Again, you haven't cited any evidence whatsoever by which to conclude that either pre-viable fetuses or fertilized eggs are "persons," even according to your own definition. Millions or billions of animals every day have live births. If a live birth is the only condition needed in order to constitute a "person," then all animals are "persons".
Again, I never said live births are persons. I said eventuality to be rational is what gives a person a right to life. Then I said that for a fetus that has implanted, she is more likley then not to develop into a rational agent (in the natural state of things).
Quote where Kant says any such thing.
"Only a rational being has a will—which is the ability to act according to the thought of laws, i.e. to act on principle"
http://www.earlymoderntexts.com/assets/pdfs/kant1785.pdf (pg 18) (maybe read that whole page too)
http://www.oxfordbibliographies.com/view/document/obo-9780199766567/obo-9780199766567-0038.xml
Opioids do not "directly kill" people. They merely inhibit the release of certain neurotransmitters that regulate respiration. It's the repressed respiration that kills a person, not the opioid drug.
When dealing with causality, we always draw the initiation of an action to the rational agent making such an action, or a state of nature. I actually would happily argue that if someone gives a person opium for another means (they wish to for example ease their suffering into death) then the person should morally only be held responsible for that intent (not murder). It is only the intended consequence that matters. When we deal with drunk people (in you car accident issue) we enter into a whole new field (i.e if someone is not aware of moral principles, on what basis do we punishs them?).
And, again, I dare say that no philosopher or scholar who proposes that it is morally wrong to kill fertilized eggs has ever argued that the “double-effect” doctrine justifies the repeated and intentional taking of any drug that is known to have an abortifacient effect. Ms. Foot did not argue any such thing
See the direct quote I posted from her. Look, alot of philosophers mirror my views on this topic. While they may differ between where right to life begins, many agree that their is a moral difference between contraceptive drugs and the act of abortion. I see contraceptive drugs as simply an action that is similar to surgery (which is the example that foot discusses).
Foot gives two examples. Firstly she gives the example that the mother has a right threatening pregnancy, and the doctors perform an operation that is intended to remove the uterus. This action doesn't directly harm the fetus, but when the uterus is removed the fetus dies as a result. However the intent of the action was not to kill the fetus, but to save the mother. In the question of abortion, the doctors end the life of the fetus, and there is no secondary intent. They wish intentionally to kill the fetus for the ends to occur. Foot then admits, that the former action is permissible, but the latter is not according to the doctrine.
Now lets look at contraception. I argue that when a women takes a contraceptive , the will is not intended at killing the fetus. Rather the pill is intented to prevent implantation to stop pregnancy from occurring in the first place.
I will give an analogous example. Let us say, that I am walking on the street, and I see an apple. I am hungry so I eat the apple in order to satisfy my hunger. However, once I eat the apple, there happens to be another person who also wanted the apple, but didn't get it (because I ate it). Due to this, they get so hungry that they died. I do not believe that I am morally responsible for the other person's death. I may have allowed her to die, but my actions did not
intently cause death. The distinction between doing harm and allowing harm is very important for the doctrine of double effect to work. This apple scenario is analogous to contraceptive pills. (the apple is the endometrium).
In the same way, the success of contraceptive pills is not dependent on the death of the fetus but rather preventing of implantation to prevent pregnancy (rather the fetus' death is an unintended consequence). I could take contraceptives pills, and the fetus doesn't have to die (because either the fetus is never brought into creation or transplantation to another womb). The success of abortion however depends on the death of the fetus (it is the ends, because you need to kill the fetus for abortion to be successful). Every successful act of abortion is dependent on the need for the fetus to die (either her skull is crushed and she is removed)
Now consider the same scenario but the other person already had the apple and they are about to eat it. I go up to that person and snatch that apple from her and she dies as a result. In such a case, I am responsible for her death (because my intended actions led to a circumstance which otherwise would not have occurred, while in the former scenario my
inactions led to that circumstance). This scenario is analogous to abortion.
If the “double-effect” doctrine absolved one of repeatedly and knowingly killing persons as a mere consequence of doing something else, then it would absolve people of intentionally driving drunk and accidentally killing someone.
But the doctrine of double effect doesn't "absolved one of repeatedly and knowingly killing persons as a mere consequence of doing something else". It deals with intended consequence. Intended consequence means the of the nature of the action (i.e the means) and the intended ends of such an action.
There is nothing at all "arbitrary" about infants, but not fetuses, being citizens. All infants have had a birth day by which they are no longer encased in a woman's body.
This definition (whether the fetus is within the mother or not) does not explain citizen qualification (and if you argue that it does, then citizen qualification is no way related to the government then). It lacks explanatory power, and hence can be rejected as arbitrary.
There is no society or government in the world that agrees with you.
Of course there is. Please refrain from making sweeping statements.
"Fetal right to life is envisaged in the
Constitution of Chile,
[51] Dominican Republic,
[52] Ecuador,
[53] El Salvador,
[54] Guatemala,
[55] Hungary,
[56] Ireland,
Philippines[57] and
Slovakia.
[58] The
Constitution of Honduras grants the unborn all rights accorded by country's law.
[59] The
Constitution of Peru similarly declares fetus "a rights-bearing subject in all cases that benefit him".
[60] The
Constitution of Madagascar grants the unborn the right to the health protection through free public health care."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fetal_rights
You just admitted that infants don't pay taxes. Neither do fetuses or zygotes.
You didnt get my point. Infant's don't pay taxes either. If you are going to argue that tax paying is what makes you a citizen, then infants aren't citizens. However if you argue that citizen rights extend not only to tax payers, but also future tax papers then infants (and fetuses) become citizens.
Perhaps you need to answer the question before you are able to "see" its relevance. In what tangible ways has Australia supposedly been harmed by its more liberal abortion laws?
The mass genocide of unborn children is a great harm to that oppressed class, both in terms of deprivation and also I believe spiritual wellbeing.