With the articulated and discussed sentence Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, the Supreme Court of the United States ruled that the north american federal Constitution does not expressly recognize the right to abortion, undermining the principles of freedom affirmed in 1973 and 1992 in two previous rulings of considerable importance. This sentence, that is the expression of a conservative majority, has aroused a strong critical reaction in all the commentators and represents a real turning point not only for the immediate implications it will have on the political and social debate concerning the subject of abortion (and of the other rights whose protection has been recognized over time) but, above all, for having distorted one of the cornerstones of the American legal system, i.e. the principle of stare decisis.
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