kenberg, on 2023-March-16, 08:52, said:
I will give my own take on this. We have state prisons because there are state laws and we have federal prisons because there are federal laws. Most people accept that some matters should be dealt with by state law or county law or such, and other matters should be dealt with at the federal level. When I was in high school, class of 56, there was a great deal of discussion about federal aid to education. The worry was that if the feds started funding education they would also exert control over the curriculum. Views change as to which should be federal and which should be state-funded and controlled.
So the question could be: When we look at other areas of regulation, is abortion akin to other federally regulated matters or more akin to other state regulated matters? My legal knowledge is too scant for me to confidently answer this. I think that before Roe v Wade abortion was treated as suitable for state regulation rather than federal, but as mentioned above, views change. As I mentioned earlier, a problem with having it be federal is that it could then go either way. Maybe a woman could then get an abortion in any state. but also maybe she could then get an abortion in no state.
Thank you for your comment. I like your take on this. There is no doubt a feferal law could go either wsy. At least there would be consistency. With states, an action could be legal in one state and a crime in another.
This is one of the brilliancies of the Constitution in that it made federal law superior to state laws so that obvious unconstitutional laws or state laws based on biases of states could be rectified federally.