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Ridgerunner
Guest
Children can certainly be inconvenient, stressful, burdensome, whatever you want to say, to fathers. In some societies, very much so. Should fathers also have the right to terminate the lives of children?Ridgerunner:
Once again, I will try to explain my position on choice. A woman’s reason for choosing to have a child or to terminate a pregnancy is irrelevant to me. Why must you people continue to drive home the very narrow presumption that abortions all take place because the pregnancy is “inconvenient”? I suppose you chose this tack to set up the rest of your post regarding ancient, agrarian and Native American societies and the ways they dealt with troublesome family members.
The laws of ancient Rome are moot. Abortion is currently legal in Rome. The father’s consent is not required for the termination to take place.
The rest of your post uses illustrations of people who were already born. I won’t go there; that’s not germane to my argument.
As far as the politics of abortion are concerned, you hotheads out there should just be grateful that you enjoy the freedom to decide what is right for you. Vote according to your conscience, your faith, your fear, whatever. Behold: CHOICE!
marietta
The topic asks what your reasons are for supporting abortion. So far, all you have identified is your desire to have choice whether or not to terminate a pregnancy by abortion. Is that it, or is there more?