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The 8th amendment(Mod warning in op)

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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,673 ✭✭✭mahamageehad


    Crea wrote: »
    My sisters baby was diagnosed with Edwards Syndrome at 30 weeks. She was told her the Ionger she remained pregnant the more likely the baby would die in utero. She begged to be induced early but the doc said it could be construed as an abortion by law. She had to stay pregnant for another 8 weeks at which time she had a number of breakdowns and the baby died.
    Nothing can be done in these cases until the 8th ammendment is removed.

    Heartbreaking. Similar to the Unreported Worlds piece where the couple knew the baby was going to die in utero and their option was England or wait. They talked about getting up every day and having to check if the baby had died. They didn't want to go to England because they wanted to be able to bury the kid here and sometimes that's difficult with the U.K. She talked about walking down the street and having people congratulate her and touch her tummy, all while she knew her (wanted) pregnancy wouldn't have a happy ending.

    Sorry your sister had to go through that too. The 8th is a terrible shadow over pregnancies in Ireland.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,637 ✭✭✭volchitsa


    Crea wrote: »
    My sisters baby was diagnosed with Edwards Syndrome at 30 weeks. She was told her the Ionger she remained pregnant the more likely the baby would die in utero. She begged to be induced early but the doc said it could be construed as an abortion by law. She had to stay pregnant for another 8 weeks at which time she had a number of breakdowns and the baby died.
    Nothing can be done in these cases until the 8th ammendment is removed.

    I feel torn about giving this a sort of "like", as it's positively heart wrenching, but I did want to thank you for posting this.

    ”I enjoy cigars, whisky and facing down totalitarians, so am I really Winston Churchill?” (JK Rowling)



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 17,739 ✭✭✭✭kylith


    Mod-You do not link to that forum ever under any circumstances


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,533 ✭✭✭AnGaelach


    B0jangles wrote: »
    Are they zero?

    Because that's the only level I'd feel safe at if I was in a situation where pregnancy means permanent disability or death to me, and I lived in a country which denies me the right to choose whether or not to take that risk.

    You're not denied the right, because it isn't a right... Whereas the right to life is a right, and you seek to deny that to the unborn simply because you want the ability to deny it.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,533 ✭✭✭AnGaelach


    nice_guy80 wrote: »
    I would prefer if people wouldn't try to impose their beliefs on others

    Kind of ironic that the "progressives" have chosen that tactic then isn't it? Not only can you not vote against abortion without being seen as some kind of monster, you also aren't even allowed to voice your own conscience without being hounded and attacked and forced to conform to their belief - Tim Farron being the most prime example. He didn't let his beliefs influence his political decisions, and yet he was run out of his job because his personally held beliefs conflicted with theirs.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,705 ✭✭✭✭Tigger


    January wrote: »
    Because circumstances can and do change. Just because you have an unplanned, unwanted pregnancy and abort it does not mean you don't get to choose to plan a pregnancy at a later date.

    a couple that have a child and then abort a healthy baby and then have a child later is an example of abortion on demand as contraception which is a far cry from abortion for medical reasons for either the fetous or the mother

    i suppose id be oknwith abortion on demand only at a early stage but ive realised that evn that concession seems to be a bridge to far for some of the repealers


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,950 ✭✭✭B0jangles


    AnGaelach wrote: »
    You're not denied the right, because it isn't a right... Whereas the right to life is a right, and you seek to deny that to the unborn simply because you want the ability to deny it.


    Do you hear what you are saying?

    That a woman who 100% knows that she will either be left disabled or dead by another pregnancy should still not have the right to end that pregnancy because 'it isn't a right'.

    How about we make it a right?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,533 ✭✭✭AnGaelach


    B0jangles wrote: »
    Do you hear what you are saying?

    That a woman who 100% knows that she will either be left disabled or dead by another pregnancy should still not have the right to end that pregnancy because 'it isn't a right'.

    That's fear-mongering nonsense. Abortions where the mother's life is at risk are legal. How you think she's going to know that not getting an abortion now will mean the next pregnancy will mean her death, is beyond me. Are women clairvoyant?
    B0jangles wrote: »
    How about we make it a right?

    Nah, you're alright. I was on the moderate pro-life side of this debate, you can check my post history if you don't believe me. I would have voted to lessen the restrictions but after some of the stunts and the highly combative stance the pro-choice crowd has taken, I'm simply voting no to changing it.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,950 ✭✭✭B0jangles


    AnGaelach wrote: »
    That's fear-mongering nonsense. Abortions where the mother's life is at risk are legal. How you think she's going to know that not getting an abortion now will mean the next pregnancy will mean her death, is beyond me. Are women clairvoyant?



    Nah, you're alright. I was on the moderate pro-life side of this debate, you can check my post history if you don't believe me. I would have voted to lessen the restrictions but after some of the stunts and the highly combative stance the pro-choice crowd has taken, I'm simply voting no to changing it.

    It's not fearmongering, it's the medical advice my friend's wife was given after her second pregnancy almost killed her. She was told in no uncertain terms that a third would absolutely leave her unable to walk, with a strong possibility of leaving her dead.

    According to the law here, she would have to be at risk of death to qualify for an abortion.

    Permanent disability is not enough; according to the law as it stands, it is preferable for her to live out the rest of her days in a wheelchair rather than allow her the choice of whether or not she wants to take the risk.

    This woman seems to have suffered from the same basic condition: https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2011/feb/19/spd-pelvic-pain-wheelchair

    edit: You'd actually vote to keep things as they are because you dislike "the stunts and the highly combative stance the pro-choice crowd has taken"

    Are you for real?
    After everything that has been said by (just for one example) parents who had to continue for months with pregnancies certain to end in tragedy because of fatal fetal abnormalities?

    You'd condemn even more parents to that kind of unimaginable suffering because some people behaved in a way you found tiresome?

    That is... To be honest, I can't even say what I think of that attitude.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 23,862 ✭✭✭✭January


    Tigger wrote: »
    a couple that have a child and then abort a healthy baby and then have a child later is an example of abortion on demand as contraception which is a far cry from abortion for medical reasons for either the fetous or the mother

    i suppose id be oknwith abortion on demand only at a early stage but ive realised that evn that concession seems to be a bridge to far for some of the repealers

    No it is not, it's about being able to decide when you're ready to parent, whether you have children already or not.

    As early as possible, as late as necessary. Taking into account that 92% of abortions happen before 12 weeks of pregnancy and 0.2% happen after 20 weeks and only for reasons of FFA and/or threat to the mother's life.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,705 ✭✭✭✭Tigger


    January wrote: »
    No it is not, it's about being able to decide when you're ready to parent, whether you have children already or not.

    As early as possible, as late as necessary. Taking into account that 92% of abortions happen before 12 weeks of pregnancy and 0.2% happen after 20 weeks and only for reasons of FFA and/or threat to the mother's life.

    exactly


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,673 ✭✭✭mahamageehad


    If Twitter is anything to go by, both sides have some pretty disgusting and vicious individuals are the main speakers. I think the 8th should be repealed, and that access to abortion should be legislated like basically every other country, whatever that looks like, but I'd honestly be worried that the arguments are going to get so messy and divisive that many just won't bother voting.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,140 ✭✭✭✭PopePalpatine


    B0jangles wrote: »
    edit: You'd actually vote to keep things as they are because you dislike "the stunts and the highly combative stance the pro-choice crowd has taken"

    Are you for real?
    After everything that has been said by (just for one example) parents who had to continue for months with pregnancies certain to end in tragedy because of fatal fetal abnormalities?

    You'd condemn even more parents to that kind of unimaginable suffering because some people behaved in a way you found tiresome?

    That is... To be honest, I can't even say what I think of that attitude.
    I wonder what the pro-lifers would have to do to reverse his decision? Team up with Da'esh or some basement-dwelling alt-righters? March around Dublin chanting "Catholic Sharia now"?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 37,208 ✭✭✭✭Hotblack Desiato


    AnGaelach wrote: »
    How you think she's going to know that not getting an abortion now will mean the next pregnancy will mean her death, is beyond me. Are women clairvoyant?

    And anti-choicers wonder why people think they're misogynists?

    Nah, you're alright. I was on the moderate pro-life side of this debate

    That wouldn't be my opinion
    I would have voted to lessen the restrictions but after some of the stunts and the highly combative stance the pro-choice crowd has taken, I'm simply voting no to changing it.

    I don't believe that for a millisecond.

    I'm partial to your abracadabra,

    I'm raptured by the joy of it all.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,279 ✭✭✭NuMarvel


    Sure they might as well have the referendum. Ireland won't vote to repeal the eighth. All these people shouting and screaming to repeal are the loud minority, Ireland will not (in my opinion) vote to repeal.

    In my opinion abortion should be legal only in limited circumstances..... for medical reasons and other limited circumstances.

    Opinion polls consistently show that support for the 8th is minimal, typically 15% or so. The public isn't in a place where they need to be convinced that we need repeal; they're already there. What the public is unsure of is what should follow.
    Do you seriously think no life has been saved because of it? Really :rolleyes:

    According to the World Health Organisation abortions rates in countries that ban or restrict access to abortion are similar to rates in countries where access is allowed. Bans don't reduce the number of abortions, it just reduces the number of safe abortions.

    That seems to correlate to what we can tell about the experiences of Irish women too. The only reliable figures we have for abortions are those provided by the UK for women who have abortions and give an Irish address. And the numbers for last year are very similar to the numbers for 1982, the year before the referendum on the 8th. In fact the numbers rose nearly every year for 20 years after the 8th, and only started significantly coming down in 2005. I think that we can be sure that the 8th wasn't the reason for those drops.

    I can understand why people would be opposed to abortion. I really do. But I don't understand why they would support a measure that international research and our own experiences show doesn't prevent abortion. The 8th at best relocates it, and at worst makes it unsafe.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,597 ✭✭✭gctest50


    AnGaelach wrote: »
    You're not denied the right, because it isn't a right... Whereas the right to life is a right, and you seek to deny that to the unborn simply because you want the ability to deny it.

    It seems a few seek to deny it to women just to have that hold over them - make them travel

    Rights ? not so long ago this was the case :

    "Under Irish law, a married woman had no right to a share in her family home, even if she was the breadwinner. Her husband could sell the home without her consent."

    How it changed

    Under the Family Home Protection Act of 1976, neither spouse can sell the family home without the written consent of the other.



    http://irishecho.com/2013/05/10-things-a-woman-could-not-do-in-ireland-in-1970/



    Things change, things need to change


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    NuMarvel wrote: »
    Opinion polls consistently show that support for the 8th is minimal, typically 15% or so. The public isn't in a place where they need to be convinced that we need repeal; they're already there. What the public is unsure of is what should follow.



    According to the World Health Organisation abortions rates in countries that ban or restrict access to abortion are similar to rates in countries where access is allowed. Bans don't reduce the number of abortions, it just reduces the number of safe abortions.

    That seems to correlate to what we can tell about the experiences of Irish women too. The only reliable figures we have for abortions are those provided by the UK for women who have abortions and give an Irish address. And the numbers for last year are very similar to the numbers for 1982, the year before the referendum on the 8th. In fact the numbers rose nearly every year for 20 years after the 8th, and only started significantly coming down in 2005. I think that we can be sure that the 8th wasn't the reason for those drops.

    I can understand why people would be opposed to abortion. I really do. But I don't understand why they would support a measure that international research and our own experiences show doesn't prevent abortion. The 8th at best relocates it, and at worst makes it unsafe.

    As I said in my previous post, I am in favour of a referendum, let the people decide either which way. I am not an extremist in either way, I'll respect if the majority votes against my opinion (which is rare these days).


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,147 ✭✭✭SafeSurfer


    B0jangles wrote: »
    RobertKK wrote: »
    People who want a clear conscience use what their own conscience tells them, not what someone else tells them what they must support because that is what their conscience tells them.

    It is not hypocrisy to vote for what one believes. It is internal hypocrisy to go against what one believes, because someone tells them they must do something against their own personal beliefs/opinions.
    Only a weak person who is easily malleable would do as you say, because you want them to believe what you want them to believe.

    My friend and his wife have two children. The first pregnancy caused her crippling pain in her pelvis - pain which left her unable to walk for the last couple of months of the pregnancy. The second caused agonizing pain and left her bedbound for most of the 9 months. She almost died during the birth.

    She has been told that having another baby has a high chance of killing her and an almost certain result of leaving her permanently unable to walk.

    According the the 8th, she can only have an abortion if she is about to die; the nigh-certainty of being left permanently disabled is not considered important enough.

    Think about that; 'health' is not just talking about minor, passing discomfort, it's talking about basic bodily functions being seriously and permanently damaged.

    Is keeping your conscience squeaky-clean so vitally important that you're happy accept the undeniable fact that there are people, real born people with lives and families, people who will be left permanently disabled by a pregnancy who are victims right now of the extreme restrictions on abortion access in this country?

    That is an argument for sterilisation of both partners and 3 forms of contraception just in case. It's not an argument for abortion.
    If getting pregnant may kill you maybe you should take measures to ensure you do not become pregnant.
    If one has a nut allergy that could prove fatal one would tend to avoid nuts.

    Multo autem ad rem magis pertinet quallis tibi vide aris quam allis



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 37,208 ✭✭✭✭Hotblack Desiato


    So... do all publicly funded hospitals permit elective sterilisations, or are there still issues about 'catholic ethos'?

    Your lot really can't have it both ways. saying that women should use contraception and sterilisation when for years you've done all you can to block both of these. We even have anti-choice activists now saying the morning after pill is an alternative to abortion, when ten years ago they were saying the morning after pill was abortion.

    I'm partial to your abracadabra,

    I'm raptured by the joy of it all.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,423 ✭✭✭✭Outlaw Pete


    To all of you pro-choicers that have been speaking about ffa, rape, mother's health etc (for reasoning as to why we need to repeal the 8th) can I simply ask you: what if all that had all been allocated for in the 2013 Protection of Life During Pregnancy Act?Would you have been happy with that? Or would you, as I suspect, all still be campaigning for the 8th to be repealed nevertheless, using something else, like not enough fetal disorders meeting the ffa criteria or whatever.

    Cause let's be honest here: as ever, ffa, pregnancy from rape, risk to women's health etc, are all just being sanctimoniously used as a battering ram to try and do was deemed necessary to bring down the floodgates which would lead to abortion being as available here as it is in the UK and Holland. That's the wish. That's the goal.

    Why do I say this? Well it's simple really: I rarely if ever hear any of you talking about how you would be more than happy if these things (which you never stop bleating about) were one day allocated for. Not once. Not even a section of you. Even the '10 or 12 week limit' crowd (of which I could possibly be convinced to be part of) are rarely heard much from. Certainly never seen a poster or a placard declaring it a goal being strived for. Just the usual 'Her Body, Her Life' nonsense.

    3500 Irish women traveled for an abortion last year we are told (or thereabouts) and of that numver how many of them did so because of the health, or lack thereof, of the fetus? Around 200 apparently (37 of which had the cheek to have Down Syndrome). So, we're talking about roughly 3000 human beings (at least) that had their lives ended merely because they were not wanted but yet all the discussion for repealing the 8th is focused on abortions which are sought for reasons which only make up a small percentage of the overall total. To say the conversation is disproportional would be an understatement.

    As far as I am concerned it's a disgrace that a woman (or a man if the state legally recognizes him as such) would not be able to avail of an abortion here if and when they needed to. FFA, same story. Disgraceful. But I think certain people need to give it a rest using these situations to try and sway how people view the 8th amendment and whether it should be repealed or not, as I feel that not only is it dishonest (with regards to why you want the 8th repealed) it would be a grave error, because the people (those with prolife beliefs) will read that dishonesty a mile off and it's my guess that it could very well have voters saying 'No' when (had they been appealed to in a more honest fashion, particularly with regards to 'Where's this all going') you may very well have got a 'Yes'.

    In fact it just happened on this thread and the user was sneered at. A taste of what's to come perhaps? I'd hope not but all the signs suggest it very much is.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,147 ✭✭✭SafeSurfer


    So... do all publicly funded hospitals permit elective sterilisations, or are there still issues about 'catholic ethos'?

    Your lot really can't have it both ways. saying that women should use contraception and sterilisation when for years you've done all you can to block both of these. We even have anti-choice activists now saying the morning after pill is an alternative to abortion, when ten years ago they were saying the morning after pill was abortion.

    I presume people from a pro life perspective would be in favour of a procedure that would save a life.
    I am not aware of any moral arguments against sterilisation, vasectomy etc, as it is very much a case of my body, my choice. No other life is being extinguished as a result of the choice.

    Multo autem ad rem magis pertinet quallis tibi vide aris quam allis



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,363 ✭✭✭nozzferrahhtoo


    SafeSurfer wrote: »
    If getting pregnant may kill you maybe you should take measures to ensure you do not become pregnant.

    People in sports wear protective gear. They still sometimes get injured. People on fishing boats often wear life jackets. Many of them still drown. Police wear stab jackets but sometimes still get injured in the line of duty.

    The list goes on. It is possible to take many precautions and still end up in a situation where you need medical or other intervention or help. And at that point the help should be offered, rather than sanctimonious admonishments from an imaginary pedestal on how they got there in the first place.

    How many people who died from their nut allergy, do you think, did so because they were not trying hard enough to avoid nuts? Or do you think, maybe just maybe, that some people despite all their efforts, manage to get exposed to nuts all the same? And would we stand over them with the epi-pen in hand and say "tut tut tut you clearly were not trying hard enough" or would we simply give them the procedure they need and leave the sanctimonious judgmental clap trap at home where it belongs?
    what if all that had all been allocated for

    Not sure what the whatiffery achieves other than to allow you to make up a narrative on how you imagine they would behave had things been other than they are.

    The fact is on the abortion issue many people have concerns about one, the other, or BOTH of the things you mention. That is they are concerned about allowing abortions in cases of medical or emotional need (FFA, Rape and so forth) and/OR they are concerned about allowing abortion entirely by choice for people who wish it, at stages when there is no reason to hold moral and ethical concern for the fetus.

    Neither are mutually exclusive, and support of either does not mean you are actually cloak and dagger in support of the other and do not wish to admit it, or whatever your dark imaginary narrative is today.

    It is perfectly possible, moral, and ok to argue for one in one context and the other in another. Not only can they, they SHOULD do so. It is the right thing to do. Much as you might wish to spin it to seem otherwise.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 41,223 ✭✭✭✭Annasopra


    RobertKK wrote: »
    If a woman is ill and needs medical help her life obviously has to come first

    The 8th amendment means her life cannot be placed first. Its shocking to hear someone strongly defending the 8th amendment and yet completely misundersanding the negative affects on healthcare of pregnant people.

    It was so much easier to blame it on Them. It was bleakly depressing to think that They were Us. If it was Them, then nothing was anyone's fault. If it was us, what did that make Me? After all, I'm one of Us. I must be. I've certainly never thought of myself as one of Them. No one ever thinks of themselves as one of Them. We're always one of Us. It's Them that do the bad things.

    Terry Pratchet



  • Moderators, Computer Games Moderators Posts: 15,255 Mod ✭✭✭✭FutureGuy


    RobertKK wrote: »
    I have a sister who was told she had FFA and the baby would die soon after birth, a nurse in Dublin suggested about getting rid of the pregnancy...she had a good doctor who supported her, the child was born in Dublin, taken to Crumlin and is now living a normal life and plays sports.
    The arguments used for FFA are as if a diagnosis is black and white, when it is grey.

    Sorry but that is absolute bollocks from the nurse. No offense to you or your sister, but there is no way the child actually had a FFA and is normal now. The nurse would want to be ****ing shot if that's the case.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 33,518 ✭✭✭✭dudara


    @Outlaw Pete - I have to agree with your post. I'm not a fan of using the FFA arguments etc to "soften" the cough on this argument. It's not a pleasant topic at all, and I believe that we need to face it head on in order to have any chance of a decent solution. Plus, previous legislation has clearly shown the issues that can arise when you attempt to legislate for exceptions or minority cases.

    Firstly, I strongly believe the 8th needs to be repealed. It is blocking the proper medical care of pregnant women and denying them a voice in their own healthcare.

    Secondly, I believe that our government needs to legislate for abortion, in my opinion along the lines of the sensible recommendations of the Citizen's Assembly. This will give pregnant women a choice.

    I am not pro-abortion, not in the slightest. I see it very much as a point of last resort. But as a woman, I would want to have all choices available to me. And I do not want to be responsible for denying anyone a choice.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 23,862 ✭✭✭✭January


    Personally, no I wouldn't be happy with just FFA, rape/incest and threat to mothers life because I don't believe in forcing a woman to give birth because she can't afford to travel. It's as simple as that.

    Women are having abortions every day in Ireland, women travel every day to England to have abortions. Why should we be forced to continue to travel. Abortion is happening already, whether any of you like it or not. Why shouldn't it become legal here?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,279 ✭✭✭NuMarvel


    To all of you pro-choicers that have been speaking about ffa, rape, mother's health etc (for reasoning as to why we need to repeal the 8th) can I simply ask you: what if all that had all been allocated for in the 2013 Protection of Life During Pregnancy Act?Would you have been happy with that? Or would you, as I suspect, all still be campaigning for the 8th to be repealed nevertheless, using something else, like not enough fetal disorders meeting the ffa criteria or whatever.

    That's a moot question, because the only way those scenarios could have been included in the PLDP Act would have been if the 8th was repealed first, or at least very significantly altered.

    The wording of the 8th is very clear; the right to life of the unborn trumps all other considerations with the singular exception of the woman's right to life. Legislation that included other aspects, such as rape, health, etc would be unconstitutional and wouldn't survive a court challenge.

    But to get to the nub of your question; I'd personally be happy with the Citizen's Assembly recommendations, and most, if not all, pro-choice groups would be as well. And most pro-choice groups are also pretty clear that they're not looking for just exception-based legislation. They want legislation that will benefit the majority of women and not subject them to jumping hurdles to gain access.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 30,851 ✭✭✭✭blanch152


    SafeSurfer wrote: »
    That is an argument for sterilisation of both partners and 3 forms of contraception just in case. It's not an argument for abortion.
    If getting pregnant may kill you maybe you should take measures to ensure you do not become pregnant.
    If one has a nut allergy that could prove fatal one would tend to avoid nuts.


    Unfortunately, as this article makes clear, the Church does not approve of sterilisation and other such procedures.

    http://irishcatholic.ie/article/sisters-and-state-scandalous-alliance


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 68,190 ✭✭✭✭seamus


    To all of you pro-choicers that have been speaking about ffa, rape, mother's health etc (for reasoning as to why we need to repeal the 8th) can I simply ask you: what if all that had all been allocated for in the 2013 Protection of Life During Pregnancy Act?Would you have been happy with that? Or would you, as I suspect, all still be campaigning for the 8th to be repealed nevertheless, using something else, like not enough fetal disorders meeting the ffa criteria or whatever.
    This again.

    The POLDPA only exists because of the 8th amendment. If the 8th amendment didn't exist, neither would the POLDPA.

    We wouldn't even be having this discussion, it would be another discussion altogether.

    This is nothing but whatiffery and a lame "slippery slope" argument. Your intention is to claim that the Repeal campaign is something altogether more sinister by fabricating imaginary scenarios that could never have existed and then presupposing the Repeal campaign's response to those fabricated scenarios.

    "Let's not discuss the facts here, let's invent a whole new set of circumstances which are coincidentally skewed in favour of my argument, and then discuss that!"


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 23,862 ✭✭✭✭January


    NuMarvel wrote: »
    That's a moot question, because the only way those scenarios could have been included in the PLDP Act would have been if the 8th was repealed first, or at least very significantly altered.

    The wording of the 8th is very clear; the right to life of the unborn trumps all other considerations with the singular exception of the woman's right to life. Legislation that included other aspects, such as rape, health, etc would be unconstitutional and wouldn't survive a court challenge.

    But to get to the nub of your question; I'd personally be happy with the Citizen's Assembly recommendations, and most, if not all, pro-choice groups would be as well. And most pro-choice groups are also pretty clear that they're not looking for just exception-based legislation. They want legislation that will benefit the majority of women and not subject them to jumping hurdles to gain access.

    Personally, the citizen's assembly recommendations would be acceptable. I know a lot of the people I know from the repeal campaign would be happy with them too.


This discussion has been closed.
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