Help me understand my own view on Abortion

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jackschmittusa

Diamond Member
Apr 16, 2003
5,972
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When a woman bears a child, she usually assumes a long commitment to care for the child. It is a life altering experience that may not always have a pleasent outcome. Sometimes morality comes down to making choises from options that are all less than optimum. I do not consider abortion murder as some do and I do not "push" abortion, there may be times when I would recommend a woman considering it.

A junkie who will ccontinue to use drugs through a pregnancy is quite likely to produce a child with poor prospects at a happy and productive life. Might not an abortion be preferable to creating a human being who is never likely to emerge from the shadow of the 8 ball it was born behind?

Suppose a young woman in the middle of a college education has a couple too many at a party and gets pregnent. Her options are to drop out of school, have the kid and resent it all her life at some level (with a negetive effect on her and the kid) or abort, continue her education so as to provide a better life for future children.

I doubt that I personally have the necessary skills and abilities to care for and raise a severely defective child. My inability to cope would have a very negative effect on my wife, any other children, and the inegrety of the family as a whole. At a minimum, quality of life for all family members would be diminished, and at a maximum? Who knows?

Rape and incest are obvious senarios.

While adoption may be an option, it may not be a good choice in some cases. Some women may feel that is not an option due to pressures from family members who might ostracise her, or worse, offer to make the rest of her life miserable. Some children may fall into a catagory of being esentially "unadoptable" by a large majority of prospective adoptive parents. This can be from such things as defect or ethnic appearence. A women may feel maternal responsibility that precludes "giving the child away" even if she is aware that she may abuse or damage the child while it is in her care.

While, as bystanders, we may offer predictions about the outcome of carring to term, ultimately, it should fall to the woman to do the final evaluation of how to proceed with her life.

Sorry if I rambled, but it is much harder to speak of the subject in generalizations than it is to consider each individual case with its own unique circumstances.
 

DT4K

Diamond Member
Jan 21, 2002
6,944
3
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Originally posted by: J Heartless Slick
If I were a woman, I would want to be able to decide when I had children.

Unless raped, every woman does have that choice.
 

DT4K

Diamond Member
Jan 21, 2002
6,944
3
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Originally posted by: TastesLikeChicken
Originally posted by: DT4K
My post probably already made the point, but it is not about arrogance or religion.
Abortion is not about arrogance or religion. The abortion issue is because the anti-abortion meme is primarily driven by religious ideologies. Christians are, in effect, trying to force their ideology as law upon everyone.
agreed. One of the reasons the pro-life movement does not have more support is because it is led by religious people. Those are the people who feel strongest about the issue and are more likely to play an active part in the movement. So yes, in a way it has become "about religion". My point was that religious beliefs are not always behind the opinion that abortion is wrong. As I said, I am not a religious person.


The whole "forcing my beliefs down you throat" thing is a flawed argument. Beliefs about what is right and wrong are forced down our throat all the fvcking time. Why am I not allowed to kill my own children? Why am I not allowed to smoke crack whenever I want?
The difference is that the majority believe that killing your children or smoking crack is wrong, and there are laws to dissuade one from doing so. You know what though? It still doesn't stop people from smoking crack or killing their children. Just as making abortion illegal will not stop women from having abortions. It'll only make abortions more dangerous by returning them to the back allys.
You are right. That is the difference. Almost everyone agrees that murder is wrong while people have mixed feelings about abortion. That is why the debate should be centered on whether or not abortion is right or wrong rather than on the flawed argument that moral beliefs should not be legislated.


If you decided to legalize murder, I would fully understand that nobody was forcing me to commit murder, but I would still think it should be illegal. Why? Because I would want to "force" my beliefs on everyone else.
I would agree that murder is and should be illegal. I would also agree that a fetus that's well into the second or third trimester should not be aborted. However, imo, the point of conception does not create a human being. It creates a lump of cells that has the potential to become a human being. That clump cannot survive outside the womb by itself. There is a point to where abortion can be performed and should not be considered murder.
Again, I agree with you. I don't consider the morning after pill to be the equivalent to having an abortion at 8 months gestation. I simply believe that the point at which a fetus has a right to life should occur well before birth. I don't know exactly where that line should be drawn, but I think it is wrong that it is currently legal to have abortions at full gestation.

The real issue should not be one about whether or not anyone has the right to impose their beliefs. It's obvious that we do that all the time with many of our laws. The real issue is whether or not abortion is wrong and whether it is wrong enough that we should make it illegal or put certain restrictions about it. If pro-choice people wanted to make an honest argument, they would stick to arguing about why abortion is NOT the same as murder and why they believe that a fetus should NOT have the same rights as a newborn baby. Those are arguments that have validity and get to the real point of the issue. Those are people who I can respectfully disagree with. People who keep going back to the "forcing moral beliefs" argument are just trying to sidestep the actual issue.
See above.

 

SirStev0

Lifer
Nov 13, 2003
10,449
6
81
watch cider house rules... there is a scene in it that basically explains my views on abortion perfectly...
 

SirStev0

Lifer
Nov 13, 2003
10,449
6
81
Originally posted by: pilgrim2u
Originally posted by: judasmachine
I don't think I could ever ask a woman to have an abortion.
So I cannot in good concious vote right wing even if I do thing abortion is totally wrong.

Go down to an abortion clinic. Ask to hold a womans hand as they slice and dice a baby apart and then suck the body parts out a tube and watch the bones and flesh go down the drain. Now keep holding that womans hand as her legs are apart never letting go :-( Remember the sounds, the smell of an abortion

Tell us then...how easy it is to be voting against the right wing :-(

better yet why dont you go back in time to when you couldnt get abortions legally and watch some quack out to make money jam a coat hanger into a women and do the same exact thing, except completely wrong, with no sanitation, and with an incredible chance of the women dieing... its called abortions would occur regardless... do we want trained professionals or people who have no idea what they are doing...

now tell me ... how easy it is to be voting against the right wing... pretty fuken easy
 

BA

Diamond Member
Dec 3, 1999
5,004
1
0
I'm not going to quote everything:

So basically, motivations aside, DT4K and TastesLikeChicken:

You agree that somewhere between conception and birth, a fetus attains human status. Once becoming human, terminating(I don't want to say kill) it is wrong. Neither of you are sure where that line can be drawn.

correct?
 

DT4K

Diamond Member
Jan 21, 2002
6,944
3
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Originally posted by: BA
I'm not going to quote everything:

So basically, motivations aside, DT4K and TastesLikeChicken:

You agree that somewhere between conception and birth, a fetus attains human status. Once becoming human, terminating(I don't want to say kill) it is wrong. Neither of you are sure where that line can be drawn.

correct?

I won't speak for him, but yeah, you pretty much got my view right. Except clearly, it's human almost immediately. The debate is at what point that human has a right to not be intentionally killed. I am just being honest when I say that I don't know when that point is. Like I said, I'm not calling the use of ru-486 wrong. Why don't you want to say kill? I'll admit that I "killed" a bunch of weeds the other day. Killing is not always wrong.
 
Sep 12, 2004
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Originally posted by: BA
I'm not going to quote everything:

So basically, motivations aside, DT4K and TastesLikeChicken:

You agree that somewhere between conception and birth, a fetus attains human status. Once becoming human, terminating(I don't want to say kill) it is wrong. Neither of you are sure where that line can be drawn.

correct?
My personal opinion is that a fetus has become "human" when there are typical human brainwaves detectable; not just simply nervous system activity, but actual brain waves. If someone is considered dead when brainwave activity ceases, why shouldn't we use that same benchmark to consider a fetus alive?

 

BA

Diamond Member
Dec 3, 1999
5,004
1
0
It's not always wrong, but it's a loaded word. I'll explain further in a bit.

I would say that as soon as you define a fetus as human, you must logically apply all the rights accorded a human, among them not being killed.
Prior to this, it's simply a collection of human tissue. There's no moral prohibition against removal of parts of a human body; no one is upset about tonsils being removed. (I didn't use killed because you wouldn't say your tonsils we're killed. It implies independent life)
The question is, how and when does a fetus transition from being a collection of human cells to a human being.

I'm not sure that question is possible to answer.
 

DT4K

Diamond Member
Jan 21, 2002
6,944
3
81
Originally posted by: TastesLikeChicken
Originally posted by: BA
I'm not going to quote everything:

So basically, motivations aside, DT4K and TastesLikeChicken:

You agree that somewhere between conception and birth, a fetus attains human status. Once becoming human, terminating(I don't want to say kill) it is wrong. Neither of you are sure where that line can be drawn.

correct?
My personal opinion is that a fetus has become "human" when there are typical human brainwaves detectable; not just simply nervous system activity, but actual brain waves. If someone is considered dead when brainwave activity ceases, why shouldn't we use that same benchmark to consider a fetus alive?

So would you support the absolute ban on abortions past a certain point of gestation? Say 3 months?
 
Sep 12, 2004
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Originally posted by: BA
It's not always wrong, but it's a loaded word. I'll explain further in a bit.

I would say that as soon as you define a fetus as human, you must logically apply all the rights accorded a human, among them not being killed.
Prior to this, it's simply a collection of human tissue. There's no moral prohibition against removal of parts of a human body; no one is upset about tonsils being removed. (I didn't use killed because you wouldn't say your tonsils we're killed. It implies independent life)
The question is, how and when does a fetus transition from being a collection of human cells to a human being.

I'm not sure that question is possible to answer.
As to the "when" I've already provided an opinion on that in my previous reply.

As to the "how" of your question, if I could answer that I'd probably be up for a Nobel prize. :D

 

DT4K

Diamond Member
Jan 21, 2002
6,944
3
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Originally posted by: BA
It's not always wrong, but it's a loaded word. I'll explain further in a bit.

I would say that as soon as you define a fetus as human, you must logically apply all the rights accorded a human, among them not being killed.
Prior to this, it's simply a collection of human tissue. There's no moral prohibition against removal of parts of a human body; no one is upset about tonsils being removed. (I didn't use killed because you wouldn't say your tonsils we're killed. It implies independent life)
The question is, how and when does a fetus transition from being a collection of human cells to a human being.

I'm not sure that question is possible to answer.

And thus, you've pointed out exactly why this issue is so controversial and why it will continue to be so for a very long time. The problem with both the pro-life and pro-choice sides is that neither one can answer this question by saying that at some point in gestation, the fetus now is deserving of rights. There is simply far too much subjectiveness in making such a determination. There are only two clearly definable points in the development of a baby. Conception and birth. The pro-choice movement has chosen birth as the point at which a human being should have the right to live and the pro-life movement has chosen conception. I would guess that the vast majority of people think both of these viewpoints are incorrect and would actually fall somewhere in between in their views. But it is very difficult to play an active role in this issue without picking one side or the other so most people are forced to make that choice whether they agree with it 100% or not.
 
Sep 12, 2004
16,852
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Originally posted by: DT4K
Originally posted by: TastesLikeChicken
Originally posted by: BA
I'm not going to quote everything:

So basically, motivations aside, DT4K and TastesLikeChicken:

You agree that somewhere between conception and birth, a fetus attains human status. Once becoming human, terminating(I don't want to say kill) it is wrong. Neither of you are sure where that line can be drawn.

correct?
My personal opinion is that a fetus has become "human" when there are typical human brainwaves detectable; not just simply nervous system activity, but actual brain waves. If someone is considered dead when brainwave activity ceases, why shouldn't we use that same benchmark to consider a fetus alive?

So would you support the absolute ban on abortions past a certain point of gestation? Say 3 months?
I's consider a law against having an abortion if it exceded the benchmark I outlined. I doubt I'd support an absolute ban though. There could be cases where a ban past the benchmark might be permitted.
 

Moonbeam

Elite Member
Nov 24, 1999
74,802
6,775
126
Originally posted by: DT4K
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
I think that abortion presents us with an unresolvable moral dilemma. We have, I think, as humans, a profound ability to emphasize and to understand cause and effect. We know that a fertilized egg can become a human being and we can place into that egg all of our imaginative feeling. We can see our own consciousness potentially there. It is therefore a simple matter to conclude that killing that zygote is the same as killing you or me. This viewpoint is is absolutely appealing and alot of people stop right there.

But it is a freak of biology that humans have sex as a means to reproduce and an additional freak that there are two sexes. It is also a freak of fate that we are profoundly driven to have sex and that we cannot consciously control whether we become pregnant, that half of us that is female. It is odd therefore that the half that doesn't have to bear a child should have some say to the other half since they have none of the biological risk or consequence. In absolute terms also, there's no real difference in consciousness between a rock an amoeba and a fertilized egg. The difference is all in our feeling and because we project our humanity there.

So if we are to outlaw the practice of abortion we make women captive to a freak fact of nature because we ourselves can't escape the feeling that she is killing a person like you and me.

The answer to this irresolvable dilemma, in my opinion, is never to participate in a sex act with a person you would not want to spend your life with raising a child that even by accident result.

The problem, of course, is that we are powerfully driven to have sex and powerfully determined to blame. Some of us will allow no escape for people who make mistakes. Such people have chosen one moral absolute over another. They are completely trapped by the notion that life begins at conception and that abortion is the murder of one of them. Therefore they are willing to make women slaves and robotic birthing machines.

Their is no religious answer those who have created a human life out of an amoeba, but I think that is the secular is the only possible societally sensible answer. Abortion is a womans choice not to have a collection of cells with absolutely no awareness of life or death, no fear, no consciousness beyond a fingernail, turn into a human being she doesn't think she wants to raise. There is no human life there in the sense that self awareness makes life precious. The fetus is programmed to survive but it doesn't care if it does not. There is no sense of self there.

Wow, a moonie post that even I can actually read and understand.

Since you say that a fetus doesn't care if it survives or not and has no sense of self, can you tell me at what point it gains the right to life?
Birth, 1 year, 2 years, ???

The right to life has nothing to do with consciousness. The Right to Life is inalienable and exists before life begins to all life that is living. The question is, when is the right of the woman to chose trumped by the right of the child. The legal decision must of necessity be somewhat arbitrary.

 

jhu

Lifer
Oct 10, 1999
11,918
9
81
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
Originally posted by: DT4K
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
I think that abortion presents us with an unresolvable moral dilemma. We have, I think, as humans, a profound ability to emphasize and to understand cause and effect. We know that a fertilized egg can become a human being and we can place into that egg all of our imaginative feeling. We can see our own consciousness potentially there. It is therefore a simple matter to conclude that killing that zygote is the same as killing you or me. This viewpoint is is absolutely appealing and alot of people stop right there.

But it is a freak of biology that humans have sex as a means to reproduce and an additional freak that there are two sexes. It is also a freak of fate that we are profoundly driven to have sex and that we cannot consciously control whether we become pregnant, that half of us that is female. It is odd therefore that the half that doesn't have to bear a child should have some say to the other half since they have none of the biological risk or consequence. In absolute terms also, there's no real difference in consciousness between a rock an amoeba and a fertilized egg. The difference is all in our feeling and because we project our humanity there.

So if we are to outlaw the practice of abortion we make women captive to a freak fact of nature because we ourselves can't escape the feeling that she is killing a person like you and me.

The answer to this irresolvable dilemma, in my opinion, is never to participate in a sex act with a person you would not want to spend your life with raising a child that even by accident result.

The problem, of course, is that we are powerfully driven to have sex and powerfully determined to blame. Some of us will allow no escape for people who make mistakes. Such people have chosen one moral absolute over another. They are completely trapped by the notion that life begins at conception and that abortion is the murder of one of them. Therefore they are willing to make women slaves and robotic birthing machines.

Their is no religious answer those who have created a human life out of an amoeba, but I think that is the secular is the only possible societally sensible answer. Abortion is a womans choice not to have a collection of cells with absolutely no awareness of life or death, no fear, no consciousness beyond a fingernail, turn into a human being she doesn't think she wants to raise. There is no human life there in the sense that self awareness makes life precious. The fetus is programmed to survive but it doesn't care if it does not. There is no sense of self there.

Wow, a moonie post that even I can actually read and understand.

Since you say that a fetus doesn't care if it survives or not and has no sense of self, can you tell me at what point it gains the right to life?
Birth, 1 year, 2 years, ???

The right to life has nothing to do with consciousness. The Right to Life is inalienable and exists before life begins to all life that is living. The question is, when is the right of the woman to chose trumped by the right of the child. The legal decision must of necessity be somewhat arbitrary.

actually, i decide. i am the creator and destroyer of life.
 

Moonbeam

Elite Member
Nov 24, 1999
74,802
6,775
126
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
Originally posted by: DT4K
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
I think that abortion presents us with an unresolvable moral dilemma. We have, I think, as humans, a profound ability to emphasize and to understand cause and effect. We know that a fertilized egg can become a human being and we can place into that egg all of our imaginative feeling. We can see our own consciousness potentially there. It is therefore a simple matter to conclude that killing that zygote is the same as killing you or me. This viewpoint is is absolutely appealing and alot of people stop right there.

But it is a freak of biology that humans have sex as a means to reproduce and an additional freak that there are two sexes. It is also a freak of fate that we are profoundly driven to have sex and that we cannot consciously control whether we become pregnant, that half of us that is female. It is odd therefore that the half that doesn't have to bear a child should have some say to the other half since they have none of the biological risk or consequence. In absolute terms also, there's no real difference in consciousness between a rock an amoeba and a fertilized egg. The difference is all in our feeling and because we project our humanity there.

So if we are to outlaw the practice of abortion we make women captive to a freak fact of nature because we ourselves can't escape the feeling that she is killing a person like you and me.

The answer to this irresolvable dilemma, in my opinion, is never to participate in a sex act with a person you would not want to spend your life with raising a child that even by accident result.

The problem, of course, is that we are powerfully driven to have sex and powerfully determined to blame. Some of us will allow no escape for people who make mistakes. Such people have chosen one moral absolute over another. They are completely trapped by the notion that life begins at conception and that abortion is the murder of one of them. Therefore they are willing to make women slaves and robotic birthing machines.

Their is no religious answer those who have created a human life out of an amoeba, but I think that is the secular is the only possible societally sensible answer. Abortion is a womans choice not to have a collection of cells with absolutely no awareness of life or death, no fear, no consciousness beyond a fingernail, turn into a human being she doesn't think she wants to raise. There is no human life there in the sense that self awareness makes life precious. The fetus is programmed to survive but it doesn't care if it does not. There is no sense of self there.

Wow, a moonie post that even I can actually read and understand.

Since you say that a fetus doesn't care if it survives or not and has no sense of self, can you tell me at what point it gains the right to life?
Birth, 1 year, 2 years, ???

The right to life has nothing to do with consciousness. The Right to Life is inalienable and exists before life begins to all life that is living. The question is, when is the right of the woman to chose trumped by the right of the child. The legal decision must of necessity be somewhat arbitrary.

Ask jhu.
 

DT4K

Diamond Member
Jan 21, 2002
6,944
3
81
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
Originally posted by: DT4K
Originally posted by: Moonbeam
I think that abortion presents us with an unresolvable moral dilemma. We have, I think, as humans, a profound ability to emphasize and to understand cause and effect. We know that a fertilized egg can become a human being and we can place into that egg all of our imaginative feeling. We can see our own consciousness potentially there. It is therefore a simple matter to conclude that killing that zygote is the same as killing you or me. This viewpoint is is absolutely appealing and alot of people stop right there.

But it is a freak of biology that humans have sex as a means to reproduce and an additional freak that there are two sexes. It is also a freak of fate that we are profoundly driven to have sex and that we cannot consciously control whether we become pregnant, that half of us that is female. It is odd therefore that the half that doesn't have to bear a child should have some say to the other half since they have none of the biological risk or consequence. In absolute terms also, there's no real difference in consciousness between a rock an amoeba and a fertilized egg. The difference is all in our feeling and because we project our humanity there.

So if we are to outlaw the practice of abortion we make women captive to a freak fact of nature because we ourselves can't escape the feeling that she is killing a person like you and me.

The answer to this irresolvable dilemma, in my opinion, is never to participate in a sex act with a person you would not want to spend your life with raising a child that even by accident result.

The problem, of course, is that we are powerfully driven to have sex and powerfully determined to blame. Some of us will allow no escape for people who make mistakes. Such people have chosen one moral absolute over another. They are completely trapped by the notion that life begins at conception and that abortion is the murder of one of them. Therefore they are willing to make women slaves and robotic birthing machines.

Their is no religious answer those who have created a human life out of an amoeba, but I think that is the secular is the only possible societally sensible answer. Abortion is a womans choice not to have a collection of cells with absolutely no awareness of life or death, no fear, no consciousness beyond a fingernail, turn into a human being she doesn't think she wants to raise. There is no human life there in the sense that self awareness makes life precious. The fetus is programmed to survive but it doesn't care if it does not. There is no sense of self there.

Wow, a moonie post that even I can actually read and understand.

Since you say that a fetus doesn't care if it survives or not and has no sense of self, can you tell me at what point it gains the right to life?
Birth, 1 year, 2 years, ???

The right to life has nothing to do with consciousness. The Right to Life is inalienable and exists before life begins to all life that is living. The question is, when is the right of the woman to chose trumped by the right of the child. The legal decision must of necessity be somewhat arbitrary.

Yeah, I guess that two posts in one day that actually content rather than mystical ramblings is too much to ask for.
Care to give an actual answer to some actual answers?

Should it be illegal for a woman to choose to kill her 5 year old child?
Should it be illegal for a woman to choose to kill her 1 day old child?
Should it be illegal for a woman to choose to kill her 9 month gestation fetus?

I'm just looking for some clarification since the impression I got from your first post was that it's ok to kill a life as long as it doesn't have a real sense of self and consciousness.
 

angelaira

Member
Oct 13, 2004
86
0
0
Partial Birth abortion was banned. So there you go, no more argument.

Now if you would like to talk about the most common type of abortion in this country, the first term abortion, I am all ears. Here is my useless opinion on the topic:

I believe abortion will go away on its own as soon as we have a culture that supports the following:
1. It takes two to make a baby, and two should be responsible for it.
2. Sex is not for recreation, selling clothes, cars, jewelry, or boats, but for the express purpose of creating babies.
3. The bond between a man and a woman is sacred, and should be consecrated only after marriage.

I am absolutely in favor of closing the doors on all abortion clinics just as soon as the day comes that there is not one young woman standing outside waiting for her turn in the clinic.

The people that are so totally against abortion in this country aren't stepping up and saying "I will pay for your unwanted child from birth through the age of 21". They are simply saying that they don't like the idea (insert squeamishness and blood here) of abortion. They are not worried about the immorality that leads to abortions, the young men who cause the need for the abortions, they simply want to scare the young women into having babies they can't care for (they couldn't even keep themselves from getting pregnant, how will they care for a baby???), can't afford, and don't want.

A little known fact, exactly 20 years after Roe v. Wade, the rate of mass murders and violent crime in this country took an unexplainable drop. The politicians of course took the credit (must be their incredible policies, right?), however, I believe that the real reason was that the women who would be hurting and abusing and ignoring their accidental children, were now being allowed to not have them at all. So fine, so be it. Let them have their sin, and their abortion, and whatever else it is that they have, leave me, my politics, and my government out of it, and let me count my lucky stars that I am less likely to be the victim of a horrendous crime as an unintended but welcome result.

That was my two cents..... Comments, Concerns??
 

cKGunslinger

Lifer
Nov 29, 1999
16,408
57
91
Originally posted by: angelaira
Partial Birth abortion was banned. So there you go, no more argument.

Now if you would like to talk about the most common type of abortion in this country, the first term abortion, I am all ears. Here is my useless opinion on the topic:

I believe abortion will go away on its own as soon as we have a culture that supports the following:
1. It takes two to make a baby, and two should be responsible for it.
2. Sex is not for recreation, selling clothes, cars, jewelry, or boats, but for the express purpose of creating babies.
3. The bond between a man and a woman is sacred, and should be consecrated only after marriage.

I am absolutely in favor of closing the doors on all abortion clinics just as soon as the day comes that there is not one young woman standing outside waiting for her turn in the clinic.

The people that are so totally against abortion in this country aren't stepping up and saying "I will pay for your unwanted child from birth through the age of 21". They are simply saying that they don't like the idea (insert squeamishness and blood here) of abortion. They are not worried about the immorality that leads to abortions, the young men who cause the need for the abortions, they simply want to scare the young women into having babies they can't care for (they couldn't even keep themselves from getting pregnant, how will they care for a baby???), can't afford, and don't want.

A little known fact, exactly 20 years after Roe v. Wade, the rate of mass murders and violent crime in this country took an unexplainable drop. The politicians of course took the credit (must be their incredible policies, right?), however, I believe that the real reason was that the women who would be hurting and abusing and ignoring their accidental children, were now being allowed to not have them at all. So fine, so be it. Let them have their sin, and their abortion, and whatever else it is that they have, leave me, my politics, and my government out of it, and let me count my lucky stars that I am less likely to be the victim of a horrendous crime as an unintended but welcome result.

That was my two cents..... Comments, Concerns??

So crime reduction is a valid incentive for first-term abortion? What about juveniles that have had multiple run-ins with the law by age 12? They probably have a statistically-verified link to higher crime rates. Should we kill them too?

And where do you get this idea that people against abortion just "simply want to scare the young women into having babies they can't care for" and aren't concerned with human rights and morality? Have you talked with anyone who opposes abortions? What about all of them?

You made quite a few sweeping statements here (and in your other posts) that make me want to consider you a troll, but won't for now, just for the sake of debate.
 

CycloWizard

Lifer
Sep 10, 2001
12,348
1
81
Originally posted by: judasmachine
I don't think I could ever ask a woman to have an abortion. I think it's disgusting except in a few extreme cases. However I believe my say matters little, while it's still part my child, I cannot say much about what she does to her body. I feel that conciousness doesn't start until fairly late in the pregnency after the brain is well developed. But trust me, I would never even suggest anyone get an abortion.
The woman does not have an absolute legal right to her own body. She cannot have her organs removed at her command, nor can she legally inflict harm on herself. Suicide is illegal. The sale of organs is illegal. Using certain drugs is illegal. All of these things clearly indicate that society has seen fit, in various ways, to control what an individual can or cannot do with his/her body.
Originally posted by: TastesLikeChicken
Being pro-choice is not the same thing as being in favor of abortion. One can be personally against abortion yet allow others to make their own personal decision as well. The idea that "I am against abortion so everyone else should be against abortion as well.", imo, seems the pinnacle of arrogance. For some reason, the Christian right -- the primary proponents of anti-abortion laws -- don't seem to understand that nobody is forcing them to ever have an abortion if they don't want one. That's part of what "Pro-Choice" is about too.

Basically, there are two alternatives in regards to the legality of abortion - You can either be pro-choice or no-choice. My preference is the former.
This comes down to why people do or do not believe in abortion. I believe that abortion is wrong because man is in no position to terminate a human life except to save another life. As I've mentioned in other threads (and, no doubt will be disputed here), there can be no scientific argument that an embryo/fetus is not a human life. Rather, you may argue that it is not a person, where a person is an entity to which we grant rights. I cannot ascertain a non-arbitrary method for differentiating between a human and a person, thus I must assume that the condition of humanity is sufficient for being a person. If, then, all humans are persons, they have inalienable rights that must be protected. Chief among these rights is the right to life - the chief right that government EXISTS to protect. Thus, I cannot condone granting someone the 'right to choose' to violate an inviolable right that exists and is the very foundation of society.
 

angelaira

Member
Oct 13, 2004
86
0
0
I have had heated debates with many pro-life supporters, most noteably on the old Fox News Channel forums (how I miss them). I am admittedly, quite rusty in my debate and articulation skills, however, I am doing my best to jump back into the fray. If my statements are too sweeping, I do apologize.

I at no point said that anyone should be killed to lower crime statistics, merely that it was an unintended and positive silver lining in an otherwise dark cloud.

I stand by my original statement, I am fully in support of closing all abortion clinics as soon as there is no one else waiting to have one. Like anything else, we need to address the demand before we go removing the supply.
 

jhu

Lifer
Oct 10, 1999
11,918
9
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Originally posted by: CycloWizard

This comes down to why people do or do not believe in abortion. I believe that abortion is wrong because man is in no position to terminate a human life except to save another life. As I've mentioned in other threads (and, no doubt will be disputed here), there can be no scientific argument that an embryo/fetus is not a human life. Rather, you may argue that it is not a person, where a person is an entity to which we grant rights. I cannot ascertain a non-arbitrary method for differentiating between a human and a person, thus I must assume that the condition of humanity is sufficient for being a person. If, then, all humans are persons, they have inalienable rights that must be protected. Chief among these rights is the right to life - the chief right that government EXISTS to protect. Thus, I cannot condone granting someone the 'right to choose' to violate an inviolable right that exists and is the very foundation of society.

fetus as a human life? possibly. embryo as a human life? definitely not. yes you will disputed on this statement because you cannot argue that an embryo falls into the same category most people would place under "human being. "
 

CycloWizard

Lifer
Sep 10, 2001
12,348
1
81
Originally posted by: cKGunslinger
So, what exactly is the current rule? I was thinking it was only legal in the cases of rape. incest, life of mother, etc. I guess that's not the case, as I remember my wife telling me about her friend from high school who had 2 done simply because she already had 2 kids and couldn't afford any more.
Any reason or no reason at all. That's why it's the most common surgery performed in the US today.
Originally posted by: lordtyranus
Abortion is needed to control the population of the poor.
Are you serious? Hitler would make posters of you saying this. "Give me your tired, your poor, your non-Aryan, and I'll kill their babies." That's ridiculous.
Originally posted by: TastesLikeChicken
The difference is that the majority believe that killing your children or smoking crack is wrong, and there are laws to dissuade one from doing so. You know what though? It still doesn't stop people from smoking crack or killing their children. Just as making abortion illegal will not stop women from having abortions. It'll only make abortions more dangerous by returning them to the back allys.
Yet we still outlaw crack. We still outlaw murder. We outlaw things despite the fact that we know the laws will be broken. You can't not legislate something because people will inevitably break that law - you legislate based on what is the right thing to do.
Originally posted by: J Heartless Slick
If I were a woman, I would want to be able to decide when I had children.
This is, of course, every woman's right. You can choose to have sex or not. If you choose to have sex, you do so knowing full well that a child may be the product of that action.
Originally posted by: jackschmittusa
...
Your whole argument voids any responsibility of a woman for her actions. Personal responsibility is a staple of society. By removing it, you must then allow any action, as one cannot be held responsible for his/her actions. A woman's life would be inconvenienced by having a child? Don't have sex. This IS a viable option, whether it's convenient or not. It's hardly convenient for the child who is killed as a result of your actions to die, yet this isn't even a consideration in your statements.
Originally posted by: jhu
fetus as a human life? possibly. embryo as a human life? definitely not. yes you will disputed on this statement because you cannot argue that an embryo falls into the same category most people would place under "human being. "
:roll: Once again, the fact that you disagree with fact does not invalidate fact. Fact: an embryo has human parents and human DNA. These are the necessary and suficient conditions for being human.

Since this issue keeps coming up, I threw together an index page of all the articles and chapters from books that I've had a chance to type up to this point. The information is presented as-is without my interjection of opinion in hopes that people will educate themselves on this issue. I believe that once a reasonable extent of education has been provided, people can draw their own conclusions based not on misinformation, but on the truth. Most of the information is taken from court documents and a renowned textbook on the subject. Anyway, here it is.
 

BA

Diamond Member
Dec 3, 1999
5,004
1
0
Originally posted by: CycloWizard
Originally posted by: cKGunslinger
So, what exactly is the current rule? I was thinking it was only legal in the cases of rape. incest, life of mother, etc. I guess that's not the case, as I remember my wife telling me about her friend from high school who had 2 done simply because she already had 2 kids and couldn't afford any more.
Any reason or no reason at all. That's why it's the most common surgery performed in the US today.
Originally posted by: lordtyranus
Abortion is needed to control the population of the poor.
Are you serious? Hitler would make posters of you saying this. "Give me your tired, your poor, your non-Aryan, and I'll kill their babies." That's ridiculous.
Originally posted by: TastesLikeChicken
The difference is that the majority believe that killing your children or smoking crack is wrong, and there are laws to dissuade one from doing so. You know what though? It still doesn't stop people from smoking crack or killing their children. Just as making abortion illegal will not stop women from having abortions. It'll only make abortions more dangerous by returning them to the back allys.
Yet we still outlaw crack. We still outlaw murder. We outlaw things despite the fact that we know the laws will be broken. You can't not legislate something because people will inevitably break that law - you legislate based on what is the right thing to do.
Originally posted by: J Heartless Slick
If I were a woman, I would want to be able to decide when I had children.
This is, of course, every woman's right. You can choose to have sex or not. If you choose to have sex, you do so knowing full well that a child may be the product of that action.
Originally posted by: jackschmittusa
...
Your whole argument voids any responsibility of a woman for her actions. Personal responsibility is a staple of society. By removing it, you must then allow any action, as one cannot be held responsible for his/her actions. A woman's life would be inconvenienced by having a child? Don't have sex. This IS a viable option, whether it's convenient or not. It's hardly convenient for the child who is killed as a result of your actions to die, yet this isn't even a consideration in your statements.
Originally posted by: jhu
fetus as a human life? possibly. embryo as a human life? definitely not. yes you will disputed on this statement because you cannot argue that an embryo falls into the same category most people would place under "human being. "
:roll: Once again, the fact that you disagree with fact does not invalidate fact. Fact: an embryo has human parents and human DNA. These are the necessary and suficient conditions for being human.

Since this issue keeps coming up, I threw together an index page of all the articles and chapters from books that I've had a chance to type up to this point. The information is presented as-is without my interjection of opinion in hopes that people will educate themselves on this issue. I believe that once a reasonable extent of education has been provided, people can draw their own conclusions based not on misinformation, but on the truth. Most of the information is taken from court documents and a renowned textbook on the subject. Anyway, here it is.


Stating something as fact also does not make it so.

Assume that human parents are necessary for being human. Take your pick of creationism or evolution.

Creationism: Adam and Eve have no parents, and are thus not human. Their children are therefore not hum. Repeat for a while...you and I are not human. I think we can agree this is not the case, and so the assumption must be false.

Evolution, the assumption implies all ancestors of humans are human. apes, lemurs...some reptile thing...amoebae. I would say we can probably both argue this also is not the case.

In either case, at some point, there must be a human that does not have human parents.

Ontogeny Recapitulates Phylogeny; similarly, at some point between zygote and birth, the fetus transitions from a non-human to a human.