PeZook wrote:LionElJonson wrote:
No more so than a woman who marries an elderly millionaire is automatically put through a background check or something.
Actually, since miscarriages happen a lot (I was told 30% in health class, Alyrium apparently thinks it's 80% ; Either way, you have
you have almost 2 million failed pregnancy a year, which would necessitate a murder investigation every time. Currently, the police inestigates about
16 thousand reported murders yearly.
So...your policy wouldn't require just "oh hey hire more coroners", but increasing police resources dedicated to murder investigation by two orders of magnitude, while criminalizing two million women a year who'd find themselves in county jail under investigation FOR MURDER.
How do you think that would affect their lives and the lives of their families? You have to include that in the utility calculation.
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The vast majority of those 2 million failed pregnancies would go unreported as well; most likely, the actual charge would come up in a few situations: where the police already have you, and are just throwing every charge they can at you; when an officer needs to make arrest quotas or the like; when the woman in question's drawn the negative attention of a police officer who uses it as an excuse to make her life difficult; when someone tips the cops off that Ms. So-and-so went and got an illegal abortion; and when the cops bust an illegal abortion operation, and uses the documentation there and/or his bank accounts to track down the people who received his services.
If it gets too bad, the Supreme Court would just rule that part of the law unconstitutional, anyway.
LionElJonson wrote:Only if the fetus actually dies as a result.
And if it doesn't die, there's still charges of reckless endangerment and such, which would have to be applied, since fetus = person. Do we charge mothers who don't take supplements?
No, because of practical enforcement issues; the cops would most likely only go after people who make themselves obvious. If a woman is drunkenly staggering down the street while obviously pregnant, and a cop comes by, she'd probably wind up spending the evening in the local jail. If a woman gets drunk at home, unless something else draws the attention of the police, it would obviously be impossible for the police to do anything, especially if the woman isn't showing yet.
LionElJonson wrote:How do you prove an elderly gentleman was suffocated, and didn't just die in his sleep?
There's a body. A woman who got an abortion in Vienna leaves no evidence. What, you're going to pressure foreign governments to send the aborted fetuses to you as evidence? Or maybe stop pregnant women from leaving the country altogether?
There would be a
body for aborted fetuses, too; they're just small and relatively easy to dispose of. As for pregnant women leaving the country to get abortions, well, there's nothing stopping someone from leaving the country to murder someone where that's legal, too.
LionElJonson wrote:The mother has the right to self-defense, like anyone else. Additionally, as far as I know, there's no way to statistically calculate the probability of success of any particular person; you can at best calculate the average for their demographic.
Yes, you can calculate that for their demographic, but there are some cases where it can be reasonably estimated.
Maybe, but it's impossible to tell whether or not someone will be the next Einstein or Van Gogh before they were even born.
How do you reconcile the right of the mother to self-defence with turning every mother-to-be into a potential criminal?
Because people have the right to protect themselves with lethal force if their life is in turn threatened. It's not an optimal scenario, but we don't live in an optimal world.
LionElJonson wrote:Yeah, obviously. You'd just hire more coroners, and let them sort through it. You'd only arrest them if there was reason to believe that criminal wrongdoing was involved. Just like you only arrest the widows of elderly millionaires if you think criminal wrongdoing was involved. Most likely, you'd just create another bureaucratic burden on the police force and coroners. Besides, even if criminal charges do get involved, "If you cannot afford an attorney, one will be provided for you."
"Hiring more coroners" sounds nice, but first: a fetus is not a body, it's a lump of cells. You can expect forensic analysis to be much harder.
Babies don't magically appear at the nine-month mark, you know.
They spend that time growing. It's a small body, but it's still recognisable as a body very early on.
Second of all, you'd need two orders of magnitude more resources to process all the added police workload.
Not really; odds are it'd be one of those laws that aren't really enforced, like being publically gay in, IIRC, Georgia (I remember reading an anecdote by a lesbian on another forum I used to visit wherein she and her girlfriend were arrested based on an old law noone's overturned yet because she mouthed off to a cop after making out in public; it was in one of the southern states).
And last but not least, you still did not include the damage done to a woman's family as a result of an accusation of MURDER. How employable do you think she'd be?
Depends on how credible the accusation is.
As an aside in the debate, I have to make an observation: anti-abortionists often seem to view women as potential baby killers. My mother often criticizes them for that, correctly pointing out that in most cases, an abortion is not a decision taken lightly. Women don't like getting abortions, they are usually forced to by circumstances ; Providing a good state safety network for potential mothers does more to lower abortion rates than criminalization.
We do; it's called "adoption"; there aren't enough healthy, white babies in the system as it is. Women don't seem to like using it, though; possibly because the hormone cocktail involved in pregnancy messes with their brains and makes them somewhat
irrational about it.
Serafina wrote:It's simple, if you are not an imbecile.
A woman only has freedom of reproduction if she can choose NOT to do it. Abortion is one way to ensure that.
Similarily, sexual freedom is only possible if sex is safe, which includes pregnancy - and hence birth controll.
Any evidence that other forms of birth control aren't sufficient for ensuring women's sexual freedom?
Are you really that daft?
Abortion obviously is a method of birth controll and therefore population controll. And several countries are already dealing with scarcity issues due to overpopulation.
I'm sorry, I suppose I wasn't clear enough. Please let me rephrase that. Obviously abortion serves as a form of population control; this much is blatantly obvious. What I was asking for was for evidence of overpopulation problems in modern, industrialized nations. If anything, we're seeing the opposite, with the increased loads our aging populations are placing on our retirement systems; we need more young people to reduce the strain, not less.
It doesn't murder any babies. It kills embryos. They are not human beings or even capable of feeling pain, hence it's not murder.
You are harping on that point again and again, except that you already admitted that they are not human beings.
I don't care about pain or cognitive abilities or the existance of the soul; those are all losing arguments. I talk about murdering babies because a fetus is worth 99.37% of an infant, and 98.7% of the value of a five-year-old child, at the average infant mortality rates for American infants and children, and that's close enough to just round up to one for day-to-day purposes.
Great. Let's ignore any of the problems of adoption and focuss solely on white people
Problems? Okay, list them. I can't rebut arguments you haven't made.
Yes it would. Because all those millions of women who had natural miscarriages would be suspected of murder. That's what i am talking about.
Yes, but the police aren't stupid; they'd be selective about the cases they pursue, since even a reasonable doubt is enough to get a Not Guilty verdict returned, and the evidence is too easy to hide. Short of records demonstrating that they did it, a confession, or someone close to the mother approaching the police and telling them she had an abortion, I doubt the police would actually investigate them as murder charges; more likely is hospitals taking all the miscarriages down to their coroner for an examination for the more common forms of inducing miscarriages, followed by a "Natural death" label on the file.
Also, it's still not about murdering babies.
.987 is close enough to 1 that rounding should be fine for the purposes of our discussion, and therefore, yes, morally, fetuses are babies. They're also five-year-old children.
So if a problem is "only marginal", we can ignore it? And it would also prevent that population growth from lowering by forbidding it.
If it is in the Third World, it's irrelevant to this discussion, since we're talking about abortion in developed countries. So, yes, it is ignorable.
Really?
Oh, right, you were the moron who argued that no existing is somehow a bad thing, right?
Not existing doesn't harm you, since you do not exist and therefore can not be harmed.
Yes, yes, and no. Not existing doesn't harm you, but it does something even worse than merely being harmed: it deprives you of continued existence, or, in the case of abortion, from existing at all. Not that I'm surprised, since you seem to have interpreted utilitarianism in one of the more juvenile fashions.
Ah, a classic. Ignoring psychology.
If you criminalize something, people will be carefull around it. Even for cases where it is actually legal.
[Citation Needed]
Ah, but the child/phone call/condom are altering the potential.
No, they're not. Before they were applied, the probability of a human arising barring an external event occuring was zero. Afterwards, the probability was still zero. It's not until the sperm fertilises the egg (an external event) that the probability of a human being being created is achieved.
What "double standards"?
One moment, a baby is in the womb. It is alright to kill this baby; it's just a fetus, after all, not a real person. Ten hours and a lot of swearing later, it's screaming in the arms of its mother. Now it's magically become a person, and it's totally not alright to kill it, even though nothing has truly changed about it. What's changed between point A and point B, to create such a large difference? Nothing but emotional flim-flam.
Your system is neither logical nor consistent. You treat something that is not a human being as a human being, you harp on "altering the odds" in one case but dismiss it in others and so on.
Yes, it is. There are one of two scenarios occuring. In the first, I am failing to properly explain my case properly, in which case I should work on elucidating it more concisely rather than rebutting each individual point you make. Secondly, I have explained it, and you're simply refusing to accept any arguments regarding it, because doing so threatens deeply-held beliefs you've invested emotional energies in, in which case you might be well-served by reading and internalising
this. Actually, you should probably read and internalise that, anyway; being willing to admit that you're wrong and change your mind is one of the major cornerstones to science, and should be something everyone on this board should be working their hardest to accomplish.
Also, creating more humans is not a net benefit if those human beings suffer. Then again, you have already shown enormous disregard for human suffering.
Yes, it is. Suffering is preferable to non-existance.
You have NOT shown that your system would produce any net benefits. Being more logical is not a benefit, and certainly not enough to justify the criminalization and suffering of millions of people.
Well, for one thing, it'd result in saving the lives of millions more, which was the main point of the whole exercise in the first place.
Also, you still assume that it is equivalent to killing human beings, despite your admission to the contrary and lack of any logical argument for that.
I am not assuming that. Either you are simply ignoring my arguments to that effect, or they are not well-enough phrased for you to understand. Since I was, to my knowledge, very clear and concise about how I arrived at those numbers, I have to assume the former.