Yeah, me. And others. If your religiously-based assertions of fact and interpretations of data are permissible then so are mine. That's what it means to live in a free, secular society. You don't get to be right about everything just by claiming divine authority.
Ahh, no.
In this instance every single rational observer in the world is in complete agreement that a fetus can't live outside of its mother's body until it can. The current record is 21 weeks, 5 days but that's not the norm. The actual survival rate at 22 weeks is around 10%.
Yeah, I see how that logic works - it works speculatively. You're basically talking about the society in A Brave New World, where everyone was conceived in a test tube and decanted at full term. If that ever happens then we'll have some more things to figure out, but basing current policy on eventualities pulled from science fiction seems silly to me.Byblos wrote: ↑Fri Mar 06, 2020 8:17 amAnd what if science advances to a point where it can exist without her, at any point after conception? Then what? If we move the viability target once again, we'd end up exactly with existing independently outside the womb. See how logic works? But you'd have to have a fit mental capacity to reach that conclusion and gymnastics tend to do that.
Seems like you've lost the thread. I'm not offering any alternatives. I'm simply stating what I believe and what position I take in the national discussion, same as you. The only difference is that I'm not trying to support my beliefs with an appeal to divine authority.Byblos wrote: ↑Fri Mar 06, 2020 8:17 amAnd your alternative is what, let's get rid of it before it becomes a real burden?edwardmurphy wrote: ↑Thu Mar 05, 2020 3:24 pmAfter it reaches viability the mother is no longer a necessity. Sure, it still needs food, water, and air, but anyone can provide those things.
Personally, my wife has been pregnant twice and I have 2 kids. If she were to become pregnant again she would have the pregnancy aborted.
I don't owe you an explanation for why we would make that decision, but I'll provide one regardless. I'm 48 and my wife is 45. Our second daughter had to be induced a month early due to fears that she wasn't thriving and might be stillborn if we delayed. The principle cause for her slow development and low birth weight was maternal age. If my wife were to become pregnant again her odds of carrying to term and delivering a healthy baby without complications to either of them is lower than we will accept. We have two girls and we need to guard our health. Beyond that, we also need to guard our finances. We want to give both of our girls the best start that they can get. Our best option to keep them safe in an increasingly uncertain world is to send them out healthy, educated, debt free, and with money in the bank. Having a third child as we approach 50 would undercut our ability to do that, and to be frank, I care more about my two existing children than about a nonexistent potential child.
If you want to simplify all of that to "get rid of it before it becomes a real burden" then I guess that's up to you, but from where I'm standing it would be the most responsible choice. And as I mentioned previously, nobody outside of my marriage gets or deserves a vote. It's our business.
Enough with the sophistry. You know the difference.
More sophistry.Byblos wrote: ↑Fri Mar 06, 2020 8:17 amAt any point after conception a fetus has all that it needs to develop. All it needs is the proper environment. Whether that environment is inside the womb or outside it is simply a matter of location, nothing more.edwardmurphy wrote: ↑Thu Mar 05, 2020 3:24 pmThat's the difference between a potential human and a human.
The difference is that in the former case the "proper environment" is a human being's body, while the latter is pretty much anywhere else. The difference is that your position rests on your belief that the potential human in the womb matters more than the actual human who owns the womb. I disagree with that contention, and with your contention that a bunch of strangers are entitled to decide how the woman must proceed. And finally, I strongly disagree with the conservative contention that while they have the right to force the woman to carry to term, they have no responsibility whatsoever to care for either the woman or the baby they forced her to have.
Nope. If you can use quotes from the RHA to crushingly refute my argument then go ahead and do it, but you don't get to assign me homework.Byblos wrote: ↑Fri Mar 06, 2020 8:55 amAre you not familiar with New York State's RHA (Reproductive Health Act) newly enacted into law by our esteemed governor Andrew Cuomo? I suggest you get familiar with it and what it allows (and who is now able to make those decisions) then come back here and tell us it's a lie and that we're just peddling extremist misinformation.