The precedent for the right to travel dates back only to 1868, so the Supreme Court should have no problem overturning it.
Given some of the reasoning in the opinion, Brown v. Board of Education should be at risk, but I think in reality, they have gone as far as they are going to go. Could be 50 years away from restoring Roe.
I think it's likely that Obergefell and Griswold will be overturned too.
What about Loving?
https://www.wistv.com/2022/06/24/su...bortions. Copyright 2022 The Associated Press.By The Associated Press and MARK SHERMAN
Published: Jun. 24, 2022 at 10:13 AM EDT|Updated: 23 minutes ago
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court has ended the nation’s constitutional protections for abortion that had been in place nearly 50 years in a decision by its conservative majority to overturn Roe v. Wade. Friday’s outcome is expected to lead to abortion bans in roughly half the states. The decision, unthinkable just a few years ago, was the culmination of decades of efforts by abortion opponents, made possible by an emboldened right side of the court that has been fortified by three appointees of former President Donald Trump. Both sides predicted the fight over abortion would continue, in state capitals and in Washington, and Justice Clarence Thomas, part of Friday’s majority, called on the court to overturn other high court rulings protecting same-sex marriage, gay sex and the use of contraceptives.
West Virginia’s lone clinic performing abortions stopped after Friday’s decision.
The headline on this should be "Women's status as second class citizens reaffirmed"The article @GenMarshall linked:
Supreme Court overturns Roe v. Wade; states can ban abortion
https://www.wistv.com/2022/06/24/supreme-court-overturns-roe-v-wade-allowing-states-ban-abortions/#:~:text=WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. Supreme Court on,to ban abortions. Copyright 2022 The Associated Press.
Someone else noted, it seems unlikely that Clarence Thomas will detract from the constitutional protections for his own marriage. Then again, he strikes me like the kind of person who would do exactly that.
NY Times said:Justice Clarence Thomas, in his concurring opinion overturning Roe v. Wade, laid out a vision that prompted concerns about what other rights could disappear: The same rationale that the Supreme Court used to declare there was no right to abortion, he said, should also be used to overturn cases establishing rights to contraception, same-sex consensual relations and same-sex marriage.
NY Times said:[Justice Thomas] took aim at three other landmark cases that relied on that same legal reasoning: Griswold v. Connecticut, a 1965 decision that declared married couples had a right to contraception; Lawrence v. Texas, a 2003 case invalidating sodomy laws and making same-sex sexual activity legal across the country; and Obergefell v. Hodges, the 2015 case establishing the right of gay couples to marry.
NY Times said:Justice Thomas wrote that the court “should reconsider” all three decisions, saying it had a duty to “correct the error” established in those precedents. Then, he said, after “overruling these demonstrably erroneous decisions, the question would remain whether other constitutional provisions” protected the rights they established.
Since corporations are people too, can a state now ban the failure to incorporate once there is conception of a corporation?
Generally, I agree with the gist of your post. Couple points of order...The headline on this should be "Women's status as second class citizens reaffirmed"
Women in the US no longer have control on what happens inside her body.And the Court isn't finished, according to defects Chief Justice Clarence Thomas. Gay marriage, interracial marriage, over the counter contraceptives decriminalization of homosexuality are now on the table.
I believe Loving was not based on "substantive due process" like those decisions listed. Still, rather convenient for himselfI notice that Thomas doesn't want to have a tilt at the precedents legalising mixed-race marriages. Now why would that be, do you think?