That entity is essentially a medical condition.
You mean a full term baby an hour before delivery? Again, what do you have to support this assertion?
The decision on whether or not to abort should be considered a medical decision. That entity can't be granted rights until it is separated from it's [sic] mother.
So you've said, but why? That's not the current law, and it goes against society's convention.
I think of rights as a blanket, if you can't wrap it, it can't be granted rights.
I hope you're being facetious. This standard would fail on many accounts.
Yes my thinking goes against convention. I support the mother's right to abort at anytime for any reason. It's my body.
Again, this is the assertion of a position, and not support for that assertion. I've offered a reasonable argument for my position (actually for more or less the legal status quo and what is by and large the convention of our society).
Also, the "moral consideration" that we grant to fetuses is laughable considering that the mother can ingest what ever legal substance she is able to and engage in any activity that she can legally engage in. If we, as a society, really wanted to grant the fetus legally recognized moral consideration, we would prohibit the mother from ingesting and participating in activities that could endanger the life of the fetus.
There's a logical flaw in this argument. Essentially you're saying there can be no moral consideration unless or until such consideration is equal to that of a live, adult person. But that's not true even after the baby is born. We have status offenses all the way up to the age of majority. (In most states--probably all by now--it's illegal for someone under the age of 21 to buy, possess or drink alcoholic beverages, for one example.)
The conventional position is that the rights of the woman and the rights of the fetus go through a continuous change and balance. In the first trimester, it's 100%:0%, but near the end of term, it's much closer to 50:50 or the way we evaluate conflicting rights of two adults. (Closer, but not quite yet 50:50 as I have noted earlier.)
For instance, the woman would have to be made to have a c-section if a vaginal birth was determined to be dangerous for the fetus. As of now, she can decline any medical procedure because she is granted the right to ignore doctor's orders. The laws as they stand are not consistent.
I disagree. I think you're holding up an absurd standard. Similarly, we recognize some level of parental neglect (of already born children) to be a crime, but it doesn't mean we let the state make those decisions for the parent(s). All the state does is say basically that this behavior is a crime, but it doesn't mean that the state has an opinion on whether or not a lot of non-criminal behavior optimally reflects moral consideration for the children.
If we are simply discussing the morality of late-term abortion, it's my contention that the woman should have a damn good reason to abort.
That's a different position than what you expressed earlier. In fact, that position is consistent with current law and moral convention. It is not consistent with statements you have made earlier:
Because the state should have zero say in what a woman does with her body, child inside the women or not.
and especially:
I'm pro-choice, at whatever time for whatever reason.
Residing inside of another person is anything but independent.
But again, a newborn baby is also anything but independent. Therefore, independence (in this sense) isn't a good standard, is it? It doesn't even support your position (your first position, that is, not your new position which I have no problem with).
A person's actual person should not be held legally responsible to support another person. I believe that a person's right to autonomy should be held sacred.
So a woman should be allowed to give birth and then put the baby on someone's doorstep? After all, that is her doing with her person just what she wants, and she ought not, according to you, have her actual person be held legally responsible to support another person.
(I think you're making some distinction between what we hold a person responsible for, and holding their "actual person" responsible for something, but I don't think there is such a distinction. Taking care of a born baby is a legal responsibility that falls on the mother or legal guardian--and it applies to their "actual person".)