Poll: Abortion- What's your position and why?

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ValentineMocker

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The only way it could be wrong is if the fetus is alive.

So when does life start? Nobody knows and probably nobody will ever know. BUT, we aren't entirely sure when someone dies either. We usually say that a person stops living when the heart stops beating...so I say a person STARTS living when the heart STARTS beating.
A beating heart is a poor criteria. Plenty of animals have a beating heart, and we still kill them. Why? Is it because they're not human? What makes humans more valuable than an animal? I'd say it's our brain, thus, brain activity (6 weeks of age) would be a much better definition of the beginning of life.
 

Ironic

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The Dr0w Ranger said:
Now for the idea about the death penalty.
If you are an adult and you have decided that you wanted to do terrible things, you chose to put yourself counter to the law, you risked the penalty, I have no compassion for you.
How many fetuses have killed people, or blown up a building?

Hardly a fair comparison...
There is always the possibility of a miscarriage of justice, and so I can never support the death penalty. As far as the foetus question goes, Hitler was a foetus once, as was Mother Theresa. You cannot possibly predict the actions of a foetus for good or bad, so it is best to leave the foetus as neutral, in a moral standpoint, and not let it's probable personality cloud the decision.

What should affect the decision is:
Probable quality of life,
Probable risk of mother dying before giving birth to the baby,
Probable risk of mother dying full stop.

I think the law in Britain is that if it comes down to a mother's or a baby's life in the 11th hour, then the mother prioritised, but im not sure.

Also, as an interesting addition to you Christian standpoint (I am agnostic), I would just like to throw in this little wild-card in relation to you foetus' killing people.

Did Baby Jesus not indirectly cause the killing of hundreds of infants throughout the city, because of King Herod?

;P
 

Chip7

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Jul 24, 2009
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I voted other.

I don't care about a woman's right to choose or not. I'm just sick of seeing people.
 

amazosaur

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Jul 12, 2009
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Seanchaidh said:
amazosaur said:
Holy Christ. Who are you, Thomas Malthus?

Anyway, personal choice is all well and good (I'm a libertarian and therefore very pro individual freedom) but a fetus is not the woman's body. As soon as that zygote is formed and the cells start to divide, that's a completely different entity. And saying that we get to decide whether or not it lives or dies is an extremely arrogant view.
If you were raped or something, then I'm sorry but we don't get to decide who lives or dies for our convenience
You're being too doctrinaire and definitional. Take a look at what it is independent of the mere labels you can apply to it. If you didn't know what sort of DNA it had, would you think twice about the morality of killing it? No, not unless you also had problems with killing flies or mosquitoes. It is not the sort of thing which needs legal protection and it is not arrogant to presume that the personal autonomy of any living woman trumps whatever interests we suppose the zygote would have. It is not yet to the stage where we should care about it or think of it as a person.
I don't have any moral issues with killing flies or mosquitoes because they would never be anything other than flies or mosquitoes. Anyway, why shouldn't we consider them people? What is the real difference between a fetus within a woman and a baby that was just born? Why does one have any more rights than the other?
 

Lullabye

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its kinda like hunting. we kill animals and dont feel bad cause they are stupid, or cause we consider humans to be superior. we kill babies on the same pretense. they are fully aware, or they are not fully developed(inferior). it is what it is, whether its evil is up to you.
 

ValentineMocker

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amazosaur said:
I don't have any moral issues with killing flies or mosquitoes because they would never be anything other than flies or mosquitoes. Anyway, why shouldn't we consider them people? What is the real difference between a fetus within a woman and a baby that was just born? Why does one have any more rights than the other?
Because the stage of brain development matters. As I've said often: at 6 weeks of age, brain activity has just begun. Brain development occurs until you're about 25. The fetus is less developed than the newborn baby. As such, I might be okay with disallowing 2nd or 3rd trimester abortion.
 

BonsaiK

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Nov 14, 2007
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Here's some info to mix things up a little.

Did you know that there's a proven link between abortion and the crime rate? 20 years after the laws legalising abortion were made, there was a sharp drop in crime. This applies to every single country where abortion was made legal. It was first noticed in the US where crime statistics for all types of violent and petty crime plummetted in the mid 1990s.

The reason for it is simple - criminals on average tend to come from broken homes. Unwantedness in the family unit produces crime, ask anyone who works closely with juvenile criminals. It's those broken homes that are most likely to pursue the abortion option if it is available and the girl gets pregnant, because - obviously - they often don't want the children. So all those kids who WOULD have been born in the 70s to live a childhood hell and then run away from home and steal VCRs for crack in the 90s just... weren't being born in the first place. Well, a lot less of them were, anyway.

Source (because if I don't put this here, you will ask): "Freakonomics: A Rogue Economist Explores the Hidden Side of Everything" S. Dubner & S. Levitt, Chapter 4. You can also look at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Impact_of_Legalized_Abortion_on_Crime for more information.
 

Rolling Thunder

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Yes, because when you start adding caveats, you're forcing your beliefs onto others, which in itself is a bad idea, but in this case, is just likely to lead to some very complicated screwups, like a woman not getting an abortion because she didn't want to report a rape, or some such horror.
 

Dr.Sean

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It's not pro-choice and pro-life. It's pro-abortion and anti-abortion. The former terms have grown tiresome, as everybody wants to give people the right to choose and everyone wants people to live.
 

Amoreyna

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Jan 12, 2009
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Dys said:
Are you implying that an abortion is worse than a miscarrage?

If that's the case, I'd kindly like to inform you that isn't so. An abortion can be as simple as taking a drug early in the pregnancy. I hardly think swallowing a pill can be compared to a traumatic stillbirth (they really aren't a fun experience). Not to say there are never negative effects from aborting this way, just that it's completely absurd to rate it next to the shock of discovering a baby you wanted dead (or for that matter a child brough up by parents who don't want it).
Ummm...why are you comparing a miscarriage and stillbirth? They are two completely seperate things. For a baby to be still born they actually have to be born. During a miscarriage the fetus is in distress or dying most of the time which is what causes the woman to lose the pregnancy. Misscarriages almost always happen early in the pregnancy and usually signify that something was wrong with fetal development or that something wasn't right in the woman's body. Stillbirths are usually caused by something going drastically wrong such as an accident, sudden illness or even assult on the mother. Medically speaking the terms are not even close to interchangable and miscarriage is only used up to 20 weeks - after which a baby becomes viable outside the womb. At this time stillborn is used and in most causes a woman goes through full labor, unlike in earlier miscarriages. A miscarriage is a pregnancy that never had a chance, basically.

I learned all this during my own two pregnancies and miscarriages and honestly I really don't understand how a woman could want to chose to make her body forcibly miscarry through abortion. At the very least it should be a very big desicion since it is still life changing. And yes, both my pregnancies were unexpecte also - I chose to keep them.
 

Exuberance

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dochmbi said:
Exuberance said:
After the conception there is another person inside you. Murder is murder no matter how old the person is.
How exactly do a handful of cells constitute a person?
Depends on how you define a person, do you require a physical form and/or a spiritual one?
 

Dys

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Amoreyna said:
Dys said:
Are you implying that an abortion is worse than a miscarrage?

If that's the case, I'd kindly like to inform you that isn't so. An abortion can be as simple as taking a drug early in the pregnancy. I hardly think swallowing a pill can be compared to a traumatic stillbirth (they really aren't a fun experience). Not to say there are never negative effects from aborting this way, just that it's completely absurd to rate it next to the shock of discovering a baby you wanted dead (or for that matter a child brough up by parents who don't want it).
Ummm...why are you comparing a miscarriage and stillbirth? They are two completely seperate things. For a baby to be still born they actually have to be born. During a miscarriage the fetus is in distress or dying most of the time which is what causes the woman to lose the pregnancy. Misscarriages almost always happen early in the pregnancy and usually signify that something was wrong with fetal development or that something wasn't right in the woman's body. Stillbirths are usually caused by something going drastically wrong such as an accident, sudden illness or even assult on the mother. Medically speaking the terms are not even close to interchangable and miscarriage is only used up to 20 weeks - after which a baby becomes viable outside the womb. At this time stillborn is used and in most causes a woman goes through full labor, unlike in earlier miscarriages. A miscarriage is a pregnancy that never had a chance, basically.

I learned all this during my own two pregnancies and miscarriages and honestly I really don't understand how a woman could want to chose to make her body forcibly miscarry through abortion. At the very least it should be a very big desicion since it is still life changing. And yes, both my pregnancies were unexpecte also - I chose to keep them.
I'm really sorry to hear about that, I certainly didn't mean to say the two are the same. From what I unterstand a stillbirth is horrendously taxing, you didn't mention how long ago the last was, but regardless my sympathys go out to you.

If anything, the point I was trying to get across was that it is, as you said, not right to compare the two (reading back over it, I seem to have misread to post I was responding too). An abortion is a choice, often very early in the pregnancy and, if done properly shouldn't remotely resemble a miscarriage. At any rate, however badly I worded my previous post, I definately agree that the two are most certainly not comparable.
 

Seanchaidh

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amazosaur said:
Seanchaidh said:
amazosaur said:
Holy Christ. Who are you, Thomas Malthus?

Anyway, personal choice is all well and good (I'm a libertarian and therefore very pro individual freedom) but a fetus is not the woman's body. As soon as that zygote is formed and the cells start to divide, that's a completely different entity. And saying that we get to decide whether or not it lives or dies is an extremely arrogant view.
If you were raped or something, then I'm sorry but we don't get to decide who lives or dies for our convenience
You're being too doctrinaire and definitional. Take a look at what it is independent of the mere labels you can apply to it. If you didn't know what sort of DNA it had, would you think twice about the morality of killing it? No, not unless you also had problems with killing flies or mosquitoes. It is not the sort of thing which needs legal protection and it is not arrogant to presume that the personal autonomy of any living woman trumps whatever interests we suppose the zygote would have. It is not yet to the stage where we should care about it or think of it as a person.
I don't have any moral issues with killing flies or mosquitoes because they would never be anything other than flies or mosquitoes. Anyway, why shouldn't we consider them people? What is the real difference between a fetus within a woman and a baby that was just born? Why does one have any more rights than the other?
So it's the potential that matters? In that case, choosing the point at which it becomes a zygote is terrifically arbitrary. Is it immoral for a woman to forgo sex or use birth control, have her period and thereby let her egg go to waste? (I won't suggest that sperm might be valuable because eggs are clearly the limiting reagent as regards new humans.) You can say that it isn't immoral, and I'd certainly agree that it isn't, but you need some sort of metaphysical explanation as to what makes a zygote special and an egg not. Suggesting eternal souls would be useful to your point but entirely unprovable and likely to provoke a good laugh. There is the potential for new humans in all human behavior that has an impact on whether someone has sex.

As for why a newborn baby should have more rights than a fetus, it is not clear that it should: it is another arbitrary line, just like the zygote. However, it is a useful one as it allows the mother's legal rights to protect the baby that she wants to have born. That's good: mothers should be in control of the process. It's all going on in her body; we should think of the fetus as an extension of her. That is why it can only be her decision to have an abortion, and not that of anyone else (unless there's a power of attorney issue because the mother is severely disabled or incompetent, I suppose.) I can agree that fetuses should have some rights, but not that they should have any rights that interfere with any of their mother's rights or interests. They should have legal rights if their own mother chooses to legitimize them but not otherwise. Until it is born, I regard it as much like a property relationship. The mother has special rights that no one else can have as regards her unborn child.
 

The Dr0w Ranger

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Jan 8, 2009
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Did Baby Jesus not indirectly cause the killing of hundreds of infants throughout the city, because of King Herod?

;P
Why stop there, people have been martyred and murdered for being Christians, and for not being Christians.
Millions I'd say.

That's not really relevant, but I have heard that before.

My point in the comparison was that a fetus has no actions on which to judge,
an adult convicted of a crime(we'll assume he is guilty), has done it and deserves punishment.
On has earned a death the other hasn't.
The comparison is moot, IMO
 

WolfThomas

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Dec 21, 2007
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As someone who has witnessed abortions first hand (both medical and surgical), as well as the consultation and counseling involved, I'd say while abortion should certainly be legal and available, it in itself should not be the first option. The focus should alway be on education about sex and adequate access to contraception both prevenative contraception (condoms, OCP, IUD, implanon) and emergency contracpetion (morning after pill).

To that end I hate it when someone is described as "pro-abortion", no one likes abortions, but it's certainly a necessary procedure.
 

jackpackage200

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Pro Choice here. And all those who say those who are irresponsible enough to use protection should be punished with the pregnancy, does it seem like a smart idea to trust someone like that with the life of a child?
 

InfiniteSingularity

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"We don't like to kill out unborn/we need them to grow up and fight our wars"

I think people will do what they need to to survive. A woman who decides to abort is, 9/10 times, reluctant but really needs it. So really, who are we to say she can't choose? IMO it's a small price to pay for a lot of women who cannot raise a child.