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The 8th Amendment Part 2 - Mod Warning in OP

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Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,555 ✭✭✭Ave Sodalis


    Sorry my wording/understanding was wrong. Yes the 8th gives the right of life to the unborn. I don't see how a definitive limit of 12 weeks (one that can't be moved by successive governments)for termination of healthy babies and unlimited teterminations for FFA, illness etc would be an issue. Unless of course you think healthy babies should terminated at any limit?


    Where on earth did you get the idea for your last line? You actually just pulled that out of nowhere.

    Why do you want it in a constitution? A constitution can be changed, as proved many times. Do you really think any government would touch it unless they have to? It took how many deaths and how many women suffering before they even considered repealing the 8th.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 21,831 ✭✭✭✭Water John


    So petalgumdrops, if this Admendment to the Constitution of a 12 week limit was what was proposed, for the Constitution, you'd be on here supporting that?
    Not a chance. All you are about, is sowing doubt and then following it up with the standard line, if in doubt vote no.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 190 ✭✭petalgumdrops


    Of course they don't. They have a place in society when they're born. Even with the 8th amendment as it stands, doesn't offer the unborn a place in society.

    Wow


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 190 ✭✭petalgumdrops


    Water John wrote: »
    So petalgumdrops, if this Admendment to the Constitution of a 12 week limit was what was proposed, for the Constitution, you'd be on here supporting that?
    Not a chance. All you are about, is sowing doubt and then following it up with the standard line, if in doubt vote no.

    I would 100% support it but thanks for the quick analysis.


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


    I apologise in advance for breaking up your post, but there's a lot in here that needs addressing and correction.
    I really wish the government had made this referendum easier by giving a clear clear limit for termination of heathy babies. I believe that women should have choice and while I wouldn't necessarily have a termination myself I do believe that a limit of 12 weeks should have been written into the constitution. If we repeal the 8th we hand over all power to move these limits to the government. what we vote for now may not be a reality in a couple of years. So many people assume that 12 weeks will be the limit for healthy babies but people need to know that this is far from the reality. Is there really a need for choice beyond 12 weeks for a healthy baby?

    I've said it before and I'll say it again; putting the grounds for abortion into our constitution is asking for more trouble. It is simply not the place to deal with these types of issues.

    There is no basis in our experience or in international experience for believing that politicians will start changing the 12 week period willy nilly. 12 weeks is the European norm, and for most countries it's been that way for decades. And our own experience with the X Case shows that Irish politicians are equally averse to changing abortion laws; it took them 20 years just to legislate for the woman's right to life after all.
    As it stands by repealing the 8th the supreme court have said that we take away all rights of the unborn which is not something that sits well with me. I am wondering if those who identify as pro-choice feel there should be any protection in the constitution for the unborn at all?

    Repealing the 8th will not remove all of the unborn's rights. The Protection of Life During Pregnancy Act would still stand, including the ban on illegal abortions. That would remain the law until the Oireachtas changes it, and the government has set out what they're proposing.

    And no, as a pro-choice person, I don't feel there should be constitutional protection for the unborn. It's not because I don't think they deserve protection, but because it's simply not the place to deal with that issue. Protections for the unborn have to be balanced with the rights of the woman, and the constitution isn't capable of addressing that balance properly.
    If repeal is passed the trouble is that unless the government replace it quickly it could be challeneged in the supreme court.

    I can't see any basis for which a successful challenge will be brought. The constitution will have been changed to say termination of pregnancy is a matter for the Oireachtas. It would have to be a matter of significant importance to the public for the courts to decide they need to act instead of the oireachtas.

    Because the constitution will have changed , once the amendment is repealed the current legislation will be unconstitutional. Unless the government act quickly there could be uncertainty in the law.

    Absolutely wrong. There will be no uncertainty and repeal doesn't make the current laws unconstitutional. The PLDP Act still stands, and there is nothing in the replacement text that renders it unconstitutional.
    The surprising thing is is that the government could have legistated for FFA years ago without repealing the 8th.

    Absolutely, categorically, not. TDs have tried at least twice in the last number of years to legislate for FFA under the 8th, and each time they were told that the Attorney General said it would be unconstitutional.

    If you have legal advice to the contrary, then please share it, because it will be news to everyone else.
    A limit placed into the constitution of 12 weeks would ensure that we are giving women the choice they desire while also ensuring that rights are giving to the unborn.

    Like I said many time before, putting grounds for abortion into the constitution is asking for more trouble. Something straight forward like a 12 week limit might work, but you certainly couldn't include things like serious risk to health, or FFA, which is also in the proposed legislation.

    It would just lead to more uncertainty, more court cases, and more referendums. And the only ones who would benefit from that would be lawyers; not the unborn, not doctors, and certainly not women.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,426 ✭✭✭Hannibal_Smith


    Wow

    :pac: well that's told me :pac:

    Tell me. What place in society does the unborn have now?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,137 ✭✭✭horseburger


    No that is not the issue and I have explained why it is not the issue AND what the issue actually is more than once already.

    Is your usual approach to conversation to ignore what is said to you and then repeat the questions that the very thing you ignored had already answered?

    Because if it is, then that is something useful to know about you and it tells us a lot.



    When a 12 week old fetus is terminated it is not that pain is not felt, it is that there is not even anyone there TO feel the pain in the first place. Is that simple difference really such a complex one for you?

    Why should anyone be concerned with "pain" when there is no one there actually feeling any? You are inventing the pain in your own imagination and then acting like we should be concerned by it.

    The issue of pain felt was brought up at the Citizens Assembly.

    There are items online that suggest that there is something tangible there at 12 weeks.

    https://www.babycenter.com/6_your-pregnancy-12-weeks_1101.bc

    https://www.babycenter.com/fetal-development-images-12-weeks

    https://www.babycenter.com/400_12-weeks-and-no-heartbeat-what-does-this-mean_13132635_507.bc


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


    There are items online that suggest that there is something tangible there at 12 weeks.

    "something tangible"? Are you entering the world championship contest for most vague statement with no actual substance?

    There are PLENTY of things there at 12 weeks. None of them constitute a person. And none of them are the presence of anything capable of experiencing pain.

    There are no lights on, there is no body home, and there will not be for many weeks to come.

    Something tangible. I have heard it all now.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 190 ✭✭petalgumdrops


    Where on earth did you get the idea for your last line? You actually just pulled that out of nowhere.

    Why do you want it in a constitution? A constitution can be changed, as proved many times. Do you really think any government would touch it unless they have to? It took how many deaths and how many women suffering before they even considered repealing the 8th.

    Legislation can be changed by politicians, a constitution by the people. In order to change the constitution we need to have a referendum. Ordinary legislation does not!!!!!

    Why would you not support a 12 week constitutional limit for terminations of healthly babies if all other cases were limitless?

    Abortion will not stop deaths. The UK MMR - available on MBRACE-UK shows that in The UK the MMR is 9.5/100,000 in comparison to 6.5/100,000 here in Ireland. More pregnant women in the uk died by suicide in the UK in 2014 than as a direct result of pregnancy related complications. Terminations are legal here so the stats don't support your argument.

    One death per year for 2015/16 as a result of terminations in the UK also. Abortion will not cure every ill. We have an overburdened mental health system here. Are the government going to do anything to support these women?


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


    €502,120!!!!!!!!!!!!! In just over 3 and a half days!

    (No more updates from me, don't want to spam the thread)


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,121 ✭✭✭✭Spanish Eyes


    Thing is, if there is a NO vote, which is democracy, and that is fine

    Will it actually stop pills and travelling? No it won't

    But I suppose that is victory for the blinkered.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 190 ✭✭petalgumdrops


    :pac: well that's told me :pac:

    Tell me. What place in society does the unborn have now?

    I have family who have given birth to stillborn babies. The are very much people in my eyes with a name and a place within our family.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,137 ✭✭✭horseburger


    "something tangible"? Are you entering the world championship contest for most vague statement with no actual substance?

    There are PLENTY of things there at 12 weeks. None of them constitute a person. And none of them are the presence of anything capable of experiencing pain.

    There are no lights on, there is no body home, and there will not be for many weeks to come.

    Something tangible. I have heard it all now.

    You said there was nothing there at 12 weeks.

    Tangible is something that is "perceptible by touch", or "real".

    http://www.dictionary.com/browse/tangible

    https://www.google.com/search?ei=9hXRWq3YHM7GwAK4t6DQAQ&q=tangible&oq=tangible&gs_l=psy-ab.12...0.0.0.59970.0.0.0.0.0.0.0.0..0.0....0...1c..64.psy-ab..0.0.0....0.P_Xnedy9M_0


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,555 ✭✭✭Ave Sodalis


    Legislation can be changed by politicians, a constitution by the people. In order to change the constitution we need to have a referendum. Ordinary legislation does not!!!!!

    Why would you not support a 12 week constitutional limit for terminations of healthly babies if all other cases were limitless?

    Abortion will not stop deaths. The UK MMR - available on MBRACE-UK shows that in The UK the MMR is 9.5/100,000 in comparison to 6.5/100,000 here in Ireland. More pregnant women in the uk died by suicide in the UK in 2014 than as a direct result of pregnancy related complications. Terminations are legal here so the stats don't support your argument.

    One death per year for 2015/16 as a result of terminations in the UK also. Abortion will not cure every ill. We have an overburdened mental health system here. Are the government going to do anything to support these women?

    Do you trust our government with any of our laws and legislation?

    I do believe, and some major organisations would agree with me, that it is far too complicated a situation to be put into constitution.

    The stats don't support my argument? My argument was that it took deaths and suffering before they even considered changing the 8th. These deaths have already happened as a direct result of the 8th. Have you seen the state of what women need to be in before the legal terminations can happen? Do you realise how much it is open to interpretation?

    Absolutely nobody has said that abortion would cure every ill.

    Are you doing anything to support these women?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,555 ✭✭✭Ave Sodalis


    I have family who have give birth to stillborn babies. The are very much a people in my eyes with a name and a place within our family.

    The bold part is the important bit in this post.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,555 ✭✭✭Ave Sodalis



    I'm pretty sure the poster meant that the foetus is not capable of feeling pain due to the lack of a nerve system that would allow for pain receptors. Not that there's nothing there at all...


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,121 ✭✭✭✭Spanish Eyes


    I have family who have give birth to stillborn babies. The are very much a people in my eyes with a name and a place within our family.

    Good to hear, so what is the problem there?

    I know it was not always the case. That is for pro birth/life to answer though. The forgotten stillbirth babies. Yes it happened for many a mother who was not allowed to grieve either, or bury the baby.

    Such fkn double standards annoy me intensely.


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


    You said there was nothing there at 12 weeks.

    Nope. I did not. Why are you now adding outright lies to everything else? Before quoting dictionaries at people who know the language better than you do, why not look up the words "nothing" and "anyone" and learn the difference between them. Then go read my post again. You do not get to lie about what someone said and then pretend it is THEM that needs a dictionary.


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


    The UK MMR - available on MBRACE-UK shows that in The UK the MMR is 9.5/100,000 in comparison to 6.5/100,000 here in Ireland.

    On a point of order, the UK rate is 8.76, not 9.5, as per the most recent Confidential Maternal Death Enquiry report:
    For the triennium 2013 – 2015, the Irish MMR was 6.5 per 100,000 maternities and the UK MMR was 8.76 per 100,000 maternities. This does not represent a statistically significant difference in MMR between countries.

    That's also the rate cited by MBRACE in their most recent report.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,426 ✭✭✭Hannibal_Smith


    I have family who have give birth to stillborn babies. The are very much a people in my eyes with a name and a place within our family.

    You didn't ask whether stillborn babies have a place in society. You asked whether the unborn have a place in society. So reel in your 'wow' and tell me what place in society does the UNBORN hold ?


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 96 ✭✭Madscientist30


    So then do you consider abortion to meet the definition of murder?

    It is the deliberate ending of a human life. Would you accept that abortion is the deliberate ending of a human life?

    here is an interesting discussion where a campaigner for repeal is reluctant to concede that abortion is the deliberate ending of a human life:

    You are avoiding the question. Is it murder? Or not? Should women that have abortions be charged with murder?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,555 ✭✭✭Ave Sodalis


    You are avoiding the question. Is it murder? Or not? Should women that have abortions be charged with murder?

    He still hasn't answered my questions either


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,857 ✭✭✭professore


    Do you trust our government with any of our laws and legislation?

    I do believe, and some major organisations would agree with me, that it is far too complicated a situation to be put into constitution.

    The stats don't support my argument? My argument was that it took deaths and suffering before they even considered changing the 8th. These deaths have already happened as a direct result of the 8th. Have you seen the state of what women need to be in before the legal terminations can happen? Do you realise how much it is open to interpretation?

    Absolutely nobody has said that abortion would cure every ill.

    Are you doing anything to support these women?

    I don't think anyone is suggesting to put the minutiae of it in the constitution. Just a position on the rights of the unborn child in relation to the mother - so no future governments can make abortion legal up to birth or ban it entirely. A guideline to prevent bad legislation.

    For example - up to 12 weeks the fetus has no rights. A non viable fetus has no rights. The mother has the right to decide if they wish to abort this fetus. Something along those lines.


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


    You are avoiding the question. Is it murder? Or not? Should women that have abortions be charged with murder?
    He still hasn't answered my questions either

    Nor mine. And the irony is there was an anti-repealer in here a few days ago saying it was the Yes side who avoided questions :rolleyes:


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,137 ✭✭✭horseburger


    Nope. I did not. Why are you now adding outright lies to everything else? Before quoting dictionaries at people who know the language better than you do, why not look up the words "nothing" and "anyone" and learn the difference between them. Then go read my post again. You do not get to lie about what someone said and then pretend it is THEM that needs a dictionary.

    Did you not state the following? Anyway when I mentioned the issue of pain, I was not talking about at the 12 week stage. I already stated twice that I mentioned that it was a question raised at the Citizens Assembly.
    No that is not the issue and I have explained why it is not the issue AND what the issue actually is more than once already.

    Is your usual approach to conversation to ignore what is said to you and then repeat the questions that the very thing you ignored had already answered?

    Because if it is, then that is something useful to know about you and it tells us a lot.



    When a 12 week old fetus is terminated it is not that pain is not felt, it is that there is not even anyone there TO feel the pain in the first place. Is that simple difference really such a complex one for you?

    Why should anyone be concerned with "pain" when there is no one there actually feeling any? You are inventing the pain in your own imagination and then acting like we should be concerned by it.


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


    Did you not state the following?

    I did. Now keep reading it until you find that nowhere there did I use the word "nothing" or suggest or imply there was "nothing" there.

    Then go read that dictionary like I told you, learn what the word "anyone" means.

    Then read my post one final time and you will at that point likely have the tools required to understand that I said there is not ANYONE there to receive, or experience pain.

    Man, at least some minimum standard of English comprehension would be nice in conversation.
    Anyway when I mentioned the issue of pain, I was not talking about at the 12 week stage.

    Nice ninja edit. Anyway we are talking about abortion on this thread. And over 92% of abortions happen by week 12. Very near 100% by week 16. So while YOU might not be talking about the 12 week stage, the rest of us very much are. You talk about abortion, then 12 weeks, actually 10 mostly, IS what you are mostly talking about. Whether that suits your agenda or not.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 190 ✭✭petalgumdrops


    Do you trust our government with any of our laws and legislation?

    I do believe, and some major organisations would agree with me, that it is far too complicated a situation to be put into constitution.

    The stats don't support my argument? My argument was that it took deaths and suffering before they even considered changing the 8th. These deaths have already happened as a direct result of the 8th. Have you seen the state of what women need to be in before the legal terminations can happen? Do you realise how much it is open to interpretation?

    Absolutely nobody has said that abortion would cure every ill.

    Are you doing anything to support these women?

    The protection of life in pregancy act is very clear on the obligation of a doctor to act. 25 legal terminations happened here in 2016 so doctors are acting. It is the interpretation of doctors that causes issues.
    Dr. Peter Boylan, when pushed, could only name one death he believed was as a direct result of the 8th - by that standard more women have died accessing safe abortions.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,555 ✭✭✭Ave Sodalis


    professore wrote: »
    I don't think anyone is suggesting to put the minutiae of it in the constitution. Just a position on the rights of the unborn child in relation to the mother - so no future governments can make abortion legal up to birth or ban it entirely. A guideline to prevent bad legislation.

    For example - up to 12 weeks the fetus has no rights. A non viable fetus has no rights. The mother has the right to decide if they wish to abort this fetus. Something along those lines.

    The constitution is still no place for it. If we applied that logic to any other law or legislation, it would make no sense.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,121 ✭✭✭✭Spanish Eyes


    Control the women. They are always the culpable.

    Harlots and murderers.

    Where are the men in all this, it takes two to tango surely. But no, it is just the incubator who is the villain. Always.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,555 ✭✭✭Ave Sodalis


    The protection of life in pregancy act is very clear on the obligation of a doctor to act. 25 legal terminations happened here in 2016 so doctors are acting. It is the interpretation of doctors that causes issues.
    Dr. Peter Boylan, when pushed, could only name one death he believed was as a direct result of the 8th - by that standard more women have died accessing safe abortions.

    Actually, it is not very clear. It is entirely open to interpretation, as demonstrated when a women was sanctioned instead of being allowed an abortion, which she was legally entitled to as a result of the Act.

    There are several situations related to the 8th which prompted the referendum.

    Have you read the In Her Shoes page on Facebook to realise the impact the 8th has? Your last line seems to suggest that you think the 8th has very little impact.


This discussion has been closed.
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