I'm not an end justifies the means type of guy. I don't need to pretend something is wrong just because I'm afraid of dealing with a more complicated issue. The fact is that naphesh (soul) does mean living creatures (or creatures that breathe) and does complicate the claim of embryos as being souls. But it doesn't change the fact that people would have to choose to forfeit the benefit of the doubt when terminating a life.
I get that you are probably angry most of the time, and being irrational and spiteful is your way of dealing with it, but have you considered that it is a medical condition? Maybe it's self-induced? Are you on birth control? I don't know for sure, but I heard a curious claim that by being on birth control, your body emulates a feeling akin to constant miscarriage, and is worse than a hypothetical 24/7 menstruation cycle. Can you confirm? Try a diary.
This is misogynistic as hell, and you accuse me of being spiteful? Also your definition of soul is pretty unique, and your "complication" of being able to use it to define fetuses as BEING souls (gods that is a weird string of words) still only satisfies your own esoteric reasoning. A machine can artificially simulate breath with a real heart attached to it, in order to keep it fresh for transplant, but the machine doesn't have a soul at that point does it? The heart has living cells, ready to be used to potentially save somebody. If you remove it from its host machine, does this constitute murder for you when the heart clearly dies? Honestly, I don't care about your actual answer, I just think your argument about a factual soul is amusing and obviously obfuscating the bigger issue that your belief makes you think you have the right to determine what the other gender is allowed to do with their own bodies.
The fetus dies when it's shredded to bits by the machine they use to suck it out of the mother with. Go load up Google Images, turn off the safe search and type in "aborted babies". I'm not sure what the hell you're thinking making claims that abortions don't end the life of the baby.
A miscarriage is the natural death of a baby before it's born. It dies in the mothers womb.
My relationship with God is none of you're damned business. It's between me and my maker.
I'm really starting to think all your knowledge of abortions comes from South Park TSOT. There are actually quite a few ways to have an abortion, and if you're so far along that the baby is self sustaining, the simplest solution is to induce labor and NOT an abortion. Most abortions end in something so small and unrecognizable that it is hard to affiliate with a baby, but hey, go ahead and keep making decisions for other people simply because you don't know much on the topic but think it sounds bad...
Wait, no, your faith in a god has no damned business in policy decisions. It may surprise you to know that in my faith, your god is really damned evil and would absolutely be tried as a war criminal several times over in a court of man's law, but even if he was a flower child out to cure cancer, he'd still be imaginary until proven otherwise, and thus have no place in social policy.
The democratic party is also shitty, just in their own way.
Source : was part of the party for 6 or 7 years before moving sides.
This isn't untrue, but one shouldn't ignore the most obvious danger just because something else has a problem. Also off the topic, I was actually a part of the GOP for a few years in my early life, before I got a good grasp of economics. It is a good thing to shift about and get different perspectives on things!
I've been following this for years now, armchair legal scholar. Here's my $0.02.
The leaked Supreme Court opinion is a legal one, and it is the correct legal one. There is nothing ideological about this. Roe v. Wade has always been an incorrect decision, bending the interpretation of the 9th Amendment beyond a reasonable interpretation of its intent. The decision with Planned Parenthood is the same. Both were always going to be vacated, it was only a question of when.
The debate over the legality and availability of abortion is absolute positively an ideological one. It is a problem that can only be solved through compromise, as it is a fundamental philosophical difference that is unlikely to ever disappear. The best we can do is seek a fair compromise. No absolute or extreme decisions will stand the test of time, they will merely encourage the pendulum to swinger harder the other way. This will be a forever war, until we resign to find a peaceful compromise, and protect it in proper legislation, something that Roe v. Wade was not.
What happens next? I have no idea, but I fear that there is little appetite for compromise. Using the 9th Amendment, one could argue that a woman could never be punished in any way for having an abortion, however, States could decide that other people who facilitate this are committing criminal actions. And other States may go so far as to allow abortion all the way up to, and after child delivery, an actual thing that has been proposed.
My solution? Admit that abortion is murder, period. Admit that forcing a woman carry a child to term against her will is cruel, unusual, and inhumane. Acknowledge the power imbalance in this relationship, in that the fetus cannot speak for itself, and it cannot live without the woman's consent. Recognize that this is a dilemma that is *impossible* to solve through rational science, and propose a symbolic compromise. The standard term for carrying a child to birth is 9 months. Allow *unconditional* abortion up until 4.5 month. Rights of the mother dominate for the first 4.5 month, rights of the unborn have precedence over the following 4.5 months. Allow all the obvious conditional (incest rape, danger to mother, etc.) abortions at the discretion of the medical professionals involved without legal limitation.
Oy, where to begin with this one...
First, the ideology of those against abortion rights is rooted in theology. Religion is not universally shared and interpretations do not all lend to the idea that abortions are bad for any faith, also it is not rooted in any sort of facts about the nature of the world. Any compromise would legitimize a state religion and that would be a pretty miserable state of affairs. Roe v Wade may not have had the strongest legal foundation, but the Supreme Court did honor it and consistently had elected officials bring it up before adding members to the bench, only to have many members betray the trust of the representatives of the people. It might have been struck down on a legal premise, but it was removed over a theological concept against the will of the populous it serves.
Admitting that abortion is murder is just wrong on its face. Unless menstruation is accidental manslaughter like Baxter's insane rant about soul vessels and "natural death", it isn't murder, it is a medical procedure done for a myriad of reasons on something with the potential for life. If you're having an issue about when something is viable or alive or whatever, I encourage you to talk with somebody who has had an abortion or even a miscarriage. It is an emotional, painful thing, something nobody would wish on themselves a second time let alone anybody else, and accusing people of being murderers on top of it is just disgusting.
Topping off, like I've said before, nobody has a 5 month abortion just because they got a wild hair up their butt one day. I don't know what kinds of scenarios guys think women get abortions for, but it just doesn't work like that. There is no room for compromise here, women are masters of their own bodies and should be able to choose if something should or shouldn't be inside of them. IF there is some lady out there who wants to endure all the pain and agony of going to 5 months routinely just so they can imagine they're a mass murderer, that person needs mental help immediately, not legal repercussions. Everyone else has reasons, and men have to learn to respect that. End of story.
Basically, "the religious will never stop fighting their religious war against human rights. its best to find a compromise where we can at least establish some of the more basic human rights, even if the science has to be ignored to do."? it's a bit depressing, but hard to argue.
Oh, if this thread has proven anything, it is EASY to argue. Difficult to convince others on, maybe, but at least in America, there is supposed to be a separation of church and state, so the argument is that religion shouldn't alter policy.
The discrepancy here is that "the religious" probably wouldn't admit to forcing a pregnancy to term as cruel (it's a blessing), even if the politically minded could see the merit in such a solution. There is a resolution where "church and state" can co-exist, and that's when the church is the state.
I'd argue that instead of approaching futility head on, that other societal issues can be addressed. Issues that contribute to the demand for abortion, like poverty, education, mental health and other socially eroding elements. Heading off the demand for abortion won't resolve the dilemma inherent in abortion as it's literally mind vs body. I wouldn't wish anybody to be in that situation, where they'd feel the need to consider it. The less that can occur, the better.
If there could be an agreement that less demand for abortion is better, I would see that as a socially progressive point of focus.
And here we come back to my favorite. I'll tell you what, you come up with a way to have a birth with your own body in a society where all your needs for a happy and healthy life for you and your child are guaranteed by the government, and I will humor this argument endlessly. Until then, I'm going to focus on the fact that you say it is a blessing with no earthly idea of what it can do to your body and mind and pocketbook and personal goals, and that you actually said the quiet part out loud and mentioned the church becoming the state. Good luck with that in Japan.