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Author Message
25 new of 526 responses total.
keesan
response 156 of 526: Mark Unseen   Feb 27 14:54 UTC 2006

A medicine is a poison that is used for its beneficial effect, but it usually
also has side effects.  Sometimes the effects that are side effects under one
condition are the beneficial effects under another (the drug can be used to
treat different conditions).  
jadecat
response 157 of 526: Mark Unseen   Feb 27 15:45 UTC 2006

resp:155 I'm not calling for euthanasia drugs to be filled by your run
of the mill pharmacy either.
kingjon
response 158 of 526: Mark Unseen   Feb 27 15:56 UTC 2006

So? 

scholar
response 159 of 526: Mark Unseen   Feb 27 16:09 UTC 2006

whoa!
jadecat
response 160 of 526: Mark Unseen   Feb 27 16:23 UTC 2006

resp:158 it's entirely the point. The discussion is whether pharmacists
should fill doctor prescribed prescriptions. Plan B is such a
medication, euthanasia drugs are not. Therefore they're an attempt to
distract from the issue at hand. 
jep
response 161 of 526: Mark Unseen   Feb 27 16:36 UTC 2006

re: cyklone: A bartender's job is almost nothing but to serve alcoholic 
drinks.  I think it should be legal for a bar to refuse to serve any 
alcoholic drinks to anyone, if it wishes.

I also think it should be legal to have a Scientologist be a 
pharmacist.  And it should be legal for his employer to fire him for 
not doing his job, if he won't do his job.

Why didn't you cite a Mormon or Jehovah's Witness who doesn't believe 
any drugs ought ever to be dispensed?  Or a delusional pharmacist who 
doesn't believe drugs exist?  If you're going to use silly examples, 
why stop where you did?
marcvh
response 162 of 526: Mark Unseen   Feb 27 17:09 UTC 2006

How about a lunch counter?  Should it be allowed to refuse to serve food
to anyone if it wishes based on whatever criteria its owner chooses (e.g.
too fat, too ugly, too drunk, too female, too black, too Jewish)?
klg
response 163 of 526: Mark Unseen   Feb 27 17:12 UTC 2006

Certainly.  This is supposed to be a free country.

If they don't want my business, there are other lunch counters that 
do.  And if there aren't, I can start one of my own.
jep
response 164 of 526: Mark Unseen   Feb 27 17:16 UTC 2006

re resp:154: The same argument is often applied to general types of 
abortion.

It is a fact that only women can get pregnant, and so only women can be 
specified when discussing abortion.  If you think that inherently means 
that any opposition of any kind to abortion is mysogynistic, then that 
is what it means to you.

I think mysogyny is something else; hatred of women.  If you want to 
define it differently, I can't stop you.  I do think you're wrongly 
defining the word.  I also think that is creating an artificial barrier 
to communicating on the subject.  Further, I think that preventing 
reasonable communication is the intention of re-defining "mysogyny" in 
that context.
jadecat
response 165 of 526: Mark Unseen   Feb 27 17:29 UTC 2006

resp:164 For a LOT of people- I think it is about hating women and
punishing them for having sex. Why else is birth control supposed to be
woman's problem and not a man's? Why isn't there a birth control pill
for men? Why are there no studies or reasearch being conducted as to how
to go about doing this?

There's a jealousy I think, men can be jealous of women because they CAN
have a child, and women are jealous because after getting a woman
pregnant he can walk away.
jep
response 166 of 526: Mark Unseen   Feb 27 17:45 UTC 2006

re resp:165: I think there are some mysogynists around, and some people 
who are anti-abortion, and some who are interested in punishing women 
for having sex.  These are three separate groups.  It is possible to be 
a member of any combination of them, or of none of them.
marcvh
response 167 of 526: Mark Unseen   Feb 27 18:03 UTC 2006

Re #165: I've always found the "no male birth control pill" argument
to be pretty un-persuasive.  Leaving aside that there is such a pill
in development, it's hardly surprising that the mechanics of stopping
the release of 1 egg (for which there is already an existing hormonal
trigger, activated during pregnancy) is simpler than the mechanics of
stopping the production of zillions of sperm, for which there is not
such an obvious trigger available.  But the trial results I've seen
indicate that the male BCP is pretty darned effective.
nharmon
response 168 of 526: Mark Unseen   Feb 27 18:12 UTC 2006

> Why isn't there a birth control pill for men? Why are there no 
> studies or reasearch being conducted as to how to go about doing
> this?

You mean like a vasectomy? What about the IVD being developed that 
should be on the market soon? Also, if you Googled around you would 
probably find at least 2 male birth control pills being tested in the 
U.S. right now. So, the studies and research is being conducted. 

I think making pro-lifers out to be slut-haters dodges the issue and 
only serves to make pro-choice people feel better about their decision.
edina
response 169 of 526: Mark Unseen   Feb 27 18:23 UTC 2006

Oh please.  "Feel better about my decision"?  You mean my decision to think
that abortion is not a good thing, but at times a necessary thing?  Or my
decision to educate every young person I am in the life of on sex education?
Or my thoughts that I can't believe that people *totally* miss the point and
harp on abortion?  I'm so serious when I say that I'd lay odds that the most
vocal people in the world on abortion aren't half as involved with things
like, oh, education (you know, which might help reduce abortion rates), or
healthcare (again, possibly helping reduce abortion rates).

I don't like abortion.  I really don't.  I see it as a breakdown in our
society.  
That being said - I'm not taking that right away from people.  Not just women,
but people, because some couples make the decision together. 
nharmon
response 170 of 526: Mark Unseen   Feb 27 18:25 UTC 2006

> Oh please

My sentiments exactly.
marcvh
response 171 of 526: Mark Unseen   Feb 27 18:26 UTC 2006

Nathan, have you figured out whether you are pro-life or pro-choice yet?
jadecat
response 172 of 526: Mark Unseen   Feb 27 19:33 UTC 2006

resp:167 Yeah, it's real simple to stop ovulation... And for that small
precentage of women who have no secondary side-effects (weight gain,
decreased libido, problems with lubrication during intercourse, sore
breasts, migraines, painful cramps, heavier periods, acne breakouts,
massive to slight mood swings, depression, etc), it's great. For those
that experience even better cycles- it's even better. Still messing big
time with hormones. I'm not a huge fan of hormonal birth control at the
moment. For some women it's great, for others- not so much.

resp:166 John- in many ways you and I really do agree about abortion- I
hate it. I wish it wasn't considered necessary. That's why I am ALL for
ways to prevent pergnancy in the first place. And why I am in favor of
Plan B- which is a mega-dose of normal hormonal birth control pills. The
difference is that while agree that in the ideal world abortions
wouldn't take place because everyone would be in a situation to care for
the resulting child- I realize that we aren't there yet. We're not even
close.
slynne
response 173 of 526: Mark Unseen   Feb 27 19:43 UTC 2006

Making pro-lifers out to be "slut haters" isnt really all that far 
fetched of an idea. They often tend to be just that. In fact, what I 
find interesting about this discussion is that it is Plan B which is 
the drug that is found morally objectionable. Plan B is not a drug that 
causes an abortion. Plan B is a birth control pill. Taking Plan B is 
likely to prevent the need for a woman to have an abortion. So why are 
the pro-lifers in support of laws that protect pharmacists from being 
required to dispense Plan B? Could it be because they are "slut haters" 
who want to punish women who have sex? I mean, it obviously isnt 
because they want to prevent abortion. If that were the case, they 
would REQUIRE pharmacists to dispense emergency contraception. 
kingjon
response 174 of 526: Mark Unseen   Feb 27 19:47 UTC 2006

Err ... "Plan B is not a drug that 
 causes an abortion. Plan B is a birth control pill. Taking Plan B is 
 likely to prevent the need for a woman to have an abortion."

I'm not one of them, but based on what I can see, most of those who oppose
"Plan B" say that it *is* an abortion. 

jadecat
response 175 of 526: Mark Unseen   Feb 27 19:51 UTC 2006

resp:174 It's only abortion if you consider a fertilized egg that has
NOT implanted to be the begining of life. That particular scenario is
the last ditch for hormonal birth control anyway- as there are two steps
prior to that which would prevent an egg from getting fertilized. 

It seems to me that most pro-lifers against Plan B have no CLUE what the
science behind it is.
slynne
response 176 of 526: Mark Unseen   Feb 27 19:53 UTC 2006

They say it is an abortion but it isnt. Those same people often claim 
that all hormonal birth control causes abortion as well as other 
methods such as an IUD. I think it is important to get on the same page 
about when pregnancy actually starts. Generally, the beginning of 
pregnancy is when the egg attaches itself to the uterine wall. Many 
right to lifers, however, seem to believe that it begins with 
fertilization of the egg or even before (you might laugh at the whole 
MOnty Python "every sperm is sacred" but they were making a parody of 
an actual view held by many people in the Right-to-Life crowd). 

(Anne keeps slipping in, saying what I planned on saying. I am going to 
post my post anyways though even though it might look like I am copying 
her.) 
marcvh
response 177 of 526: Mark Unseen   Feb 27 19:55 UTC 2006

Yes, some people like to define words like "abortion" to mean that
which suits their argument rather than using the generally accepted
definition.  It makes conversation impossible, so such people are
annoying.

The "slut haters" idea is a hypothesis which attempts to explain the
views of pro-lifers who think that abortion is OK if it's the result of
rape or incest.  If someone can present a better hypothesis then that's
fine, but so far I haven't heard one.
tod
response 178 of 526: Mark Unseen   Feb 27 19:58 UTC 2006

These people using the bible to defend their foetus is a human life argument
are of the same ilk that used the bible to defend owning slaves.  
bible bible bible bible bible bible bible bible babble bible babble babble
happyboy
response 179 of 526: Mark Unseen   Feb 27 20:01 UTC 2006

whah do yew hate th' bobble?
bru
response 180 of 526: Mark Unseen   Feb 27 20:05 UTC 2006

All you have to do is get the Religious pro-lifers to agree that life begins
when the bible says it does, when the feotus starts producing blood!  Then
you can dispense the day after pill and the other methods without fear of
ending a life.
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