frostyjacks wrote: » Like I said, human error, not our laws. Our services are good, it's disingenuous to try and run them down. Why don't mothers emigrate then, if we're so backwards here? The opposite is actually true; people are coming here to start families.
frostyjacks wrote: » Can you kindly tell your mother that Ireland has a lower infant mortality rate than NZ? You would be taking a greater risk by having a baby over there.
HILLARY CLINTON WAS TOLD about the controversy surrounding the death of Savita Halappanavar before visiting Ireland in December 2012, her most recently released emails show.
frostyjacks wrote: » Watching the election coverage over the last few weeks, I'm not seeing any desire amongst the general population to change the status quo,
oldrnwisr wrote: » Pro-life advocates have a tendency to adopt a rather blinkered view of public opinion, choosing to see things only as they want them to be (just as you did in the gay marriage thread too). The reality, however, is usually different.
nozzferrahhtoo wrote: » If one is going to measure things solely in terms of "outcomes" and nothing else..... then by that measure one would, as volchitsa suggests, also have to include contraception. Because if contraception prevents a pregnancy that otherwise WAS going to happen, then "the outcome is the same". Thankfully however a significant quantity of people seem to measure things like this is more nuanced and in depth terms that merely "outcomes".
volchitsa wrote: » People are entitled to be unpleasant people if they like, and disliking someone because of their gender or their hair colour is pretty high up on the scale of nasty IMO, but if choosing to have an abortion because you've been raped is considered to be your own business and no-one else's, then clearly abortion is not the equivalent of killing the resulting child. It's ending a pregnancy, which is a different thing. That is because a fetus is not a child, no matter how much the forced birthers try to say it is. (Though how one would identify a red-haired fetus is a puzzle.)
nozzferrahhtoo wrote: » Errrrr it is a fetus. So the people NOT accepting that term are the ones "distancing themselves from reality". Not the other way around as you pretend here.
nozzferrahhtoo wrote: » Yet discussing merely "outcomes" and little else is very reductionist so let's not do that.
nozzferrahhtoo wrote: » Then by all means get the terminology right. Such as not accusing someone of calling a spade a spade, or a fetus a fetus, as being the ones "distancing themselves from reality" when the exact opposite is true.
One eyed Jack wrote: » I absolutely detest the politics that surrounds the issue, and I hate some of the nonsense terminology and spin used by anyone to try and make out like they're in the right and everyone else is wrong, or anyone who doesn't align with them is the enemy and all the rest of that nonsense. Those types of people (not specifically aiming this at you volchista, but it feels like it sometimes), seem to be more taken up with flinging shìt at each other, than remembering the reality of, or being mindful of, what they're actually arguing over.
One eyed Jack wrote: » I wasn't referring to the part of her post regarding contraception.
One eyed Jack wrote: » The reality I was referring to is the termination of human life.
One eyed Jack wrote: » The point I'm making (and the point that still stands), is that whatever way a person wants to refer to it, doesn't change the fact that the outcome for the foetus, for the unborn, for the unborn child, is the same - they're dead.
One eyed Jack wrote: » We're not? I don't know where you picked that up from as there's a whole thread going on here
One eyed Jack wrote: » The point: You missed it, by a country mile.
Irish Times Ireland has not paid enough attention to women and childbirth, and our maternity hospitals are “falling down”, according to the Master of the National Maternity Hospital in Dublin. “I believe we did not pay enough attention to birth in this country. It was a women’s issue. There’s a tendency to turn off for women’s issues, but here’s the thing: everybody is born and women’s issues matter,” said Dr Rhona Mahony, the first female master of the hospital on Holles Street. “When you look at it, we have a third the number of doctors we should have, we’re really short on midwives in my hospital, and the Rotunda is the same. And we have these old buildings that have changed very little.”
nozzferrahhtoo wrote: » The real reality that should be front and center of discussion on the issue of abortion is that no one, least of all anyone on this thread, has erected a single coherent argument for affording a fetus any rights at all before certain stages of development. And in the TOTAL absence of such arguments.... there is therefore no basis for opposing abortion at those stages.
Absolam wrote: » What is the argument for affording anyone any rights at any stage of development?
aloyisious wrote: » Maybe this opinion-piece by Breda O'Brien... (not that I agree with her view of the term 'fatal foetal abnormality') Breda O’Brien: ‘Fatal foetal abnormality’ is a hurtful and damaging term'. Rightly or wrongly. I get the impression that Breda think's a feotus with fatal foetal abnormality should be allowed go to full-term birth and then put into a hospice to die as nature allows.
robdonn wrote: » I give up, what is it?
Absolam wrote: » How is that an argument for affording anyone any rights at any stage of development?
volchitsa wrote: » I'm not too sure either, but at a guess I'd say autonomous existence and identity might be part of the minimum requirements.
volchitsa wrote: » Certainly the lack of same seems to be the reason why the unborn twins killed in the Omagh bombs aren't counted as the youngest victims - their "big" sister is the youngest official victim, at 18 months of age.
aloyisious wrote: » ??????
Absolam wrote: » Well, nozzferrahhtoo seems to think there is no argument for affording a fetus any rights at all before certain stages of development; which suggests he thinks there is an argument for affording someone some rights at some stages of development. I'm wondering what he thinks it is.
Absolam wrote: » How autonomous? Neither newborns nor the aged (and various situations inbetween) are autonomous, yet we afford them rights.
Absolam wrote: » As for identity;does a newborn have any more identity than a foetus? How exactly do you quantify identity?
Absolam wrote: » You quoted my question and followed with your piece from Breda saying "Maybe this opinion-piece by Breda O'Brien..". It had all the appearance of a response to the question but perhaps you intended something else?
nozzferrahhtoo wrote: » I nowhere claimed you were, you have missed my meaning by a country mile. Do keep up, it's not rocket science.
volchitsa wrote: » Quick question. For those people here who support contraception on demand, does that include a woman's right to use contraception because she's afraid of having a child of a particular gender or hair colour? Isn't that what "on demand" means, after all?
nozzferrahhtoo wrote: » Irrelevant to my point, which you have missed by a country mile. Do keep up, it's not rocket science. I am pointing out that it is people who do not want to refer to a fetus as a fetus who are distancing themselves from reality. Not the people who do.
“unborn”, in relation to a human life, is a reference to such a life during the period of time commencing after implantation in the womb of a woman and ending on the complete emergence of the life from the body of the woman; “woman” means a female person of any age.
nozzferrahhtoo wrote: » Which is a point that misses being relevant by a country mile as there is no reason to be concerned with the perspective of reality from the view of a fetus. Nor have you provided one. Anywhere. ever. And the point also still remains that from the perspective of a fetus who would have been conceived other that due to contraception, the "outcome is the same". A fact which shows just what a non-point your "point" actually is.
nozzferrahhtoo wrote: » Measuring things purely in the reducationist terms of results and outcomes, will get the discussion nowhere. It's not rocket science. It is just prevention of people getting away with empty semantics and their attempts to avoid arguing a position by hiding behind terminology.
nozzferrahhtoo wrote: » I said "lets not" do it. I was not referring to anyone actually doing it. You have missed my meaning by a country mile. Do keep up, it's not rocket science.
nozzferrahhtoo wrote: » But you errr dangerously close to it with reductionist and empty non-points about results from the perspective of a fetus. You certainly are not offering anything of any utility or relevance by pointing out that abortion results in a dead fetus. I would guess most, if not all, people posting on this thread know that already. So what you think pointing it out gains is opaque to me and, I suspect, to you too.
nozzferrahhtoo wrote: » You do have an MO of pretending that people who do not agree with, or find utility in, your points must have missed them or failed to understand them. The exact opposite of that is true in reality however. Understand and got your points perfectly well thanks all the same, they are just ranging between totally wrong and entirely irrelevant.
nozzferrahhtoo wrote: » We are all well aware of what we are arguing over thanks all the same. And when it comes down to it what we are arguing over is the rights, if any, of a fetus. And people who call a fetus a fetus, not the ones who refuse to do so in terms of evocative but empty terms like "unborn child" are the ones hiding from the reality of it.
Under European law, fetus is generally regarded as an in utero part of the mother and thus its rights are held by the mother. The European Court of Human Rights opined that the right to life does not extend to fetuses under Article 2 of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), although it does not confer on the European Court of Human Rights the authority to impose relevant laws on European Union member states. In H. v. Norway, the European Commission did not exclude that "in certain circumstances" the fetus may enjoy "a certain protection under Article 2, first sentence". Three European Union member states (Ireland, Hungary and Slovakia) grant fetus the constitutional right to life. The Constitution of Norway grants the unborn royal children the right of succession to the throne. In English common law, fetus is granted inheritance rights under the born alive rule.
robdonn wrote: » Fair enough, but that doesn't answer my question, which is also your question. What, in your opinion, is the argument for affording anyone any rights at any stage of development?
robdonn wrote: » None of the examples you give require the constant siphoning of someone else's biological system, that could be seen as a level of autonomy that a foetus lacks. Of course this can apply to other situations, such as some conjoined twins, so it would be silly to base the decision on one factor alone.
robdonn wrote: » A newborn is granted a legally recognised identity by society at the moment of birth and all rights applicable are then applied. As a society we could choose to change this and apply it to the unborn but we don't.
aloyisious wrote: » Did you read Breda's opinion piece?
Kiwi in IE wrote: » To liken a foetus to an newborn baby because a new born baby cannot live independently is absurd. Anyone can look after a new born baby, so if it's parents choose not to, someone else can step in.
Absolam wrote: » I did. She didn't offer any argument for affording anyone any rights at any stage of development that I could see. In fact, the only reference to a right she made at all was "Mothers who continue their pregnancy are rarely lauded as brave. At best, they are patronised. They are told that while their choice might be fine for them, they have no right to impose it on others." Maybe you should simply explain what you think your point is?
aloyisious wrote: » Actually my sole point was merely to present people with the opinion piece written by Breda. I believe she wrote it for the edification of the reading public. I believe it meant that she see's a feotus with FFA worthy of being allowed a full-term birth so as to be allowed die in a hospice and she see's that as a form of a right. Perhap's I am wrong in that.
robdonn wrote: » Fair enough, but that doesn't answer my question, which is also your question. What, in your opinion, is the argument for affording anyone any rights at any stage of development? None of the examples you give require the constant siphoning of someone else's biological system, that could be seen as a level of autonomy that a foetus lacks. Of course this can apply to other situations, such as some conjoined twins, so it would be silly to base the decision on one factor alone. A newborn is granted a legally recognised identity by society at the moment of birth and all rights applicable are then applied. As a society we could choose to change this and apply it to the unborn but we don't.
nozzferrahhtoo wrote: » My point is I see no reason for affording a fetus rights. Arguments I do see for affording other things rights are not relevant to that point, or this thread. Suffice to say however I consider Rights to be very heavily and proportionately connected with things like sentience and consciousness. An attribute a fetus not only seemingly lacks, but lacks the structures even required to produce it in the first place.
One eyed Jack wrote: » You quoted my post and implied I was measuring things solely in terms of outcomes
One eyed Jack wrote: » You're deliberately misrepresenting my position to address something I never said
One eyed Jack wrote: » What use is contraception to pregnant women who want to have an abortion?
One eyed Jack wrote: » And how is the outcome of an abortion for a woman the same as if she had never gotten pregnant?
One eyed Jack wrote: » How is anyone distancing themselves from reality
One eyed Jack wrote: » Slightly more nuanced and in depth terms than your attempts to restrict people to refer to the unborn as the foetus.
One eyed Jack wrote: » You notice that I haven't provided a reason to be concerned with the perspective of reality from the view of a fetus, so what point are you addressing exactly?
One eyed Jack wrote: » Who's missing the point now?
One eyed Jack wrote: » You're just demonstrating with your non-point that you have missed my point
One eyed Jack wrote: » or you're seeking to address a point I never made.
One eyed Jack wrote: » I never made any mention about reality from the perspective of a fetus.
One eyed Jack wrote: » So you're suggesting we not do something that nobody was doing anyway? I definitely missed the point there then
One eyed Jack wrote: » because you don't appear to have one
One eyed Jack wrote: » Talking about contraception when a woman wants an abortion is completely irrelevant
One eyed Jack wrote: » the outcomes of contraception and abortion are certainly not the same.
One eyed Jack wrote: » I'm almost certain though in your attempts to remain obtuse as possible you'll avoid the point again and go off on another tangent rather than address what's written in front of you.
One eyed Jack wrote: » You clearly demonstrate that you haven't understood my point at all
One eyed Jack wrote: » and so far rather than address my points that I have made, you appear to be more concerned with addressing points I haven't made! What's that about?
One eyed Jack wrote: » So far you haven't written anything remotely relevant to rebutting my points
One eyed Jack wrote: » but rather you appear to have chosen to reply with immature nonsense.
One eyed Jack wrote: » Well it might come down to arguing the rights if any of a fetus for you.
One eyed Jack wrote: » rather than pissing and moaning because someone isn't using the right terminology that suits me.
One eyed Jack wrote: » You've mentioned before that you would afford a fetus certain rights at a certain stage of development, but that isn't the reality that should be front and center of the discussion on the issue of abortion at all IMO.
One eyed Jack wrote: » That's how we ended up with the piecemeal legislation we currently have in place where abortion is only permissible in terms of a threat to the woman's life from suicide. Arguing for circumstances including rape and FFA is just more kicking the can that little bit further down the road, when what should actually be legislated for, and what should actually be front and centre of any discussison regarding the issue of abortion is that there should be no circumstances a woman should be denied an abortion if that is what she wants.
One eyed Jack wrote: » I've seen plenty of coherent arguments against this position, so claims that there are none is to deny the reality that there have been coherent arguments made against abortion.
One eyed Jack wrote: » The onus is on the people making an argument for abortion to make a coherent argument, because otherwise the law will remain as it is in the absence of any compelling argument to legislate for abortion.