After thinking about this and conversing with some other people about it for a few days, I have concluded that the only reasonable stance for me to take is full-bore pro-choice. Up to the point of birth. This is based on 2 moral imperatives for me.1)We should never force a woman to give birth to a child no matter what the circumstances of her fertilization.I can't morally justify trumping the rights of a woman by the rights of an unborn child. A person should have total control over her body, regardless of the potential sentience of the unborn child. Whether she was raped is irrelevant.2)The aggregate suffering is far less than what will probably be suffered by the unwanted child, the mother, and everyone else affected.This is less important to me than point 1), but from a purely consequentialist point of view, this point stands. Unwanted children undoubtedly suffer on average more than children that are nurtured by loving support systems. Not to mention the suffering for the parent(s) of unwanted children, and everyone else that unwanted child affects. Call it euthanasia if you want, but it is most likely the more humane choice given the circumstances.----------------------------------------------I do not support infanticide. At the point of birth, if the child is unwanted, there should be social structures in place to foster those children. I just can't see forcing a woman to go through with birth to get to that point if she doesn't want to.Finally a pragmatic point. Abortions, even late term abortions, will happen even if you outlaw them, or blow up every abortion clinic, or kill every late term abortion doctor. Just like drugs and prostitution, outlawing it will simply make it dangerous. Whether you're for or against abortion philosophically, this will always be the case. I think it's better for society if we have safe methods for women to abort their fetuses if they so choose.
7/12/2010 8:57:06 AM
i think you have a clear opinion, which i can respect. at least you have a reasoned stance. however, it is completely devoid of tying the would-be mother to any form of responsibility for getting pregnant in the first place...almost like it happens out of thin air. i do not agree with basically alleviating total responsibility for creating the life from the woman or the man. further, what possible argument can be made to waiting until late (third trimester) into a pregnancy to terminate it?
7/12/2010 9:32:57 AM
well didnt you hear, 95% of abortions are because of brutal gang rapes
7/12/2010 10:03:31 AM
It's not that it happens out of thin air, it's just impossible to make exceptions for intent. Was a person really raped? Has their circumstances changed where when they got pregnant they could feasibly support the child, but now cannot? Has the father died and the woman simply isn't emotionally or financially able to support a child? Who knows? That's why for me it's important to not restrict it.I don't think getting pregnant under any circumstance obligates you to go through the birthing process and certainly we should not force a woman to.I can't imagine any woman would intentionally wait until the third trimester, but it will happen. Maybe they were out of the country and did not want to risk the procedure in Uganda. Maybe their husband was killed and she was critically injured in a car accident. Maybe doctors failed to diagnose a serious congenital defect until that late.
7/12/2010 10:06:29 AM
7/12/2010 10:39:58 AM
the bible says that children are a blessing so i don't know how you could infer that they are actually a punishment
7/12/2010 11:06:47 AM
The Bible says a lot of things. Are you certain you want to go down that road?
7/12/2010 11:07:47 AM
yes
7/12/2010 11:08:07 AM
7/12/2010 11:12:04 AM
I agree with all of those verses. The bible is the unerring holy Word of God. Why are you questioning it?[Edited on July 12, 2010 at 11:16 AM. Reason : ]
7/12/2010 11:15:27 AM
<-----looks for his troll spray.
7/12/2010 11:15:59 AM
7/12/2010 11:17:05 AM
7/12/2010 5:26:39 PM
do you consider being fat the same as being pregnant?
7/12/2010 5:29:21 PM
^^ Yes, obesity is the punishment people get for eating shitty food, along with heart disease and airplane discomfort. What is your point?
7/12/2010 5:37:00 PM
my point is how dumb your metaphor is. again, I am not pro life. but you cannot completely remove the responsibility for creating a life from this equation. that is a dangerous concept. there has to be middle ground.
7/13/2010 9:35:14 AM
I'm still on the fence.Pragmatically speaking, legalized and cheap abortions will reduce crime, poverty, and the number of screaming, obnoxious feminists.On the other hand, I have a hard time justifying a distinction between a fetus a week before birth and a baby a week after birth. Aside from some minor cosmetic changes there's very little difference. So why do I think it's OK to kill one and not the other? We could reduce crime and poverty by euthanizing poor people, too.One thing I can't understand is how this always becomes a discussion of women's rights. If the thing is a person then you don't get to kill it for inconveniencing you. If the thing is not a person then I don't give two shits what you do to it. Nobody cares what you're doing to YOUR body, they care what you are doing to (presumably) another person's body.
7/13/2010 6:11:20 PM
7/13/2010 6:18:19 PM
7/14/2010 3:58:44 AM
7/14/2010 9:16:49 AM
is it murder if it's an ectopic pregnancy
7/14/2010 9:17:56 AM
Well it would definitely be killing. If you feel that all killing is murder then I guess so.
7/14/2010 9:25:30 AM
7/14/2010 12:03:48 PM
^ wouldn't an ectopic pregnancy be necessary to abort due to it being a serious threat to the health of the mother (and no chance of successful outcome for the fetus, anyway)?
7/14/2010 12:27:39 PM
7/14/2010 12:50:49 PM
Wait, I thought you'd decided you were OK with allowing any and all abortions?
7/14/2010 12:52:55 PM
That's what I'm getting at. Too many what ifs to reasonably make exceptions. Better to err on the side of freedom of the mother, in my opinion. Then there's the aggregate suffering issue.I don't think a mother giving birth is comparable to someone assaulting another. I think it's ok to treat birthing as an entirely unique process as it is.
7/14/2010 1:02:09 PM
7/14/2010 1:24:11 PM
7/14/2010 1:51:55 PM
7/14/2010 2:08:55 PM
I'm just not cool with forcing a woman to get a c-section or giving birth if she doesn't want to. Or punishing her legally if she chooses not to go through with a particular medical procedure versus another.The word legally was unnecessary. They're not people until they're out of the mother's womb, one way or another. Since people who are already here are people it's obvious that the rest of the slippery slope doesn't apply.
7/14/2010 2:16:53 PM
7/14/2010 2:28:13 PM
7/14/2010 2:32:48 PM
Back up now, I wasn't saying what you seem to think I was. I was responding to a very specific comment from disco_stu:
7/14/2010 2:37:25 PM
^^^cuteness and grossness have nothing to do with it. It's not a scientific decision. It's a logical distinction based on the idea that a mother should have full control over her body, including the life that exists inside of her. The exact point could be argued. For me it's at whatever point that the baby can be physically separated from the mother without further harm to the mother.NOTE THEN: a 7 month gestated prematurely birthed child IS A PERSON, but a 7 month gestated unborn is not a person. I'm fine with this.[Edited on July 14, 2010 at 2:40 PM. Reason : ^][Edited on July 14, 2010 at 2:40 PM. Reason : note]
7/14/2010 2:39:51 PM
whoa, whoa, whoa, this "euthanasia" argument is absurd. I don't have any problem with assisted suicide or whatever--if someone wants to be put out of his misery, go for it. An unborn baby is a fundamentally different scenario, as the baby has no say-so in the matter.
7/14/2010 2:42:46 PM
^^ Fair enough.
7/14/2010 2:43:06 PM
7/14/2010 2:46:12 PM
7/14/2010 2:48:25 PM
Dude, I'm not talking about a fetus that's a few weeks old. I'm talking about a fucking baby that just hasn't made the magical passage through the cervix and vagina that turns it into a person.
7/14/2010 2:51:54 PM
7/14/2010 2:53:49 PM
It magically has something to say now? ^^[Edited on July 14, 2010 at 2:53 PM. Reason : .]
7/14/2010 2:53:51 PM
And now McDanger's advocating infanticide. Alright, I gotta leave the computer for a while.[Edited on July 14, 2010 at 2:55 PM. Reason : maybe I'm misunderstanding that last post though]
7/14/2010 2:55:11 PM
It's not magical. It's the physical separation of the child from the mother. If it comes out through cesarean, it never passes through the cervix or the vagina but it still becomes a person. If it falcon punches it's way out of the womb it's still a person.There's nothing magical about it. Once it's no longer a part of the mama, it's own person. Up to that point, it has no rights, especially any rights that would force an actual person to go through a medical procedure that they would otherwise choose not to.At the point where it no longer has this impact on the mother, it's a person.
7/14/2010 2:55:42 PM
.[Edited on July 14, 2010 at 2:58 PM. Reason : nvm, not worth wading in atm]
7/14/2010 2:58:27 PM
^^You went from completely reasonable to off-the-charts absurd, dude. By that logic, partial birth abortion at the 9-month mark is OK. OK, fine...if you don't think it's the magical cervix and vagina that bestow personhood upon a baby, it's the magical umbilical cord that, when severed, marks the establishment of human life?[Edited on July 14, 2010 at 3:02 PM. Reason : ^^]
7/14/2010 3:01:17 PM
I don't see what's so magical about a vagina anyway.
7/14/2010 3:10:21 PM
Human life != human personhood.No, the umbilical cord is not the demarcation point since neither the mother nor child are using it at that point and neither feel pain when it's severed surgically or naturally. It's at whatever point the child is no longer physically affecting the mother.It's a fucking shitty topic and I like thinking about it. I'm not saying I could not be convinced otherwise, I just have currently no way of trumping the rights of a woman to decide the fate of her body with the rights of an unborn child to live.It's not OK. It's fucking horrible. I just think it shouldn't be illegal.[Edited on July 14, 2010 at 3:11 PM. Reason : .]
7/14/2010 3:10:36 PM
7/14/2010 3:13:24 PM
^^^ haha. I think it's one of those things where "if you have to ask..."^ I'll agree with elements of that. Specifically, the part about personhood being a spectrum. I think that should be obvious. However, I think you're a full-fledged person at some point before birth. The point at which you're "person-enough" to rate protection from abortion (i.e., your death represents killing of a person) is arguable, and that's been my point all along--this debate revolves not around religion, or women's rights, or anything else but what defines a "human life" (*unless you're someone like BridgetSPK or Solinari who says that willfully killing babies is fine, since it's for the greater good)If a baby isn't as much of a person as you or I are, then what about a toddler? What about a 3rd grader? What about someone in a 3rd-world country who's never really experienced anything beyond his village, his fields, and his livestock? What about some of the dumbasses on here who are half-retarded? What about someone who is no-kidding clinically retarded?
7/14/2010 3:27:57 PM