right direction whether they deserve that credit or not. that could be some of the motivation. rick newman, you take credit for a good discussion. thank you, my friend. see you, alex. mississippi s abortion case goes before the supreme court this week, a direct challenge to roe v. wade. what to expect, next. ke one. everything felt like a no . everything. but then ray went from no to know. with freestyle libre 2, now he knows his glucose levels when he needs to. and. when he wants to. so ray. can be ray. take the mystery out of your glucose levels, and lower your a1c. now you know. try it for free. visit freestylelibre.us (vo) reflect on the past, celebrate the future. now you know. season s greetings from audi.
the arguments that are going to happen before the supreme court. if you read the constitution, there is nowhere in the constitution that prohibits individual states, states like mississippi, to limit access to abortion and the far left loves to scream my body my choice and what i would submit to you, chuck, is they absolutely ignore the fact that in getting an abortion there is an actual killing of an innocent unborn child. sofia. okay. well, legally speaking, he has no idea what he s talking about. the reality is is that roe versus wade is the governing law of this nation right now. abortion is allowed. it is a federal law which takes precedent over and preempts state law, which is why i was shocked to see the direction that the court has been moving towards because if you believe in super precedents like brown versus the board of education,
so this is an interesting view that they have. it wasn t until july that mississippi s attorney general actually petitioned the court to reverse roe. they say the 15-week ban could pass unconstitutional muster. how much do the opinions of americans matter? a poll finds 60% of americans say roe v. wade should be upheld. that s consistent since 2005. is it aligned with the american people? i know the justices aren t driven by poll numbers but legally speaking reflecting the law as it is now? the only reason i want to waffle a little bit on this one, alex, is because we re approaching the midterm
of the road. that s why georgia senators, we had a democratic senator from georgia which we haven t had for generations. what the big lie means is do you want more january 6th in this country. do you think armed insurrection and invasion of the capitol by people who believe the election was stolen when there s no evidence for it, is that a good thing for america? and i think the vast majority of americans think it isn t, and i think these things, january 6th, the texas abortion decision which is essentially affirmed by a group of political hacks that have gotten themselves out of the supreme court. these things have alarmed americans. and, yeah, the republicans will carry really right-wing states like mississippi and alabama, but they re not going to carry a lot of reasonable thoughtful middle of the road people. i think we ll pickup a seat in ohio because of this kind of stuff and 22. can i ask you quickly, because we have other news we have to get to. another guest said the reveng
the world professional association for transgender health and the u.s. arm. and in addition, by the society, an international organization. there are well published standards of care. there s a strong evidence base to support that standard of care. that includes the treatment of transyouth participating in sports, and there are sports bodies who have guidelines. this is politics and not science. you mentioned the risk of bullying for transgender youth. what s your message to transgender youth in these states that have seen some bills pass, states like mississippi, and arkansas, and tennessee? where bills have been signed into law this year? well, my message to those youth is that the federal government supports them. our president supports them. and he has vocally come out in