V
vern_humphrey
Guest
In reference to killing her child – whether born or unborn.I’m not being combative, but in reference to what?
What is the moral difference between killing a child in January, and killing that same child the following December?
I suggest you look up the meaning of the phrase “begs the question.” It means to present an argument which asks your opponent to accept your point so you can prove your point.If this is so, it begs the question "Why do young poor women still get abortions?
But to answer the question, the answer is, “Not because they are poor. There is plenty of help available.”
Yes – but none of that justifies killing the children.I’m not sure you know (and maybe you do, of course we don’t know each other) what it *really *means to be poor. Do not mistake me for getting on a soap box here. I’ve had a look and it isn’t pretty. True poverty has little to do with money, as evidenced by former street thugs turned celebrities who bring their poverty with them into their mansions.
We offer the resources a woman needs to bring a child into the world raise it – including courses that give her salable skills.The poor are uneducated to the point that even with resources available, they don’t have the interpersonal tools to even ask for them or avail themselves to them. We can’t just say “We’re offering resources,” and expect abortion to go away.
Yes – in the last half century or so, our continual failure to impose accountability on the system has made the problem immeasurably worse.The failure of the education system is a long tragic story. Do you know who teaches in poor communities? Unqualified teachers that can’t get work anywhere else. Technically, my first year as a teacher, I was one of them. Fresh out of grad school (no M.Ed) and the school that hired me was desperate–no one else would take the job for that pay. And the Dean of Students was incompetent, so problem children were sent back to the classroom (“children” who were in gangs. Some had killed people). I had a student offer me $400 to pass him (a junior) so he could get a good grade *and *skip class to work and provide for his *two *children. I tried calling parents. I’d say 80% of my students didn’t have the same last names as their parents. And often it was an elderly grandmother who answered the phone saying “I don’t know what to do with him either. Can’t *you *help? Aren’t *you *his teacher?” Students writing essays about it’s hard to do homework when the baby is crying and their grandmother is smoking crack in the bathroom. I kid you not.
And a law making murder illegal would target the poor (look at who commits most of the violent crimes in this country.)It’s a black hole of need. And there aren’t enough good thoughts and hand-holding going around just yet, and I don’t know if there ever can be. “The poor you will have always” Jesus said. A law making abortion illegal would target the poor,
The argument won’t hold water – a law making abortion or murder illegal would target the killers.
Not as long as the law says abortion is a** right**, not a wrong.and in many cases most likely young women who just don’t know that they don’t know. And to reiterate, I’m not for abortion. I am for fellowship, and against a law. And the job will *never *be done.
Let me explain. Arkansas is about 48th in the nation when it comes to most metrics that reflect prosperity.And this post doesn’t fall under the *ad misericordiam *fallacy, “appeal to pity.” It is fact. To think it is sad is simply a matter of perspective. For many, it is reality.
This congressional district (the 1st) has 27 counties – and only four of them can match the state average for per capita income.
Of the remainng counties, 19 of them are declining, compared to the state.
I have a pretty good handle on poverty and what it does to people.