drkpower wrote: » UK doctors don't have to lie. Read the provision. Because of the drafting, termination is always permissible. That was the flaw (or perhaps the genius) in their law.
drkpower wrote: » I thought you knew something about this stuff.
Zubeneschamali wrote: » I do. The single most powerful speech in the entire debate was by panti. Do you want me to link that, too? You know perfectly well the one I mean.
drkpower wrote: » Read section a again.
Zubeneschamali wrote: » Are you are arguing about the value of X again? 12, 24, 10 weeks? That was not all all an accident, it is written there in black and white, and I don't care if it says 2 or 20. The real meat of the law is before that: two registered medical practitioners are of the opinion, formed in good faithThey don't have to be right. They don't have to be good at it. They just have to be registered. And if anyone thinks they should be charged with anything, their defence is right there, I'm registered and I formed my opinion in good faith. Abortion on demand.
drkpower wrote: » Continuance of the pregnancy always involves greater risk than a termination. That is why doctors don't have to lie.
Zubeneschamali wrote: » What exactly do you imagine the new Irish legislation will say?
drkpower wrote: » Do u accept she took a step back for strategic reasons?
Zubeneschamali wrote: » Tactically, she may have preferred to make it not just about her, which I respect. It didn't work well, many outlets described Panti as the face of marriage equality. And she did not lie, and did not hide what she thought we should do. And we did it anyway.
drkpower wrote: » Lessons have been learned. It will be much much tighter, and sadly, court battles will probably lie ahead in a few edge cases.
drkpower wrote: » I am sigggesting you and others could learn from that approach. Or not.
Zubeneschamali wrote: » How about we learn a lesson and pass a law that means we don't have to go to the Supreme Court just to find out what the law we just passed means? The obvious solution is what Leo Varadkar said the other night:No longer an article of our Constitution, but rather a private and personal matter for women and doctors. No more X cases, C cases, Miss Ys or Miss A, Miss B, or Miss C.
Zubeneschamali wrote: » Eh, no. It was a stupid idea in 1983 and I told everyone in sight. Now it is a 1980s stupid idea dripping in blood. Not going to lie.
drkpower wrote: » This referendum is not some sort of revenge for 1983.
drkpower wrote: » But if you try and hurdle those steps, you will only risk losing the main objective.
_Roz_ wrote: » To me the only difference between an abortion at 12 weeks and one at say 8 months, is the distress and pain for the potential life, and for the mother. But I don't think one is morally worse than the other, just more traumatic.
Jim Ellis wrote: » Have a read of this to see the baby's development at 12 weeks: Tell me that's not a human life?
Jim Ellis wrote: » I know you probably won't though because most on the repeal side are afraid to confront what they're actually campaigning for.
RobertKK wrote: » Some people have lives and I don't have time to reply to everything.
RobertKK wrote: » I mean I got a loads of people quoting me, I am not going to reply to all and especially not long winded posted that are divided up like the above.
RobertKK wrote: » I did answer one of those questions you asked but you missed it.
freshpopcorn wrote: » Yes but if this happens in debates I can see there being trouble! Can you?
freshpopcorn wrote: » To the best of my knowledge we are voting to allow abortion up to twelve weeks. As in the marriage referendum we were voting to allow marriage regardless of gender. If people are told by TD's they support abortion up to twelve weeks I believe it will pass but if there is to much doubt on this being expanded in the future I could see it causing the campaign trouble because lets face it people on the pro life side will use this as a tactic. With the marriage referendum a line often used by the no side was it will lead to polygamy and the td's etc could say no it will not we are voting on allowing marriage regardless of gender. There was no doubt and it was clear cut. Similar with this referendum we need to make sure people known what they voting on and there is no doubt.
Joeytheparrot wrote: » Sure only a few weeks ago you were saying 12 weeks was too much!! I dunno but you keep finding fault with eveything. All your posts seem to be low level giving reasons to vote no. Its kinda like now you realised 12 weeks might win that you then bring in hardline TDs. At every opportunity you are doing it. "But what about x" and X is always a reason to vote no to repeal.
ForestFire wrote: » I don't even know the background to this, But are people not allowed to progress their views, add to their views as new information is presented. If you asking everyone to stick to what they thought or said 2 weeks ago, that just seems like trying to stop the discussion.
ohnonotgmail wrote: » finding something else to cast doubt on
ForestFire wrote: » Sorry but this is asking people to stop discussing, trying to shut down debate. If something new is raised , then counter it, but don't try to stop new arguments/info.
drkpower wrote: » No one mentioned 1983. 1983 has nothing to do with the strategic approach that need to be adopted now. This referendum is not some sort of revenge for 1983.
splinter65 wrote: » For some people it is.
nozzferrahhtoo wrote: » Well I would say that is no small difference given there IS no distress and pain for the fetus at 12 weeks. At all. The lights are off and no one is home. You will cause no more stress and pain in the world from terminating a fetus than you will from taking a hammer to a mannequin. The reason one is morally worse than the other is that one would be killing an actual sentient entity. The other is not. Saying one is not worse than the other is basically like saying jabbing needles into a dog is no worse than jabbing them into an amoeba.
_Roz_ wrote: » So this analogy/argument omits the fundamental thing I am focusing on, which is the prevention of completion of a process.