Quote:
Originally Posted by 69in2it69
Thank you for a thoughtful and intelligent reply, it's exactly what I had hoped to promote. But, the SC is part of the judicial arm of the federal government, so does that mean that ultimately the federal intrepretation can negate any state choice?
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Only if those "choices" are enumerated in the Constitution. I'm not trying to be a smart ass but it's all right there in the Constitution for the SC to say and if we the people don't like a SC decision, we can amend the Constitution like we have done 27 times before and "theoretically" there is noting the SC can do about that.
If Roe is overturned and returned to the states and 38 states get together and say "we want Roe to be the law of the land", that is the end of the SC's authority. The founding fathers were brilliant in that they seemed to cover all the bases. No one branch has "Ultimate" authority. Ultimate authority rests with the people "if we can keep it", if we believe it.
And thanks for the compliment.