7/11/2013 12:49:09 AM
7/11/2013 12:50:47 AM
You gain sentience once you pass through the birth canal?http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Singer#Abortion.2C_euthanasia_and_infanticide
7/11/2013 12:53:24 AM
^i'm a little unclear on what point you're making, your question mark is confusing me.that philosopher sort of simultaneously refutes and supports my claim[Edited on July 11, 2013 at 1:04 AM. Reason : .]
7/11/2013 1:03:58 AM
A women walks into an abortion clinic. "I was raped, I want an abortion." Goes one of two ways."Good enough for me, here's your abortion", or"Prove it by filling out this form and submitting yourself for interrogation by our resident 'rape bureaucrat' who will decide if you in fact have been raped."Impossible to implement. So either you are OK with abortion or against it across the board. No cop-outs on the rape exception.
7/11/2013 7:57:51 AM
7/11/2013 8:34:17 AM
I like how republicans want all embryos to be born, even if the parents don't want them, but they hate social programs like food stamps to feed kids, and early childhood education to make sure they are ready for school. They just care about the fetus'es welfare until its born, then if they don't make it, tough shit, blame the parents for irresponsibly having sex.
7/11/2013 11:47:13 AM
^i saw something once that was along the lines of, conservatives want to protect the unborn's right, right up until it's born gay. similar line of thinking.
7/11/2013 12:09:04 PM
http://damarisafari.kinja.com/11-year-old-girl-forced-to-carry-pregnancy-from-rape-732109495
7/11/2013 12:37:44 PM
I'm interested in what people consider to be "terminal genetic illnesses." For the record, there are many genetic disorders that are not terminal but absolutely horrible and might cause extreme mental retardation or numerous birth defects yet they don't necessarily have a shortened lifespan. You can't even lump all Down syndrome pregnancies together as some are very mild and others resemble the likes of trisomy 18 and will most likely die once they're born. I also want to point out that in many cases the different clinics consider the fetuses with multiple anomalies or a known condition to be elective abortions. I always wondered how much it would throw the numbers off if they really broke it down and reported how many affected pregnancies were terminated versus how many were really just elective for whatever reason. For example, one of our recent cases was trisomy 13 (rare, usually lethal) and that woman was put into the elective category. So was our patient whose baby had no lower jaw (google agnathia-otocephaly if you're brave) - their case clearly wasn't going to end well, yet still considered elective. And just in case people don't think it's real, we have a case from this week where that lady will absolutely die if she continues her pregnancy. I've also seen them perform one in a Catholic hospital ASAP because it would've 100% killed mom. Happens more often than you realize, that's for sure.Anyway, I'm done rambling now
7/11/2013 7:33:42 PM
I consider terminal genetic illnesses genetic illnesses that are terminal
7/11/2013 7:38:44 PM
come on man, discourse. a lot of valid points were made.
7/11/2013 7:51:18 PM
But I said that in a list of examples, what I said doesn't really mean anything more than listing various things to see if aaronburro was an absolutist. None of that post matters to the point of my question.
7/11/2013 8:01:59 PM
Well you sure didn't list any examples and I think people often use that term without knowing what it even means. There are only a small amount of true, terminal genetic disorders. (And by the way, hardly anyone in the genetics community uses the phrasing "genetic illness.") I wasn't even going against your point, I was just trying to spark discussion so there's really no need to be a dick. But now that I think about it, I would like to know why you used that phrasing. I mainly ask because for the single gene disorders that are terminal oftentimes there is a family history and people will then test their current pregnancy after having a previous child affected or possibly a relative. Some of the disorders are terminal very early in life and others maybe not so much. A good example is Hurler syndrome versus Cystic Fibrosis. A kid with Hurler syndrome will die usually within the first decade of life because of all the mucopolysaccharides building up in their body but someone with CF could live into their 30s or 40s with treatment. Yet you could put it into the "terminal illness" category because unless an accident happens, the complications from CF will kill that individual.* So, where do you draw the line? Are you only going to allow people to terminate pregnancies with crazy chromosomal disorders? What about the people who are terminating because they know the genetic disorder really sucks and will eventually kill someone, but possibly not until they're an adult? Maybe I am rambling and all over the place but I wish people would not lump genetic disorders into one nice little package when they have no idea what they're talking about.[Edited on July 11, 2013 at 8:24 PM. Reason : * in cases of classic CF, not the unusual ones like a male with only CAVD]
7/11/2013 8:22:47 PM
you can strike that phrase entirely from my post and it doesn't change anything
7/11/2013 9:23:59 PM
7/11/2013 10:04:32 PM
7/12/2013 9:16:04 PM
7/12/2013 9:22:59 PM
If only there were ways to discern how likely it is that someone had been raped... Hmmm.....]
7/12/2013 10:16:53 PM
Lol. Yeah bud. If only those ways were 100% foolproof. And now you want to put rape victims through examinations by a rape bureaucrat which is exactly what I said. What if a woman actually got raped but the government flunkie you are installing came back with "nope". Will she be granted due process of law? Allowed access to a lawyer? Can she appeal? How long will that take? We all know how efficient government and the courts are. If she loses, are you now forcing the rape victim to carry her rape baby to full term?Also what about statutory rape? Incest? Date rape via rufies? None of that leaves a convenient physical scar you can point to.[Edited on July 13, 2013 at 8:37 AM. Reason : .]
7/13/2013 8:23:20 AM
7/13/2013 10:29:23 AM
7/13/2013 9:21:58 PM
go to a pro-life protest, there are lots of women. there are women cosponsoring this legislation.
7/13/2013 9:28:13 PM
Let's shake this topic up!To pro-life people, - Would it be wrong to abort a fetus which is a Chimpanzee-human hybrid? - Would killing any human hybrid species be murder? - What about neanderthals? - Is killing a modern Chimpanzee murder?I know there's going to be the common "murder is killing your own species". But the word 'species' is a concept of human invention, and frankly, nature doesn't give a crap about what words you use to describe things.
7/14/2013 3:52:47 PM
7/14/2013 5:20:28 PM
[Edited on July 14, 2013 at 6:27 PM. Reason : meh]
7/14/2013 6:27:18 PM
7/14/2013 7:01:56 PM
7/14/2013 7:06:05 PM
7/14/2013 9:19:01 PM
http://www.salon.com/2013/08/07/fetal_pain_is_a_lie_how_phony_science_took_over_the_abortion_debate/
8/7/2013 5:15:30 PM
I wish that reality was useful response to the irrational fucks that dominate our country's discourse.
8/7/2013 6:25:28 PM
I can't understand how a group of people can flat out deny sound science or irrefutable evidence...which is weird to me, because I'm generally a very empathetic person. But, it is beyond me to comprehend how a person can see undeniable evidence to support something and just say, "Nope, that's wrong...I know better." It's like the Congressional Budget Office performing their in-depth analysis of the ACA and concluding that it will save hundreds of billions of dollars over 10 years...and John Boehner has the nerve to respond that "CBO is entitled to their opinion..."
8/7/2013 10:42:08 PM
8/8/2013 3:36:47 PM
8/8/2013 4:45:19 PM
Maybe the "group of people" he's referring to are the idiots the lying politicians pander to. Otherwise known as a majority of Americans.
8/8/2013 4:51:08 PM
Either one. People ignore evidence if it's detrimental to their belief system. Or they "rationalize" their way around it. Most people are incapable of thinking in shades of gray.
8/8/2013 5:43:06 PM
8/8/2013 5:52:07 PM
care to cite your source?[Edited on August 8, 2013 at 11:13 PM. Reason : autocorrect fail]
8/8/2013 11:12:24 PM
The common sense from seeing that they used 10 years of income to barely pay for 6 years of expenses, and then had the balls to claim it would lower the deficit, AFTER they included non-medical related incomes, such as the college loan takeover.It's basically an accepted fact at this point that the CBO numbers on the ACA are complete bullshit. IIRC, their original estimate said it was going to lose a good deal of money, so Obama, Reid, and Pelosi told them to do it again.
8/8/2013 11:31:09 PM
exactly
8/8/2013 11:42:57 PM
But guys, its basically an accepted fact!BASICALLYan ACCEPTEDFACT
8/9/2013 6:57:31 AM
good point. thanks for adding to the discussion with your trolling.
8/9/2013 9:13:31 PM
I don't want to respond because it'll derail the thread further, but since the CBO isn't good enough for you, how about the GAO's analysis?http://thehill.com/blogs/healthwatch/health-reform-implementation/285009-gao-health-law-will-increase-deficit-if-cost-cutting-measures-stop
8/9/2013 11:40:29 PM
I can work with that. Just don't think that ACA is a good example to trot out, given how highly politicized that issue is to begin with.
8/9/2013 11:53:55 PM
8/10/2013 9:00:42 PM
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2013/10/28/fed-judge-texas-abortion-limits-unconstitutional/
10/28/2013 5:14:45 PM
damned liberal activist judges in Texas
10/29/2013 7:55:56 PM
What are you talking about? The story is about judges in Texas trying to appeal a ruling about their conservative bullshit being unconstitutional.
10/30/2013 12:36:37 PM
http://www.wral.com/court-to-hear-nc-choose-life-license-plate-case/13053162/
10/30/2013 1:00:18 PM
10/31/2013 12:32:53 AM