I hear you. “Our” guy isn’t talking about the fringy fringe though, and a hypothetical future political party that doesn’t currently even have a seat in our parliament, but his current (actual) opposition.Yep, pretty much what we said. "Roe v. Wade is settled law. It's been in place for half a century. A Constitutional right. The Supreme Court will never go back on it, any more than it would go back on racial segregation. And nobody but a handful of bible-beating hillbillies want it to."
Just like the "war to end war."
Having checked the tape, I can report that Trudeau didn’t actually say Canadian conservative leaders were as big a threat to women’s rights as the rescinding of Roe v. Wade. He said they’re a bigger threat.
“It’s not that Roe couldn’t happen in Canada,” Trudeau told reporters in Caraquet, N.B. “It’s that it’s more likely to happen in Canada.”
Anyway, yes anything can happen in the realm of the possible, but not necessarily probable, and here we are.
Chris Selley: Trudeau's abortion shtick reaches new lows — National Post
'It’s not that Roe couldn’t happen in Canada,' said Trudeau. 'It’s that it’s more likely to happen in Canada'
apple.news
I think we might be saying the same thing.Ron, I'm not saying what will happen. What I am saying is that the Tories, the Libs, and every damn body else in politics will turn on a dime if they think it'll get them elected.
I think our current Tories don’t need to touch this settled bogeyman argument to get elected, but some future government might.I do hope you're not so naive as to think a politician gives a shit less about Canadian women. Hell, the definition of "politician" is "a person who would cheerfully wade knee-deep through the blood of their own children to obtain or retain the smallest scrap of power."
(The Tories did go down this week, and both the Bloc & NDP went up, but the Libs and Greens are unchanged)