The Corinthian wrote: » In short, even if you do not believe that the fetus should have rights, you are still justifying that a man should pay for the unilateral choice of another - be it to keep a child or not. And that pretty much erodes your moral high ground to nothing.
sparkling sea wrote: » That is not my justification, it is the conclusion that you are jumping to - and its not the first time that you have jumped to the wrong conclusion, maybe you could ask before you jump, please. Everything isn't black or white, or one way or the other, life is full of complexities. Rights have to be balanced and a woman is the one who ultimatly must decide whether or not she wishes to be pregnant for 9 months, only she knows whether or not she can deal with the vast amounts of changes that will happen to her, in a perfect world this would be done with the input of a man, they would reach the decision together and this is probably often the case.There are as many young men who want their girlfriends to have abortions as the other way round. It doesn't mean that a man can't really want a child or be devasted by the fact that a woman has an abortion BUT all people have a fundemental fight to autonomy when making decisions about there own body and mind. We are rational free people and we cannot impose our will on others in these circumstances - no amount of legislation,etc. will change that.
The Corinthian wrote: » Why don't you cite Saudi Arabia too, while you're at it - that's just as relevant to the society we live in as the historical past is. Why? Is is a religious taboo to do so?
The Corinthian wrote: » Yet that balance seems to be skewed in favour of the woman either way - if she chooses to terminate, then she terminates and no one can or should stop her. If she chooses not to then the 'child' suddenly supersedes the rights of the man - but only if the woman wills it - conveniently forcing the man to contribute to the cost of her choice. It may not be black and white, but if not you appear to be cherry picking the shades of gray that suit a woman's choice, either way. And that is a 'cake and eat it' mentality that is not based on balance but on self interest.
GarlicBread wrote: » The last magdalane laundry closed in 1996, thats not the historical past.
Dont even bother with religious taboo please, the reason we are in this mess having this debate in the first place is because of religious taboo and its long string of catastrophic effects on the well being of irish women.
We are the only country in this section of the planet that still hasnt legalized abortion simply because we left ourselves wide open to the vatican and their twisted social values.
sparkling sea wrote: » A man cannot carry a child nor can he force a woman too. No one can impose their will on another with regard to bodily integrity.
You are not addressing the reality of the situation, and your arguments are a little be child like at this stage.
GarlicBread wrote: » Poland and malta are far away and have particularly bad infestations of catholicism just like us .
I dont mean to sound like a zealot, but i feel strongly about this issue(as do many of us) and fire must be fought with fire when serious things are at stake.
GarlicBread wrote: » Most of my family, friends and society at large are catholic but its not the populations fault since they had no control of the situation.
You cant write legislation for one person by going through another. She has total control of the situation and thats the crux of the arguement. If she so chooses the father to be involved, then so it be.
The Corinthian wrote: » Please don't devolve to churlish comments - I am quite aware of the situation, I simply am challenging you biased view of how it is handled.
SLUSK wrote: » Did you ever read Freakonomics? In this book they make a very good case that the reduction in crime was due to legalisation of abortion. People with stable relationships in middle class or wealthier classes usually have planned pregnancies and these children are likelier to be well taken care of than the welfare mum who already has 2 kids by the age of 20 with 2 different dads. I'm not advocating eugenics people, just legalizing abortion. You know it is legal in civilized countries.
sparkling sea wrote: » The comments that are churlish are yours and your arguements far from challenging are based on nothing but your imagination, and the obvious chip you have on your shoulder.
Its fairly simple for a man not to be burdened with a child and for a woman not to have control over whether or not she has the final say over the birth of a child. Don't have sex - its that simple.
For you to even state that a person should have control over anothers bodily integrity is frankly sick and smacks of principles similiar to Nazism.
Men have the right to choose so why shouldn't women - will they should.
So were are the fathers in these cases - they have availed of the Male Abortion principle.
The Corinthian wrote: » Only through avoidance and the constant threat of legal action. Women one the other hand can legally make a clean break. And it is this cherry picking of rights, to suit only one of the stakeholders in these situations that is the reason I reject your argument. It is partisan.
sparkling sea wrote: » Back your conjecture with facts and/ or stats - not your imaginary veiw.
sparkling sea wrote: » Many fathers in Ireland abort their rights and obligations - I don't I agree with it because I think once a child is a person in its own right it needs both parents.If a person chooses to have a baby they need to remember it is not a "thing" its a person - its needs, in my opinion must come first - children need both their parents. I dont agree that a woman has the right to stop a father seeing a child either
celticbest wrote: » Can anybody please explain how aboration is not murder after reading link article below..http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/italy/7652889/Baby-that-survived-botched-abortion-was-rejected-for-cleft-lip-and-palate.html This case is now being investigated as homicide(Murder).
StealthRolex wrote: » There's more. The abortion was allowed because a scan shown the baby was disabled.
The Corinthian wrote: » Well, outside of tugging at the heart strings, I'm not sure how relevant the reason is. Either the fetus has a right to life or it does not. I do think though that as medical science advances, you will find more and more cases whereby either botched abortions, or more likely premature births will result in younger and younger fetuses surviving independent of the mother. As a result it is likely to repeatedly reopen the debate on the status of the fetus - whether it is human or not - and slowly push back the time during which an abortion is permissible. Eventually, we will develop an artificial uterus, and that is when the s**t will really hit the fan.
grindelwald wrote: » I really hope the mother feels the pain of this poor baby. Believe me i feel like saying a lot worse but im sure peole will jump down my throat. Who would want a mother who didnt want you because you had a a cleft lip and palate. Thw woamn needs to grow up and live in the real world.
SLUSK wrote: » Abortions should be legalised in Ireland. In the long run it will help bring prostitution down because potential prostitutes will not be born. It is a well known fact that poor people commit more prostitution , they also have more kids out of wedlock and so on. If these women can have abortions instead it would be good for all of us.
StealthRolex wrote: » Granted. Medical science has advanced to the point where it is accepted as fact that it is a unique human and that human life starts at conception yet we still get arguments that "in my opinion is not human or not human yet".
Either all humans have a right to life or none have.
StealthRolex wrote: » I would suggest that as that woman had an abortion in a "Catholic" country she should have had a "Catholic abortion" and had her entire uterus removed :eek:
The Corinthian wrote: » I'm afraid that the right to life has never been so black and white. So it is not black and white, I'm afraid - even if the fetus is recognized as human.
The Corinthian wrote: » That is actually quite an offensive and emotive comment, unbecoming of this forum, IMHO.
StealthRolex wrote: » I admire your eloquence however the fact remains that the grey areas, in particular triage issues, are frequently presented as reasons for allowing abortion to be legalized so that abortion is essentially available on demand up to certain "acceptable" time limits.
IYO but IMO for many people abortion itself is offensive and emotive.
The Corinthian wrote: » To begin with you have ignored the numerous other examples that demonstrate that a right to life is not black and white. But more curiously, are you suggesting then that all triage issues are false? If not, then you cannot use abuses as a justification for applying a black and white code of conduct. And if so, and you deny that there are any cases where a mother can be medically in significant medical risk, if not mortal danger, then I think you would be at odds with pretty much 99.9% of the medical profession.
Wibbs wrote: » If women have the right to a termination or not in law, then the man involved should have the right to input into this decision and the right to opt in or out in law too. *Though many do so already. I've even known two women in HR depts that have this bias.
The Corinthian wrote: » Irrelevant. This is the 'Humanities' forum and is meant for rational and reasoned debate. If I wanted to read a posts screaming "won't someone think of the children" I would be reading the diatribe commonly found on 'After Hours'.