Do you have a right? Well, that depends on a lot of things. In a constitutional sense, in the U.S., “No.” In the U.S., no such “constitutional” right actually exists -- no matter what any politically corrupted justice says. The fact is, there is no such thing as a “constitutional” right to have an abortion any more than there is a “constitutional” right to wear your hat any way you please. Any right not enumerated and retained by the people (amendment 9) exists only so long as an individual State (by the consent of the People from where all power is derived) does not legislate a denial of that right. So, can a State constitutionally make abortion illegal in that State? Yes. It is their constitutional right; for, all rights not enumerated in the constitution were to remain with the People; and, it is the “People” that can then choose which rights to give up in their State -- and it is not the right of any other State to object to, or interfere with, that which another State does within their own jurisdiction. As a retained right left to the People, abortion cannot be treated any differently than the retained right to wear a hat, or the retained right to run naked down the street. No one would argue that the People of a State do not have a right to legislate as to morality and decency -- and outlaw nakedness in public, creating a public disturbance by wearing an obscenely indecent hat, owning a Bong, smoking weed or peeing in public. The retained right to an abortion is no different; and, like all other retained rights, must be treated the same; and, being under the jurisdiction of the People of the State wherein that right exists, it is a “Constitutional Right” of those People in their own State to decide whether it is objectionable and whether it shall be retained or denied. The Federal government has an obligation and duty to guarantee that right and protect it against encroachments and interference from other member States in the Union. (Source: Journals from the constitutional convention; and journals from the first and second congress.) wjb.