The list of sins in the churches (temples, mosques, etc.) shouldn't be the basis of secular law. — Bitter Crank
Before I accepted the idea that anti-unionism was a prime driver of prohibition, I'd want to read a strong case for that view. But again, the major drive for prohibition came from rural protestants who were not witnessing a whole lot of union organizing. — Bitter Crank
Sure. But if some Americans firmly believe abortion is murder, that matters. Their opinion shouldn't be brushed aside in the name of someone's privacy. No one has a right to privately commit murder.
This is why I am sympathetic to the conviction of pro life. These people literally believe the government allowing access to abortion is them legally protecting murder. I understand their motivation, even if I disagree with when they define a baby as being the moment the sperm enters the egg.if some Americans firmly believe abortion is murder, that matters. Their opinion shouldn't be brushed aside in the name of someone's privacy
But if their view on this is rooted in their religion, then it shouldn't be the determinant of what is law. There are reasonable approaches they could take to reduce abortions: support agencies that provide medical and other financial support for poor, pregnant women; education; ensuring access to birth control; adopting (otherwise) unwanted children...if some Americans firmly believe abortion is murder, that matters. Their opinion shouldn't be brushed aside in the name of someone's privacy. — frank
That's a fair point, and I haven't had a problem with placing some reasonable restrictions - although there should be medical exceptions in any case.In my opinion, both pro-lifers and pro-choices have a point. It would be ridiculous to allow abortions the day before delivery while considering it murder the day after. So at what point does the fetus stop becoming part of the woman’s body and start becoming a “baby” (sorites paradox)? At what point does it deserve moral consideration? Scalar morality could help here. — Paulm12
But if some Americans firmly believe abortion is murder, that matters. Their opinion shouldn't be brushed aside in the name of someone's privacy.
I maintain that defining abortion as murder is a particular religious belief. Medically aborting a blastocyst (recently fertilized egg) is clearly not the same as killing a someone who has been born (5 minutes, 5 years, or 50 years ago), Neither is aborting a 6 week fetus, which is entirely non-viable. Neither is aborting a 5 month non-viable fetus.
Aborting an 8 month altogether viable fetus comes much closer to your claim of abortion as murder. Such abortions are extremely rare and are the result of severe compromise of maternal health, where it's the baby OR the mother.
So yes: privacy matters here. Abortion as murder can be a privately held idea, and should apply only to the person holding the view. Hence the good slogan: "Opposed to abortion? Then don't have one." — frank
It's true they were being disingenuous, but almost everyone knew which way they leaned - that's why Dems opposed them and GOP supported them.I think it's unsurprising Roe v. Wade is being overturned. That a majority of the Justices intended to do so has been apparent, despite their disingenuous and cynical performances during the appointment process (itself something of a farce). — Ciceronianus
So yes: privacy matters here. Abortion as murder can be a privately held idea, and should apply only to the person holding the view. — Bitter Crank
Barrett (remarkable for being someone who spent only a few years practicing law but now sits on the Supreme Court). — Ciceronianus
Of course, but the establishment clause prohibits laws that force a particular religious view on the rest of us. That's what abortion bans do.We don't screen voters for their justifications. You're a citizen, you get a vote. — frank
No - there's no objectively correct answer. Is a zygote a human being? What establishes that? God implanting a soul? "Human being" is a fuzzy concept.. Abortion is either murder or it's not. If it is, it's everybody's business.
Of course, but the establishment clause prohibits laws that force a particular religious view on the rest of us. That's what abortion bans do.
There's more to it, of course, but this aspect is rarely brought up. — Relativist
No - there's no objectively correct answer. Is a zygote a human being? What establishes that? God implanting a soul? "Human being" is a fuzzy concept. — Relativist
Sure. But if some Americans firmly believe abortion is murder, that matters. Their opinion shouldn't be brushed aside in the name of someone's privacy. No one has a right to privately commit murder. — frank
That's a small fraction, and I would guess many of them are malleable/educable (e.g. the survey shows the fraction was reduced from a 2007 survey). A view rooted a a religious belief will be incorrigible.11% of atheists are pro life. So it's not necessarily a religious view. — frank
I agree, and I've brought up this issue with many of them. I understand and respect that it's murder from their perspective, and that this is a valid perspective. This seems to be what you are trying to convey, but I'm just adding that it's worthwhile to try to help them understand that other perspectives are also valid.Nevertheless, if a portion of the community is crying "murder," it's your business. — frank
I agree, and I've brought up this issue with many of them. I understand and respect that it's murder from their perspective, and that this is a valid perspective. This seems to be what you are trying to convey, but I'm just adding that it's worthwhile to try to help them understand that other perspectives are also valid. — Relativist
why not have males carry some responsibility here, instead of males just legislating females' bodies? — jorndoe
Or how else do you propose that the male might carry some of this responsibility? — Metaphysician Undercover
Some Christians on abortion: We don't care about bodily autonomy or individual choice! We're trying to protect innocent lives!
Some Christians on COVID-19: We don't care about protecting innocent lives! We care about bodily autonomy and individual choice! — jorndoe
Abortion rights in America date to 1973, when the high court by a 7-2 vote declared that a constitutional right to privacy, rooted in the Fourteenth Amendment, covered a woman's right to end a pregnancy.
— CNN
Roe was egregiously wrong from the start. Its reasoning was exceptionally weak, and the decision has had damaging consequences.
— Justice Samuel Alito (conservative)
Lemme get this straight. Abortion was legalized based on the right to privacy. Aren't Republicans/conservatives (the pro-life faction) staunch defenders of privacy?
:confused:
Something doesn't add up...or does it? — Agent Smith
My to-do list for the day: Give granny more-fatal cancer. Murder all preborns. Take dog for a walk. — Baden
American bullshit — Streetlight
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