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Luis_Santiago
Guest
Early-term abortion was often not punished at all, and the Church didn’t establish biological conception as the point at which personhood begins until the 19th century.Why make the point? The crimes were punished in a similar fashion. So to be correct we should say abortion is a *form *of murder, just as is manslaughter.
Obviously, I didn’t read the 1300-page book, and I’m fairly certain you didn’t either.OK. You can either accept a 1300 page 2000 case analysis by a PhD and other sources from Right to Life, or Wikipedia and Justice Blackmun as you wish. I would say your version of history is counterintuitive to say the least. As to quickening (the time at which child moves), for example, the point is that prior to it, absent medical knowledge and technology, there are no signs of live pregnancy. Since spontaneous abortion is not the issue, but induced abortion, it was at the point of quickening that abortion became an issue. Likewise, available abortifacients were likely to kill the mother. Finally, when they did work, they were punished as capital crimes (just like murder, I’d say). But again, as you wish.
So you are saying that before the child moves, they didn’t believe it was alive? St. Augustine had an in-depth understanding of the stages of pregnancy over a thousand years ago, so claiming our forebears were ignorant on the matter can’t be right.
Perhaps Americans can all agree that every person has a right to life, but the point there is disagreement on is what constitutes a person.I would say yes, anyone can understand the need to preserve life as a first right. That people do not agree speaks to the evil of people, not to a problem with communication.
A person who is brain dead has a brain that is too damaged to ever function, and thus they cannot ever be conscious again. I’m not talking about cases like Terry Schivo, who had a minimally-functional brain, I’m talking about people with no functional brain at all. They are usually only kept alive to keep their organs functioning for transplantation. As far as I’m aware, no one has a problem with this.Here you are clearly in error (the due process and equal protection clause of the first amendment applies to all persons), but you have found the subsequent problem to abortion. If we do not know when life begins, we also do not know when it ends. Along the way, we forget what the Constitution guarantees. And next we confuse life with ability. At that point no one’s life is protected. Hold on. We are almost there, so you may be a little ahead of your time.
Agreed. This is certainly true for late-term abortions, but perhaps more difficult for embryonic stem cells.Solid and logically sound arguments can be made against abortion based solely on medical science and the constitution.
Yes, Obama is a Christian, and I do believe he wants to do the right thing. Indeed, in his personal life and on most issues besides abortion he does appear to be doing the right thing. But in the speech, he does say that even though religion often allows no compromise, when it comes to public policy, compromise is necessary. I think he may be open to specific changes, like restricting late-term abortions, but I don’t think he will ever be open to eliminating abortion entirely.No, Obama is not evil. Misguided on the abortion issue? Yes. Evil? No. We are a nation who’s constitution and governmental system is designed to be inclusive of all religions, therefore, our laws must be based on the constitution, not religion.