Your statistics would be relevant if we were talking about abortion in the mid 90's we aren't and therefore your statistics are irrelevant. This is a simple concept and something I have stated over and over again I am not sure why it is so difficult for you to comprehend? You are the one who defined abortion as murder. Another situation was stated in which refusing to sustain another human life by donating tissue/organs (this other life is a fully formed and functional human life btw) isn't considered murder. Your response is that this can't even be considered but it could be if several irrelevant (to the act of murder which is what you define abortion as btw) conditions are satisfied. They are:
5/13/2011 9:37:06 PM
5/13/2011 9:46:36 PM
5/13/2011 10:11:06 PM
5/13/2011 10:38:10 PM
5/13/2011 10:56:04 PM
5/14/2011 12:18:19 AM
^ I know that. Which is my point. Per adder's argument (as I understand it), the mother owns everything in her body, so an abortion is her exercising control over her body. So I asked him how he felt about laws which charge a mother with crimes for drinking / doing drugs while pregnant. He indicated he was generally favorable to the concept, if not the law itself. I am trying to figure out what difference he sees which changes the issue in this case to not being only about the mother's body.
5/14/2011 12:33:05 AM
There are actually quite a few good points on both sides. One thing that doesn't make much sense, however, is how a lot of the pro-abortion people claim that since a fetus/zygote doesn't have consciousness, then it therefore has no rights. Take, for instance, a dead person. It's illegal to have sex with a dead person or dig them up. You cannot utilize their perfectly good organs without their living permission. A dead person truly is a useless clump of cells (a description that is often used for an unborn baby) yet they have many rights. So to try to rationalize the premature destruction of a fetus simply because it may or may not know that it is alive just doesn't make sense. In fact, I would think that an unconscious clump of cells that will someday be conscious should have significantly more rights than an unconscious clump of cells that will soon decompose into the earth.Also, just as a side question, for those of you who are pro-abortion, how many of you have children?
5/14/2011 1:39:11 AM
ITT people suggest that fetuses are autonomous lives completely separate from the body of their mothers.I have 2 children.Oh and I so love Duke's high moral ground here. Blowing up "bad guys" and innocent people that happen to be near "bad guys" is ok, but preventing unwanted children from suffering and causing unneeded strain on their families and society at large is so terrible that he "can't find words"...
5/14/2011 1:39:48 AM
5/14/2011 1:49:01 AM
5/14/2011 1:51:08 AM
It is, of course, reliant on someone else to provide it with the most basic necessities of life. A fetus can be taken out of its mother well before it is supposed to be born, and subsequently cared for by someone other than it's mother. I wouldn't call it "autonomous."
5/14/2011 2:17:20 AM
Just saw an HBO special on the Chinese one child policy. I didn't know they had problems with human trafficking, female fetus abortion and kidnapping. The said that since the policy was enacted six million female fetuses were aborted. They also said 70000 children are abducted every year. Sad state of things over there.
5/14/2011 2:29:27 AM
5/14/2011 3:27:41 AM
Slow your roll there, merbig. I'm not necessarily opposed to abortions at any stage, and I'm still ambivalent on the whole subject.But I think it's necessary to answer the question of when, exactly, a fetus becomes its own entity and not just an extension of the mother. Because that's what it boils down to. I don't think any significant portion of the population is out there saying, "Fuck a woman's right to her own body, let's restrict that!" No. The whole issue centers around the presumption (or lack thereof) of life for the unborn.So we start with the obvious point of distinction: birth. As I've said, not a lot of difference in the thing in the 48 hours preceding birth and afterwords. You seem to tacitly agree with that assessment. So, if there's no big difference there, where do we draw the line? That's the only question that matters. And when I see a convincing answer to that, I'll reach a conclusion.I can see how my line of questioning comes off as pro-life. I really, truly don't intend it that way. I can see the benefits to society that come from not having unwanted children. But I can also see the benefits of not having the infirm, retarded, etc. Which is why -- and I reiterate, for the thousandth time, this point -- the only question is whether or not the unborn is its own person. I don't know. I'm willing to hear arguments either way. If it isn't a person, well, shit, vacuum the thing out and I have no problem. If it is a person, things get a lot more complicated.
5/14/2011 4:56:37 AM
5/14/2011 8:27:53 AM
I personally don't think you can draw a line anywhere and that it will be different for every case...But to answer some previous questions, I do not have children but I do work in the medical field (or at least am being trained in the moment) and a large concentration of my work will be in prenatal. So, yeah, I'll have the job of telling many women their baby will either die soon after birth or have a medical condition its whole life (I.e., Down syndrome). However, in college I did have a scare once. The gynecologist told me my pregnancy test was positive when I went in for a routine check-up. Turns out the lab tech knocked over an 8-month-pregnant woman's sample into mine But, I wasn't told this immediately and they asked me to take another one and call them with the results. Even though it was negative, by the time I took the test I had already decided I would step up and accept my new responsibilities. I'm also Christian.I have always found these arguments to be frustrating for one main reason: it's NOT a black and white issue, and you can't ignore the gray areas..
5/14/2011 8:48:54 AM
5/14/2011 9:08:00 AM
^ I agree that is the main issue up for debate. I have to go to work but I will respond later.
5/14/2011 9:20:02 AM
5/14/2011 9:31:48 AM
Let's say that somehow a grown adult person was miniaturized and implanted within a woman. If the woman wanted the man out of her but the only way to get it out would result in the death of the man, would she or would she not have the right?Not that fetuses should be given the same rights as adults (and I don't think that anyone is arguing it). Just trying to figure out where the line is why a woman wouldn't have the right to get a foreign body out of her own.
5/14/2011 1:35:20 PM
That's an interesting question, but it lacks the key point that (in your example) she had absolutely no choice in the fact that the miniature person got implanted.Of course I realize there are outliers (rape, failed BC), but for the most part, if a woman gets pregnant when she doesn't want to, she usually has a reasonable say-so in the matter. Either she missed a couple of pills, or she was taking medication that negated the effectiveness of the pill, or she didn't use BC at all, or (insert reason).So assuming that said woman chose to have sexual intercourse, and as a result, a person (let's say you disco_stu were then miniaturized and placed inside of her, I do not believe that it should be within her rights to kill you to assure her safety.I am not totally versed on birth control and contraception, however I know there are some pretty effective methods of birth control. The pill, a shot, an implant, tubal litigation, a condom.... these methods used in conjunction with each other - they may not be 100%, but I am pretty sure that you can get pretty close to 100%. So it is pretty safe to say that if indeed you're truly practicing safe sex, you're not going to get pregnant - despite that one friend of a friend we all know who used a condom and the pill and still got knocked up. And using that rationale, I don't think it is right for a woman to kill miniature disco_stu.
5/14/2011 2:02:54 PM
5/14/2011 2:23:07 PM
Just an arbitrary line here but I want to see what other people think of it. How about drawing the line at the point where the baby could survive outside of the mothers womb? The info I saw during a quick perusal of March of Dimes website seem to indicate that pre 26 weeks things aren't looking good. Even after 26 weeks you are looking at a fetus needing extreme care (intravenous feeding, oxygen etc) and can face problems as a result of this premature birth. So basically as a starting point no aborting a fetus after 26 weeks unless there are serious medical reasons or other extreme factors.
5/14/2011 4:20:42 PM
That line will continually shift with medical progress.Plus, it seems to me to be an awfully poor indication of human life.
5/14/2011 4:49:29 PM
5/14/2011 5:11:17 PM
5/14/2011 5:35:08 PM
5/14/2011 5:48:31 PM
5/14/2011 5:54:09 PM
5/14/2011 7:03:34 PM
5/14/2011 7:21:15 PM
5/14/2011 7:32:37 PM
Your argument also hinges on the idea that a zygote is an individual human being although it is identical to the separate sperm and egg. This is really the heart of the debate, whether or not we should protect human life is a red herring.
5/14/2011 7:51:44 PM
5/14/2011 8:15:23 PM
5/14/2011 8:24:15 PM
Unfortunately, typing "SHUT THEIR FUCKING LEGS" in all caps invalidates your opinion on this matter.And you were doing so good! Really.[Edited on May 14, 2011 at 8:55 PM. Reason : (Not really.) ]
5/14/2011 8:55:36 PM
5/14/2011 8:58:01 PM
5/14/2011 10:13:03 PM
5/14/2011 11:01:38 PM
I don't think I've seen anything less intelligent in quite a while. nowhere did I say that I use our laws as the end-all be-all about morality. Rather, someone asked why we were "granting rights" to fetuses instead of animals. It only makes sense to then respond with something regarding law. Rights and laws are kind of things that tend to be discussed in the same breath. That may be a shock to you
5/14/2011 11:07:40 PM
For those who want to argue about statistics...http://www.guttmacher.org/pubs/ib14.htmlThe website itself is a good source.
5/14/2011 11:57:03 PM
5/15/2011 2:28:22 AM
5/15/2011 10:19:49 AM
5/15/2011 10:58:05 AM
If doctors agreed when "life began" we wouldn't be having this conversation. Additionally the context of the discussion was around any abortion.
5/15/2011 11:41:51 AM
5/15/2011 1:56:59 PM
Should just have the child adopted. Everyone wins!
5/15/2011 2:10:04 PM
Let's worry about babies, while 20% of the living workforce isn't needed in the modern workforce.
5/15/2011 3:07:32 PM
5/15/2011 5:11:35 PM
I we outlaw abortion, the adoption scenario only works out for certain groups.Black women account for a disproportionate number of abortions. For instance, they accounted for 45 percent of abortions in NC in 2006, but they make up only 21.6 percent of the population. Furthermore, I've seen reports (keep in mind, they're from anti-abortion agencies) that supposedly 2 out of 3 black pregnancies are terminated with abortion. Of course, of the 1 out of 3 pregnancies that are not aborted, some of those may end up in adoption or miscarriage so even the 1 out of 3 is not guaranteed to result in a child that grows up with the biological family. On the other end of things, black people disproportionately do not qualify to adopt. So what we end up with is a lot of black babies available for adoption and not a lot of black parents able to adopt. If we banned abortion and attempted to replace it with adoption, obviously the racial disparity between adoptable babies and adoptive families would get even greater.In fact, if we imagine a world where abortion is outlawed and adoption is used instead, following the current statistics to their theoretical ends...we could see a country in which the majority of black children are raised in non-black homes (or foster/group homes). Of course, this would never happen! There would be a major intensification of the backlash against adoption in the black community. Black women would be discouraged from ever even considering adoption and would have to keep their unwanted pregnancies or seek an illegal/dangerous abortion instead.So adoption as an alternative to illegal abortion would be a privilege primarily reserved for white women and the white families who are able to adopt.[Edited on May 15, 2011 at 6:23 PM. Reason : My post is really weird and it sounds crazy racist, but it is the truth.]
5/15/2011 6:14:25 PM