Pevenseagull
meh
- Jul 20, 2003
- 20,680
WTF is happening to one of the most powerful countries in the world!?
I read and watch USA News most days, the past few years have been simply mind bogglingly bizarre.
Imagine being 8 or 9 weeks into a pregnancy and being told it is ectopic, knowing you will die when the fallopian tube bursts.
In your rush to racialise the politics of left and right so that white is right, and the Hispanic/blacks are left…….in this case, if I understand it correctly:
The only black judge on the US supreme court supported the amendment?
Black Christians (especially in the south) in the US are not more progressive than their white church going counterparts?
Hispanics in the US and those arriving from deeply Catholic countries like Mexico, Honduras and El Salvador (where this policy exists) are far more likely to agree with this judgement than disagree.
The values of these new Hispanic Americans in particular are far likely to be conservative with their religious background, in exactly the same way as their deeply religious peers from the Middle East.
We know that full well in this country…….if you don’t believe me why don't you check out what your local mosque is doing for pride month? Do you think their madrassas have invited any drag queens in to read the young uns the Koran?
What do you reckon?
In terms of rhetoric, if you exchange the word “man” for “woman”, “property” for “body” and “slave” for “unborn child”, pro-abortion arguments read a lot like pro-slavery arguments from the 1850s.
I wasn't playing a game of what is worse. Horrific decision for many reasons.
For those more educated than me, I assume a pregnant woman in an state that bans abortion can't simply go to a different state? Is there a reason behind that?
For those more educated than me, I assume a pregnant woman in an state that bans abortion can't simply go to a different state? Is there a reason behind that?
Yes they can, but it's not the same as going to Hampshire or Kent!
I'd imagine it's now closed, but there was a time when there was only one clinic in all of Texas.
Plus now I'd imagine as hard as it was to keep clinics going through all the protests, it's now become a million times harder.
I think some states also prosecute anyone helping a woman to cross a state line to get an abortion.
In Texas they’re trying to prosecute anyone who helps such driving someone out of state, which is why I mentioned the doctor’s advice to women who have their menstrual cycle on their phones or fitbits. Such data can be used in evidence.
The American constitution grants its people the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. Note the word Liberty. American citizens are promised it as their right - but does that mean that it is unconstitutional to put anyone on prison? Obviously not. And no doubt you could, and perhaps would, argue that it's the same with imprisonment as it is with the death penalty - that if you believe that freedom is a God-given right, then you cannot possibly agree with the locking up of criminals. But if you argued that, you'd be wrong again, because people do believe that locking up criminals is OK while simultaneously believing that innocent people have the right to liberty.Not when the pro-life argument is based on sanctity of life. If you believe that life is a God-given right then you can't argue in favour of the death penalty.
I didn’t know that. It’s all a bit North Korea.
Imagine if vasectomies were made mandatory at 16 for boys and only reversed when they got married.
The American constitution grants its people the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. Note the word Liberty. American citizens are promised it as their right - but does that mean that it is unconstitutional to put anyone on prison? Obviously not. And no doubt you could, and perhaps would, argue that it's the same with imprisonment as it is with the death penalty - that if you believe that freedom is a God-given right, then you cannot possibly agree with the locking up of criminals. But if you argued that, you'd be wrong again, because people do believe that locking up criminals is OK while simultaneously believing that innocent people have the right to liberty.
Yes, it's fair to say that there are people who believe they do not have the right to take a life in any circumstances. But plenty of others hold that innocent people have a right to life while guilty people have forfeited theirs. It's a rational argument, even if you don't agree with it.
There are only two questions about abortion - one, is it OK to kill living human beings at an early stage of their life; and two, when do they become living human beings. Part one is surely a no, from all sides. Part two is where the difficulty lies because it isn't subject to compromise - if you believe that a foetus is a living human being worthy of protection from the day of conception, then you aren't going to agree with abortion; if you are convinced that it does not become a living human being until sometime later, then you aren't going to be bothered by its death.
The American constitution grants its people the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. Note the word Liberty. American citizens are promised it as their right - but does that mean that it is unconstitutional to put anyone on prison? Obviously not. And no doubt you could, and perhaps would, argue that it's the same with imprisonment as it is with the death penalty - that if you believe that freedom is a God-given right, then you cannot possibly agree with the locking up of criminals. But if you argued that, you'd be wrong again, because people do believe that locking up criminals is OK while simultaneously believing that innocent people have the right to liberty.
Yes, it's fair to say that there are people who believe they do not have the right to take a life in any circumstances. But plenty of others hold that innocent people have a right to life while guilty people have forfeited theirs. It's a rational argument, even if you don't agree with it.
if you are convinced that it does not become a living human being until sometime later, then you aren't going to be bothered by its death.
The American constitution grants its people the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. Note the word Liberty. American citizens are promised it as their right - but does that mean that it is unconstitutional to put anyone on prison? Obviously not. And no doubt you could, and perhaps would, argue that it's the same with imprisonment as it is with the death penalty - that if you believe that freedom is a God-given right, then you cannot possibly agree with the locking up of criminals. But if you argued that, you'd be wrong again, because people do believe that locking up criminals is OK while simultaneously believing that innocent people have the right to liberty.
Yes, it's fair to say that there are people who believe they do not have the right to take a life in any circumstances. But plenty of others hold that innocent people have a right to life while guilty people have forfeited theirs. It's a rational argument, even if you don't agree with it.
There are only two questions about abortion - one, is it OK to kill living human beings at an early stage of their life; and two, when do they become living human beings. Part one is surely a no, from all sides. Part two is where the difficulty lies because it isn't subject to compromise - if you believe that a foetus is a living human being worthy of protection from the day of conception, then you aren't going to agree with abortion; if you are convinced that it does not become a living human being until sometime later, then you aren't going to be bothered by its death.
The American constitution grants its people the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. Note the word Liberty. American citizens are promised it as their right - but does that mean that it is unconstitutional to put anyone on prison? Obviously not. And no doubt you could, and perhaps would, argue that it's the same with imprisonment as it is with the death penalty - that if you believe that freedom is a God-given right, then you cannot possibly agree with the locking up of criminals. But if you argued that, you'd be wrong again, because people do believe that locking up criminals is OK while simultaneously believing that innocent people have the right to liberty.
Yes, it's fair to say that there are people who believe they do not have the right to take a life in any circumstances. But plenty of others hold that innocent people have a right to life while guilty people have forfeited theirs. It's a rational argument, even if you don't agree with it.
There are only two questions about abortion - one, is it OK to kill living human beings at an early stage of their life; and two, when do they become living human beings. Part one is surely a no, from all sides. Part two is where the difficulty lies because it isn't subject to compromise - if you believe that a foetus is a living human being worthy of protection from the day of conception, then you aren't going to agree with abortion; if you are convinced that it does not become a living human being until sometime later, then you aren't going to be bothered by its death.