https://www.mountvernon.org/library/digitalhistory/digital-encyclopedia/article/george-washington-and-the-supreme-court/<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;https://founders.archives.gov/?q=Thomas%20Recipient%3A%22Washington%2C%20George%22%20Author%3A%22Supreme%20Court%20Justices%22&s=1111311111&sa=supre&r=3&sr= <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That answer is not a precedent for keeping courts from communicatint with legislatures for two reasons: (1) it was not a sensible answer then. The Constitution puts no limit on who the President can consult for advice, while Proverbs 15:22 says “in a multitude of counsellors, purposes are established”. I can’t imagine where SCOTUS came up with the idea that the President was limited to asking his department heads. Washington asked for advice, not a binding ruling. That’s what “extrajudicial” means. (2) SCOTUS then declined to get involved in an issue which it otherwise would never face. This is different than asking a Court to make up its mind earlier than later. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is not wrong to ask judges to give advisory opinions to lawmakers so lawmakers don’t have to spend years crafting laws which judges at the last minute decide to overturn. The August 8, 1793 answer was before Americans had to worry about activist judges who leave the future of legislation, and indeed the very future of human rights, very much in doubt. <br />
However, asking judges to give an advisory opinion about a law before it is passed is probably impractical, since judges are used to taking longer to study an issue than a legislature is in session, and also since even after giving an early opinion, new evidence or argument might come later which would flip the Court’s ruling. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;An expedited three month deadline is probably the closest we can come to a timely response from courts. Certainly legal wrangling that dribbles on for years exhausts the patience of rational minds. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The subject of the public hearing is whether the law really was unconstitutional. Because if it wasn't, then the judges plainly acted outside their authority, which is grounds for impeachment. But beyond being grounds for impeachment, an order given that is beyond one's authority to give is legally invalid. So surely the legislature has the authority to investigate whether an order was invalid, and upon establishing that it is, to reverse its effects. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sheltering judges from interaction doesn’t make them free of bias. In every other human interaction, accountability is the best way to cleanse a hard heart of bias. <br />
The Two-Thirds Majority<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The only thing remotely relevant to this 2/3 vs. simple majority requirement in American constitutional law that I can think of is that to ratify a constitutional amendment, Congress has to pass it by 2/3 before states pass it by 3/4. But the solution here doesn’t change the constitution; it only defines how the legislature is choosing to exercise authority already given by the Iowa Constitution. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If anything, there is a constitutional principle favoring the power of legislatures over courts, with respect to Fundamental Rights. The 14th Amendment is the part of the Constitution which courts have taken to give them jurisdiction over states who trample fundamental rights. But who did the 14th Amendment authorize to enforce its provisions? Not courts! Rather, Congress, according to Section 5 of the Amendment. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yet here are examples of not just state laws, but even state constitutional amendments, which were overturned by courts for violating the “equal protection” clause of the 14th Amendment: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Cummings v. Missouri, 71 U.S. 277 (1867) a Missouri oath to hold office designed to keep out former confederate soldiers was ruled an unconstitutional Bill of Attainder. <br />
Hollingsworth v. Perry, 570 U.S. 693 (2013) a California same sex marriage ban. <br />
Romer v. Evans, 517 U.S. 620 (1996) a Colorado gay rights ban. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Awad v. Ziriax, 10th Circuit, January 10, 2012 an Oklahoma ban of the use of Sharia Law in court. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Giles v. Harris, 1903, and Giles v. Teasley, 1904, courts winked at disenfranchising Blacks, but explicitly accepted jurisdiction over state constitutions violating the 14th and 15th Amendments. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The authority to enforce the requirements of the 14th Amendment, given to Congress and not courts, gives Congress also the authority to define and apply fundamental rights, and for anyone seriously in doubt, to clarify who is a human being and therefore deserves to have his fundamental rights protected. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;These are philosophical as well as legal questions which merit national discussion, but while courts are sheltered from having to talk to anybody the conversation has been one sided. America needs to open this up into what Proverbs 15:22 calls a “multitude of counsellors”. It does not undermine respect for the judiciary to imagine judges are able to explain their reasoning. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If Legislatures overturn court rulings, won’t they exercise the authority of the judicial branch?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: legislative action wouldn't affect litigants; only the part of the ruling that reaches wrongfully into legislating) No. On that future day when a legislature overturns judicial rulings, the legislature’s action would not apply to the parties to the case, so the “separation of powers” aspect of the ruling is untouched. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;There are several reasons a court may exempt a litigant from the effects of a law, without invalidating the law for everyone else. The simple difference between courts and legislatures is that legislatures pass laws which apply to everybody, while courts apply those laws in specific cases, only to the parties to the case, guided by the special facts and circumstances of the case. The power given by this bill to legislatures to overturn rulings applies only to the part of the ruling where the court stepped outside its constitutional authority in order to nullify a law passed for the benefit of millions of others. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The purpose of the public hearing is only for the legislature to investigate whether their law was constitutional after all, and if so, to take back their constitutional authority to pass laws by their subsequent vote. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Lawmakers take oaths to defend the Constitution too. Courts cannot rob lawmakers of their power to obey the Constitution without violating the constitution themselves. <br />
Perhaps that is the key principle declared implicitly by this bill: judges aren’t the only branch of government authorized to understand and defend the Constitution. The other branches are too. That balance needs to be restored. The conversation needed needs to be among equals.<br />
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<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Shouldn’t judges be immune from popular pressure? We don’t want our rights subject to a vote!<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Neither legislatures nor courts should have the last word over each other. We have seen what happens when legislatures had the last word, in the South, during the time of slavery. And we have seen what happens when courts had the last word, in 1857 and 1973; regarding slavery and abortion. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Even the Iowa constitution gives the last word to voters. Is that dangerous? America’s Founders talked about popular whims that could remove important protections over the weekend if the public could vote on individual issues continually. They set up 6 year terms for U.S. Senators and 4 year terms for presidents explicitly to shield our Rule of Law from whims the public might hold for only a month. Nor does this process give voters direct control over the outcome of a disputed law, but only equips them to evaluate the wisdom of their elected representatives and their judges, which is the same as our current system except this leaves voters much better informed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The 14th Amendment expanded the power of courts to overturn laws which violate “fundamental rights”. It made slave-loving southern state legislatures accountable to courts. Unaddressed was what to do when it is courts which violate fundamental rights. This measure is an attempt to restore balance. It is interesting that the 14th Amendment actually leaves its own enforcement not to courts, but to Congress. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The “independence of the judiciary” from popular whims is well protected by lifetime tenure. This measure does not change that. It only defines a remedy for Iowans when judges rule lawlessly and unconstitutionally. <br />
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<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Didn’t Iowa decide recently not to impeach judges for their rulings?<br />
Summary: “Overreaching” can only reach so far before it turns into full fledged unconstitutional legislating. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Removal from office, for just one harmful ruling which may be out of a long career of beneficial rulings, is pretty drastic; not to mention ineffective since it leaves the ruling in place that triggered the impeachment! <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That is why remedies short of impeachment are necessary, as well as remedies able to focus on the problem without cutting off talent which is mostly beneficial.<br />
If an assembly line produces an occasional klunker amongst its generally great output, we keep the assembly line and discard the klunker; we don't keep the klunker and blow up the assembly line! <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Iowans seriously considered impeaching judges for their rulings not so long ago. Highlights are discussed at the Brennan Center: <br />
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<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A 2011 review by the National Center for State Courts’ Gavel to Gavel website also found numerous bills introduced in state legislatures that year to impeach judges and justices because of disagreement over specific rulings. Several of those introductions were part of a failed effort in Iowa to remove four Iowa Supreme Court Justices for their decision in a high-profile case about marriage rights for same-sex couples. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The impeachment attempt garnered significant media attention, but also widespread condemnation – even from members of the sponsors’ own party. Iowa Governor-elect Terry Brandstad (R) [sic] said at the time that disagreement over a ruling did not constitute grounds for impeachment. “There’s a difference between malfeasance and over-reaching,” said Brandstad, “the Constitution says what the grounds for impeachment are. My reading is it’s not there.” Iowa House Speaker Kraig Paulsen (R), whose chamber would have voted on the impeachment, sent the resolutions to languish in an inactive committee and said, “I disagree with this remedy,…I do not expect it to be debated on the floor of the House, and if it is, I will vote no.”<br />
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<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I respectfully disagree with Governor, later Ambassador Branstad. When the Iowa Supreme Court not only struck down laws limiting marriage to opposite sex couples, but specifically ordered county clerks to solemnize “marriages” between same sex couples, that reaches beyond “overreaching”. “Overreaching” implies a mild going-a-little-too-far out of one’s proper jurisdiction. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But if the plainest example of a “person charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to” the judicial branch of government exercising “any function appertaining to” the legislative branch can be dismissed as mere “overreaching”, then it is impossible for any other judicial legislating to violate the Iowa Constitution. We might as well just give judges the password to the Iowa Code database and let them write whatever laws they please. As Rep. Matt Windschitl said January 27, 2020 on the Jeff Angelo show, “Do we really want judges deciding laws? If so, why do we even have a legislature?”<br />
Article 3 Section 1 of the Iowa Constitution says “Departments of government. The powers of the government of Iowa shall be divided into three separate departments — the legislative, the executive, and the judicial: and no person charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to one of these departments shall exercise any function appertaining to either of the others....”<br />
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<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;FAQ’s: Judicial Philosophy<br />
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<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Isn’t it unconstitutional to impeach a judge for a ruling?<br />
Summary: It can’t be unconstitutional to correct the part of a ruling that unconstitutionally legislates. Although it has not been established definitively, whether a judge may be impeached over a ruling, most legal discussion avers that would be unethical, and there is no precedent of a successful impeachment over the content of a ruling. <br />
Most legal discussion is of the U.S. Constitution; the Iowa Constitution specifies that judges can’t legislate, which is only implied in the U.S. Constitution. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The United States Constitution provides little guidance as to what offenses constitute grounds for the impeachment of federal judges...However, the impeachment power has historically been limited to cases of serious ethical or criminal misconduct. - Brennan Center<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is generally supposed that legislative action to correct an unconstitutional ruling, or to discipline a judge who writes one, would be unconstitutional. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Constitution does not “provide for resignation or impeachment whenever a judge makes a decision with which elected officials disagree” said four judges when President Clinton and Senator Dole urged impeachment of a judge over his ruling on admissibility of evidence. “These attacks do a grave disservice to the principle of an independent judiciary and…mislead the public as to the role of judges in a constitutional democracy.” Brennan Center<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Let’s make a distinction glossed over by those four judges: between a ruling hated because it applies existing law and facts in a way most people think is wrong, and a ruling hated because it overturns laws by a rationale that most people think is unconstitutional. I agree with the four judges that the case was correctly kept off limits to lawmakers, but the judges generalized their criticism to the extent of dismissing concerns about truly unconstitutional rulings as being mere decisions “with which elected officials disagree”. <br />
It is that degree of generalization that is “a grave disservice” by elevating “the principle of an independent judiciary” beyond the reach of the Constitution, of common sense, and of accountability of any kind from any source. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;What I have not found in law review articles is any proposed remedy for when a ruling itself is unconstitutional. I have not found it even acknowledged that it is possible for a ruling to be unconstitutional. As if to say “how could judges rule unconstitutionally? Judges ARE the constitution.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But it is judges themselves, in vigorous dissents, who stir public concern about the constitutionally of certain rulings. Judges who write dissents are as qualified as those in the majority, and their reasoning is often equally persuasive. When the public has a basis this solid for concern about the constitutionality of rulings, it is surely in the public interest, and not contrary to any known legal or constitutional principle, to hold a public hearing where those concerns can be addressed and hopefully resolved, where judges, perhaps for the first time in America history, can be compelled to interact with experts other than each other.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In fact, any time a law is overturned for being unconstitutional, but the ruling is flawed and a correct ruling would actually not find the law unconstitutional, then actually the ruling itself is unconstitutional because the ruling amounts to raw legislation. It is unconstitutional for courts to pass laws. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Let me emphasize this point. Any ruling that overturns a law is either correct because the law is in fact unconstitutional, or is itself unconstitutional because its reasoning or factual basis is flawed. Lawmakers take oaths to defend the Constitution too, and should not be unconstitutionally deprived of the power to enforce it when they see a violation. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If we may agree that it is at least theoretically possible for a ruling overturning a law to be unconstitutional, shall we insist the Constitution requires the legislature to honor every unconstitutional ruling? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Suppose there were a law against painting your house red, someone was prosecuted for painting his house red, and the court refused to convict because it is surely unconstitutional to outlaw painting your house red. Even without a formal nullification of the law, the law would be defacto nullified because prosecutors would know the court won’t convict anybody for that crime. It may be reasoned that rulings overturning laws merely formalize this natural process. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Public hearings would bring healing to our national division over issues less clear than the right to paint your house red. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As is pointed out below, the power this bill gives the legislature to overturn a judicial validation of its laws would not usurp judicial powers. It would not affect individuals who are actual parties named in the case. It would only affect that part of the ruling which wrongfully reaches into lawmaking, changing the laws which affect millions of other people who are not named in the case. <br />
</ref><br />
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<span style="color:blue">Should any federal judge so interfere, this state appeals to its congressional delegation to examine similar grounds for disciplinary action, along with exercising its Article III, Section 2, paragraph 2 authority to make “exceptions” and “regulations” designed to end SCOTUS’ long line of landmark abomination cases.3 <br />
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</ref><br />
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<span style="color:blue">This state also appeals to its congressional delegation to exercise its life-saving and rights-protecting authority under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment whose plain words give Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of Rights,4 which subsumes the authority to define their scope and balance competing interests, while the “privileges and immunities” clause identifies as protectable rights those listed in the Constitution.4 <br />
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</ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">Official world-wide definitions of “crimes against humanity” apply “to representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission.”5<br />
<ref><br />
</ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">Any court review of this law must be expedited, because lives are lost with each day that courts delay.<br />
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<small>The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: 396 State Legislators from 41 States <> Melinda Thybault/Moral Outcry</small><br />
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INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Courtrecognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human<br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] Courts Accept the Fact-Finding Authority of Legislatures, Juries, Experts for the same good reasons their findings persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures should regulate abortion, as Dobbs held, just as legislatures regulate the prosecution of all other murders.<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] The full humanity of a tiny physical body is hard for many to grasp. But what distinguishes us from animals isn’t physical, and has no known pre-conscious stage.<br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress has ''Already'' Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment already authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion.<br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] Roe, Dobbs, and the 14th Amendment agree: All Humans are “Persons”.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] When pregnancies develop into medical emergencies requiring separation of mother and child to save the mother, the child has an equal fundamental right to life and medical care. <br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any class of humans by any other is prohibited by the Constitution, by the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives legislatures no authority to legalize violations of Constitutional Rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
<br />
<br />
====<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
----<br />
'''FOOTNOTES'''<br />
----<br />
<br />
<references /></div>DaveLeachhttp://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/index.php?title=Statement_12_%2B_Footnotes&diff=50349Statement 12 + Footnotes2023-12-12T17:03:28Z<p>DaveLeach: </p>
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<br />
Statement of Facts #12 of 12 from: <br />
<br />
=[[Reversing_Landmark_Abomination_Cases]]=<br />
<br />
<span style="color:red">'''Saving Babies''' from judges & voters<br />
<br>'''Saving Souls''' from ‘Scrupulous Neutrality’ about Religion</span><br />
<br />
by proving in courts of law and in the Court of Public Opinion that:<br />
''The right to live of a baby and of a judge are equal<br />
''The Bible & reality-challenged religions are NOT equal<br />
<span style="color:brown"><br>A strategy of Life that relies on the Author of Life<br />
<br>for pro-life, pro-Bible Lawmakers, Leaders, Lawyers, and Laymen <br />
<br />
by [[User:DaveLeach|Dave Leach R-IA Bible Lover-musician-grandpa]] ([[User talk:DaveLeach|talk]]) 18:11, 15 October 2023 (UTC)<br />
<br />
<span style="color:grey"><small>''Try to imagine how a judge, reviewing a prolife law with these Findings of Facts, would be able to dodge this evidence - in fact, see if you can find ANYONE who can ''refute'' these facts - as opposed to not ''caring'' about facts - that is, not caring about reality:''</small></span><br />
<br />
====<span style="color:blue">Statement of Fact #12 of 12:====<br />
<span style="color:blue">Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable. <br />
<br />
<span style="color:blue">Any state judge interfering with this state’s compliance with the 14th Amendment and its ancient authority to protect its people <br />
<ref>More about '''“the ancient authority of state legislatures...to protect the lives of all its people – an authority which no court can legitimately remove.”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Courts that overturn the prolife laws of “red states” interfere with the ancient duty and power of every government, in every generation, to protect life, points out the amicus brief filed in Dobbs v. Jackson by <u>396 State Legislators from 41 States</u>.(www.supremecourt.gov/Docket PDF/19/19-1392/185121/ 20210728125120809_Dobbs%20Amici%20brief_State%20Legislators_07272021.pdf)<br />
<blockquote><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;State legislators have the constitutional duty, and therefore the power, to protect the fundamental, civil rights of persons. The fundamental law in which those fundamental rights are found is the common law, which consists of both natural duties and those ancient, customary rights and immunities that are foundational to ordered liberty. Thus, a state legislature must declare and secure to all persons within the protection of its laws the rights that those persons have by natural and customary law. Cf. ''Washington v. Glucksberg'', 521 U.S. 702, 721-22 (1997) (upholding state legislation that prohibited assisted suicide and reasoning that the Fourteenth Amendment’s “Due Process Clause specially protects those fundamental rights and liberties which are, objectively, ‘deeply rooted in this Nation’s history and tradition’.” (quoting ''Moore v. E. Cleveland'', 431 U. S. 494, 503 (1977)). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England (1765): “Hence,” he said, “it follows, that the first and primary end of human laws is to '''maintain and regulate these absolute rights of individuals'''.” Id. Blackstone taught that the legislative power is to declare existing common-law rights and duties and to remedy any defects in the legal security for those rights. Id. at *42-43, 52-58, 86-87 <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Founders echoed this view in the Declaration of Independence, declaring that governments are instituted among men in order to secure the inalienable rights with which human beings are endowed by nature and nature’s God. They also accused the crown and Parliament of infringing the rights of “our constitution,” which in 1776 could only have been a reference to the common-law constitution of British North America. This view predicated the Constitution of the United States, which expressly secures natural rights, such as life and religious liberty, and common-law rights, such as jury trials and freedom from the quartering of soldiers in one’s home, and expressly disclaims any intent to disparage the other rights of the fundamental law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Indeed, the point of having legislatures, executives, and courts is to secure the rights that Americans already have.''' Neither state legislatures nor the Constitution of the United States create those rights. See District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570, 592 (2008) (stating that “it has always been widely understood that the '''Second Amendment, like the First and Fourth Amendments, codified a preexisting right,” that it “is not a right granted by the Constitution,” and is not “in any manner dependent upon that instrument for its existence.”'''). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Some, but not all, of the rights of natural persons are enumerated [listed] in the Constitution''' of the United States and its amendments. U.S. Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 8.; art. IV, §2; amends. I-VIII. Others are enumerated in state constitutions. See e.g., Soc’y for the Propagation of the Gospel v. Wheeler, 22 F. Cas. 756, 766 (No. 13,156) (C.C.D.N.H. 1814). Still others are declared in American constitutions but not enumerated. U.S. Const. amend. IX (“The enumeration of certain rights herein shall not be construed to deny or disparage other rights retained by the people.”) (emphasis added). '''State legislatures have a duty to declare and secure all fundamental rights, both enumerated and unenumerated.''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Fundamental rights are those that persons enjoy by fundamental law—natural law and common law— with or without any written constitution. Because the common law includes natural rights, to understand the fundamental rights declared and secured by the Constitution, it is sufficient to look to the common law, especially as explained by William Blackstone. Established common-law doctrines constitute the best evidence of the existence and meaning of both enumerated and unenumerated, fundamental rights. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The interpretation of the Constitution of the United States is necessarily influenced by the fact that its provisions are framed in the language of the English common law, and are to be read in the light of its history.” ''Smith v. Alabama'', 124 U.S. 465, 478 (1888). The terms and concepts of the common law provided the “the nomenclature of which the framers of the Constitution were familiar.” ''Minor v. Happersett'', 88 U.S. (21 Wall) 162, 167 (1875). Accord James R. Stoner, Jr., Common-Law Liberty: Rethinking American Constitutionalism 9-29 (2003). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;American constitutional rights are not philosophical abstractions. They are described in detail in common law treatises, such as those by Coke and Hale, and especially Blackstone’s Commentaries. The framers crafted American constitutions—state and federal—in common law terms. And Blackstone was their teacher and lexicographer....<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As this Court has rightly acknowledged, Blackstone’s “works constituted the preeminent authority on English law for the founding generation.” ''Alden v. Maine'', 527 U.S. 706, 715 (1999). Blackstone retained his influence through the adoption of the Civil War Amendments. James M. Ogden, Lincoln’s Early Impressions of the Law in Indiana, 7 Notre Dame L. Rev. 325, 328 (1932). And '''this Court continues to turn to Blackstone today.''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[2 A few examples from recent years include ''Gamble v. United States'', __ U.S. __, 139 S. Ct. 1960 (2019) (the Court’s opinion, the concurrence, and one dissent citing Blackstone multiple times to determine the meaning of the phrase “the same offense” in the Fifth Amendment’s double jeopardy clause); ''Department of Homeland Security v. Thuraissigiam'', __ U.S. __, 140 S. Ct. 1959, 1969 (2020) (calling Blackstone’s Commentaries a “satisfactory exposition of the common law of England”); Ramos v. Louisiana, __ U.S. __, 140 S. Ct. 1390, 1395 (2020) (citing Blackstone in explanation of the holding that '''the requirement of juror unanimity is “a vital right protected by the common law”''' and therefore the Constitution’s jury trial guarantee); ''Torres v. Madrid'', __ U.S. __, 141 S. Ct. 989, 996, 997, 998, 1000 (2021) (citing Blackstone multiple times to determine meaning of Fourth Amendment “seizure”). ]...<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But as the Ninth Amendment makes clear, the enumeration of certain common-law rights does not deny or disparage all the other rights that the American people enjoy by virtue of natural law and their ancient customs. The Ninth Amendment expressly reserves to the people those civil and fundamental rights that they enjoyed prior to ratification, which are their natural rights, other common-law rights and liberties, and some privileges enumerated in state constitutions. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Because many states refused to remedy infringements of fundamental rights [for blacks] prior to the Civil War, the Fourteenth Amendment was necessary to ensure to all persons due process of law and the equal protection of the laws, and to empower Congress to remedy infringements of those rights. It bears emphasis that the '''Fourteenth Amendment was necessary to recall state legislatures to their original task. Far from repealing the people’s retention of fundamenta'''l rights declared by the Ninth Amendment, the Fourteenth Amendment strengthened it. And far from abrogating the duty of state legislatures to declare and secure unenumerated rights, the Fourteenth Amendment reinforced that duty. </blockquote><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That is, the rights retained by the people but not protected by their state, such as the right of Blacks to liberty, was strengthened – at the expense of the freedom of the legislature to torpedo those rights. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And as Statement #11 and its footnotes explain, the 14th Amendment did not supplant the duty of legislatures to protect rights with that duty in courts. The only authority over state violations of rights given courts by the 14th was to enforce federal laws enacted by Congress. The authority of courts we see today, to make up “rights” not found in the Constitution and impose them on states without waiting for Congress to pass a law, was not given by the 14th, but was seized by courts in violation of the Constitution. </ref><br />
<span style="color:blue">– the central reason governments exist, is an accessory to genocide according to the uncontradicted consensus of court-recognized fact finders, and is guilty of exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide through an unconstitutional ruling, which exceeds the judicial powers given by the state Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment.<br />
<ref>More about '''“exercising the legislative function, in order to perpetuate genocide...exceeds the judicial powers given by the state Constitution, which is Malfeasance in Office, a ground of impeachment”'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Legislatures have considerable untapped potential for restraining their activist courts when they become confused about which branch of government they are. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Perhaps the major reason few people even think about solutions is fear of any change to the balance of powers between the legislature and the courts. “Better the devil you know than the devil you don’t.” We don’t want to just switch tyrants. A change to a real solution requires wisdom, which requires study, and who wants to study? <br />
<center>Another obstacle to restraining courts to their constitutional function is that most people, even Christians, limit their goals to what they consider “realistic”, and especially “politically realistic”, which usually means what people think they can do without God. Trust that what Jesus promised about “impossible” goals is truly “realistic”, enables us to think about not just what would be a little bit better, but about what would be perfect. and then to think about doing whatever we can think of to move in that direction, fully aware how feeble our own steps are, trusting God to open up new opportunities, in His time, as we walk with Him. </center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;My own feeble steps were drafted into a bill in Iowa in 2020. The bill is posted at http://savetheworld.saltshaker.us/wiki/ <br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Judicial_Accountability_Act:_How_Legislatures_can_stop_judges_from_legislating <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Senate Judiciary Committee Chair Brad Zaun liked the idea and got it numbered and introduced, but it came to him too late that year to get it through the “funnel”, and he was disappointed that there was no organized group helping make other lawmakers aware of it. <br />
<center>'''Judicial Accountability Act: How Legislatures can stop judges from legislating'''</center><br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Summary: what the bill accomplishes'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1. '''No district court injunctions. A single district judge can't overturn a law.''' Any legislature is well within its constitutional authority to prohibit any ''district'' court (lower court) from invalidating a law – only the ''Supreme'' Court should be allowed to do it, and only within 90 days. Letting a single lower court judge overturn the work of 150 lawmakers which include several attorneys and constitutional scholars is insane. Any challenge to a law should go directly to the most experienced judges in the state.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2. '''Supermajority required. It takes 5 of the 7 justices of the Supreme Court to overturn a law.''' A simple majority of justices overturning by one vote a law produced by tens of thousands of people over several years is a scandal. It has nothing to do with wisdom, law, or the Constitution. When judges can’t even agree with each other, unanimously, whether to destroy the work of the majority of voters and their representatives, they prove they are not so much wiser than everybody else in their state to be trusted with such unbridled power. At the very least any injunction should have their unanimous support before they should have any power to shut down the will of their whole state. A supermajority that is short of unanimous may be OK if it is not the final word but is followed by further opportunities for the legislature to restore their law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3. '''Expedited. The Court has to rule in 3 months if the court blocks a new law from taking effect with a Temporary Restraining Order.''' If the court invalidates an existing law, the invalidation doesn't take effect for one year. Courts bottling up laws with injunctions for years while they make up their minds should make them ashamed. They don’t need years. No controversial law is passed without months if not years of scrutiny by attorneys for and against. Their briefs are already ready. They already know what the other side will say. They don’t need years to think of what to say or how to respond. Maybe a day. Maybe two.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Nor do judges need months to read the briefs for several weeks to bring themselves up to speed on the issue. The law has been in the news for years. There is no honor in willful ignorance of the issues until the first brief is filed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Laws are passed to correct serious wrongs. Years of work costing millions of dollars goes into fixing problems. There is no good reason to delay justice for the citizens of a state for years to wait while judges try to agree among themselves whether to allow justice as understood by the majority of voters and lawmakers. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''4. Discussion. The legislature may compel designated justices to attend a public hearing to debate the constitutionality of the law within one year of such a ruling, by passing a resolution.''' Provided a supermajority of the Supreme Court has agreed on an injunction in less than a month, the legislature should then be able, within the next year, to compel the attendance of judges under their jurisdiction to discuss and debate, with specified legislators in a public hearing, the constitutional justification for [or necessity of] that judicial exercise of the legislative function. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''5. The legislature may overturn the invalidation by a 60% vote, by a resolution, leaving the last word, the final verdict, with incredibly well informed voters''' (through ordinary elections of lawmakers and retention of justices). The resolution overturning the invalidation would give reasons responsive to the reasoning of the judicial ruling. <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''The Bill: Iowa SSB3181 2020 AD''''''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A BILL FOR <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 An Act regarding legislative oversight of supreme court <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 decisions, and including applicability provisions. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF IOWA: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Introduction/Legislative Findings'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 Section 1. NEW SECTION. 602.1615 Legislative findings —— <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 challenges to the validity of a statute —— exclusive jurisdiction <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 —— public hearings —— legislative oversight. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 1. The general assembly finds and declares all of the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 following: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''If the legislature can even impeach,''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''it can at least ask questions'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 a. The power to impeach subsumes reasonable less severe <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7 remedies. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Lawmakers take an oath''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''to uphold the Constitution too'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Their responsibility to uphold the Constitution'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''requires action against courts '''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''that interfere with their responsibility'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 b. The intent of this section is to provide for a mechanism <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 in which to resolve disputes regarding the constitutionality of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 laws between the courts and the legislature, both of which are <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 composed of constitutional scholars. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Jurisdiction of courts is''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''restricted by the legislature'''<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 c. Article 5, section 4 of the Constitution of the State <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13 of Iowa states that the supreme court is “a court for the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14 correction of errors at law, '''under such restriction as''' the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15 general assembly may, by law, prescribe . . .”. <br />
<center>Judicial power to invalidate laws <br />
<br>is not given by the Iowa Constitution</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 d. Article 3, section 20 of the Constitution of the State <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 of Iowa gives the legislature the power to impeach judges for <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 “malfeasance in office”, which is generally defined to include <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;19 acting without authority and abusing power. The power to <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;20 impeach subsumes all lesser remedies. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;21 e. The Constitution of the State of Iowa does not give the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;22 courts of this state the power to invalidate laws enacted by <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;23 the legislature, to require the legislature to enact different <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;24 laws, or to publish rulings that have the same effect as new <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;25 legislation. Article 3, section 1 of the Constitution of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;26 the State of Iowa states: “The powers of the government of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;27 Iowa shall be divided into three separate departments —— the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;28 '''legislative, the executive, and the judicial: and no person''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;29 '''charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to one''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;30 '''of these departments shall exercise any function appertaining''' <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;31 '''to either of the others,''' except in cases hereinafter expressly <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;32 directed or permitted”. <br />
<center>'''The Legislature must get involved''' <br />
<br>'''when courts legislate unconstitutionally'''</center><br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;33 f. Although the courts of Iowa have usurped those powers <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;34 without constitutional authority, it has been done for reasons <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;35 which the general assembly respects. The general assembly <br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 welcomes the expertise and guidance of the courts in evaluating <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 the constitutionality of its laws. But when the reasoning of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 rulings which function as legislation appears to be not only <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 unsound, but unconstitutional, the general assembly has the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 constitutional duty and authority to determine that judges and <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 justices have abused their power and exceeded their authority, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7 which are grounds for impeachment under the malfeasance in <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 office clause. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 g. A remedy short of impeachment should advance wisdom, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 build consensus, and educate voters so that informed voters <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 may hold both judges and legislators accountable. Article 1, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 section 2 of the Constitution of the State of Iowa states: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13 “All political power is inherent in the people. Government is <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14 instituted for the protection, security, and benefit of the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15 people, and they have the right, at all times, to alter or <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 reform the same, whenever the public good may require it”. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Meat of the Bill: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;the Enforcement Section<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Lower courts can't invalidate laws<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 2. The supreme court shall have discretionary and exclusive <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 original jurisdiction over any challenge to any law. A <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;19 district court or the court of appeals shall not invalidate a <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;20 law on any grounds. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Supreme Court must rule <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;within 3 months, by supermajority,<br />
when the Court blocks a new law.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;When the Court blocks an existing law<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;the block will not take effect for one year<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;21 3. A decision of the supreme court that invalidates <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;22 existing law or has the effect of creating new law shall not <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;23 have any effect unless agreed to by five or more of the seven <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;24 justices, and otherwise shall not have any effect for one <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;25 year. The supreme court shall also have the power to suspend <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;26 implementation of a new law provided the supreme court produces <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;27 an expedited ruling within three months of the law’s enactment. <br />
Public Hearing<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;28 4. a. Within one year of the date a supreme court decision <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;29 is published that invalidates existing law or has the effect <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;30 of creating new law, the general assembly may, by resolution, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;31 compel the attendance of specified justices to a public hearing <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;32 to discuss and debate the justification for the decision with <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;33 members of the general assembly. A public record of the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;34 hearing shall be made. <br />
Impeachment grounds inquiry<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;35 b. During or after the hearing, the general assembly shall <br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;1 determine if grounds to begin impeachment exist as to any <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;2 of the justices present at the hearing for acting without <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3 authority or malfeasance in office. <br />
Judges may improve their ruling<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;4 c. Based on the results of a hearing commenced pursuant to <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;5 this subsection, a justice whose presence was required at the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;6 hearing may change the justice’s vote or alter the justice’s <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;7 individual contribution to the decision. <br />
Legislature may overturn court invalidation<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 5. A supreme court decision invalidating existing law or <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 having the effect of creating new law will not take effect if <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 two-thirds of both the senate and the house of representatives <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 approve a resolution to overturn the decision within one year <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 of the date the decision was published. The resolution must <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;13 specify the basis for overturning the decision, including <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;14 its reasoning, not to be limited by court precedent that is <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;15 responsive to the supreme court’s initial published decision, <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;16 and must be documented by expert testimony and constitutional <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;17 authority. <br />
Legislature may add statement to the ruling<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;18 6. The general assembly may issue its own statement to a <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;19 published supreme court decision that invalidates existing law <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;20 or has the effect of creating new law if done within one year of <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;21 the date the decision was published. The statement must regard <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;22 the constitutionality of the invalidated existing law or the <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;23 newly created law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;24 Sec. 2. APPLICABILITY. This Act applies to decisions <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;25 published by the supreme court on or after the effective date <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;26 of this act. <br />
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<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;FAQ's<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Questions and Answers <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Why are existing laws treated differently than new laws?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The difference is for the benefit of the public, so the laws governing them do not flip back and forth from being in effect. A new law – for example, the Heartbeat law – could be suspended until the suspension is overturned by the legislature. An existing law – for example our former marriage laws requiring spouses to be of the opposite sex – could not be suspended for one year, to give the legislature time to respond. No chaotic back and forth. <br />
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<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Could courts suspend a new law between its effective date and the court ruling?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The legal action a court takes to invalidate a law is an Injunction. The process here doesn’t specify it, but would allow the normal process of allowing the courts to immediately suspend a new law with a TRO, Temporary Restraining Order, until their hearing, at which the temporary order could become permanent. In the case of an existing law, by contrast, allowing the court to immediately suspend the law, with the possibility of it going back into effect after the legislature acts, would subject the public to a law which is in effect, then suspended, then back into effect. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If this law removed the court’s power to put a TRO on a new law, the law would take effect until the ruling, then it would be suspended, but then the legislature might give it effect again.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;What will be the effect of a 4-3 ruling that a law is unconstitutional?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: no legal effect, but much political pressure) Although a 4-3 ruling would no longer have legal force, it would still have powerful political force. A ruling that a law is unconstitutional would be a public relations challenge for the legislature. The legislature would face pressure to refute the judges' claims point by point, or adjust the law voluntarily. A 4-3 ruling would not be powerless; and of course it would still be binding on the parties to the case. But an argument in defense of the legislature ignoring the challenge would be that after all, the justices themselves barely agree the law is unconstitutional. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Would a ruling always trigger a public hearing?<br />
That decision is made independently of a decision to vote to override the court. “Within one year, the legislature MAY, by a resolution, compel the attendance of specified Iowa judges ....”<br />
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<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Is one year for the legislature to act too long? Too short?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;One year from the court’s ruling is needed to process the ruling’s reasoning, to hold hearings which would require passage of a resolution by both chambers, and then to schedule a vote, which could be while the legislature is not in session. A year is needed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;On the other hand, requiring courts to act in 3 months is reasonable, considering this is not a brand new question before them that they have never heard of before. They have had all the years of public debate on the issue to think about the issue. Plus, courts are accustomed to ruling quickly when cases are required to be “expedited”. <br />
Would prolife laws do any better under this system?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: Good news for Democrats!) No, at least not by much. Prolife laws would have a brighter future in Iowa courts, but in federal courts there would be no difference from a state law. That is, until such time as Congress adopts these reforms. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;However, it might give prolife bills as much help as a “no right to abortion” state constitutional amendment would, although a different kind of help. And although there seems little concern that a Constitutional Amendment might be overturned, (even though constitutional amendments have been overturned in other states by their courts), this act would further reduce that possibility. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Is a 2/3 majority requirement necessary? Shouldn't a simple majority of the legislature be enough to override courts?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: practically & legally, certainly; politically, complicated) This may be the hardest detail to muster a quick opinion. There are strong arguments for either choice; perhaps there is even a third option: a 60% vote. As this bill proceeds, perhaps it should be expected that a consensus will form later requiring amendment of this detail. The current draft requires a 2/3 majority. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Practical Argument: Currently, courts get away with a simple majority requirement (4-3) which faces zero accountability from anybody. This draft requires a 5-2 vote; another option is 6-1. Should the legislature face a similar hurdle? Several lawmakers believe a 2/3 requirement removes any practical hope of ever overturning a judicial invalidation of a law, because the Iowa legislature is incapable of agreeing by 2/3 that the sun is up. A 2/3 requirement would make restraint of lawmaking judges actually harder than passing a constitutional amendment! <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In Congress, our U.S. Constitution says a 2/3 majority is enough to send an amendment to the Constitution before the states for their ratification. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But if we let the legislature overturn the court’s invalidation with a second simple majority, it could be objected that would be almost ridiculously easy for the legislature to gather together the same “yea” votes a second time (if an election doesn’t intervene). A 60% requirement could answer that concern. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;However, that objection could also be met by pointing out that the ruling of the courts would give typically 60 pages of reasons the law should be overturned, which would put a lot of pressure on those “yea” votes to either eloquently and exhaustively justify their votes or vote “nay”. It would not be easy to secure a majority a second time under that pressure. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The public hearing option would put that 60 page ruling on a level playing field with reasoning from lawmakers. It would make both legislatures and courts accountable not only to each other, but to reason. It might even make lawmakers upset enough to reach a 2/3 agreement. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Voters, informed as has never before been possible about judges on the ballot, or about the legal skills of lawmakers, would have the last word. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Political Argument: The public is not used to legislatures having ANY power to correct unconstitutional rulings. A 2/3 requirement would be less of a shock to tradition. Were this bill to pass into law with a 2/3 requirement, and lawmakers saw how unnecessary it was, lawmakers could ease the requirement in the future - since this does not require amending the constitution, which already grants more than this power, but requires only a law. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Amendment. Should it be decided that a simple majority of the legislature to overturn a court’s invalidation is sufficient, here is the simple change that could do it - simply strike out “two-thirds of” (or replace it with “six tenths of”): <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;8 A supreme court decision invalidating existing law or <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;9 having the effect of creating new law will not take effect if <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;10 two-thirds of both the senate and the house of representatives <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;11 approve a resolution to overturn the decision within one year <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;12 of the date the decision was published. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Is it practically possible to require courts to add a statement from the legislature up to a year after its ruling?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;When the Supreme Court first publishes its ruling, that is not the final version that will be later given an official permanent citation in the Northwest Reporter series. (Their contact information) Unpredictable delays are caused by litigants asking for rehearings, and courts taking time to respond. Even after that option is exhausted, court staff continue proofing their decisions, a process that can take months. [Iowa Supreme Court Clerk phone number: 515-348-4700] Northwest Reporter doesn’t officially publish a case, and give it a permanent citation, until a state supreme court notifies them that it is ready. That is why a new case has only an Iowa citation that does not list a page number or volume number, and doesn’t get a fancy N.W.2d permanent citation until much later. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Requiring the Court to leave the publication open for a year in case the legislature chooses to submit a statement would affect only the time the Court notifies Northwest Reporter, and it may not even affect that time at all. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The farther this bill gets, the more discussions there will be about it with the Iowa Bar Association and the Court itself. If delaying final publication that long is deemed unreasonable, an amendment could easily give the legislature an earlier deadline. It might also require the legislature to notify the court of an intent to exercise that option. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Of course, this entire final sentence of this bill is not critical to legislative correction of judicial overreach. It could be conceded if necessary to save the rest of the bill. But it is an appropriate correction of the current system. <br />
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<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Will an expedited hearing that begins in the Supreme Court diminish the time needed by the litigants to fully present their claims?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: anyone ready to block a law from taking effect is ready for court) A challenge to a new law means (and perhaps this bill could so specify, although I think it is already clearly implied) a challenge to a law that has not yet gone into effect, to keep it from going into effect (beginning with a Temporary Restraining Order (TRO) the day it would go into effect). <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In such a case the state itself will normally be the defendant, and the petitioner will be a well funded group that tried to kill the law in the legislature but failed. In that situation the petitioner will already be prepared legally, their arguments well honed through interaction with lawmakers. It is hard to imagine that any less prepared petitioner would be ready with a TRO to stop a law before it goes into effect. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Iowa court rules already require appellants to outline their issues in their initial notice of appeal, which is more pressure on individual defendants to prepare that far ahead, in proportion to their means, than challengers to a new law will face, who will be fully primed for a court battle before the law passes the first chamber. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Were the petitioner an individual seeking relief only for himself and not for anyone else affected by the law, courts have many tools for giving relief to individuals short of invalidating whole laws. Extenuating circumstances, interaction with other laws affecting the individual, necessity in order to avoid serious injury (Iowa 704) for example. The applicability of laws to individuals is the jurisdiction of the judicial branch, with which the legislative branch has no intent to interfere, any more than the judicial branch should interfere with the jurisdiction of the legislative branch to establish laws of general application. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;After a law has already gone into effect, then there is no requirement to expedite. In fact, the decision to challenge a law could be made by the parties to the case, or by a judge, at any point during a years-long case: in pre-trial briefs, a district judge’s ruling, or during the appeal before the Court of Appeals or the Supreme Court. With this bill the applicability of the law to the individual defendant could still be suspended, but the law itself, as applied to everyone else, would not be suspended until after the Supreme Court so rules and then only if the legislature does not block the suspension. The legislature’s year to respond would not begin with any ruling made before the Supreme Court’s supermajority ruling. <br />
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<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Are there any U.S. Supreme Court precedents relevant to these half dozen powers?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: making judges answer lawmakers' questions is a staple of confirmation hearings) These proposed powers are all completely unprecedented in law, although some of them have been discussed. Probably the one never before discussed is the idea of a public hearing. <br />
Surely the prohibition of a district judge overturning a law, limiting that power to the state Supreme Court, and requiring a supermajority of the court to overturn, is well within the power given the legislature to limit the jurisdiction of courts. <br />
Public Hearings<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;How about public hearings? Is there any legal or constitutional principle that shields judges from having to explain their rulings any better than they do in their written opinions? Is there something nefarious about requiring judges to answer questions? <br />
Federal judges answer questions about their past rulings in confirmation hearings for appointments to higher courts. If U.S. Senators can require them to answer questions about their rulings years later, why can’t state legislatures require their state judges to answer questions at the time? Judges justify not answering questions about future potential cases, that they may remain free to rule in view of facts and arguments they might not see until then, but there is no reason to shield judges from explaining their past cases. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Especially since the Public Hearings envisioned in this bill are not only to clarify whether a law ruled unconstitutional actually is unconstitutional. The second purpose of these Public Hearings is to investigate whether there are grounds for impeachment. Because if the legislature determines that the court’s ruling of the law’s unconstitutionality is utterly lacking in merit, then judges who so ruled were legislating; they were acting without authority, exercising a power of a different branch of government than their own, which is malfeasance of office, an impeachable offense. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Obviously, in any impeachment trial, the judges would be required to answer questions. These public hearings are a power subsumed under the power of impeachment; they are a reasonable, less severe remedy. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Certainly the very idea of communication between lawmakers and judges on a “level playing field” is unheard of. Unprecedented. (Outside confirmation hearings.) Current communication, which tradition will be slow to reconsider, is somewhat like a parent trying to reason with a child who is as inarticulate as he is stubborn. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is a special challenge for a lawyer representing the legislature to reason with a judge who gives only the scantest clues to what is on his mind before he rules, after which it is too late to respond to his errors. Does any Constitutional or legal principle require such a breakdown of communication? Does this ritual serve any good purpose? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Once President Washington asked SCOTUS for its advisory interpretation of a treaty. The justices declined, saying “The lines of separation drawn by the Constitution between the three departments of government – their being in certain respects checks upon each other – and our being judges in a court of last resort – are considerations which afford strong arguments against the propriety of our extra judicially deciding the questions alluded to; especially as the Power given by the Constitution to the President of calling on the Heads of Departments for opinions, seems to have been purposely as well as expressly limited to executive departments.” https://www.mountvernon.org/library/digitalhistory/digital-encyclopedia/article/george-washington-and-the-supreme-court/<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;https://founders.archives.gov/?q=Thomas%20Recipient%3A%22Washington%2C%20George%22%20Author%3A%22Supreme%20Court%20Justices%22&s=1111311111&sa=supre&r=3&sr= <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That answer is not a precedent for keeping courts from communicatint with legislatures for two reasons: (1) it was not a sensible answer then. The Constitution puts no limit on who the President can consult for advice, while Proverbs 15:22 says “in a multitude of counsellors, purposes are established”. I can’t imagine where SCOTUS came up with the idea that the President was limited to asking his department heads. Washington asked for advice, not a binding ruling. That’s what “extrajudicial” means. (2) SCOTUS then declined to get involved in an issue which it otherwise would never face. This is different than asking a Court to make up its mind earlier than later. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is not wrong to ask judges to give advisory opinions to lawmakers so lawmakers don’t have to spend years crafting laws which judges at the last minute decide to overturn. The August 8, 1793 answer was before Americans had to worry about activist judges who leave the future of legislation, and indeed the very future of human rights, very much in doubt. <br />
However, asking judges to give an advisory opinion about a law before it is passed is probably impractical, since judges are used to taking longer to study an issue than a legislature is in session, and also since even after giving an early opinion, new evidence or argument might come later which would flip the Court’s ruling. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;An expedited three month deadline is probably the closest we can come to a timely response from courts. Certainly legal wrangling that dribbles on for years exhausts the patience of rational minds. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The subject of the public hearing is whether the law really was unconstitutional. Because if it wasn't, then the judges plainly acted outside their authority, which is grounds for impeachment. But beyond being grounds for impeachment, an order given that is beyond one's authority to give is legally invalid. So surely the legislature has the authority to investigate whether an order was invalid, and upon establishing that it is, to reverse its effects. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sheltering judges from interaction doesn’t make them free of bias. In every other human interaction, accountability is the best way to cleanse a hard heart of bias. <br />
The Two-Thirds Majority<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The only thing remotely relevant to this 2/3 vs. simple majority requirement in American constitutional law that I can think of is that to ratify a constitutional amendment, Congress has to pass it by 2/3 before states pass it by 3/4. But the solution here doesn’t change the constitution; it only defines how the legislature is choosing to exercise authority already given by the Iowa Constitution. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If anything, there is a constitutional principle favoring the power of legislatures over courts, with respect to Fundamental Rights. The 14th Amendment is the part of the Constitution which courts have taken to give them jurisdiction over states who trample fundamental rights. But who did the 14th Amendment authorize to enforce its provisions? Not courts! Rather, Congress, according to Section 5 of the Amendment. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yet here are examples of not just state laws, but even state constitutional amendments, which were overturned by courts for violating the “equal protection” clause of the 14th Amendment: <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Cummings v. Missouri, 71 U.S. 277 (1867) a Missouri oath to hold office designed to keep out former confederate soldiers was ruled an unconstitutional Bill of Attainder. <br />
Hollingsworth v. Perry, 570 U.S. 693 (2013) a California same sex marriage ban. <br />
Romer v. Evans, 517 U.S. 620 (1996) a Colorado gay rights ban. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Awad v. Ziriax, 10th Circuit, January 10, 2012 an Oklahoma ban of the use of Sharia Law in court. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Giles v. Harris, 1903, and Giles v. Teasley, 1904, courts winked at disenfranchising Blacks, but explicitly accepted jurisdiction over state constitutions violating the 14th and 15th Amendments. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The authority to enforce the requirements of the 14th Amendment, given to Congress and not courts, gives Congress also the authority to define and apply fundamental rights, and for anyone seriously in doubt, to clarify who is a human being and therefore deserves to have his fundamental rights protected. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;These are philosophical as well as legal questions which merit national discussion, but while courts are sheltered from having to talk to anybody the conversation has been one sided. America needs to open this up into what Proverbs 15:22 calls a “multitude of counsellors”. It does not undermine respect for the judiciary to imagine judges are able to explain their reasoning. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If Legislatures overturn court rulings, won’t they exercise the authority of the judicial branch?<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(Summary: legislative action wouldn't affect litigants; only the part of the ruling that reaches wrongfully into legislating) No. On that future day when a legislature overturns judicial rulings, the legislature’s action would not apply to the parties to the case, so the “separation of powers” aspect of the ruling is untouched. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;There are several reasons a court may exempt a litigant from the effects of a law, without invalidating the law for everyone else. The simple difference between courts and legislatures is that legislatures pass laws which apply to everybody, while courts apply those laws in specific cases, only to the parties to the case, guided by the special facts and circumstances of the case. The power given by this bill to legislatures to overturn rulings applies only to the part of the ruling where the court stepped outside its constitutional authority in order to nullify a law passed for the benefit of millions of others. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The purpose of the public hearing is only for the legislature to investigate whether their law was constitutional after all, and if so, to take back their constitutional authority to pass laws by their subsequent vote. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Lawmakers take oaths to defend the Constitution too. Courts cannot rob lawmakers of their power to obey the Constitution without violating the constitution themselves. <br />
Perhaps that is the key principle declared implicitly by this bill: judges aren’t the only branch of government authorized to understand and defend the Constitution. The other branches are too. That balance needs to be restored. The conversation needed needs to be among equals.<br />
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<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Shouldn’t judges be immune from popular pressure? We don’t want our rights subject to a vote!<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Neither legislatures nor courts should have the last word over each other. We have seen what happens when legislatures had the last word, in the South, during the time of slavery. And we have seen what happens when courts had the last word, in 1857 and 1973; regarding slavery and abortion. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Even the Iowa constitution gives the last word to voters. Is that dangerous? America’s Founders talked about popular whims that could remove important protections over the weekend if the public could vote on individual issues continually. They set up 6 year terms for U.S. Senators and 4 year terms for presidents explicitly to shield our Rule of Law from whims the public might hold for only a month. Nor does this process give voters direct control over the outcome of a disputed law, but only equips them to evaluate the wisdom of their elected representatives and their judges, which is the same as our current system except this leaves voters much better informed. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The 14th Amendment expanded the power of courts to overturn laws which violate “fundamental rights”. It made slave-loving southern state legislatures accountable to courts. Unaddressed was what to do when it is courts which violate fundamental rights. This measure is an attempt to restore balance. It is interesting that the 14th Amendment actually leaves its own enforcement not to courts, but to Congress. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The “independence of the judiciary” from popular whims is well protected by lifetime tenure. This measure does not change that. It only defines a remedy for Iowans when judges rule lawlessly and unconstitutionally. <br />
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<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Didn’t Iowa decide recently not to impeach judges for their rulings?<br />
Summary: “Overreaching” can only reach so far before it turns into full fledged unconstitutional legislating. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Removal from office, for just one harmful ruling which may be out of a long career of beneficial rulings, is pretty drastic; not to mention ineffective since it leaves the ruling in place that triggered the impeachment! <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That is why remedies short of impeachment are necessary, as well as remedies able to focus on the problem without cutting off talent which is mostly beneficial.<br />
If an assembly line produces an occasional klunker amongst its generally great output, we keep the assembly line and discard the klunker; we don't keep the klunker and blow up the assembly line! <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Iowans seriously considered impeaching judges for their rulings not so long ago. Highlights are discussed at the Brennan Center: <br />
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<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A 2011 review by the National Center for State Courts’ Gavel to Gavel website also found numerous bills introduced in state legislatures that year to impeach judges and justices because of disagreement over specific rulings. Several of those introductions were part of a failed effort in Iowa to remove four Iowa Supreme Court Justices for their decision in a high-profile case about marriage rights for same-sex couples. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The impeachment attempt garnered significant media attention, but also widespread condemnation – even from members of the sponsors’ own party. Iowa Governor-elect Terry Brandstad (R) [sic] said at the time that disagreement over a ruling did not constitute grounds for impeachment. “There’s a difference between malfeasance and over-reaching,” said Brandstad, “the Constitution says what the grounds for impeachment are. My reading is it’s not there.” Iowa House Speaker Kraig Paulsen (R), whose chamber would have voted on the impeachment, sent the resolutions to languish in an inactive committee and said, “I disagree with this remedy,…I do not expect it to be debated on the floor of the House, and if it is, I will vote no.”<br />
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<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I respectfully disagree with Governor, later Ambassador Branstad. When the Iowa Supreme Court not only struck down laws limiting marriage to opposite sex couples, but specifically ordered county clerks to solemnize “marriages” between same sex couples, that reaches beyond “overreaching”. “Overreaching” implies a mild going-a-little-too-far out of one’s proper jurisdiction. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But if the plainest example of a “person charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to” the judicial branch of government exercising “any function appertaining to” the legislative branch can be dismissed as mere “overreaching”, then it is impossible for any other judicial legislating to violate the Iowa Constitution. We might as well just give judges the password to the Iowa Code database and let them write whatever laws they please. As Rep. Matt Windschitl said January 27, 2020 on the Jeff Angelo show, “Do we really want judges deciding laws? If so, why do we even have a legislature?”<br />
Article 3 Section 1 of the Iowa Constitution says “Departments of government. The powers of the government of Iowa shall be divided into three separate departments — the legislative, the executive, and the judicial: and no person charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to one of these departments shall exercise any function appertaining to either of the others....”<br />
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<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;FAQ’s: Judicial Philosophy<br />
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<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Isn’t it unconstitutional to impeach a judge for a ruling?<br />
Summary: It can’t be unconstitutional to correct the part of a ruling that unconstitutionally legislates. Although it has not been established definitively, whether a judge may be impeached over a ruling, most legal discussion avers that would be unethical, and there is no precedent of a successful impeachment over the content of a ruling. <br />
Most legal discussion is of the U.S. Constitution; the Iowa Constitution specifies that judges can’t legislate, which is only implied in the U.S. Constitution. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The United States Constitution provides little guidance as to what offenses constitute grounds for the impeachment of federal judges...However, the impeachment power has historically been limited to cases of serious ethical or criminal misconduct. - Brennan Center<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is generally supposed that legislative action to correct an unconstitutional ruling, or to discipline a judge who writes one, would be unconstitutional. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Constitution does not “provide for resignation or impeachment whenever a judge makes a decision with which elected officials disagree” said four judges when President Clinton and Senator Dole urged impeachment of a judge over his ruling on admissibility of evidence. “These attacks do a grave disservice to the principle of an independent judiciary and…mislead the public as to the role of judges in a constitutional democracy.” Brennan Center<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Let’s make a distinction glossed over by those four judges: between a ruling hated because it applies existing law and facts in a way most people think is wrong, and a ruling hated because it overturns laws by a rationale that most people think is unconstitutional. I agree with the four judges that the case was correctly kept off limits to lawmakers, but the judges generalized their criticism to the extent of dismissing concerns about truly unconstitutional rulings as being mere decisions “with which elected officials disagree”. <br />
It is that degree of generalization that is “a grave disservice” by elevating “the principle of an independent judiciary” beyond the reach of the Constitution, of common sense, and of accountability of any kind from any source. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;What I have not found in law review articles is any proposed remedy for when a ruling itself is unconstitutional. I have not found it even acknowledged that it is possible for a ruling to be unconstitutional. As if to say “how could judges rule unconstitutionally? Judges ARE the constitution.”<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But it is judges themselves, in vigorous dissents, who stir public concern about the constitutionally of certain rulings. Judges who write dissents are as qualified as those in the majority, and their reasoning is often equally persuasive. When the public has a basis this solid for concern about the constitutionality of rulings, it is surely in the public interest, and not contrary to any known legal or constitutional principle, to hold a public hearing where those concerns can be addressed and hopefully resolved, where judges, perhaps for the first time in America history, can be compelled to interact with experts other than each other.<br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In fact, any time a law is overturned for being unconstitutional, but the ruling is flawed and a correct ruling would actually not find the law unconstitutional, then actually the ruling itself is unconstitutional because the ruling amounts to raw legislation. It is unconstitutional for courts to pass laws. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Let me emphasize this point. Any ruling that overturns a law is either correct because the law is in fact unconstitutional, or is itself unconstitutional because its reasoning or factual basis is flawed. Lawmakers take oaths to defend the Constitution too, and should not be unconstitutionally deprived of the power to enforce it when they see a violation. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If we may agree that it is at least theoretically possible for a ruling overturning a law to be unconstitutional, shall we insist the Constitution requires the legislature to honor every unconstitutional ruling? <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Suppose there were a law against painting your house red, someone was prosecuted for painting his house red, and the court refused to convict because it is surely unconstitutional to outlaw painting your house red. Even without a formal nullification of the law, the law would be defacto nullified because prosecutors would know the court won’t convict anybody for that crime. It may be reasoned that rulings overturning laws merely formalize this natural process. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Public hearings would bring healing to our national division over issues less clear than the right to paint your house red. <br />
<br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As is pointed out below, the power this bill gives the legislature to overturn a judicial validation of its laws would not usurp judicial powers. It would not affect individuals who are actual parties named in the case. It would only affect that part of the ruling which wrongfully reaches into lawmaking, changing the laws which affect millions of other people who are not named in the case. <br />
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<span style="color:blue">Should any federal judge so interfere, this state appeals to its congressional delegation to examine similar grounds for disciplinary action, along with exercising its Article III, Section 2, paragraph 2 authority to make “exceptions” and “regulations” designed to end SCOTUS’ long line of landmark abomination cases.3 <br />
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<span style="color:blue">This state also appeals to its congressional delegation to exercise its life-saving and rights-protecting authority under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment whose plain words give Congress, not courts, the authority to correct state violations of Rights,4 which subsumes the authority to define their scope and balance competing interests, while the “privileges and immunities” clause identifies as protectable rights those listed in the Constitution.4 <br />
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<span style="color:blue">Official world-wide definitions of “crimes against humanity” apply “to representatives of the State authority who tolerate their commission.”5<br />
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<span style="color:blue">Any court review of this law must be expedited, because lives are lost with each day that courts delay.<br />
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<small>The following footnotes are enriched by selections from the following amicus briefs filed in Dobbs v. Jackson: 396 State Legislators from 41 States <> Melinda Thybault/Moral Outcry</small><br />
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INDEX to all 12 Statements of Facts<br />
<br><small>[[Statement_1_+_Footnotes]] Courtrecognized, court-tested Finders of Facts unanimously establish that unborn babies are fully human<br />
<br>[[Statement_2_+_Footnotes]] Courts Accept the Fact-Finding Authority of Legislatures, Juries, Experts for the same good reasons their findings persuade the public.<br />
<br>[[Statement_3_+_Footnotes]] The FACT that Babies are Fully Human was never denied or ruled irrelevant by SCOTUS.<br />
<br>[[Statement_4_+_Footnotes]] Heartbeats & Brain Waves are Legally Recognized Evidence of Life.<br />
<br>[[Statement_5_+_Footnotes]] Legislatures should regulate abortion, as Dobbs held, just as legislatures regulate the prosecution of all other murders.<br />
<br>[[Statement_6_+_Footnotes]] The full humanity of a tiny physical body is hard for many to grasp. But what distinguishes us from animals isn’t physical, and has no known pre-conscious stage.<br />
<br>[[Statement_7_+_Footnotes]] Congress has ''Already'' Enacted a Personhood Law as Strong as a “Life Amendment”. The 14th Amendment already authorizes Congress to require all states to outlaw abortion.<br />
<br>[[Statement_8_+_Footnotes]] Roe, Dobbs, and the 14th Amendment agree: All Humans are “Persons”.<br />
<br>[[Statement_9_+_Footnotes]] When pregnancies develop into medical emergencies requiring separation of mother and child to save the mother, the child has an equal fundamental right to life and medical care. <br />
<br>[[Statement_10_+_Footnotes]] Tyranny over any class of humans by any other is prohibited by the Constitution, by the Declaration which gives the purpose of the Constitution, and which rests its own authority on the revelation of God in the Bible.<br />
<br>[[Statement_11_+_Footnotes]] The 14th Amendment gives courts no authority to invent rights not specified in the Constitution, like the right to murder, and gives legislatures no authority to legalize violations of Constitutional Rights.<br />
<br>[[Statement_12_+_Footnotes]] Judicial Interference with Constitutional Obligations is Impeachable.</small><br />
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'''FOOTNOTES'''<br />
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<references /></div>DaveLeach