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  • They also want to be able to support their families by making money through the Obsidian application, which could be more difficult in an open source environment.

    This is the only one that seems really legit to me. That and the other commenter that said open source is more work, which is probably true, and if you're not getting benefit it could be a net loss.

  • Both pro-life and pro-choice are sanitized descriptions of the beliefs they refer to. Both movements contain people that believe completely insane things on the topic, like that women or doctors should be imprisoned or worse for making a certain difficult health choice, or that unborn children aren't really people until they're on a particular side of their mother's vagina.

  • If SCOTUS were insistent (and consistent) that only the federal government had the power to regulate interstate commerce, yet this Texas jurisdiction is trying to do just that, wouldn't that logically be in violation of the Commerce Clause and SCOTUS would have to strike down?

    I was arguing that SCOTUS isn't consistent on this, but pretend they were.

  • That is not even close to what the Dobbs decision ruled. What are you talking about?

    Dobbs just said basically that the Constitution does not imply a fundamental right to an abortion (which is what Roe said). That's it. Congress is still free to pass laws about abortion, and it could try to preempt states prohibiting it.

    Not to mention the Commerce Clause reserves the power to regulate interstate commerce to the federal government, which this Texas ordinance doesn't explicitly violate, but comes awfully close and will probably be challenged on those grounds.

  • People always say this, but it's not as strong of an argument as they think it is. Religious conservative people, especially Christians, give to charity quite a lot, actually. They just hear that argument and think, "this person doesn't know what they're talking about, we obvious do care about the already born, I can comfortably dismiss everything they say now."

  • Honestly, yes. The nominal reason we give states federal money for highways that there's a benefit to other states from one state having highways passing through it. If you're not going to non-selectively give use of your highways, you're not universally benefiting your neighboring states, so you shouldn't get the money.

    Now, the actual reason we take tax money from people in one state, give it to the federal government, just to have the it dish the money back out to the states is so the federal government gets a bunch of leverage over the states. It's not actually efficient to collect a bunch of money, which costs money, and then give most of it back, which also costs money. It's about control.

  • They do care about precedent, usually too much in my opinion. There have been many cases in the last few years brought to SCOTUS seeking the overturning of the doctrine of Qualified Immunity, but SCOTUS has in all cases either not taken them up or not ruled on that issue. They basically keep saying, "we've already ruled on this, we won't touch it unless Congress changes the law in some way." Dobbs was like the one issue SCOTUS has actually overturned a previous opinion on in recent years.

  • Kavanaugh was never that extreme. He's the squishiest of the 3 Trump nominees by far. Gorsuch is way more consistent, actually in a good way much of the time, like when he wrote the majority opinion prohibiting certain discrimination against gay and trans people using a originalist textualist approach.

  • Something something it's not commerce because reasons.

    Nevermind that the Commerce Clause has been cited to give the federal government authority to prohibit activities that are neither commerce nor inter-state, such as growing cannabis for personal use on your own property.

    Schroedinger's commerce. It's commerce only when it's convenient for prohibitionists.

  • Interestingly something like 41% of women identify as pro-life. I know you and the person you were responding to probably wouldn't, but my point is just that there are a lot of women who would see their conservative male partner vote for anti-abortion candidates and not be bothered at all. Not because they're rationalizing it, but because they don't see it as a negative in the first place.

  • I've run in largely Christian circles for most of my life, and that's how the conservative Christians I know have been talking about communism as long as I can remember, that its most important feature is that it's atheistic. I don't think it's actually indicative of any change or advancement of their position. Also, I'm pretty sure the GOP is technically less Christian now than it's ever been.