I'm not sure that it's accurate to suggest different medical procedures will have exactly the same outcomes for the health of the woman. I don't see how you can justify choosing for her at that point. Let's say doctors predict that a woman needs a Cesarean or the fetus will die. Should we force her to have a cesarean?
8/3/2011 9:38:31 AM
No body should have any right to tell a patient and her doctor what to do in any case. I don't feel this way for most professions, but doctors are there to make life and death decisions.I guess there would be problems if the patient and the doctor were at odds, but no one has formalized any such situations right now.
8/3/2011 9:46:01 AM
Everyone that says "I draw the line at" any place earlier than birth is doing so. You're creating a situation where at some point it would be a crime for a woman to make a particular choice about which medical procedure to take regarding her pregnancy.
8/3/2011 9:48:53 AM
Please note that when I say "I draw the line" is not where I think laws should be put in place. This is the point where I myself, would not go through with an abortion. I am Pro-Choice and respect individual civil liberties. An abortion is a womans personal decision to make and no one should ever interfere with that right.
8/3/2011 10:33:50 AM
10/14/2011 12:51:40 AM
I don't see what religion has to do with abortion.I don't see why a woman should get to claim any particular right to the decision, unless her health is seriously in question.It all boils down to the question of at what point you define the unborn as a human life. Without a doubt, that is well before birth. How much so is a grey area, but at any time before that point, I don't see how there's anything wrong with abortion. Go for it, I'm all for the practice under those conditions. After that, I don't see how you can call it anything but murder.[Edited on October 14, 2011 at 1:04 AM. Reason : ]
10/14/2011 1:03:29 AM
10/14/2011 1:27:26 AM
10/14/2011 1:42:59 AM
10/14/2011 1:48:56 AM
I don't agree with labeling a person's right to his or her body an "irrelevant distractor." Personal freedom is what is most important to me. We may have to just chalk this up to a difference in opinion.
10/14/2011 8:58:10 AM
What did you say about them?
10/14/2011 8:45:27 PM
i, actually, agree with duke on this on the the fact that this boils down to when it's a life. is it when it could survive on it's own outside the womb? but is that survival only going to happen if there is medical life support?what i do have a major problem with is people in the federal government, state government, whatever government trying to dictate when that time is.
10/14/2011 9:48:09 PM
Yeah, but that's the nature of the beast. The only other option is to allow open season on babies, which is by far even worse. I'm hardly a statist--government, in my view, should primarily exist to facilitate the net maximizing of liberty. I mean, I think mine is the only ethically acceptable position on this one. I don't see how one could justify anything else. It so happens that it's fairly pragmatic, too--just don't delay the decision to abort unduly.[Edited on October 15, 2011 at 12:05 AM. Reason : ]
10/15/2011 12:02:55 AM
^^sooooooooooooo if it's a life when it can survive outside the womb then it's not a life until its around 13-22 years old?[Edited on October 15, 2011 at 12:05 PM. Reason : That joke has to already be in the thread... Somewhere...]
10/15/2011 12:04:21 PM
Yeah, I don't think that's a good way to draw the line from a philosophical, medical, or practical standpoint.
10/15/2011 2:49:27 PM
10/15/2011 5:27:15 PM
Well obviously I wouldn't make a statement like that about, say, how progressive our taxation should be, or what our foreign policy should be with respect to a particular country, or capital punishment.I would have an oPinion and obviously think mine was the right one, but I certainly wouldn't view it as the "only ethically acceptable" position. Most things fall into the realm if philosophical differences, but not so much this one.[Edited on October 15, 2011 at 10:19 PM. Reason : ]
10/15/2011 7:06:54 PM
well that's fine if you think that.i'd be interested to see what men's opinions would be changed if they were in a precarious situation.don't get me wrong, i'm all for banning late term abortions. but yea, just saying.
10/15/2011 10:00:04 PM
I'm saying that what I'm arguing is not subject to a sliding scale based on the precariousness of a situation...not unless you would argue that murder for convenience is OK if you manage to put yourself in a precarious situation. That's the only alternative to my argument.The only thing to discuss regarding the subject of abortion is what point we are dealing with a human being. I would characterize myself as pro-abortion, but only in much more limited circumstances.[Edited on October 15, 2011 at 10:20 PM. Reason : ][Edited on October 15, 2011 at 10:51 PM. Reason : And it's not just an academic issue to me]
10/15/2011 10:18:07 PM
men have 100% responsibility for a child except for the 9 months b/w conception and birth.if a woman can choose to pay a fee to get of a baby, shouldnt a man be able to do the same?yes this is kinda off-topic.other than the obvious ethical questions, it does gnaw on me a little bit that two people can agree they want to have a child, then the woman can just change her mind.
10/15/2011 10:38:10 PM
^hmm i've never thought of it that way b4. iiiinnteresting.
10/16/2011 1:27:03 AM
I kind of see your point, but the biggest issue is the woman is carrying that child and will be taking a hit much more than the man. It's not like pregnancy is a walk in the park
10/16/2011 12:41:55 PM
And bingo was his name-o.Also, men don't have 100% of the responsibility, wtf are you smoking? At most they have 50% and even then that's questionable in the traditional American family.
10/16/2011 6:08:50 PM
100% in that they cant take a pass on responsibility. child support is not optional.and pregnancy is no fun, but it affects you for 9 months then its over.
10/17/2011 10:44:29 PM
10/17/2011 11:03:08 PM
Let's not even get into that argument.
10/17/2011 11:05:45 PM
i don't think anyone's gonna argue that, lol
10/17/2011 11:20:48 PM
haha that is why i stay away from soap box, i tend to oversimplify
10/18/2011 9:57:02 PM
10/19/2011 9:51:15 AM
10/19/2011 2:51:32 PM
I think that when he said "a human life" he meant a human person. I mean, an egg or even a zygote is alive but it's definitely not a person. A beating heart isn't incredibly relevant to personhood in my opinion.I'm not convinced that even reasonable definitions of personhood are enough to trump the bodily rights of the woman however.
10/19/2011 3:10:24 PM
Really? If you can reasonably and safely say, "this is another fully functional human with all the rights we would afford to anyone" you still think that it's ok for the mother to decide that person doesn't deserve to live? Her right to not be inconvenienced by carrying a child to term outweighs a human being's right to exist? How is that moral or logical?
10/19/2011 6:45:09 PM
10/19/2011 7:21:26 PM
10/19/2011 7:29:29 PM
because by that point she has already made the comitment to go along with it.
10/19/2011 7:42:04 PM
How is that different from electing to continue a pregnancy to whatever point we decide that the unborn baby is a human being?
10/19/2011 7:47:04 PM
becuse that argument is flawed
10/19/2011 7:57:46 PM
10/19/2011 8:27:13 PM
It's interesting to me that in the U.K. they used to abort babies for having a cleft lip, which means that Rick Perry (if he was born in the UK) would have been aborted.
10/19/2011 8:35:55 PM
I just dont understand why this and gay marriage are the most polarizable political topics. I fear that it is done intentionally to keep Amurica divided.
10/19/2011 8:38:03 PM
Because the most recent poll suggested that 44% of Americans are creationists. Let that sink in.
10/19/2011 8:48:09 PM
10/19/2011 8:55:47 PM
I just don't understand how poeple can put their entire moral beliefs off of a supernatural belief. Add that to the list of things that I dont understand. But I tolerate it.
10/19/2011 8:57:25 PM
10/19/2011 9:00:45 PM
Where did you even get that statistic? And like I said, many children die right after birth. So, they would technically count as a "real person" if you look at it using your defense. I don't know about you, but I have no issues with something like that being prevented if you know it ahead of time and can prevent undue suffering (both mentally and physically for the family).[Edited on October 19, 2011 at 9:03 PM. Reason : And honestly, being past 12 weeks doesn't equal out of the danger zone - more like 20]
10/19/2011 9:02:39 PM
10/19/2011 9:06:59 PM
10/19/2011 9:09:26 PM
This whole thing reminds me of a particularly sad case... A woman was sent to the fetal anomalies clinic because they were worried what could be normal gut herniation in the 12th week (goes back in at 14 wks) could actually be something worse and they wanted to be doubly sure. Ended up being a case of body stalk anomaly - DON'T google it - and let's just say, that's not a baby. She couldn't afford to have a termination and Medicaid wouldn't cover it because her life wasn't at risk - so she has to carry around a mass of tissue for months. And I definitely agree that it still blows my mind when people want others to birth a child with anencephaly or some other neural tube defect. I had the misfortune of watching an ultrasound when a case of exencephaly was discovered, and let me tell you... it was hard even imaging what that kid would have looked like coming out, especially when you could tell something major was up just from a black and white image on the screen. Then having to hear the MFM tell the couple it was incompatible with life? Major suck.^ I really don't think you get how many terminations occur due to medical reasons. I wish people would stop acting like it's some rare thing, because it isn't. People just don't like to talk about that stuff. [Edited on October 19, 2011 at 9:13 PM. Reason : .]
10/19/2011 9:11:46 PM
10/19/2011 10:11:28 PM
Well they asked why it's a polarizing issue. Part of the reason is that nearly half of the country is against it a priori without good reason, then they grasp at straws to rationally support their preconceptions.The other half is like us, not against it, but disagreeing philosophically when a fetus becomes a person with rights. So even if you're not pro-life, there's a lot of ground to reconcile and room for discussion.
10/20/2011 8:50:19 AM