Parasites aren't self sustaining and yet they are life...
You misunderstand the term 'self sustaining', by which I am referring to the ability of an organism to maintain homeostasis, etc. Not whether or not it needs food.
Parasites aren't self sustaining and yet they are life...
The reason murder is illegal is that it deprives people of their right to life, it's nothing to do with mass fear.
Also I'm not in America. I'm not going to just "live with" something that is wrong happening in the world, I'm going to discuss it and hopefully be a part of the change that is happening over the world as we speak.
I think that is ultimately what is behind a lot of this discussion. The whole debate ultimately boils down to who should have control.
There are a lot of terrible things that happen each day that people ignore. I think if we start thinking about why this one issue in particular seems to be so "special" it might reveal something about ourselves.
You misunderstand the term 'self sustaining', by which I am referring to the ability of an organism to maintain homeostasis, etc. Not whether or not it needs food.
This is clearly untrue, as murder has been illegal throughout human history, even in societies that have not recognized a general right to life of its citizens. It has everything to do with mass fear.
I know you're not in America. You don't have to live with it, it was more a suggestion for your own good.
Oh, and it's not wrong.
Your premise is false. Ergo your entire argument is false.Rather than utterly hijack Gigantopithecus' thread about third party candidates, I will create this topic instead.
My argument on abortion.
A woman does not have the right to kill anyone except in self-defense. Killing your unborn child, then, is only permissable when you've been raped or in any event did not consent to the act which brought about pregnancy.
The response from the pro-choice side: Sex doesn't cause pregnancy.
Then what does? The implantation of a fertilized egg? In other news, guns don't cause deaths. Bullets aimed at hearts do.
I'd like to know who honestly believes this notion, and furthermore their justification for it.
My mind is insufficient to the task of adequately describing the incongruity of this defense, so I have to resort to metaphor.
Your premise is false. Ergo your entire argument is false.
Your premise that a fertilized egg is an "unborn child" is patently false. A viable, 6+-month old fetus is an "unborn child;" a fertilized egg is not.
A woman dies during child birth. Do we charge the newborn with negligent homicide/manslaughter?
And why not?
1) If we're forcing pregnant women to have unwanted children then child birth isn't a decision either.A couple of reasons:
1) To be born is not a decision (as far as we are aware)
2) New borns are not legally responsible for their actions.
3) The child would be born even if it were dead and the woman would die in child birth.
4) New borns are not capable of making the decision to kill AFAIK
1) If we're forcing pregnant women to have unwanted children then child birth isn't a decision either.
2) Newborns should be charge with negligent homicide/manslaughter because newborns aren't legally responsible for their actions. Circular reasoning.
3) Charge the woman with negligent homicide/manslaughter if she lives.
4) Negligent homicide/manslaughter != Making a decision to kill
Unborn child, perhaps not, but a potential child it is. It has far greater potential to become a child than almost anything else.
A "potential child" is not a "person." The mental defect among the anti-abortion crowd is that they do not seem to be able to understand the difference.
I understand the difference, I don't consider a potential child a person... yet.
When a "potential child" becomes a viable fetus, it also becomes an "unborn child" and therefore a person.
The anti-abortion crowd thinks zygotes are babies. They're insane.
I'm anti-abortion and I think a zygote is a potential child.
In what sense are you "anti-abortion?" Are you also anti-choice?
If you agree that a pre-viability fetus isn't a person, then on what grounds do you oppose allowing women in the first trimester (or, with added restrictions, in the second trimester) to get abortions, if that's what they want?
The reason murder is illegal is that it deprives people of their right to life, it's nothing to do with mass fear.
Yes but what is the 'right to life' really? A right is basically a thing that we have arbitrarily decided that all humans should have. The definition for a right is actually quite similar to the definition for a law, which you have already stated you don't care about. They are both rules for society created by humans.
A right, like a law, must be justified by a reason. For example, we have the right to freedom of speech, and this can be justified by discussing the benefits of freedom of speech (helps promote new ideas, makes govt more accountable). We have the right to a good education, which results in a better economy and thus a better standard of living. However, in very poor countries people do not have the right to an eduction as this would be a waste of resources (debatable of course).
What is the reason for the right to life? Other than the reasons I have already mentioned, there are none. If a fetish is created and destroyed shortly after, it's as if it never existed. There is no drawback to this. We fear death and as a result believe death itself is morally wrong, but it is not. Living beings die to make room for new living beings. It's a natural part of life.
Yes but what is the 'right to life' really? A right is basically a thing that we have arbitrarily decided that all humans should have. The definition for a right is actually quite similar to the definition for a law, which you have already stated you don't care about. They are both rules for society created by humans.
A right, like a law, must be justified by a reason. For example, we have the right to freedom of speech, and this can be justified by discussing the benefits of freedom of speech (helps promote new ideas, makes govt more accountable). We have the right to a good education, which results in a better economy and thus a better standard of living.
What is the reason for the right to life? Other than the reasons I have already mentioned, there are none. If a fetish is created and destroyed shortly after, it's as if it never existed. There is no drawback to this. We fear death and as a result believe death itself is morally wrong, but it is not. Living beings die to make room for new living beings. It's a natural part of life.
A person owns their own body, they control it, they have their own will. Its only logical that each person owns their own body.
Killing them is destroying their own property. I don't see this as arbitrary at all.
That's how I justify it. Each person has a right to their own property, their own production and fruits of their labor, their own life and liberty.
I'm against the destruction of a potential person. The greater potential something has the more I value it.