V
Vonsalza
Guest
You may, but it’s progressive even if you don’t want to admit it. You obtain more rights and privileges as you age. This is the reality in which we find ourselves.Human beings begin at conception. “Personhood” is used in the abortion debate to determine who’s allowed the basic human right not to be killed. I argue that in this context, “personhood” is a bigoted concept.
Easy. When the survival of that other human being physically depends on her body and is certain to leave it in an altered state when pregnancy concludes.When is a woman of sufficient magnitude to override, i.e. kill, another human being’s body?
Again, easy. The toddler is not dependent on its mother’s actual, physical body. Anyone can raise that toddler.If might makes right, why is it socially, legally, and ethically frowned upon for her to kill her toddler?
Fine with me, but that’s a walk-back on the previous statement.Opinion isn’t necessarily invalid. It’s just not something that can necessarily be proven as concretely as, say, the science of embryology.
As forcing that upon a would-be mother physically imperils her, she should make that choice.This is incorrect. Using the precautionary principle, I’d argue for keeping both parties alive.
the point is that a child is a real, physical hazard to a woman’s health - after the delivery of which her body is ever-changed.A fetus is not a parasite because s/he is of the same species as the mother. A fetus is not a tumor because s/he is a separate human being, not part of the mother and not an overgrowth of the mother’s own cells. This is all very real. Very physical.Therefore these references to pre-born human beings would indeed be metaphorical.
No one has the right to force her to go through that. Period.
Agree, abortion is tragic. But the tragedy doesn’t justify stripping a woman of her right to decide she doesn’t want to do it.As a reminder, abortion is something also being done to somebody else’s body, usually death by crushing inside of a cannula.
Of all the women I know who’ve had one, literally none of them did so as a justification to get back at men for the wrongs done to their long-dead female ancestors. To suggest so is, frankly, a little odd.That men have for so often exploited and dominated women throughout history isn’t right. So why is it OK to turn that domination around and impose it on the pre-born?