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
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
Barrett (remarkable for being someone who spent only a few years practicing law but now sits on the Supreme Court). — 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
But if their view on this is rooted in their religion, then it shouldn't be the determinant of what is law. — Relativist
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
The list of sins in the churches (temples, mosques, etc.) shouldn't be the basis of secular law. — Bitter Crank
The 18th Amendment concretized SOME peoples' will to ban liquor — Bitter Crank
Your statement seems more like a play on words than a serious objection.
Is a fertilized egg, a non-viable fetus, or a near term fetus, a person? Thereby hangs the tale. — Bitter Crank
Defining a fertilized egg or a non-viable / viable fetus as a person seems to be first a religious definition (based on the idea of 'ensoulment') that has been taken up by religious-minded secular legislators. — Bitter Crank
What I'm enquiring about here is how (if we agree with the process) we might morally justify it. — Isaac
That's what Roe was. Insurance against the possibility that future generations saw fit to deny those rights - not by virtue of them merely disagreeing (that would be opposed to ordinary respect for autonomy), but by virtue of the previous generation having failed to bring them up to be sufficiently moral human beings to have their preferences respected. — Isaac
In a sense, that's the moral ground in which I think anti-democratic, but moral, legislation might stand. — Isaac
Sure. Do you think that we have responsibility for our effects on the personality and beliefs of others? — Isaac
Say, if I, through my God awful parenting, produced an absolute monster, do I just let them loose on society at 18 and wash my hands of them (respect their "Freedom to decide" as you put it)? Or do I have some responsibility to act as some restrainer of their excess? — Isaac
If I were responsible (evil meddling psychologist that I am) for creating a platoon of ruthless assassins by behavioural programming, Jason Bourne style, do you think I'd have some responsibility for the actions of the resulting unit, and how ought I exercise that responsibility? — Isaac
So why (the devotion)? — Isaac
The point, such as it is, was that if one advocates democratic rule because they consider it a moral 'good', then there's a conflict when that democracy results in something which they consider a moral 'bad'. Unless, of course, a person has no moral goods other than promoting democracy. — Isaac
No. I'm asking why you think it ought to be? — Isaac
What I mean is that you think we should follow democratic decisions, yes? Or are you just telling us how democracy works? — Isaac
But why should they? — Isaac
So you don't see a problem with a majority who decide that slavery is acceptable? — Michael
The majority doesn't have the right to oppress the minority. — Michael
Should they also get to decide whether or not that act be repealed so that they can decide if they want homosexuals or black people in their communities? — Michael
Should they also get to decide if they want homosexuals or black people in their communities? — Michael
The personal sphere is private and not a proper object of governmental intrusion. — Bitter Crank
I actually see this as a good thing. From what I understand, the legality of Roe v Wade was always a bit sketchy. Even RBG said “the court ventured too far in the change it ordered.”
I’m all for abortion rights but do it the right way.
In my (completely disinterested, it doesn’t affect me) opinion, the legal cut-off should be at the “point of viability.”
If it gets overturned it will be up to the states. What do you think? — Paulm12
I wouldn’t propose to restrict anything. — NOS4A2
Less than 20% of all women want an outright ban on abortion, and yes - they may get what they wanted- at least in some states. — Relativist
I'm nervous and tense about statism, which is both left and right. — NOS4A2
There never was any laissez-faire. The state caused much of the poverty, and the state caused all of the wars. — NOS4A2
Poverty, overconsumption, monopoly, wealth inequality, seem to me the common objections. Keynes said as much in his essay “The End of laissez-faire”. But all of the above are apparent in all systems, including in those in which Keynes was the architect: capitalism “wisely managed”.
But why should it be managed at all? Why should one serve the interests of the state instead of his own and his neighbors? — NOS4A2
Yes. Laissez faire is nonsense because "free markets" don't exist and cannot exist. Period. So the very idea is nonsense. So to is trying to separate "economy from state." — Xtrix
Which will disproportionately affect the poor, pushing them further into poverty (or death). — Michael
