The Abortion Debate Containment Thread - Put abortion sperging here.

Not taking a side on this debate. But abortion laws are ticky and hard to equally enforce. For one thing, the upper middle class and above will have access to on-demand abortion. Despite what people think stable, married couples do get abortions. All abortion laws will do is make poor people poorer.
 
Not taking a side on this debate. But abortion laws are ticky and hard to equally enforce. For one thing, the upper middle class and above will have access to on-demand abortion. Despite what people think stable, married couples do get abortions. All abortion laws will do is make poor people poorer.
This is a good point that nobody on the pro-life side will consider because they're arguing this from a moralist and utopian perspective. Meanwhile, the pro-choice people will say the argument begins and ends with the woman's right to have an abortion if she deems fit. My pragmatic opinion is that making abortion illegal is more trouble than it's worth.
 
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Not taking a side on this debate. But abortion laws are ticky and hard to equally enforce. For one thing, the upper middle class and above will have access to on-demand abortion. Despite what people think stable, married couples do get abortions. All abortion laws will do is make poor people poorer.
I've never really got how ”legalise a thing because a thing will always happen” is a good argument. It strikes me as saying ”let's legalise theft, because muggers and burglars will always exist”.
 
I've never really got how ”legalise a thing because a thing will always happen” is a good argument. It strikes me as saying ”let's legalise theft, because muggers and burglars will always exist”.
You might have a point here, if objects could be spontaneously stolen by nobody in particular in the same way that pregnancies will spontaneously miscarry. For me, though, I'm not particularly bothered by a woman chemically inducing a miscarriage(which is what a lot of abortions actually are) that has a decent chance of happening anyway.
 
You might have a point here, if objects could be spontaneously stolen by nobody in particular in the same way that pregnancies will spontaneously miscarry. For me, though, I'm not particularly bothered by a woman chemically inducing a miscarriage(which is what a lot of abortions actually are) that has a decent chance of happening anyway.
Abortions also sometimes happen because the fetus died but isn't naturally being aborted (or the woman doesn't want to wait around for her body to naturally expell rotting dead fetus and uterus goo). It's still considered an abortion even if the fetus is already dead, and its performed the exact same way. That's why women have died from sepsis and shit in countries with extreme abortion bans that dont allow it even if the mothers life is in danger.
 
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Oh boy a controversial political thread with all my friendly neighborhood shit flingers, let me just slide right in here. Although I'm probably going to take a different stance than anyone familiar with my post history would suspect.

Life begins at conception.

The fact you want to deny that doesn't mean it stops being true.
But it's alive, and you ruined its life by killing it.
I don't get this shit, it's an incredible simplification of what is actually happening. I mean even conception itself is not a black and white event. Does conception occur the moment the sperm touches the egg? Once the sperm has drilled in? Once the egg embeds itself? Point I'm making is that there is no light switch moment when any of this happens, let alone when you can call it a life. The start of life is a process, not a line in the sand. There's a definite point where something is a life (capable of surviving outside the womb) and one where it isn't (sperm and egg), anyone who claims there is a specific point in between those points where you can call it a life is full of shit. It's just one long transition process.

And what is the significance of a embryo "being a life"? Life is not inherently sacred to anyone, not even all human life is. It always just feels like an attempt to pull the heartstrings, because no one gives them same value as brain dead humans. The embryo has no personality, no thoughts, no desires, no emotions, nothing. It's a human in the loosest possible sense in that it has human dna, just like my dead skin. It might one day become a full fledged person, but it's not at that point. In no other circumstances do we consider the value of a potential thing as though it were already that. Coal is just coal until it's a diamond.

All of this being said, I hate how flippant we are about abortion. I wish it were limited to early term embryos/very underdeveloped fetuses and treated like a very serious and unfortunate thing. People who brag and use it as a first layer of BC disgust me.
 
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Imagine wanting a child rape and incest victim to suffer because of your religious fee fees.
Suffering is a "fee fee." Morality is not.
The start of life is a process, not a line in the sand.
It is logically necessary for there to be a line in the sand. There is one instant where the human doesn't exist, and another where it does. We can quibble over where that instant is, but it has to exist somewhere.
Life is not inherently sacred to anyone, not even all human life is.
All humans have been endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights. Among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
 
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I don't get this shit, it's an incredible simplification of what is actually happening. I mean even conception itself is not a black and white event. Does conception occur the moment the sperm touches the egg? Once the sperm has drilled in? Once the egg embeds itself?
At the moment of fertilization.

There's a definite point where something is a life (capable of surviving outside the womb) and one where it isn't (sperm and egg)
Is a fetus in its seventh month not a life just because it can't survive outside the womb in all likelihood? What about newborns that die minutes after birth? Were they not lives, despite the fact that they didn't survive outside the womb?

Life is not inherently sacred to anyone, not even all human life is.
Sure it is-- it's why we punish for murder, and why we have to dehumanize in order to justify murder. Human life is certainly special-- if you kill someone, you can't un-kill them, and that person will never exist alive ever again.

The embryo has no personality, no thoughts, no desires, no emotions
And you have none of those things when you're in a coma. That doesn't make you any less living or human, but what would accomplish that is someone stabbing you to death while you're in said coma.

It's a human in the loosest possible sense in that it has human dna, just like my dead skin.
Your dead skin would never become a human being. Also, it's not alive.

It might one day become a full fledged person,
Unlike your dead skin.

In no other circumstances do we consider the value of a potential thing as though it were already that. Coal is just coal until it's a diamond.
Yeah, but not only is a diamond produced from coal under specific, exacting conditions, coal isn't a human being-- it isn't even alive, so the comparison is poor.

All of this being said, I hate how flippant we are about abortion. I wish it were limited to early term embryos/very underdeveloped fetuses and treated like a very serious and unfortunate thing.
Why? Because you're squeamish about it? You can't make this expansive conversation about how fetuses are hardly human because they haven't qualities they're well on their way to developing/qualities that can be robbed from an individual, and even human life doesn't have inherent sacredness and then say that we should limit abortion to early term subjects. The gravity of abortion, regardless of whether you have a traditional pro-life or pro-choice perspective otherwise, is originally derived from the understanding that the fetus is a human being.

Imagine wanting a child rape and incest victim to suffer because of your religious fee fees.
Imagine continuing to use this bullshit rhetorical sleight of hand after being exposed.
 
The embryo has no personality, no thoughts, no desires, no emotions, nothing.
None of this has the slightest relevance or makes the slightest difference so I don't see why you guys keep saying it like it's supposed to mean anything to us. They aren't called personality rights, or thought rights, or desire rights, or emotion rights. An absence of one or even all of these things has no bearing on your rights.

It is extremely simple:
If: Human
Then: Inalienable rights


Yeah, but not only is a diamond produced from coal under specific, exacting conditions, coal isn't a human being-- it isn't even alive, so the comparison is poor.
An already conceived child doesn't have a "potential" life ahead of it. It's not a possibility, it's an inevitability. It already has its future laid out before it. That future is what will happen to it if no one intercedes to change its future. This is commonly referred to as "the natural course of events," and it is something atheists have a great deal of trouble with. Atheist worldview views the present as the only real moment. Christians tend to view all of time as existent, just not in the same way.

A seed in your pocket isn't an apple tree, but a properly planted seed that has germinated is. Its natural future is laid out before it. From an eternal perspective, all forms of the tree are itself, at all points in time. The future is as real as the present or the past, which is why stealing someone's future (murder) is wrong. That's what makes murder wrong. Not the "suffering" it might cause you (murder can be done without you even knowing you're murdered, watch the end of the Sopranos.) And not the impact on your loved ones. All of that is just feelings. What makes murder wrong is the same thing that makes all violations of rights wrong: You are stealing or damaging something that belongs to someone else. You are violating their right to their future, their right to their life.
All of this being said, I hate how flippant we are about abortion. I wish it were limited to early term embryos/very underdeveloped fetuses and treated like a very serious and unfortunate thing. People who brag and use it as a first layer of BC disgust me.
This is the least coherent position on abortion possible. You can think it's not wrong at all, or you can think it's wrong. "It's wrong, but we should so it anyway" is straight up evil.
 
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It is logically necessary for there to be a line in the sand. There is one instant where the human doesn't exist, and another where it does. We can quibble over where that instant is, but it has to exist somewhere.
Not it isn't. It's legally convenient but there does not need to be a line in the sand, and frankly reductive thinking like this is poisonous to proper dialogue. It is a gray transition, period.
All humans have been endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights. Among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
Autism.
None of this has the slightest relevance or makes the slightest difference so I don't see why you guys keep saying it like it's supposed to mean anything to us. They aren't called personality rights, or thought rights, or desire rights, or emotion rights. An absence one or even all of these things has no bearing on your rights.

It is extremely simple:
If: Human
Then: Inalienable rights
The entire point of this debate is define what constitutes a human and when human-hood begins. You're just begging the question. Those qualities I listed are considered by some to be cornerstones of humanity, and their absence would be evidence of lack humanity/personhood. That's why I listed them, I'm making the case for the other side. Simply repeating "it is a human" isn't an argument.
 
Not it isn't.
It's logically necessary. If something's existence is temporal and we know there is a state where it did not exist and a state where it exists, there must necessarily be some point in time where it changed from state A to state B. Even if that change is a slow process, there must be some point in the process where it is A, and at the next infinitesimal moment in time, it is B. This is not debatable. It's just how reality works. A thing can't exist and not exist, it's a binary. At all points in time either you existed or you didn't, and there are exactly two specific instants in time where that state changes.
>referring to the most legitimate moral philosophy in human history as autism
Either argue seriously or troll. If you mix them both all you're doing is setting up a motte and bailey you can retreat to whenever you don't have a counterargument.
are considered by some
Does that "some" include anyone you're talking to?
That's why I listed them, I'm making the case for the other side.
You should be less concerned with who you're making your case for and more concerned with who you're making it to. Just saying "BUT OTHER PEOPLE SEE IT DIFFERENT" isn't the slam dunk compelling argument you guys think it is.
Convince us to see it that way.
 
At the moment of fertilization.
There's no such thing, that is the point I was trying to make. There is no line in the sand here.
Is a fetus in its seventh month not a life just because it can't survive outside the womb in all likelihood? What about newborns that die minutes after birth? Were they not lives, despite the fact that they didn't survive outside the womb?
I believe 7 months can survive, at least with a bit of assistance. And a baby the dies shortly after being born could theoretically survive but was sick, an infant at that stage is not intrinsically dependent to survive. But this is all semantics anyway, the point I was making is that there are certain points in development where there is no debate about it being a life. I think everyone can agree a newborn is a life, maybe except for some exceptionally demented individuals.
Sure it is-- it's why we punish for murder, and why we have to dehumanize in order to justify murder. Human life is certainly special-- if you kill someone, you can't un-kill them, and that person will never exist alive ever again.
MOST human life is considered special. No one would cry if a school shooter gets strangled to death. People care less if not at all if a human that's already brain dead dies. What I'm getting at is that there is more than just simply being human to be valued, some level of moral/cognitive capability is what makes us special. A human that lacks those is not special like the rest of us.
And you have none of those things when you're in a coma. That doesn't make you any less living or human, but what would accomplish that is someone stabbing you to death while you're in said coma.
This is a interesting point, and is precisely why I keep hammering that this discussion is more gray than people are acknowledging. I'd counter by saying that when you are in a coma, you have the hardware for those mental faculties, they're just in sleep mode.
Your dead skin would never become a human being. Also, it's not alive.
I'm don't normally like bringing up definitions, but I'm going to to illustrate a point. Most definitions of life have a clause about being self sustaining. It's why viruses aren't considered life. I'm not arguing that these definitions make me right, cause most appealing to definitions is gay. But what I am saying is that by some standards the fetus and the dead skin are effectively the same, neither are alive. A fetus technically being alive or not really does not matter to me, I kill a lot of life every day. I only care if it is a person.
Yeah, but not only is a diamond produced from coal under specific, exacting conditions, coal isn't a human being-- it isn't even alive, so the comparison is poor.
I think the comparison is appropriate for I'm trying to convey. A fetus being a full blow human one day is a weird argument to me. I don't act upon other things as though they are what they will become.
Coal has no value, even though it will eventually.
Raw chicken is inedible, even if I'm going to cook it later.
A fetus is not a person, even if it is going to be.
I just don't comprehend why you value this reasoning, it seems irrational to me.
Why? Because you're squeamish about it? You can't make this expansive conversation about how fetuses are hardly human because they haven't qualities they're well on their way to developing/qualities that can be robbed from an individual, and even human life doesn't have inherent sacredness and then say that we should limit abortion to early term subjects. The gravity of abortion, regardless of whether you have a traditional pro-life or pro-choice perspective otherwise, is originally derived from the understanding that the fetus is a human being.
I'm not squeamish about it, or really much of anything. I hate when people do that because it's degenerate, it conveys they are irresponsible and don't take life changing choices seriously. It is a serious decision that alters the course of your life, that is the gravity of the choice.

Really my main concern is just the "it will be a human someday" line of reasoning. It's the main sticking point for me. It holds no weight in my eyes and I don't get why you and others think it is signficant.
 
It's logically necessary. If something's existence is temporal and we know there is a state where it did not exist and a state where it exists, there must necessarily be some point in time where it changed from state A to state B. Even if that change is a slow process, there must be some point in the process where it is A, and at the next infinitesimal moment in time, it is B. This is not debatable. It's just how reality works. A thing can't exist and not exist, it's a binary. At all points in time either you existed or you didn't, and there are exactly two specific instants in time where that state changes.
This is literally just gibberish and based on nothing.
>referring to the most legitimate moral philosophy in human history as autism
Either argue seriously or troll. If you mix them both all you're doing is setting up a motte and bailey you can retreat to whenever you don't have a counterargument.
You referenced both the declaration of independence and god in what is essentially a question of what makes a human. It was unprompted, unrelated, and pretty fucking autistic. I'm not motte and baily'ing you, I just have nothing to so to a random line pulled out of your ass.
Does that "some" include anyone you're talking to?
You should be less concerned with who you're making your case for and more concerned with who you're making it to. Just saying "BUT OTHER PEOPLE SEE IT DIFFERENT" isn't the slam dunk compelling argument you guys think it is.
Convince us to see it that way.
I don't know how to convey my point any simpler.
>you human life no kill
>i give examples of other standards of human life
>you say not matter, it human life
>i say you're begging the question
>you say BUT OTHER PEOPLE

And for the record, in a discussion that revolves around defining something, other people's perspective are quintessential.
>inb4 not matter it still human
 
There's no such thing, that is the point I was trying to make. There is no line in the sand here.
That's impossible.
the point I was making is that there are certain points in development where there is no debate about it being a life.
Any rational person has to recognize that the point when a thing begins is when it begins, not when it reaches some stage of development.
No one would cry if a school shooter gets strangled to death.
If that happens while he's killing people, it's self defense and not murder. If it's afterward, and without due process of law to charge him for his school shooting, it's murder. That would be wrong.

What I'm getting at is that there is more than just simply being human to be valued
Yes, we understand what you're getting at. It's just that what you're getting at is false.
some level of moral/cognitive capability is what makes us special.
This is an extremely outlandish position and yet you present it like it's just a given that everyone on earth would obviously agree with. No, some level of cognitive or moral capacity is not what makes us special. Being human is. Dumb people are human. Sleeping people are human. Fetuses are human. You don't acquire rights through intelligence or morality. They are endowed upon humans by our creator.
This is a interesting point, and is precisely why I keep hammering that this discussion is more gray than people are acknowledging. I'd counter by saying that when you are in a coma, you have the hardware for those mental faculties, they're just in sleep mode.
A corpse has the same hardware. It's obviously not the "hardware." Also, that language reveals a very materialistic view of human beings as simply robots.
But what I am saying is that by some standards the fetus and the dead skin are effectively the same, neither are alive.
This is not an argument. "Standards exist where you are wrong," is not an argument. Through critical theory a standard can be constructed to make anything wrong in its context. What are those standards, and are those the right standards to use? A vague appeal to "But people somewhere might disagree!" is extremely retarded, please stop trying it.
A fetus being a full blow human one day is a weird argument to me.
"full blown human" is a subset of human. It is an attached adjective, "full blown." If we remove that adjective, and make the fetus not, "full blown," what are we left with?
Human.
We aren't saying it's a "full blown human." What are we saying it is?
Human.
You referenced both the declaration of independence and god in what is essentially a question of what makes a human.
Those are essential tools for answering that question, particularly with respect to American law.
It was unprompted, unrelated, and pretty fucking autistic.
If we are talking about human rights, which we are, it is extremely related.
other people's perspective are quintessential.
Other people's perspectives are essential so that we can examine them to see if they are better perspectives than ours. Ultimately we have to come to a final perspective when we make a decision. Simply saying "some people somewhere disagree, so how can you think that?" is not an argument.
 
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I've never really got how ”legalise a thing because a thing will always happen” is a good argument. It strikes me as saying ”let's legalise theft, because muggers and burglars will always exist”.

While abortion could be consider horrible. It isn't comparable to stealing. For one thing, pregnancy and child rearing is very labor intensive that is best left up to the parent's discretion. See my answer below for more insight.

This is a good point that nobody on the pro-life side will consider because they're arguing this from a moralist and utopian perspective. Meanwhile, the pro-choice people will say the argument begins and ends with the woman's right to have an abortion if she deems fit. My pragmatic opinion is that making abortion illegal is more trouble than it's worth.

I'm a pro-choice, but I don't care either way. Pro-lifers bug me when they act like babies are a gift or that promiscuous, unmarried women are the ones that having abortions. I would be more pro-life if we didn't live in brutal economic system with a very competitive job market. Children take resources and tons of parental investment if you want them to succeed in this day and age. Yes, I know that I'm being Utilitarian about children and children education. But the upper classes have always had that view of children. That's why they keep winning. I look at this way. If I was poor and married, I would be on birth control. Not to equate abortion to birth control, but reproduction is a serious matter.
Personally, I feel that with the widening wealth and wage gap, it's better to plan for children.
 
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