But your standard seems to be if an action is legal or illegal. Why should laws be based on your morals instead of mine?
Hi Joanna,
Of course laws should not be based on my morality, neither should they be based on yours.
Nor even upon the morality of Mother Church.
Laws should be based upon sound logic.
You, I, and Mother Church should influence judgement of that logic, but not define it.
My judgement is based upon the most ancient traditions which go back to Roman times.
Yes, Roman science was primitive, but actually, modern science has not much improved upon the essence of what the Roman science was based upon.
That is, the unborn beginning to show signs of its individuality.
a person, but you *were *alive?
Let me show you something.
This is my daughter at 9 weeks gestation, well before quickening:
Lovely picture of a healthy infant, but, remember, 9 weeks gestation is not a guarantee of 9 weeks from conception.
Gestation is counted from the first missed period, so, it could equate to 13 weeks from conception.
Yes, this is before my line in the sand, but not by a ball-park.
Further, my line in the sand does not define what is before it, only what is after it.
That is, I assert, not that before quickening, that there is no person, only that after quickening, there is.
As you can see, she has clearly discernible limbs, a rump, a brain, and a beating heart. Are you trying to tell me that the time I had this ultrasound, my daughter was not a human being or a person, despite the fact that she has all the qualities of a person?
Not quite:
Remember my comments about the auto? How it does not receive its identity stamp plate until the engine has run, and it has moved under its own power?
Yes, the infant’s heart is beating, but that could still be under its own independent chemical control.
Yes the physical location of the brain and spinal column is marked out, and occupied by a mass which ‘looks’ like nerve tissue, but the presence of copper wire does not mean that it is carrying current.
There is no proof that the ‘computer’ has been switched on, and initialized.
It is this ‘switch on’,and ‘initialization’ which is the beginning of the person.
Until Gates’ or Jobs’ software is loaded, what you call a computer is just a box of electronic junk.
That seems to be the implication you are giving.
No, what I was trying to say, was that if a decision was to be made, as to whether the pregnancy was viable, it should be made upon the best possible evidence, which in most cases, is not available until after birth.
It was actually a vote against abortion.
Perhaps you’d better read yours. The Church says that we may not kill human life, from conception to natural death. The church says that we do not have to take extraordinary measures
to save someone who is dying.
Why do you have difficulty in equating ‘vainly’ with ‘taking extraordinary measures’ and ‘hopeless’ with ‘dying’.
Do I have to quote verbatim?
Killing an unborn child in the womb is NOT an extraordinary measure. Moreover, 98% of abortions are on-demand, killing healthy children.
If you read my earlier posts, you will find that the use of abortion as a means of ex post facto contraception, is to me anathema.
The only possible acceptable reason for terminating a health pregnancy, is where that pregnancy presents a real and present lethal danger to the mother. I also insisted that such a termination should be, if at all possible, delayed until the infant is viable as a prem. That is, after 24 weeks minimum, the later the better. Every effort should be made to save the infant alive.
If, however, it is not possible to wait until the foetus is viable, then the reasoning to follow is that if the mother dies, then so does the foetus.
This is where I accept ‘choice’. This is a valid choice for the mother. Whether to sacrifice herself in a vain attempt to save the infant, or to accept the inevitable, and sacrifice the pregnancy for another day.
It is her choice.
It is her life.
You, indeed, I also, favour the first, but I insist that we have no right to impose our choice upon that mother.
But it proved your assertion false, didn’t it?
Well maybe.
Voluntary euthanasia is also legal in Holland and Switzerland.
Involuntary euthanasia is practiced commonly in Texas and Missouri. There they call it the death penalty.
The only difference apart from words, is that euthanasia is performed with mercy and compassion, whereas the death penalty, with vengeance.
Also, the death penalty is not reserved for incurably hopeless cases which are lethally dangerous to the community, such as a rabid dog.
There is indeed a long history of non dangerous, and fully reformed individuals having been terminated.
How does ‘pro-life’ tackle that?