Why Won’t Abortion Go Away As an Issue?
By Jerry Newcombe
1/17/12
January 22, 2012 marks the 39th anniversary of Roe v. Wade, the Supreme
Court decision which gave us abortion on demand.
After all these years, and tens of millions of abortions in these United
States ---killing more than twice the population of Canada ---why won’t
this issue go away?
Some people think the Supreme Court (in that 7 to 2 decision) nailed
down the issue once and for all in 1973. End of story.
“But the Court’s decision has by no means settled the debate,” wrote
President Ronald Reagan eleven years later in a book he wrote, entitled
Abortion and the Conscience of the Nation. He continued, “Instead,
Roe v. Wade has become a continuing prod to the conscience of the nation.”
Even Roe (Norma McCorvey) doesn’t agree with Roe any more---making
it, if you will, Roe v. Roe. She even tried to get it overturned
years later, after she became pro-life, but to no avail.
Our country is not an oligarchy (rule by the few). The founding fathers
warned against that as tyranny.
Instead, we have a republic, where we elect representatives, who decide
things for us (with our input). James Madison spells all this out in Federalist
#10.
To use a baseball analogy, we also have a judicial branch, which is
to act as an umpire in case there are close calls to monitor.
But what would happen in a baseball game, if the umpires decided to
change the rules of the game, willy-nilly---in the middle of the game?
That is kind of what happens sometimes in our courts, including in
the example of Roe v. Wade, where judges decide to legislate from the bench,
usurping the role from Congress.
I once interviewed Robert Bork, eminent legal scholar, former Yale
professor, Supreme Court nominee, on the subject of judicial tyranny. He
said this about Roe v. Wade:
There’s not an ounce of legal reasoning in it. He [Justice
Harry Blackmun, who wrote the majority opinion] goes through what the ancient
Egyptians thought about abortion; he goes through the English Common Law
of abortion; he goes through what the American Hospital Association thinks
about abortion; what the American Medical Association thinks about
it; and then, suddenly, after all this history, which is utterly irrelevant
to the issue before him, he suddenly says, “Well, there is a right of privacy
and it’s broad enough to cover the right to abortion.” Bang. It’s a terrible
opinion.
Even some liberals admit that Roe was not a good example of legal reasoning;
but they like its effects, so they embrace it. Conservative commentator
Gary Bauer cites an example in pro-abortion rights Supreme Court Justice
Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who called Roe v. Wade “heavy-handed judicial intervention.”
Abortion is a sacred right to the liberals, regardless of how it came
to us.
When it comes to politics, I view abortion as such a critical issue,
since I affirm what the Good Book says. As human beings, we are made in
God’s image; therefore, we have inherent value. But noooooooo. The Court
says that value only applies when you’re born, and that has not been overturned,
lo these 39 years.
I feel that if a politician can’t get this issue of abortion right,
what else can’t he or she get right? It’s so basic. Sonograms improve over
time and document the humanity of the unborn baby.
So why does abortion continue to remain so divisive to we the people
of this republic? Because we the people never got to vote on it.
That vote was taken away, and it has never been restored. One of those
Supreme Court justices dissenting Roe, Byron White (appointed by John F.
Kennedy), even called the decision “an act of raw judicial power.”
In short, abortion on demand as a “constitutional right” was imposed
on us by judicial fiat. This decision was handed down as if it were from
Mt. Olympus , delivered by our robed masters. None of those particular
judges in the 1973 case still sits on the Court. They’ve all since died
(and stood before a different judgment seat, from which there is no appeal).
So as you consider casting your ballot for which candidates you support
during this election year, on this anniversary of the lethal decision of
Roe v. Wade, ask yourself what types of judges would your candidate nominate
or support. Do they believe in judicial activism or judicial restraint?
In some cases, as in abortion, it is literally a matter of life and
death.
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Jerry Newcombe is the host of Truth
That Transforms with D. James Kennedy (formerly The Coral Ridge
Hour) and spokesman for Truth in Action Ministries (formerly Coral
Ridge Ministries). He has also written or co-written 23 books, including
The
Book That Made America: How the Bible Formed Our Nation. and Answers
from the Founding Fathers. Jerry co-wrote (with Dr. Peter Lillback)
the bestselling, George Washington's
Sacred Fire. He hosts the website www.jerrynewcombe.com. The views
expressed above are his own.