GardenLady
Active Member
God told them to stone disrespectful children, but they aren’t doing that.
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There is also a perception or stereotype that men are prolife as opposed to women, even though there are more women who are prolife than men. When the feminist says a man has no right to tell her what she can do with her body, it pushes an agenda that it is male attitude that is the problem rather than male and female attitude that they are disagreeing with themIt seems like there's this perception or stereotype that being pro-life is a religious thing & I'm interested in trying to find out why this is.
There's a reason why verbal contracts, or really any contract that doesn't actually contain written clauses and an intentional signature agreement rarely hold up in court.Its never been a legal excuse
In fact, though, both sides of this issue resort to disingenuous oversimplication. The "woman's right to choose" glosses over the right to life of the foetus, just as the "pro-life" people gloss over the fact that it is a woman has to carry this parasitical being inside her and then sacrifice the next 20 years of her life to take care of it.
I'm comfortable with the statement that there are far more theists, religious or otherwise, pro-choice than there are pro-choice non-religious atheists. Pretty much every secular civil rights battle, including other things like gay marriage, was not won in popular vote by atheists which are in small minority but by secular religious people.It seems like there's this perception or stereotype that being pro-life is a religious thing & I'm interested in trying to find out why this is.
I don't have specific examples, but it seems to be like a popular & standard media narrative.
There are plenty of religious folks who are for abortion rights, but I'm not sure if the notion is that those who are pro-life are just a subset of those who are religious.
I'm not religious, and lean towards being pro-life - or used to be, anyways & the reason I say this is because as a libertarian, I believe that people have the right to consume whatever they want. If a woman decides that she want to take a so-called "abortion pill", or drink some sort of herbal concoction that induces miscarriages, that shouldn't be a crime.
I used to take a radical pro-life position of being opposed to any intentional harm to an unborn child, whether it's through an abortion procedure at a facility involving an abortionist, or the so-called "abortion pill." I have to admit this is a stance I took from when I used to be religious, so perhaps there is some sort of association in a practical sense.
However, I don't think my change in position has anything to do with my move away from being religious; I changed my position because of a self-evaluation as a libertarian regarding my adherence to libertarian principles.
I don't take the position that life begins at conception; life began millions of years ago and has been an ongoing, continuous process. What does happen at conception is simply a new generation of life.
An abortion involves 2 things, not just one - termination of a pregnancy and termination of the life of the unborn child. If the goal of an abortion were to terminate a pregnancy, for whatever reason, and not to slaughter the unborn child (by removing it without harming it and placing it in an incubator, or perhaps transplanting it in a surrogate mother in a late part of fetal stage (not that the technology exists, yet - I'm just being hypothetical, here), then I wouldn't have a problem with it. It would a win-win situation, except for those who have some sort of bloodlust obsession with slaughtering unborn children & I don't care if they don't get their way.
When a pregnant woman takes the so-called "abortion pill," I don't see the difference between ending a pregnancy this way, and any other miscarriage. To me that's just another miscarriage. One might want to argue that the difference is that they know what the effect will be, so it's intentional. So what if it's intentional? How can it be determined when any miscarriage is the result of an intentional act or not? Who decides that?
To me, the libertarian principle that a person has the right to consume whatever they want makes it irrelevant whether or not there's any intent involved.
Another difference between consuming something that can or does induce a miscarriage and going to a facility to get an abortion is that there's a separate actor involved in an abortion procedure. In the case of a miscarriage, that's actually the mother's body that jettisons the fetus, regardless of whether or not the mother wishes to have a miscarriage. On the other hand, the abortionist is using tools and equipment to actively destroy and remove the fetus.
Anyhow, the reason I went through this is because if being pro-life only has to do with being religious, then it begs the question regarding why we have laws against murder and manslaughter (of adults, or anyone after they're born); do these laws exist only because religious folks are opposed to murder & manslaughter, and they created them?
If someone were to say "yes, and that's also a reason for repealing such laws along with laws banning abortion," then at least they'd be consistent; I think people would quickly realize, though, that there's a big problem with doing that.
Bottom line: is being against killing innocent human beings only a religious stance? To me, the answer is no.
The 90 year old has already done what they're going to do to break the world. A one year old is a future adult who's going to create troubles, headaches and add to the sum of the world's problems.The same with old people. If a 90 years old person, and a one year old girl, both get a disease that can be cured by a medicine that costs one million dollars, and you have to choose, what would you do? Throw the dice, and let fate to decide who bites the dust? Of course not, because you know that the one year old girl has priority.
Thank goodness for that.God told them to stone disrespectful children, but they aren’t doing that.
That's not the position pro-choice people object to, nor the entirety of the position of the anti-choice people, which is not merely to consider abortion wrong for them, but to impose that belief on others using the force of government.is being against killing innocent human beings only a religious stance? To me, the answer is no.
Nope. A fetus has no rights not granted to it by others unless the law says it does, and even that is meaningless if it doesn't defend those rights.A fetus is like a small child, and its life is a right that it has had since its tiny body had the opportunity to exist.
Ditto for the theists in the eyes of this atheist. Elsewhere, you wrote, "I have read many atheists saying that human beings are animals. That's not very flattering. What humanism can be expected from people who think that?" That's how a zealous Christian thinks. He's offended to hear that he is an animal, and he finds humanists contemptible for not joining him in his primitive worldview. Humanism is a more evolved philosophy that Christianity, which makes no advances except when humanists lead the way, and even then, not in all Christians. Why are predominantly Christian countries more ethically evolved than Muslim countries that have no use for democracy or women's rights despite having almost the same religion featuring an angry, harsh, judgmental god that issues commandments, demands obedience, punishes, and is very concerned about your sex life? Why are there more atheists and irreligious people in the West than the Muslim world? The answer is that the former but not the latter have been subjected to four or five centuries of humanist influence.The participation of atheists in forums like this has helped me a lot to know what they have inside and how they think
To which you got the very common sense reply:It seems like there's this perception or stereotype that being pro-life is a religious thing & I'm interested in trying to find out why this is.
And you answer….I guess you'll need to trace back the history of the pro-life movement then.
So you were motivated enough to ask the question, but not motivated enough to look into the question…….Well, I don't have the motivation to do something like this, nor do I see the need.
It does when “most” of those screaming are the ones “most” people hear the “most” and are also numerically the “most”……wouldn’t you say?Screaming about something the most doesn't correspond to dominant representation.
The real reason that anti-abortion people also tend to be religious is because people that believe in God tend to believe that we humans should not be playing God. That we do not have the right to decide who gets to be born and who doesn't.
You seem to be ignoring your own stated exception ... that is when they believe they are acting as their God mandates. They do not see this kind of action as presuming unto themselves that which is only God's purview. They see it as acting on God's behalf, not on their own behalf. Which is how they see a woman choosing an abortion.This gives the impression that you haven't met many religious people.
They're often quite happy to "play God." They'll even say that their actions are God's will expressing itself.
You seem to be ignoring your own stated exception ... that is when they believe they are acting as their God mandates.
They do not see this kind of action as presuming unto themselves that which is only God's purview. They see it as acting on God's behalf, not on their own behalf.
Which is how they see a woman choosing an abortion.
They don't see it that way.... but what their God mandates is an expression of their own views. It ends up circular.
We all want to be the gods of our own realities. It's not just 'them'.Oh, I know.
... because other people's abortions offend them personally, therefore they offend their God as well.
... and because their God is opposed to abortion, their actions to oppose abortion are an expression of "God's will."
It's a neat trick: they get to play God while all the time attributing what they're doing to something external.
They don't see it that way.
We all want to be the gods of our own realities. It's not just 'them'.
That can work for us or against us. I think you're only seeing it one way.Oh, I know.
One key difference, though: you can't think your opinions are God-endorsed - and therefore immune to criticism - if you don't believe in God.
Oh, nobody's immune to overconfidence. It's just that certain flavours of theistic belief are a fast track to it.That can work for us or against us. I think you're only seeing it one way.
Same can be said of politics and business.Oh, nobody's immune to overconfidence. It's just that certain flavours of theistic belief are a fast track to it.
Well, ok, but that doesn't follow from the quote snippet that you're responding to.You said that you used to be "radically pro-life" and opposed all forms of abortion. That position.
There's something seemingly mysterious that I'm not getting about this question; do you mean other than the fact that abortions (with extremely rare exceptions) result in the killing of human beings? There's nothing else - other than that, that I can come up with. Perhaps if you would expand or elaborate somehow on this question, then I might be able to better understand what you're trying to ask.Sure, but what does this have to do with abortion?
I don't see the difference; is there supposed to be a difference?I mean not based on or reliant on religion.
This seems incorrect, to me; I can see all secular positions being available to all non-religious people, but not all secular positions being available to some religious people; some secular positions could be in conflict with religious positions. Examples include evolution and the Earth being a globe; to some religious individuals, evolution may go against their beliefs in creationism and/or intelligent design, or the Earth being a globe may go against their belief that the Earth is flat.A secular position is one available to religious or non-religious people.
I'm not following you.
How? This seems like a slang thing. the problem with this definition is that there's nothing in it to suggest that it pertains specifically to abortion, and only to abortion. Why wouldn't or couldn't it (also) apply to murder, armed robbery, rape, arson, fraud, etc? These are banned legally, so why wouldn't being in favor of these legal bans also be "anti-choice"?"Anti-choice" means "in favour of abortion being banned legally."
I don't know how they're painting a false picture or euphemisms, but if this is about avoiding terms that generally paint a false picture and euphemisms, then based on your own definition of "anti-choice", then this is a term you ought to be avoiding even more than the other two."Pro-life" and "anti-abortion" are the euphemisms that are often used, but both terms generally paint a false picture, so I don't use either one to describe people who are fighting for abortion bans.
Religious people are often averse to thinking through complex, reality-based issues.It seems like there's this perception or stereotype that being pro-life is a religious thing & I'm interested in trying to find out why this is.
I don't have specific examples, but it seems to be like a popular & standard media narrative.
There are plenty of religious folks who are for abortion rights, but I'm not sure if the notion is that those who are pro-life are just a subset of those who are religious.
I'm not religious, and lean towards being pro-life - or used to be, anyways & the reason I say this is because as a libertarian, I believe that people have the right to consume whatever they want. If a woman decides that she want to take a so-called "abortion pill", or drink some sort of herbal concoction that induces miscarriages, that shouldn't be a crime.
I used to take a radical pro-life position of being opposed to any intentional harm to an unborn child, whether it's through an abortion procedure at a facility involving an abortionist, or the so-called "abortion pill." I have to admit this is a stance I took from when I used to be religious, so perhaps there is some sort of association in a practical sense.
However, I don't think my change in position has anything to do with my move away from being religious; I changed my position because of a self-evaluation as a libertarian regarding my adherence to libertarian principles.
I don't take the position that life begins at conception; life began millions of years ago and has been an ongoing, continuous process. What does happen at conception is simply a new generation of life.
An abortion involves 2 things, not just one - termination of a pregnancy and termination of the life of the unborn child. If the goal of an abortion were to terminate a pregnancy, for whatever reason, and not to slaughter the unborn child (by removing it without harming it and placing it in an incubator, or perhaps transplanting it in a surrogate mother in a late part of fetal stage (not that the technology exists, yet - I'm just being hypothetical, here), then I wouldn't have a problem with it. It would a win-win situation, except for those who have some sort of bloodlust obsession with slaughtering unborn children & I don't care if they don't get their way.
When a pregnant woman takes the so-called "abortion pill," I don't see the difference between ending a pregnancy this way, and any other miscarriage. To me that's just another miscarriage. One might want to argue that the difference is that they know what the effect will be, so it's intentional. So what if it's intentional? How can it be determined when any miscarriage is the result of an intentional act or not? Who decides that?
To me, the libertarian principle that a person has the right to consume whatever they want makes it irrelevant whether or not there's any intent involved.
Another difference between consuming something that can or does induce a miscarriage and going to a facility to get an abortion is that there's a separate actor involved in an abortion procedure. In the case of a miscarriage, that's actually the mother's body that jettisons the fetus, regardless of whether or not the mother wishes to have a miscarriage. On the other hand, the abortionist is using tools and equipment to actively destroy and remove the fetus.
Anyhow, the reason I went through this is because if being pro-life only has to do with being religious, then it begs the question regarding why we have laws against murder and manslaughter (of adults, or anyone after they're born); do these laws exist only because religious folks are opposed to murder & manslaughter, and they created them?
If someone were to say "yes, and that's also a reason for repealing such laws along with laws banning abortion," then at least they'd be consistent; I think people would quickly realize, though, that there's a big problem with doing that.
Bottom line: is being against killing innocent human beings only a religious stance? To me, the answer is no.