Thanz
Fuzzy Thinker
- Joined
- Jul 24, 2002
- Messages
- 3,895
Q-Source said:
I think we are a little lost here in the discussion.
One of the reasons for making abortion illegal was that the right of the fetus for life is a basic right. It is unbreakable. So, let's focus on this case.
If we are in a situation where the mother may put her life in risk, then we are admiting that the fetus's right to live is not that important as we have assumed. So, the basis for making abortion illegal collapses. We cannot use the argument of the fetus's basic right anymore.
Forget about specific cases, why should we discriminate among reasons to abort if we no longer believe that the fetus has a basic human right?
I think that toddjh has pointed out the problem in this argument. Just because there are certain circumstances that may cause a person's rights to be violated, it does not mean that the right itself is lost. As pointed out by toddjh, I have a right to life. I may lose that life if I try to attack someone with a knife. That doesn't mean that I don't have the basic right to life.
People have the right to free speech. They don't, however, have the right to yell "Fire" in a crowded theatre, causing panic, if there is no fire.
The fetus right to life is just as basic as it always was. It just doesn't AUTOMATICALLY trump the woman's right to life. If, in the balancing of the rights, the woman's life is in serious danger, her right to life will prevail. If not, her right to life is not being threatened, and therefore the fetus right to life is upheld.
You cannot forget about specific cases. You are trying to take one specific case and make it the rule for other specific cases, with different facts.
Remember, you said this:
Let's assume for a moment that the fetus is a human. Now, the question is whether or not the woman has the right to get rid of a human that she no longer wants to carry in his body.
Does she have the right to say no?
It would be a matter of deciding who has more rights:
1. the fetus/human to live or
2. the woman to not accept the pregnancy.
It is precisely this analysis that I am proposing, in each case. The threat to the woman's health is part of the analysis of her "right to not accept the pregnancy".