Abortion  Is NOT Legal!
The American View
God – Family – Republic 
v      The following article by Herbert W. Titus, JD, and  Christine Ross first appeared in the May/June ‘99 issue of “Life Advocate”  magazine.
The mainstream media tell us that the Supreme Court  legalized abortion with its Roe v. Wade decision in 1973. The media also tell us  that there is nothing we can do about it because Roe v. Wade is the “law of the  land.”
Nothing could be further from the truth. Abortion is not  legal in America! Recognition of this fact is the first step for the pro-life  movement in its campaign to turn back the murderous scourge on innocent babies.  Indeed, heart disease (738,781 deaths per year) is not the number one cause of  death in the United States - abortion is, at well over a million deaths per  year.
Article VI of our nation’s founding document declares  that “[t]his Constitution, and the laws of the United States.. .made in  pursuance thereof; and all treaties…made…under the authority of the United  States shall be the supreme law of the land.”
What is clearly missing from this Constitutional list of  supreme laws is a court opinion. This was not an oversight. Our Constitution’s  writers knew that a court opinion could never be law; much less the supreme law  of the land. This is especially true if that court opinion contradicted the  Constitution itself.
As can be plainly seen from the Constitutional text, a  statute enacted by Congress is the supreme law of the land only if made  “pursuant to” (in conformity with) the Constitution. If a statute passed by the  people’s representatives is not law unless it conforms to the Constitution, then  how can a court opinion decided by unelected judges be given a higher  status?
When Chief Justice John Marshall established judicial  review-the right of the court to review a statute to see if it conformed to the  Constitution-he said that the written Constitution was just as binding on the  courts as it was on Congress. Marshall, then, did not establish the supremacy of  judges over the Constitution-but the supremacy of the Constitution over  Congress, the President and the courts.
Our Founding Fathers resoundingly rejected the idea of  judicial supremacy. They did not empower judges to usurp a power, rightfully  belonging to the people and thereby become a law unto themselves. That is why  they put the Constitution in writing-so that the original founding laws and  principles would not be mistaken or forgotten. In this way they believed that  the Constitution would become the fixed law of the land.
Just a little more than 100 years ago, the American  people knew that Supreme Court opinions did not become the law for the whole  country, but bound only the parties to the case. That is why Abraham Lincoln  rejected the Supreme Court’s decision in the infamous Dred Scott case. Lincoln  knew that even though the Court declared-in the name of the Constitution that  black people had no rights that white people were bound to respect, that ruling  was not the law of the land.
What has happened to America since the days of  Lincoln?
Things began to change when Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.,  ascended to the Supreme Court. He introduced the idea that law changed with  changing times, and that it was the business of judges to make the necessary  changes.
Holmes’s evolutionary philosophy of law soon transformed  the Constitution from a document of fixed rules and principles to one reflecting  the latest court pronouncements. In this way, the judges became the nation’s  supreme lawmakers, displacing the Congress and legislatures on matters ranging  from abortion to pornography.
But judges have no right to make law. Their job is to  discover the law, state it and apply it. Their role is like that of an engineer  who designs a bridge according to the discovered laws of the natural world, not  according to “laws” that he has made up.
If an engineer should design a bridge contrary to  natural law, there is no question that the government officials who employed  that engineer would reject his design. So it should be with a court opinion. If  it is contrary to the Constitution, then the president, the Congress and the  fifty states’ governors and legislators should reject that  opinion.
This is what their oath of office demands. The president  takes an oath to “preserve, protect and defend the Constitution,” not Supreme  Court opinions. Further, Article II, Section 3 states that the president is  duty-bound to “take care that the laws be faithfully executed.” Any court  opinion that is contrary to the Constitution is, by definition, not law.  Therefore, the president must not enforce it.
That was what President Lincoln did with the Dred Scott  decision. He refused to enforce it as the law of the land.
That is what presidents today should do about Roe v.  Wade. Pursuant to his Constitutional oath, the president should issue a  proclamation declaring Roe v. Wade to be illegal, and declaring that the human  fetus is a person entitled to the full protection of the right to life by the  states.
At the state and local level, the people should insist  that the laws that are still on the books be enforced against abortionists. In  Virginia, for example, abortion is still a Class 4 felony. While other Virginia  statutes have incorporated the Supreme Court’s ruling in Roe v. Wade, those  statutes are unconstitutional. They violate Article 1, Section 1 of the Virginia  Bill of Rights which denies to the state legislature or any other civil  authority any power to deprive the state’s “posterity” (the yet-to-be-born) of  their “inherent” rights to “life, liberty, and property.”
In Virginia, then, pro-lifers do not have to change the  state law to protect innocent life. They don’t have to look to the president or  Congress for action. They don’t have to elect a pro-life governor or state  attorney general. They can act now, petitioning their local Commonwealth’s  Attorney to prosecute abortionists under the state law and defend the right to  life of the preborn under the state Constitution. And if the Commonwealth’s  Attorney chooses not to prosecute, then the people can vote him out of office  and elect another who will do his prosecutorial duty consistent with his  Constitutional oath.
A petition drive has already begun in Virginia. The  governor and the attorney general have been petitioned to speak out, urging the  Commonwealths’ Attorneys to prosecute the abortionists. While neither office has  the authority to command such prosecutions, such a statement would have a  profound moral impact. Some local prosecutors have also been petitioned to take  action now.
As concerned citizens, it is our duty to petition the  Commonwealth’s Attorneys to make decisions according to what the Constitution  demands, and not according to what the Supreme Court decides. And it is our  further duty to continue to seek justice until we receive it.
Gill  Rapoza
Veritas Vos  Liberabit

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