Well, actually, I thought that legislation regarding abortion (either allowing or disallowing) was relatively new altogether, so thanks for clearing that up for me. It helps me see the reason to ban it a little better.
I don’t understand why you think I have feelings against human rights or the laws of God. I am also very confused as to why you think I might be in favor of “the China thing.” Maybe that part wasn’t directed at my post, but at the abortion issue in general? If the “China thing” was directed at my post, please tell me how it fits in.
As I said in my original post, abortion is an abomination and no one should have one. I also made a very angry post directly after my first one (I kind of lost my temper, really) that was very much for human rights, specifically the rights of a barely formed human embryo. I hope that this clears up any misunderstanding of how I feel about abortion - which is murder, you are correct.
About laws: I agree wholeheartedly with following the laws of God. No problem there.
I don’t think that the government should make laws regarding abortion for several more reasons than I originally listed. I did not include them because I felt they would weaken, rather than strengthen, my argument. Here are two of them:
1)If we ban abortion, more people will get together to legalize it again
2)If we ban abortion, people will engage in extremely dangerous secret abortions, and because that has happened in my own family and it has caused a lot of pain I don’t want to see it happen again.
What do I mean “choices like these?” Understand what I mean by “choice:” the law says to drive on the right side of the road, and it is my choice to follow that law; I sit down to dinner, and it is my choice to eat or not eat. That is “choice.”
Now, when I say “choices like these” I mean choices that hit extremely close to home, like the choice to reign in my temper or let it loose, or like the choice to send my child to Catholic school, or even like the choice to become an organ donor. “Choices like these” are choices that directly affect a local group of people, and only indirectly affect the entire populous.
I will state my original point more concisely: by making it legally impossible for someone to make the wrong decision (I am only talking about abortion, not other things!) we are a)taking away their ability to have merit in making the right decision; and b)demolishing all hope and faith that a person faced with the decision will make the right decision.
I have read many (though not all) of the posts on this thread, and it just looks like a long stream of hopelessness. The idea that people
simply will not make the right choice, and so we must force them onto the proper course, seems to be rampant.
God gave us rules and he gave us free will. Free will is each singular person’s gift from God. We need to use our gift wisely and follow the laws God set out for us. I believe we can do it. Do you?
P.S. Yes, I suppose I am on a soapbox, but then again I have never been able to fully express my opinion on this matter before, so I felt that I should go ahead and get it all out. Aren’t we all on soapboxes here?