There is no legislation that would be able to prevent a woman's right to choose, only legislation that would prevent women from seeking out medical assistance for her choice. — m-theory
You're right that there is no legislation which can prevent women from killing that which is living and growing inside of them, an unborn human, if they're determined enough, just as there is no legislation which can prevent women or anyone else from killing anyone else if they're determined enough. But neither are good things which should be encouraged. It is an unfortunate fact that murders and abortions occur, when in most cases, a better resolution is available. Just as someone who is contemplating murder should have access to counseling, so should someone contemplating abortion, and that is already the case in the developed world, as far as I'm aware. — Sapientia
How DO you label someone like myself who ticks off republicans and democrats alike when politics are discussed? — anonymous66
But it is far less difficult to prove that one person has a murdered another in a court than it is to prove that a woman intentionally miscarried. So when we compare these things we would not say that there is no legislation that will prevent murder because it is less difficult to demonstrate that an intentional killing has taken place. — m-theory
So even if we agreed that terminating a pregnancy was murder we are left with a far more difficult burden of proof than is the case when this happens to those that have been born. — m-theory
Also I don't agree that there is necessarily a better resolution in some cases of termination of unwanted pregnancy. — m-theory
Take the cases where a woman has been raped and it has resulted in pregnancy.
I sternly believe that the woman should have the right to decide if she wants to procreate with a rapists.
And personally, in general, I think that women ought to have that right to decide even if they are not raped and ultimately, as I have pointed out, they do have that right and there is nothing to be done about it in legislative terms. — m-theory
But that's after the fact: the killing will have already either taken place or not taken place. My point stands: no amount of legislation can prevent someone determined enough from going out and killing another human, whether that's an adult or a baby inside of themselves. — Sapientia
This is another straw man. What I actually said is that in most cases, a better resolution is available, and I stand by that claim. — Sapientia
Feel free to go over my part in the previous discussion in order to better understand it. You've made quite a few big assumptions about my position which are in fact incorrect. Yes, there are exceptional circumstances, and yes, in places like the U.K. where I'm from, it is true that up to a point, pregnant women have a legal right to decide to have an abortion (We've even been over the actual wording and stated conditions in the relevant legislation), and I accept that there can be morally acceptable circumstances, although I would emphasise that they are acceptable, but not desirable or ideal. — Sapientia
Yes. Legislation can only be reactionary. There is no way to strictly enforce any law. But there is a way to convict a murderer in a court beyond reasonable doubt. The same does not apply when a woman self induces miscarriage. There is virtually no way to prove a miscarriage was intentional if the accused does not admit that it was. — m-theory
Sorry I must have misread.
I did not set out to misrepresent your position. I only sought to lay out my own. If I did, then I apologise again. — m-theory
And it doesn't look especially appealing.Libertarianism (Latin: liber, "free") is a collection of political philosophies that uphold liberty. Libertarians seek to maximize autonomy and freedom of choice, emphasizing political freedom, voluntary association, and the primacy of individual judgment.[1][2] Libertarianism has been applied as an umbrella term to a wide range of political ideas through modern history.
What isn't appealing about maximizing autonomy and freedom of choice? What issues do you tick off both parties with, anyway? — Harry Hindu
Well, marriage shouldn't be something the govt. should be defining or legitimizing. It's personal and private — Harry Hindu
What isn't appealing about maximizing autonomy and freedom of choice? — Harry Hindu
What isn't appealing about maximizing autonomy and freedom of choice? — Harry Hindu
Crude communism is only the culmination of such envy and levelling-down on the basis of a preconceived minimum. How little this abolition of private property represents a genuine appropriation is shown by the abstract negation of the whole world of culture and civilization, and the regression to the unnatural simplicity of the poor and wantless individual who has not only not surpassed private property but has not yet even attained to it. The community is only a community of work and of equality of wages paid out by the communal capital, by the community as universal capitalist. The two sides of the relation are raised to a supposed universality; labor as a condition in which everyone is placed, and capital as the acknowledged universality and power of the community. — Marx, Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts
Socialists dismiss the consequences of their "solutions". They think that their intentions are all that matter without realizing the consequences of their good intentions. If Socialists had their way, they'd limit the choices and resources of everyone as there isn't enough to go around to every individual. If every citizen on this planet received an equal amount of resources, they'd only get about $16,000 a year, which just brings those making more than that down, while not lifting the poor at all. This will also limit choices. When your resources are limited, so are your choices. In the effort to make everyone equal, you end up limiting everyone's freedoms. — Harry Hindu
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