mrkiscool2 wrote: » WOW. Wow. Your hatred of women really coming out now EOTR. So, forcing women to have babies is good because reasons and there should be a massive financial expense and difficulty for women who travel for one, because fcuk those women.
Da Boss wrote: » This is all personal to me as I was informed I would have me aborted should the law have allowed. Therefore the eight amendment saved my life, the life I currently enjoy that only for the eighth I wouldn’t never have seen. Surely you see where I’m coming from and why the eighth is so important to me
Bannasidhe wrote: » No. The State is saying after birth is when it acknowledges the child as a separate person exists. It is immaterial where the child was born or at what state of gestation. From the moment of birth it exists as a legal entity and becomes entitled to benefits. All of this brandishing about terms like child in the womb is emotive nonsense - particularly when it is a embryonic clump of cells.
Yeah, thanks for mansplaining what unborn means - I was getting it confused with undead. Now, let me return the favour by womansplaining that a woman is an adult female not a female of any age. The framers of this ridiculous piece of bunkum failed to acknowledge that there are non-adult females in this country who through no fault of their own become pregnant. There are 10 year old girls capable of becoming pregnant - they are not 'women' - they are children. Children this hideous clause would force to become mothers.
But it doesn't. What has actually happened is medical staff are so unclear about the law they wait until the balance of probability means the women is over 50% likely to die - would you like those odds if it was your life on the line?
end of the road wrote: » what a horrible thing to say. shame on you. by all means disagree with my view but there is no need to be making up horrible allegations about me. i do not under any circumstances hate women. i have the upmost respect for them. i just disagree with abortion on demand and i believe that by making the procurement of abortion difficult that some women will consider not having an abortion. that is all. if it wasn't for abortion on demand i would gladly vote repeal as i want the other issues it causes gone. but because of the high likely hood of abortion on demand i will be unable to vote yes and i'm unhappy about that. i cannot vote for something that will lead to something i fundamentally disagree with.
mrkiscool2 wrote: » You have respect for them up until the point they become pregnant with an unwanted child. Then all respect goes out the window
mrkiscool2 wrote: » either a. they should be burdened with a child they don't want and, even if they are giving the child up for adoption, be burdened with carrying it for 9 months and go through the emotional and traumatic experience of childbirth or b. be punished financially, mentally and emotionally by being made to travel to have an abortion. You literally said it should be expensive and difficult for them to do so. That isn't respectful at all.
end of the road wrote: » again this is another false allegation. nobody is being punished, this isn't about punishing. it's about helping people to really think about their options rather then seeing abortion as the solution, and upholding the unborn's right to live. so another failed allegation from your good self. try again
end of the road wrote: » which in turn makes the killing of the unborn bar extreme circumstances more difficult and expensive, in turn deterring some from making the trip, meaning some lives are saved. so in terms of abortion on demand it does work to an extent.
One eyed Jack wrote: » But it doesn't. What has actually happened is medical staff are so unclear about the law they wait until the balance of probability means the women is over 50% likely to die - would you like those odds if it was your life on the line? I'm really the wrong person to ask that question as I've taken my chances with worse odds regarding my medical treatment and what I was and wasn't prepared to live with. ... that as one consultant put it "if you need blood, I'm giving you blood". I simply told them "no, you won't!", and made it perfectly clear that that was something I wasn't prepared to live with, and would rather die than live with it. I didn't expect them to understand, and many of them didn't, and 'medicalsplained' (:pac:) to me the likely outcome of my decision as though I had never given it any thought before. I took the risk, knowing the consequences, and I got lucky. I don't think the medical professionals were wrong, and I don't think I was right, and I wouldn't recommend it to anyone else as it was entirely a decision based upon illogical, irrational, emotive nonsense as you put it. I can understand that medical professionals would be more interested in covering their own arse from a legal perspective, but that's a risk that they take, and it's a risk they would still take regardless of the existence of the 8th amendment because we live in an increasingly litigious society, where medical professionals are increasingly being held accountable for their actions, and I don't know about you, but I for one see that as a good thing... not the fact that we live in an increasingly litigious society, but the fact that more and more medical professionals are held accountable for their actions.
One eyed Jack wrote: I'm really the wrong person to ask that question as I've taken my chances with worse odds regarding my medical treatment and what I was and wasn't prepared to live with. You wouldn't believe the amount of bureaucracy and being bounced around between consultants and hospitals because nobody wanted to risk an almost certain death on their conscience for what to them should normally be a standard procedure that as one consultant put it "if you need blood, I'm giving you blood". I simply told them "no, you won't!", and made it perfectly clear that that was something I wasn't prepared to live with, and would rather die than live with it. I didn't expect them to understand, and many of them didn't, and 'medicalsplained' ( ) to me the likely outcome of my decision as though I had never given it any thought before.
volchitsa wrote: » But you had that choice. You weren't informed that this is being done despite the fact that a lower risk procedure exists. It's really strange that you appear to think that an anecdote in which you made a choice like that can help justify the removal of the same choice from someone else.
pilly wrote: » That's very interesting Jack, you feel you've the right to make those kind of decisions but you don't feel a woman should be afforded the same rights. Bit of a contradiction No?
Bannasidhe wrote: » But it doesn't. What has actually happened is medical staff are so unclear about the law they wait until the balance of probability means the women is over 50% likely to die - would you like those odds if it was your life on the line?
Da Boss wrote: » One observation I’ve made reading all the pro choice posts is that despite all the reasons we, the pro life side, have given as to why The eighth amendment should be retained. They have yet to acknowledge a single genuine argument.for the retention of the eight amendment. They have yet to make any reference to the unborn child. I find the arrogance from the pro choice side baffling, as it appears to them their superior to us and were just uneducated fools.
Chrome Autofillet wrote: » I think the unborn child deserves consideration, it was brought into the world without it's consent, the least you can do is give it the consideration it deserves. In my opinion, abortion up until around 12 weeks should be legal.
volchitsa wrote: » All of that ignores the single main issue that Pilly and I were pointing out here, which is that women have been threatened with arrest for not "consenting" to medical procedures. And these are not just women who wanted abortions, by the way : because of the 8th amendment, women have had various medical procedures done without their consent and even when the procedure went wrong and caused her and her baby significant harm, a woman who sued had costs awarded against her (Ciara Hamilton). You refuse to acknowledge that what really matters there is that you could choose to have a procedure, or refuse to have one. That's why your point about risking your life is completely different to the situation a pregnant woman finds herself in. If I choose to risk my life, that's one thing. But the law doesn't allow me to make that decision, unlike you. Especially when my health is not important enough to be worth considering at all.
One eyed Jack wrote: » not ignoring your point volchista, I'm saying that the only way the two different circumstances could be relatable is if the decisions I made for myself also affected the another human life which was immediately dependent upon my continued survival. I would suggest that under those conditions, I would not have the ability to withdraw consent to a procedure which would have an immediate effect on another human life which was immediately dependent upon my survival, in Ireland at least. You could of course make the same decision I did in the same circumstances I did, if you weren't pregnant, and that's the important distinction.
applehunter wrote: » It's a trick question. I gave a flippant answer.
applehunter wrote: » The answer is that it protects the life of the unborn in Ireland. That is a positive for me.
Da Boss wrote: » One observation I’ve made reading all the pro choice posts is that despite all the reasons we, the pro life side, have given as to why The eighth amendment should be retained. They have yet to acknowledge a single genuine argument. for the retention of the eight amendment. They have yet to make any reference to the unborn child. I find the arrogance from the pro choice side baffling, as it appears to them their superior to us and were just uneducated fools.
volchitsa wrote: » If we actually followed through on this principle, you'd have a point, but there are so many instances in which this other human life gets little or no consideration (destruction of IVF embryos being one obvious example) that its application in order to justify reducing the pregnant woman's rights is more the exception than the rule.
Which suggests that the motivation is more about making some aspirational statement than about genuinely exercising rights for the unborn.
222233 wrote: » Different pro-choice siders have different opinions. From my perspective repealing the eight falls into acknowledging women's rights and providing a basic medical procedure available to women in many forward facing countries. However if I were to look at it from the side of the unborn I would say, that in some cases (e.g fatal foetal abnormalities etc.) repealing the eight amendment works to protect the unborn, from unnecessary potential suffering. I don't believe the pro-choice side are uneducated, like the pro-life side there are varying degrees of views on each part. I do however think that some within the pro-life can be quite insensitive with respect to how they speak of abortion, it seems that people forget that there are thousands of women in this country who have had abortions (Legally, without breaking any laws) as is their right to do so. I also think that some views are very one sided, they look at abortion solely from the perspective of the unborn and omit that the mother / father have any rights. Alas, the stories of women who regret having abortions are very sad, but they should not be used as a weapon to deter other women from considering the option or preventing women from having abortions. Similarly, stories of people who's mothers decided not to have an abortion, I don't get where the argument in this is, every child who has been born was born because someone didn't have an abortion. As for religion, that argument is mute as far as I'm concerned.
Outlaw Pete wrote: » So, tell us, PROUDLY, why stilling the hearbeats of babies as they develop in the womb is still the right way to go about things, even when the mother's health and developing baby's health are not in any danger.
Da Boss wrote: » I would do all I could within reason. Obviously I couldn’t be forceful about it
One eyed Jack wrote: » Ireland is one of only three countries in Europe which acknowledges the legal right to life of the unborn, and introduced the 8th amendment to vindicate and protect that right as far as was practical, which means that in cases where it simply isn't practical to view the right to life of the unborn and the right to life of the woman as equal, the woman's right to life takes precedence over the right to life of the unborn, as one would logically expect, in theory at least.
bubblypop wrote: » I posted this story before on a different thread I think, but I will post again,just in case people don't understand how the 8th amendment can affect women's health. A few years ago I had an ectopic pregnancy. I was approx 7 weeks pregnant, so most definitely a very small bunch of cells. In the hospital I was not informed that there were any options available in my treatment. I had to undergo emergency surgery, where they removed the embryo. Afterwards I spoke with a midwife, who informed me that ectopic pregnancy can be dealt with by way of a pill. This was not an option for me however because the 8th amendment made it illegal for them to 'kill' the embryo. They had to operate & the loss Of The embryo was as a consequence of operating. So, basically instead of giving me a pill, with little side affects I had to go under anaesthetic and undergo an operation which was entirely unnecessary. if it happened in any other country we here would believe them to be backward.
volchitsa wrote: » Funny none of these women ever seem to feel strongly enough about this to come out and say so themselves isn't it?
Joeytheparrot wrote: » Indeed and so we get doctors tying themselves in knots trying to work out the legal practicality of whether to abort in order to save the womans life. So effectively what happens in a number of cases is that the 8th puts womens lives in danger.
Zubeneschamali wrote: » And the same will happen when the 8th is finally gone. No-one will miss it.
One eyed Jack wrote: » Joey if you wanted to view the issue in those terms, then women should be discouraged from ever getting pregnant in the first place as they are immediately putting their lives in danger. In fact, women should just wrap themselves in linen and never leave their abode as they are immediately putting themselves in danger. I would fully expect any woman would tell me to naff off if I suggested such measures in an attempt to claim they could be putting themselves in danger otherwise.