1. The federal government only has specific and enumerated powers.
Where in the U.S. Constitution does the federal government have the power to tell states that they cannot regulate abortions?
2. How did this (imaginary) “Abortion Industry Protection Clause” get added in 1973?
3. Under the doctrine of stare decisis, what other unconstitutional powers do federal officials get to keep?
4. Why do the same liberal activists who treat stare decisis as sacred in abortion cases ignore it when it doesn’t suit their political purposes, like in gun-grab cases?
5. How do state governors have unilateral power to control so many aspects of our lives to “protect us” from COVID (like forced vaccinations,
closing private businesses, banning travel) — but state legislatures (somehow) can’t regulate abortion?
6. How do states have the power to regulate almost every industry doing business in their states — except the abortion industry?
7. The Supreme Court held that states have the power to ban singing in church during COVID. But states (somehow) can’t regulate the abortion industry?
Bottom Line:
Whether you support or oppose abortion rights, states—not the federal government—have the power to regulate the abortion industry.
Just like states—not the federal government—have the power to regulate vaccinations of private businesses and people.
If you don’t like vaccine mandates, move to Florida.
If you don’t like abortion restrictions, move to California.
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1. Does this 7-day quarantine of American citizens returning to the United States, enforced with fines and penalties, apply to government officials and the reporters who travel with them?
2. Does it apply to illegal economic migrants flooding across our Southern Border?