Why does it seem like so much pressure is put on individual politicians to end or "fight" abortion when the supreme court ruling is the cause for its legality. Wouldn't it be unconstitutional for a politician to single out abortion in any type of medical funding law since its legal by supreme court ruling?Why do you always see pro life groups going after politicans and bills instead of the real problem, the supreme court ruling?Why is it so hard to get a bunch of doctors together and challenge the supreme court to redefine what a life is? Biologically, a zygote (conception) is a life. What am I missing?Do not flame as this thread is based on my misunderstanding of the culture of the situation.
3/9/2011 12:51:01 AM
First, as I understand it the Roe v. Wade ruling is based on individual privacy (though I may be mistaken there). Point being, there's other angles to attack it from.Second, if you're in a state or constituency that doesn't like abortion, you do well to propose all manner of shit opposing it, because it will appease your base (even if the legislation stands no chance)Defining a life is way more complicated than what you put forward in your post. Even "biologically" this is a heavily debated concept.Lastly, I know you're a troll, but someone has to say something.
3/9/2011 1:24:08 AM
3/9/2011 8:58:20 AM
The abortion issue doesn’t REALLY have anything to do with the science of life.It’s purely about the social aspects.And politicians only ever bring it up so that they can rally their supporters.
3/9/2011 9:10:22 AM
I think we all know the truth is that life begins at 40.Anyway, there are legistlative ways to attack abortion (like GrumpyGOP mentioned). You can make it so that insurance companies won't be allowed to cover abortions (at least if they want Federal help or want to be listed in the Federal exchange). You can severely limit the circumstances under which an abortion is legal (keep shortening the window of when you can get one, force an abortion seeker to jump through endless expensive hoops [therapy] in order to discourage them).Also, they are going after the Supreme Court ruling. The best way to do that is to stack the Supreme Court with justices who are anti-abortion. Republicans have been trying to do that for the last 40 years.Troll or not, there's your response.[Edited on March 9, 2011 at 9:14 AM. Reason : .]
3/9/2011 9:13:20 AM
I find it funny that usually the "Right to Life" folks are usually the same ones who are staunch oppenents of the promiscuity that our gov't treats social welfare programs (foodstamps, welfare, medicaid). They are usually the ones also bitching about healthcare reform. Do they not realize that folks being forced to conceive ill timed fuck trophies just puts more mouths on the government teat.
3/9/2011 10:26:26 AM
3/9/2011 10:34:49 AM
When did I ever point out Christianity as the problem?
3/9/2011 10:45:27 AM
I was being facetious.
3/9/2011 11:08:49 AM
3/9/2011 12:11:29 PM
3/9/2011 12:44:08 PM
3/9/2011 1:37:38 PM
3/9/2011 2:59:21 PM
3/9/2011 3:00:51 PM
Not everyone who is pro-choice necessarily likes the idea of abortion. I think a lot of them, while being in favor of womens rights, don't particularly care if the government is banned from funding them.
3/9/2011 3:33:23 PM
3/9/2011 3:45:28 PM
they usually grow too.
3/9/2011 3:52:50 PM
I think something is being missed here. When it comes to federal funding you run into a situation where people who don't believe in abortion being forced to pay for other peoples abortions. Everyone pays taxes and everybody's money looks the same. Who can honestly say that a pro-life person's tax dollars won't end up paying for an abortion. Abortion is legal and if a woman wants one she can have one. Why should other's be forced to pay for it?
3/9/2011 8:18:43 PM
3/9/2011 8:36:52 PM
Fair enough. But this is a little different. It's an elective medical proceedure. You wouldn't like being forced to pay for someone else nose job or lyposuction would you? Neither would I.
3/9/2011 8:58:25 PM
^I think the only abortions that are federally subsidized are in the case of rape and threat to the mother's life. And there were like 100 or so of those abortions that were subsidized last year. So we're talking about a very, very, very small amount of money that helped this group of women avoid death or avoid carrying a rapist's baby to term. This creates good outcomes for society because it means less dead mothers and less potentially motherless babies. The amount of burden each taxpayer bears for these benefits comes out to tenths of a cent.War is legal, and if a president wants to skirt the laws and essentially declare it, he can. Why should others be forced to pay for it?(These particularly abortions are hardly elective, and like war, they're supposedly good for society or something.)[Edited on March 9, 2011 at 9:07 PM. Reason : More clarity.]
3/9/2011 8:59:12 PM
Once again, fair enough. But you're still missing the point. This has nothing to do with the healthcare law, or foriegn policy. Read the post, neither is mentioned. As you mentioned both of those scenarioes are rare meaning most abortions are in fact elective (rape is also in fact elective though I don't blame any rape victim for having one).
3/9/2011 9:19:22 PM
You're talking about federal funding for abortions, right? Where you went on about how taxpayers shouldn't have to pay for somebody else's abortions because they don't believe in abortion, and how those abortions are like nose jobs...you're speaking about federal funding for abortions? Taking taxpayer money and paying for an abortion, right?
3/9/2011 9:39:38 PM
[Edited on March 9, 2011 at 9:55 PM. Reason : ]
3/9/2011 9:50:51 PM
Correct. Let me clariffy, I wasn't talking about this in terms of the healthcare bill, rather in response to the topic. Of course people will inevitabley have to pay for things they believe in. Abortion is fundamentally different issue than those in that it involves terminating what either is or will become (depending on you'r point of view) a human life. The life, or potential life of someone who didn't get a chance to choose their life. And as was pointed out earlier is most often elected as a matter of convienience. That's what most pro-life people believe. And seeing as the thread is about ways politicians can attack abortion, I was noting a strategy they can use to defund it. I'm not trying to get into an ideological fight with you guys. Just noting a strtegy. Although reading back I should have been more clea about that.
3/9/2011 10:10:01 PM
3/9/2011 10:21:10 PM
^^You're the first one to mention the healthcare bill. And the healthcare bill didn't expand funding for abortions. Federal funding is still the same way it's been forever: available in the case of rape/incest and threat to the mother's life. I don't consider those "elective" procedures.And war costs a bunch more than a handful of abortions, could be viewed as elective, and it also involves terminating way more lives than 100 or so abortions. But I still have to fund it, right?I think what I'm saying is that your "strategy" is really crappy since it revolves around convincing people that helping 100 or so raped/potentially dying women get abortions is the same thing as funding nose jobs.[Edited on March 9, 2011 at 10:22 PM. Reason : I always gotta edit.]
3/9/2011 10:22:24 PM
3/10/2011 12:13:27 AM
The E Man, do you support in vitro fertilization?[Edited on March 10, 2011 at 12:32 AM. Reason : .]
3/10/2011 12:31:49 AM
^^ babies can be supported by other people, in my parents generation everyone had wet nurses.and
3/10/2011 7:24:32 AM
3/10/2011 8:18:53 AM
3/10/2011 8:55:42 AM
when i was younger, while travelling in the 3rd world, i picked up a multi-cellular parasite with independant DNA that was not viable outside my body until reaching a certain stage. Was I responsible for carrying it until it was ready to be shit out and do its thing? My insurance company paid for the pills that killed it, should this have been denied to me if I was on government healthcare?
3/10/2011 9:42:58 AM
3/10/2011 1:32:03 PM
the fed should pay for aboritions and all manner of birth control and make them readily available. Preventing needless births goes along way to lowering state costs.
3/10/2011 1:39:32 PM
3/10/2011 1:58:27 PM
^ahahahahah
3/10/2011 2:01:20 PM
So if fertilization occurs but implantation never does because the woman continues to take birth control, has poor diet, or for some other reason, should we charge the woman with murder? Or at least manslaughter, amirite? 25% of all pregnancies miscarry. There are millions of "individuals with rights" being flushed down the toilet in this country a year. Are you honestly outraged by this?
3/10/2011 2:02:50 PM
Those are deaths[Edited on March 10, 2011 at 2:06 PM. Reason : and people wonder why the catholic church is against birth control...]
3/10/2011 2:05:28 PM
You are crazy and people who think like you are a threat to women's rights. Your understanding of human nature and individuality is unscientific and I don't give a shit what a rapist-filled organization thinks about sexuality.nevermind you're trolling.
3/10/2011 2:12:35 PM
i just want him to see that his logic is circular. his constant redefining to address rebuttals has left his definition of life as just the definition of what we are trying to determine is a life. he is saying that, "it is a life because it is a life." it is circular reasoning and it doesn't stand up to any logical test.
3/10/2011 3:06:12 PM
3/10/2011 5:00:31 PM
^
3/10/2011 5:05:33 PM
The E Man, do you support in vitro fertilization?
3/11/2011 12:30:25 AM