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Author Message
25 new of 209 responses total.
keesan
response 83 of 209: Mark Unseen   Jul 29 21:01 UTC 2003

During the 8th month, in the womb, it is not a baby but a fetus.  How many
abortions are done during the 8th month?
jmsaul
response 84 of 209: Mark Unseen   Jul 29 22:58 UTC 2003

The only ones done that late in this country are those where the mother is
at extreme physical risk.  Usually risk of imminent death.
russ
response 85 of 209: Mark Unseen   Jul 30 04:44 UTC 2003

I want to parse the subtext out of #77 paragraph 3:

> If you can rationalize the murder[a] of an unborn child[b],
> you will have no problem accepting the right to murder others
> under the right circumstances.

Taking point [a], I recall that murder is defined as "the unlawful
killing of a human being with malice aforethought".  Bruce is asserting
that abortion is unlawful (false), that what is being killed is a
human being (debatable even in the third trimester), and that the
act is always malicious rather than possibly defensive (false).

Ergo, Bruce's conclusion depends entirely on two complete falsehoods
and one questionable assertion; in other words, he's WRONG.  This is
all too typical of his reasoning abilities as exhibited here.

Point [b] illustrates this.  Bruce probably cannot wrap his mind around
the possibility that a fetus might be not YET a child; he's shown no
ability to consider this in a rational manner before, and I doubt he will
in the future.  He appears to take it as an article of faith.

Well, okay, Bruce, it's an article of faith with you.  You're welcome
to it.  Now, will you stop trying to force EVERYONE to practice YOUR
faith?  Others differ on this, and they will have abortions if they
believe and feel it necessary.  Can't you just mind your own business?
rcurl
response 86 of 209: Mark Unseen   Jul 30 05:24 UTC 2003

(Prediction: he will not be able to just mind his own business.)
polygon
response 87 of 209: Mark Unseen   Jul 31 03:31 UTC 2003

I strongly agree with Jan and Russ and others here, but I do admire Bruce
for sticking up for his point of view.  It shouldn't be necessary to
insult him over this.
bru
response 88 of 209: Mark Unseen   Jul 31 03:50 UTC 2003

nope, I cannot.  Anynore than I could stand by and watch a 12 year old raped
and murdered in a parking lot, or a 6 year old beaten to death by a group of
bullies.

Sperm is sperm, it has no righ to remain alive or procreate.  An egg is an
egg, with no more rights to life than the sperm.  A zygote is a zygote, but
tell me the day and hour it becomes a fetus and I will accept abortion prior
to that date.
rcurl
response 89 of 209: Mark Unseen   Jul 31 06:12 UTC 2003

I'm glad that you will accept abortion up to *some time* after conception.
This is exactly the issue the Supreme Court addressed in Roe vs Wade,
and they chose up to the end of the second trimester. So, if you would
prefer a different date, then argue it with the Supreme Court. What is
important is that you accept abortion under a woman's judgement for
a reasonable period of time.
russ
response 90 of 209: Mark Unseen   Jul 31 11:49 UTC 2003

Re #88:  In other words, you refuse to distinguish between innocent
individuality (the right to be left alone) and infringement upon the
very body of another?

The distinction between embryo and fetus isn't a bright line that's
crossed in an instant; the transformation is a process, and the
criteria appear to be based largely on appearance.  The thing that
actually makes a human being (the brain) takes a long time to catch
up.  Are you saying that *outward appearance* of humanity is more
important than the fact?  This is eerily similar to the primitive
superstition that putting a face on a doll gives it a soul.

IIRC, RU-486 acts during the zygote/embryo phase.  If so, you should
have no objection to its use.
tod
response 91 of 209: Mark Unseen   Jul 31 16:19 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

bru
response 92 of 209: Mark Unseen   Jul 31 17:22 UTC 2003

As I said, I do not believe in abortion because I do not believe you can state
the time and place when they become a human being.

zygote, embryo, fetus, baby, infant, child et al are just conventions we have
established to try and define when a human being reaches a certain stage. 
But the age of the stage varies from person to person.

Some people are still children developmentally even after they have reached
the age of majority.  some children are much more adult than some parents I
have known.

My wife, Twila, was born at a stage in the pregnancy when it would have been
legal to abort.  Yet she survived adn I am thankful for it.  I know some
people say that at cetain points, teh brain is not fully functional, but evn
some adults do not have fully functional brains, and to kill them would be
considered murder.

even if you have a person who is brain dead, adn you pull all life support,
sometimes the body will go on living.  and if you were to kill one of these
people, it would be murder.

So, if we cannot define a set of criteria that we all can agree on to say
"this is life and it is sacred"  How can we make the decision to end a life
because it is inconvenient for us?
tod
response 93 of 209: Mark Unseen   Jul 31 17:47 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

rcurl
response 94 of 209: Mark Unseen   Jul 31 18:35 UTC 2003

Re #92: in fact, you would be completely oblivious of it if the fetus later
named Twila had been aborted. You would probably now have a wife anyway
about whom you might say the same thing, but it would be equally meaningless.

It is the human condition that we must make many choices of ages when
things are permitted or unpermitted. We choose the age 18 to vote and 21
to order alcohol (in Michigan) - although there is no instant at which a
person converts from should not be able to vote to should be able to vote
(or drink, or drive, or be president, or anything else for which we choose
specific ages). Doing the same for the right to abort a fetus is just as
necessary. Since you accept the right of abortion but only quibble about
the date at which it goes from permitted to unpermitted, the only recourse
is to have society make that choice - which is has done through the action
of the Supreme Court.

jmsaul
response 95 of 209: Mark Unseen   Aug 1 03:55 UTC 2003

Re #92:  You're saying Twila was born during the first trimester, or that
         abortion later than that was legal at the time she was born?
russ
response 96 of 209: Mark Unseen   Aug 1 04:07 UTC 2003

Re #92:  I can state the condition under which a human organism is
no longer a human being despite vital signs (brain death).  Given
that one can also measure the appearance of the neurological attributes
of humanity (much more accurately and reproducibly than their
disappearance), it's my opinion that your opinion is unsupported by
anything resembling a fact and deserving of no weight in public policy.

Defining "a set of criteria that we all can agree on" is impossible so
long as you have one holdout who refuses to accept them because they
fail to support their preconceived conclusion.  This is why we have
nonsense like the claim that a zygote is a human being from the moment
of fertilization; the people behind this wanted to justify their stand
against contraceptives which prevent implantation, so they argued
themselves into a stance which forces them to stand against in-vitro
fertilization as well; they want more babies, as long as you don't
make them THAT way!  Ironies abound.
keesan
response 97 of 209: Mark Unseen   Aug 1 04:53 UTC 2003

Jim heard something on the radio about in-vitro fertilization to the effect
that the leftover zygotes must be stored forever, they cannot be 'adopted',
or disposed of, or used for research.  Apparently zygotes outside of a womb
have more rights than zygotes inside a womb.  I have heard of bizarre cases
where a divorced woman wanted to use a zygote made with her ex's sperm.  I
don't know if child support would have been required.  It went to court and
stayed there for a long time.  
mynxcat
response 98 of 209: Mark Unseen   Aug 1 13:50 UTC 2003

A zygote outside the womb does not have a chance to become a baby. 
Whereas one in the womb does. So it's understandable that a woman 
would be able to make a decision regarding the zygote in her womb 
wihout getting the courts or anyone else for that matter involved. 
It's still part of her body. 

While it is bizarre to think that once the zygote leaves her womb, she 
has no say, I can see how they would argue that her rights were 
different now.

About the divorced woman wanting to use a zygote with her ex's sperm, 
would she have had to have the court involved if she wanted to destroy 
it, as opposed to using it?
russ
response 99 of 209: Mark Unseen   Aug 2 01:29 UTC 2003

Re #97:  Definitely false.  Many zygotes are discarded every year.

There has been a case where frozen zygotes became the subject of a
property/custody dispute during a divorce.  The ex-wife wanted to
have more children (her ovaries were no longer good), the ex-husband
didn't want his genes being used by his ex-wife without his consent.
Consent won out over the right to reproduce.

I'm not quite sure how I feel about this, but given that the ex-wife
would have been sterile anyway and she always had the option to buy
an egg to use with a future partner, I think I see how the judge
balanced things and probably got it right.  (Especially given that
the issue of custody and support would have to have been settled,
perhaps inconsistently by someone else, if he decided for the ex-wife!)
klg
response 100 of 209: Mark Unseen   Aug 3 02:32 UTC 2003

WARNING:  The following post may be hazardous to the beliefs of pro- 
choice fanatics and to those who think President Bush's judicial 
nominees are out of the mainstream of American thought.  Proceed at your 
own risk.  Thank you.




"Progress and Perils:  How Gender Issues Unite and Divide Women"
Conducted for Center for Gender Equity by Princeton Survey Research 
Associates, Oct. 2001

. . . Women's opinions on the issue of abortion itself are sharply 
divided and entrenched.  Only one-third (34%) or women say abortion 
should be generally available to those who want it.  Forty-five percent 
held the opposite view and want access to abortion limited.  Thirty-one 
percent want it limited only to cases of rape, incest, and to save the 
woman's life. . . . 
mary
response 101 of 209: Mark Unseen   Aug 3 03:27 UTC 2003

So 34% of women want it to be available without any restrictions.  Do the
45% who want "access to abortions limited" want these limitation to be in
the third trimester only?  Not clear from your quote. If so that would
hardly be the opposite of what that no restrictions group wants.  And even
that last group of 31% sees abortion as suitable in some situations, so
that's hardly hardcore pro-life. 

So that adds up to 110% of women want abortion kept legal
to some degree.

Wow.  Good news. ;-)

janc
response 102 of 209: Mark Unseen   Aug 3 15:47 UTC 2003

That study may be found at
http://www.advancewomen.org/womens_research/PartOne.pdf

It's long and says many things.  Here's a quote:

  Of 12 issues investigated in this study as possible priorities for
  a women s movement, only abortion generates sharp differences of
  opinion.  Half of women (49%) say keeping abortion legal should be
  a top priority of the movement, but 24 percent assign it a lower
  priority, and 25 percent reject it outright as an issue that should
  concern a women s movement.

  In a different context, 55 percent of women say "reproductive
  rights  is a public issue that is very important to them personally,
  ranking lowest out of eight public issues tested.

  Women s opinions on the issue of abortion itself are sharply divided,
  and entrenched.  Only one-third (34%) of women say abortion should
  be generally available to those who want it.  Forty-five percent
  hold the opposite view and want access to abortion limited: 31
  percent want it limited only to cases of rape, incest and to save
  the woman s life and 14 percent say abortion should never be
  permitted. Nineteen percent of women prefer a middle ground,
  saying abortion should be available, but under new limitations.
  These might include limitations, for example, on the timing of
  abortions, or on the steps that must be taken before a woman can
  have an abortion.  Overall, 81 percent of women say they never have
  second thoughts about their own position on the abortion issue.
  This percentage is up sharply from the 60 percent of women who said
  they never had doubts about their opinion on abortion when asked
  about this in a slightly different way in a 1988 Gallup Poll.

  Women are more likely to take the view that abortion should be 
  generally available as their level of education increases. Less
  than a quarter of women who did not complete high school (22%), 28
  percent of high school graduates, 35 percent of women who attended
  college but did not graduate, and 49 percent of college graduates
  support the general availability of abortion. The effect of education
  is particularly strong among older women. In fact, college
  graduates age 50 and older are the only demographic sub-group of
  women where a majority (54%) favors having abortion generally
  available to women who want it.

  Race and ethnicity also influence attitudes about the availability
  of abortion, with Hispanics most opposed and African-Americans most
  supportive. Overall, one in five Hispanic women (20%), 35 percent
  of white women and 40 percent of African-American women support
  the general availability of abortion. Since education affects these
  attitudes and African-American women attend college at lower rates
  than white women, the differences between whites and
  African-Americans are reduced when the two groups are compared in
  total. Half of African-American women who have attended college
  (50%), but only 42 percent of comparably-educated whites, support
  having abortion generally available.
janc
response 103 of 209: Mark Unseen   Aug 3 15:55 UTC 2003

So yeah, lots of women aren't pro-choice, especially if they are young
and poorly educationed.  Golly, that's a shock.
slynne
response 104 of 209: Mark Unseen   Aug 3 16:44 UTC 2003

That is quite interesting since if Roe v. Wade were overturned, it 
would mostly be young, poorly educated women who would have trouble 
obtaining abortions. 
mary
response 105 of 209: Mark Unseen   Aug 3 17:14 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

keesan
response 106 of 209: Mark Unseen   Aug 3 18:11 UTC 2003

The young poorly educated women can always go on welfare if they have unwanted
babies.
slynne
response 107 of 209: Mark Unseen   Aug 3 19:45 UTC 2003

Yeah, because you can really live it UP on welfare. *snort*
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