The other shoe dropped last week. Senator McCain appeared before a group of students at Wake Forest and vowed to appoint judges "strictly faithful to the Constitution'' who would not engage in "the common and systemic abuse of our federal courts." As the New York Times noted, "The issue is of enormous importance to conservatives.''
Duh. The likelihood is that the next president is going to appoint one or more justices to the Court. Justice Stevens is 88, Justice Ginsburg is 75, and Justices Scalia and Kennedy are 72, ages when people sometimes, like, die. The appointments of Justices Roberts and Alito put conservatives one vote away from overturning Roe v. Wade. If McCain got to appoint the next justice, that would assure two things: first, that the states will create a hodgepodge of abortion laws, meaning that in many states, there will be a return to back-alley abortions; and second, arguing about abortion will assert itself as one of the most intense issues on the political agenda, coloring our politics and eclipsing the many 21st century questions we now think as vital.
This was the other shoe. The first shoe came in March, when the vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff testified before Congress that the U.S military did not have adequate manpower to maintain our efforts in Iraq and Afghanistan as presently constituted. The only way McCain could fulfill his pledge to maintain the present mission in Iraq ad infinitum would be to restore the draft.
Restoring the draft and restricting abortion rights. For years Grover Norquist and other GOP activists have expressed the desire to take America back to pre-New Deal days. Electing McCain would travel half the distance--a return to those ugly, contentious, rancorous days of the late sixties and early seventies, when the draft and abortion split the nation.

Comments on this entry:
While the prospect of Roe v. Wade being overturned is chilling to me for a variety of reasons, as a diehard liberal, I am actually in favor of the return of the draft. For one thing, our forces are severely depleted thanks to the waste of the Iraq War. For another, reinstating the draft may be an effective way to end our overt involvement in Iraq and reprioritize when U.S. forces should and should not get involved in foreign situations - especially if the new draft does not include the type of exemptions used by fat cats (and their children) in the past, and if it includes women. Finally, a few years of governmental service for the public good, whether it be in the form of the military or some other organization such as the Peace Corps or even domestic service, may go a long way in cutting down some of the chronic problems that affect the young adults of this country, such as criminal behavior.
Since when they were in the back alley. From your liberal get it on, there comes the baby, stupid.