I’m not trying to justify abortion, before six weeks or after six weeks. I am justifying not considering those who have abortions as murderers.
Ah…
http://r14.imgfast.net/users/1417/11/70/26/smiles/3828209772.png
Scuzzi, what difference does it make whether you justify the person or the act? You are basically saying the same thing: abortion is not murder, and the person who seeks abortion is not a murderer. Same thing, different words. Either way, you justify the act, removing the label from it as murder and the label of its actors as murderers.
Now, if, on another hand, we were to argue whether someone who has had an abortion is an evil person, that would be a different matter entirely. Someone can by definition commit murder and not necessarily be evil, if they are ignorant of the act’s evilness, or of the gravity of the evil, or of its gravity even in the face of the good that is trying to be accomplished.
Furthermore I am arguing against any civil prohibition on abortions before six weeks, on the simple logical grounds that brain death is legal death, and embryos younger than six weeks have no functioning brain.
So the fact that human embryos have a normal observed pattern of developing brains over time (due to the process in which humans are made, meiosis), while BHCs have a normal observed pattern of
never developing new brain matter (due to the fact that their brain has died), has absolutely no bearing to you at all?
It is, in the case of human life, simply the present circumstances of brain, not future ones, which you take into consideration when considering what is legal to kill and what is not? Am I correct?
There is no legally relevant biological hard-and-fast line between “human life” and “nonhuman life.” If an embryo that’s implanted is considered human life, then a fetus in fetus is also human life. The legal distinction, while necessary, is arbitrary.
OK…
A BHC is brain dead. Therefore it is not human life, because, by legal definition, brain death is death. It is human, but it is dead.
An embryo has no brain. It would seem by your definition, since it lacks a brain, it should be legally dead. Yet clearly under normal circumstances an embryo is very much alive and ever-growing.
Am I understanding this correctly?
The logical conclusion of granting legal standing as a “person” to embryos is to investigate all women who suffer spontaneous abortions for negligence or intentional homicide. This is madness.
Well, so much for the brain argument.
Hm. Your conclusion doesn’t make sense to me, as a spontaneous abortion is one that is not deliberate. It simply happens due to no fault of the mother.
Every molecule in every cell of an embryo is provided via the mother. DNA doesn’t just form out of nothing.
Ummm… can we get a
sperm cell over here plz? Half of the DNA and chromosomes of the new life comes from the sperm, thank you very much.
Are you a woman, by any chance? (And if so, could I have your Skype?

)
I said “I would not condone killing a human being that is currently able to have a preference for not being killed.” That’s all I said.
I didn’t say I would condone in general the killings of people not currently able to have a preference. I said if someone is currently able to express a preference for not being killed, I would certainly not condone someone killing them.
Ok. I get that, I get that.
So where does one, then, draw the line with people who are NOT able to express a preference? I’m sure the above questions will answer that fairly well.