A
Arkansan
Guest
None of us knows the evidence. That doesn’t mean there wasn’t any.
So what sentence is appropriate for a raped woman who uses the morning after pill, which I understand Catholics consider to be an abortion. Similar to the penalty for murder? Or less?Yes, abortion should be prohibited without exception, and those who have, perform, or conspire to arrange one should be prosecuted for murder.
The same penalty that would apply if a recently-raped woman murdered the already born child of her rapist.Arkansan:![]()
So what sentence is appropriate for a raped woman who uses the morning after pill, which I understand Catholics consider to be an abortion. Similar to the penalty for murder? Or less?Yes, abortion should be prohibited without exception, and those who have, perform, or conspire to arrange one should be prosecuted for murder.
You think a woman who may or may not have been pregnant should be charged for attempted murder for taking a legal drug that may or may not have increased the risk of a miscarriage of a blastocyst? That seems like quite a stretch. The Church itself doesn’t enforce any kind of excommunication for abortions that are unknown and merely probable.Edit: Actually, in the case you describe the correct punishment would probably be for attempted murder, since the actual fact of homicide would be unprovable.
As would attempted murder if you couldn’t prove there was actually someone to kill.FiveLinden:![]()
The same penalty that would apply if a recently-raped woman murdered the already born child of her rapist.Arkansan:![]()
So what sentence is appropriate for a raped woman who uses the morning after pill, which I understand Catholics consider to be an abortion. Similar to the penalty for murder? Or less?Yes, abortion should be prohibited without exception, and those who have, perform, or conspire to arrange one should be prosecuted for murder.
Edit: Actually, in the case you describe the correct punishment would probably be for attempted murder, since the actual fact of homicide would be unprovable.
Even the sins of adults are treated in light of their subjective culpability.Some people think that women are adults and should be treated as such.
Murder is the intentional illegal killing of an innocent human being.Murder is “the intentional killing of an innocent human being”, and if abortion does not fit that description then nothing does.
Murder does not become non-murder merely because the State says it’s legal.Murder is the intentional illegal killing of an innocent human being.
In the Antebellum South, the murder of black people had the protection of law, as did the murder of Jews in Nazi Germany. That didn’t mean it wasn’t murder.In the US, abortion has the protection of law.
What makes one sound crazy is rationalizing how murder is not really murder, as you are doing here.It is killing, it is immoral killing, but, those in the pro-life world lose credibility calling abortion “murder”. Makes those folks sound a little crazy.
Obviously, if abortion were illegal at all stages, the morning after pill would also be banned.Arkansan:![]()
You think a woman who may or may not have been pregnant should be charged for attempted murder for taking a legal drug that may or may not have increased the risk of a miscarriage of a blastocyst? That seems like quite a stretch. The Church itself doesn’t enforce any kind of excommunication for abortions that are unknown and merely probable.Edit: Actually, in the case you describe the correct punishment would probably be for attempted murder, since the actual fact of homicide would be unprovable.
This sort of sloppy thinking is why I have no faith in the mainstream American pro-life movement.Arkansan:![]()
Even the sins of adults are treated in light of their subjective culpability.Some people think that women are adults and should be treated as such.
Yours included.
You objected to the law being disproportionately directed at poor women. This is the case because rich women can afford to travel abroad. I assumed that since you were complaining about this, you actually cared and would support laws to make the situation more equal.Also you could not reasonably or realistically prosecute women who travel abroad for abortions. You would have to press this was the purpose of their trip. I’d like to see how you are going to do that. Thousands of women travel to the UK from Ireland for that purpose each year, it’s an acknowledged ‘open secret’. How do you suggest the authorities there could stop that?
Prior to Roe v. Wade the law treated the abortionist as the criminal, and the woman and child both as victims. This is because, objectively, they both were; as has been said, a women typically doesn’t want an abortion as she might want a fudge sundae, but rather as a trapped animal wants to gnaw off its foot to escape a trap.In case it isn’t obvious, the purpose of the justice system isn’t to punish sins. It exists to punish crimes based on objective evidence, not to make subjective judgments about the spiritual state of defendants.