Good. Because if you supported that you would be no better than the doctors who ran Tuskegee.I support four of the five laws with the exception of the one protecting doctors from lawsuits if they do not talk about the fetus' handicaps.
Please provide a definition of "human life" that grants a fetus protection. A single cell in my body is human life. If I pop a zit I am killing or thousands of cells. What you want to say is a "person". Now, I understand your definition of person is based upon that of a soul. However not everyone holds this position and it is not OK for you to make that very subjective evidence-free assessment law. Particularly because we have this thing called religious freedom which prevents the government from making laws favoring one religious position over another. As it is now, the government allows individuals to make their own choices, which is the neutral position when it comes to ethical questions like this.I furthermore think fetuses are human life and thus abortion should be illegal except to the save the life of the mother.
So, provide a secular justification for this position.
I will note by the way that of known pregnancies, 20% or so end in miscarriage. So if abortion is murder, God is the greatest abortionist of them all.
That does not follow at all.I also think the idea "Pro-Lifers/Anti-Abortionists Are Misogynist" argument is rubbish as if pro-lifers/anti-abortionists were really misogynist they would prefer to allow the fathers of the fetuses to perform abortions if they wish.
You lack reading comprehension skill. I specifically stated that I used it for the purpose of tricking my opponent. It is part of a rhetorical bait and switch of course the argument has holes in it. The hole that my opponent takes tells me what set of traps to lay.He said he used this analogy frequently in public debates, and used in this discussion, so I felt I should point out what I feel are flaws in his argument. I dislike it when poor analogies or arguments are used and tolerated simply because people (such as myself) agree with them, and I thought this one was a fairly inaccurate analogy.
That is pretty much assumed yes.This is a terrible analogy UNLESS this is a situation where spores do this all time.
Wow. You mean the logical hole in the argument I explicitly set out to exploit? Who would have thought! The whole point is to find those who think that consenting to sex in one instance is equivalent to consenting to pregnancy and that said consent cannot be revoked. Go back to school and learn how to fucking read.Okay, maybe I'm being blind, but this seems like a dishonest analogy to make for abortion. One MAJOR difference, is that there is no choice with regards to being hooked up to the violinist as compared to the choice of a women to have sex (exception for rape).
Which is just an extension of the above. If I leave my door unlocked to give up my right to shoot someone who enters my home with the intention of harming me? No. That is the point. Rights ethics generally hold that rights are inviolate unless explicit consent is given and maintained. This analogy finds those who think there is an exception. That somehow the rules that apply everywhere else do not apply to women.The other difference is that you are not biologically responsible for the violinist's situation. The violinist was hooked up (to a complete stranger), against your will, using artificial methods.
Also part of the trap. If they make an argument that leads me to suspect that is true for an individual person, I have a response prepped.There is also the fact that most of the pro-life movement (as far as I've seen) stops caring about a person after their born. Which means they will have a fundamentally different view of the life of an adult versus that of a fetus with regards to your responsibility for it and its "right to life."
And again. It is a rights based argument. In that ethical system rights are inherrent and it does not matter who the person is. Any deviation from this is an inconsistency in their ethical system I can exploit.And from my personal perspective, it is a flawed analogy because you have far MORE reason to save the violinist than a fetus and because it is a one-off thing, as opposed to the lengthy process of child-rearing.