Here's why the Supreme Court's abortion ruling is wrong
Fox News
The decision by the Supreme Court on Friday to overturn Roe v. Wade views pregnant women with contempt. It's a disaster for women and all Americans.
Sherry F. Colb is C.S. Wong Professor of Law at Cornell Law School
The Constitution does not contain the word "Internet," but the Supreme Court, in Reno v. ACLU, rightly construed the First Amendment to protect online speech. To similar effect, the Supreme Court long ago ruled, in Rochin v. California, that the government violates the Fourteenth Amendment Due Process Clause when it "shocks the conscience" by inducing a criminal suspect to vomit narcotics that he allegedly swallowed, even though the Constitution does not contain guidance on the practice and we have no history of prohibiting the use of emetics by government or private individuals.