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CrazyAnglican wrote:Yet, regardless of getting another caretaker, a two-year-old's mother would be guilty of abuse and neglect for allowing him/ her to go hungry (if she had the power to prevent it). This merely showing that there is a moral obligation there. A mother who neglects her infant or her two-year-old is guilty of abuse; and is not fulfilling her moral obligation, if she allows her offspring to go without the essentials for life. It doesn't matter if someone else takes up the burden for the child. It's the mother who hasn't fulfilled her moral obligation.
CrazyAnglican wrote:FabledIntegral wrote:3. It's not that he has given up his right not to be killed, it's that he doesn't have that right in that situation. The right to life does NOT imply the right to use the resources of another for one's own survival. And that is the point. You can only use the resources of another if given the consent by another to survive. Keep in mind we are under the premise that a fetus IS a person.
Perhaps we've already covered this (I've been away for a couple of days), but why exactly is it different for a fetus than for a two-year-old? Both are fully dependent on the consent for use of resources to survive. Perhaps the fetus might die sooner, but the end result would be the same for both. Yet if the two-year-old is denied those resources, he/she needs to survive, it is abuse (neglect) and murder if the child dies. Why should a two year old have more right to life in this regard than a fetus, given that we are acknowledging both as people?
Or if we go a little further does a neonate have the right to suckle? In this regard it is using Mom's body to survive (ie it's primary source of nutrition). Suppose that no other milk or formula is available. Doesn't Mom have a moral obligation to allow a newborn to use her body for it's own sustenance, in this case? I'd have a hard time acquitting a mother who allowed her infant to starve because she didn't see that she had a responsibility to allow her body to be used in that manner.
mpjh wrote:Returning to the OP's Thompson arguments by analogy, I love it. This is done all the time in court. When trying to explain a complex economic point, economist often refer to a "railroad" as an example. The underlying assumption is that everyone will think they understand the railroad example and thus be able to draw meaning for the economic problem. I always get a chuckle when this happens because everyone does think that they understand a railroad operation, despite never having been trained nor studied railroads.
Thompson's analogies have the same problem. Her example are no less complex than the original problem, and fraught with the same underlying principles of humanness and conscience. Nothing is really explained by her analogies.
The example of the person forcibly attached to the violinists explains nothing. It clearly violates the human dignity and individual human rights of one person to provide the violinist with a longer life. Which is the fetus? The blood donor or the violinist? Which is innocent? Clearly the blood donor is the innocent person and has a right to have her human dignity returned. How does that explain what rights a fetus has?
Is the fetus innocent? No. How can it have a right to human dignity when it is just a part of the woman's body without the ability to live separately. The analogy falls apart here. The blood donor analogy explains nothing.
The example of the burglar similarly falls apart. The open window is an invitation of sorts. In law it would make the difference between an illegal breaking and entering, and just a trespass. It is what the burglar does inside to which the owner does not consent that makes the crime.
There is no proper analogous case for agreeing to sex but not the pregnancy. After all, it is the sperm and the egg that are doing the thing to which the woman has not agreed. These are not human actors, just biological features of the two bodies involved. The whole idea that the woman did not give consent to her egg to join with a sperm is, well, ridiculous, and in no way analogous to the burglary illegal conduct in the home. The burglar is a person responsible for his actions, sperm are not persons.
Don't try these arguments in court.
FabledIntegral wrote:The general argument is that a fetus is indeed an innocent human being and thus has the same right of life as you and me.
wrestler1ump wrote:FabledIntegral wrote:The general argument is that a fetus is indeed an innocent human being and thus has the same right of life as you and me.
That might be the argument you are making, but how are you going to prove it to be correct? You can't just say abortion is wrong without defending your position. Whether you are pro or anti abortion, you've got to have some argument either way.
FabledIntegral wrote:Thompson goes and, although she disagrees personally with the claim that a fetus is a person, decides to AGREE for the sake of her argument on the premise that a fetus IS a person. This part is crucial, as I've debated with god knows how many morons that don't understand the entire concept of "agreeing with a certain premise you might disagree with for the sake of an argument." Through agreeing on the premise that a fetus is a person, she argues that it still does NOT have a right to life because of its dependency on another.
saxitoxin wrote:Your position is more complex than the federal tax code. As soon as I think I understand it, I find another index of cross-references, exceptions and amendments I have to apply.
Timminz wrote:Yo mama is so classless, she could be a Marxist utopia.
arrested on suspicion of murder for the death of an unborn child
saxitoxin wrote:Your position is more complex than the federal tax code. As soon as I think I understand it, I find another index of cross-references, exceptions and amendments I have to apply.
Timminz wrote:Yo mama is so classless, she could be a Marxist utopia.
Nobunaga wrote:... It's only human if somebody decides they want it?
BigBallinStalin wrote:I've got a question for FabledIntegral.
No, I haven't read this entire thread, but I want to just skip to this one thing.
Why is it that you seem to believe that a fetus is a human life? Because it has the potential to become a "human being?"
Nobunaga wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:I've got a question for FabledIntegral.
No, I haven't read this entire thread, but I want to just skip to this one thing.
Why is it that you seem to believe that a fetus is a human life? Because it has the potential to become a "human being?"
... I'm simply pointing out inconsistencies in the thinking. At 13 weeks you can still chop it up and suck it out with a vacuum cleaner type aparatus, by law.
... But then, in another instance, you can be charged with murder.
... Am I the only here who finds this troubling?
...
Frigidus wrote:Nobunaga wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:I've got a question for FabledIntegral.
No, I haven't read this entire thread, but I want to just skip to this one thing.
Why is it that you seem to believe that a fetus is a human life? Because it has the potential to become a "human being?"
... I'm simply pointing out inconsistencies in the thinking. At 13 weeks you can still chop it up and suck it out with a vacuum cleaner type aparatus, by law.
... But then, in another instance, you can be charged with murder.
... Am I the only here who finds this troubling?
...
I think that the idea is that it should be up to the potential mother. While I feel that up to a certain point it is not a human life, if the mother feels that the organism leeching off her is not something she wants she has the right to remove it. If she feels that it is something she does want she has the right to keep it. It is not up to someone else to make the decision. I'm not sure what crime the guy should be charged with, but it is definitely a crime.
Frigidus wrote:Nobunaga wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:I've got a question for FabledIntegral.
No, I haven't read this entire thread, but I want to just skip to this one thing.
Why is it that you seem to believe that a fetus is a human life? Because it has the potential to become a "human being?"
... I'm simply pointing out inconsistencies in the thinking. At 13 weeks you can still chop it up and suck it out with a vacuum cleaner type aparatus, by law.
... But then, in another instance, you can be charged with murder.
... Am I the only here who finds this troubling?
...
I think that the idea is that it should be up to the potential mother. While I feel that up to a certain point it is not a human life, if the mother feels that the organism leeching off her is not something she wants she has the right to remove it. If she feels that it is something she does want she has the right to keep it. It is not up to someone else to make the decision. I'm not sure what crime the guy should be charged with, but it is definitely a crime.


Ray Rider wrote:Frigidus wrote:Nobunaga wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:I've got a question for FabledIntegral.
No, I haven't read this entire thread, but I want to just skip to this one thing.
Why is it that you seem to believe that a fetus is a human life? Because it has the potential to become a "human being?"
... I'm simply pointing out inconsistencies in the thinking. At 13 weeks you can still chop it up and suck it out with a vacuum cleaner type aparatus, by law.
... But then, in another instance, you can be charged with murder.
... Am I the only here who finds this troubling?
...
I think that the idea is that it should be up to the potential mother. While I feel that up to a certain point it is not a human life, if the mother feels that the organism leeching off her is not something she wants she has the right to remove it. If she feels that it is something she does want she has the right to keep it. It is not up to someone else to make the decision. I'm not sure what crime the guy should be charged with, but it is definitely a crime.
So the mother decides whether the unborn child in her womb is human or not??If she wants it, then it's a human and a guy can be charged with murder for killing it. But if she doesn't want it, you can cut it up in pieces and suck it out because it's not human? I mean, you can get serious charges for destroying an eagle egg because it's recognized to be an unformed, immature eagle. But a fertilized human egg? "Oh no, it's not human yet. You can do whatever you want with it." Anyway, this is totally off of the original topic...although I guess most of the original people debating in this topic aren't around anymore, anyway.
BigBallinStalin wrote:I've got a question for FabledIntegral.
No, I haven't read this entire thread, but I want to just skip to this one thing.
Why is it that you seem to believe that a fetus is a human life? Because it has the potential to become a "human being?"
Snorri1234 wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:I've got a question for FabledIntegral.
No, I haven't read this entire thread, but I want to just skip to this one thing.
Why is it that you seem to believe that a fetus is a human life? Because it has the potential to become a "human being?"
If you read the first post you'll see that FabledIntegral doesn't believe that a fetus is a human life.
Ray Rider wrote:So the mother decides whether the unborn child in her womb is human or not??![]()
If she wants it, then it's a human and a guy can be charged with murder for killing it. But if she doesn't want it, you can cut it up in pieces and suck it out because it's not human?
I mean, you can get serious charges for destroying an eagle egg because it's recognized to be an unformed, immature eagle.
But a fertilized human egg? "Oh no, it's not human yet. You can do whatever you want with it." Anyway, this is totally off of the original topic...although I guess most of the original people debating in this topic aren't around anymore, anyway.
natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"