You use that a lot. Must be your fav...
There is so much controversy and division between pro choice and pro life advocates.Why do pro choice have the right to force their beliefs on pro life advocates?
Why can't individuals be left to make their own decision about this ? Why do pro lifers have the need to force their beliefs on pro choice believers ? Originally Posted by VitaMan
The government doesn’t but that doesn’t stop them from legislating everything. I am fine with states choosing their on path. Put it on the ballot and vote. I am a reasonable man realize I have a different belief pattern than other people, I have my own beliefs and someone else has theirs and that’s fine Originally Posted by texasgentleman1Why do states have to vote on it....how about every pregnant woman has an individual vote concerning her body.
Why does the government have the right to legislate morality?It doesn't. The Supreme Court is not a Legislative body that's why Abortion is left up to individual States now. Some States will allow Abortion others won't. It's not complicated.
You don’t want an abortion, don’t get one. Originally Posted by Yssup Rider
There is so much controversy and division between pro choice and pro life advocates.
Why can't individuals be left to make their own decision about this ? Why do pro lifers have the need to force their beliefs on pro choice believers ? Originally Posted by VitaMan
I am a Constitutionalist/ Textualist, so I understand the SC reasoning that had nothing to do with religion but the Constitution.
Having said that, if and when I get a chance to vote on an abortion law here in the state of Florida, I would vote on a 15 week option and if rape and incest can be proven, they should be exceptions. That is my personal opinion.
So it is possible to see and agree with what the court did but chose to have a different view in the state you live in.
These people that want to talk about abolishing the SC, what would you have as a legal process if you did? State courts making all decisions based on nothing more than the feelings of the people in each state with no SC to tell a state "you can't do that" because the Constitution forbids it whether the majority wants it or not.
People seem to forget that the Constitution is there to protect minority rights from the majority. Majority rule is not an absolute and we should be damned thankful we have such a document governing us. Originally Posted by HedonistForever
As most of the frequent posters in the forum are older right wingers over 50, this is appropriate reading material for the forum.
The only demographic in America that reliably opposes abortion access is men over the age of 50, according to an analysis of data from Gallup's annual survey on abortion.
While pluralities of both men and women in the aggregate expressed support for abortion, men were almost evenly split down the line. Forty-eight percent of men surveyed said they identify as "pro-choice," while 47% said they identify as "pro-life."
During the past 20 years, men over the age of 50 are the only group with a relatively steady increase in "pro-life" identification (up 11 percentage points) and a decline in "pro-choice" identification (down 6 percentage points) with numbers declining below 50%.
Age is a significant factor: the only age demographic that has a greater percentage of individuals who identified as "pro-life" as over "pro-choice."
When it comes to legal abortion under any circumstance, older men are the least supportive.
While the percentage of young men, young women, and older women in support of abortion under any circumstance has steadily grown over time, the percentage of men over 50 who support such abortion rights is stagnant — although the greatest percentage of support of legal abortion under certain situations came from older men.
Setting aside self-descriptions, overall support for abortion under certain or any conditions is significant and steady. In the three years from 2020 to 2022, on average 79% of men and 82% of women aged 18 to 49 as well as 82% of men and 81% of women 50 and up support abortion in at least some condition.
Younger women from the ages of 18 to 49 reported the largest margin of difference (26 percentage points) between being "pro-choice" and "pro-life".
Support for "pro-choice" views among younger women in particular are 10 percentage points higher than they were two years ago.
Women over the age of 50 showed the most stability in their stance on abortion, but over the past three years have been become majority "pro-choice".
But while the margin of difference between the two camps in this demographic group are not as stark as its younger counterpart, people who self-describe as "pro-life" steady declined beginning in 2020, while "pro-choice" numbers went up.
Younger men, from the ages of 18 to 49, have been generally steady in their abortion-related beliefs, of late.
Although a greater share of men (51%) in this demographic said they are "pro-choice," a close 45% reported that they identify as "pro-life." That is the smallest margin between the two identifiers reported by any of the four demographic groups in the survey. Originally Posted by VitaMan
I wonder if the results of this poll correlate with christian/religious beliefs. Do younger people who skew pro choice also skew non religious? Originally Posted by txdot-guy