Jumping off a cliff without a parachute can be life-threatening. So what? The consequences of doing so are dictated by gravity. Does it hurt when you do that? Yes? Then don't do that. Yes, having an abortion certainly can be considered to be taking responsibility for one's sexual behavior, and as I've said, it's not a problem if all the interested parties are consulted and have their say before irrevocable, fatal decisions are made. The essence of the pro-abortion argument is, of course, that a zygote or a fetus is not a "human being" or is not a "person," and therefore no consideration is to be given to the potential of the fetus. But my argument does not depend as much on the "personhood" of the fetus as it does upon the rights of the father, who has a legal interest in the products of conception because he's contributed half the genetic material involved, by invitation. He has a reasonable expectation that society will support his rights and that they will will be respected as regards the future of the fetus, whether that be in the interests of gestation or in the interests of termination. That's fundamental fairness and equity.hadespussercats wrote:I'll have to echo Lordpasternack here and ask you why choosing to have an abortion isn't taking responsibility for sexual behavior? In many cases, choosing to have an abortion is far more responsible than having a child one doesn't want or can't support. Not to mention, in an aspect of this issue you assiduously avoid, the responsible decision to avoid unnecessary physical risk. Carrying a pregnancy to term is not easy, and it can be life-threatening.Seth wrote:No, women voluntarily agreeing to become gestational professionals.hadespussercats wrote:Women forced to be "gestational professionals," eh, Seth?
Haven't read the book, but I've seen the movie. Quite good, but having nothing whatever to do with what I propose, which does not require any woman to have sex with anyone, ever.You should read A Handmaid's Tale. You'd love it-- a handbook for your proposed social order.
I don't see why they shouldn't be required to accept the consequences of their voluntary actions. I'm a firm believer in personal responsbility and acceptance of the consequences of one's decisions. Abortion on demand is merely a convenient way to avoid the consequences of bad sexual decision making at the expense of the live of a living human being. I'm not at all certain that a woman's convenience and desire to escape from her poor judgment outweighs the life of a human being.I don't see why women should be forced into nine months of indentured servitude for what is now, thanks to the wonders of modern science and forward-thinking society, an avoidable aspect of personal biology.
Like gravity, some decisions have life-changing consequences, and people ought to be encouraged by the law to be careful, prudent and make good decisions, not encouraged to make rash, selfish hedonistic decisions that affect others negatively.
The hypocrisy of the law as it stands now is that the man has absolutely no rights at all when it comes to the fetus, and is burdened with the responsibility of providing support for the child if the woman asserts her right to gestate the child.
I see that as a fundamental inequity in the law that must be rectified. The law is supposed to protect everyone's rights equally.
And you'll note if you read carefully that I never stated nor inferred that because a zygote is a "human being" that this fact endows the zygote with any legal rights whatsoever. I merely point out a biological fact, and people go ballistic because so much of the pro-abortion rhetoric depends upon dehumanizing the fetus in order to justify terminating it.**-- and to clarify an earlier point, I was indicating that the fetus very well could be considered a human being. But whether it's human or not is aside from the point of whether or not a woman is obliged to sacrifice her health, time, financial and psychological well-being, or possibly even her life, simply to keep that other human being alive.
I'm not necessarily opposed to terminating fetuses, I have no religious beliefs in that regard, but I think that society should squarely face the issue and acknowledge that abortion terminates a human life. Society may be able to justify doing so, but not by evading the debate by falsely trying to characterize a fetus as something other than, or less than, a living human being.
I see this common evasion as intellectual weakness and a failure in rationality. If we are to be fully rational we must face the difficult questions unflinchingly and directly and make our decisions based on sound knowledge and understanding, not political rhetoric and evasions.