If his logic in this draft opinion regarding Roe is sound, then none of the decisions based on a right to privacy are legitimate either.
So he can't say that this doesn't affect those other decisions because those decisions were rooted in the same right to privacy argument he and his fellow Nazis shredded with this decision.
That's the contradiction.
Merely saying it doesn't apply to those other decisions doesn't make it so, nor does it make a sound legal argument.
Clearly precedent doesn't matter for these Nazi judges, so why would Alito's newly-set precedent in this decision hold to Legal scrutiny when the one for Roe and Casey did not?
His explanation was that "But none of these decisions (Griswold, Lawrence, Loving) involved what is distinctive about abortion: its effect on what Roe termed "potential life."
Certainly the constitutional guarantee of "life, liberty, and property without due process of law" gives a higher priority to life than it does consensual sex, interracial marriage, or birth control.
I favor the freedom of a person to get an abortion, but that doesn't make Roe good constitutional law just because we like the results. To suggest the Constitution splits the right to get an abortion into trimesters is certainly more imagination on the part of the justices than any constitutional principle.
Right, women can choose to breathe or not breathe.