The narrative that the rich specifically support policies with the intent of decreasing social mobility does not seem to be very well supported by evidence in the US, in my opinion. The rich routinely support policies with the intent of diminishing their tax burden, or of promoting an idealized notion of 'hard work and independence,' that have the net effect of decreasing social mobility. But the average American upper class citizen, even the average American millionaire or multimillionaire, is not Hoggish Greedly and doesn't really seem to have have any specific desire to stratify American society as such.
They just can't be bothered to lift a finger to prevent it from happening.
Now, I can see the rich having less incentive than you'd expect to resist abortion bans. Because they're more likely to be able to afford 'medical tourism' that leads them to places where a woman's vagina is not considered government property, be they states that lack abortion bans, or be they other countries that likewise allow it.
But that doesn't actually translate into changing their opinion on whether abortion should, or should not, be legal. It just affects how much effort they put into acting on their opinion.
Is Governor Kasich prepared to commit the state of Ohio to paying for the massive, intensive, elaborate care required to ensure that a premature baby born at 21.5 weeks survives and grows up healthy?Grumman wrote:He's not the crazy one. What's both insane and unethical is the inability to even comprehend why pro-life people might hold the position they do. If a baby can be born at 21 weeks, 5 days and grow up to be a healthy adult, it is neither insane or unethical to set the date at which a parent can have their healthy child killed on a whim before that date.The Romulan Republic wrote:Just remember- John Kasich is what passes for a sane, ethical Republican in national American politics.
Let that sink in.
Because it's damned sure that a lot of Ohioan parents won't be able to pay for it themselves, especially with Trump and the congressional Republicans likely to do their best to nuke Obamacare.
Would you mind expanding on your reasoning?Grumman wrote:Good. Roe vs. Wade shouldn't provide any abortion protection at all, because the logic that justifies the decision is complete nonsense. You want abortion to be legal? Do it properly, instead of building your house on a foundation of bullshit.GrandMasterTerwynn wrote:If enough states pass twenty week bans, and enough of them survive legal challenges, then the abortion protection offered by Roe vs. Wade becomes fatally compromised.