AKots
(Though i find the term "designed" a touch inappropriate, it's what springs to mind.)
Because it is a weak argument. Men are "designed" to rape women, kill other men, and commit other acts of violence. That's what upper body strength and testosterone is all about. Yet neither of us thinks that matters for a discussion on morality, do we?
Nor should the fact that women are "designed" to have children matter. Except in carrying out the will of the designer; which is, as I have said, a religious position.
what if you offer somebody a life-support system,
This is the entire issue. You maintain that having sex is a de facto offer. I maintain that an offer requires intention, and having sex without the intention of having children is both reasonable and morally defensible.
Perhaps the ultimate difficulty is that you feel a human life is too high a cost to preserve our rights to have sex without reproducing. The problem with this position is that it is inconsistent; there are a number of other areas in which the excersize of your rights also incurs the death of a person, and in those instances you don't care. You seem to feel that the voluntary act of producing food does NOT entitle those who need it to take it for free (I say this because at no point have you endorsed communism). You seem to endorse private property rights as understood by ordinary US law. Only in the case of sex do you feel that the voluntary physical act automatically must include the intention of sharing your property.
I maintain that it is morally and reasonably possible to have sex without extending an invitation to other persons to sieze your property. If those persons do, then recovering your property (even if it costs the other his life) is simply the excersize of your rights.
I maintain that private property rights trump other people's needs. You do too - except in this one case.
Q-Source
They keep on referring to Abortion as a "killing babies" practice
It is killing babies. The fact that you cannot emotionally accept the truth of your position is as damaging to your case as TexasBeast's need to dismiss pregnancy as a crimp in style.
Of course, if you reject the notion that fetuses are persons, then it isn't. But - for purposes of this discussion we have agreed that they are. If you cannot support abortion even if the fetus is a person, then you should not concede that point for argument's sake. I, however, have no problem with killing people I've never met to defend my property rights. I must admit, however, that this is easy for me only because the person in question does not suffer, has no consciousness, no history, no friends or relatives, no debts, promises, obligations, or ties to the world of any kind. I would still do it, though, even if it weren't easy, because ultimately I defend property rights as necessary to human well-being.
Thanz
The question is not whether the fetus has a right to the mothers organs, the question is whether the mother is justified in killing it.
The act of killing it is the denial of access to the organs. If you could extract the fetus and allow it to surivive, then it would be a different issue. But you can't, so it isn't.
I say that the law requires some sort of real threat to the life or health of the person before the homicide is justified. In a normal, healthy pregnancy, that threat is not present
Your failure to understand the nature of pregnancy does severe damage to your case. For your information, ALL pregnancys carry an implicit death threat, because there is always a chance that something will go wrong.
So, there is quite a bit of law that says another is entitled to your property based solely on need.
Wrong. The law is based on assumption of an obligation - having children is an assumption of an obligation that the law will force you to oblige. If it were based solely on need, then the law could take YOUR money to support MY children.
The law does not allow you to abandon the children you create
Because you
chose to create them. Your argument
does hinge on the culpability of the parents.
The parents actions make them responsible, regardless
Why?
By engaging in vaginal intercourse, you accept the risks and responsibilities of pregnancy should it occur.
But we don't want to accept the responsibility of pregnancy. Why should we have to? Just because some other person - whom we've never met - might die? Why should we care? It is not a violation of the golden rule. I am never going to be a fetus, I am never going to know a fetus, so I can't complain about you treat fetuses. (Unless it degrades your interactions with other human beings, but we already know such collateral harm does not occur)
What are these physical consequences that you say I reject?
Death is the physical consequence of life. Broken legs are the physical consequence of skiing. You reject the skiing argument because no has to die to fix my leg, but his is just another way of saying you support our property rights untill death is involved. Yet you aren't demonstrating against immigration laws that kill people, the crab-fishing industry, or stores that let food sit on their shelves while people are starving in other countries.
Once again, you ignore people who don't care and don't use birth control at all.
No, I addressed them. I said that mere lack of intention was sufficient to preserve your rights.
While my arguments do not depend on parental culpability, yours do.
Are you so committed to winning that you cannot learn? I have clearly shown that your central thesis is that pregnancy is a morally inescapable result of sex. The fetus' status as a person is irrelevant, because you do not feel that people who need should be allowed to take from you without asking. Or do you? If you embrace communism, now is the time to say so.
Akots
To say a fetus invades a body is like saying a burn victim invades a hospital or an ambulance.
Absolutely incorrect analogy.