- The behavior (sex) that âattachesâ the unborn to its mother is one where this subsequent attachment is a likely possibility. What other activity is there where the foreseeable outcome is having another person grafted to you for life support? (thus the example the author provides isnât real, and should likely not even be considered).
This is where the conversation on the show did not get to as I remember it, to the point of consent by both parties. It requires both parties to consent to the use of their body if the people are both outside the womb, but if one person is not born, then the consent of the woman does not matter anymore. Thatâs a double standard.
The guy driving the car, consents to the risky behavior that he may actually crash the car. Does that mean heâs granting consent to have his body used to save the life of the people he hit? That he can be hooked up to them for 9 months till they recover? Currently as it stands, the people that are born do not get a right to use the body of the person that created the event. But the people that are not born, get to use the body of the person that created the event, but only the female, not the male. But if the victims of the guy are to die by his actions of crashing the car, then he can be held accountable for manslaughter. He is not legally required to use his body to save their lives though. Itâs just a terrible accident that resulted in risky behavior.
So is the woman to be charged with manslaughter as the guy would driving the car and kills his passengers? Not every driver is charged with the death of the people in the car or on the side of the road. Ice on the road caused him to loose control, not his fault? Broken condom, not her fault?
- Because pregnancy is a commonly foreseeable outcome of sex, the mother provides tacit consent to the reality of pregnancy by choosing to have sex. Ergo, she is not forced into pregnancy (unless, of course, sheâs raped).
Driving a car in bad weather is a risky situation as well and foreseeable that an accident most likely will occur. Just as having unsafe sex is. Key word there, âunsafeâ. But the guy driving the car in day light, no bad weather, etc. is the same as a couple using birth control properly.
- Pregnancy has a maximum duration. The generic example where an injured person is grafted on to a man is not.
Duration of the someone elseâs right to another personâs body is always 0 currently. No one has a right to use another personâs body for any reason without that personâs consent, regardless of the duration. Or do you see it differently?
- Pregnancy is a natural function of the female body. The other is obviously not a natural function as it requires medical intervention in order to exist.
Having the ability to do something does not mean you always consent to that action. Or do you see that differently? I have the ability to skydive, but Iâm never going to consent to that.
- Pregnancy is required for the continued existence of our species. The grafting example provided is one fantastic anecdote, and thus it is not required for our continued existence.
Women need to give consent for the species to survive. The species can die out before we allow people access to her body without her consent. Thatâs where we all are, I hope.
The author continues to defend the analogy of âpregnant woman is the same as grafted-manâ, despite the clear fact that they are not analogues.
Any argument to justify the killing of the quintessentially innocent, right? :doh2:
We are here discussing where two conflicting moral issues come in conflict. The right to someoneâs bodily use to someone elseâs right to life. As it stands now, once you are born, you do not have a right to use someone elseâs body to save your own life for any reason. Such as, we do not harvest cadavers to save peopleâs lives that need organ donation. We do not force death row inmates to give up their body to save their victims, etc. But if you are preborn, then your right to live supersedes the right of the womanâs use of her body. Thatâs the argument presented and currently where things are being argued now. Or do you see this issue in the US being argued differently?