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KoS View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 28 2012 at 23:38
Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

Originally posted by KoS KoS wrote:

If it's not legal, women will get illegal ones.



This is a specious albeit popular notion.  After all, the same people who push for gun control ignore the argument that if we ban guns, people will get guns illegally.

Suppose women wouldn't get abortions if they weren't legal.  Does that change whether or not it is ethical?
that's a "what if". my statement i supported by evidence. 

it is more ethical to have a safe( as possible, all medical practices have risk), sanitary and supportive way of making abortion possible rather than have it illegal and unsafe.


Edited by KoS - January 28 2012 at 23:39
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 28 2012 at 23:59
I have far too little knowledge of the process and science behind the matter to make a good judgement. And I feel many others SHOULD be making the same call as me. If I had to vote on it or something I'd read up on it I guess
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 29 2012 at 07:52
Originally posted by KoS KoS wrote:


it is more ethical to have a safe( as possible, all medical practices have risk), sanitary and supportive way of making abortion possible rather than have it illegal and unsafe.

Yeah but if you make it legal and safe then you don't properly punish women for making a life or death decision.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 29 2012 at 08:11
Originally posted by The Truth The Truth wrote:

Freaking bumps.

They never are good things.

It's a matter of choice regardless of a laws. If it was made illegal, some would still abort. Blackmarket abortions. Personal ethics are the only factor in this argument. For everyone it's different, so don't make a public law. Keep it a personal opinion.


As I tried to point out earlier, this is an unhelpful observation.  Murder is illegal, but people still do it.  Ditto theft or arson.  Should we keep these things a personal opinion and not make a law about them?  If we should make a law, then why?  Wink


Edited by Epignosis - January 29 2012 at 08:19
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 29 2012 at 08:17
Originally posted by KoS KoS wrote:

Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

Originally posted by KoS KoS wrote:

If it's not legal, women will get illegal ones.



This is a specious albeit popular notion.  After all, the same people who push for gun control ignore the argument that if we ban guns, people will get guns illegally.

Suppose women wouldn't get abortions if they weren't legal.  Does that change whether or not it is ethical?
that's a "what if". my statement i supported by evidence. 

it is more ethical to have a safe( as possible, all medical practices have risk), sanitary and supportive way of making abortion possible rather than have it illegal and unsafe.


You circumvented what I asked, but fine (no one tries to make murder safer or more sanitary).

DIY abortions still occur even though its legal in all 50 states.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 29 2012 at 08:30
About the most pointless thing to argue about a law it that people are going to break it anyway.  Another thing trotted out is "you can't legislate morality".  Yeah you can.  What you shouldn't codify into legislation is religious morality.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 29 2012 at 09:03
Originally posted by lazland lazland wrote:

Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:

Originally posted by Slartibartfast Slartibartfast wrote:

 
Originally posted by Ivan_Melgar_M Ivan_Melgar_M wrote:


In no case abortion should used as a substitute for casual sex without protection, the woman owns her body, but not the body of the baby, if she was careless enough to have sex without protection, she should have the baby.


No responsibility for the man eh?  Yeah there is a epidemic of loose women going around having sex willy nilly just so they can conceive children only to take sheer pleasure in killing them.

By the contrary Starti, attack us where it hurts more (In the pocket).

If a MANDATORY DNA test proves it's a man's child, we should be forced to pay 50% of the expenses and of course education.

Instead of protecting abortion, make stronger laws to make men and women responsible of their acts...If a man has to pay 1/3 of his incomes in one baby he never wanted, he wouldn't be stupid enough to have another one, I'm sure he would be the first to carry a package of condoms in the pocket.

Iván.

As a lawyer, you must surely be aware that the easiest laws to break, and those most frequently broke, are silly ones. They tried something similar here with the Child Support Agency, one of the biggest governmental disasters of our time in the UK, which is saying something.

Of course with problems, but in the modest Perú it works, since failing to pay child support is a felony..

You can go to jail, but that's not all, you can't leave the country unless you leave several months of guarantee, and if you owe as little as a month your passport is void.

Last time I was returning from USA, I was arrested in the airport for evading child support, the curious thing is that I don't have a child, the problem was that an Iván Melgar M had a rial and escaped the country, but when the Captain in charge checked the file called the policemen and sanctioned both for being stupid, the guy that was Iván Melgar MORENO and I'm Iván Melgar MOREY.

Of course some people hide properties, but if found (normally the woman's lawyer finds hides properties or hidden salary) they can go to jail.

One client was in that problem, her husband had placed two houses in the name of a company which he was majority shareholder, I went to trial and asked for 50% of his shares, he was forced to sign a settlement giving us one of the houses.

Iván


Edited by Ivan_Melgar_M - January 29 2012 at 09:05
            
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 29 2012 at 09:03
People confuse the idea of an unenforceable law with a law that people will break (otherwise known as every law). Trying to apply the latter as an argument in favor of abortion's legalization clearly proves too much.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 29 2012 at 09:17
Originally posted by Arrested Decay Arrested Decay wrote:

Not sure if it's been asked, yet, I skipped a bunch of pages, I got kinda tried of reading a lot of the same stuff... But, I wanted to ask.

Any of you pro-lifer's saddened by dying sperm? Is that life? That's gonna be your baby, those little guys constantly. And you super ensure their death by deliberately masturbating and jizzing them into nowhere'sville, at least dying in the sack means they waited for a chance, you're technically willfully wasting the lives of sperm by w**king. Any of you opposed to w**king?

I'm not even taking a jab here, I'm not gonna get involved in this debate, I just wanted to hear thoughts on that one from the pro-lifers who believe even the earliest cell forms are alive. So, honest question, I'm just curious.

This is absurd, there's no life until the sperm fecundates the egg, that's a fact.

 A fecundated egg will become a baby, you can nurture and feed sperm for 100 years and will never become a baby.

My religion sanctions masturbation, but no law in the universe sanctions masturbation, unless you do it in front of a girl's school. LOL

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 29 2012 at 09:59
Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

I am sorry, but still you make no sense to me.


I can't spell it out any more clearly, considering that I said it explicitly. If you cannot understand, I cannot help you.

Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

I also question how you can speak for "most people."  Do you know most people?


I have data that is ideally representative of "most people" for a 5-to-1 situation (I used 400-to-1). Given that it comes from Americans, who are notably individualistic, it would probably be an underestimate for the rest of the world as a whole.

Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:


Can you prove that I am in a tiny minority?  Even if you can, it doesn't make the majority right.


See above. Whether it makes the majority right is moot. I merely proposed that for most people, the ultimate consequence of the action would normally figure into their judgment of whether it is ethical. Furthermore, you seem to be suggesting that there is an absolute right in matters of moral judgment.

Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

And I fail to see what this vain hypothetical question has to do with abortion.  Surely one fetus won't destroy 400 people right off.


You suggested that the outcome of the law should be divorced from the debate of whether it is ethical. I provided a counterpoint. If the outcome of the law is to produce 1,000 dead women in alleyways every year, and that can be foreseen, there are certainly ethical questions about the law.

That's not to suggest that it would always happen. Morality is typically emotional. Want to know how you can convince people to switch sides on the 5-to-1 experiment? Connect them with the action. General terms? Do it. Shoot them? Do it. Pull a level? Do it. Stab him? Throw him on train tracks? Now wait just a darn minute, Jim! Now switch them back by saying those 5 are children. Psychology is mean, innit?

Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

Please start making sense.


Good God. If your neighbor shoots someone for just being on his lawn, is that ethical?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 29 2012 at 10:14
Originally posted by Gamemako Gamemako wrote:



You suggested that the outcome of the law should be divorced from the debate of whether it is ethical. I provided a counterpoint. If the outcome of the law is to produce 1,000 dead women in alleyways every year, and that can be foreseen, there are certainly ethical questions about the law.




By this reasoning, outlawing automobiles would be ethical since there are more than 30,000 fatal crashes each year.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 29 2012 at 10:17
I'd vote for legalization because of this: Wink
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 29 2012 at 10:20
Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

By this reasoning, outlawing automobiles would be ethical since there are more than 30,000 fatal crashes each year.


You are hell-bent on ridiculous straw-man arguments. You know an additional consequence would be economic collapse and thousands if not millions of other deaths. Stop being a douche.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 29 2012 at 10:44
 
Originally posted by Gamemako Gamemako wrote:

Not that it's a simple question. I'm sure you could find those who would agree with your interpretation. Regardless, your beliefs here -- particularly the mystical Stamp of Scientific Proofiness -- are immodestly off-base. It's also unusual that you go to such such efforts, revealing the unquestioned assertions behind your beliefs, to attempt to disprove something that isn't even stated as a fact but rather as a consequence of a traditional and common definition of life.

Late response, but whatever.

I'm not sure why you are getting so uptight about this, nor do I know why you think I am putting much effort into this point. (Which, I really am not.) Let me make it simple though: gametes are a kind of cell and all cells are considered life. And here's the almighty wikipedia citation: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cell_(biology) If you want to have your absurdly strict definition of life, then go ahead, but this discussion is getting ridiculous, and there's really no point in continuing this.

Originally posted by The T The T wrote:

I think you are complicating things a bit too much. Yes, technically abortion might be another contraceptive method, but I would be quite scared of trivializing it so much as to be seen in the same light as the pill or other alternatives. It would be morally dangerous, and I'm quite the one against any type of moral judgments in most cases (people here know that). But to start treating abortion just like "another option open" seems to me wrong. I encourage people to always use some form of contraceptive, but I won't say "hey, just do it, you can abort if anything". Is it really that easy? Yes, let it be legal, get the state out of the choice, but don't start painting it as just some alternative to other methods. Don't make it so mundane. Don't promote it. One thing is to be "pro-choice" another one to be "pro-abortion", and calling it "just another contraceptive method" seems to make it something we should promote.


I really fail to see how it is morally dangerous to promote abortion as just another option. I have no problem with people promoting it or making it mundane.    

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 29 2012 at 11:23
^If you fail to see why abortion, though open as an option, shouldn't be promoted or encouraged, I can't help you.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 29 2012 at 11:43
Originally posted by Gamemako Gamemako wrote:

Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

By this reasoning, outlawing automobiles would be ethical since there are more than 30,000 fatal crashes each year.


You are hell-bent on ridiculous straw-man arguments. You know an additional consequence would be economic collapse and thousands if not millions of other deaths. Stop being a douche.

And you should stop being rude. It's not a ridiculous argument.

Rob is perfectly capable of explaining himself, but my understanding of his argument is that laws based on ethical questions tend to be bad laws, or, as I posted with Ivan before, generally ignored.

He is right. Car crashes are responsible for many, many deaths. If you wanted to pass a law that specifically looked at death prevention, you would pass a law banning motor cars. And smoking. And drinking. And hill walking. The list would be endless.

The point is that overbearing legislation aimed at stopping a particular habit or way of doing things, no matter how unethical you might find it, almost always ends up being a bad law - look at prohibition.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 29 2012 at 12:17
Originally posted by lazland lazland wrote:

And you should stop being rude. It's not a ridiculous argument....


Have I not been incredibly clear? Let me try to spell this out one more time, in the simplest terms possible.

1) There are consequences to any action.

2) Some are directly caused by the action, some are indirect.

3) Most people consider all consequences, not just the intended ones, in determining whether an action is ethical.

ERGO: In the case of banning cars, all consequences are considered. 30,000 vehicle-related deaths are prevented annually. However, 3 billion vehicle-miles per year are lost as well. This is the unintended consequence that is considered by most normal people. That loss results in far more damage than the 30,000 vehicle deaths in any case, let alone the question of the role of government (which has its own subjective value). This is also why Rob's comment is so absurd: he's supporting the notion of considering the consequences rather than refuting it, and throwing it out there as a counterpoint to an argument that was never made by anyone here.

IN THE CASE OF ABORTION: We would consider not only the direct result but also the unintended consequence of back-alley abortions (among other things).

HOWEVER:
It is not always possible to know the ultimate consequences. Therefore, we try to use our best estimate. When that indicates an unacceptable consequence (like the deaths of hundreds of women), we might reconsider doing it. We may choose to be conservative to reduce the risk of unpredicted negative consequences, but that is a matter that requires a personal valuation of the risk involved.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 29 2012 at 13:05
US laws should not exist to control consequences- that is not their Constitutional purpose.  If that is their purpose, then laws are largely failures.  Constitutionally, laws are to protect life and property.  Abortion visits violence on another unique human individual.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 29 2012 at 14:02
Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

Originally posted by The Truth The Truth wrote:

Freaking bumps.

They never are good things.

It's a matter of choice regardless of a laws. If it was made illegal, some would still abort. Blackmarket abortions. Personal ethics are the only factor in this argument. For everyone it's different, so don't make a public law. Keep it a personal opinion.


As I tried to point out earlier, this is an unhelpful observation.  Murder is illegal, but people still do it.  Ditto theft or arson.  Should we keep these things a personal opinion and not make a law about them?  If we should make a law, then why?  Wink

I agree with what Pat said about this, but I still think this is a good point to consider.

In my eyes and my understanding of what "the law" is for, the general intent of the law is to protect and serve society and the individuals who make it up. We can argue for decades about what society is/should be, whether or not a fetus has rights, and so on. And in a way, I think these are irrelevant (there are lots of things that are legal that are horrifying or have large downsides, modern animal farming techniques and motor vehicles as examples).

The question we have to ask is, what is the best way to legislate, such that it leads to being the most beneficial to society/the individual? Given the current understanding of human behaviour, what is the likely outcome of making it legal or illegal?

I'm not going to be pretend to be an expert in this regard, but when it comes to this evaluation I do tend to side with those who think that legalisation is the way to go. Giving women who are going to do it the option to do it in a safer manner can only be a good thing, in my mind. It also prevents the situation where doctors do it in the black market because they believe they are helping, only to be arrested or lose their medical license (like we really need less doctors, especially less of the kind willing to put their neck out to help people).

The "golden" situation would either be a) women never want abortions or b) there was no negative perception towards abortion. I think the most damaging thing that comes from abortions are DIY abortions that go wrong. Unfortunately, situation a) will likely never occur, and as long as situation b) is a reality, there are going to be some women who go DIY anyways in an attempt to avoid shame. But if we provide a safe, legal option, I think the damage to individual women is lessened. And I consider that to be a gain for society as well, because then less money is being spent on damage control when women injure themselves. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 29 2012 at 14:30
When you can hide behind the constitution it doesn't matter if a thing is right or wrong.
Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...

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