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- Xref: sparky alt.rush-limbaugh:12042 talk.abortion:52558
- Path: sparky!uunet!sequent!muncher.sequent.com!ether!bug!stevef
- From: stevef@bug.UUCP (Steven R Fordyce)
- Newsgroups: alt.rush-limbaugh,talk.abortion
- Subject: Re: rights and responsibilities
- Keywords: abortion, religion
- Message-ID: <1197@bug.UUCP>
- Date: 20 Dec 92 22:51:22 GMT
- References: <1992Dec2.193515.8185@cs.yale.edu> <1992Dec2.235324.4215@advtech.uswest.com> <1177@bug.UUCP> <1992Dec8.222534.453@advtech.uswest.com>
- Reply-To: stevef@bug.UUCP (Steven R Fordyce)
- Distribution: usa
- Organization: Handmade Designs, Salem, OR, USA
- Lines: 136
-
- In article <1992Dec8.222534.453@advtech.uswest.com>
- steven@advtech.uswest.com ( Steve Novak) writes:
- >> = (Steven R Fordyce) writes:
- >>> = Steve Novak writes:
- >>>OK. I mentioned it only because, to me, such religion-based laws [laws
- >>>regulating or banning abortion] violate the seperation of church and
- >>>state.
- >
- >>Abortion is no more strictly a religious issue than murder is.
- >
- >Then I see no basis for anti-abortionism being forced on everybody. It
- >becomes a personal issue.
-
- Is murder a personal issue, beyond the purview of public debate and
- law? Of course not. What is or is not murder, what is or is not a
- person, and when personhood begins are not simply matters of personal
- choice. They are legitimate issues for public debate and law.
-
- ...
- >>That many people take a position on this issue (both pro and con) for
- >>religious reasons doesn't change whether or not abortion is a
- >>legitimate issue for public debate or public law.
- >
- >This is obfuscation. The vast majority of anti-abortionists do indeed
- >base their stance not only on religion, but on christianity specifically.
-
- So what? Many of these same people base their views on stealing and
- incest on Christianity too. That doesn't make it a matter of personal
- choice.
-
- >Except for stating that nothing equating abortion with
- >murder exists in the bible, I've never heard a pro-choicer use religion
- >to justify his/her stance.
-
- You aren't paying attention. Several people have used that justification
- on the NET. I saved one from alt.activism.d. In article
- <Sep.28.10.39.13.1992.20171@gandalf.rutgers.edu> shagan@gandalf.rutgers.edu
- (Susan Hagan) writes:
- |In my personal spiritual philosophy, a child is not a child until it
- |inherits a soul. This soul is not inherited until birth. At that
- |point, the soul deserves the chance to make the most of the life that
- |it has chosen, without interference. Before that point, in the womb,
- |the body is a vehicle under construction. I don't believe that when
- |a fetus is lost, it is irreplaceable. It is the soul that is irreplacable.
- |But that soul cannot be destroyed -- at least not by any means that we
- |have at our disposal.
- |
- |Therefore, to force me to carry to term, a fetus that I do not want, to
- |me would be ridiculous.
-
- >And yes, a law based purely on christianity has no business being made
- >into law. That would make our country a theocracy.
-
- I agree. But abortion pro or con is not based purely on Christianity.
-
- >Forgach would love that, but most people wouldn't.
-
- If "Forgach" is supposed to be me*, then you are wrong. I think the
- question of abortion should be decided by the vote, state by state.
-
- * Have you confused me with Suzanne Forgach? I haven't see her express
- such sympathies, but I could have missed it.
-
- >>Those who favor legal abortion often say, we don't know when human life
- >>starts or science can't tell us when human life begins. This statement
- >>can only be made based on (at least) a quasi-religious belief in some
- >>extra-biological aspect in what constitutes human life.
- >
- >No. There is no quasi-religious belief involved, though I'll bet you'd
- >like it to.
-
- What do you mean?
-
- >That statement is saying in essence, "There is no way that YOU can
- >prove that YOUR opinion that a fetus is human life worth protecting at
- >the expense of an alive, breathing human being's bodily autonomy. Since
- >you have no such proof, then kindly practice your own beliefs and leave
- >the rest of us alone."
-
- This is the same as saying:
-
- A) The fetus is not a person* and therefore the mother
- is free to do as she chooses.
-
- or
-
- B) The status of the fetus doesn't matter, because the
- rights of the mother take precedence. Even if the
- fetus is a person, abortion is ok.**
-
- Which is it? You seem to want both positions depending on which is more
- convenient. If I proved position B to be without merit (somehow), my
- guess is that you would be undaunted and take position A.
-
- * defined here as a human life worth protecting.
-
- ** In other words, in the case of pregnancy, the deliberate killing of a
- person for convenience, or any reason, is ok.
-
- >>The biological facts are not in question (at least, not this
- >>century), and these, it seems to me, are the only sound basis for
- >>deciding what is and isn't human life.
- >
- >Is there anyone saying a fetus isn't human life? I think you're missing
- >the pro-choice point: the woman involved.
-
- I meant "a human life", i.e. a person. I'm not missing the pro-choice
- point at all. I simply don't agree with it.
-
- >Of course, the sperm or the egg is human life, too. And, the main question
- >we're confronting here is a woman's right to an abortion, which doesn't
- >depend on if a fetus is human life; just if the woman's rights are
- >paramount.
-
- Here you seem to be arguing for B. I see this position as simply a dodge,
- a confusion of the issues. If we say the unborn child is a person, it may
- be correct to say that he has no right to infringe on the mother, but that
- certainly doesn't give her the right to kill him, i.e. no claimed non-vital
- right can have parity or greater claim than the right of a person (in this
- case a fetus) to life. You can't simply kill a guest who has overstayed
- his welcome. If you say the mother can kill the unborn child, and yet the
- unborn child is a person, you are in effect saying that the unborn child is
- a class of person different from all other innocent persons in that he has
- no right to life. For the purpose of honest debate on abortion, this is
- no different from saying that the unborn child is not a person.
-
- If the fetus is not a person, then abortion needs no further justification,
- and there is no need to compare the rights of the mother with those of the
- fetus because clearly he doesn't have any. However, if you say that the
- unborn child is not a person, then you are using something other than
- biology to define personhood, and hence my "a quasi-religious belief in
- some extra-biological aspect in what constitutes human life [personhood]"
- comment above.
- --
- orstcs!opac!bug!stevef I am the NRA Steven R. Fordyce
- uunet!sequent!ether!stevef . . . Deer are for Dinner
-