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December
24,
2003
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Limbaugh and Privacy A
BUZZFLASH READER COMMENTARY Happy holidays, BuzzFlash.
The constitutional right to privacy comes from the holding of Griswold v. Connecticut, a 1965 Supreme Court case which struck down as unconstitutional a state law that prohibited birth control, even among married couples. The Griswold case provided the judicial foundation for Roe v. Wade. This is the very issue that sparked controversy surrounding then President Reagan's nomination of Judge Robert Bork to the Supreme Court. Judge Bork's position was one of strict construction -- because the constitution itself makes no express reference to a right of privacy (which it doesn't), no such right exists. Abortion rights unquestionably dominated the public debate surrounding Judge Bork's nomination, but his view of proper constitutional interpretation also implicated the more generalized attack on the "liberal judicial activism" of the Warren Court. I
can only guess, but it seems a safe bet that Rush Limbaugh supported
Judge Bork's
nomination and he probably embraces Bork's interpretative
philosophy. If so, not only can he not assert a constitutional
right to privacy with respect to his medical records, he must
eschew the
existence of such a right altogether. A BUZZFLASH READER COMMENTARY | |||||
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