Can you provide an example of a situation where the mothers life is not at stake?
Well he obviously mean where the mother's life is at stack... to a degree that bothers him.
Can you provide an example of a situation where the mothers life is not at stake?
It's a pity that you are not.
More importantly, your silly semantic game about "individual" proves nothing.
If your preference for not aborting is based on "OMG, think of the child!", I do not understand what rape or incest have to do with it.
The exception for rape and incest has always puzzled me because it's contradictory to the anti-choice philosophy that "all 'babies' have a right to life". Is the 'baby' conceived by rape or incest any less 'precious'? Does it have any less 'right to life'? Apparently so if a girl/woman can have an abortion because she's the victim of rape or incest.![]()
That's where I'm at. The current anti-choice position doesn't leave any logical place for exceptions for rape/incest.
Ironically "I hate women for being sluts" does leave places for those exceptions.
Then you are not against abortion at all. Or did you mean to say something else?
I said I am not against abortion when the mother's life is stake. I assume by what you said you meant refer to the fact that technically in every pregnancy there is also some small percentage of chance that the mother could die. Obviously I was talking about cases where the risk to the mother is higher than normal, one where her doctor thinks the risk is too great for her to go through with going to labor.
When the reasons for the abortion in lack of finances, home, stable environment, lack of ability to care for the child, perhaps yes, in some cases. (not rape, incest, or when the woman's life is in danger)
Adoption solves the problems you mentioned in your previous post, that was my point.
You says it's not about choosing, then say we are choosing.
At what point during a womans pregnancy should she lose rights?
As far as a foetus is concerned, all we can say is that the more developed it becomes, the greater its right to live. It is unfortunate that we have to impose a terminatable/unterminatable dichotomy on the status of a foetus but at some point we have to decide whether the rights of a pregnant women to make her own choices continue to exceed the rights of the foetus to live.
It doesn't have any.
Nope, it gains rights when its born.
Irrelevant. People have rights, the fetus does not.
A bunch of old grey men forcing their unwanted, arbitrary medical decisions of a woman doesn't dehumanize that woman?
Got it!
Just to poke at a factor being neglected here - the pregnancy itself is a serious burden on the pregnant person in a number of ways, some of which can last long after the pregnancy, even in the cases where it's not directly life-threatening.
I realize it puts a serious burden on the pregnant person, but it is either that or the fetus, which may have rights will die. That is why forcing a woman to carry a pregnancy to term, should not be taken lightly. However, I think you can argue death is a much more serious burden, which is what the fetus faces if you abort.
Nope, it's fact.
A fetus has no "right to live," or any other rights for that matter. This is well established both by law and nature.
Many pregnancies end in miscarriage anyway, at many points along through gestation. This is "natural". Some also end in stillbirth, i.e. the fetus is potentially viable but dies in the womb. This is also "natural".
Why do these events happen?
In Nicaragua, ANY premature end of pregnancy is taken as being "wrong" and illegal. Even these natural events. Women are in jail right now because they had a miscarriage or a stillbirth because that is seen legally as "murder". So not only the heartbreak of a failed pregnancy but the prospect of years of deprivation of liberty due to a natural event. This is the type of legislation just introduced in Texas.
I agree jailing a woman as murderer because her pregnancy ended in miscarriage or the baby was still born. That is despicable.
You referred to choosing between the life of the mother and the life of fetus. It is not a choice between two lives in a normal pregnancy, it is a choice between the mother's the right to bodily autonomy and the fetus' right to live.
when the right of the fetus to live exceeds the right of the mother's right to bodily autonomy. As for when that is, I am not certain. But I do believe it comes sometime after conception and before birth. psionl0 said it better than I could. (although he did misspell fetus)
Adoption is not really an alternative to abortion.
Women who carry a pregnancy to full term generally prefer to keep the baby even if they didn't want it during pregnancy. And those who give the baby away for adoption usually find it a very traumatic experience.
It is not fact that in nature the fetus has no right to live, that is opinion. (Unless you can prove scientifically that in nature it has no right to live.
You might as well ask why does anyone die. It happens. It doesn't mean that people don't have a right to live. The same is true with stillbirths, miscarriages and the fetus.
when the right of the fetus to live exceeds the right of the mother's right to bodily autonomy. As for when that is, I am not certain. But I do believe it comes sometime after conception and before birth. psionl0 said it better than I could. (although he did misspell fetus)