Natural rights are enforced by nature, but not necessarily in a timely fashion — frank
The position I am aware of is that governments have the duty to protect natural rights. For example, my right to free speech isn't given to me by the government, but the government must recognize it and protect it else it's an immoral government. — Hanover
So, if people have the natural right to respect in death, it's obvious the dead can't enforce it, but that doesn't mean it doesn't exist. It just means someone else must enforce it for the dead, just like an infant couldn't enforce its own rights without assistance. — Hanover
Sigh. I'm a glutton for punishment. I'll try one more time. Here are two statements from you:I haven’t contradicted myself, or at least you have not shown it. — NOS4A2
No measurable property called “personhood” appears or disappears in any given human being. — NOS4A2
The second statement clearly contradicts the first. The second statement says that there IS a measurable property that appears (and may disappear) in any human being - namely the capacity to speak a language.Humans have the capacity to speak a language at some point in their lives. — NOS4A2
if I had to go use the zygotes to put out the fire to save the child, then I would be doing something immoral — Bob Ross
There have been votes; and red states vote no; and blue states vote yes. There is no consensus.
— Bob Ross
Without checking, from what I recall this is not true. Since the Dobbs decision, when there’s a vote on the ballot in red states it goes pro-choice. Legislatures in red states don’t always allow the issue to be voted on, however. — praxis
The second statement clearly contradicts the first. The second statement says that there IS a measurable property that appears (and may disappear) in any human being - namely the capacity to speak a language.
And again, you do not make any distinction between the terms "person/personhood", "human", or "human being" - so you cannot define your way out of this contradiction.
I don't know any way to make this any clearer.
Is it never warranted for military officers issue orders that are almost certain to result in the deaths of their innocent men?
I am asking you why you believe that a zygote does not have the same fundamental right to not be killed when innocent like a woman does — Bob Ross
I don't think that is true at all. Red states are predominantly conservative; and conservatives are not pro-choice. — Bob Ross
When the right to abortion is on the ballot, it wins. It wins in red states that voted for President Donald Trump. It wins in counties President Joe Biden lost by more than 20 points. It wins when popular Republican officials campaign for it and when they ignore it. And it wins even when the outcome has no immediate effect on abortion access.
— Politico
Except that the double effect was part of an extended discussion of abortion involving Philippa Foot and Anscombe, the very one in which what 'mercans call the "trolly" problem was first deployed.Yes (under certain circumstances), and this gets into the principle of double effect; and is not pertinent to the abortion discussion. — Bob Ross
Yep. Folk don't generally fuck in order to have an abortion.Well, presumably in virtually all cases of elective abortion the woman having the abortion isn't acting in order to have an abortion. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Words have meanings/usages - and your inconsistent statements render your arguments meaningless. Just to give a contrast, I disagree with @Bob Ross but his position is clearly articulated and understandable. I'll give you the last word if you want.
This biology, and all material required to develop it, is present from the very beginning to the very end of every human being’s life — NOS4A2
So you would let a child die rather than save their life by sacrificing/using zygote(s)? I think your position is absurd. I also don't think you would let the child die, if push came to shove. — RogueAI
Are you arguing that a both have rights, but one trumps the other? Or are you arguing that only one of them has rights? — Bob Ross
I know many Republicans that believe that abortion should be allowed up to a certain point in the pregnancy for any reason. I don't know one Republican that says that if prior birth control (condoms, the pill, etc.) failed that the woman should be forced to carry through with her pregnancy.The most common republican view, although not officially, is that abortion should be illegal except under certain grave circumstances. E.g., https://news.gallup.com/poll/246278/abortion-trends-party.aspx#:~:text=Views%20on%20Legality%20of%20Abortion%2C%20by%20Party%20ID .
Democrats commonly want it legal in all or most circumstances. You are making it sound like both republicans and democrats see eye-to-eye on abortion....not at all. — Bob Ross
I don't know one Republican that says that if prior birth control (condoms, the pill, etc.) failed that the woman should be forced to carry through with her pregnancy. — Harry Hindu
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