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This is an interesting question. Why do the very same people who passionately oppose the death penalty have no problem supporting the right of a woman to abort an unborn child for any reason and at any stage? Do find any hypocrisy here? I personally oppose both.
by BJ Lange (langebj@gmail.com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 07:06:07 AM EST
Because the the people supporting the right of a woman to an abortion generally don't accept that the aborted foetus is alive in the way that a prisoner to be executed is.
by Colman (colman at eurotrib.com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 07:25:09 AM EST
[ Parent ]
Well firstly I would argue that there is a continuum from initial conception tilla point about 28 weeks into pregnancy where various developmental stages occur, there are ggod arguments  at several points along this chain for life to be considered to have started.

If you wish to take a biblical argument, it specifically (exodus 21:22) separates out the punishment of causing an unborn child to be miscarried, to that of the woman bearing the child to die. because  the woman is alive and the unborn child is not (Incidentally this is an echo of the legal system of the Hittites, and the code of Hammurabi which have simmilar sections)

Life should consist in at least fifty percent pure waste of time, and the rest doing what you please.

by ceebs (bunchofwankers (at) gmail (dot) com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 07:25:47 AM EST
[ Parent ]
No hypocrisy, no. Neither a contradiction.

The unborn child has made no investment in its own life. Its awareness of itself is not sufficiently acute to count, and I don't support protection of bare, biological life. Esp. not when in conflict with the self-aware suffering imposed on its host. Because, yes, it is dependent on parasitic feeding on an others body. I will reserve myself the right to eradicate any parasitic infestation of my body!

The death penalty is ugly. Retributive, vindictive, 'justice' in general is an abomination. More ugly still is that we don't recognise what I would consider the most important human right: The right to die, at any time, for any reason. The only way to protect individuals from having protracted suffering imposed on them.

by someone (s0me1smail(a)gmail(d)com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 07:29:15 AM EST
[ Parent ]
Right. The death penalty is vengeance, not justice. And on the occasion when the wrong person is convicted, it's pretty damn hard to undo.

As for abortion...couching it in terms of "the unborn child" makes it sound pretty bad, sure. But, while having been an embryo is a necessary pre-condition for becoming human, it's not in itself a sufficient condition for being human.

The right to die...I highly recommend the Spanish move The Sea Inside (Mar Adentro).

"The basis of optimism is sheer terror" - Oscar Wilde

by NordicStorm on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 07:41:54 AM EST
[ Parent ]
Not just the death penalty, but most prison terms as well. If the conditions of imprisonment are inhumane: if the inmates are at danger of suffering physical or mental injury by the facilities in which they are housed, the guards, or their fellow inmates; if the prison term does not come with concrete opportunities for development of skills required for a non-criminal career upon release - then I think we can conclude that the point was vengeance, and nothing but. Or maybe some greed as well? Don't forget, privatised prisons are a growth industry!
by someone (s0me1smail(a)gmail(d)com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 07:58:22 AM EST
[ Parent ]
Very good point. If you come out of prison a worse person than when you came in, it's not a net gain for society.

"The basis of optimism is sheer terror" - Oscar Wilde
by NordicStorm on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 08:00:59 AM EST
[ Parent ]
The reason I brought this up was that a month ago I was sitting in the office of an orthopaedic surgeon and was browsing through a coffee table book that was actual photographs of conception through birth and every small step in between. It described in detail each organ and appendage development.

What I realized just how miraculous birth of another human being is and how incredibly fast its' development is from the time of conception. By the 5th or 6th month organ and appendage development is almost complete.

While the decision of Roe v. Wade in the U.S. was necessary to stop the illegal abortions and threats to women's health, it led to the view of many that abortion was victimless and it became as vogue as doing a facelift.

A woman has all the control when it comes to reproduction. That control is education, birth control pills or devices, but most importantly is personal responsibility. The decisions this past year by the US Supreme Court in upholding a relatively new law still allows for this partial birth abortion if it is to save the mother's life. She can still have an abortion in the first few months after conception, which morally I still have a problem with.

So what right does a woman lose? She loses the right to treat life as an inanimate toy.

Years ago when my son was in 5th grade, they were learning sex education and the teacher spoke about abortion. My son objected to abortions and when the teacher asked him why, he said, "I am lucky to be sitting here because the mother of the 15 year old girl who was my birth mother did not believe in abortions - otherwise I would never have had the chance to have a life."

by BJ Lange (langebj@gmail.com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 10:22:57 AM EST
[ Parent ]
My son objected to abortions and when the teacher asked him why, he said, "I am lucky to be sitting here because the mother of the 15 year old girl who was my birth mother did not believe in abortions - otherwise I would never have had the chance to have a life."

How very touching. Now, tell me, does he also say: "I am lucky to be sitting here because my insemination father did not believe in condoms - otherwise I would never have the chance to have a life."

Now, sing along, please:

Every sperm is sacred,
Every sperm is great.
If a sperm is wasted,
God gets quite irate.
by someone (s0me1smail(a)gmail(d)com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 10:33:33 AM EST
[ Parent ]
That pretty much sums up your character (or lack of). Have a good life.
by BJ Lange (langebj@gmail.com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 11:08:27 AM EST
[ Parent ]
You may be right. After all: "Just because you are a character doesn't mean that you have character." That still begs the question, however: which is more important?

I'm pretty sure that I am a character. I find this far more valuable than having character. More fun too!

Cheers to you too!

by someone (s0me1smail(a)gmail(d)com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 11:15:34 AM EST
[ Parent ]
Your comment is unduly harsh and insulting.

someone's comment above was very much on topic - or do you deny that sexual intercourse requires two people, and that both are responsible for it to happen or not?

The difference with pregnancy and abortion is that it will affect one person a lot more than the other, so the decision has to be assymetric there.

In the long run, we're all dead. John Maynard Keynes

by Jerome a Paris (jeromeguillet@yahoo.fr) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 01:26:00 PM EST
[ Parent ]
To be fair, I understand the reaction. Here he's telling   a heartfelt story about his child, and he gets a seemingly sarcastic "oh, how touching!" in response?

Not that I disagree with someone's sentiment (and any comment quoting Monty Python is a-ok in my book), but I see why one would react in that way...

"The basis of optimism is sheer terror" - Oscar Wilde

by NordicStorm on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 01:49:31 PM EST
[ Parent ]
As a woman, that heartfelt story gives me chills or horror -- I HOPE it's bullshit that he's making up.  Otherwise, his son has somehow learned so little respect for his own mother that he thinks she would have gladly aborted him if given the chance.  How sick is that?

And, as someone points out, apparently no thought whatsoever to his father's role.  Pointing out that we're all here because our parents didn't use contraception is entirely on point.

Maybe we can eventually make language a complete impediment to understanding. -Hobbes

by Izzy (izzy at eurotrib dot com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 02:01:25 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Aah, I see what you're saying. I didn't quite think my previous comment through.

"The basis of optimism is sheer terror" - Oscar Wilde
by NordicStorm on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 02:10:15 PM EST
[ Parent ]
NordicStorm - Thank you.

The story is very true and was repeated to us by his teacher who was taken aback by his very thought through comment at such a young age. I had never thought much about the topic until I heard this and then questioned my own values concerning the sanctity of life: death penalties and abortion.

The birth mother was only about 16 and not able to make her own decision, so she relied on her mother who believed that the child should be allowed to live and the right couple selected for adoption.

by BJ Lange (langebj@gmail.com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 02:29:51 PM EST
[ Parent ]
So if your son had said he hoped contraception would be made illegal otherwise he and others wouldn't be there, would you and his teacher still have thought this was a reasonable line of thought?  How about if he came out strongly against abstinence programs?  

Do you think it's ok for your son to believe his birth mother would have gladly aborted him if not for the intervention of others?  What would your reaction have been if he'd said he was relieved his mother didn't leave him in a dumpster?  Would you have said, yeah, you're mighty lucky that's illegal or she might have?

Perhaps you should try to be more wise than a fifth grader and reassure him that his birth mother probably loves him and has his best interests at heart, instead of reinforcing his fears that she'd have wiped him out of existence if given the chance.  You and his teacher should be ashamed of yourselves.


Maybe we can eventually make language a complete impediment to understanding. -Hobbes

by Izzy (izzy at eurotrib dot com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 03:04:23 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Perhaps when he gets older he'll realize that if he had never been, he wouldn't have cared (and be able to consider my statement philosophically). Or, put another way, someday he might be able to view the world outside of his current egocentric lens.

you are the media you consume.

by MillMan (millguy at gmail) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 04:34:30 PM EST
[ Parent ]
When one starts walking up the causality chain of low probability events such as ever having been born, one very much end up in silly territory. "Oh, I'm glad that my parents got really drunk one night in High School and got knocked up, or I wouldn't be here." The 'touching story' I find rather manipulative. Remember the Snowflake babies?

Snowflake children is a term used by organizations that promote the adoption of embryos left over from in vitro fertilization to describe children that result, where the children's parents were not the original cell donors.
...
President George W. Bush has made public appearances together with snowflake children while speaking about his support for adult stem cell research and his opposition to embryonic stem cell research.


It's the same manipulative, emotional nonsense. I mean, clearly I don't wish for any of these people to not have been born. This, however, does not lead my to conclude that whatever circumstances in their pre-birth life they emphasize as crucial to their very existence ought to be specifically protected. Just as I don't think we should start telling teens to drink and screw more without contraception 'cause some people have been born as a consequence of this.

Thus, I felt an appropriately sarcastic, dismissive and insensitive response was in order.

by someone (s0me1smail(a)gmail(d)com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 02:20:40 PM EST
[ Parent ]
"Oh, I'm glad that my parents got really drunk one night in High School and got knocked up, or I wouldn't be here."

OK, I'll volunteer to go too far:
"Thank God " ... no on second thought even I cannot bring myself to type the "logical extreme" version of that. No asbestos suit is thick enough.

-----
sapere aude

by Number 6 on Fri Aug 24th, 2007 at 05:35:39 AM EST
[ Parent ]
I dare you!
No, really, I'm SOO staying out of this thread! Mine fields wherever you look...

"If you know your enemies and know yourself, you will not be imperiled in a hundred battles." Sun Tzu
by Turambar (sersguenda at hotmail com) on Fri Aug 24th, 2007 at 05:42:48 AM EST
[ Parent ]
Double-dare ya! :)

Yes, positions are firmly entrenched so that's probably the wisest.


-----
sapere aude

by Number 6 on Fri Aug 24th, 2007 at 08:03:20 AM EST
[ Parent ]
His own comment back to me:

"You may be right. After all: "Just because you are a character doesn't mean that you have character." That still begs the question, however: which is more important?"

Your criticism should be directed to back to him unless feel it is acceptable to poke fun at my son.

by BJ Lange (langebj@gmail.com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 02:36:48 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Um, no, I am questioning the relevance of your story. As far as I am concerned this all rather unrelated to your son, see this comment.
by someone (s0me1smail(a)gmail(d)com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 02:47:27 PM EST
[ Parent ]
There is a big debate here that cannot be handled by the swordplay of comments.

I do not feel up to putting bones on it - maybe Bob could bring in the voice of reason. This is somehow the base subject from which all else springs.

You can't be me, I'm taken

by Sven Triloqvist on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 02:58:05 PM EST
[ Parent ]
The problem here is that there's a large grey area between definitely alive - let's take being able to survive and develop outside the womb as this point - and pretty definitely not alive - let's take pre-implantation. Somewhere in there is the point where pretty much everyone except fanatics will accept as the point where the foetus is "alive"  - whatever that means.

In that grey area goes personal morality and belief: thus abortion should be left to the choice of the pregnant woman. Whether you or I like the decision is irrelevant.

by Colman (colman at eurotrib.com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 10:33:39 AM EST
[ Parent ]
If one takes 'viability' as the limit, then one should always be able to have an 'abortion'. If the child is considered to be viable, simply remove it, put it in one of those incubator thingies, and offer it for adoption. If it is not viable, abort and discard.

Besides, alive is clearly not the criterion to use here. Animals and even plants are alive, yet they can for the most part be killed at will. I think 'alive and sufficiently human-like' is closer.

I can probably be considered a fanatic on this topic. In principal I have nothing against early-life infantcide either, as little babies don't seem sufficiently human-like to me.

by someone (s0me1smail(a)gmail(d)com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 10:43:20 AM EST
[ Parent ]
Some nights out I'm happy for it to occurr up to the age of about 20.

Life should consist in at least fifty percent pure waste of time, and the rest doing what you please.
by ceebs (bunchofwankers (at) gmail (dot) com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 10:45:47 AM EST
[ Parent ]
And when I lived in my apartment near the fading nightclubs of Leeson Street I'd have supported it up to about seventy, especially coming up to Christmas.
by Colman (colman at eurotrib.com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 10:49:44 AM EST
[ Parent ]
Yup, I think you'd be considered a fanatic.

In principle I don't have a problem with the idea of extracting a viable child late on, though it's probably not a great idea medically for mother or child at that stage.

The problem with killing anything that isn't sufficiently human-like is that the line can be too easily redrawn - which is my main problem with euthanasia as well: opens up too many practical problems in real life.

by Colman (colman at eurotrib.com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 10:48:22 AM EST
[ Parent ]
The problem of not having euthanasia opens up even more horrors, as far as I am concerned. I can think of many things worse than dying. Being trapped in some half-conscious comatose state is one of them. Mind, there ought to be some pretty serious conditions on this one. In the line of a living-will. Each person should have the opportunity to predetermine the set of conditions under which they would like their life ended, for conditions that would prohibit the person to make such a request directly, assistance for those that are able to make the request, but physically incapable of carrying it out, and an efficient poison pill to swallow, for those capable of that.
by someone (s0me1smail(a)gmail(d)com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 11:03:47 AM EST
[ Parent ]
What if you're not all that sick, but don't want to be a bother and the assorted variations on that. Does one have to be ill, in-pain, what?
by Colman (colman at eurotrib.com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 11:05:11 AM EST
[ Parent ]
If you are physically capable of swallowing the poison pill, you have to do it yourself.

No other conditions. Maybe a 4 week waiting period to not have people killing themselves due to temporary unhappiness. Otherwise, no conditions, no age requirement, or 'sanity' requirement.

I can think of nothing more inhumane than forcing someone to live against their wishes.

by someone (s0me1smail(a)gmail(d)com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 11:09:28 AM EST
[ Parent ]
Hmm. Don't like it. Too easy to manipulate people into popping the last pill if it's acceptable.
by Colman (colman at eurotrib.com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 11:16:01 AM EST
[ Parent ]
Sure. Still, less worse than making someone continue their misery against their wishes. Death is not the worst thing that can happen to you!
by someone (s0me1smail(a)gmail(d)com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 11:18:16 AM EST
[ Parent ]
I'm not quite certain that I'd consider suicide under pressure less awful than preventing someone offing themselves. It's not obvious to me where the point of balance is in this.
by Colman (colman at eurotrib.com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 11:20:30 AM EST
[ Parent ]
If I may be so bold to reveal the ending of Mar Adentro (spoiler alert!):

In the end, Rámon Sampredo (the protagonist), who's been paralysed from the neck down for close to thirty years, commits suicide by drinking a poisonous liquid through a straw from a glass standing on a table right next to his bed. Friends of his prepared the liquid and placed the glass right next to him, but ultimately the decision to drinking the liquid is his. I'd have a hard time convicting his friends for anything, other than being good friends.


"The basis of optimism is sheer terror" - Oscar Wilde

by NordicStorm on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 11:21:00 AM EST
[ Parent ]
My former biology teacher once shared an anecdote about the school of thought on reproduction before we understood it as fully as we do now. According to that school of thought, semen actually contained microscopic human beings. Might be apocryphal, I don't know...

"The basis of optimism is sheer terror" - Oscar Wilde
by NordicStorm on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 03:09:16 PM EST
[ Parent ]
I'm sure that some of the early microscope work resulted in drawings of sperm like you are describing, whether they were attempts to portray structure or function might have become lost knowledge.

Life should consist in at least fifty percent pure waste of time, and the rest doing what you please.
by ceebs (bunchofwankers (at) gmail (dot) com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 03:21:36 PM EST
[ Parent ]
...and it became as vogue as doing a facelift.

This is as far as I know an anti abortion myth. I have not seen any studies to confirm it. When it comes to number of abortions the studies I have seen on swedish abortion statistics show a decrease after legalisation.

by A swedish kind of death on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 10:44:39 AM EST
[ Parent ]
If you were around int eh U.S. in the '70s and '80s all the gynocologists were setting up "birth control clinics" (abortion clinics). It was a time when abortions were happening very frequently and without remorse. So I would say the analogy did fit. Times have changed here since and younger people have been raised differently and with more sense of responsibility regarding sexual acitivities and control. so tht analogy I made should only apply to an earlier period.
by BJ Lange (langebj@gmail.com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 11:13:00 AM EST
[ Parent ]
Times have changed here since and younger people have been raised differently and with more sense of responsibility regarding sexual acitivities and control.

I don't think the statistics of teenage sex, in the USA bear your argument out.

Life should consist in at least fifty percent pure waste of time, and the rest doing what you please.

by ceebs (bunchofwankers (at) gmail (dot) com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 12:35:01 PM EST
[ Parent ]
The key word here is "responsibility" and support for that are the continuing declines in abortions.
by BJ Lange (langebj@gmail.com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 12:46:55 PM EST
[ Parent ]
But all the figures i've seen tend to show that the decline in abortions is mainly occurring in the areas of the states which are supposedly the least moral, and the teenage pregnancy and abortion rate is highest in the most religious areas.

Life should consist in at least fifty percent pure waste of time, and the rest doing what you please.
by ceebs (bunchofwankers (at) gmail (dot) com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 01:06:05 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Let's hear it for Abstinence Only programs!

"This is nothing compared to how Putin rigged Eurovision."
by poemless on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 01:07:44 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Apparently teenage girls who signed so called "abstinence pledges" are far more likely to have oral or anal sex than their "slutty" non-pledgee sisters (source).  Oh well, back to the drawing board!

"The basis of optimism is sheer terror" - Oscar Wilde
by NordicStorm on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 01:30:11 PM EST
[ Parent ]
I seem to remember seeing figures that there was no statistically significant difference in the incedence of STDs between people who had taken the abstinence pledge and those who hadn't as well.

Life should consist in at least fifty percent pure waste of time, and the rest doing what you please.
by ceebs (bunchofwankers (at) gmail (dot) com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 01:33:22 PM EST
[ Parent ]
No-sex programs 'not working' says the BBC.

I'm not sure why the scare quotes are there. It's obvious that the programs that are 'not working' are really just not working.

There was a superb diary on dKos earlier in the year from a gynecologist explaining why he was happy to perform abortions. It was one of the clearest and most moving pro-abortion pieces I've ever read, and made the point that sometimes it's for very real health reasons - pregnancy can be fatal, after all - and sometimes for quality of life reasons.

I don't think abortion should be casual, but I think it should be available on demand.

And I'm always baffled by the clear association that seems to exist between those who want to 'defend life' before birth and then treat life with contempt after it.

I'm not suggesting BJG is in that group, but it's hard to ignore the correlation in much of the rest of the US.

by ThatBritGuy (thatbritguy (at) googlemail.com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 05:21:06 PM EST
[ Parent ]
by william f harrison

In the long run, we're all dead. John Maynard Keynes
by Jerome a Paris (jeromeguillet@yahoo.fr) on Fri Aug 24th, 2007 at 01:22:11 AM EST
[ Parent ]
Well, this being the BBC they have to be clear even in headlines that they are quoting someone, and it's shorter than adding a "says ..." or "studies show". (Or even "area man".)

Looking at other posts in this thread, perhaps we could be calling them


  • "No"-sex programs

  • No-"sex" programs


etc.

-----
sapere aude
by Number 6 on Fri Aug 24th, 2007 at 05:20:57 AM EST
[ Parent ]
Which just goes to show that the best way to reduce the number of abortions is sex ed in school and easy access to contraceptives (including the morning-after pill).

"The basis of optimism is sheer terror" - Oscar Wilde
by NordicStorm on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 01:38:36 PM EST
[ Parent ]
WHAT!!! then people might start having sex for fun, and outside marriage, and then, sin of sins women might actually enjoy it and that would never do. </snark>

Life should consist in at least fifty percent pure waste of time, and the rest doing what you please.
by ceebs (bunchofwankers (at) gmail (dot) com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 01:47:59 PM EST
[ Parent ]
I'd hate to make comparisons to female genital mutilation or forcing women to wear burkas (particularly as someone (no, not the ET member of the same name!) is bound to misunderstand what I'm saying), but ultimately it all boils down to the same kind of thinking, doesn't it?

"The basis of optimism is sheer terror" - Oscar Wilde
by NordicStorm on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 01:53:07 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Yes it does.

When Gudrun Schyman, party leader for the left party tried to express this in a speach 2002, it was instantly converted to "all men are taliban" in the media. So you are probably right in your parenthesis too.

by A swedish kind of death on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 02:01:26 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Well in any sane society if you had what was in effect a parasite growing inside you that had a chance of killing you during its attempts to exit your body, then it would be considered self defence.

Life should consist in at least fifty percent pure waste of time, and the rest doing what you please.
by ceebs (bunchofwankers (at) gmail (dot) com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 02:03:36 PM EST
[ Parent ]
BJ Lange: "abortions were happening very frequently and without remorse." How could you or anyone else know they were "without remorse"? If you had any eveidence at all for this claim you should have cited it. Stated like this it's just arrogant dogma.

And yes, people can poke fun at your son, or at anything else. It won't kill him, and you and he will be more mature if you learn to accept fun, even jeers, without throwing a hissy fit.


Maybe it's because I'm a Londoner - that I moved to Nice. Blog - Nice Experience

by Ted Welch (tedwelch-at-mac-dot-com) on Sun Aug 26th, 2007 at 04:50:48 PM EST
[ Parent ]
and without remorse

What? You've got statistics on their emotional state as well and they all decided to check

Remorse? NO

Is that right? Please provide a little evidence.

I know. You can't. You can't because this is certainly unsupported by anything approaching scientific research, not to mention common sense.  Having helped a few ladies walk to clinics in my time (and I'll happily do it again) the misery the US pro-life crowd --people with attitudes exactly like yours--have inflicted on these girls is reprehensible.  When  the pro life couldn't beat laws into submissions in the US, they just start breaking the laws, threatening the girls and threatening the abortions performers. "Pro Life" indeed. Bombing clinics, murdering doctors and in general creating their own little reign of terror for those who didn't buy into your pathetically paternalistic attitude about WHO gets to decide whether or not to have a baby is exactly why these things have happened.

You might feel you have some claim to decide about this yourself--and you do--legally, when you are the person carrying the baby. Otherwise, you have no legal right to intimidate or force the issue for someone else, and your emotional tone now vis a vis the 'remorseless' quip--as if you'd know-- reeks of something from the time of the inquisitions. Or, more precisly, reeks of a generally misogynistic attitude. Especially when coupled with your previous comment upthread that suggested the girls were doing it merely as "a matter of convenience". I wear a rubber for convenience. Am I also 'remorseless' and 'a baby killer'? Or does that only fall to the individual who must support another life for nine months, and significantly alter their own lives because some male decided not to be inconvenienced with birth control because 'it wasn't up to him'? So we punish her, right? And call her 'remorseless'. Prostitutes are treated with the same level of respect-- the Johns are never busted, but the hooker goes to jail. (As far as I know Sweden is the only country that flips this general 'rule' on its head, busting the John and letting the prostitute go...oh, yeah, and it works). But I guess you want to apply the same old set of inequities we use here for prostitution to baby making? Wow, that's fair.

Why don't you wrap your head around another much more serious societal problem rather then your fantasy about what the girls might be feeling? You know, like population control. Like the fact that we've reached 6.6 billion and counting and getting a handle on taking care of everyone we've got here now, not making sure we keep reproducing more and more, might be the more intelligent--not to mention  more humane--thing to be concerned about.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_population

by delicatemonster (delicatemons@delicatemonster.com) on Sun Aug 26th, 2007 at 07:58:18 PM EST
[ Parent ]
With all due respect, I think you're arguing a bit of a strawman here. No woman is going to make such a decision lightly (and then pop in for a quickie botox injection immediately after having the procedure done).
The bottom-line, though, is that it's the woman's decision (as is whether to have a botox injection).

"The basis of optimism is sheer terror" - Oscar Wilde
by NordicStorm on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 10:49:03 AM EST
[ Parent ]
I should have put that in a better time context. Not now of course, but there was a time soon after the Roe v. Wade decisions that women I knew wore it almost as a badge of honor - that they were liberated women and did not want to be inconvenienced with a child. The doctors were enablers as was Planned Parenthood. There was not enough known about the stages of a fetus then. It was also reflective of other irresponsible behavior of the time in terms of sex and drugs. The facelift reference was a metaphor for how careless the issue was treated back then.

Today younger people are much better educated and more responsible when it comes to issues of sexual conduct. Birth control is much more available and sexual activity is not as reckless as it was.

by BJ Lange (langebj@gmail.com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 12:09:43 PM EST
[ Parent ]
sexual activity is not as reckless as it was

That's primarily due to AIDS and AIDS awareness. According to people I know that were sexually active in the early 80's, sexual behavior changed almost overnight.

you are the media you consume.

by MillMan (millguy at gmail) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 02:16:24 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Sixth month, granted. However a quarter or so of pregnancies end in miscarriage before the sixth week. Comparing this collection of cells to something that could almost survive is ... apples and oranges etc.

-----
sapere aude
by Number 6 on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 12:09:49 PM EST
[ Parent ]
I thought that was 25% of detected ones  before the twelfth week, with either 60% or 40% of all pregnancies miscarrying?
by Colman (colman at eurotrib.com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 12:16:20 PM EST
[ Parent ]
You are probably correct; I didn't go much further than wikipedia.

-----
sapere aude
by Number 6 on Fri Aug 24th, 2007 at 04:40:50 AM EST
[ Parent ]
Incidentally, another term for miscarriage is spontaneous abortion...

"The basis of optimism is sheer terror" - Oscar Wilde
by NordicStorm on Fri Aug 24th, 2007 at 11:07:25 AM EST
[ Parent ]
it led to the view of many that abortion was victimless and it became as vogue as doing a facelift.

I expect you back up that rhetoric with facts.  Actually, I expect you to keep such discussion within the realm of fact and not resort to this kind of rhetoric at all.

A woman has all the control when it comes to reproduction.

That will only be true when rape, incest, abuse, access to reliable and safe education and health services, and the last vestiges of social pressure for women to be dependent on and submissive to men all disappear.  We do not live in such a world yet.

So what right does a woman lose? She loses the right to treat life as an inanimate toy.

A woman who has carried a child for months cannot be under the assumption that that child is 1)inanimate or 2)a toy.  Unless they are genuinely mentally ill.  No, what the woman loses is the right to make serious medical decisions, which will greatly effect her physical, mental, financial health herself with the advice of her family and healthcare providers.  And she loses dignity when a stranger in Washington decides he is more capable of making that personal decision than she is.  Esp. when the decision of the stranger is based on personal religious belief, which should not be legislated, and not a careful weighing of the common good against individual rights, which is the ultimate task of our legislators.  

We are all entitled to our personal beliefs.  But don't mistake your preferences and sentiments and experiences for being representative of that of all or the majority of the population.  


"This is nothing compared to how Putin rigged Eurovision."

by poemless on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 12:35:29 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Should be "lack of access" of course...

"This is nothing compared to how Putin rigged Eurovision."
by poemless on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 12:39:57 PM EST
[ Parent ]
as soon as I learn how to put links on this I can provide substantive facts.
by BJ Lange (langebj@gmail.com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 02:31:02 PM EST
[ Parent ]
New User Guide.

When locusts move on, they leave nothing behind
by afew (afew(a in a circle)eurotrib_dot_com) on Sat Aug 25th, 2007 at 01:38:00 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Your comments are full of right-wing lies with a big dollop of your own misogyny thrown in.  Abortion is not about "killing babies."  Full stop.  Abortion access is about not denying women the right to make their own life and death healthcare choices.  It was never "in vogue."  That's simply a malicious lie propagated by religious fanatics.  Restricting abortion access kills women.  It's that simple and entirely in keeping with anti-death penalty beliefs.

Maybe we can eventually make language a complete impediment to understanding. -Hobbes
by Izzy (izzy at eurotrib dot com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 01:56:25 PM EST
[ Parent ]
my troll radar is bleeping...

I have a modest proposal :-)  anyone who feels really, really deeply and viscerally that no woman should be allowed to terminate an unwanted pregnancy... should be willing to put their abdominal cavity where their mouth is, and serve as surrogate birth-mother.  medical technology is almost there... if our technociv does not collapse entirely, then surely both men and women of such strong convictions will soon be able and willing to be surgically implanted (with artificial wombs and constructed birth canal in the case of men) with the unwanted fetuses of unwilling mothers.  after all, if bearing an infant to term, giving birth and taking responsibility for its life is no big deal -- nay, is a moral imperative -- and anyone should be willing to do so regardless of the circs of conception, then why not the kibitzers?  let them step forward.

as the old saying goes, "If men could get pregnant, abortion would be a Sacrament."

alternatively, when the anti-abortion crowd put their weight behind laws that would mandate vasectomy for all males over the age of puberty -- to be surgically reversed only on marriage, with a binding signed and witnessed prenuptial agreement covering parenting responsibilities and child suppport -- then I might start taking their moral fervour a bit more seriously...  if they allowed that moral fervour to extend for one moment into interference, kibitzing, and reduction of bodily sovereignty affecting males, instead of using women's bodies only as the chalkboard on which to write their sermons.  until any such evenhandedness is manifested, I have to regard their tender concern for fetal life as merely a decorative wrapper in which to package the age-old patriarchal agenda of controlling/owning/punishing women.

while I'm on a roll:  all this rightwing lala about "without remorse" and frivolous abortions bears no resemblance to the experiences of any woman I have personally known who decided to abort.  in every case, and I am going back to the supposedly licentious 70's here, the decision was made with a lot of thought and often some agonising.  "remorse" is what you feel when you have committed a sin or a crime, so even the use of the word is spin and framing;  the women I knew who decided not to continue a pregnancy felt mixed feelings, made a choice that was often very difficult.  some were raped or impregnated by guile (there really are some men who will claim to be using contraceptives, but sabotage them in an effort to gain control over a girlfriend by getting her pregnant) and others became pregnant accidentally during consensual sex, but felt they could not offer a child a safe, secure, and happy life at that moment in their own lives.  some went on to have a child later, others remained nullipara.  none took the invasive and painful procedure lightly or casually.  the idea of Happy Hippie Chicks frolicking into the abortion clinic and reading a mag during D&C, then rushing out to have some more promiscuous sex, is a wingnut cartoon.

I would have had a sibling, had my mother not stumbled and fallen heavily in the garden early in her second pregnancy; she miscarried as a result.  should all pregnant women be confined to the home -- perhaps strapped down and spoon-fed -- so that they are prevented from taking any action that might possibly harm the developing cell bundle within?  there are wingnuts who are heading in exactly that direction.  

our inheritance of mediaeval misconceptions (ahem) about the nature of semen (i.e. that it contained entire microhomunculi and that the woman's body is merely a passive growth medium) conditions beliefs that the fetus "belongs to" the impregnating male, or to the State, and that the woman is a mere vessel or container for someone else's property.  biological fact is quite different:  semen is not seed, contrary to its ancient and ignorant etymology, but pollen.  males are butterflies and bees, not farmers, in the mammalian reproductive game.  their investment is very slight;  but they keep trying to leverage it into a takeover bid on the entire enterprise.

The difference between theory and practise in practise ...

by DeAnander (de_at_daclarke_dot_org) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 04:12:05 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Nothing to add or subtract. This is my view, which I was not sure I had until I read this.

OOps no. One thing to add. All killing of sentient self-supporting humans is wrong. But dying is a choice. IMO. I find it the greatest hypocrisy that one can be an anti-abortionist AND support, in particular, a war that has created so much innocent death. Iraq, to name just one.

You can't be me, I'm taken

by Sven Triloqvist on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 04:27:49 PM EST
[ Parent ]
"the decision was made with a lot of thought and often some agonizing"

In 1973, the first year of Roe v. Wade there were about 740,000 abortions or 4.5/female ages 15-44. That dramatically kept rising until 1990 when there were over 1,600,000 abortions or 27.39/female aged 15-44.

And their reasons in 1987? Unready for the responsibility (21%), cannot afford baby now (21%), concerned having baby would change life (16%), wanting to avoid single parenthood (12%), too immature to have a child (11%). The legitimate reasons for an abortion that most agree on are: possible fetal health problems (8%), mother has health problems (3%), or rape or incest (3%). It appears to an objective observer that the overwhelming majority of abortions were a result of, shall we call it, lifestyle inconvenience.

During the 1970s I was a young guy in the ad business in Manhattan and abortions were not a badge of honor but they were treated like any other medical condition and I certainly did not experience anyone having second thoughts about it.

Abortions have been steadily declining since 1990, which has been attributed to sex education among younger people, better access to different forms of contraception, to the HIV/AIDS crisis, and, yes, also to increase in religious belief.

by BJ Lange (langebj@gmail.com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 06:36:28 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Being unready for the responsibility, wanting to avoid single parenthood (which often means social exclusion and community banishment), Being too young (ditto), cannot afford baby now (which in the US health care systems, endangers health of both of the parents, and of the child), or being a afraid of baby changing life, are decisions that can be, and usually are, made with a lot of thought and agonising.

Auferre, trucidare, rapere, falsis nominibus imperium; atque, ubi solitudinem faciunt, pacem appellant.
by linca (antonin POINT lucas AROBASE gmail.com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 07:01:46 PM EST
[ Parent ]
 . . .  and then let's dispose of the inconvenient little thing that's in the way. Sorry, I don't buy that - particularly when it conflicts with all the heart felt feelings for convicted killers and the death penalty.
by BJ Lange (langebj@gmail.com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 08:12:59 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Did you read my comment? You were complaining that the decision to interrupt pregnancy was supposedly done without proper consideration, and trying to support it by printing the reasons given for abortions. Reasons which are compatible with well thought out decisions, despite what you say.

You answer with a non sequitur general comment about how abortions should not exist. Are you interested in talking, or just repeating the same point over and over ?

All parts of the human life cycle can't be sacred. After all, sperms and ovules are as much "human life" as embryos. And indeed, in the 19th century masturbation, homosexuality and contraception were considered as waste of human life, and forbidden.

All this has nothing to do with the destruction of an adult, sentient member of society.

Auferre, trucidare, rapere, falsis nominibus imperium; atque, ubi solitudinem faciunt, pacem appellant.

by linca (antonin POINT lucas AROBASE gmail.com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 08:49:28 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Abortions have been steadily declining since 1990, which has been attributed to sex education among younger people, better access to different forms of contraception, to the HIV/AIDS crisis, and, yes, also to increase in religious belief.

NB: Figures/stats when quoted should be footnoted.  If the HTML for a URL is outside one's comfort zone, then pasting in the raw URL is next-best. But as to these putative explanations for the alleged decline...

Religious belief, certainly -- particularly when that religious belief involves bombing abortion clinics, murdering doctors who provide abortions, defunding state/fed programs that would pay for medical services including abortion, disseminating disinformation that exaggerates the risk of abortion, including wild claims that it causes sterility and suicidal tendencies [this plays oddly with claims of frivolity and lack of remorse among abortion-seekers], and so on.  But what am I thinking -- this atmosphere of threat, disinformation and prurient/punitive oversight of (particularly young unmarried) women couldn't have anything to do with the higher  incidence of teen pregnancy in the red states, of course.

"While organizations such as the National Abortion Federation and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives also collect information on crimes against clinics, the FMF annual survey provides the most extensive information on victimization and intimidation of abortion clinics and staff of any source in the nation and is the most comprehensive publicly available data set on this topic," Pridemore said.

The reported victimizations involved many forms of violence, harassment and intimidation, including physical violence, bombing, arson, death threats, bomb threats, facility invasion, burglary, break-ins, broken windows, glue in locks, nails in driveways, graffiti, clinic blockades, stalking of staff or physicians, home picketing, posting of "wanted" posters and harassment via the Internet.

Abortion-related crime and violence have a broad array of consequences, Pridemore said. In addition to direct harm to victims and physical damage to clinics, these politically motivated crimes intentionally create a climate of fear that affects abortion providers across the nation.

Because of the resulting physical threat and emotional toll, some providers have stopped performing abortions, reducing the availability of the option of abortion for many women. Eighty-seven percent of U.S. counties, representing more than one-third of the female population aged 15-44, have no abortion providers, and 31 percent of the nation's metropolitan areas do not have a provider, Pridemore said.

footnote

But no, the only reason why fewer abortions are performed is that young people these days are smarter and/or more religious (and/or more into sodomy);  the harassment, intimidation, and terrorism practised against the clinics leading to their gradual disappearance from 87 percent of our counties and 30 percent of our metro areas has nothing to do with it!

they were treated like any other medical condition and I certainly did not experience anyone having second thoughts about it ... it strikes me that if the writer's attitude to women then was as controlling, unsympathetic and judgmental as it appears to be today -- based, I admit, only on the discouraging content of this thread and therefore far from a complete picture -- the possibility does occur that his women friends might not have been exactly leaping at the chance to confide in him and share their most personal and intimate 3am feelings on the subject :-)  in any case, in my limited anecdotal database, women most always turn to female friends and family members for emotional support before, during, and after.

Ironically I, too, would prefer a world where it was rare for women to seek abortions (a painful and invasive procedure as noted above) --  not because they were threatened with prosecution, but because affordable, safe, and reliable contraception was readily available worldwide, because rape was no longer commonplace, because girl children were no longer considered a "failure" requiring a retry, because more men were taking responsibility for their semen, because RU-468-like "morning after" pharma remedies were cheap and easily available, etc.  Perhaps membership in anti-abortion groups should be restricted to those who can provide proof of a tubal ligation (either gender's version) to demonstrate the sincerity of their desire to make abortion really, truly obsolete -- a relic of the bad old days of women's second-class citizenship -- rather than merely illegal?

Alas, that happy obsolescence date grows farther off, not nearer, thanks to the rampup of the religious Right's stealth campaign against contraception itself:

Take the current debate about pharmacists "religious choice". Now, on the surface, this sounds fine. No one should be forced to violate their religious beliefs. John Kerry got sucked right into this code word argument. But what it really is an attack on Griswold, which was the case which created the right to have contraception. Condoms had been sold as a disease prevention device, but the pill, which was designed to prevent pregnancy, was a very different matter.

While the right has been quite vocal about abortion, their campaign against birth control has been a stealth one. They rarely talk about their plans to eliminate birth control, but it's as much a part of the "right to life" movement as their war against abortion. Now, pharmacists are deciding on their own to not fill birth control prescriptions. Married women, wanting to control the size of their families, are finding pharmacists who will not fill their scripts for the pill.

This is no more about religion than bombing clinics. It's a concerted attack on reproductive freedom.

Texas has 254 counties. You can get an abortion in six of them.

This stealth attack on contraception is seeking to do the same thing, to limit the availability of birth control for women.

The judge who decided the Schiavo case was forced to leave his church because the pastor didn't like the way he ruled. How many small town pharmacists can withstand the social pressure to continue to fill prescriptions for birth control? The social pressure will explode once this is permitted.

This is the power of code words. No one will say that they don't like contraception, they will hide behind the words "religious choice". Now, wellmeaning people don't see the intent of these ideas and think this is a reasonable discussion when it is anything but.

footnote

The object of the great game appears to be to give males the ultimate control over pregnancy:  superior size and strength (plus financial/material dominion) make rape and coercion ever-available strategies for impregnating women against their will and/or best interest, and the erosion of all options for women to prevent or terminate pregnancy leaves control exclusively in male hands -- just another form of Enclosure really.

When my grandmother was a girl, women who procured abortions -- or doctors who provided them  -- ran the risk of life imprisonment or hanging.  The result was not exactly a kinder, gentler society;  it was a society in which women "knew their place" or faced barbaric punishments.  And there were a lot of unwanted children even so.Here is a time travel ticket back to those 'good' old days...

All politics is about control:  someone trying to throw off the yoke of control by another, or someone trying to fasten the yoke of control on another.  Abortion politics is about the struggle over who controls women's reproductive capacity and hence women's bodies and intimate bodily processes -- women, or men?  or so I read it.  The rest is window dressing, smoke, and mirrors.  Anti-abortion and anti-contraception initiatives are not just anti-something, they are pro-something:  they are pro-forced-pregnancy, which imnsho does indeed earn them a place in the Dewey Decimal System a couple of shelf units away from our rock-throwing burqa-enforcers in the neo-dar-al-islam.

The punitive aspect of USian culture, already referenced above, seems to me to play an enormous role here... I sometimes think the next target of the neotalibs might as well be oncology:  after all, heavy smokers who develop lung or bladder cancer deliberately did something immoral and risky -- indulging in an addictive vice, a frivolous abuse of the body G-d gave them -- so how dare they seek medical intervention in order to evade the wages of their folly and sin?  They should carry their cancers to term, and accept their punishment as just.  The vindictiveness and mean-ness of such a position don't strike me as all that dissimilar... but of course, many white rightwing xtian men smoke cigs -- so we won't be hearing any calls to bar smokers from receiving oncological services any time soon :-)

Well I'm done with this.  It seems incredible that in this day and age it should even be a debate.  I didn't think the Nineteenth Century was all that great the first time around :-)  and as a warmed-over re-run it's definitely  unappetising.  which is one of many reasons why I am leaving (read 'fleeing') the US, or trying to.    much as the USSR was in its early decline, it feels like living in a time warp.  It's always Groundhog Day.  We're still worshipping C19 economists, mining coal, fighting the Viet Nam war and rescheduling the Scopes trial... and arguing about whether women should or should not be forced to carry unwanted pregnancies to term.

The difference between theory and practise in practise ...

by DeAnander (de_at_daclarke_dot_org) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 08:14:09 PM EST
[ Parent ]
The stats came from The Guttmacher Institute (named after the former President of Planned Parenthood) has studies on sexual and reproductive health (http://www.guttmacher.org).

"the only reason why fewer abortions are performed is that young people these days are smarter and/or more religious" - - - - Agree.

"the writer's attitude to women then was as controlling, unsympathetic and judgmental as it appears to be today" - - -  not true and not even sure how you arrived at that.

"women most always turn to female friends" - - -  true and it is called water-cooler conversation and general gossip that occurs in companies.

You can't make abortion obsolete or illegal or even legislate it only for specific purposes. All that can be done is educate and, as you said, make widely available all kinds of birth control for women and for men. I agree that the combination of those two (as well as the scare of HIV+/AIDS) has been responsible for the general decline in abortions over the last 15+ years.

Regarding the tactics of the radical right religious groups in bombing and protesting abortion clinics I don't think it was generally effective and have not read of any recently. I know that my wife's gynecologist had to close his abortion clinic but it was because of major increases in already high malpractice insurance he was experiencing as a result of just keeping it opened.

" . . . and arguing about whether women should or should not be forced to carry unwanted pregnancies to term." - - - -  and this is where we have a very fundamental disagreement. You categorize it as "unwanted pregnancies" as if it were a material thing that had no use. In this day and age do you regard women as being helpless and unable to make their own decisions regarding their sexual activity? The statistics I provided as to reasons why women aborted children in 1987, while the actual numbers have declined the percents associated with the reasons have been about the same. In the past NARAL and Planned Parenthood have treated the right to an abortion as "the rule" and I believe it should be "the exception to the rule." I am a very strong believer in personal responsibility and the arguments of NARAL and Planned Parenthood in the past do not encourage that.

by BJ Lange (langebj@gmail.com) on Thu Aug 23rd, 2007 at 09:47:59 PM EST
[ Parent ]
I am a very strong believer in personal responsibility and the arguments of NARAL and Planned Parenthood in the past do not encourage that.

I've always found this argument to be a bit simplistic. that the person who just sits and says I'm in this situation so I have to let this happen is the one that is being responsible, whereas the one who has sat down and considered all of the possible options and made a rational decision, often at the cost of social exclusion from a section of society if they come to know about it. is the one who is being frivolous.

Life should consist in at least fifty percent pure waste of time, and the rest doing what you please.

by ceebs (bunchofwankers (at) gmail (dot) com) on Fri Aug 24th, 2007 at 05:08:31 AM EST
[ Parent ]
Maybe there are instances when terminating a pregnancy is taking personal responsibility.

I'm sure we can all agree that abortions should be safe, legal, and rare.
But damn! Don't you think women who are faced with making that decision aren't under enough pressure as it already without being branded as evil and perpetrators of infanticide.

"The basis of optimism is sheer terror" - Oscar Wilde

by NordicStorm on Fri Aug 24th, 2007 at 05:16:29 AM EST
[ Parent ]
Republicans are after contraception

In the long run, we're all dead. John Maynard Keynes
by Jerome a Paris (jeromeguillet@yahoo.fr) on Fri Aug 24th, 2007 at 12:56:29 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Wow. How insightful. Your answer to someone who questions your view automatically means that he is a "Republican" or some Right Wing religious fanatic. And you actually use DKos as an authority. That's deep. I've been showing my son the comments coming from this post and he is astounded by how little people know or, more importantly, want to know. SO now, not only to you agree that it is okay to make satirical remarks about my son, you are also calling him a right wing fanatic. Keep it up Jerome. What I initally posted was the question if anyone saw the hypocrisy between such passionate humanity toward a convicted murdered and none toward an unborn fetus. What I got was posts that called me or my son a liar, calling us right wing fanatics, calling him "unwanted." All I can say is that the people who chose to use this to defame either of us should now question their own morality - seriously. Especially you.
by BJ Lange (langebj@gmail.com) on Sat Aug 25th, 2007 at 02:04:42 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Your answer to someone who questions your view automatically means that he is a "Republican" or some Right Wing religious fanatic.

I'm not sure exactly who you're writing to. We're all discrete individuals here on this site, so I would appreciate if you can actually respond to individual commenters rather than allocating all comments posted here to an anonymous you or to me, Jerome.


And you actually use DKos as an authority. That's deep.

I pointed to a story about how some Republicans are lobbying to limit all forms of contraception, and how they are discreetly supported by Republican candidates. The story uses as material a story form the Baltimore Sun and a study from the very same Guttmacher Institute which you quote yourself elsewhere in this thread. I write on DailyKos all the time. I read it all the time. I quote articles that provide relevant information and/or commentary. I wonder exactly how the story I posted fails to past any reasonable smell test in terms of credibnility of its content (as opposed to the gag reflex the site it is posted on seems to generate for you).


SO now, not only to you agree that it is okay to make satirical remarks about my son, you are also calling him a right wing fanatic. Keep it up Jerome.

So I'be curious to see where exactly I accused you of being a Republican (is that an insult for you, now?) or a "Right Wing religious fanatic", and, even more specifically, where I made any such comments about your son.


What I initally posted was the question if anyone saw the hypocrisy between such passionate humanity toward a convicted murdered and none toward an unborn fetus.

The passionate humanity is not to "convicted murderers" - nice try. It is among other arguments directed at the fact that not all people convicted are actually guilty (as the long string of cases in the recent past has shown). It is also about us - we think that democracies should not kill people, whatver they have done, because it means we are little better than them - killing for revenge. It says nothing about what we think of murderers, convicted or otherwise, guilty or otherwise. But no, you have to reframe the argument in a much more convenient way.

Same thing about an 'unborn fetus' - unborn immediately suggests alive, something which is quite disputed for at least a big chunk of any pregnancy. And, of course, it fails to take into account the woman that carries the fetus. Where's the care for her?


All I can say is that the people who chose to use this to defame either of us should now question their own morality - seriously. Especially you.

Who is "you"? You seem to have surprising difficulty to understand that we are individuals, not some kind of amorphous collective entity. I am the spokesperson of noone, and neither are they spokespersons for anyone else.

And do you see me questioning your morality? I see you questioning mine. Please don't.

In the long run, we're all dead. John Maynard Keynes

by Jerome a Paris (jeromeguillet@yahoo.fr) on Sat Aug 25th, 2007 at 11:40:52 AM EST
[ Parent ]
it led to the view of many that abortion was victimless and it became as vogue as doing a facelift.

This really sounds like a Republican taking-point.  As an argument, it just does not fly.

There is a deep flaw in the logic that would remove the subject of abortion from the process of human life both biologically and socially, and the context in which the continuity of generations occurs.  

To remove the subject of abortion from the question of who does childrearing and how is it done, and how are decisions made about having children--bearing children--and rearing them, is INHERENTLY dishonest.  

Any society that is not wedded to both deceit and imbalance has to face the question of how population is to be managed, so that human numbers stay roughly constant over time, and in happy relation to the world that sustains all life including human life.  In truth, history and anthropology indicate that the easiest way to resolve these issues satisfactorily is to let women make the childbearing decisions.  

For reasons that may be obscure, when men make these decisions, society moves towards imbalance, oppression, war, exhaustion of resources, and collapse.  These latter states are, of course, most familiar to us.  

By taking abortion out of its context, you can then apply a moral standard about the value of life, but that value, out of context, is itself based on nothing--it is merely made up.  

A real morality is compatible with human survival and well-being over time--generations and generations of time.  

To particulars:  Modern experience is that women always prefer other methods of birth control to abortion, when they are available.  The basic faithlessness of the "right to life" movement is revealed in their opposition to the birth control that would reduce abortion of all kinds (legal or illegal) and in their reluctance to concern themselves with the well-being of the fetus once it is born.  

That this dishonesty itself implies a deep and abiding hatred of women as a gender is a point I bring to your attention, as, if you are interested, there has been much thoughtful investigation of this matter and why it is, which I allude to but don't try to summarize here.  

In societies where birth control is available in fact (and not just in theory) we find that abortions happen in pregnancies where the child was WANTED but something  has gone wrong medically that makes the pregnancy non-viable.  This happens more often than you might think:  Pregnancy is a risky process, as spontaneous miscarriages alone should give proof.  Bans on abortions thus target women who wanted their babies, and pregnancies that are not viable.  It is hard to come up with a human explanation of why lawmakers anywhere would want to do this, but they have done and do.  You will forgive me if I do not think much of their morals or character.  

By the way, the phrase of yours I recopied is highly offensive on several levels, and if that was your intent, well and good--you succeeded, but if not, you might want to do some rethinking.  

I am sorry for you son.  The direct implication of his statement is that he is an unwanted child--and knows it.  That is hard.  

by Gaianne on Fri Aug 24th, 2007 at 06:59:20 PM EST
[ Parent ]
"This really sounds like a Republican taking-point.  As an argument, it just does not fly."  - - -  - wow!  You arrived at that all by yourself with any assistance. I am impressed! Doesn't fly? Rather than take the story at face value and then try to better understand it, you sit there as some sort of Solomon and have to compartmentalize it because it does not fit into that little delusional world of yours.
Rather than come up with inaccurate prose about abortion, pick up a book that shows every stage of development from conception - they sell these books - and then tell me when exactly an embryo is alive or not. The only flaw is that you choose to be blatantly ignorant of facts.

"I am sorry for you son.  The direct implication of his statement is that he is an unwanted child - - and knows it.  That is hard."    -  -  -  -  You must be very lonely and desperate for attention. Where in what I wrote does this pathetic notion of an "unwanted child" come from? Be specific if you are making defamatory charges. He said he was lucky his birth mother did not choose abortion and I never said anything about how he felt about us. You make a charge. Defend it!

by BJ Lange (langebj@gmail.com) on Sat Aug 25th, 2007 at 01:54:10 AM EST
[ Parent ]
Rather than take the story at face value and then try to better understand it,  

I do understand it.  It is emotional manipulation.  YOU are doing the manipulating--or trying to.  If it were true, it would be horrible, as your telling of it reveals contempt for women AND children.  

You must be very lonely and desperate for attention.

:D  Not SO desperate!  Thank you for a good laugh.  

Be specific if you are making defamatory charges. He said he was lucky his birth mother did not choose abortion

No charges at all:  Merely drawing implications from your own account of the matter.  Don't accuse yourself unnecessarily.  

and I never said anything about how he felt about us  

You badly misunderstand.  The question is how YOU feel about HIM.  And at this point, I would rather not know.  

by Gaianne on Mon Aug 27th, 2007 at 08:48:42 AM EST
[ Parent ]
You know, I may be late to the party, but I thought this story about a kid telling someone they were lucky to be alive because their mother might have gotten an abortion was familiar so I googled the key words and found the same story on multiple fundie Christian web sites. This is an urban myth. I've received broadcast emails from my fundie inlaws that have these same kinds of anecdotes, and invariably they turn out to be manufactured outrage-inducing tools.

I'm suspicious that this really happened to you, considering how many different people have claimed to have had the same experience.

by iamcoyote (iamcoyote at gmail dot com) on Fri Aug 24th, 2007 at 10:54:56 PM EST
[ Parent ]
What you are saying is that I am a liar. First this happened over ten years ago. I showed my son some of the comments and he found them to be superficial and downright ignorant. Ignorant because of comments like this from people who do not have an idea about facts but have this insatiable need to neagtively label anything that is counter to their limited scope of life. Instead of trying to learn more from someone's experience you sit behind this computer and play tough guy.
by BJ Lange (langebj@gmail.com) on Sat Aug 25th, 2007 at 01:45:39 AM EST
[ Parent ]