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12/6/2021

This week’s curation at RealClear’s American Civics portal centers around the Supreme Court case of Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization, which concerns the constitutionality of a 2018 Mississippi state law that prohibits abortion after the first 15 weeks of pregnancy. The Court’s pivotal decision, which will be announced in the summer of 2022, could either affirm or overturn the controversial cases of Roe v. Wade (1973) and Planned Parenthood v. Casey (1992) and have wide-ranging effects across the nation. As Mark Sherman of the Associated Press reported prior to last week’s hearings, “Both sides are telling the Supreme Court there’s no middle ground in Wednesday’s showdown over abortion. The justices can either reaffirm the constitutional right to an abortion or wipe it away altogether.”

At NPR, Nina Totenberg covers the first day of oral arguments, noting that the Republican-appointed majority fell into “two camps.” “In one were Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito and Gorsuch apparently willing to reverse Roe and perhaps other decisions based on a right to privacy. And in the other camp, the court's other three conservatives” – Chief Justice Roberts and Justices Kavanaugh and Barrett – seemed more “reluctant” to overturn precedent on abortion jurisprudence.

Adam M. Carrington gives five reasons at the Washington Examiner why the Court should overturn Roe and Casey. “Roe’s wreckage goes far and wide,” he argues, “in law and society. That wreckage deserves a reckoning.”

At his Substack, C. Bradley Thompson continues his ongoing series on education, asking the important question: Is there a right to education? “The rights and responsibilities of children are connected to and dependent upon – indeed, they must overlap and are inseparable from – the rights and responsibilities of parents and vice versa.” He notes that since the relationship between children and their parents are so closely linked, “it is extremely difficult to sort out the precise boundaries between these two categories of rights. Ultimately, the challenge is to identify and define the three-way juridical relationship between parents, children, and the government.”

Essential Reading

1776: Out of Many, One

Gordon Wood, ACTA

It is a great honor to be here to receive the Philip Merrill Award from ACTA. For a number of years, I have been on the nominating...

In Defense of Citizenship

Daniel J. Mahoney, RealClearPublicAffairs

It is hard to dispute the claim that the United States is a political and social order in the midst of an immense crisis. The old...

In the News

The Books Every American Should Read

1776 Unites

How Purdue University, Arizona Regents Educate For Citizenship

Michael Poliakoff, Forbes

America Is One State Away From Constitutional Reform

Adm. Bill Owens, RealClearPolitics

Missouri Lawmakers Question History Curriculum

Galen Bacharier, Springfield News-Leader

Education and the Man According to John Adams

Pavlos Papadopoulos, Law & Liberty

1619 Versus 1776: Nikole Hannah-Jones Takes on Bob Woodson

Valerie Richardson, Washington Times

The Values Choice Movement Comes Before the Supreme Court

Jim Kelly, RealClearPolicy

Noncitizen Voting Doesn't Pass This Test

Howard Husock, The Hill

Roe v. Wade's Future Is In Doubt After Historic Arguments

Nina Totenberg, NPR

Roe’s Legacy Deserves a Reckoning

Adam M. Carrington, Washington Examiner

How John Marshall Expanded the Power of the Supreme Court

Dave Roos, History.com

Slavery as a Political Construct

Alexander Riley, Chronicles

Common Good and Common Belief in the Common Law

Timon Cline, Anchoring Truths

Woke Universities Are Rousseau’s Children

Garion Fankel, Martin Center for Academic Renewal

Supreme Court Set to Take Up All-Or-Nothing Abortion Fight

Mark Sherman, Associated Press

Multimedia

The 1619 Project's Egregious Errors

James Oakes & Martin DiCaro, History as It Happens

Amid a national debate over history curricula and the importance of racism and slavery in shaping the American past, The 1619 Project...

The Two Party System

Hannah McCarthy & Nick Capodice, Civics 101

Americans often take issue with our two-party system. So what other options are out there? Today, with the help of political...

Democracy in America

Chris Flannery, American Story

In January, 1835, the first volume of a book named Democracy in America was published inParis. It was a great critical and...

We Are All Americans

John Wood, Jr., Braver Angels

At the conference, Braver Angels' National Ambassador, John Wood, Jr., explored the responsibilities we have to each other...

Article I: The Legislative Branch

Gary S. Lawson, National Constitution Center

In this session, students explore Article I of the Constitution, which defines the powers of Congress. This class examines constitutional...

1898: The Spanish American War

Paul McCartney, Bonnie M. Miller, Louis Pérez, & David Randall, National Association of Scholars

In the late 1880s, the United States supported revolts in Cuba against Spanish colonial rule. Reports of concentration camps in Cuba...

Carl Cannon's Great American Stories

Great American Stories: Honored at Last

As in presidential politics, Hall of Fame voting results often strike outside observers as inexplicable (Jim Kaat, but not Danny ...

Great American Stories: Stella Adler's Quote

Good morning, it's Friday, Dec. 3, 2021, the day of the week when I reprise quotations intended to be uplifting ...

Great American Stories: The Manhattan Project

On Dec. 2, 1942, Harvard President James B. Conant, the man essentially functioning as White House science adviser, took an urgent ...

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