Originally posted by: hellokeith
Originally posted by: Cerpin Taxt
then the doctor can remove the fetus and sever the umbilical cord. There is no need to euthanize the fetus..
later-term abortions requiring a doctor's approval and perhaps even the approval of a medical review board in extremely late-term cases.
Since the fetus has no rights by law and is considered part of the woman's body by law, how would a doctor or medical group establish "imminent domain" to go into her body against her will and do what they please with what they remove, at any point during the pregnancy up to and including 1 second before birth?
So if a tapeworm grows to a certain size/age inside her stomach, then it gains rights to remain there and/or be removed without being killed? A squatter is a person occupying another person's territory. Are you saying that a fetus should be granted personhood at a certain size/age? How about the tapeworm?
What in the world are you talking about? No woman is ever required to abort her pregnancy against her will.Originally posted by: hellokeith
Originally posted by: Cerpin Taxt
then the doctor can remove the fetus and sever the umbilical cord. There is no need to euthanize the fetus..
later-term abortions requiring a doctor's approval and perhaps even the approval of a medical review board in extremely late-term cases.
Since the fetus has no rights by law and is considered part of the woman's body by law, how would a doctor or medical group establish "imminent domain" to go into her body against her will and do what they please with what they remove, at any point during the pregnancy up to and including 1 second before birth?
You can seriously be this obtuse. Is this how disconnected from reality one needs to be to hold the positions you hold? It would figure.So if a tapeworm grows to a certain size/age inside her stomach, then it gains rights to remain there and/or be removed without being killed? A squatter is a person occupying another person's territory. Are you saying that a fetus should be granted personhood at a certain size/age? How about the tapeworm?
Originally posted by: Cerpin Taxt
What in the world are you talking about?
Originally posted by: Cerpin Taxt
You can seriously be this obtuse. Is this how disconnected from reality one needs to be to hold the positions you hold? It would figure.
Originally posted by: Budmantom
Originally posted by: Vic
I just want to jump in and say that this is not a medical or scientific question, but a legal one. From a medical standpoint, life begins at conception. From a scientific standpoint, life began some 3.5 billion years ago (DNA is seemingly immortal), and each individual is not new life but the propagation of life.
From a legal standpoint, interested in protecting the rights of individual life, the question is a bit more clouded. It comes down to: whose individual rights are more important? The mother's or the fetus'? This is why a person who murders a pregnant woman at the doorstep of an abortion clinic would be charged with 2 counts of murder. His rights are not at issue here. But so long as the fetus is incapable of surviving outside the mother's womb, then the mother's rights are of issue here. So I believe that it will be legally determined that life begins at the point where the fetus is able to survive outside the mother's womb on its own.
This is why I applaud Obama in supporting the Born Alive Infants Protection Act, while simultaneously recognizing the right of a woman to choose -- up to a point.
And also why I frown upon McCain for abusing science to forward his own ideological agenda even when it trounces upon the legal rights of pregnant women. Obviously, he could spout out his response without thinking. That's because he didn't think.
I thought he voted against it?
Already covered. Due to the increasing probability of viability of the fetus and her ample opportunity to exercise her right to become unpregnant in earlier stages of pregnancy, the counsel of a medical review board should be required.Originally posted by: hellokeith
Originally posted by: Cerpin Taxt
What in the world are you talking about?
You just said that "later-term abortions requiring a xyz's approval". How does xyz establish "imminent domain" to force her to seek approval?
That depends entirely on you. So far, things are not looking positive.Originally posted by: Cerpin Taxt
You can seriously be this obtuse. Is this how disconnected from reality one needs to be to hold the positions you hold? It would figure.
You are being evasive and insulting. Can we have an intelligent debate?
Well, tapeworms are not human, and tumors are not potential persons.Simply answer the questions. What is the difference between a tapeworm, a tumor, and a fetus?
If you want lines drawn at all, they have to be drawn somewhere. As stated above, after a certain reasonable period, likely after a certain point of probable viability, the fetus can be argued to have earned "squatter's rights," and the necessity of euthanization of the fetus diminishes significantly.None have personhood, all are considered to be the woman's property with which she can remove/terminate at her leisure, and yet you arbitrarily say that after a certain size/age the fetus cannot be terminated without explaining your reasoning.
I'm not defending Cerpin's statement that as long as the fetus is still inside the mother, an abortion is okay. But your own statement is absurd. You're somehow arguing that if a fetus has no rights, a woman can be forced to have an abortion, and are then linking that nonsensical point to the general abortion debate. That's utterly illogical.Originally posted by: hellokeith
Originally posted by: Cerpin Taxt
then the doctor can remove the fetus and sever the umbilical cord. There is no need to euthanize the fetus..
later-term abortions requiring a doctor's approval and perhaps even the approval of a medical review board in extremely late-term cases.
Since the fetus has no rights by law and is considered part of the woman's body by law, how would a doctor or medical group establish "imminent domain" to go into her body against her will and do what they please with what they remove, at any point during the pregnancy up to and including 1 second before birth?[/b]
You've answered your own question by pointing out that a squatter is a person. Tapeworms aren't people, so a tapeworm can't have squatters' rights.So if a tapeworm grows to a certain size/age inside her stomach, then it gains rights to remain there and/or be removed without being killed? A squatter is a person occupying another person's territory. Are you saying that a fetus should be granted personhood at a certain size/age? How about the tapeworm?
Originally posted by: Cerpin Taxt
viability of the fetus
Originally posted by: hellokeith
Originally posted by: Cerpin Taxt
viability of the fetus
Can I get abortion limitations tied to fetus viability in writing, a.k.a. bipartisan federal legislation?
With respect to the State's important and legitimate interest in potential life, the "compelling" point is at viability. This is so because the fetus then presumably has the capability of meaningful life outside the mother's womb. State regulation protective of fetal life after viability thus has both logical and biological justifications. If the State is interested in protecting fetal life after viability, it may go so far as to proscribe abortion during that period, except when it is necessary to preserve the life or health of the mother.
Originally posted by: shira
It's already in writing..
If the State is interested in protecting fetal life after viability
Originally posted by: hellokeith
Originally posted by: shira
It's already in writing..
If the State is interested in protecting fetal life after viability
This is simply a court statement, and is neither federal legislation nor limiting.
Again, can we get federal bipartisan legislation limiting abortions tied to viability of the fetus?
Originally posted by: shira
Originally posted by: zinfamous
Originally posted by: Corbett
Originally posted by: Rainsford
Originally posted by: Corbett
Originally posted by: shira
Don't believe the dishonest description of the bill presented in this hatchet-job article. Read the bill for yourself (go back a couple of pages in the thread) and you'll discover it doesn't "simply prohibit the killing of a baby born alive."Originally posted by: Corbett
I think no matter how hard the Obama water boys here @ ATP&N try to spin it, this is the most damning evidence that Obama is just another hardcore liberal. I dont understand how ANYONE who says they oppose abortion "personally" can vote to have a LIVING BABY OUTSIDE OF THE WOMB KILLED.
Absolutely disgusting.
The fact that you accept on faith the grossly inaccurate characterizations made in this article, without tracking down the actual text of the bill and determining for yourself what the bill actually says, is a pretty damning indictment of your intellectual prowess.
Newsflash. A living fetus outside of the womb is not a fetus. Its a human being.
What in the world makes you think that's the argument here? Because some political hack with a vested interest in convincing you of something told you so? For God's sake, think for yourself once in a while. Bills are complex pieces of legislature that often contain dozens of different aspects, any one of which a reasonable person might use as a reason to reject the bill even if they don't disagree with ALL of the bill. Trying to spin this as "Obama votes to have a living baby killed" is stupid, but not as stupid as you buying the argument.
Try to follow along ....
Originally posted by: shira
So lets analyze:
This bill defines any living fetus outside the womb, at any stage of development, a person.
That statement alone makes it clear why this bill is totally unacceptable to anyone who is pro-choice: If a fetus (even a one-week-old fetus) happens to survive extraction from the womb, then killing the fetus thereafter is murder. And if the fetus cannot be killed absent fear of prosecution for murder, that means it's the abortion clinic's responsibility to fight to keep the fetus alive. regardless of cost.
wait. you mean one week after fetal stage? or one week after conception? one week after conception, the embryo is barely at blastula stage. it sure as shit isn't a fetus. it isn't even a fully-formed ball of cells. You probably couldn't even see the damn thing. Besides, this is when most naturally occurring spontaneous abortions occur. Women abort embryos quite frequently, actually; without even knowing they were pregnant.
I hope you mean the latter...or this is just another case of those not knowing anything about the issues that they try to cram down everyone else's throats.
I used the words "fetus" loosely, to refer to the post-conception "entity" carried by the mother. I realize that "fetus" when used formally refers to that entity at the end of the 8th week post-conception. The bill does is NOT restricted to fetuses. It's actual words are:
As used in this Section, the term "born alive", with respect to a member of the species homo sapiens, means the complete expulsion or extraction from its mother of that member, at any stage of development, who after that expulsion or extraction breathes or has a beating heart, pulsation of the umbilical cord, or definite movement of voluntary muscles
From information I found after my original post on the bill, it looks like 22 days post-conception (that is, when the heart begins to beat) is the earliest that, under the terms of the bill, the "member of the species homo sapiens" could be considered "born alive."
Note that the very earliest abortions are performed 5 to 7 days after the first missed period (earliest abortions) and that a woman can easily be fertile 11 days after her last menstruation (17 days before the missed period). Thus, in practice, even the earliest possible abortion can be dealing with a 22-day-old "member". That is, there's no way for abortion providers to know with confidence that the "member of the species homo sapiens" they're about to remove is LESS than 22 days old.
Thus, every, single abortion performed would be affected by this bill. And since early abortions are performed by sucking the lining of the uterus into a tube, it's very likely that the "member" in the sucked-out material would have a heartbeat. Thus, when the "member" died shortly thereafter, that would be murder.
That's why I call this bill a complete fraud. Its proponents disguise it as an effort to protect aborted third-trimester babies that have a chance to live full lives, but the reality is that the bill makes even the EARLIEST abortions - as typically performed - illegal.
Originally posted by: ConkyAt what point does a baby get human rights?
Originally posted by: KIRBYEE
Why is abortion such a big deal to some people?![]()
Originally posted by: hellokeith
Originally posted by: shira
It's already in writing..
If the State is interested in protecting fetal life after viability
This is simply a court statement, and is neither federal legislation nor limiting.
Again, can we get federal bipartisan legislation limiting abortions tied to viability of the fetus?
Originally posted by: hellokeith
Originally posted by: Cerpin Taxt
then the doctor can remove the fetus and sever the umbilical cord. There is no need to euthanize the fetus..
later-term abortions requiring a doctor's approval and perhaps even the approval of a medical review board in extremely late-term cases.
Since the fetus has no rights by law and is considered part of the woman's body by law, how would a doctor or medical group establish "imminent domain" to go into her body against her will and do what they please with what they remove, at any point during the pregnancy up to and including 1 second before birth?
So if a tapeworm grows to a certain size/age inside her stomach, then it gains rights to remain there and/or be removed without being killed? A squatter is a person occupying another person's territory. Are you saying that a fetus should be granted personhood at a certain size/age? How about the tapeworm?
Originally posted by: ConkyAt what point does a baby get human rights?