Friday, July 19, 2019
The Debate Over Roe v. Wade :: abortion argumentative persuasive argument
      The Debate Over Roe v. Wade                   Many critics of the Roe v Wade  resolution dispute that the Supreme     Court's decision was mistaken because, as said by Robert Bork, "the right     to abort, whatever one thinks of it, is not to be found in the     Constitution".  Consequently, they say the court did not translate  the     Constitution at all in making their influential mark on the citizens of  the     United States.  Ronald Dworkin, on the other hand holds a different     perspective of this situation.  He tends to believe that although  the     technical terminology of abortion was not stated in the Constitution, the     simple right of privacy, which in his mentality, deals with termination  of     a pregnancy.                   Some critics of the decision  regarding Roe v Wade feel that the     court is, in a sense, legalizing murder.  Most refined critics on the  other     hand believe that the Court's decision on this issue was indeed wrong,  but     for different reasons.  Like Bork, many feel that the Court had no right  to     interpret the binding piece of our country, the Constitution.  Since  the     word "abortion" is not used in the Constitution, right-wing lawyer Bork     states " Unfortunately, in the entire opinion there is not one line of     explanation, not one sentence that qualifies as a legal argument ".   (pg,     103, Bork)  He continues to say  " It is unlikely that it ever  will,     because the right to abort, whatever one thinks of it, is not found in  the     Constitution ". (Pg, 103, Bork)                   Dworkin, distinguished author of  the book titled Life's Dominion,     feels differently than the critics described above.  He deems that  the     court does in fact have the right to interpret the Constitution.   Dworkin     agrees with Justice Blackmun's opinion in this great philosophical issue.     Blackmun feels that " a pregnant woman has a specific constitutional  right     to privacy in matters of procreation, and that this general right  includes     a right to an abortion if she and her doctor decide upon it". (pg. 105,     Blackmun)                   In 1965, another case regarding  the right of privacy made a lasting     and influential mark as well.  In Griswold v. Connecticut the Court  decided     that a state does not have the right to prohibit the sale of  contraceptives.  					    
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