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The Al Mohler Crosswalk Commentary - 
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Tuesday, October 12, 2004

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>>  Abortionists Finally Admit the Truth--They Fear Democracy

The judicial imposition of the Culture of Death will forever remain one
of the great tragedies of American history. Abortion on demand was not
made legal in this nation by an act of the people through their elected
representatives, nor was it forced by a referendum or popular vote. To
the contrary, abortion was legalized in all fifty states only when the
United States Supreme Court invented a constitutional right to abortion
and imposed its will upon the people of the United States. This arrogant
act, rightly defined as the judicial usurpation of the democratic
process, is not only foreign to the intention of our Constitutional
founders, it is also subversive of the very idea of democracy itself.
Now, in a shocking development, the abortion rights movement has
published an absolute admission of its anti-democratic ideology. "What
If Roe Fell?" is a major report just released by the Center for
Reproductive Rights. The report features a state-by-state analysis of
how state governments would respond to an overturn of Roe v. Wade. The
report offers a fascinating look into the world of state legislation,
and an even more fascinating look into the mentality of the Culture of
Death.

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Formerly know as the Center for Reproductive Law and Policy, the Center
for Reproductive Rights claims to be "the leading legal advocacy
organization dedicated to promoting and defending women's reproductive
rights worldwide." The Center begins its report with this ominous
warning: "There is perhaps no political issue more volatile in the
United States than abortion, no Supreme Court ruling subject to such a
well-organized and well-funded attack as Roe v. Wade. Since it was
decided in 1973, Roe has been under constant attack. Since 1995 alone,
state legislatures have enacted 380 measures restricting abortion, and
in November 2003, Congress passed the first-ever federal ban on abortion
procedures. Anti-choice forces are counting on new appointments to the
Supreme Court in the next few years to totally overturn Roe." Having
established that scenario, the Center then moved to consider how each
state would respond to Roe's overturn.

Of course, a Supreme Court decision overturning Roe v. Wade would not in
itself bring abortion to an end in all states. As the report indicates,
"a reversal of Roe would remove federal constitutional protection for a
woman's right to choose and give the states the power to set abortion
policy." State-imposed limitations could run the gamut from mild
measures dealing only with procedural matters to outright bans on
abortion under most circumstances. The Center also warns that Congress
might also move to ban abortions if Roe is overturned.

More likely, the Center suggests that the overturning of Roe "would
result in a patchwork of rights in which women seeking abortions would
be strongly protected in some states and completely denied the right in
others, with different levels of protection in between."

Nancy Northup, the Center's president, told the Associated Press, "The
building blocks are already in place to recriminalize abortion."

The report makes for fascinating reading. According to their analysis,
"only 20 states would likely protect women against the enforcement of
abortion bans." These states have adequate legal protections in place,
without reference to Roe v. Wade. Beyond this, these states are also
likely to have legislatures friendly to abortion rights and resistant to
any curtailment of abortion access.

Of course, this leaves thirty states where, according to the Center's
analysis, abortion rights are likely to be curtailed or eliminated. Some
of these states have pre-Roe abortion bans that could be revived in the
event Roe v. Wade is overturned. Beyond this, several of these states
have legislatures or governors--or both--that are opposed to abortion
and would be expected to act accordingly in the event the
judicially-imposed right to abortion falls. As Northup stated in a press
release released by the Center for Reproductive Rights, "Anyone who
thinks abortion will still be legal in most states across this country
after a Roe reversal hasn't been paying attention. This is a wake-up
call to women and men who support the right to have an abortion--in a
relatively short period of time, women in more than half the country are
in jeopardy of losing their right to choose."

The Center identifies twenty-one states that are "high risk" for
enacting laws against abortion. These states include Alabama, Arkansas,
Colorado, Delaware, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Mississippi,
Missouri, Nebraska, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Rhode
Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, Virginia, and
Wisconsin. At "middle risk" are the states of Arizona, Georgia, Idaho,
Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, New Hampshire, and Pennsylvania. At
lower risk, with abortion rights "likely protected," are Alaska,
California, Connecticut, Florida, Hawaii, Maine, Maryland,
Massachusetts, Minnesota, Montana, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New
York, Oregon, Tennessee, Vermont, Washington, West Virginia, and
Wyoming.

Going beyond a state-by-state analysis, the report suggests possible
scenarios for the curtailment of abortion rights in various states.
"Imagine that your sister is living in Alabama and has an appointment to
obtain a first trimester abortion. Would she be able to get it? No.
State officials could begin immediately to enforce Alabama's pre-Roe
abortion ban that remains on the books and has never been enjoined by a
court. If you live in a state such as Mississippi, Michigan, or Rhode
Island, "where pre-Roe abortion bans have been blocked since shortly
after the Roe decision," you are likely to find that state officials
will "rush to court to lift the injunctions and begin enforcing the
laws." The report goes on to suggest that these state officials would
probably succeed in their efforts.

The report also contemplated a post-Roe scenario in the state of
Nebraska. If your daughter lives in Nebraska, and the legislature is in
session, she had better hurry to get an abortion, the report urges.
"Nebraska has no ban on the books, but the legislature has never met an
abortion restriction it didn't like." Nebraska has already adopted a
statute deploring the destruction of unborn human life in Nebraska, "and
is poised to enact a new ban on abortion if Roe is overturned."

"What If Roe Fell?" offers abortion supporters a comforting analysis
when looking at states like California, which has enacted both
constitutional and statutory protections for abortion. But the report
reflects absolute panic in dealing with states like Kentucky, Indiana,
and Ohio. Ohio, for example, has elected both a pro-life legislative
majority and a pro-life governor. Therefore, Ohio "is likely to ban
abortion if Roe is overturned."

In the press materials released by the Center for Reproductive Rights,
several legislative strategies are targeted for opposition. These
include outright bans on abortion procedures, such as the Partial Birth
Abortion Ban Act of 2003. Other laws intended to restrict abortion
include parental notification laws that would, according to the Center,
"restrict a minor's access to abortion." Beyond this, some states have
adopted legislation requiring mandatory delays and counseling for women
seeking abortions. Other measures, known as "TRAP laws," seek to impose
"targeted regulations on abortion providers." These laws cover matters
ranging from medical safety statutes to reporting requirements.
According to the Center, "TRAP laws are designed to effectively put the
abortion facility out of business."

The Center for Reproductive Rights spends most of its time combating
these legislative strategies and contesting such laws in court. This new
report is further proof that it is the Roe v. Wade decision that
provides abortion-rights advocates with cover and protection.

This report is nothing less than an unconditional admission that
abortion rights exist in this country by mere judicial fiat and not by
the will of the people. This conclusion--forced by the evidence and now
formalized in this report--calls into question the very viability of the
American experiment. Over thirty years after the U.S. Supreme Court
handed down the Roe v. Wade decision, the people of this nation are
still not trusted to settle the question of abortion by democratic
means. Why? Because, as this report makes transparently clear, the
American people would--at least in a majority of states--move to limit a
woman's "right" to an abortion.

Hadley Arkes, Edward Ney Professor of American Institutions at Amherst
College, insists that, in the founders' constitutional vision, "the
restraint of judges was bound up in the morality of a democratic
regime."

Without this restraint, judges would be turned into "legislators in
robes," exercising a trumping power. These robed "legislators" would not
be elected to office, and they would not "have to suffer the torments of
running for reelection."

With this in mind, Professor Arkes, one of America's leading experts on
constitutional law, provides an eloquent warning of an overly-ambitious
and unrestrained judiciary. "This kind of power, exercised by unelected
judges, had been understood from the beginning as a power that was
deeply problematic in a republic, in a government that rested on the
consent of the governed. The sense of propriety, arising from the
character of the regime, was that judges in a democracy should be
obliged then to work under a distinct discipline that would confine
their judgments and the reach of their power."

Arkes points to the "new jurisprudence" represented now in our federal
courts. This new jurisprudence "reaches its completion by detaching
itself from every premise necessary to the notion of lawfulness. It
rejects the logic of natural rights; it denies that any of us has rights
of intrinsic dignity because it denies that there is any such intrinsic
dignity attaching to any human being, as the subject and object of the
law."

The Center for Reproductive Rights has provided us with an analysis that
damns their own cause and reveals their own weakness. The only important
question left remaining is this: How long will Americans accept the
undemocratic judicial imposition of abortion on demand?

____________________________________

R. Albert Mohler, Jr. is president of The Southern Baptist Theological
Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky.  For more articles and resources by
Dr. Mohler, and for information on The Albert Mohler Program, a daily
national radio program broadcast on the Salem Radio Network, go to
www.albertmohler.com.  For information on The Southern Baptist
Theological Seminary, go to www.sbts.edu.  Send feedback to
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


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