zehydra said:
Boneasse said:
It's absolutely sensible to get an abortion in your situation, should you girlfriend get pregnant. The average public attitude towards abortions are overly positive, unless you count religious fanatics, and who does?
You should only have a child when you're ready for it. Negating a child is severely worse than having an abortion in every way, if you're not ready for it.
On the subject matter of her implant, I'd say you should start using condoms if you are very worried. Just to be on the safer side.
Trust me, not everyone who has decided to keep a baby due to an "unintentional" pregnancy are happy with their choice later in life.
I disagree. A neglected child is at least alive. It is better to be alive than dead.
Well, maybe. I mean, do you remember what it was like before you were alive? I don't. Maybe it wasn't so bad.
Also, it may be better for the unborn child if it's allowed to live, but we already-alive people need to think about how that child will affect its environment. Somehow, I doubt that many of the children born to parents who either aren't there or view them as an unwanted burden are going to grow up to become doctors, scientists, and humanitarians.
OT: My view on abortion is that we should stop thinking about it.
Abortion is a terrible thing. I personally feel that it's the lesser of two evils in certain situations when a child is conceived but not wanted, and that it's a valuable medical procedure for situations in which complications during pregnancy will result in the death of the mother, the child, or both.
That said, pro-lifers are taking the wrong position on this issue, because they're trying to 'cure' abortion as if it were a social ill. It's not. It's the symptom, not the disease.
The disease is a lack of personal responsibility regarding reproductive activities; having unprotected sex, not using birth control effectively, and having reckless sex with people you don't really care about.
This problem is compounded by abstinence-only sex education programs, a lack of availability of birth-control systems to young people, and an unwillingness of parents to have frank discussions about sex with their children and provide their children with appropriate protection and alternate outlets for their sexual urges.
There's a prevailing sentiment in the United States (and other countries as well) that sex is dirty and sinful and we shouldn't talk about it. In a way similar to other social problems like drug abuse, prostitution, and airport security, enacting laws to stop abortion isn't going to solve the problem of unwanted pregnancy. It just means that abortions will, from then on, be performed by criminals in dark alleyways armed with coathangers instead of licensed physicians in clean examination rooms.
Obviously, thinking that people just shouldn't have sex unless they're married, so things like birth control and proper sexual education aren't necessary, has not resolved the problem. Maybe we should give young people more access to information about sex and birth control instead of trying to browbeat them into alignment with a dubious ideology.