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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]There is no constitutional basis for abortion. [/quote] There was for 50 years. Easy come, easy go. What is good enough for abortion is good enough for ammo.[/quote] Why didn’t the founders mention abortion? Because they thought killing unborn babies was inhumane. SCOTUS made the correct decision. Let the states make their own laws. No more lies about the constitution and abortion. It is absolutely not a constitutional right. [/quote] That's absolutely and completely false. During the Founders time abortions were common, legal and non-controversial up until the moment of "quickening" which is where the mother could feel the baby move. Basically abortion wasn't mentioned because it WAS common and non-controversial, and taken for granted. They never foresaw that the nation would backslide on abortion.[/quote] You are spreading disinformation. https://wng.org/sift/did-colonial-america-have-abortions-yes-but-1617409251[/quote] Ahahahahahahahahahahahaha!!!! :D :D :D :D :D Omhg I am dying "based on Biblical truth?" Dear, thank you. I so needed a laugh today![/quote] An excerpt from Abortion Rites: A Social History of Abortion in America American culture, during the time we are discussing, was based on the Bible. The Christian Bible. I take it you are not someone who understands history in even the most simple and superficial terms. Editor-in-chief of WORLD. Dean, World Journalism Institute. Senior Fellow, Acton Institute. Susan and I have been married for 44 years. Four sons, four daughters-in-law, five grandchildren. Formal education: B.A. from Yale University in 1971, Ph.D. in American Culture from the University of Michigan in 1976. Real education: Grew up in Judaism, became an atheist and a communist, and then (purely through God's grace) a Christian in 1976. I read the excerpt and it is very interesting. It’s clear the author has well sourced historical facts in his book. Do you deny that religion was not dominant at this point in the history of America? If you do, please explain why. [/quote]
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