You can believe in a soul and still not care about abortion. What's really necessary is to believe in original sin. That is, believe that God would for some reason punish an aborted child instead of just giving it a do-over.
11/16/2011 3:16:53 PM
Can you not baptize it in the womb and then yank it?
11/16/2011 3:35:33 PM
I guess you can reuse the amniotic fluid?
11/16/2011 3:42:56 PM
11/16/2011 3:54:31 PM
11/16/2011 8:35:19 PM
11/16/2011 8:41:58 PM
11/16/2011 8:49:12 PM
11/16/2011 9:03:29 PM
11/16/2011 9:10:55 PM
11/16/2011 10:59:54 PM
What I am saying is that people are treating it like it's only an issue because of a bunch of Bible-bangers wanting to get into other people's business due to some feeble analysis of the issue based on some fairy-tale reality.Certainly some of that goes on--religious people view the world through the lens of religion--but that doesn't discount the validity of the ethical question at hand. It's a pretty weak and cheap "out" to say "Look, abortion is simply a 'choice' that women should have, and the argument against it is religious in nature and doesn't warrant a serious response or consideration."If you want to ignore the pleas of "babies are crafted in the womb by the hand of God; that's why they're human and we shouldn't kill them", then by all means, be my guest. That argument rightfully should be ignored...but the existence of that simple-minded analysis doesn't discount very legitimate arguments against the status quo on this issue.^ So you're saying that you're cool with killing human beings that are unwanted and/or inconvenient? Where do you draw the line? Birth? Why is that any different than, say, 6 months old? Somewhere before birth? What drives your decision on where to draw the line?You have to draw the line somewhere. Where do you put it and why?[Edited on November 16, 2011 at 11:16 PM. Reason : ][Edited on November 16, 2011 at 11:17 PM. Reason : ]
11/16/2011 11:12:09 PM
The line for a woman to choose to terminate her pregnancy? The moment the child is no longer physically contigent on the mother. Usually birth, but could be the moment that it's extracted by some other method.The line for which a person should be punished for killing a fetus against the mother's will? Much earlier. Probably the same place you draw the line for all killing of fetuses.You see, I don't think it's convenient to ignore the mother in the situation. If I could, then my position would probably be the same as yours. But any stipulation of what she cannot do with her own body is a limitation of her rights I'm not willing to throw out the window because it's icky. She already exists and clearly has rights to her own body. I'm not ready to charge her with murder if she takes a clothes hanger to herself after your point of demarcation.
11/16/2011 11:21:04 PM
11/16/2011 11:26:38 PM
11/16/2011 11:45:23 PM
^ you never answered this question yourself
11/17/2011 8:55:51 AM
my personal opinion is that the fetus becomes a living person at the point in which it could live outside of the womb minus 3 weeks
11/17/2011 9:50:28 AM
Please explain the minus three weeks... Did you randomly pick that?
11/17/2011 11:20:04 AM
2/1/2012 6:27:12 PM
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2/1/2012 6:32:13 PM
I can't find any logic in this decision.If you're against abortions, how is removing PP's breast-cancer funding going to achieve this goal? PP isn't the only place to get abortions. I bet you can count on 1 hand the # of abortions this will prevent.With this in mind, they are significantly affecting the number of women that will get screened for cancer.It's ironic how cruel and uncaring the allegedly pro-life side can be.
2/1/2012 6:42:59 PM
Ahhh....the abortion issue.Just another wedge issue getting people to vote against their own best interests since 1973.Hey, did you guys know that gay people are getting married now?THAT SHIT IS GROSS![Edited on February 1, 2012 at 6:53 PM. Reason : the future, conan?]
2/1/2012 6:43:50 PM
19723? INTO THE FUTURE!what, we allow homos to live? This changes eeeeeeeeeeeeverything[Edited on February 1, 2012 at 6:44 PM. Reason : ]
2/1/2012 6:44:14 PM
Susan G. Komen, helping fight cancer for wealthy women!
2/2/2012 2:46:14 PM
i wish we could use these fetuses as fossil fuel and nip two problems in the bud.
2/2/2012 2:58:59 PM
2/2/2012 6:04:42 PM
Ahmadinejad very possibly has weapons of mass destruction.I can't sleep on that. Not on my watch.
2/2/2012 6:06:55 PM
The nigga bought aluminum tubes! You know what the fuck you can do with an aluminum tube? ALUMINUM!
2/2/2012 6:20:12 PM
2/2/2012 8:18:00 PM
About face (maybe):
2/3/2012 12:10:03 PM
2/3/2012 12:41:13 PM
Thing is, before this, they were under pressure from the other side not to fund the PP screenings (e.g., refusing to sell pink Bibles in stores). So that side also was pressuring and voting with their dollars. So it's unfair to say it's not okay for the pro-choice contingent to exert pressure when that's what folks on the other end were doing. SKG can do whatever it wants with its grants, but donors are also free to no longer donate - or speak up -if they don't agree with an agency's actions. People on every side speak up, either vocally or with their money, all the time. And the problem with the investigation is, there is a lot of - in my opinion - rightly founded suspicion that this congressional investigation is similar to other past, politically motivated attacks. Congressman/women can open an investigation over pretty much anything - McCarthyism? - so that doesn't automatically warrant halting funding unless something is proven. SKG also gives money to Penn State, which coincidentally, is facing investigations but wasn't facing the same penalties. Also, this investigation is about how PP is spending federal funds, not private donations.And part of the outcry was because SKG was hiding behind what I consider to be a bogus excuse. If they don't want to make grants to PP, then they should just say so. Own it. Don't hide behind the veil of this new policy, which appears convenient and transparently false, then get mad/surprised when people say you're being political because you made a decision based on an investigation many already think is political. SKG then offered a second reason a few days later as the "real" reason, which then made it look like they were making up new reasons. Abortion is a sensitive topic, so if you want to cut ties to PP, you need to accept the consequences and be prepared to handle it, because you will upset people. In the end, SKG looked foolish for not creating a coherent, united, believable message, esp. when it kept changing directions. They would have been better off just saying they didn't want to affiliate with PP and deal with the fallout. It was a great lesson to future PR folks how not to handle a potential problem.
2/4/2012 8:43:59 AM
I always thought it was ironic for Komen to be funding breast cancer research on one hand, while giving grants to create breast cancer with the other. PP's primary services create more breast cancer than their alleged screenings help find.
2/4/2012 9:16:14 PM
sounds like some rightwing talking point frankly. got any sources?
2/4/2012 9:22:18 PM
^ It's complete bullshit obviously.He's just continuing the right-wing trend of embracing delusion.
2/4/2012 9:38:35 PM
Is the American Cancer Society good enough?http://www.cancer.org/Cancer/BreastCancer/OverviewGuide/breast-cancer-overview-what-causesOr the National Cancer Institute?http://cancer.gov/bcrisktool/breast-cancer-risk.aspxThe use of hormonal birth control, not having any children, older age at first live birth are all recognized as real risk factors. Planned Parenthood is the go-to place for people want those things. Beyond that, abortion is a bigger contributor than any of those factors, but politics keeps that in the denial stage. The science against the link is as bad as the smoking/cancer denials of decades ago.Think of the tremendous volume involved with PP and those factors, then compare to how many women are helped in early detection by PP (even using optimistic, propagandistic PP estimates).[Edited on February 4, 2012 at 9:45 PM. Reason : a]
2/4/2012 9:42:30 PM
You DO realize though that birth control exists independently of PP? That if you snapped your fingers and made all the PPs disappear, people would still use birth control and seek abortions at a similar rates?It's completely absurd to say that the Komen foundation funds creating cancer by earmarking money to PP to be used on breast cancer screenings.And then it's even more disingenuous to say that Planned Parenthood as an organization has created more cancer than they've found.But this is such basic reasoning that you surely must have already rejected logical thought processes in favor of blaming planned parenthood for the existence of birth control.Not to mention that incidences of breast cancer have been dropping for the past decade, as birth control use has increased. Clearly Planned Parenthood is a massive cancer-creating machine, spreading breast cancer far and wide, feeding itself by devouring fetuses.
2/4/2012 10:21:16 PM
Of course BC would exist and be used at similar rates without PP. But that's irrelevant.Abortions would not be nearly as available without PP, but in their absence, other providers would spring up and abortion rates wouldn't change much. Of course that's true. It's also irrelevant.Planned Parenthood facilitates later first births and the use of the birth control. Those things increase breast cancer risk. Those are the relevant facts. It's perfectly fine if you want to say that, as a society, we believe these benefits to lifestyle flexibility and 'freedom' are worth the costs (including increased breast cancer risk) that come along with them. But it's not fine to deny the cost altogether.Lastly, money is fungible. If you gave money to PP designated only for their landscaping, that is still money for BC and abortion, because it frees up assets that would otherwise be used for landscaping to serve another purpose.
2/4/2012 10:29:49 PM
^^^ Why bother citing the National Cancer Institute and then post something they have debunked?"In February 2003, the National Cancer Institute (NCI) convened a workshop of over 100 of the world’s leading experts who study pregnancy and breast cancer risk. Workshop participants reviewed existing population-based, clinical, and animal studies on the relationship between pregnancy and breast cancer risk, including studies of induced and spontaneous abortions. They concluded that having an abortion or miscarriage does not increase a woman’s subsequent risk of developing breast cancer."[Edited on February 4, 2012 at 10:31 PM. Reason : .]
2/4/2012 10:31:15 PM
^^ I'm not denying the costs, but it's baseless and absurd to assert that PP has created more cancer than they've found. There's just no evidence for this, or reasonable ways to speculate that's the case.Risk factors are just that, risk factors. [Edited on February 4, 2012 at 10:38 PM. Reason : ]
2/4/2012 10:37:42 PM
^^First, the case stands regardless of that point. The cancer created by PP's services exceeds their screening help without abortion included.Secondly, politics rules (at least in the short and medium term), even in science. It was a serious fight even to get them to recognize that late child-birth, not having children, and birth control increase breast cancer risk. Those things were politically unpalatable to say the least. Abortion is on a whole different level than even that.I can cite more studies showing the link between breast cancer and abortion than you could cite studies that deny it, even limiting myself to federally-funded studies by our health agencies. Why? Because there are more of them - a lot more show a statistically significant correlation than don't.^ If you know how much the risk is increased (and we have a good idea), then you can get a very good count for how many cases are attributable to that risk factor. Then take the percentage of those risk factors attributable to PP's services, and compare to their screening and detection rates. This is all very easy and very standard. And the numbers aren't even close, because PP only does basic checks for breast cancer like a normal general practitioner. And they don't do even that very much. Compare that to the massive volume of BC they issue, and early first-children they help prevent, and it's not even close. [Edited on February 4, 2012 at 10:44 PM. Reason : a]
2/4/2012 10:40:41 PM
You realize the AMA, American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, WHO, American Cancer Society, and National Cancer Institute all have concluded that there is no causative link between induced abortion and breast cancer, right?
2/4/2012 10:46:21 PM
Of course I'm aware of that. I'm also aware that their own studies say they are wrong.
2/4/2012 10:51:25 PM
2/4/2012 10:54:35 PM
So if the rate of birth control use and the rate of abortions would be the same with or without PP, then how is PP 'causing' cancer?This is like arguing a particular car company causes car accidents.
2/4/2012 11:00:08 PM
lol, back of the hand calculations are fine when the relevant numbers differ by several orders of magnitude. With the millions upon millions of BC recipients from PP, even a ludicrously low rate of increased breast cancer risk would exceed the cancer they help detect by their relatively rare, basic breast cancer checks and subsequent referrals. Their primary clients are in the 18-35 range, or close to it, and their breast cancer rates at that age (which would be detected at their PP visit) are terribly low.[Edited on February 4, 2012 at 11:02 PM. Reason : a]
2/4/2012 11:00:39 PM
As you've already said, the rate of use of birth control would be the same with or without PP. Unless you're arguing the mere act of walking into a PP clinic is carcinogenic, the fact that birth control comes from PP has no bearing on increased cancer rates resulting from the use of birth control (whatever that may or may not be).]
2/4/2012 11:05:49 PM
Let's look at my actual first semi-trolling words. "PP's primary services create more breast cancer than their alleged screenings help find."I didn't say PP creates cancer that wouldn't otherwise exist. I said their services create cancer. And that's indisputable. They give birth control. Birth control increases the incidence of breast cancer. They help delay first child-birth, and that increases the incidence of breast cancer. Ergo, their services create breast cancer. It's fair, and it's true.That's why I find it ironic that Komen funds increasing cancer. You'd think a first line of thought would be, "let's not give money to things that increase breast cancer risk."[Edited on February 4, 2012 at 11:12 PM. Reason : a]
2/4/2012 11:11:10 PM
Do you believe the existence of PP has any impact whatsoever on cancer rates? I.e., would cancer rates be different if PP didn't exist?
2/4/2012 11:15:35 PM
Because of PP's unique passion for their services, other providers may not have been as successful at a public campaign for them. In the end, it washes out. If PP didn't exist, somebody very similar to them probably would.The demographics of abortion and birth control may have been different during their early days, because PP targeted certain areas more heavily than others. So yes, I think there would have been less breast cancer, but not in a very meaningful amount.I'm still perfectly right that their services create cancer. Because their services create cancer. I haven't claimed anything about them increasing overall cancer rates compared to the world without them.
2/4/2012 11:22:20 PM
So, yeah, you are arguing that a particular car company 'causes' car accidents.
2/4/2012 11:31:55 PM