leejosepho wrote:
PunkyKat wrote:
No. If I ever get pregnant and they need to do countless ultrasounds or surgeries I will not do it. If they come to my house and try and force me to go to a clinic or hospital, I will pop a cap in their ass. If anyone tries to force me to have any prodecure done regardless of being pregnant or not I will pop a cap in them.
You make a good point: Pregnancy is not a medical condition, and it is not in need of medical treatment.
That was not the point. Pregnancy, just like 'life,' IS in fact a medical condition (just not usually one requiring dramatic intervention) and prenatal care dramatically improves both mother and infant outcomes if the pregnancy is to go to term. Hyperemesis - in which a woman can lose ten pounds in two days due to dehydration from vomiting and inability to swallow - is the
mildest of the many common conditions that require medical intervention to maintain optimum health for both mother and zef.
Quote:
Lecks wrote:
... we're considered a person after we exhibit sufficient human characteristics.Quote:
leejosepho wrote:
And how shall we assure such a line is never drawn anywhere past the womb's exit?
Child protection laws ... "Child" being defined as "a person between birth and full growth".
leejosepho wrote:
How would child protection laws address the matter of maternal rights versus fetal rights?
Dude,
you're the one who brought up born children. Don't go pretending that someone
else was changing the topic.
Quote:
PLA wrote:
Question: Do you believe or do you not believe that legalisation of abortion poses a threat to the survival of the human race?
leejosepho wrote:
How would anything I either believe or not have any bearing on this discussion?
Again, it has bearing because
you brought this issue up. Just answer the question so we can move on.
leejosepho wrote:
The question before us here is the matter of alleged rights which are only in conflict when a pregnancy is either unwanted or someone insists it continue ...
that is incorrect. Fetal and maternal rights are also in conflict when the medical care needed by one is harmful to the other: for example, when the mother needs teratogenic chemotherapy to treat cancer, or when the fetus requires the mother to be confined to bed-rest for months in order to be carried to term.
an example of the latter:
http://www.aclu.org/reproductive-freedo ... efuse-medi