But there's no privacy in things not related to contraception and abortion?
What about vaccination? What about data? What about metadata?
I suspect for data and metadata the answer is "the 4th Amendment covers that, see 4th Amendment jurisprudence", but that's not enough because that only limits the state and state agents, and even then not at all as to metadata, and barely as to data.
There is a tradition of data and metadata privacy based on Brandeis's "The Right to Privacy" from 1890. You are correct that this tradition is partly rooted in 4th amendment jurisprudence, but it has deeper foundations in English common law. Amy Gajda's Seek and Hide is an accessible introduction to the area if you are looking for a deeper dive into the subject.
Many of the landmark privacy-as-bodily-autonomy decisions are related to reproductive health, but there are others. McFall v. Shrimp is another important case in the area and concerns forced medical procedures rather than reproductive health: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/McFall_v._Shimp The court found in that case that an individual could not be compelled to donate bone marrow, even though it was necessary for another to live, because that would violate "the sanctity of the individual."
Yes, specifically Thomas' concurrence argues that the privacy is the same right that underlies Griswold (right to contraception), Lawrence (private consensual sex), and Obergefell (same sex marriage), and so Thomas thinks those should be overturned as well.
I looked at his concurrence and my impression was that he's saying that if substantive due process goes the way of the dodo then those decisions need to be revisited, but he didn't say reversed, and I got the impression that he wants at least some of them on a more solid foundation.
> then those decisions need to be revisited, but he didn't say reversed
Lol, then I've got a bridge to sell you. Thomas dissented vociferously in both Lawrence and Obergefell, it's clear he wants to overturn them, not even he is trying to hide that fact. His Obergefell dissent was especially nauseating because he was trying to say how we was so "offended" that Loving was even construed to be analogous to Obergefell.
He's a typical "I've got mine, fuck you" conservative.
Thomas said we could maybe think about finding a different justification for some of those rights “[a]fter overruling these demonstrably erroneous decisions." Sounds like he wants them reversed to me!
Interesting that these are all 'liberal' decisions. Do conservatives not desire privacy, or is it just that we haven't had a conservative right that needed a way to be defended. I guess a lot of things like freedom of religion and gun rights are enumerated in the constitution. In general not having a right to privacy doesn't seem reasonable in a free world. The recent scandal about California leaking gun owners seems like it could lead to a conversation about the right to privacy for gun owners. The constitution mentions a right to bear arms, it doesn't say we have to keep that gun ownership secret. Seems like this might be particularly true for the anti-government militia crowd.
IANAL. Privacy qua Griswold (and subsequently Roe) is a limited application of privacy as is commonly understood. A full right to privacy in a classically liberal sense is a right to keep something from the knowledge or access of any or all others by means of (but not limited to) omission or oath. If a right to privacy in this sense were to be applied to the CCW scandal, one could argue that California (or any state) should never have required disclosure of gun ownership in the first place or (should such information have been disclosed by the owner voluntarily) that California had violated a promise to keep such information secret unless otherwise noted.
The limited privacy right in Roe was invented by the Warren Court to decide Griswold vs Connecticut (contraceptions). The only other case where I recall privacy being explicitly mentioned is Lawrence vs Texas (sodomy), a case which directly derives from Griswold.
No, the basis of HIPAA rights are that Congress actually passed a law titled the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act that outlines the privacy requirements associated with healthcare.
HIPAA is a law, not a constitutional right, and interracial marriage had nothing to do with a right to privacy in the constitution. You’re confusing the entire doctrine of substantive due process with its specific application in finding a right to privacy in the constitution.