Who are you or anyone given the authority to deny life to a person, for any reason ?
The Supreme Court made the decision in 1973. They had the authority.
My only role here is to support it.
Who are any of us except people living in a pluralistic society who don't all share the same values, but still need to find a way to peacefully coexist?
Death is better than being alive ? Is there in death any opportunity for anything ? Millions and millions have survived bad homes, or adoption to become successful and productive people. You want to deny them that possibility by killing them ?
I've already stated my argument and told you how I feel about yours. Our values are not the same, nor do we frame the issue similarly. As you know, I see this as a pregnant woman versus state choice issue - who should make it. That is the issue that the Supreme Court decided, not the murder of babies. This is a matter for woman and her doctor to decide - a private matter. This is where the privacy enters.
I understand that you don't agree, and that you object. Perhaps you'll someday understand that that doesn't matter to others and address what they say does matter to them. You still steadfastly refuse to even acknowledge the issue as I've framed it. You simple want to keep returning to emotive language about humanity and killing babies that you've been told was deemed not relevant to the central issue of choice.
If you ever feel like discussing that, let me know.The murdered children argument has been played out. We're booth only repeating ourselves now.
Yet you speak of morality ?
Yes, and I'm quite comfortable with my position in this matter as well as with my ability to make sound moral judgments. I understand that there are competing interests at play. The rights of the pregnant woman trump your right and the right of the church to insist that she bring the baby to term against her will. You and the church would turn her into an incubator.
Those who support abortion sooner or later want to drag in religion to the discussion. They want to harp on the mean old Christians, and dominion BS, and forced confirmation to standards people don´t want, blah, blah, blah. this is where they want to attack, with bizarre ideas and conspiracy theory´s. I couldn´t care less
For starters, I am aware of nobody who supports abortion. For myself, I don't think that I would have had one had I been a woman with an unplanned and unwanted pregnancy, but who knows. I would never have performed an abortion or assisted in one, and I would be very happy if no unwanted pregnancies ever occurred again, and no woman ever wanted one again.
But none of that matters. It's about the woman's right to choose. People like me are pro-choice, not pro-abortion.
As far as dragging religion into the argument, this argument is almost always with the religious. I think that @columbus is the only RF poster that takes your position that isn't of an Abrahamic faith. Apart from him, it's pretty much all Christians making the argument you're making. It isn't hard to figure out what's motivating them when they line up in front of Planned Parenthood clinics marching with Bibles and signs about sin and murdering babies. This is a religious issue in America, and it is disingenuous to pretend otherwise.
The fact that this outrage clusters in the religious tells us that it is manufactured. Organic, grass roots outrage is distributed more evenly among people. Outrage at Martin Shkreli, the 9/11 attackers, and Jeffrey Dahmer cut across all demographics.
But this is mostly a Christian thing, meaning that it's being taught to Christians. They're being trained to think of abortion as baby murder in order to stoke the fires and artificially boost the outrage.
Likewise with that plot to depict Planned Parenthood as a clinic for harvesting baby parts for profit. They're playing with people's emotions in a way they cannot with the rest of us, so we remain at baseline absent the manufactured outrage. That's manipulation of those subject to it.
Pro abortionists despise the legal argument because there is no room for hyperbole or conspiracy theories.
Pro abortionists? What pro-choice people dislike are those with theocratic tendencies who would impose their religious preferences on others.
And notice how your harsh language really applies more to people like you than to people like me. You're the one that despises. You're the one with the obvious frustration. You're the one who just can't accept the society he lives in.
I have nothing in this matter to despise. I'm content with the status quo. This is not an emotional issue for me.
And I have no legal argument to make, nor one to consider.
Their debate claim that the fetus is already a legal person under the constitution also deserves a response, for it has no basis in positive law. In Roe v. Wade all nine justices agreed that the use of “person” in the Constitution always assumed a born person, and therefore that the 14th Amendment’s mention of person did not confer constitutional rights until after a live birth. In the years since Roe, when the make-up of the court has changed, no justice has ever disagreed with that conclusion, including those who would overturn Roe and Casey.
Fetal Personhood and the Constitution | Bill of Health
Oops! There goes the legal argument. There goes equal protection for fetuses.
Thanks for posting that.
I have a feeling that some of the people in this thread might be thinking of “freedom” in terms of constraints created by government specifically. Anyone: am I right?
Yes, I assumed political freedom. I realize that economics and health, for example, can affect other kinds of freedoms. Also, the times one lives in.and the technology available affect options.