tbburg
NAXJA Forum User
- Location
- Scottsdale AZ
So I've been thinking recently about the legality of abortion in the face of universal medical care.
In the Roe-v-Wade decision the Court ruled that a right to privacy under the due process clause of the 14th Amendment extended to a woman's decision to have an abortion.
OK, good enough. (for the time and place anyway,..) Fast forward 40 years, and now we're gearing up for government supplied medical care. Our medical records will now be government records.
It would seem that our right to privacy in our personal medical decisions is overridden by the government need to account for the medical care provided.
Now, the court didn't say,"She has a right to an abortion, so shut up and leave her alone." It said, "She has a right to privacy, so quit being nosy."
So where does it leave the right to privacy in these matters when there's a government bureaucracy waiting to collect the paperwork?
In the Roe-v-Wade decision the Court ruled that a right to privacy under the due process clause of the 14th Amendment extended to a woman's decision to have an abortion.
OK, good enough. (for the time and place anyway,..) Fast forward 40 years, and now we're gearing up for government supplied medical care. Our medical records will now be government records.
It would seem that our right to privacy in our personal medical decisions is overridden by the government need to account for the medical care provided.
Now, the court didn't say,"She has a right to an abortion, so shut up and leave her alone." It said, "She has a right to privacy, so quit being nosy."
So where does it leave the right to privacy in these matters when there's a government bureaucracy waiting to collect the paperwork?