Abortion and the Brett Kavanaugh Hearings: A Plan for Senate Republicans
They can make the democrats lose
their appetite for this issue
George Sutherland, the former Senator from Utah, was just returning from Europe, where he was negotiating on claims of arbitration for his country, and when he arrived back at his apartment in Washington, there was a letter from President Harding: “Since your departure for Europe you have been nominated and confirmed as a Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States.” The vacancy on the Court had been opened — and filled — on the same day, without Sutherland’s being told.
That was 1922. Since then, as we’ve seen, things have been notably different. We are bracing now for what promises to be the most rancorous hearings for the Court since the nomination of Robert Bork in 1987. The violence of the reaction, the hyperbolic assaults on Brett Kavanaugh within the first 24 hours, already exceed the whirlwind of the attacks on Bork. For the main issue at stake then is even more at stake now.
When the Court established, in 1973, a constitutional right to abortion, it suddenly made the issue of abortion the business of the federal government, and a poisonous part then of our national politics. President Trump remarked, on introducing his nominee, that just beneath the gravity of making decisions on peace and war, the appointment of a justice to the Supreme Court was now the most consequential decision that a president can make. But that should not be true. It has come closer to the truth since the Court began extending its reach and remaking the culture, with decisions on pornography, contraception, abortion, homosexuality, and same-sex marriage. In the name of “privacy,” the Court has spun out a jurisprudence of sexual liberation, which now licenses more and more intrusions of the state into the privacy of the family. It will soon become the business then of a federal court to decide whether a legislature may bar parents from seeking counsel for their children who suddenly discover an adolescent passion to change their sex. Under these conditions, as David Forte has so tellingly remarked, the president is cast in the role of the “Prime Elector”: He is the one who will choose those people, serving for life, who will indeed rule us on virtually everything that touches our lives.
https://www.nationalreview.com/2018/07/brett-kavanaugh-nomination-republicans-should-expose-democrat-views-on-abortion/
Sick fuckers
Going down
Couldn't stop with fucking around with the kids
Burn in hell bitches