No, you have it backwards. Since Enlightenment, the law is based on the idea that you have an inalienable right to property. The gov’t prohibits others from stealing in order to safeguard your rights, not because stealing is inherently bad. The gov’t then punishes the offenders to enforce your rights.
No… the right to property is not inalienable. For one thing, the government takes away some of our property all the time, from when sales tax is collected to income taxes.
In addition, the right to property is not inalienable because property can be transferred voluntarily: one can sell it or give it away.
But more importantly, the right to property under even Enlightenment principles does not mean a person has a right to keep one’s property–one only has a right to not be stolen from. If one had a complete right to property, then the government would protect everyone from property losses due to fire or what are still called acts of God, like floods, tornados, and the like. But even the most rigorous Enlightenment politician does not suggest that we outlaw hurricanes.
Actually, I can grant that woman does not have the right to directly kill the child.
Not that it matters. Here’s why: if we respect the woman’s right to her own body, then she must be able to refuse life support to a child – i.e. deliver it intact. If the child is under 22 weeks, it will suffocate un delivery due to underdeveloped lungs.
If nature is allowed to run its course, the baby will be born and no longer reside in the mother. If there is action taken to interfere with the natural course of events, the baby will die. Therefore, that action cannot be taken, because actions which interfere with the course of nature and cause death are killing actions, and actions which kill innocent human beings are immoral.
One’s rights along these lines are not absolute. For example, imagine that Mr and Mrs Smith just barely make it to their mountaintop home because a blizzard moved in as they were driving. They stumble into the house, only to be see that someone has taken refuge in their house. Altho normally they would be able to kick the person out, in this case they cannot, as they would be sending the person to his death.
However, if the person attacked them and in the struggle for their self-defense the attacker was killed, that would not be immoral.
But you see that the sifference is the circumstances. The first person, who sought shelter, must be given shelter, because of the blizzard. The second person, who attacked them, was killed only because that was the amount of force needed to subdue him.
Now, suppose the attacker had left a baby in the dining room. Could the Smiths put the the baby out into the blizzard? Are they obliged to care for the baby?
Suppose even worse, that the attacker, before Mr Smith killed him, had killed Mrs Smith. Would that change Mr Smith’s obligation to care for the baby? Could he put the baby in the basement and forget about it?
I think that you can see from this that one’s own rights do not supercede the obligation not only to refrain from killing the baby, but even to feed and care for the baby.
Thus we can see that the mother whose unborn baby is the result of conception is not so much being forced to carry the baby but prohibited from interfering in the course of the baby’s natural life.
Again: you cannot effectively enforce fetal rights unless you nationalize woman’s uterus.
The government would only be nationalizing wombs if women were *forced *to *become *pregnant–if they had to show up for duty and have a baby put inside her. Merely forbidding individual women to kill their unborn babies is not a general requirement that women bear children, only that they refrain from killing babies already in wombs.