EverLastingGodStopper
probably lurking
- Joined
- Aug 17, 2005
- Messages
- 185
So, can you come out and say what your position is, please?
I think abortion should be legal and allowable in the interests of the pregnant woman, probably up to about 20 weeks. I have quite a lot of agreement with the Canadian ideology that the state does not need to restrict abortion at all, because third-term abortions are extremely rare and largely self-regulating. However I'm not convinced—on balance—that an "anytime" law is just.So, can you come out and say what your position is, please?
So, if I learn, at 7 months into my pregnancy, that the fetus inside of me has a medical condition that can not be corrected by modern medicine, and that if this pregnancy is carried to term, I will be giving birth to a defective infant that will only live a few painful hours before death, you think that the government should force me to have this baby instead of aborting the pregnancy?I think abortion should be legal and allowable in the interests of the pregnant woman, probably up to about 20 weeks. I have quite a lot of agreement with the Canadian ideology that the state does not need to restrict abortion at all, because third-term abortions are extremely rare and largely self-regulating. However I'm not convinced—on balance—that an "anytime" law is just.
I think that governments should set and review the precise details of abortion law through their legislature—perhaps by consulting their electorates if that is the norm (it is not in the UK), and not by a country's judiciary or its constitution. I think that the latter risks a lack of legitimacy.
Abortion law is also not very amenable to international treaties on human rights IMO, nor to justification based on "absolutes" and "fundamentals".
It is extremely unlikely that you would be forced to have the baby. The law as I describe it is pretty much the extant law in many countries. Do you know of a precedent in Europe (or the US) where a woman has been so forced?Abortion law is also not very amenable [. . .] to justification based on "absolutes" and "fundamentals".
I don't know about Europe, but most South American countries deny women legal access to abortion services, therefore, the women are forced under law to give birth to babies that they do not want.It is extremely unlikely that you would be forced to have the baby. The law as I describe it is pretty much the extant law in many countries. Do you know of a precedent in Europe (or the US) where a woman has been so forced?
This qualifies your earlier statement about "separated" some. And introduces complexity. What about before the baby breathes its first breath? At that instant it is fully dependent on the cord. Human being?
"Not necessary" is different from "useless". Something of a backtrack.
It is extremely unlikely that you would be forced to have the baby.
"Not necessary" is different from "useless". Something of a backtrack.
I see that the definition of the fetus and its rights (or lack there of) vary from one country to another. Is there an international scientific or ethical concesus about it, say, at the UN?
how so? I do not understand how being born is in the best interest of a fetus...
The fact that the fetus doesn't understand renders the fetus's "best interest" irrelevant.
?...
A fetus's interest would only matter if it was a person.
A fetus's interest would only matter if it was a person.
How does that work?Oh, Ok then. But a person isn't necesserally a being that "understands".