thebeave
Contributor
That would be like a 120 mph speed limit on the highway. Something that is insane. You are being purposely obtuse.Okay, so birth it is then.
That would be like a 120 mph speed limit on the highway. Something that is insane. You are being purposely obtuse.Okay, so birth it is then.
Dude, take it up with each of the governments that recognize birth as the start of personhood via a birth certificate.That would be like a 120 mph speed limit on the highway. Something that is insane. You are being purposely obtuse.Okay, so birth it is then.
Sure, but if your life depended on driving at 75 in a 70 zone, you would not only be justified in ignoring that law, but also justified in despising anyone who tried to ensure that it was enforced.Establishing a demarcation point between "personhood" and "non-personhood" is always going to be inherently fraught with ambiguity. Yet, we do similar things, such as establishing reasonable speed limits on roads. I think we could all agree that 120 mph on a highway is too fast, and 10 mph is ridiculous and would bring civilization to a halt. So, we pick something reasonable in between and stick with it. Like, say, 70 mph. Would 75 mph be OK? Yes, that's pretty reasonable too. Would 65 mph be OK? Yes, that's also reasonable. There is often quibbling and whining about the exact speed limit, but we recognize that establishing a number is a sensible thing to do and come together to abide by it. Yet it does seem like people are having problems with this concept. [End of Captain Obvious rant]
I see that as a very good question without an answer. How about you write legislation that will keep all the parties safe from harm and legal punishment?Can you connect the dots for me on this?What the difference is between a fetus in the womb and a neonate is : certainty. We like to believe that every healthy pregnancy results in a healthy baby —and healthy mom. Unfortunately that is not the case, even in ideal circumstances. Things can go horribly wrong during labor and delivery and not every fetus lives.
(1) I agree that there's no certainty that a healthy fetus in a healthy mother will result in a delivered newborn being healthy and the mother not having any complications. I haven't suggested such.
(2) I believe that at some point in the pregnancy, it's not 'just a fetus' but is a baby, and as such, abortion without good medical necessity (severe defect or congenital condition, risk to the mother's life or health) is tantamount to murder.
Can you explain how holding view (1) somehow negates view (2)?
It's apparently an 'ugly right wing lie' that the entire rest of the world embraces across the board.You are really really reaching for a particularly ugly right wing lie and I’m not having it.
Toni, they literally provide a list of places that absolutely *will* provide abortions at any point in the pregnancy.You can ‘choose’ all you want but that choice is not a reality if no one and no medical facility will perform the procedure.A woman who, at 38 weeks decodes she dies not want to continue to carry the pregnancy—please believe me when I say that is most pregnant women at 38 weeks gestation— does not go to her doctor or hospital or clinic and say; I’ve changed my mind. Do an abortion. Because guess what? That choice would not be given to her. She’d be treated to some serious intervention by mental health professionals and kept under close observation until the baby was delivered.I'm going to restate this from my perspective. Please correct where I've gone wrong.Ok: A fetus is not a separate person until it is born and separate from the mother’s body,
In any pregnancy which is intended to be carried until term ( or as close as possible) any medical intervention or care plan for mother or fetus affects both and is designed and delivered with that fact in mind.
"If the mother decides at week 38 that she doesn't intend to carry to full term, then the fetus isn't a person at all and it's perfectly fine to terminate it. On the other hand, if the mother intends to carry to full term, but goes into premature labor at week 30, it's a person, and termination would be murder."
What happens if the mother doesn't intend to carry to term, but ends up going into premature labor at week 28, and the infant gets delivered via c-section? Is it a person, because it's been born and is separate from the mother's body... or is it not a person since she didn't *intend* to carry it to term?
At which point, CPS would definitely be involved to determine if it were safe to send baby home with mom or even allow mom in the same room as baby. Unfortunately pregnancy does sometimes cause serious mental health issues, including life threatening crisis
I may be misremembering but I think you do not have biological children? I’m only mentioning because you seem to be suffering under the delusion that pregnant women call the shots re: their care during pregnancy and labor and delivery
They don’t . At best, they get to state their wishes and plans and if things go according to plan and there is t some other reason-/different doctor. Lots of babies being born thst night, nurse with strong opinions that conflict with mother’s—everything might go to plan. Might. Doesn’t usually but it could happen
Reality is that women are given c-sections they don’t want, refused c-sections they do want, given episiotomies and meds they don’t want or are denied those things—depending on what the medical team things is best.
Not true, at least in some states. Oregon for example, which has basically no restrictions:
Oregon Health Authority
While medical providers may refuse to give you abortion services based on their personal beliefs, they cannot interfere with your legal right to choose to have an abortion. If you are refused an abortion, please know there are providers who will help you obtain abortion services in Oregon. See here for where to get an abortion in Oregon.
- Abortion is legal in Oregon.
- You do not need to be a resident of Oregon or a U.S. citizen to get abortion services in Oregon.
- Oregon has no restrictions on abortions based on how far along in pregnancy you are.
- There are also no required waiting periods before receiving an abortion.
- There are no restrictions on getting medication abortion pills by mail within Oregon.
The rest of your post is irrelevant, given that I have specified the point at which I think that limitation ought to be set. FFS, I've even provided the reasoning behind that point.Sure; But the way laws work is that they have to specify a point.The reason for it, as I have articulated several times, is that at some point in the pregnancy, it's no longer a fetus but a baby, and at that point you are murdering an infant.
You're claiming that red is exactly the same as blue.No, it is exactly what you just agreed to be the case. There is no boundary, just a continuum.You might not *agree* with where I've set the boundary, but to claim that one does not exist is disingenuous.
Sure sure. Cat's didn't evolve to eat meat, pandas didn't evolve to eat bamboo. It's all just moral judgements on their part, and anyone who disagrees that it's a cat's moral judgement to be an obligate carnivore is really making an excuse for refusing to consider the morality of the cat's position, and that's a moral position in and of itself.We didn't "evolve to eat meat" (as I have already pointed out), and the claim that we did is clearly a moral judgement (as is the claim that veganism is therefore "silly") - or perhaps it is an excuse for refusing to consider the morality of your position, which is itself a choice of moral position.Seriously - go back and review. I have no moral view about veganism. I think it's silly, given that we evolved to consume meat. There's no moral position in there... unless "this is silly" is something you consider to be a moral judgement. And I think that's really stretching the idea of morality there.
The bolded is only partially true.What a crock of faux Captain Obvious shit.
Highways and roadway curves are designed for a particular speed. Physics would force cars to fly off them when exceeding that speed by a FoS or two. Additionally, we have statistics that can look into whether speeds should be increased or decreased based on accidents, deaths, incidents that have been observed as well as looking back at decades of data regarding how fast can reliably be expected to drive safely on.
And that's totally why the entirety of Europe restricts abortions at an earlier gestational period than what I've proposed. Yep. Totally.Arguments regarding personhood date back millenia, have no concensus, and have no objective basis from statistics to rely on onee thing to justify one choice over the other. The only consistent thing is that legal provisions generally only apply to an individual post birth.
Not yet.We didn't *evolve* to eat other humans.Ya get them hungry enough and that majority, if it still exists, won’t be so vast.For Papua New Guineans perhaps, but for the vast majority not so much.So are other humans.The justification for killing a fish or a cow is that they're food which we have evolved to eat.
A reasonable doctor makes reasonable decisions based on the specifics of the situation. In that scenario, no decision by the doctor concerning a medical procedure should be prohibited by statute, IMO.I'm going to step back a moment. Let's approach this from a different perspective.
@Toni , @Elixir , @bilby , @ZiprHead , @Jimmy Higgins and anyone else who would like to answer:
Let's assume a situation in which there is no known risk or deleterious condition in the fetus, and no known risks to the mother's health or life. For all intents, both the mother and the fetus are healthy.
Given that the normal length of a pregnancy in humans is 40 weeks...
At how many weeks of gestation do you think a reasonable doctor should refuse to perform an abortion in this situation?
It doesn't matter whether we think a reasonable doctor would perform the procedure; if the doctor is reasonable, the doctor will do the reasonable thing no matter what that happens to be from our probably-less-reasonable point of view, seeing as we do not have access to all the reasons doctors do.A reasonable doctor makes reasonable decisions based on the specifics of the situation. In that scenario, no decision by the doctor concerning a medical procedure should be prohibited by statute, IMO.I'm going to step back a moment. Let's approach this from a different perspective.
@Toni , @Elixir , @bilby , @ZiprHead , @Jimmy Higgins and anyone else who would like to answer:
Let's assume a situation in which there is no known risk or deleterious condition in the fetus, and no known risks to the mother's health or life. For all intents, both the mother and the fetus are healthy.
Given that the normal length of a pregnancy in humans is 40 weeks...
At how many weeks of gestation do you think a reasonable doctor should refuse to perform an abortion in this situation?
And once again, Emily says something quite reasonable and the folks who don't like it say something asinine.Not yet.We didn't *evolve* to eat other humans.Ya get them hungry enough and that majority, if it still exists, won’t be so vast.For Papua New Guineans perhaps, but for the vast majority not so much.So are other humans.The justification for killing a fish or a cow is that they're food which we have evolved to eat.
You're claiming that red is exactly the same as blue.No, it is exactly what you just agreed to be the case. There is no boundary, just a continuum.You might not *agree* with where I've set the boundary, but to claim that one does not exist is disingenuous.
Sure sure. Cat's didn't evolve to eat meat, pandas didn't evolve to eat bamboo. It's all just moral judgements on their part, and anyone who disagrees that it's a cat's moral judgement to be an obligate carnivore is really making an excuse for refusing to consider the morality of the cat's position, and that's a moral position in and of itself.We didn't "evolve to eat meat" (as I have already pointed out), and the claim that we did is clearly a moral judgement (as is the claim that veganism is therefore "silly") - or perhaps it is an excuse for refusing to consider the morality of your position, which is itself a choice of moral position.Seriously - go back and review. I have no moral view about veganism. I think it's silly, given that we evolved to consume meat. There's no moral position in there... unless "this is silly" is something you consider to be a moral judgement. And I think that's really stretching the idea of morality there.
Please be less absurd.
That depends on the situation. Every case is unique.I'm going to step back a moment. Let's approach this from a different perspective.
@Toni , @Elixir , @bilby , @ZiprHead , @Jimmy Higgins and anyone else who would like to answer:
Let's assume a situation in which there is no known risk or deleterious condition in the fetus, and no known risks to the mother's health or life. For all intents, both the mother and the fetus are healthy.
Given that the normal length of a pregnancy in humans is 40 weeks...
At how many weeks of gestation do you think a reasonable doctor should refuse to perform an abortion in this situation?
When a reasonable doctor opines that it's a viable fetus, they will also reasonably refuse to perform an abortion.At how many weeks of gestation do you think a reasonable doctor should refuse to perform an abortion in this situation?
Why is there still an obsession with identifying "a number" that we all have agreed does not exist, enshrined wherever or not?More importantly, why do you think that number should be enshrined in law?
A reasonable doctor makes reasonable decisions based on the specifics of the situation. In that scenario, no decision by the doctor concerning a medical procedure should be prohibited by statute, IMO.I'm going to step back a moment. Let's approach this from a different perspective.
@Toni , @Elixir , @bilby , @ZiprHead , @Jimmy Higgins and anyone else who would like to answer:
Let's assume a situation in which there is no known risk or deleterious condition in the fetus, and no known risks to the mother's health or life. For all intents, both the mother and the fetus are healthy.
Given that the normal length of a pregnancy in humans is 40 weeks...
At how many weeks of gestation do you think a reasonable doctor should refuse to perform an abortion in this situation?