elohiym
Well-known member
Why would you say [hopefully a daughter]?
I picked a gender. Sue me.
Why would you say [hopefully a daughter]?
I picked a gender. Sue me.
You did so deliberately and for a reason, just wondering what and why.
Because, when writing, it's better to pick a gender than write "he/she" or "he or she" or "son/daughter" or "son or daughter." Substitute son, if you like. My point is that hopefully the rape victim will see herself as a mother, and her child as her son or daughter.
Thus, if legislation were inacted that precluded one their right to a pumped stomach...we'd have a similar disagreement....yes?
Yes, by threat of violence or imprisonment.
No, specific legislature is, by force, exacting a fruition which physically can - and by established right - be circumvented.
My mode and terminology are just fine....they simply don't speak an agreeable conclusion for you.
Or you're simply valuing something else more. Just so, my right to personal autonomy is less valuable than the right of my neighbor to survive it should I consider lobbing handgrenades a reasonable pastime.If you remove any opportunity to think on her own or make an independent decision, you are implicitly devaluing the mother.
If you want to tell me that the non-commission of an abortion is coerced, then I'm fine with admitting that. But then you're just telling me that, by making abortion illegal, the State would be forcing the girl not to get one. To which my answer is: "No duh! That was the very intent of the legislation!"
But if you wish to draw from this an additional conclusion, "and therefore the State is forcing her to have a baby," then I'll deny this. In point of fact, she's already pregnant, independently of any intervention on the part of the State. She's already going to have a baby.
Okay, so you fully agree that (state) force is in play....she's being forced by the state from procuring a desired abortion ("No duh!...")
then, by logical implication and extension of this state sanctioned force the state is forcing her to see her pregnancy to fruition..i.e. the state is forcing her to have her to have a baby.
Quit your weak attempt at sophistry to justify the denial of rights to women.
Neither of these follows. I can understand the temptation:
Either she has the baby or she aborts it. The State says she can't abort it. Therefore, the State says she must have the baby.
The problem is that "having a baby" is not an intentional/voluntary act. I think I've demonstrated this sufficiently above.
In this case, the opposite of "forced" is "voluntary." Only those acts which otherwise could have been voluntary can be forced.
Again, I can't be forced to digest a hamburger. Either it happens or not.
Getting an abortion is certainly a voluntary act, and someone can be forced or compelled not to do that.
But having a baby is not a voluntary act. Therefore, since it was never voluntary in the first place, it cannot be forced.
I deny that there is such a right. How would you prove that?
Or you're simply valuing something else more. Just so, my right to personal autonomy is less valuable than the right of my neighbor to survive it should I consider lobbing handgrenades a reasonable pastime.
All rights aren't equal and every right runs into some abridgment, but with life that usually equals an egregious exercise of our liberty to the horrific end of ending another's ability to exercise any. No infant in the history of the world has ever crossed that threshold, though many meet the same end as those adults who have.
Of course you "...understand the temptation" because the implication is blatantly obvious.
Unless, you have an endgame here...who cares if you disagree with the particular phrasing? The circumstances are such that a pregnant woman is not allowed personal autonomy by way of state sanction....the result, birthing a child against her will.
You're hiding behind liberal buzz words. Using plain English and non-politically/emotionally charged language (i.e., language which is descriptive, not prescriptive), please explain to me what you mean, and how and why that applies in this case here and now.
I'm not hiding behind anything. I'll reiterate: The circumstances are such that a pregnant woman is not allowed personal autonomy by way of state sanction....the result, birthing a child against her will.
You're basically just saying: "I'm a liberal. I disagree. BOOOOO!"
Replace "personal autonomy" with a description of what's actually happening that doesn't involve prescriptive terms. Replace "birthing a child against her will" with a description of what's actually happening that doesn't involve prescriptive terms.
You want to say her personal autonomy is being violated? Fine. Then explain what that is. Explain how it's being violated. Explain why I should care. Same goes for "birthing a child against her will." [And, let me note, when you explain all of this, do not use liberal buzzwords and emotionally/politically charged prescriptive terms. In other words, "just the facts, ma'am."]
What you'll find is that if you stop hiding behind buzzwords, what you are trying to claim is actually much less impressive. What you're saying is all smoke and fluff. There's no substance behind it.
At that point, what it comes down to is: "She doesn't want to be pregnant, and the State would punish her if she tried to terminate the pregnancy (i.e., by killing her offspring)." That's basically what you are saying, minus the fluff and smoke. Everything else you are adding is: "And as a liberal, I don't like that. BOOOOO!"
My answer: So what?
Choice Trad...the state is refusing her the personal choice to surgically remove her fetus from her body; terminate her pregnancy...etc. But you know this Trad....are you simply playing games?
It's of little interest to me whether you particularly care or not. And I'm even less interested in jumping through your hoops ... considering I'm sure you're quite aware of the particulars regarding the abortion debate.
Otherwise, I could answer in kind: Who cares if you don't like and consider the pro-choice argument as "liberal fluff" BOO HOO!
Who cares if lifers equate aborting a group of undifferentiated cells akin to "the murder of an innocent baby!". . . . BOOOOOOO.... we don't approve of your lifestyle. BOOOO you don't view the unborn like we want you too.....BOOOOO
Who cares if lifers refuse to defend the ideal that a group of undifferentiated cells should (prescriptive btw) have an equal right to life as that of the mother who's body it's sustained within and upon. BOOOOO those murdering pro-abortionists.
Anything else Trad?
I'm not sure if you're aware of this quip, but that's what anti-abortion laws mean. You're literally saying: "I disapprove of anti-abortion laws because they are anti-abortion laws."
:kookoo:
Kind of forcing a useless tautology here?
I disapprove of anti-abortion laws (abstract) because of the restrictions they place upon woman/real-world phenomenon.
This is what you wrote:
"...the state is refusing her the personal choice to surgically remove her fetus from her body; terminate her pregnancy."
Any prohibitive law "refuses" somebody "the personal choice" to do something.
A prohibitive law against the ownership of methamphetamines "refuses" people "the personal choice" to own meth.
A prohibitive law against murder "refuses" people "the personal choice" to commit murder.
A prohibitive law against theft "refuses" people "the personal choice" to commit theft.
A prohibitive law against hosting dog fights "refuses" people "the personal choice" to host dog fights.
So what are your criticisms?
1. It's a prohibitive law
2. Against abortion.
In other words: it's an anti-abortion law!
There's no "should." Either the unborn child is a person and inherently is a subject of right, or else, it isn't.
Only to note that it amazes me that a Buddhist is having such a difficult time having a reasonable, unempassioned debate.