F
fix
Guest
Yes, “pro choice” is a type of evasion.This thread might be more aptly titled, ‘Pro-life versus pro-death: only fools will argue for the latter.’
Yes, “pro choice” is a type of evasion.This thread might be more aptly titled, ‘Pro-life versus pro-death: only fools will argue for the latter.’
Not exclusive, but primary and fundamental. Without that protection all else is meaningless.
Granted protection of life is a major policy. But society does not do *everything *And where do they come from my friend, please explain to us all.But there you go again, it is not a question whether abortion is morally wrong-it is. The question is what are the best means to help prevent it and society’s choice to use such different means to accomplish its goal. Not to forget, the need to protect us all from grandstanding moralist from implementing an autocratic government. Learn the distinction between a legal issue and a moral issue, it might help.
What would doing that prove?
What it helps with is that the pro-Abortion side never really did that. It was the default assumption by most people before the Supreme Court decision, that a baby born or unborn was a person. Roe vs. Wade simply put the right of a woman’s convenience over the right of a child to live. So yeah, the pro-Abortion side really does need to justify that.As I’ve said before, there are more options than your opinion and my opinion. Simply declaring my opinion to be wrong doesn’t mean that yours is automatically right. If you want your opinion to be the basis of law, then defend it on its own merits.
Again, I really don’t see what this would do. My personal definitions are irrelevant to the debate over whether abortion should be legal. In a free society, every action is legal unless a reasonable justification can be provided for why is should be illegal.
It was reasonable for a long time. Roe vs. Wade is the new kid on the block, that needs to justify itself. Rights were removed from one individual and given to another. So yeah, the pro-abortion side needs to justify either that one of two being affected isn’t actually a person, or it needs to demonstrate how that the rights of one outweighs the rights of the other.It’s not a matter of deciding between your opinion and mine; it’s a matter of deciding whether your opinion is a reasonable justification for the law, period.
That’s because you’re making an assumption that your position requires no justification, and then your further clouding the waters by dismissing personhood to vague concept that seems to become more vague as we go. We’ve left off now where that you seem to be questioning if even born children are really persons, because that might just be an emotional response on your part. The problem with that type of reasoning is that eventually the only place you have left to go is that no life has value.I don’t believe in souls. I think that people are unwilling to bring them up because they know that the soul is a religious concept. They want their opinion to rest on some sort of objectively provable foundation, but AFAICT, there isn’t one.
I have an idea which might not have occurred to you. Why don’t you answer the questions I asked you in posts 381 and 382 and then we will discuss this post.Arrgh. Maybe it would be best to give up this analogy. It seems to be muddying the waters more than anything else (no pun intended).
If you didn’t make those statements, then someone has hacked into your account:
What would doing that prove?
As I’ve said before, there are more options than your opinion and my opinion. Simply declaring my opinion to be wrong doesn’t mean that yours is automatically right. If you want your opinion to be the basis of law, then defend it on its own merits.
Again, I really don’t see what this would do. My personal definitions are irrelevant to the debate over whether abortion should be legal. In a free society, every action is legal unless a reasonable justification can be provided for why is should be illegal.
It’s not a matter of deciding between your opinion and mine; it’s a matter of deciding whether your opinion is a reasonable justification for the law, period.
I don’t believe in souls. I think that people are unwilling to bring them up because they know that the soul is a religious concept. They want their opinion to rest on some sort of objectively provable foundation, but AFAICT, there isn’t one.
How did being a biologist have an effect on your position?
I’m personally of the opinion that the sciences only provide us with factual knowledge; while they do give us information on which we can base moral choices, they don’t dictate morality themselves.
Sure. It seems like I’m the only pro-choice poster in this thread now, so I’ve got a number of posts to respond to and only a limited amount of time to do it. It’s getting a bit hard for me to keep everything straight and not miss questions.I have an idea which might not have occurred to you. Why don’t you answer the questions I asked you in posts 381 and 382 and then we will discuss this post.
No, that’s not what I meant. I meant that in every case where the end point is a baby, the path to that point went through an unfertilized egg.Gearhead, you just stated that every baby started out as an unfertilized egg. That means you are stating that an unfertilized egg is a baby. I don’t agree with this, but if you make that statement you must also agree that if an unfertilized egg is a baby, than a fertilized egg must be a baby also. And a baby is a person.
Is this what you meant to state?
My assessment is based on conversations with other people who are pro-choice. I’m sure you can find members of the radical fringe who disagree and won’t ever budge on their demand for the right to abort at any time all the way up to birth, but they seem to me to be a slim minority.Please provide some evidence which shows that the “pro-choice movement” would be willing to compromise; specifically, to “concede” late-term abortions. Oh, and could you also give a definition of “late-term abortion”?
I posted this because I hope to bring the focus of this discussion back to what was originally planned. I had to cut some of the original post because of length.If we truly believed that an embryo was human, we would not permit it to be destroyed.
Scott started his talk by outlining a few of the points his opponents make in their argument for a woman’s right to choose abortion.
Scott surprises his opponent and his audience by agreeing with these arguments. He agrees with every aspect of their arguments; IF, the fetus is not human.
- Pro life people do not have the right to impose their opinion on others
- Every person has the right to “choose”
- Abortion is a choice between a woman and her doctor. No one else’s business.
- Restricting abortion for the poor who cannot afford more children is unfair.
- Women should have the right to abort their pregnancy at any time though out the nine months of pregnancy.
- Women should not be required to give birth to an unwanted child that may be subjected to abuse, poverty, or illness.
- Abortion should be permitted in all cases of rape or incest.
Scott’s point is that the whole controversy boils down to “is the fetus human?” Virtually no one would use any of these arguments to kill a 2 year old toddler. So, the question really is, “is the fetus human?” If the fetus is not human then all of the pro choice people are correct and we pro life people concede the right of a woman to have an abortion. The reason however, that we continue to oppose abortion is that all scientific evidence supports the fact that the fetus is human. If we were however, to concede for arguments sake that we do not know when the fetus becomes human; does that alone permit us to morally kill the fetus? If there is a doubt should we assume the fetus is human or assume it is not human? To illustrate this point, Scott uses the analogy of hunting with a friend and you see a bush rustling, and you are not sure if it is the deer you have been pursuing or your hunting partner, do shoot hoping it is the deer, or do you not shoot until you know it is a deer?
The pro choice people seem to take the position that since they do not know if the fetus is human or not, It is okay to accept this as an unknown and an excuse to do what is convenient. The fact that they do not know does not mean there is no truth or correct answer. There was a time when people were not sure if slavery was right or if the world was flat or round, but there always was a correct answer, as there is for this question. We should always error on the side of morality.
Some pro choice people like to make this an argument about religion. Religion has nothing to do with if we have the right to kill another human being. The most devout atheist does not believe we have the right to kill another human being. The religion argument is nothing but an attempt to change the subject and not face the real issue.
Some pro choice people like to use the argument that the fetus is not fully human by using the well known argument of the laboratory fire. This argument goes like this; you are in a laboratory that is on fire, in one corner are several frozen embryos, in another corner is a 2 year old toddler, you have time to save only the embryos or the toddler, which do you save? Because most people would choose the toddler, the pro choice argument is that even you pro life people do not believe that the embryos are human. Scott’s rebuttal is that emotional feelings do not change the fact of what is human and what is not. His example was if his 8 year old daughter was in the auditorium with us and a fire broke out and he had the choice of saving his daughter or all of us, we would all be “toast”; this does not prove that none of us were human.
Over the years of dialog I have had with those supporting the right to “choose” I have always been intrigued by the fact that they, almost without exception, have not watched, and refuse to watch any picture, video, or image of an actual abortion. Of course the excuse is always, “I refuse to watch such gory pictures” because they are offensive to me. Interestingly, these same individuals will pay good money to go to a movie which contains more graphic images then the abortion images. So, what is the real reason they do not want to see the images of an abortion; maybe, because they don’t want to subject themselves to the reality of abortion?
This link will take you to a short video of not an actual abortion but the after math; if you have not seen these images, you need to see them at least once, once will be enough. If these images do not convince you that the fetus was human, I don’t think anything will.
Abortion after math Video
So why did you state this? Perhaps a slip of the tongue?Sure. It seems like I’m the only pro-choice poster in this thread now, so I’ve got a number of posts to respond to and only a limited amount of time to do it. It’s getting a bit hard for me to keep everything straight and not miss questions.
No, that’s not what I meant. I meant that in every case where the end point is a baby, the path to that point went through an unfertilized egg.
My assessment is based on conversations with other people who are pro-choice. I’m sure you can find members of the radical fringe who disagree and won’t ever budge on their demand for the right to abort at any time all the way up to birth, but they seem to me to be a slim minority.
So you have NO scientific evidence, no quotes, no definition for “person” and a sad story about miscarriages (I do believe it is sad even if you don’t. Even if you don’t consider the loss to be human, it still dashed your hopes and caused physical problems. I’ve been there. It can hurt physically to have a miscarriage. Not only is there emotional pain, the physical pain can be immense.)I think the meaning of “late term” can vary depending on who you ask, but I was specifically thinking of the third trimester. Potentially earlier as well, but not into the first trimester.
You are right to point out ‘a’ strategy used by the far left: steering clear of perfectly consistent analogies that would otherwise unmask the horror of what there logic leads to and says about them.Here is the problem with arguing logic with one who puts more faith in Godwin’s law than in God’s law;
Godwin’s law is a typical tactic of the far left. Whenever there is a valid point (or person) such as the lessons of history like Hitler and Nazis Germany (or Sarah Palin) for which they have no counter argument, they demonize the use of the argument (or person) in an attempt to discredit its (or their) use. Because this causes some to shy away from supporting these arguments (or people), this tactic has been very successful, hence why it is continually used by those without a conscience.
???You are right to point out ‘a’ strategy used by the far left: steering clear of perfectly consistent analogies that would otherwise unmask the horror of what there logic leads to and says about them.
I asked you if the way you parsed the idea of finding middle ground on abortion via reducing late term abortion and finding middle ground on something as equally heinous as the holocaust was logically consistent. And it would be consistent if that’s the way you parse ideas. To believe otherwise would demonstrate a lack of knowledge of what it is to be pro-life - as that kind of ‘middle ground’ would be ridiculous.
You can dance all you want but it is a pretty straight forward analogy and it deserves a straight forward answer. Here, i’ll demonstrate how easy it actually is from the pro-life standpoint:
The pre-born baby (fetal human) has intrinsic value equal at all stages of development - thus killing a pre-born baby before he/she has developed enough for a late term abortion would be just as wrong as killing a child, teen, adult…
Conclusion: you cannot parse developmental stages of human beings to find middle ground if you pro-life.
There again, a human person weather Jew, Christian, handicapped, short, tall is still a human person and to parse the demographic somehow so seek middle ground involving the holocaust would be equally impossible given pro-life philosophy.
That was not hard to do, but since you logic places you on the opposite end in both cases I suppose it will be hard for you to answer this. In fact, as you have already demonstrated, you probably won’t.
Regardless, the glaring inconsistency within your logic will remain know matter how you try to dance around this issue…
No, I think my intended meaning was there in the sentence as I originally wrote it. It seems that it left room for interpretation, and you’ve latched onto that for some reason.So why did you state this? Perhaps a slip of the tongue?
Wait… what? AFAICT, you asked me why I believed that most pro-choice people would compromise on late term abortions if they didn’t think it would result in a ban of all abortions generally. What scientific evidence would you want? And I’m sure I can dig up a few quotes if you really want me to, but the important thing here is the general feeling of the community, not opinions.So you have NO scientific evidence, no quotes, no definition for “person” and a sad story about miscarriages (I do believe it is sad even if you don’t. Even if you don’t consider the loss to be human, it still dashed your hopes and caused physical problems. I’ve been there. It can hurt physically to have a miscarriage. Not only is there emotional pain, the physical pain can be immense.)
I’m going through the thread here. Like I mentioned before, it looks like I’m the only pro-choice poster here right now, so I’m getting a bit overwhelmed.I am new to this forum, as you are. I’ve re-posted most of the original post in the post before this one. Have you read it?
No worries - take your time. I hope you feel better tomorrow.I am sick today (degenerative disc disease) so I am not in my best form. I will wait until tomorrow to respond to your other post. Sorry.
You have to be able to defend your position. When you state that you believe that most pro-choice people would compromise on late term abortions you need to show why this is true. Otherwise it is simply your opinion. Show some proof. You are saying here that you believe what you believe because you believe it. Is there evidence that most pro-choice people would compromise?No, I think my intended meaning was there in the sentence as I originally wrote it. It seems that it left room for interpretation, and you’ve latched onto that for some reason.
Wait… what? AFAICT, you asked me why I believed that most pro-choice people would compromise on late term abortions if they didn’t think it would result in a ban of all abortions generally. What scientific evidence would you want? And I’m sure I can dig up a few quotes if you really want me to, but the important thing here is the general feeling of the community, not opinions.
Just the first post in the discussion. It is what we should be debating.I’m going through the thread here. Like I mentioned before, it looks like I’m the only pro-choice poster here right now, so I’m getting a bit overwhelmed.
Thank you!!No worries - take your time. I hope you feel better tomorrow.
It is only my opinion. As I said, it’s my general impression; I never presented it as anything else. You can take it or leave it as you please.You have to be able to defend your position. When you state that you believe that most pro-choice people would compromise on late term abortions you need to show why this is true. Otherwise it is simply your opinion. Show some proof. You are saying here that you believe what you believe because you believe it. Is there evidence that most pro-choice people would compromise?
Do you mean your first post, or the first post in the thread (i.e. gakroeker’s)?Just the first post in the discussion. It is what we should be debating.
to protect life, if it did we certainly would have only speed limits of 25 mph. And no all else is not meaningless, but society would become unsustainable with an autocratic government which occurs if the value of limited government does not hold some weight.Code:Granted protection of life is a major policy. But society does not do *everything *
Quote:
That is your opinion on what means are the best to prevent abortion. Reasonable people can differ with you on that. And you mean criminal law? right, do you know.
Quote:
Well, let us see, the policy of limited government-you know that thing conservatives like to champion.
Quote:
And where do they come from my friend, please explain to us all.:rolleyes: But there you go again, it is not a question whether abortion is morally wrong-it is. The question is what are the best means to help prevent it and society's choice to use such different means to accomplish its goal. Not to forget, the need to protect us all from grandstanding moralist from implementing an autocratic government. Learn the distinction between a legal issue and a moral issue, it might help.*
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.
Code:We hold these truths to be self-evident*, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.All you are so correct they are self-evident. And what is government’s job, to implement the means it see best to protect ALL of these values. Your desire to make all abortions criminal accomplishes what? That no abortion occurs-----hardly. Govt can select different mean to achieve its goal of protecting " life". And what other value have you stated my friend,(by the way that is the Declaration of Independence not the Constitution you quote from), the value of " liberty" which is threaten by a government that is expansive and autocratic with its power.
Liberty and happiness mean nothing if you get to be killed. Limited government does not mean murder should be codified into civil law. The law is a teacher as well as a corrector. Teach people it is acceptable to kill babies and they will as we see today.All you are so correct they are self-evident. And what is government’s job, to implement the means it see best to protect ALL of these values. Your desire to make all abortions criminal accomplishes what? That no abortion occurs-----hardly. Govt can select different mean to achieve its goal of protecting " life". And what other value have you stated my friend,(by the way that is the Declaration of Independence not the Constitution you quote from), the value of " liberty" which is threaten by a government that is expansive and autocratic with its power.
What value trumps innocent life? Do we get to kill because a baby is too expensive? Is that how you define limited government. Again, pick up a book on forming a proper conscience and moral reasoning. Any legal philosophy that is devoid of the moral law is no good philosophy.No one was equating the two. The point that you missed is that no " value" is protected or promoted exclusively at the expense of all of values. Again, pick up a book on legal reasoning-really it will help.
Sorry, but your reasoning seems terribly utilitarian and misguided. We expect our government to protect innocent life, period. The cost is not the issue. Do we stop prosecuting rapists if they are single fathers with no one to care for his children? Is that the logic now?Who said that it does? You only need one " moral" issue for the grandstanders to get carried away with government power. Why evade the notion that govt can select other means to protect life as well as protecting the competing value of limited govt (as wells as limited resources)?. With you complete criminal ban of all abortions under all circumstance what do you suggest–that we place all those women in jail? You want to pay for the increase costs? What are we going to do, let other violent criminals who are more of a threat out sooner due to space? Why is it govt completely responsibility for protecting life? What about the women’s duty to the early fetus? This has all been stated above before. Starting to get a little tricky-saying only one value (and only one means to promote that value) matters at the expense of everything else.
True. My apologies.It is only my opinion. As I said, it’s my general impression; I never presented it as anything else. You can take it or leave it as you please.
I mean the first post on the thread - gakroeker’s.Do you mean your first post, or the first post in the thread (i.e. gakroeker’s)?
My goodness, you do ramble a bit, don’t you?gee wrong direction…at conception a human life starts…period…not a little doggy or catbird but a human being…slavery was the ownership of other humans by folks with money and power and greed and hate…abortion is a form of slavery for the temporary host has been given the right to kill whatever is growing inside of her! Our nation has gone downhill since the abortion issue was passed by the supremes…child abuse,rape and incest go on and on…this did not just happen ,in early flicks like Peyton place a rape took place between a step father and his beautiful step daughter…later the towns doctor…Lloyd Nolan…performed an abortion and then later looked down on the village as hypcrites for not believing as he does…what nonsense…flicks like this created a subliminal conditioned reflex on americans that to oppose abortion is to be bigoted and narrowminded…and yes heartless. on the other side .capital punishment.we saw flicks that showed people being ‘innocent’ but being executed anyway…prison movies which illustrated brilliant sensitve cons while the warden and guards were morons and thugs…all a plan…brainwashing takes time to work but once it sets in is like concrete…!!!the advice in my day was just have the number of kids that you can send to college…since my wife and I had a large family we were teased and insulted for years.funny thing happened…all…all of our kids are college grads earning their way thru scholarships while the wise n hymers with one kid ended up with a pot head who lived off of them for years…go figure…now we cant criticize the present head of gov because if we do we are branded with a bad name that reveals we are unfair and dishonest and sure…hateful…and thats how it goes with the abortion issue…we who want a developing baby to be born and take a turn at bat are the bad narrow minded ones…Pavlov just beams from below at his handiwork…keep smiling…Pas
That isn’t from the Constitution. It’s from the Declaration of Independence.Every person is given the rites of life, liberty and pursuit of happiness by the Constitution.
Liberty and happiness mean nothing if you get to be killed. Limited government does not mean murder should be codified into civil law. The law is a teacher as well as a corrector. Teach people it is acceptable to kill babies and they will as we see today.
It is criminal law you are talking about. Law as a teacher-to a certain extent but not competely, otherwise we have something like a Theocracy/or Plato’s Republic. The American Govt is not founded SOLEY on the notion that govt is to be used an expansive means to develop the character of each individual. Yet you get right to my point, by only regulating abortions during the early stages you can have means to educate women on making a better decision. You outlaw all abortion, women go underground you have less influence over them. But you can use the law as a teacher by outlawing later terms abortions and counseling women on the gravity of the decision to abort early terms. So saying that, which approach is really using govt the best to be a " teacher". No one would be teaching women to kill babies-actually the opposite.Govt is responsible for protecting life, we disagree on the best means to do that as wells as the need to consider that to protect any value at the complete expense of all other values actually threatens the very value you claim to want to protect.Before you said " natural rights do not come from the majority." True, but without majority rule and the govt the majority forms, you have a state of nature-anarchy-and natural rights really do not do well in that environment.