![]() |
Re: Legal or Illegal: Abortion?
Quote:
This debate wasn't nearly as interesting as the other one's we've had anyway, as there's no solution for this. At least the Economics thread had something of a resolution, this can never have that. I'm done. |
Re: Legal or Illegal: Abortion?
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
|
Re: Legal or Illegal: Abortion?
Quote:
However, I present this analogy. Some people think that all things have some good. Living and nonliving. Some people think that only living things have good; this extends to the plants, the trees, the animals you eat. And, some people think a good is only intrinsic to things with a waking conscience. So, I ask, if something does not have a conscience or to a lesser extent is unaware of their good, do they have less value than the things that do? Again, I believe that any form of abortion that is not the pill is morally reprehensible. The pill does what nature does by chance, only by tweaking hormones. However, I do not feel that I am in a position to deny all women the right to make the decision to have a first trimester abortion or to have an abortion in unique circumstances. In defense of my own contradiction, I do think to an extent life holds different value in certain situations. I'm not saying that there is a time when killing someone is okay; that's not what I said. However, if someone in an indefinite vegetative state or if some mindless mass of cells were to be compared to you or me, I think we could argue that there is a difference in value of life. Quote:
|
Re: Legal or Illegal: Abortion?
Quote:
However, for every woman who uses abortion as an escape from rape or to save her own life, I assure you there are just as many if not more using abortion as a form of post-sexual birth control. That alone should be a good reason to rethink your position. |
Re: Legal or Illegal: Abortion?
Quote:
Quote:
That said, our current abortion law is terrible. Its far too subjective and placed WAY too much power in the opinions of people, rather than the law of the land, Subjectivity needs to be removed and clarity must be achieved. We are quickly approaching the time in science when humans will be able to create other humans, and if we do not do a better job of defining human life, I don't even want to think of the horrors that are possible. Quote:
Terry was NOT on life support, she only required food and water. Essentially she was starved to death over several days. It was a unique situation. So if life is life, was allowing her to die from starvation and dehydration any better or worse than ignoring an infant until it dies of the same neglect? The question of pain is subjective and I'm not going to play the game of whether or not I think she was in pain, as it only clouds an issue where we are trying to find clarity. |
Re: Legal or Illegal: Abortion?
Quote:
But, I agree, on the subject of abortion we should try to stick to the subject of human life, so I will attempt to do that. Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
As far as "humans making humans," I think you are referring to cloning? In which case, the cloning we have now still involves the clone to go through the birth process. So, the rules of abortion would still apply. Maybe one day we will be able to clone 40 year old person from scratch, but I doubt you or I will see that in our lifetime. Quote:
Quote:
|
Re: Legal or Illegal: Abortion?
Vampyr - I'm sorry you didn't like this discussion. I was going to reply to your reply, but if you're done with this thread, then I won't. I can't help but feel that you confused me with a right-wing-pro-life-wacko-nutjob, which, I assure you, I am not. The primary basis for my argument is the Constitution, not God's will. I would like to point out though that I do not support rape, am not anti-women, and never said that abortion is worse than the Holocaust. :)
KG - Here is my response to how to deal with legislation concerning abortion (assuming our agreements that we made last night): First and foremost, I consider Roe v Wade unconstitutional. I believe abortion is a state, not a federal, issue. Therefore, I believe abortion should be decided state by state and the federal government should not legislate abortion. That being said, if I was a state legislator, this is the bill I would propose: I would first state that life begins at the moment of conception. I would then cite Amendment XIV, Section 1 of the Constitution which states: "No State shall ... deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law." I would then state that abortion is unconstitutional, when the mother's life is not threatened by the baby, given the agreement that: 1) life begins at conception and 2) the citation of Amendment XIV, Section 1 of the Constitution. This is an example of a government's fundamental responsibility to protect life, and to curtail violence. I would then address situations where the mother's life is threatened by the baby. The government does not have a right to interfere in these situations. If the government were to decide one way or another (either against the mother, or against the child), the government is failing to protect the liberties of either the mother or the child, and is advocating violence. Therefore, I believe the government should not interfere in situations in which the mother's life is threatened by the child. I believe it should be a decision between the mother, the father, and the doctor (ideally). |
Re: Legal or Illegal: Abortion?
Who determines when a mother's life is in jeopardy? A doctor who can decide whether or not the law is morally correct, and start a black market abortion clinic with excuse that the very act of giving birth is life threatening or just make up an affliction that threatens her life.
Once again, we end up in a mess. Thats why I think there needs to be sonme form of comprimise that is somewhat tolerable to both sides, or nothing will get accomplished. There has to be some steadfast law that will save many of the unborn, but also give pro-abortion people options and choices that they can tolerate. Both sides need to give a little, or we will be stuck with Roe v. Wade forever, and not only is it unconstitutional, but is also horrible law as it is legislation from the bench. Law is specific, RvW is NOT. |
Re: Legal or Illegal: Abortion?
This is true. There was an article about a pharmacist that wouldn't fill someone's birth control prescription because they didn't think it was moral. But, it's not the job of the pharmacist to have moral opinions. I believe the pharmacist worked for Meijers. Meijers could adopt a stance where they don't sell contraceptives, but they do sell them, so that pharmacist was way out of line.
|
Re: Legal or Illegal: Abortion?
I dont understand why this is still an issue. Abortions are legal. Roe Vs. Wade. Killing people is illegal. Rape is illegal. This is America.
The sun will rise tomorrow. Get over it people. |
Re: Legal or Illegal: Abortion?
lolwat
|
Re: Legal or Illegal: Abortion?
Quote:
|
Re: Legal or Illegal: Abortion?
Quote:
Right? |
Re: Legal or Illegal: Abortion?
Quote:
|
Re: Legal or Illegal: Abortion?
Oh please Professor, the only reason anyone posts topics of this nature is to stir people up. Admit it, you like acting like my opinion is crap and your shit dosent stink.
|
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:20 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
GameTavern