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- Newsgroups: talk.abortion
- Path: sparky!uunet!haven.umd.edu!darwin.sura.net!spool.mu.edu!nigel.msen.com!heifetz!rotag!kevin
- From: kevin@rotag.mi.org (Kevin Darcy)
- Subject: Re: Medical Enforcers? (Was: Holtsinger on Harassment & Health)
- Message-ID: <1992Nov17.073100.27234@rotag.mi.org>
- Organization: Who, me???
- References: <1992Nov15.053904.11401@samba.oit.unc.edu> <1992Nov16.032641.23855@rotag.mi.org> <1992Nov16.154654.25918@samba.oit.unc.edu>
- Date: Tue, 17 Nov 1992 07:31:00 GMT
- Lines: 87
-
- In article <1992Nov16.154654.25918@samba.oit.unc.edu> Suzanne-lucia.Demitrio@launchpad.unc.edu (Suzanne-lucia Demitrio) writes:
- >In article <1992Nov16.032641.23855@rotag.mi.org>
- >kevin@rotag.mi.org (Kevin Darcy) writes:
- >
- >>In article <1992Nov15.053904.11401@samba.oit.unc.edu>
- >>Suzanne-lucia.Demitrio@launchpad.unc.edu (Suzanne-lucia Demitrio) writes:
- >>>
- >>>Well, if by 'killing a possible person' you mean taking actions designed
- >>>to kill any person who might be there, I can think of two offhand:
- >>>shooting at a man-shaped pile of rags in a dark alley, and dropping large
- >>>rocks off an overpass onto the busy highway below. Manslaughter.
- >>
- >>You seem to be confusing "possibly killing a person" with "killing a possible
- >>person". Those are not interchangeable terms.
- >
- >I know. I'm trying to probe the legal nature of Elizabeth's 'possible
- >person'. That's why I began with 'if', and made another guess in the next
- >paragraph:
- >
- >>>Or do you mean to define a new legal category, inferior to personhood,
- >>>called 'possible personhood'? Have you thought about the implications of
- >>>doing that?
- >>
- >>Whereas you define a new legal category, even _more_ inferior to personhood,
- >>called "human organism non-personhood"?
- >
- >New? What about the dead?
-
- Hmmmm... It's arguable whether a corpse would be considered an "organism".
- For the sake of argument, however, I'll amend that to "living human organism
- non-personhood". Better?
-
- >I'm simply putting fetuses into the old category of non-personhood -- we
- >no more need to neologize it with the modifier 'human organism' than we
- >need to speak of, say, chocolate-cake non-personhood, or wombat
- >non-personhood.
-
- It *IS* a living human organism, however, and by and large such entities
- have rights, do they not, as opposed to chocolate cakes and wombats, which
- NEVER have human rights?
-
- >>You're criticizing her for a watered-down form
- >>of what you take to extremes, hypocrite.
- >
- >No, Kevin. I'm criticizing her for an incoherent approach to the problem.
- >I think that a doctrine of fetal personhood, in any form, spells legal
- >disaster -- it gives new and inappropriate powers to government, and
- >encourages meddling with the concept of constitutional rights.
-
- Sounds awfully ominous. Why do you suppose the fabric of our entire
- Constitutional system will come completely unraveled just because we decide
- to put personhood at point "X" instead of point "Y"? Do you think that all
- Con Law rests on the minutiae of personhood definitions?
-
- >>>no power in our society (outside military contexts) has the legal
- >>>authority to 'balance' rights to survival among two living persons. Not
- >>>the courts, and certainly not doctors. We may acquit self-defense
- >>>afterwards, but we can't authorize manslaughter in advance. Which is a
- >>>very, very good thing when you think about it.
- >>
- >>Balderdash. Legislators and judges balance rights all the time. Our entire
- >>body of law is a gargantuan balancing act.
- >
- >I was speaking specifically of the right to *survival*. No power in our
- >society can legitimately resolve conflicts between two parties' rights to
- >survive, and mandate killing the loser.
-
- Rarely does one citizen's life come into DIRECT competition with another
- one's, Suzanne, but when they do, the law most certainly does a balancing
- act. Deadly force used in self-defense, for example, or the laws governing
- who gets to live, and who gets to die, in a lifeboat adrift at sea. Just
- because it's rare, doesn't mean the law CAN'T balance these rights. By
- "not deciding", the law would be favoring the "stronger" party, in any case
- -- the woman, in the case of abortion -- so in a deeper sense, the law
- can't ESCAPE making a decision one way or the other. The only question is
- whether the choice is implicit or explicit.
-
- >>Please clearly identify this "infectiously rotten" [sic] premise.
- >
- >The premise that any personhood rights can be consistently granted to
- >fetuses under our legal system.
-
- Non-arbitrarily, no. Consistently, yes. Just pick a point, and stick with it.
- That's arbitrary AND consistent. Although I happen to disagree with it, I see
- nothing UNWORKABLE about that approach...
-
- - Kevin
-