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Ender
Guest
I need to understand why you support laws punishing murder but oppose laws that would punish abortion. Do you believe that an abortion terminates the life of a human being? If it is, how is it not also a form of murder?I in no way advocate or defend a society that is indifferent to murder in general or abortion in particular.
The law conveys certain basic societal attitudes and helps shape those attitudes by implying if it is legal it is also moral and if it is illegal it is also immoral.Now this is completely foreign to me. The law is a teacher? What does that mean?
This can also describe people for whom caring for the children they already have is an enormous burden. Should they be allowed to terminate the lives of those children to ease their burdens?I have no firsthand experience, but I would be fairly confident asserting that pregnancy is a vulnerable, emotional, and complex situation.
The heaviest punishments are applicable solely to the abortionists, not the mothers.A prohibition on abortion would not prohibit having one, only performing one?
It is either a good idea or a bad idea to ban abortions today. That determination is in no way whatever influenced by actions (good or bad) that were committed in the past.The past is utterly irrelevant to current social institutions and practices? If that is what you believe, perhaps we should start another thread on that question (although I am surprised that any Catholic would believe that).
You oppose murder and apparently accept laws that prohibit it yet you oppose laws that would prohibit abortion even though an abortion takes the life of an innocent person. How do you explain supporting laws that protect the lives of some people while opposing laws that protect the lives of others?
Ender