And in the case of a burglar imminent danger does not mean the moment he points the gun at you. The imminent danger occurs long before that. The analogy here is that the imminent danger to the fetuses can arguably begin long before the doctor begins the procedure.
And I’ve already exposed why that is a false and terrible analyogy. There is a vast difference in someone coming at you in your private property and comparing that to the clinic (owned by the buglar from your analogy). You don’t have the same rights in public property. You can’t shoot someone because they invaded your personal space or something in a public area.
Comparing the situation to the leniency you are given in your own home is a false analogy.
Again, we're arguing about when imminent begins. Citing a court case using the word imminent does not help unless it defines where imminent becomes future violence.
Ultimately we are actually arguing self-defense and
how imminent relates to that. Imminent can mean other things in different relations, but in self defense, you cannot shoot someone going into your neighbor’s house with a gun. That reminds me of a terrible but humorous movie called "Naked Gun" where the protagonist defends shooting a bunch of guys stabbing someone in central park. Whereas they were all thespians doing a Shakespeare in the park rendition of Julius Caesar. So before you shoot the guy going into your neighbor's house with a gun .. make sure he isn't selling it or something.
When an abortionist enters the clinic, he may be doing a consolation first. He might not kill for an hour. Usually not. But it is not certain. Also it needs to be immediate. West's Encyclopedia of American Law defines imminent this way;
Impending; menacingly close at hand; threatening.
Imminent peril, for example, is danger that is certain, immediate, and impending, such as the type an individual might be in as a result of a serious illness or accident. The chance of the individual dying would be highly probable in such situation, as opposed to remote or contingent.
So it would have to be;
1) certain
2) immediate
3) not contingent.
You can't argue that an abortionists walking into the clinic from his car meets any of those three. It is contingent. It is not certain. And it is certainly not immediate. At this point, in any one case you look at, the woman may change her mind. The abortionist may change his mind. Any number of things could stop him short of death.
And to be honest, killing him is just bad problem solving.
I consider myself pro-life. You probably would not consider me pro-life because I don't find anything wrong with oral contraceptives.
I apologize for the misstatement.