BigVrunga
Well-known member
It isn't a belief that life starts at conception, it is simply the truth.
No, that is what you believe to be the truth. That is your opinion. An opinion that you would force on others that do not agree with you.
It isn't a belief that life starts at conception, it is simply the truth.
BigVrunga said:You keep comparing abortion to murdering a developed human being, this is not the case. A zygote is no more a complete human than a few cells from my skin are a complete human.
By your method of reasoning, now that cloning technology is becoming more viable, in a few years nobody should be allowed to get any type of surgery that involves tissue removal. After all, those cells could potentially be a full grown human, if grown in the right conditions.
Blah...I'm so sick of people trying to compare abortion to murder, or the death penalty.brogers said:Great point, I suppose if I don't think anyone wants to murder me, I shouldn't care if it's legalized, because it doesn't affect me, other people will die, but that's not something that should matter.
Then by that truth, life starts in your testicles.It isn't a belief that life starts at conception, it is simply the truth.
Depends on the stage of development it is in. However, much of the time it is just a mass of cells.If that "blob of tissue" isn't human, I challenge you to tell me what it is.
No its not. But, its not worth arguing with you over. You obviously are learning your science from the King James VersionWe are all merely groupings of cells. Killing an unborn baby because it doesn't have characteristics of fully developed humans is comparable to the Nazi programs euthanizing mentally and physically handicapped people, after all, they were burden on the people who had to take care of them (sound familiar?).
Great post--100% valid, too.BigVrunga said:You keep comparing abortion to murdering a developed human being, this is not the case. A zygote is no more a complete human than a few cells from my skin are a complete human.
By your method of reasoning, now that cloning technology is becoming more viable, in a few years nobody should be allowed to get any type of surgery that involves tissue removal. After all, those cells could potentially be a full grown human, if grown in the right conditions.
Congrats!foo.c said:My wife is pregnant with fraternal twins right now. She's almost in the third tri-mester.
Third trimester is key. At this point, if a baby 'had to come out' he could live as a human. If it were up to me, I would ban later term abortions (with exceptions) because at a certain piont, they are no longer a 'blob of cellular mass', even while they're still in the womb.I just wanted to say that having gone with her and watched the ultrasound monitors, that I am not of the opinion that a fetus is just a "collection of cells".
:sad: What if gulp is part of another word? For example, can I use BigGulp and sperm in the same sentence?jarhead said:Kwycke-please never use the words "gulp" and "sperm" in the same sentence again.![]()
foo.c said:My wife is pregnant with fraternal twins right now. She's almost in the third tri-mester.
I just wanted to say that having gone with her and watched the ultrasound monitors, that I am not of the opinion that a fetus is just a "collection of cells".
Maybe I'm biased because they are my children, but I felt very attached to them. I have seen them move their arms, kick, touch their faces, etc.
To some extent we even think we can see some of their personalities. One baby is always moving and fidgeting. While the other seems to be more relaxed.
The though of killing a fetus that can do those things strikes me as abhorrent. (And I'm not a religous person at all.)
Keep in mind all of this was in the second trimester where abortion is allowed.
BigVrunga said:A government telling a woman she can't terminate a pregnancy that is a result of rape or incest is downright twisted, and boarderline evil if you ask me.
kwyckemynd00 said::sad: What if gulp is part of another word? For example, can I use BigGulp and sperm in the same sentence?![]()
kwyckemynd00 said:Congrats!
kwyckemynd00 said:However, during the first few months they are tiny masses of cells with no discernable human traits. This is what it would look like during early stages of development under heavy magnification. Oh wait....he has his mothers eyes....ahhhh
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jarhead said:This is where choice is important. This is a wonderful experience for you and I can understand your feelings. You have grown attached to what WILL become your children. This is much different however than a women that was raped with the same thing inside her. As much as it's wonderful for you, it's horrible for her. This ban makes no concession for that type of circumstance.
foo.c said:I'm not in favor of this legislation.
I just wanted to say what I saw and what I felt.
[B said:jarhead][/B]This is the whole issue- YOU call it human life, others do not. Just because you call it life does not make it so. The point of when life begins is the whole debate. If people don't agree with your beliefs and ideas about when life begins, you can't legislate it into them, nor do you have the right. You have every right to feel the way you do, but so do others. Why is it so difficult for people who are against abortion to realize that nobody is forcing YOU to get one? Make your choice, let other people make theirs.
Mrs. Gimpy! said:
jarhead said:Oh, I know you weren't in favor of it. Just using the situation as a comparison. BTW- did you get a buy one get one free deal on the pregnancy? Two for the price of one! Congrats!
BigVrunga said:You keep comparing abortion to murdering a developed human being, this is not the case. A zygote is no more a complete human than a few cells from my skin are a complete human.
By your method of reasoning, now that cloning technology is becoming more viable, in a few years nobody should be allowed to get any type of surgery that involves tissue removal. After all, those cells could potentially be a full grown human, if grown in the right conditions.
While I agree on the death penalty, it is defined as murder in some circumstances. And, if one or both parents wanted the baby and someone through a criminal act causes the pregnancy to terminate, does it not justify a murder charge? Suppose the termination of the pregnancy under some freak circumstance was the only result of the reckless or deliberate act of another human being. Do the parents have no legal recourse? If not murder, what is it? Robbery, destruction of property? Clearly some wrong has been done to the parents and possibly the fetus. But if not murder, unless the fetus is given some legal definition as property, there is no recourse for the parents. And if it is murder under those circumstances, why would it not be murder when the mother terminates the pregnancy?kwyckemynd00 said:Blah...I'm so sick of people trying to compare abortion to murder, or the death penalty.
If left alone though, those sperm will not develop into a human being. They have to deliberately be delivered to the egg, and then, bio problems causing misscarriage aside, the fetus will develop nonstop despite the intentions or wishes of the parents. The legal point of intent is also left out of this analogy. Jerking off in bed obviously has no intent or even risk of producing a pregnancy, nor does the blood or tissue lost during surgery, sex does, as does cloning. It is a known consequence. The 'death' of the fetus is also a known consequence of abortion.They're not human for the first few months of development. By your definition it would be manslaugter to have a wet dream...all of those poor sperm (with 'human dna') are just going to *gulp* die!?
CDB said:For the pro life crowd, while the fetus may be considered human the mother certainly is considered human. At what point can and should a mother or parent in general have the legal ability to end their responsibility for that child? Five, 10, 18 years of age? When someone is willing to take care of it for them, before or after then? Being forced to carry a baby to term, whether you like it or not, is taking their choice away. A horrible choice yes, but we do not stop landlords from evicting tenants even if that tenant would be likely to die for lack of housing. Not a perfect analogy, but still relevant. There are property rights, specifically to your own body, that trump the ability of people to impose on, abridge or violate those rights even if their life depends on it.
Defined is the problematic word here....'definitions' are entirely problematic. That's why we're debating this, is it not?CDB said:While I agree on the death penalty, it is defined as murder in some circumstances.
Another technicality in the law. The parents made the decision to give that baby life, so it was legally alive.And, if one or both parents wanted the baby and someone through a criminal act causes the pregnancy to terminate, does it not justify a murder charge?
I addressed this issue in my previous statements in this post.Suppose the termination of the pregnancy under some freak circumstance was the only result of the reckless or deliberate act of another human being. Do the parents have no legal recourse? If not murder, what is it? Robbery, destruction of property? Clearly some wrong has been done to the parents and possibly the fetus. But if not murder, unless the fetus is given some legal definition as property, there is no recourse for the parents.
IMO it is murder once the child reaches a certain developmental stage. But, if terminated responsibly while the embryo is still in development and we don't have a fetus who is dreaming, feeling, etc, that was just a decision that is not much different than wearing a condom. You wear a condom because you don't want to be pregnant. When the condom doesn't work, that doesn't change your desire to have a child, does it? No, technology failed in the preventative stage, now we need to terminate the pregnancy quickly and responsibly.And if it is murder under those circumstances, why would it not be murder when the mother terminates the pregnancy?
you're assuming people are screwing for reproductive purposes. if a woman doesn't want to have a child, she wouldn't ever deliberately deliver anything.If left alone though, those sperm will not develop into a human being. They have to deliberately be delivered to the egg, and then, bio problems causing misscarriage aside, the fetus will develop nonstop despite the intentions of wishes of the parents.
Exactly the reason we developed methods of 'birth control'. People are taking appropriate action against getting pregnant. Were not talking about purposely getting pregant and then calling it off, these are accidental / unintended / unwilling pregnancies.The legal point of intent is also left out of this analogy. Jerking off in bed obviously has no intent or even risk of producing a pregnancy, sex does It is a known consequence.
No...ethics are just overstepping their bounds here. Morphologically, the embryo is not human. The microscope CAN tell you that.King James Science aside here, there's also ethics, morality and legality involved, questions not answered by looking through a microscope.
brogers said:The age of independence is 18 in the US, no? As for if we should change that, I don't know.. I suppose I'd have to think about it, but 18 seems logical as that is when you will have finished basic schooling.
As I had said before, yes there are rights to your own body. You have the right to have sex with whomever you want or not and you have the right to use birth control or not to. Conception of a child is the result of a choice and the exercising of your own personal freedoms. It stops becoming just about the mother when there is an unborn child's life at stake.
I don't understand why we condone such irresponsible and selfish behavior. I can't think of anything more selfish than ending your child's life because you didn't want to be accountable for what you did. As you yourself stated, pregnancy is ridiculously easily prevented.
Most of what I said was directed at a specific post, so much of this is taken out of context or aimed at rhetorical questions. I will say that even though there are atheists that are prolife, the reality is that this IS largely a religious issue. Lets be realistic- atheists aren't burning down abortion clinics, sending death threats etc.etc-religious zealots are. It's the religious aspect of the prolife side that makes it such a heated argument. People aren't arguing and getting violent because it's wrong in the eyes of science. They're arguing that they feel that it's wrong in the eyes of God. And you yourself said that the question of when life starts is not easy to answer. Prolife /prochoice-neither have that DEFINITIVELY answered. So how is the prolife argument that it is murder even valid?CDB said:Not a good posting, because at various points in history the government has 'redefined' and 'clarified' just who is and is not human, and just who does and does not deserve legal protection as a human. This protection has been repeatedly denied to those who are quite obviously more than a lump of cells. It's mostly a legal distinction. Whether or not that blod of cells can morally or ethically considered a human is not so easy.
As to why prolifers have such a hard time accepting legal abortions, to them that would be equivalent of asking why some people had such a hard time accepting the holocaust. As far as they are concerned the fetus is a human being at conception. While I'm generally prochoice in my views, it's more often than not the prochoicers who are not seeming to notice that people can have differring opinions because they can't understand why anyone who disagrees with them would 'impose' their view on everyone else, even if the view being imposed is one that is, in the view of the imposer, saying something as universally agreed upon and simple as Do not kill innocent people.
People who are prolife believe abortion is murder. Many people disagree with that, but given the nature of the prolife view I think it is more than understandable why they are so adamant about imposing their views on everyone else. That they may be right makes it more disturbing, and not acknowledging that their views are most certainly not always rooted in religion is disingenuous. There are prolife atheists. This is not a religious issue, it is a human one.
kwyckemynd00 said:Another technicality in the law. The parents made the decision to give that baby life, so it was legally alive.
What stage, how is that determined objectively, and why does this get trumped when the parents want the baby? Say the stage is arbitrarily set to that level of development achieved at 6 months. Your reasoning seems to lead to these conclusions:However, IMO, it would be wrong to charge a man for the murder of an unborn child who which was on its way to the abortion clinic anyway, because its parent made the decision it would not be given birth to.
I addressed this issue in my previous statements in this post.
A parent decides they want to give birth to the child, therefore, there is a legal recognition of life there. If the parent decided they would not give birth, the human-to-be does not exist. If nobody knew the mother was pregnant, the child will never exist, and you can't murder a non-existant person.
IMO it is murder once the child reaches a certain developmental stage.
I like that you're dealing with intent, few if any do. But wearing a condom is not the same as an early term abortion. Sperm do not develop on their own, nor do eggs. Preconception birth control is not the same as post conception birth control. Post conception you are deliberately stopping a process that will continue to fruition if left alone and produce a living human being, and doing so after two (or more :woohooBut, if terminated responsibly while the embryo is still in development and we don't have a fetus who is dreaming, feeling, etc, that was just a decision that is not much different than wearing a condom. You wear a condom because you don't want to be pregnant. When the condom doesn't work, that doesn't change your desire to have a child, does it? No, technology failed in the preventative stage, now we need to terminate the pregnancy quickly and responsibly.
Intent of the sex isn't the issue really, but the known consequences of unprotected sex: pregnancy. The prolife crowd is not off base when they say if you don't want the kid and are absent any protection, the woman should keep her legs crossed and the guy his dick in his pants. They see it as punishing the child as the unwanted consequence of what the parents in hindsight see as a stupid decision. And apparently after the fetus reaches a certain point of development, so do you. So you actually share their view, just not their determination of when it takes legal hold. So that's what the question comes down to: when is the fetus a child? Legally this can be defined anytime as in some countries and throughout history parents have retained post birth abortion rights. Ethically and morally it can also be defined anytime depending on what factors you are looking at. Scientifically it can't be defined, because what is life vs what is human life, how it is defined, detected and tested for, etc., are not questions that are currently answerable in an objective manner.you're assuming people are screwing for reproductive purposes. if a woman doesn't want to have a child, she wouldn't ever deliberately deliver anything.
Any pregnancy can be defined as accidental and unintended regardless of the precautions that were or were not used. So long as the mother and father don't want it, it's accidental and unintended. Should parents have to prove reasonable steps were taken to avoid pregnancy before being allowed to have an abortion? If so how do they prove that, and if not how do you limit abortions to those that are truly accidental and unintended and not those that are the result of irresponsibility?Exactly the reason we developed methods of 'birth control'. People are taking appropriate action against getting pregnant. Were not talking about purposely getting pregant and then calling it off, these are accidental / unintended / unwilling pregnancies.
Ethics are involved. You can't dismiss the possibility and potential for life there that will occur. The conception has happened the rest is set in stone, bio problems aside, and the general gladness of most people who were once such blobs that they weren't removed is also not deniable. It seems you want to say ethics are not involved because the questions are inconvenient to the prochoice stance.No...ethics are just overstepping their bounds here. Morphologically, the embryo is not human. The microscope CAN tell you that.
True, but isn't that like blaming every Muslim for 9/11? Religious prejudice is not acceptable towards our largely Christian prolife crowd, and nor should it be for the very reason that this detracts from the prochoice side's credibility. Derrision of prolifers as religious zealots leads to straw man arguments against their valid points and, as we've seen here, some poor analogies meant to prove points that are completely off base and irrelevant to the prolife argument.jarhead said:Most of what I said was directed at a specific post, so much of this is taken out of context or aimed at rhetorical questions. I will say that even though there are atheists that are prolife, the reality is that this IS largely a religious issue. Lets be realistic- atheists aren't burning down abortion clinics, sending death threats etc.etc-religious zealots are.
I've seen prochoicers who are just as if not more zealous as prolifers. Even though I'm not prolife myself I am very sympathetic to their side and arguments, and get very, very, very heated when someone hits me with the "it's just tissue" argument. I have no overriding or pressing religious beliefs, if any, just a passionate belief that all human life is precious and that all humans have inalienable rights which deserve to be respected and protected. Very often prolifers are portayed as religious lunatics because it's easier to do that than deal with some of the valid points and questions they raise. And even if they are zealots, much of our inalienable rights as set forth in the Declaration of Independence, which we consider as an inarguable given, were considered inherent in nature and by some zealots as granted by God. It would seem religious zealotry has had some positive aspects and consequences throughout history. Point being if the prolifers are right on some level, the current state of affairs regarding abortion is very, very scary.It's the religious aspect of the prolife side that makes it such a heated argument.
Since we don't know, would you give no creedence to those who think playing it safe if the best option? If you admit we don't know you are granting the possibility that abortion may in fact equate to murder under certain circumstances. So what you'd be arguing is that it's okay to turn a blind eye to wholesale murder so long as it's kept quiet and not looked into, basically so long as it can't be absolutely proven. I'm sure you can see the problem with that viewpoint, and it is a logical consequence of the above view. Religious and nonreligious prolifers would say that, because we don't know, all the more reason to not allow abortion. After all, whatever the point at which the fetus becomes human is, eventually all that don't self abort will pass that point eventually. And it seems there is no way, or at least none acceptable to the prochoice crowd, to allow but limit abortions because there always seems to be some circumstance they want an exception made for. Rape and incest for example. They have nothing to do with the potential child and whether or not it deserves to live or die. The sufferring of the mother only has a bearing on what should be done to the person who hurt her, not the child's fate. However, that's an exception the whole prochoice crowd seems to want. The health of the mother is another. Why should abortion be the only option, that is if birth threatens the life of the mother grant she should be allowed to have the fetus removed, why does it have to be in a way that completely eliminates its chances of survival? Why can she not carry it as long as possible and then transplant the kid into an incubator? I'll admit medical possibilities limit options in many cases, but it is conceivable that there are or will be options in the future, in which case a late term abortion or even any abortion would no longer be justified by the health of the mother, because it might not always be necessary to guarantee the death of the child to guarantee the health of the mother in those cases.People aren't arguing and getting violent because it's wrong in the eyes of science. They're arguing that they feel that it's wrong in the eyes of God. And you yourself said that the question of when life starts is not easy to answer. Prolife /prochoice-neither have that DEFINITIVELY answered. So how is the prolife argument that it is murder even valid?
No, I blame our government for 9/11, but that's another topic. I wasn't saying all religious people are prolife. I was saying that out of the prolife group, a large part are that way because of their respective religions.True, but isn't that like blaming every Muslim for 9/11? Religious prejudice is not acceptable towards our largely Christian prolife crowd, and nor should it be for the very reason that this detracts from the prochoice side's credibility. Derrision of prolifers as religious zealots leads to straw man arguments against their valid points and, as we've seen here, some poor analogies meant to prove points that are completely off base and irrelevant to the prolife argument."
I don't say people are zealots because of their views. I say that because of their actions. I have no problem dealing with different views than my own. But they lose credibility when they start bombing clinics, getting violent etc., or being hypocritical in judging others. God is the only one who can judge us, so why don't they let him? That's why they come off as lunatics. And ask a prolifer what he thinks of the death penalty, and watch the stuttering begin.(Not all, but many) It's about all human life being precious when it's a baby, not when it's a murdering rapist, or homeless people starving or freezing to death etc. etc. or when a politician needs votes in the bible belt.I've seen prochoicers who are just as if not more zealous as prolifers. Even though I'm not prolife myself I am very sympathetic to their side and arguments, and get very, very, very heated when someone hits me with the "it's just tissue" argument. I have no overriding or pressing religious beliefs, if any, just a passionate belief that all human life is precious and that all humans have inalienable rights which deserve to be respected and protected. Very often prolifers are portayed as religious lunatics because it's easier to do that than deal with some of the valid points and questions they raise. And even if they are zealots, much of our inalienable rights as set forth in the Declaration of Independence, which we consider as an inarguable given, were considered inherent in nature and by some zealots as granted by God. It would seem religious zealotry has had some positive aspects and consequences throughout history. Point being if the prolifers are right on some level, the current state of affairs regarding abortion is very, very scary.
I knew I was setting myself up there.Since we don't know, would you give no creedence to those who think playing it safe if the best option? If you admit we don't know you are granting the possibility that abortion may in fact equate to murder under certain circumstances. So what you'd be arguing is that it's okay to turn a blind eye to wholesale murder so long as it's kept quiet and not looked into, basically so long as it can't be absolutely proven. I'm sure you can see the problem with that viewpoint, and it is a logical consequence of the above view. Religious and nonreligious prolifers would say that, because we don't know, all the more reason to not allow abortion. After all, whatever the point at which the fetus becomes human is, eventually all that don't self abort will pass that point eventually. And it seems there is no way, or at least none acceptable to the prochoice crowd, to allow but limit abortions because there always seems to be some circumstance they want an exception made for. Rape and incest for example. They have nothing to do with the potential child and whether or not it deserves to live or die. The sufferring of the mother only has a bearing on what should be done to the person who hurt her, not the child's fate. However, that's an exception the whole prochoice crowd seems to want. The health of the mother is another. Why should abortion be the only option, that is if birth threatens the life of the mother grant she should be allowed to have the fetus removed, why does it have to be in a way that completely eliminates its chances of survival? Why can she not carry it as long as possible and then transplant the kid into an incubator? I'll admit medical possibilities limit options in many cases, but it is conceivable that there are or will be options in the future, in which case a late term abortion or even any abortion would no longer be justified by the health of the mother, because it might not always be necessary to guarantee the death of the child to guarantee the health of the mother in those cases.
.[/quote]I certainly don't think a zygote is human, but it is potentially a human with a whole life in front of it and that is not arguable. As such, I'm not so sure that just because we don't know to minute at which point it can be defined as human that killing it should be acceptable
Ever hear the saying "if it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck, its a duck." ?CDB said:What stage, how is that determined objectively, and why does this get trumped when the parents want the baby?
Then refer to my original statement, lol.Say the stage is arbitrarily set to that level of development achieved at 6 months. Your reasoning seems to lead to these conclusions:
I) If they didn't know about the pregnancy, it isn't murder. What if they only knew after the fact but have a documented desire for a child on record somehow?
That would be a ridiculous thing to claim, considering its pretty damn hard to differentiate between blastocysts. ahaha...A legal defense would be they wanted a child, not this specific child, and their lack of awareness of it deprives it of protection.
This would be no different than what goes on today. Dr.'s get sued all the time for things like that.Suppose a doctor prescribes a medicine that causes a miscarraige. Even though no one knew of the child, if post involuntary termination of the pregnancy means the fetus was human, the doctor could easily be charged with manslaughter,
Already things taken into consideration in all litigation against doctors. These aren't new concerns, and people are sue-happy. I'm not concerned about how 'people' will try to take advantage of a law. I'm more concerned with the law protecting people.the argument being even if miscarriage was a slight risk he should have checked for pregnancy first. What if the medication needed to be administered right away though?
This goes back to the root of the abortion debate, so I'm not going to bother answering it.The problem I see is the protection of the fetus, if any, has to be based on its inherent characteristics, not someone else's wishes.
No, then it becomes a moral / ethical issue--a real one. At this point there is no reasonable argument against a child being a living human--its the determination of when the fertilized cell becomes a living human that is being debated, (the age of emancipation, 16yrs in the US with a petition, 18-19 is the normal age range otherwise).III) I asked for what the standard for determining when the fetus is a person regardless of the wishes of the mother because of this point: most of the reasons used to justify a woman being able to abort a fetus can be used to justify the termination of any child up to whatever the age of emancipation is,
Again, its the age at which a fertilized cell has developed enough to be considered human that is being debated. Its pretty well known by biologists when there is enough development to exhibit signs of what we commonly refer to as life. At different stages of development, we're nto more 'alive' than bacteria, a sponge, etc.because all children impose on their parents, all parents have made the choice to have them there, and absent a legal distinction more objective than 'when their gills disappear,' there's really no reason why the age of legal termination has to be in the prebirth period.
You're acting as if this isn't a problem already, hahaa. This is why judges have discretion over rulings and why we're judged by a jury of our peers. We're trying to minimize damage by taking things into consideration and approaching each case individually. There is no law that is 100% set in stone. So, this won't be as big of an issue as you make it. You can easily apply your fearful logic to an endless amount of currently existing laws which are perfectly fine laws.Such legal standards leave the door open for severe legal abuses. The levels of fraud and possible crimes and legal precedents when someone is human under these circumstances and not human under those, and their status is dependent in wholeor part on the wishes of someone else, someone who may not have the interests of the person to be terminated in mind, are scary.
IV) What if one parent wants the child and the other doesn't? If the wishes of the parents are the issue, the father should have a say. If he is willing to care completely for the child and wants it with all his heart, but the woman doesn't, is it murder when gets the abortion, or do her rights over her own body trump the father's desire for the child's life, and if so why? Does her desire to avoid a mere nine months discomfort completely trump the legal protection for the fetus' life that the father's desire to see it live would otherwise give it? Is the life of the fetus to be completely determined by the convenience of the mother up until the arbitrary point where it turns into a child?See this is a little different than the rest of the abortion debate, and this is a really good debatable topic (for a different thread). But, IMO, fathers are getting assed out on this 'womans right to choose' thing. Not 'enough' association with what I was talking about earlier to take up thread space though.
This is too dependent on that last quote of yours to really get into. As of right now, according to 'abortion law', this isnt' an issue. And this really has nothing to do with the stage at which we have a 'human life'. Good topic though, and it would be good for another debate.Suppose the husband delays her ability to abort somehow to beyond that point, does he then win by default, would she be a murderer if she still got an abortion? He could kidnap her and take her to a state or another jurisdiction where abortion was totally illegal, stay there until the six month limit passed and she had the kid and keep it. In that jurisdiction he would be a hero and could presumably stay without fear of extradition.
4/5 of the complexity was you going off on an unrelated tangent, haah. As for the debate at hand in respect with the current law and a womans right to choose, its not too complex to say that if a mother determines she wants to have the baby that it can be legally considered to be alive. And, if she decides she will abort it, it would legally be non-existant. The ramifications would really be minor, and if anything, would maybe save some poor sap from being charged with manslaughter for getting into a car accident and causing a fetus to abort while it was already on the way to the abortion clinic.I do however think this is needlessly complex, and at whatever point, from conception to birth, that a fetus' life is legally defined as starting, it should be absolute and not dependent of what the parents want. It either is or is not a person who deserves legal protection.
No, its not the same, but I'm not comparing the two, I'm saying that if method #1 of our parent prevention plan fails, use method #2I like that you're dealing with intent, few if any do. But wearing a condom is not the same as an early term abortion.![]()
In order to believe there is something 'inherently special' about a fertilized cell, you have to believe in the religious, or mystical portion of the subject.
If you disagree, can you logically explain the difference between a canine embryo and a human embryo? Why is one so much more special than the other that we debate it so vehemontly, when essentially they are exactly the same. They are randomly developed traits that allowed for our particular species to flourish.
We're now 6.3 bn ppl dense in the world, and these huge brains we've evolved allow for us to control our birth rates and there is nothing wrong with controlling our birth rates, or choosing not to become a parent when given the choice. Just don't do it in a fashion that causes excruciating pain to a poor defenseless fetus who has been dreaming away for some time...that's the thought that horrifies me.
We cant do much about the fact we need male and female contributors to have a child, but other animals have evolved methods of changing sex which allow them to do that. Similarly, we developed large complex brains that will enable us to manipulate life in many, many ways. Dont' be surprised if people start combining sperm+sperm and egg+egg in the near future.Sperm do not develop on their own, nor do eggs.
How,and the requirements of a human being propogated are things we've evolved. Our physical evolutin in this sense may be at a hault, but our intellectual evolution is being compounded by itself. (We created technology that allows us to further advance ourselves). This IS part of our evolution. So, i see the ability to control birth as a part of human evolution. IMO there is nothing wrong with deciding to be a parent or not to be a parent. The only thing I think we need to be cautious of is HOW we do it. Like I said earlier, it makes me cringe to think about how some late term abortions are done on fetus' that can think, feel, dream, etc. The pain has to be horrendous, and I have a respect for emotion and feeling.
If it were simply 'life' that were the factor that made me oppose abortion, Id also oppose stepping on the grass. Afterall, you'd be killing it. However, I dont' think that way...I walk on grass all the time. Now, if the grass could feel pain, and was crying from the torturous pain, I'd sure as hell stay off of the grass.
My point...Its not entirely "life" I'm worried about in the abortion process. Hence my reasoning for hating late term abortion. I only brought up my point of parents and deciding to or to not have a baby because you brought up legal issues involving manslaughter / murder involving a fetus/embryo that was considered to be a person by the law. It was a side issue.
Eh, I'm stopping here...its super late, and I'm super tired. I can't even keep my eyes straight...they're crossing on me :blink: (seriously) slept a total of 4-5 hrs in the 48hrs before yestarday, so I'm trying to catch up on sleep...ehhe.
Anyway, I'll just try to sum up my position in a few words.
We should have the right to choose whether or not we want to have children. If we can outsmart mothernature, who is she to tell us what to do?![]()
If we choose not to have children, do so in a fashion that doesn't involve torturing something else to death (late term abortion).
Late term abortion should be legal for doctors to perform at any given time in the event of an emergency, but aside from that, you better have a darn good reason to get an abortion after you've know you were pregnant for 3+ months! A judges discretion is necessary when there is no emergency.
Unless it can think/feel/etc, its no more alive than a sponge.
Reproduction is reproduction and its no more special (note: i didn't say interesting) that a human can do it than it is a fly or a bacteria can do it. Sex is pleasureable...people who found sex pleasureable reproduced more...therefore, we reproduce a lot. We can now have sex and not have babies, so why not?![]()
jarhead said:I don't say people are zealots because of their views. I say that because of their actions. I have no problem dealing with different views than my own. But they lose credibility when they start bombing clinics, getting violent etc., or being hypocritical in judging others. God is the only one who can judge us, so why don't they let him?
That's why they come off as lunatics. And ask a prolifer what he thinks of the death penalty, and watch the stuttering begin.(Not all, but many) It's about all human life being precious when it's a baby, not when it's a murdering rapist, or homeless people starving or freezing to death etc. etc. or when a politician needs votes in the bible belt.
I knew I was setting myself up there.No both sides don't know the definitive answer when life begins. But I'm thinking of the point when it has a soul,consciousness,etc. etc. Immeasurable things. But we can measure when it's NOT a human being physically.
Lots of things are potential life. Sperm is if you want to think of it in potential terms. Where would you draw the line then? In this case I've damn near commited genocide due to the years of masturbation and blowjobs.
Yup, but I also know people who think ferrets are rats and they aren't even in rodent family. What the **** are you doing up at this time of night/morning? For me it's just insomnia, but I think I see evidence of you here at these times regularly. That's harsh living man.kwyckemynd00 said:I should clarify, I know nothing is set in stone, and for the most part, this is of course my opinion...but, that's the problem, EVERYTHING is subjective because everything is percieved and interpreted by a unique being.
Ever hear the saying "if it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck, its a duck." ?
Interesting definition. I can't find any holes at a glance except the potential subjective definition of what is uniquely human. Is it just the organs and their arrangement, or does it include behaviors and brain/though patterns if they're detectable? It would seem to allow for a wide window of time where the fetus becomes recognizably human in a physical sense up to the point of birth and even after. After all, the brain isn't done developing when you're born.Well, IMO, the stage of development could be described similarly. If the embryo exhibits uniquely human characteristics, then its a human.
The law does not demonstrate a significant ability to exclude the ridiculous, which is one of the reasons I believe we're all anonymous here because we would happily be used to take up space in a prison, even if it meant letting a rapist or murderer out, because we like to use certain substances.That would be a ridiculous thing to claim, considering its pretty damn hard to differentiate between blastocysts. ahaha...
One of those people presumably being the fetus at a certain point. Being civily sued and charged with manslaughter or murder are quite different. If that fetus dies and is defined as human that falls into murder and manslaughter territory under certain circumstances, not a civil action. A possible consequence is a refusal of insurance companies to insure doctors who preform abortions, and no more legal abortions by default, or no more unless they are medically necessary and defensible as such.This would be no different than what goes on today. Dr.'s get sued all the time for things like that.
Already things taken into consideration in all litigation against doctors. These aren't new concerns, and people are sue-happy. I'm not concerned about how 'people' will try to take advantage of a law. I'm more concerned with the law protecting people.
That's the key though and it has to be addressed. If it's not no one can say for sure the right to choose trumps the right to life, and the smug attitude and dismissal of some prochoicers towards prolifers (no one here, just making a general statement) are certainly no more justified than the similar attitudes of prolifers. If it's not addressed it's also impossible to defend any position on the issue as every position is arbitrary in the end, a matter of preference.This goes back to the root of the abortion debate, so I'm not going to bother answering it.
EEMain will kill me for saying this, but what about 100 years from now? Society and the law are not static, nor are they always advancing as a rule. Define it as legally okay to kill a fetus today, tomorrow something more. It is a possibility, as evidenced by history and the general tendency of people to do very horrible things to others, sometimes en masse.No, then it becomes a moral / ethical issue--a real one. At this point there is no reasonable argument against a child being a living human--its the determination of when the fertilized cell becomes a living human that is being debated, (the age of emancipation, 16yrs in the US with a petition, 18-19 is the normal age range otherwise).
I like your standard despite its subjective aspect.Again, its the age at which a fertilized cell has developed enough to be considered human that is being debated. Its pretty well known by biologists when there is enough development to exhibit signs of what we commonly refer to as life. At different stages of development, we're nto more 'alive' than bacteria, a sponge, etc.
I understand your point, but more lawyers and more legal crap like this is, I think, to be avoided not invited. Nor would I generally trust my peers or even a judge these days to reliably tell me how to tie a pair of shoelaces to be honest.You're acting as if this isn't a problem already, hahaa. This is why judges have discretion over rulings and why we're judged by a jury of our peers.
Yup, but to date you're the only person with enough of a fucking brain to point that out. Cheers.We're trying to minimize damage by taking things into consideration and approaching each case individually. There is no law that is 100% set in stone. So, this won't be as big of an issue as you make it. You can easily apply your fearful logic to an endless amount of currently existing laws which are perfectly fine laws.
I see your point, but it is relevant to our debate here because the standard for a possible murder/manslaughter charge if the fetus is pre or proto human as you have defined it is whether or not the parents want the kid. That there are two parents who might have conflicting opinions on the subject throws a monkey wrench into the works on all levels. Would it be sorted out legally? Likely yes.See this is a little different than the rest of the abortion debate, and this is a really good debatable topic (for a different thread). But, IMO, fathers are getting assed out on this 'womans right to choose' thing. Not 'enough' association with what I was talking about earlier to take up thread space though.
This is too dependent on that last quote of yours to really get into. As of right now, according to 'abortion law', this isnt' an issue. And this really has nothing to do with the stage at which we have a 'human life'. Good topic though, and it would be good for another debate.
I think it's more complex than you want to let on. We're talking about the point, legally, morally and ethically the termination of a thing turns into the termination of a person, and the latter has serious consequences and the former none. From a practical point of view I would never want a murder charge of any kind based on whether or not someone wanted the victim around. Even if it could be legally confined to this very specific instance. I just don't like the implications.Its not too complex to say that if a mother determines she wants to have the baby that it can be legally considered to be alive. And, if she decides she will abort it, it would legally be non-existant. The ramifications would really be minor, and if anything, would maybe save some poor sap from being charged with manslaughter for getting into a car accident and causing a fetus to abort while it was already on the way to the abortion clinic.
Allowing that, option one has no potential to be considered a murder, but option two at some point does.No, its not the same, but I'm not comparing the two, I'm saying that if method #1 of our parent prevention plan fails, use method #2![]()
Allowing that, even when the determination is based on your definition all the way at the top it's not black and white.In order to believe there is something 'inherently special' about a fertilized cell, you have to believe in the religious, or mystical portion of the subject.
Because one might grow into the greatest American President in human history and bring world peace and unending prosperity through a few simple policy decisions, and the other will never have the potential to do anything more significnt than shitting on the former's rug. It's not a medical/scientific distinction, but it is a logical/valid one and it's why the debate exists.If you disagree, can you logically explain the difference between a canine embryo and a human embryo? Why is one so much more special than the other that we debate it so vehemontly, when essentially they are exactly the same.
Me too, but even your definition allows for the possiblity of this happening regularly.We're now 6.3 bn ppl dense in the world, and these huge brains we've evolved allow for us to control our birth rates and there is nothing wrong with controlling our birth rates, or choosing not to become a parent when given the choice. Just don't do it in a fashion that causes excruciating pain to a poor defenseless fetus who has been dreaming away for some time...that's the thought that horrifies me.
Nor do I but that is not the issue. Someone deciding whether or not to adopt is making that decision and not necessarily at the cost of another human's life. An abortion is not the decision whether or not to be a parent. It is the decision to end a pregnancy and eliminate that human life or potential human life in the womb, giving it no chance to live, ever. A woman could just as easily bring it to term, deliver it and put it up for adoption. Is 9 months of inconvenience in her life and a few bad hours of pushing and breathing strange worth that life?So, i see the ability to control birth as a part of human evolution. IMO there is nothing wrong with deciding to be a parent or not to be a parent.
To me it is central and no less important that the ethical and moral issues. If we based the decision on the pain the child could possibly feel, well all kinds of arguments could surface about just who can and cannot feel and whether or not murdering people under this or that circumstance if punishable. Like I mentioned, laws are not static, nor do they remain confined. Precedents from this area can transfer to another. For something to be a law the principle it is codified from has to be as axiomatic as possible. Regarding the possibilites of murder, manslaughter, etc., they're central to me because they focus on the central issue of if and when the fetus can be considered alive, to have rights and to be deserving of protection.It was a side issue.
I agree in a general sense, but as some of the prolifers here pointed out, birth control is better defined as conception control. Abortion is in a very real sense the avoidance of the consequences of actions where the risk was known and in my opinion not considered. The people I've known, the married couples specifically trying to have kids, lead me to the conclusion that you've got to be very unlucky or fucking your brains out without a care for prevention to get pregnant 'by accident.' I've had my share of close calls with girls, back when I was young and though pull and pray was enough. But there were plenty of times I didn't pull and still no little CDBs running around. Thank God for that in more ways than one.We should have the right to choose whether or not we want to have children. If we can outsmart mothernature, who is she to tell us what to do?![]()
If we choose not to have children, do so in a fashion that doesn't involve torturing something else to death (late term abortion).
Late term abortion should be legal for doctors to perform at any given time in the event of an emergency, but aside from that, you better have a darn good reason to get an abortion after you've know you were pregnant for 3+ months! A judges discretion is necessary when there is no emergency.
Unless it can think/feel/etc, its no more alive than a sponge.
Reproduction is reproduction and its no more special (note: i didn't say interesting) that a human can do it than it is a fly or a bacteria can do it. Sex is pleasureable...people who found sex pleasureable reproduced more...therefore, we reproduce a lot. We can now have sex and not have babies, so why not?![]()
jomi822 said:big long post about decisions
BigVrunga said:I would hope so too, but if a woman ended up pregnant becuase of a terrible act like that, I would like to think should would legally have the option.
Here is the bomb question – would we be better off if we were to assume each sexual encounter outside of committed relationship would actually result in a conception and, as a condition precedent, be willing to assume parental responsibility if that were the outcome? Just food for thought.
Beau said:Another possible perspective - for the males, would your thoughts on abortion be any different if the girl facing this decision was your sister after having been involved in a long term relationship with a boyfried. I think the more "real" we make it, the less theorectical the discussion becomes.
I also agree that one's perspective changes when one has a tangible point of reference (or, in my case - 3 of them); that is – a situation in which the "blob" became a son or daughter. Whether or not it should be, when the discussion moves from one based on academic beliefs to one based on feelings, personal experience and parental observations - things change. Again, that is something one has to experience to appreciate the difference. I’m not saying those of us with kids “know”; but it makes the argument more personal.
Abortion for convenience is never "good" - and in my mind there may be a great deal of collateral damage. Worse, abortion intended primarily to benefit the impregnator from assuming responsibility creates real issues; especially if the impregnatee is pressured into it (I’ve witnessed to results through a then-close relationship I had with a couple).
BigVrunga said:Great post Beau. I think that you're right here, that the act of copulation is meant to concieve a child, and that it should be taken with that degree of respect and seriousness when a young person decides they're ready for sex.
But, sex is also fun, enjoyable,and a bonding act between two people (hopefully), and a child is usually not the desired outcome when two people engage in intercourse.
I think the key to preventing unwanted pregnancy is education, education, education. Kids shouldnt be afraid to talk to their parents about sex, and parents shouldnt freak out about talking to their kids about birth control.
If the government wants to reduce the amount of unwanted pregnancy, then safe and convienient birth control methods should be free and available to everyone. But of course, we still havent figured out how to manage an effective health care system for our citizens...
BV
CDB said:[/color]Don't you have anything wise assey or flip to say?
Beau said:Summary: Although I'm not sure what prompted your question - there aren't/won't be any comments from me in this thread that are knowingly intended as flip or smart A.
Any chance you can elaborate?
Beau said:Normally I agree. I just try to keep certain subjects (like Alzheimer’s, adultery, abortion, etc.) off limits (you never know who has been hit by these types of things), as well as show approporiate respect for things like SPAM (and other similar potted meat products).
CDB said:Speaking of food and abortion in the same posts, I have a love for eggs cooked in almost anyway, and what is an egg but a chicken that never was? What is an omelet but mass murder, in the most horrid way too? I'm now having visions of a Walter Cronkite version of a chicken on tv in the coop, clucking over black and white images of omelets being made, poaching going on, and a pic Colonel Sanders at the top of the Chicken FBI's Ten Most In Need of Pecking.