In most cases the child is in the mother's womb because of her consent.
You can't grant consent to a child that does not yet exist.
In most cases the child is in the mother's womb because of her consent.
The assertion that the child has no right to use the mother's womb is ludicrous in the extreme. The child would not be there in the first place if the mother had not engaged in activity that is DESIGNED BY THE VERY NATURE OF THE ACT to put a child there. The child had no choice to be in a womb, or that womb, or to exist at all. So if I lock you in a room against your will, I should then have the choice to kill you because I do not want you using that room since it belongs to me? Insane.
Of course this always leads to the discussion about when life begins.
For me it is mostly one of accountability for your actions. I am reasonably certain that most everyone who willfully engages in sexual intercourse have some inkling what could happen as a result.
(In cases like Moe pointed out I think then it falls into another realm. My biggest issue is with "recreational abortion" as a form of birth control when a couple choose not to use any kind of birth control, and then afterward just figure they can kill the baby because it is so inconvenient that their choice to have sex actually had the intended consequence of the act.)
How picky? Do they have to be a certain color, intellect, gender, age, or class to have the right to life? or have the government protect that right?
This gets back to the entire debate we've had ad nauseum about whether or not the only purpose of sexual activity/intercourse is for procreation.
Some people believe this to be the case - - others have different ideas about this. If you're of the belief that procreation is a byproduct of sexual intercourse, rather than the primary goal, then that might change your point of view.
I love DoI/Constitution thumpers like you. You're the equivalent of those nut ball Bible thumpers down south.
Hence the portion of my comment "In most cases". Even with birth control failure that child is there because of the mother's consent. No BC is 100% effective. She consented to have sex knowing that there was a 1% or better chance she could get pregnant.
The assertion that the child has no right to use the mother's womb is ludicrous in the extreme. The child would not be there in the first place if the mother had not engaged in activity that is DESIGNED BY THE VERY NATURE OF THE ACT to put a child there. The child had no choice to be in a womb, or that womb, or to exist at all. So if I lock you in a room against your will, I should then have the choice to kill you because I do not want you using that room since it belongs to me? Insane.
Of course this always leads to the discussion about when life begins. For me it is mostly one of accountability for your actions. I am reasonably certain that most everyone who willfully engages in sexual intercourse have some inkling what could happen as a result. If they are adult enough to engage in the act they should be adult enough to deal with the consequences without needing to potentially destroy another life-form simply because it is "inconvenient". As was stated previously, adoption is always an option. I know that there is a shortage of babies available for adoption, so it isn't like it would not be possible to find willing parents.
(In cases like Moe pointed out I think then it falls into another realm. My biggest issue is with "recreational abortion" as a form of birth control when a couple choose not to use any kind of birth control, and then afterward just figure they can kill the baby because it is so inconvenient that their choice to have sex actually had the intended consequence of the act.)
Yes, your analogy is insane, I agree. At the time of intercourse, there is no child to be locked in a room. A better analogy would be that you leave a door open, and a squatter comes inside to live. YOu can't get rid of the squatter because they'll die if they go back on the street. Of course, you might be the sort of liberal socialist commie pinko who says that every homeowner should be forced let any squatter who is on their property stay there, and has to feed them and take care of them. I'm a real American who thinks a person should be able to control who does and does not use their property (and their womb). You liberal socialist commie pinkos and your squatters-rights movements are trying to destroy America.
(My biggest issue is with "recreational abortion" as a form of birth control when a couple choose not to use any kind of birth control, and then afterward just figure they can kill the baby because it is so inconvenient that their choice to have sex actually had the intended consequence of the act.)
That's a horrible analogy. A child doesn't just wander into a womb. The mother had SOMETHING to do with it, don't you think? (Again, let's say like LoganGrad did that cases such as rape are a different situation.)
1. Making abortion illegal doesn't stop abortion; it just makes it less safe, more expensive, and significantly class triggered.
2. There are significant secondary social effects that are highly costly to society as a whole that result from the elimination of abortion rights.
3. Referring to procreation as the sole reason to have sex is contrary to all human experience and certainly denies the existence of entire industries.
If a fetus is a baby...
Maybe you're not specifically referring to LogGrad's viewpoint
1 and 2) LogGrad didn't talk about making all abortions illegal or eliminating all abortion rights. At most, he's talking about making abortions illegal where the woman was a willing participant in the sexual intercourse. And I suspect he would also make an exception for cases where the woman's life is in serious danger due to the pregnancy.
3) Where did anyone say procreation is the sole reason? That's not LogGrad's nor my view. And yet, can you deny that it's a very foreseeable possible unintended consequence? Does not the very nature of the act guarantee that possibility, as LogGrad said in his post which I quoted above?
That's an awfully big IF. It's not my view that a fetus is equivalent to a baby, nor necessarily deserves the same protections as a baby. However, that doesn't mean the fetus deserves NO protections.
What's your view--does a fetus deserve any protections? For example, if a guy beats on an 8 month pregnant woman and terminates the pregnancy, should his penalty just depend on the damage to the mother? Or should he receive a stiffer penalty due to the loss of life (or whatever word you prefer) of the fetus?
If a fetus is a baby, why does it matter whether it's a rape case? Is that baby less of a person because its father did something horrible?
I think if you're going to acknowledge that there's an exception for rape then you've already acknowledged that the mother has some prior right that has to be opted out of in some way before a fetus can take residence in her body. Now we're just discussing what constitutes an effective opt-out, but that means on some fundamental level you have to agree with the premise that a fetus and a human being are NOT the same thing.
Yeah, she has a right to choose whether to have sex or not. If that choice is taken away then abortion is justified (early in pregnancy).
I regard that as a distinction without a functional difference. This is a coded way of saying "I oppose abortion rights except in approximately 4% of situations where abortions currently occur." That's advocating for the elimination of abortion rights without saying it outright.
That is totally non-responsive to the two issues you're responding to: making abortions illegal just makes abortions less safe and there are significant negative social effects (poverty, crime, etc) that result from the ban.
In that post LG writes, "afterward just figure they can kill the baby because it is so inconvenient that their choice to have sex actually had the intended consequence of the act." My point is that in the vast majority of sexual encounters that IS NOT "the intended consequence of the act."
In that post LG writes, "afterward just figure they can kill the baby because it is so inconvenient that their choice to have sex actually had the intended consequence of the act." My point is that in the vast majority of sexual encounters that IS NOT "the intended consequence of the act."
Why does that choice affect the humanity of the fetus? Why does it diminish the fetus' "right to life?"