frostyjacks wrote: » You're confusing a natural miscarriage (not a crime) with abortion (a crime). This girl ignored offers of help, was dead set on breaking the law and can count herself lucky not to be sitting in a jail cell right now. What it is about these people that they think the law doesn't apply to them?
inocybe wrote: » What would you call a miscarriage where the mother took a lot of ibuprofen and vitamin C? Or drank a lot of alcohol? Is that a crime? How about taking arthritis medication belonging to a relative.... how about the same medication ordered on the internet??? When does a miscarriage become a crime?
Loafing Oaf wrote: » You were making an issue of how the girl in the case disposed of the by-products of the abortion. Are you saying an aborted foetus deserves to be dispatched with dignity but a miscarried one does not?
frostyjacks wrote: » The by-product of the abortion? What kind of sick term is that? All human life is precious, and should be treated accordingly. Unfortunately, we live in the age of greed and entitlement.
frostyjacks wrote: » All human life is precious, and should be treated accordingly.
Cabaal wrote: » What would you prefer them to do with it? Incinerate it?, because thats what happens with medical waste normally in hospitals throughout the UK, Ireland and pretty much the world.
seamus wrote: » So, would you prefer that it was put in a rubbish bag and incinerated in a big fire with a load of medical waste, or flushed down into the public sewer with mountains of faeces and toilet paper? Because they're your only two options really. That's where all of the other foetuses of this age end up.
Lingua Franca wrote: » What do you expect us to do? Scrape the products of conception off the pads and out of our underwear and scoop bits out of the toilet for burial under a tree in a little white box? What method of disposal is allowed, FrostyJack?
Loafing Oaf wrote: » Are you saying an aborted foetus deserves to be dispatched with dignity but a miscarried one does not?
lazygal wrote: » How does greed and entitlement affect how women dispose of the contents of our uteruses? Should I bury everything that's expelled into my menstrual cup in case I had a chemical pregnancy?
oscarBravo wrote: » It's almost as if frostyjacks has no answers; just snap judgements.
oscarBravo wrote: » It's almost funny to see how these questions have been studiously ignored, except for the entirely transparent dodge that there's somehow a practical difference between a miscarriage and an abortion. It's almost as if frostyjacks has no answers; just snap judgements.
drkpower wrote: » As often happens in these cases, you have gotten a few things mixed up. The Judgement did not find that as there was no realistic prospect of emerging alive, the best interests of the unborn child were not served by maintaining somatic support. It found that the best interests of the unborn child were not served by maintaining somatic support simpliciter. One of the (many) reasons that influenced the court (as to what was in foetal best interests) was the fact that the child wouldn't be born alive, but it was only one of many. It may not seem it, but this is a very important distinction..
drkpower wrote: » Also, to be clear, many many things were unclear before this judgment in relation to this specific case (and of wider application to these types of cases); too many to get into here, but its worth pointing out that while there is some additional clarity for doctors as a result of this judgment, the clarity really only extends to another almost identical case. Change some of the pertinent facts slightly, and a new dilemma arises.
drkpower wrote: » To say as you do above that 'the only thing I think was unclear was whether the Doctors were obliged by law to maintain support for an unborn child once they had the knowledge that such support was inevitably futile' is just wrong. When this case arose, a load of pertinent legal matters were unclear: - did the 8th amendment even apply to this case given it didn't relate to abortion? - were the mothers rights part of the consideration given that she was all-but-dead? - if a foetus is not capable of being born alive, does it have a right to life? - is acting in a foetus' best interest (to withdraw life support) in breach of the 8th amendment to vindicate his right to life - and many many more When this issue arose, all of these matters (and more) were relevant and none were clear. Not all of them are clear even now. Some of these have been answered/clarified by PP, but loads of other questions haven't been (and more issues have been raised by PP).
drkpower wrote: » That's the problem when you legislate for a massively complex area of medicine and law with one sentence. Similar areas of complexity have 100 page pieces of legislation devoted to them and still there are cases that fall between provisions. Anyone who criticises a doctor (or lawyer) from seeking court clarification in these types of scenario doesn't know what its like to be either.
frostyjacks wrote: » It's really none of my business what mother nature does to a pregnancy, or what a woman does after that. But if someone deliberately ends the life of the unborn, that is a crime and I want to see the law applied. We can't pick and choose which laws we obey. The actions of the girl in this case, in ignoring the options available to her, refusing help, her total disregard for the law and the revolting method of disposal are indefensible. That's why she plead guilty. There is no defence, no muddying the waters or conflating her crime with a miscarriage. It was a vile, barbaric act that has no place in a civilised society.
mansize wrote: » Always reminds me of every sperm is sacred...
Loafing Oaf wrote: » From the moment of fertilisation? How would this work in IVF clinics for instance? Should staff hold a little prayer service before they pour surplus embryos down the sink?
frostyjacks wrote: » We can't pick and choose which laws we obey.
frostyjacks wrote: » It's really none of my business what mother nature does to a pregnancy, or what a woman does after that.
...the revolting method of disposal [is] indefensible.
oscarBravo wrote: » Oh look, you said something that's true. I'll ask you the question again, because it's sort of fun to watch you squirm out of answering it: how come the method of disposal of a miscarriage is none of your business, but the exact same method of disposal used by the woman in this case is revolting and indefensible? Why don't you care about miscarried foetuses? Have you no decency?!
MrPudding wrote: » Well, I suspect if he were to answer we might find that our friend frosty likely doesn't think there should be such a thing as IVF... Excellent news. Can we take it then that you are now fully in support of the law in relation to marriage, as amended, after the marriage equality referendum? MrP
oscarBravo wrote: » how come the method of disposal of a miscarriage is none of your business, but the exact same method of disposal used by the woman in this case is revolting and indefensible? Why don't you care about miscarried foetuses? Have you no decency?!
MrPudding wrote: » frostyjacks wrote: » We can't pick and choose which laws we obey. Excellent news. Can we take it then that you are now fully in support of the law in relation to marriage, as amended, after the marriage equality referendum?
Neyite wrote: » I actually would really like the answer to this too. I bled my miscarriages onto sanitary towels and some went down the toilet when I used it. I put the sanitary towels, wipes I used to clean up, and even the destroyed underwear from leaks into a bag, and into a bin. I'd really like to know how to collect the entirety of the miscarriage over the 6 days I usually bleed for to dispose of properly. Sanitary items cant be flushed. They block sewers. I don't have a stove or a fire to incinerate. I don't have a garden to bury the items and to be honest, likely foxes or dogs would likely dig up items. If I attend the early pregnancy unit, they possibly would dispose of my collection of soiled pads but it would be into the hospital incinerator. But then, I'm clogging up an overstretched health care system and well, since I'm not on contraception I should probably go every month with my little bag of period, because there could be a fertilised embryo that didn't implant in there. I'd really like to know the official way to deal with disposal of miscarriage, because in all my appointments to discuss them with my healthcare professionals, not one has explained how I should appropriately dispose of them.
frostyjacks wrote: » I can't imagine anyone of sound mind and body would throw it in the bin with the household rubbish. Surely that's wrong?
frostyjacks wrote: » I can't imagine anyone of sound mind and body would throw it in the bin with the household rubbish. Surely that's wrong? Babies in bins....a chilling vision of the future you'd have us living in.
frag420 wrote: » Just came across this...... Russian women who decide to sell their babies instead of having an abortion will receive $3,700 under a proposed new law. Officials are hoping the measure, which was put forward by a MP for the country's nationalist party, will boost the country's birth rate and give children 'a chance to live'.Those of you who are anti choice/abortion, what are your thoughts? Would you be happy if the Irish government were to implement something similar?http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3530351/Russian-women-decide-against-having-abortion-SELL-babies-state-3-700-proposed-new-law.html
frostyjacks wrote: » I think it's a good idea. There are plenty of prospective parents out there who are going through years of heartache trying to conceive; it must be soul-destroying for them to read about women flaunting their abortions.