- Jul 19, 2001
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Originally posted by: Evan
Roe v. Wade is very necessary, leaving abortion up to the states is inconsistent and a moral cop-out.
The whole "leave it up to the states" mantra is a default answer for a lot of conservatives but is bupkis in plenty of practical circumstances, this being one of them. Might as well leave civil rights "up to the states" based on that interpretation.
Originally posted by: bamacre
Originally posted by: Evan
Roe v. Wade is very necessary, leaving abortion up to the states is inconsistent and a moral cop-out.
Inconsistent with what? Oh, yeah, the Constitution. :thumbsup:
The Constitution does not provide the Federal Government authority to regulate, rule over, nor decide upon, abortion.
Well, actually, Evan, err, Mr. Champion of the Constitution, the Federal Government does have the job of protecting liberty and property of all people. Of course we shouldn't have needed new federal laws to protect those things for black Americans, I like to think that it wasn't government that granted rights and liberties to black Americans, it was black Americans like Martin Luther King, Jr., and Rosa Parks, who fought to keep the freedoms and liberty they knew they already had.
And maybe I feel that way, Evan, because it wasn't government that got bashed over the head, strung up on trees, it was the black Americans who fought that war, it was Martin Luther King who was continuously tossed into jail, of course almost 100 years after our civil war was over.
But we don't need to go back to our history to understand the ideas of representation and jurisdictions of the Federal government. We can look at a prime example of this argument today, and that is the prohibition of marijuana and the entire Federal war on drugs. Certainly this is a case, like abortion, where the Federal government has no jurisdiction, the Constitution does not grant the Federal government authority for these powers.
And yet out of fear we have allowed them to do this anyway. And it is not shocking that the result of this "war on drugs" is a complete disaster. Hundred of billions of dollars wasted, jails full of nonviolent drug offenders, empowered drug lords and street gangs, and hundreds of dead bystanders caught in their violent black market dealings gone bad. And all the while, they still cannot keep marijuana, or any other drug, out of our schools, not even our prisons. Do the people want change? Yes they do. Already many states have legalized medical marijuana, and talk on higher levels has begun for legal recreational use of marijuana, all of this contradictory to Federal drug laws. But it is much easier for people to change laws on the local level than on the Federal level, and this again, is a prime example, and this is perhaps just one reason why the Constitution grants limited powers to the Federal government and leaves many matters up to the states and to the people. Perhaps it would have been easier for me to plead my case had Roe v. Wade went the other direction, and it wasn't right-wing radicals terrorizing abortion clinics, but the Federal government terrorizing them, much in the same way they do the medical marijuana facilities in California. My point, Evan, is that while we may have been lucky with the federal legality of abortion, it certainly isn't wise to continue gambling, it isn't wise to continue betting against the Constitution. Because if we do, in the long run, the house always wins, and we always lose.
Originally posted by: feralkid
And the majority of women voters prefer the Democrats' (look, CAD; it's called a plural possessive! Woo-Hoo!) platform on those issues as well; based on the last several elections.
Originally posted by: extra
Yeah, the thing is though that it looks like in the same poll the majority of americans still believe abortion should be legal. Which seems to indicate people don't like abortions happening, but don't want it to be illegal, either, which is a pretty normal (and imho common sense) position to have.
Originally posted by: BoomerD
Originally posted by: Double Trouble
Originally posted by: senseamp
Good thing they also voted for Obama and Democrat Congress. Good ACLU lawyers are coming to the USSC![]()
Heaven help us all if ACLU lawyers get to the scotus. Don't get me wrong, the ACLU is a necessary evil, but 80% of the time they are way left of center and they go with ideology over logic. We don't need more political correctness gone crazy all the way at the top of the chain. Anyway, that's not for this thread.
I, like (I'd guess most people) tend to be pro-choice for society, but pro-life personally. I'm pro-choice and my choice is life. I don't presume to be the right one to make that choice for others though.
I agree with about all of this. I'm a life-long Dem, support (most) of what the ACLU does, yet I don't want to see them in the USSC either. Those positions should be filled with judges who have NO agendas, no political leanings, and are able to rationally consider both sides of an argument...not just the side they favor.
I, as a male, believe I have NO say in what a woman does with her body...except that, as her "life partner," I expect to be a part of any decision along these lines that my wife makes.
I'm NOT pro-abortion...but I am pro-CHOICE.
Originally posted by: brxndxn
Originally posted by: Mani
I think the guy they quoted from Planned Parenthood summed it up perfectly - that "pro-life" and "pro-choice" are not the correct parameters for the debate at this point - that in fact you can be both, which a majority of Americans are.
That's what I am..
I don't see why this is such a big issue anyway. Most people in their lives will never even need to consider abortion. Why do those people have an opinion?
Originally posted by: cwjerome
Topic Title: New poll: Majority in U.S. is now 'pro-life'
I very rarely discuss anything abortion. I lean anti-abortion but I'm not fanatical about the issue at all.
Sorry to hear about your kid; children are the best; only mentally disturbed people can look at their children and not know it was the best thing that they had ever done in their lives.I still had no say in the matter, however, as she got an abortion then told me about it afterwards. Her mom influenced her to do it.
Offering the end of a life or a life of hell dichotomy is a moral cop-out.Or just the simple fact that sometimes people make mistakes and shouldn't have to raise children they're not capable of raising responsibly, financially, or morally.
Originally posted by: DixyCrat
Sorry to hear about your kid; children are the best; only mentally disturbed people can look at their children and not know it was the best thing that they had ever done in their lives.I still had no say in the matter, however, as she got an abortion then told me about it afterwards. Her mom influenced her to do it.
Offering the end of a life or a life of hell dichotomy is a moral cop-out.Or just the simple fact that sometimes people make mistakes and shouldn't have to raise children they're not capable of raising responsibly, financially, or morally.
Very, very few children who would otherwise be aborted would live the life you are suggesting. The number of prisoners you we preemptively remove from existence through abortion does not make up for even one would-be researcher who will now never discover a cure for the complications of sickle-cell anemia.
Abortion is racist, it is the destruction of the poor-black people of the inner city... you sit on your white ivory tower and look down on the poor and say "well, they are better off dead aren't they?".
You should be, and I know deep down are, disgusted with yourself.
Originally posted by: n yusef
Women of all races get abortions
Originally posted by: DixyCrat
Originally posted by: n yusef
Women of all races get abortions
But the argument was that poor people, who are disproportionately black, would have a hard-life and thus are better off not living.
Abortion is destroying the fertility of the inner-city black woman, in another four generations we won't have to worry about our 'black' problem in America, the practice of abortion will have eliminated it for us.
Affluent people use abortion to allow themselves the ability to get-ahead in life before having children; poor people use abortion as a life-long means of birth-control.
... I've read this in books about gender-studies, in particular the book "black feminist thought" and the research of my professor. But the data can be cross-correlated for validity through census and publicly available research data.
Those children denied life through abortion would, on balance, have done so much more good for this world we have today than any of us can know. As would those children murdered in the African genocides.
Children, no matter how hard a life they have, are full of so much potential that denying them a chance at life because "life is hard" is the most morally empty argument any human could possibly make.
ad hominim attacks and esoteric red herring disagreements will not change the fact:Originally posted by: n yusef
your other arguments, are ridiculous.
If you have ever raised a new born you know they are not born with the in-bread knowledge of how to poop! Which means their learning, their personality and their individual person-hood asserts itself well before you think it does.If you have ever interacted with a new born baby, you quickly realise it is little more than a bundle of reflexes.
Originally posted by: n yusef
DixyCrat, I have no idea what, "Abortion is destroying the fertility of the inner-city black women," means. First, I was unaware that abortion destroyed fertility. Second, in poor and black communities there are high rates of teen and unwed pregnancy. I have no idea where you get your "four-generations" line from; it's ridiculous.
This comes from collins obsevations, It is the second page referenced in the index.Your second claim that, "Poor people use abortion as a life-long means of birth-control," is false as well.
I agree that the best answer is improved use of contraceptives that the women will use, such as deproprevara. The social structure of the inner city youth does not allow for condoms as a viable alternative, though changing this would be great!Because of lack of information, access and affordability of abortion procedures, many poor women don't get abortions. But if there were an epidemic of poor women getting abortions as "life-long means of birth-control," it would obviously be a problem of ignorance about real birth control, which is cheaper, easier and far less intrusive. The answer wouldn't be to restrict abortion access, but to provide comprehensive sex education.
Dixy Lee RayIs "DixyCrat" supposed to be ironic name?
Originally posted by: WhipperSnapper
Originally posted by: BoomerDI, as a male, believe I have NO say in what a woman does with her body...except that, as her "life partner," I expect to be a part of any decision along these lines that my wife makes.
I'm NOT pro-abortion...but I am pro-CHOICE.
What if a woman wants to have a child and you want her to have an abortion? You tried to explain to her that having an abortion would be the rational thing to do since the two of you aren't married and neither of you can afford to have a child. You even offered to pay for the costs of the abortion and even offered to give her $5000 to keep if she would do it. You also pleaded with her to agree to put the infant up for adoption but she wanted no part of it.
In that case, might you have a "say" over what a woman does with her body--such as her irrationality--her choice--having a negative impact on your life? Her choice--your responsibility. That's why I urge you to support the concept of paper abortions for men.
I agree that men shouldn't be able to force women to have abortions or not to have them, but that doesn't mean that men should have to pay for the costs of women's irrationality (an externality). If a man is willing to pay for the costs of an abortion and some money above that, then I'm all for his being able to legally waive all rights to the child and to be absolved of all child support and parental responsibilities.
Originally posted by: Atreus21
Originally posted by: Evan
Except a huge majority of Americans, 70%+, want to keep abortion legal federally in at least some cases. Fact is, nearly half of all self-described pro-lifers still want abortion to stay legal in limited cases and other pro-lifers in less limited cases. The end result is one and the same for 70%+ of Americans; don't make it illegal again in all cases, i.e. do not overturn the SC's 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling because there's simply far too much downside to overturning this particular federal law, not even close to appropriate. But it medically dangerous back-alley abortions, higher crime rates from discarded children, etc.
And lmao at people downplaying abortion as a wedge issue. It's hugely important.
EDIT: Here's the link to the 70%+ polls and an excerpt from the OP's article:
"The terms 'pro-choice' and 'pro-life' no longer define the parameters of the debate, witnessed by the fact that in the Gallup Poll, a majority of people say they are both pro-life and that abortion should be legal," Richards said.
I disagree. I'm ardently pro-life, and I believe abortion should be legal in one circumstance: when it threatens the mother's life.
I don't think Roe v. Wade is necessary to protect that one exception.
Originally posted by: Hacp
Democrats have used the abortion for too long to lure female votes. It distracts them from the bread and butter issues like taxes, the economy, and the illegals.
Originally posted by: jpeyton
You can be pro-life on a personal level and pro-choice on a social level.
It showed that Americans remained deeply divided on the legality of abortion - with 23 percent saying it should be illegal in all circumstances, 22 percent saying it should be legal under any circumstances and 53 percent saying it should be legal only under certain circumstances.
