Aridas
Crazy Little Green Dragon
I guess that is a third way to avoid the question.![]()
Really desperate to troll, eh?
I guess that is a third way to avoid the question.![]()
People using a SCOTUS ruling to shore up and/or define their personal morality. The should call it, "playing the Roe card". As I say, laughable.
Congratulations! You figured out that it's not legislation all on your own! Gold Star!
People using a SCOTUS ruling to shore up and/or define their personal morality. They should call it, "playing the Roe card". As I say, laughable.
The result of it being overturned would of course pave the way for more conservative legislation.![]()
To the great detriment of the US.
Either way, it would actually be much more surprising if said legislation meaningfully impacted the opinions of the posters here. Roe v Wade rests on pretty much the strongest point of compromise to be had between the main directly conflicting issues, either way - the medical consensus about viability. That you are trying to portray it as prescriptive, rather than descriptive, is just wrong.
Or the morality of forcing women to endanger their lives and health by carrying a pregnancy to term.Okay.
We can talk about the societal ills of overpopulation and how providing women with choices beyond child bearing improves a nation's economic welfare.
The way some people present this is, "see, here is my opinion...and Roe proves it right". Maybe not you, but definitely some.
It's tiring. Also, I don't care about the medical consensus on "viability". That term is not used in the general sense that people understand it.
If I prepare a perfect cake mix and put it in the oven, but decide 5 minutes later I don't want a cake, and then throw it out...people will ask why. If I tell them it wasn't viable, only the liberals will understand.
Given that poster's history, were you really expecting a reasoned or reasonable argument?
"Viability" is one way to measure the extent to which a foetus had any rights. It is not ideal but we don't seem to have any other measure.This is a reasonable expression of a position.Thank you.
ETA: I would add that viability must enter any discussion at some point.
It's often over-rated, complicated to manage and prone to fissioning off couples anyway.This is not a negotiation. The rules of Roe v Wade work just fine.
The only group I'm interested in participating in is group sex.
Otherwise, I'm not interested in a group which would have me as a member.
"Rights" is not a dichotomy. Where the rights of two individuals conflict (in this case, the mother and the foetus), we have to decide who has the greater right. IE rights exist on a sliding scale.No, we CAN'T say that.
What we can say is that the older the fetus.gets, the more viable it gets to survive a premature birth.
But that doesn't translate into a right to live, not even according to Roe.
Not unexpected and rather typical of the "pro-life" hangers-on. Though I notice whole screw-up mess is embarrassing even to the anti-abortion nuts.
"Viability" is one way to measure the extent to which a foetus had any rights. It is not ideal but we don't seem to have any other measure.
One problem with using "viability" is that as medical technology progresses, a foetus becomes viable at an increasingly earlier stage of development. (Who knows? Maybe the day will come when women don't carry a pregnancy to completion but choose to complete the final stages in an incubator!)
"Rights" is not a dichotomy. Where the rights of two individuals conflict (in this case, the mother and the foetus), we have to decide who has the greater right. IE rights exist on a sliding scale.
"Rights" is not a dichotomy. Where the rights of two individuals conflict (in this case, the mother and the foetus), we have to decide who has the greater right. IE rights exist on a sliding scale.
I said "individual" not "a human being".That is not an example of "the rights of two individuals" conflicting. You only mentioned one individual; the mother.