Issues other than abortion

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Vonsalza:
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HopkinsReb:
No. I’m opposed to murdering babies. I’m really not sure how to be clearer about this.
Sure. It’s just that your primary defense was that women who have most abortions engage in sexual activity with the awareness that pregnancy could result.

I’m asking what you’d do about women who had “sex” and were thus impregnated against their will.
My primary defense was that murdering babies is bad. I was arguing against a specific line of reasoning you were using, not arguing my basic claim.
Still, your answer, please?
 
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HopkinsReb:
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Vonsalza:
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HopkinsReb:
No. I’m opposed to murdering babies. I’m really not sure how to be clearer about this.
Sure. It’s just that your primary defense was that women who have most abortions engage in sexual activity with the awareness that pregnancy could result.

I’m asking what you’d do about women who had “sex” and were thus impregnated against their will.
My primary defense was that murdering babies is bad. I was arguing against a specific line of reasoning you were using, not arguing my basic claim.
Still, your answer, please?
I’d recommend adoption, not murdering babies.

My view really isn’t that hard to understand.

Murdering babies = bad. Don’t murder babies. It really blows my mind that this is controversial.
 
I’d recommend adoption, not murdering babies.

My view really isn’t that hard to understand.

Murdering babies = bad. Don’t murder babies. It really blows my mind that this is controversial.
Sure, and my view is that no woman should be forced to have a child against her will.

Similarly, I’m blow away that anyone would think they have any right to force their views upon any uterus other than their own.
 
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HopkinsReb:
I’d recommend adoption, not murdering babies.

My view really isn’t that hard to understand.

Murdering babies = bad. Don’t murder babies. It really blows my mind that this is controversial.
Sure, and my view is that no woman should be forced to have a child against her will.

Similarly, I’m blow away that anyone would think they have any right to force their views upon any uterus other than their own.
To save lives. Likewise, if I saw someone in the street trying to murder someone, I’d step in. It would not bother me one whit that I was denying him the right to choose what to do with a knife arm other than my own.
 
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The issue is that we don’t consider fetuses as “fully people”, Ender.
Obviously, which begs the question as to whether they should be and what criteria ought to be used to make that determination. The rights and desires of the mother have no bearing whatever on whether a fetus is or is not an actual person.
 
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Vonsalza:
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HopkinsReb:
I’d recommend adoption, not murdering babies.

My view really isn’t that hard to understand.

Murdering babies = bad. Don’t murder babies. It really blows my mind that this is controversial.
Sure, and my view is that no woman should be forced to have a child against her will.

Similarly, I’m blow away that anyone would think they have any right to force their views upon any uterus other than their own.
To save lives. Likewise, if I saw someone in the street trying to murder someone, I’d step in. It would not bother me that I was denying him the right to choose what to do with a knife arm other than my own.
Interesting you say that.

It’s theorized that the great crime collapse in New York in the early 90s didn’t happen because Rudy was such a darn good mayor.

It happened because the early 90s occurred roughly 16-19 years after Roe v. Wade. As unwanted children statistically are more prone to a misspent youth, the next great generation of criminals had been killed in-utero.
 
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Vonsalza:
The issue is that we don’t consider fetuses as “fully people”, Ender.
Obviously, which begs the question as to whether they should be and what criteria ought to be used to make that determination. The rights and desires of the mother have no bearing whatever on whether a fetus is or is not an actual person.
Similarly, the right of a woman to not be forced to carry a baby seems to be a pretty good one.

So the best solution seems to be to make no societal determination and simply let the woman have her choice.
 
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HopkinsReb:
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Vonsalza:
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HopkinsReb:
I’d recommend adoption, not murdering babies.

My view really isn’t that hard to understand.

Murdering babies = bad. Don’t murder babies. It really blows my mind that this is controversial.
Sure, and my view is that no woman should be forced to have a child against her will.

Similarly, I’m blow away that anyone would think they have any right to force their views upon any uterus other than their own.
To save lives. Likewise, if I saw someone in the street trying to murder someone, I’d step in. It would not bother me that I was denying him the right to choose what to do with a knife arm other than my own.
Interesting you say that.

It’s theorized that the great crime collapse in New York in the early 90s didn’t happen because Rudy was such a darn good mayor.

It happened because the early 90s occurred roughly 16-19 years after Roe v. Wade. As unwanted children statistically are more prone to a misspent youth, the next great generation of criminals had been killed in-utero.
Well, if we can just get the abortion rate to 100% we can eventually eliminate all crime.

Supporters of murdering babies come up with all kinds of fanciful theories to justify murdering babies.
 
Similarly, the right of a woman to not be forced to carry a baby seems to be a pretty good one.
You keep evading the question: what criteria should be used to determine whether someone (something) is or is not a human being? It cannot be that this entity is human because its mother wants it while that entity is not because its mother does not want it. What criteria determines whether a human life is a human “being”?
 
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Vonsalza:
Similarly, the right of a woman to not be forced to carry a baby seems to be a pretty good one.
You keep evading the question: what criteria should be used to determine whether someone (something) is or is not a human being? It cannot be that this entity is human because its mother wants it while that entity is not because its mother does not want it. What criteria determines whether a human life is a human “being”?
Apparently personhood is determined by the percentage chance you’d grow up to commit crime in New York City or something.
 
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Vonsalza:
Similarly, the right of a woman to not be forced to carry a baby seems to be a pretty good one.
You keep evading the question: what criteria should be used to determine whether someone (something) is or is not a human being?
I’m not evading - I don’t think it can be answered in an objective way.

As such, we must default to individual liberty. That’s the answer.
 
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HopkinsReb:
Apparently personhood is determined by the percentage chance you’d grow up to commit crime in New York City or something.
At the moment that’s as valid a definition as we have.
You’re just not comfortable with the notion that some things can’t be dogmatically defined. I’m sure that is a difficult concept for someone who comes from a background of traditional western legalism.

In the words of Van Halen, “How do you know when it’s love?”

It can’t be objectively answered.
 
@Ender

I can offer this, though:

When the child is born, it is no longer physically dependent on the sacrifice of its mother for survival. At that point, it can be cared for by her, or by anyone else.

Ergo the mothers right to choose comes to an end.
 
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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.
Of course. But I wouldn’t lump the right to vote or hold a driver’s license in with the right to make it to one’s birthday without getting crushed to death in the abortionist’s vacuum machine.
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.
I already addressed that in my post. You truncated my quote to leave out the following relevant follow-up.
It’s not enough to say that the human being depends on her or lives inside of her. This distinction is ethically arbitrary and, frankly, quite bigoted. I’d hate to think I’m living in a society that killed other based solely on their location or level of dependency.
As forcing that upon a would-be mother physically imperils her, she should make that choice.
Fear of physical endangerment is not the reason why the vast, sweeping majority of women choose abortion. https://www.guttmacher.org/sites/default/files/pdfs/journals/3711005.pdf
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.
Then why did you refer to that argument?
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.
Actually, the tragedy of killing someone does technically justify taking away the right to kill. I suppose your perspective will depend on how seriously you take abortion.

A Roe v. Wade reversal will only send the legal decision back to the states, however. It also hasn’t occurred for nearly 50 years, despite empty promises and threats from politicians.

What I’m therefore more focused on is addressing the issues in the Guttmacher link above. Women carry pregnancies to term when they have the support to do so.

Take away the legal question, and you’re stuck defending the ethics. I don’t blame pro-choicers for not wanting to be in that position. Because it’s indefensible.
 
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I’m not evading - I don’t think it can be answered in an objective way.
Of course it can be; it is just inconvenient to do so.
As such, we must default to individual liberty. That’s the answer.
Even you don’t believe this. At some (arbitrary) point you are forced to recognize that the right to “liberty” does not take precedence over the right to life. Clearly you would not grant me the liberty of killing the mother even though you have granted the mother the liberty of killing her fetus. Life in general trumps liberty, and you have provided no rationale for reversing the order in this case.

If you cannot distinguish between what is and what is not a human being - which you have claimed cannot be answered in an objective way - then you have simply arrogated to yourself the right to determine who lives and who dies. Stalin and Mao would have appreciated your approach, the rest of us not so much.
 
Of course. But I wouldn’t lump the right to vote or hold a driver’s license in with the right to make it to one’s birthday without getting crushed to death in the abortionist’s vacuum machine.
Sure. That sounds awful.

But I would lump it with the right to override a woman’s right to not have a baby she doesn’t want to have.
I already addressed that in my post.
Not sufficiently as the objection still stands.
Fear of physical endangerment is not the reason why the vast, sweeping majority of women choose abortion.
Quite right. The fear of poverty is.
As I’ve said here and elsewhere, the statistical face of abortion is a tired, broke mother in her 30s that already has kids.
Actually, the tragedy of killing someone does justify taking away the right to kill. I suppose your perspective will depend on how seriously you take abortion.
And similarly I suppose your perspective depends on how seriously you take the right of a woman to have control over her body.
A Roe v. Wade reversal will only send the legal decision back to the states, however. It also hasn’t occurred for nearly 50 years, despite empty promises and threats from politicians.
I agree. I think the primary basis on which the GOP attracts its non-wealthy voters is largely a dog-and-pony show.
What I’m therefore more focused on is addressing the issues in the Guttmacher link above. Women carry pregnancies to term when they have the support to do so.
I think you’re right.

But I don’t think that precludes making choice illegal - it precludes promoting that support.
I don’t blame pro-choicers for not wanting to be in that position. Because it’s indefensible.
It’s very defensible. It’s about a woman’s control over her body, which should be absolute.
 
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Vonsalza:
I’m not evading - I don’t think it can be answered in an objective way.
Of course it can be; it is just inconvenient to do so.
I understand. But your side isn’t capable of providing a definition that can’t be torn to shreds by rational concerns, or you’d have done it by now.

As such, that’s evidence for it being unanswerable. Thus we default to choice.
Even you don’t believe this. At some (arbitrary) point you are forced to recognize that the right to “liberty” does not take precedence over the right to life.
Sure. At birth the child is no longer dependent on the sacrifice of the mother’s body in order to live.

As stated above, if she carried it but doesn’t want it, someone else can care for it.
 
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