And never the twain shall meet?
We'll have to settle for "less often".
Why ever not? Most rational decisions are defined via an incorporated risk-to-reward evaluation.
It depends on the principle. If you believe the unborn are entitled to life, that principle trumps the potential risk to those who thumb nose at the law, who willfully enter into risk against the defense of right?
Not sure of the origin nor accurate reflection of this number as abortion - as yet - remains legal.
Can't find it. The estimate I saw at the time was 1.2 million. I think that's the average CDC per year response from a year ago.
Prior I noted both Guttmacher and the CDC for a high/low set of figures. But take the lowest known CDC figure of 700,000 from 2012 rounded down. And let's simply credit the "No thanks, I've got as many as I want" as a poor justification from the earlier survey I noted. That would translate to nearly 140,000 dead for no better or other reason.
Well, there is indeed trouble in paradise. Ignoring those issues may serve you satisfaction on some personal level
I'm not ignoring an issue. Peculiar that you'd try that angle with me, but you won't find purchase for the charge. Go to.
Else, if you believe the unborn are entitled to life and that entitlement is rooted in rights arbitrarily denied them then you see the unborn as human beings and saving the life of a human being, or hundreds of thousands of human beings, should be satisfying, rationally so. I was meeting your notion that feeling in this matter is somehow suspect. It needn't be.
I'm not in disagreement over the importance of education and prevention...my point serves well after the fact. The factors representing those statistics simply don't disappear by way of anti-abortion legislation. The abortion debate incurs more than a simple moral command to save unborn lives may solve....
My response would be that while you can lay much of the unwanted pregnancies at the feet of ignorance in those third world nations where a simple prohibition of abortion stands without concerted efforts to undo the thing that gives rise to the problem, you can't make that same claim here, where contraceptives are readily available and education has been a sustained and ongoing effort.
Ignorance isn't even one of the main reasons for abortion here. Mostly, to one extent of another, it's convenience. "I'm not ready, it would interfere with my education or career, I've had all I want, just not ready"...those aren't the answers of women who weren't aware of the means to minimize the chance of pregnancy.
....all the more reason this heart-tugging narrative serves no more purpose than the artful mode of emotive manipulation it's predicated upon.
Rather, I think it's informative to take a thing usually presented in a sanitized, removed fashion and mostly addressed in terms of examining a woman's right to control of her body and putting it in another light, one illustrative of another human cost.
Some weep for children slaughtered in a schoolyard while supporting a principle that takes the life of hundreds of thousands of children each year. There's a disconnect in it that should be troubling.
Spoken like a true neo-conservative....at least on popular levels.
Rather, spoken like someone capable of understanding the response. I didn't say I shared it.
Likewise the efficacy of legal proscription.
Legalization of any particular has always swelled the ranks of participants, if for no other reason than access (though I'd argue additional factors). And I've noted/illustrated the rule of impact with regard to a law and answered on the potential exception of Prohibition, which had nothing like the force of argument behind it that the pro-life movement can muster.
On the contrary. Rights (due process) and liberties simply cannot be easily placed upon a linear scale of comparision ...monetary or otherwise.
The comparison was in complaint, not value and I was answering on the cost/benefit you suggested.
No one has an absolute right to their person. No such right has ever existed in this country. That's why you can't ingest anything you want, can't end your life legally when you want and can't do any number of things with your body that might suit your inclination. But the argument here is about where and when the rights we have vest, utlimately.
This falls under the presumption that the right to human life is non-impeachable yet, we both know that legal praxis shows this not to be true.
No, it's founded on the principle that absent some grotesque violation of the compact that protects and balances right, you are entitled to your life.
As such and by default, you simply refuse argument where a conflicting aggregation of rights exist (re: abortion)
I don't refuse argument at all. We agree as a society that fundamental rights exist which cannot be abrogated absent the willful violation of the compact. None of the unborn have met that standard. Beyond that, here I stand, inarguably fully vested in right and protected by law. Looking back across my life in being you cannot separate me from that right without applying an arbitrary line of demarcation. That should be insufficient to abrogate my right.
; effectively denying a woman her moral right to apply her own set of values and principles to the circumstances at hand.
Again, there is no moral right to complete autonomy of self. That's a myth. And beyond that is the assumption that her right to control should be of greater value and singular consideration than the right by which every other right obtains meaning and without which no right is more than an utterance or idea, the right to life itself. The life of the unborn child.
...the same woman you'd hold no reservations against her active role within a theater of war nor her duty as selected juror deciding the fate of a convicted murderer.
There's no real parallel there. It isn't her ability to follow the law that's in question.
Can this categorical lack of deliberation be justly acceptable to you?
I can't discuss a thing until we do, but there's no lack of deliberation on my part.