This is dangerous to implement. It creates conditions for hyperinflation and such. — Posty McPostface
Yes, and that doesn't make it less important. And whether a fetus is viable or not lies in the field of science.
— Bitter Crank
agree - however using viability as a criteria for person hood is outside science. — Rank Amateur
Yes, and that doesn't make it less important. And whether a fetus is viable or not lies in the field of science. — Bitter Crank
Because they do not question the same principles. — SnowyChainsaw
Sure, I can agree with that for the most part. But I still feel it assumes that there is a conflict between values in the context of discussing these two issues, which is just not the case. — SnowyChainsaw
This is because they are very different issues. — SnowyChainsaw
I disagree that these issues are comparable. Climate change is an issue about preserving the environment so we can sustain our civalisations. The abortion debate is about how we value the autonomy of people's choices, mistakes and lives. Both issues are far too complex to be summed up as you have. — SnowyChainsaw
I also don't think of the just-conceived egg/sperm combo as a person, or an ensouled being. When does a fetus become a person? When the first-cry infant is held in the arms of his or her parents, personhood has been achieved. — Bitter Crank
The result is a debt that will never be paid. — frank
I understand that personal or corporate debt isn't the same as national debt. However, the fact is that national debt is a recurrent item of discussion among economists and politicians, both. — Bitter Crank
as the First Amendment did not limit the states from enacting state churches and sending people to prison for blasphemy laws. The First Amendment was finally applied to the states through the due process clause of the 14th Amendment, in the late 1940s. — LD Saunders
Fort Agnostic, featuring high walls, a lovely moat, and a tall tower upon which to look down on the ignorant masses — praxis
Yes, if you're talking about the Republican base perception that Kavanaugh will change abortion precedent, not whether that precedent will actually change, then we are talking about the same thing — boethius
I do not believe life long appointments really do free people from all leverage points and allows them to vote their conscience. Leverage in elite circles can be from all sorts of angles. — boethius
I think the impeachment boat has sailed. — boethius
My opinion is that this scenario has essentially zero chance of happening — boethius
As I mentioned in an earlier comment, the purpose of the FBI investigation was simply to buy time — boethius
I also disagree that this this is about abortion — boethius
Kavanaugh's nomination is about protecting Trump. — boethius
Trump has been finding by trial-and-error who's loyal and who's not. — boethius
And anyway, the display that we have gotten from Bart Kavanaugh simply shows that he is far more of a political hack than a lawyer. But that's obvious when you look at the guy's CV. — ssu
You can deny false allegations and make a sincere, firm case that people will believe without loosing your temper. You can be credible and convincing without loosing it. As Boethius said, you do think that someone for the post of Supreme Court Justice would be able to respond in a different way. — ssu
Not to loose your cool (or temper) just like Bret "Bart the beer-lover" Kavanaugh does. — ssu
All this just makes me to think in a better light Trump's previous pick for SCOTUS. Don't remember such a show then. — ssu