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by invokestatic
1657 days ago
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It's interesting you bring up both commerce clause and abortion as I'm currently taking a constitutional law class covering both issues. The commerce clause did wildly expand through the 20th century, but I just want to point out that US v Lopez substantially cut back Congress' Commerce power. It laid out clear restrictions to what and when Congress has the power to regulate interstate commerce. Further cases like NFIB v Sebelius (Obamacare) also cut down on commerce power. The difference I see with abortion is that the SCOTUS held in Roe v Wade that women have an affirmative right to an abortion under substantive due process of the 14th amendment. If the government coerced healthcare providers to stop providing abortions, this would be a direct infringement on a right protected by the constitution. Conversely, there is no constitutional right to /not/ get a vaccine. Of course, the demographics of the court has changed, so it's very possible the SC will rule that not getting vaccinated is also a constitutional right conferred by substantive due process. |
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> Conversely, there is no constitutional right to /not/ get a vaccine
Doesn't it need to be framed as the government having the right to apply a medical treatment to me against my will?
I have a constitutional right to bare arms but presumably the federal government can decry that I do not have the right in certain places. Or is that not an affirmative right.
[EDIT] It appears that is what US v Lopez is about (federal restriction of guns near schools)
[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wickard_v._Filburn