- Joined
- Mar 27, 2019
Ah, you know-- I always forget to verify someone's "had sex" status before we talk viewpoints.Fucking virgin.
What a fucking joke.
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Ah, you know-- I always forget to verify someone's "had sex" status before we talk viewpoints.Fucking virgin.
He's a confirmed incel who hates women because they won't fuck him, so yeah.Fucking virgin.
Taxation isn't a violation of bodily autonomy. The government creates the money you earn and use, and by law, they are entitled to a percentage of it in return. By concealing this from the government, you are committing a form of fraud against the government, and fraud is a crime.Ah, I'll just go ahead and not pay my taxes because I don't want to.
What was that? I have to go to prison for tax evasion?
Except the concept doesn't only apply to women and abortion; it's a fairly consistent legal standard. Laws which prevent abortion or allow conscription are very much the exception to the rule; hence my argument for why they should be struck down.You were making a point about legality. It's legal for the state to conscript. I can hardly do anything about that, as a private citizen. This is a violation of my bodily autonomy as the state supposedly understands, but that's only because the concept only applies to women trying to kill their kids-- except not even consistently so.
What is "blind" about the comparison? Both scenarios involve a conflict between the right to bodily integrity and the right to life, and my point is that you can't have it both ways. You either have to argue in favor of setting a new precedent (and thus, accept the consequences of applying it beyond the issue of abortion and pregnancy), or you have to find a way to argue that a fetus' right to life is somehow more legally compelling than that of anyone else (such that the usual precedent does not apply). I have not seen you convincingly make either argument, and I'm fairly confident that you can't.Let's put aside that there's no explanation as to why the standards for sex have to apply to pregnancy as blindly as you apply them-- aside from the aforementioned, states can still make restrictions on late term abortions.
Yeah it's a topic of political discourse (shitflinging). Everyone who posts in this thread probably has an agenda.I'm starting to think you have an agenda.
This is the kicker for me. The morality of abortion has more to do with bodily autonomy/right to life arguments than anything else and putting all specifics of pregnancy and abortion aside, no one should have a legal obligation to be bodily life support for another person. Not that I couldn't see points to the other side. One could argue our wishy washy laws surrounding "right to life" is keeping the USA from free universal healthcare, for example.you have to find a way to argue that a fetus' right to life is somehow more legally compelling than that of anyone else
The actions taken in retaliation to acts such as tax evasion fundamentally are. But, please-- don't get hung up on (the consequences of evading) taxation, since it's but one of many examples where the government violates "bodily autonomy" that we accept as natural or otherwise deserved, such as drug possession/use.Taxation isn't a violation of bodily autonomy.
What does this have to do with bodily autonomy or its violation? Fraud is bad but doesn't infringe on bodily autonomy. If the implied argument is "violation of the law is forfeiture of bodily autonomy, regardless of the nature of the violation", then you've only supported an argument adjacent to mine: "bodily autonomy is violable, and we selectively permit it to be".The government creates the money you earn and use, and by law, they are entitled to a percentage of it in return. By concealing this from the government, you are committing a form of fraud against the government, and fraud is a crime.
Except the concept doesn't only apply to women and abortion; it's a fairly consistent legal standard.
You start by appealing to legality ("the courts and laws are in support of bodily autonomy as they say that you don't owe others your body"), I point out (after pointing out that Judith Butler is a pseudointellectual hack) that this is hardly respected outside justifying women killing their kids (and go further to point out that the very legal sources you use as support also allow states to still place restrictions on the practice in favor of a "balance" between this concept and protecting prenatal life), you say that's morally wrong and needs to be rectified.Laws which prevent abortion or allow conscription are very much the exception to the rule
Sex itself most certainly does not involve the concept of "right to life".What is "blind" about the comparison? Both scenarios involve a conflict between the right to bodily integrity and the right to life
How many more times are we going to regurgitate Butler, even after having it called out, even after having it explained that the analogy is nonsense because you're not in any way responsible for such a man because you weren't ever responsible for such a man, much less by way of conceiving him?Here's how it was explained to me. If I was hooked up to some guy who needed a blood transfusion
So, what if that man was my son that I had a hand in conceiving? I don't have any obligation to donate blood to my kids either, the fuck does being responsible for their conception have to do with that and why does it negate bodily autonomy?How many more times are we going to regurgitate Butler, even after having it called out, even after having it explained that the analogy is nonsense because you're not in any way responsible for such a man because you weren't ever responsible for such a man, much less by way of conceiving him?
Better yet: what if your son was literally inside you because you did the one thing capable of conceiving him and causing him to be there, and the only way to "get him out" would be to actively kill him through euthanization and ejection rather than letting him expire because you were too stingy to do something as simple as donating blood to your own flesh and blood?So, what if that man was my son that I had a hand in conceiving?
Whether or not someone takes on the duties of gestating and subsequently raising a human being, in my opinion, is entirely up to the parents (mother pre-birth and both parents afterwards). How much a potential parent should or will care about their potential kid is something no one can realistically or reliably measure. You obviously know more about the legalities of this than I do, so I'm not trying to argue with you on that, but I do want to understand what your solution to this issue would be.Better yet: what if your son was literally inside you because you did the one thing capable of conceiving him and causing him to be there, and the only way to "get him out" would be to actively kill him through euthanization and ejection rather than letting him expire because you were too stingy to do something as simple as donating blood to your own flesh and blood?
Are there any duties you take on for your children's sake by virtue of being their parent?
How is "ejection" of a fetus any more* active of a kill than removing an IV from my arm? Both are a medical choice, post conception, to no longer support the life of one's kid with one's own body. Your standards are emotionally influenced by the innocent life of a child and dirty sluts who commit what feels like murder to you, but if removing my body as life support for an external person is okay, internal ones can get yeeted, too. There is no difference.Better yet: what if your son was literally inside you because you did the one thing capable of conceiving him and causing him to be there, and the only way to "get him out" would be to actively kill him through euthanization and ejection rather than letting him expire because you were too stingy to do something as simple as donating blood to your own flesh and blood?
Are there any duties you take on for your children's sake by virtue of being their parent?
I'm unclear about the issue you're posing.Whether or not someone takes on the duties of gestating and subsequently raising a human being, in my opinion, is entirely up to the parents (mother pre-birth and both parents afterwards). How much a potential parent should or will care about their potential kid is something no one can realistically or reliably measure. You obviously know more about the legalities of this than I do, so I'm not trying to argue with you on that, but I do want to understand what your solution to this issue would be.
Again, there's a difference between killing someone and allowing them to expire for want of a resource you were unwilling to give.How is "ejection" of a fetus any more* active of a kill than removing an IV from my arm? Both are a medical choice, post conception, to no longer support the life of one's kid with one's own body.
That's not okay, either, if it's your child. You're still a failure of a person for that, but for different reasons, because they're not the same thing no matter how much you try to force an equivalence. Butler's analogy is just inherently bullshit because the person you're spontaneously hooked up to (a fucking improbable situation, for the record, unsuitable for her purposes and multifariously impossible for humans) is a person you don't know from Adam, and owe nothing to.Your standards are emotionally influenced by the innocent life of a child and dirty sluts who commit what feels like murder to you, but if removing my body as life support for an external person is okay,
Hmm, nope, still not seeing the difference.merely deciding that you don't want to continue to provide it resources doesn't do anything because you can't stop that from happening unless you remove thefetusIV from yourbodyarm or kill yourself. You have to take an action.
It's interesting that you hinge your moral argument on how well acquainted you are with the person, wouldn't it make more sense to argue that everybody has a right to live, and we should all be obligated to do everything we can to keep us all in good health? Myself, I couldn't pick a fetus with my DNA out of a lineup. "Knowing" them is a bad qualifier for your moral guidelines, and you should feel bad.That's not okay, either, if it's your child. You're still a failure of a person for that, but for different reasons, because they're not the same thing no matter how much you try to force an equivalence. Butler's analogy is just inherently bullshit because the person you're spontaneously hooked up to (a fucking improbable situation, for the record, unsuitable for her purposes and multifariously impossible for humans) is a person you don't know from Adam, and owe nothing to.
Hmm, nope, still not seeing the difference.
You have a particularly poor grasp of my argument and everything it hinges upon-- which is to be expected from someone who keeps trying to brute force a false equivalency of what's clearly a difference of activity and passivity.It's interesting that you hinge your moral argument on how well acquainted you are with the person,
You might like for that to be the case, but no. There are several layers of choices and incidents beyond your choosing that can happen to cause a pregnancy. I even mentioned one for you in my last post, which you conveniently skated over. Consent to sex is not consent to pregnancy in the same way that consent to putting an IV in my arm and giving blood is not consent to continued blood giving until the alien refugee breaches the wall. This has been true as long as humans have been around to fuck and flush the leftovers.Such a detail analogizes nothing, because through the act of our one reproductive method, you are choosing to become pregnant should a pregnancy occur.
Getting autistically laser-focused on the dictionary definition of one word has me concerned about your reading comprehension as well. Don't worry, we can misunderstand each other together."Being a direct cause of someone's being" isn't a matter of "acquaintance". "Being naturally and legally responsible for their well-being on account of parentage" isn't a matter of "acquaintance".
Like rape? You are alluding to rape, right? I have no idea what you're referring to since you didn't seem to mention any such thing.There are several layers of choices and incidents beyond your choosing that can happen to cause a pregnancy.
You're comparing two different scenarios with two different collections of dynamic frameworks. Sex leads to pregnancy. Sex is performed, primarily, to reproduce. Sex is the unilateral and direct cause of pregnancy. If you think that consent to sex isn't consent to pregnancy (let's put aside the matter of birth control employed), you likely have a poor grasp of responsibility.Consent to sex is not consent to pregnancy in the same way that consent to putting an IV in my arm and giving blood is not consent to continued blood giving until the alien refugee breaches the wall.
Reproduction. The purpose of sex is to reproduce. It is the only way that any sexually dimorphic species propagates and persists. When you have the urge to have sex, you have the urge to reproduce. Everything else (the pairbonding, the pleasure) is secondary.What do you think the driving force for sex is?
Homosexuality is very much rare, so there's no value in using it as a support for your argument. Sexual orientation is a social construct a few centuries old at best-- prior to, homosexual behavior was only recognized for itself. At "best", it was recognized as part of an "effeminate" mindset, but nobody would think the homosexual was biologically incapable of having sex with a woman. This is also why conversion camps are themselves a recent innovation.And before you say it's the hindbrain seeking to spread its seed, gays cross that point off the list for you.
That's not the problem here. You're not stretching the definition of a word-- you have failed to understand the concept of parenthood, because you haven't even considered the concept of parenthood. It's the only reason why one would only consider it in the same spectrum as acquaintanceship, as though you could choose who birthed or sired you the same way you choose people with whom you associate.Getting autistically laser-focused on the dictionary definition of one word
If the mother's hunting for child support, you'll likely learn soon enough.If I donate my sperm to a bank, how do I know the resulting kids from Adam?
The reason that adoption exists as a process is in fact because other people, regardless of whether they are evidently better parents than the actual ones, do not have a natural and automatic right to children who are not their flesh and blood. Legally, it is a process by which these parental rights are transferred (willingly or otherwise) or conferred (in the case there are no living parents to transfer such rights).And speaking of legal responsibilities, do you think adoption should be illegal if the natural parents are fit to raise their kid but don't want to for whatever reason?
You should be asking yourself this question, because you're the one who seems to think that laws against tax evasion somehow violate bodily autonomy. I have made no such claim, and in fact completely reject it. When people speak of bodily autonomy (or more specifically: bodily integrity), we're talking about a person's right to not have their physical person violated against their will.What does this have to do with bodily autonomy or its violation? Fraud is bad but doesn't infringe on bodily autonomy. If the implied argument is "violation of the law is forfeiture of bodily autonomy, regardless of the nature of the violation", then you've only supported an argument adjacent to mine: "bodily autonomy is violable, and we selectively permit it to be".
Morality undoubtedly informs my perspective, but principally, I view this as a debate which centers on legal philosophy. My point was never to defend the law as it is, but to argue for what I believe the law ought to be, using the various precedents which have been set as a guide.You start by appealing to legality ("the courts and laws are in support of bodily autonomy as they say that you don't owe others your body"), I point out (after pointing out that Judith Butler is a pseudointellectual hack) that this is hardly respected outside justifying women killing their kids (and go further to point out that the very legal sources you use as support also allow states to still place restrictions on the practice in favor of a "balance" between this concept and protecting prenatal life), you say that's morally wrong and needs to be rectified.
Put aside that conscription is older than Roe, and the general concept is much older-- what does this have to do with your legal appeal? What even is the point of a legal appeal, if you're still arguing that the laws need to be changed? They don't need to be changed for legal reasons-- they're not in contradiction of some other law, but rather some alleged principle. We're still regressing to an argument of morality.
You've literally made the argument that Muh Vagina has been making since the conception of this thread writ large, except that you're explicitly illustrating the flaws that said argument had.
Sex itself doesn't, but the specific example I gave clearly does.Sex itself most certainly does not involve the concept of "right to life".
You are capable of scrolling up and reading what I actually said instead of fighting strawmen, I believe in you.Like rape? You are alluding to rape, right? IIRC, abortions due to those account for... ~1% of abortions, according to Guttmacher.
But if gay people can have sex without it being about making babies and there's nothing in the natures or nutures that make them clearly different from straight people, why is it so impossible for you to think that a decent chunk if not the majority of the population also has sex purely for fun?Homosexuality is very much rare, so there's no value in using it as a support for your argument.
Source(s): lmao just trust me bro.Sex is performed, primarily, to reproduce.
Why would we put aside birth control when talking about consent to sex and pregnancy when it's gone hand in hand for centuries in all types of societies? Birth control has been in active use since at least the 1500s, because people don't always want to get pregnant when they fuck. This is a normal, healthy outlook on sex. Thinking of sex as only a vehicle to children is narrowminded and more importantly, unrealistic.If you think that consent to sex isn't consent to pregnancy (let's put aside the matter of birth control employed), you likely have a poor grasp of responsibility.
I don't think tax evaders want to go to jail, and they only comply because the government is effectively/literally pointing guns at them.You should be asking yourself this question, because you're the one who seems to think that laws against tax evasion somehow violate bodily autonomy. I have made no such claim, and in fact completely reject it. When people speak of bodily autonomy (or more specifically: bodily integrity), we're talking about a person's right to not have their physical person violated against their will.
That may have been your intent, but that's not what's actually happening. You appealed to the law as it was to make your case. When provided with cases where the principle that you defended with legal precedent did not apply despite a clear contradiction, you marginalized them as outliers and gave a moral statement. Rather than arguing "legal philosophy", you've been vacillating between arguing from legality and from morality.My point was never to defend the law as it is, but to argue for what I believe the law ought to be
You never asked, and it's unnecessary to make my original point ("'bodily autonomy' is a principle that's only legally applied when women want to kill their kids, and it's not even consistently applied there").I find it interesting how you don't seem to want to elucidate what informs your legal perspective, much less cite examples which would clearly support your case.
If it's the one about sex, then no, it doesn't.Sex itself doesn't, but the specific example I gave clearly does.
Actually, that's a steel man. If it wasn't anything I mentioned up there, I would have straight up said "sucks to be a dumbass".You are capable of scrolling up and reading what I actually said instead of fighting strawmen,
What does "what people do" with a tool have to do with the evident purpose of said tool?But if gay people can have sex without it being about making babies and there's nothing in the natures or nutures that make them clearly different from straight people, why is it so impossible for you to think that a decent chunk if not the majority of the population also has sex purely for fun?
Go outside, read a biology textbook, study history, etc.Source(s): lmao just trust me bro.
Because the only thing to be said to "birth control can fail" in this discussion is "that sucks".Why would we put aside birth control when talking about consent to sex and pregnancy when it's gone hand in hand for centuries in all types of societies?
What's not healthy is deliberately trying to render yourself barren with drugs and vacuuming out any kids you do end up conceiving, which people back then weren't wont to do.This is a normal, healthy outlook on sex.
I didn't bother answering this question because I found it fairly pointless. For me, my concern has always been with culture rather than law, since law is a product of politics, which is a product of culture. It wouldn't matter if you were legally allowed to kill your kid five seconds before birth if nobody thought that that was moral, and it would only be a matter of time before such law was stricken as a matter of ceremony. In contrast, just changing the law doesn't change the hearts of the people-- not enough, anyways, and not by default. Laws established against the will of the people are usually liable to be stricken whenever the opposition takes back power.If you could, what would you change about the law to more closely align it with your point of view that all sex is consent to pregnancy and child rearing? (Even gay sex?) Would it be best if no one ever fucked unless it was specifically to make a baby? Porn bans, intercourse permits? Just spitballing here.
Loooool. Sorry, I was trying to genuinely get into this with you but I can't take it seriously anymore after this one. Tools are defined by how we use them. If the vast majority of us use sex more often for pleasure than children, that is its evident purpose. You might not feel the same way as everyone else, that's cool, but you should stand by that instead of trying to rewrite history. You come off like an asexual tard and nobody relates to that. You can't change the hearts of people you fundamentally don't get. Unlucky.What does "what people do" with a tool have to do with the evident purpose of said tool?