Wait a minute. You believe abortion is legal, right now. At the Federal level. Do you not?
Let's not equivocate. On paper, they have "decriminalized" murder at both state and federal levels.
However, no government at any level has the authority (much less the "right") to do so. Such laws are lawless and invalid. We rightly held not only gov't officials but even lawyers and judges accountable to charges of murder at the Nuremberg Trials. We sentenced men to life in prison or even death for ... what? For upholding the law, following legal precedent and acceding to the authority of the higher court.
What those judges should have done was rule that killing an innocent Jew is murder, and anyone who does it is guilty of murder. And if they lose their job, so be it. If they are arrested, so be it. If they are executed, so be it. That is what you do if you are a judge. You don't say "Well, the law says you can kill a Jew just for being a Jew, so I'm going to rule based on that." As a judge, you have no authority to do that, and you should be held accountable on earth (as we did at Nuremberg) and you will be held accountable before God on the day of your judgment.
Abortion is murder. The legal prohibition of murder is mandatory under the 5th and 14th amendments of the Constitution. Any law or ruling that contradicts that is invalid. But we do live in a nation where, on paper, they have made these invalid laws where they have endeavored to legalize murder at the state and federal level.
Sozo, your logic is bizarre. You argue that just because someone does something, that proves logically that they have a right to do so. If I kill an innocent person, does that prove I have a right to do so? Obviously not. How, then, do you logically conclude that if a state passes a law saying that some kinds of murder are legal, that this somehow proves that they have the authority or the "right" to do so? Just because they did it doesn't mean they have a right to.
Btw, I'm still eagerly waiting for someone to point to the section in the Constitution that refers to the "rights" of states.