ponderingturtle
Orthogonal Vector
- Joined
- Jul 11, 2006
- Messages
- 54,545
We'll put you into the "I don't understand the question" category.
No rejecting the question is not the same thing as not understanding it.
We'll put you into the "I don't understand the question" category.
What are you talking about? That would be a description of a first-trimester abortion, as the vast majority are under current laws. There's nothing far-fetched about it. In fact, it would be early in the first term. The word "abortion" is sufficient. No qualifier need be applied.
The preceding discussion was about third-trimester abortions. What point are you trying to make?
What kind of a ****** up person can think there is any such thing as a convenient third term abortion?
No rejecting the question is not the same thing as not understanding it.
Haha oh wow. I honestly was not expecting such a clear and prompt vindication!
I I say that abortions of necessity (such as all legal abortions in the third trimester right now) are a red herring, to avoid discussing abortions of convenience which is the real issue.
Meadmaker acknowledges this, and shifts back to first trimester scenarios of convenience.
And immediately there is mad dash to try to force the discussion away from that topic, back to the other thing.
The abortion debate would be very different, if it were actually about the health of the mother. Or if it were actually about two or three very specific and very difficult moral or ethical dilemmas.
But it's not. It's about legalizing abortions of convenience.
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But it's not. It's about legalizing abortions of convenience.
It also is an interesting view of medical ethics that there are doctors out there that will perform such a late term abortion for no good reason.
I mean, I might want a doctor to amputate both of my legs just to win a weight loss bet, but any doctor that is enough of a maniac to do it is going to have some serious problems professionally and probably legally because that's a pretty big flag I'm not in my right mind.
I've long been against any restriction on this medical procedure, and a big part of that is that I trust the medical profession to act ethically within their field of expertise.
That's blatantly absurd. Maybe that is your honest answer (because you want to tell others what to do); but the whole point of the pro-choice position is that if it's not your body, if you are not the one potentially gestating, you don't get to make the choice.
^^^That said, I see no reason why "not wanting to be a parent right now" isn't a good enough reason on its own to justify having an abortion. Libs should stop being so squeamish about this and embrace that abortion, as a last means effort to allow people to control their reproductive health, is good.
I understand what you are talking about. I also understand that that attempting to have a discussion under that framework for whatever reason muddies the water as to what your position is regarding the main issue.I expected someone to do that. You're right of course. Those two lives are intertwined and sometimes you have to choose one.
When legislation is written, it sometimes goes on for pages because they have to cover all the edge cases. In a discussion, though, you have to simplify things to the point that regular speech is possible.
Of course, that assumes people want regular speech. When dealing with a hot button issue like abortion, in an unrestricted public discussion, it's a pretty safe bet that there will be enough people involved that it will devolve into nonsense no matter what happens.
In this case what I'm trying to do is find some sort of statement about human life that we could agree is true. At what point is it ok to kill that organism just because you don't want to deal with it? I would hope that we could all agree that once it's outside the mom, you can't kill it. I would hope, in fact, that if it's healthy, and mom's healthy, and it's on the way out (i.e. mom is in labor) you can't kill it just because you don't want to deal with it.
Now, starting from that point, work your way backwards. At what point do you say that it is, in fact, ok to kill it just because you don't want it to turn into a living breathing baby?
For my purposes here, the answer doesn't even matter. Whether you say 24 weeks of pregnancy, or implantation, or even fertilization, it doesn't really matter for the question I'm getting at. The point is that you have to ask the question. From a legal standpoint, someone has to provide an answer, so that a person can know whether they are breaking the law. Who should that be? Should that be a judge, or a legislator?
But....that's not something a lot of people find interesting, and, what's more, they're suspicious of anyone who would even worry about such details. So, it devolves into name calling, slogans, and maybe an occasional molotov cocktail.
That said, I see no reason why "not wanting to be a parent right now" isn't a good enough reason on its own to justify having an abortion. Libs should stop being so squeamish about this and embrace that abortion, as a last means effort to allow people to control their reproductive health, is good.
Arguably having an abortion is the less medically impactful option compared to carrying to term and giving birth, which is quite the extreme and often permanently altering medical event. An abortion, especially early term abortion, is the least medically risky response to pregnancy.
That said, I see no reason why "not wanting to be a parent right now" isn't a good enough reason on its own to justify having an abortion. Libs should stop being so squeamish about this and embrace that abortion, as a last means effort to allow people to control their reproductive health, is good.
What kind of a ****** up person can think there is any such thing as a convenient third term abortion?
I agree. The "convenience" argument is just another attack on choice.
I'm not sure if you expressed it, but I can also see a point in that opening the door on "interpretation" too wide gives the judicial branch free reign to create law without restriction because no other branch has veto power over any of their rulings. (Impeachment is arguably supposed to do that, but we seem to shy away from that like it's a third rail.)
If the universe were just every person who uses the word "convenience" in an argument against abortion would wake up ten weeks pregnant.
Thanks for the reply.
The section quoted above is my main concern.
As I've expressed it in the past, a court that can decide to grant a right that is not in the constitution can decide to take away one that is.
......
You can call it an illustration. I call it amplifying the lie.You know what I love here? I use something as an illustration. Let's take something obvious. No one would allow killing a baby about to be delivered, right? Everyone agrees, right?
See what I'm doing there? I'm finding the thing we can all agree on. Let's start from a position that everyone can go for common ground. We all agree that no one could possibly support that position, can't we?
And somehow that turns into "You're lying"
Better than that, it turns into "You're lying because no one would ever do that."
Oh, well. It's what I get for trying to argue fine points of law on a hot button issue.
Vote.
The point is that third term abortions in extremis are a red herring. Invoked to avoid discussing the real controversy: abortions of convenience.
You just demonstrated the point in practice. Forget about the third trimester for a moment. Should Meadmaker's scenario be legal?
You can call it an illustration. I call it amplifying the lie.
I'm not calling you a liar. I'm pointing out that the more we repeat falsehoods, the more they are cemented in peoples' heads. For example why did you use that illustration instead of something like saying a healthy baby near term? Anything would be better other than repeating the propaganda message that has become fact for some people.