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- Newsgroups: talk.abortion
- Path: sparky!uunet!noc.near.net!black.clarku.edu!vax.clarku.edu!hsims
- From: hsims@vax.clarku.edu
- Subject: RE: The Ultimate Hypocrisy
- Message-ID: <23DEC92.15522078@vax.clarku.edu>
- Sender: news@black.clarku.edu (USENET News System)
- Organization: Clark University
- References: <BzpEKu.9zp@usenet.ucs.indiana.edu>
- Date: 23 DEC 92 15:52:20 GMT
- Lines: 73
-
- In a previous article, graham@venus.iucf.indiana.edu (JIM GRAHAM) wrote:
-
- >Ah, but what about voluntary amputations. Suppose I'm a productive
- >member of society, and due to an unfortunate turn of events, I end up
- >with a leg that no longer works, and in fact, produces a significant
- >amount of chronic pain... so much so that I can no longer work, nor
- >can I be the husband or father I once was.
- >
- >In short, I can no longer earn a living, nor can I be as _responsible_
- >as I once was.
- >
- >So, I'm left with sucking blood from a welfare system (and perhaps
- >Social Security), just to eat, BECAUSE I can find no surgeon that can
- >see things AS I SEE THEM, and refuses to give me a stump that produces
- >hopefully less pain, and will fit in an artificial leg, allowing me once
- >again, some semblance of "normalcy", and returns me to a _productive_ life.
- >
- >Shouldn't this be a matter of my "choice", considering the alternative
- >cost to the rest of society (at least those that give in to extortionists
- >and pay taxes)?
-
- You have as much right to choose amputation as a pregnant women does to choose
- abortion. You do not have a right to force a physician to amputate your leg,
- just as a pregnant women cannot force an unwilling physician to perform an
- abortion on her.
-
- >And what about any "pain" that I may feel afterward? Is it not possible
- >that many people that have abortions suffer some type of emotional
- >"pain" later on?
-
- It's possible. It's true that many women suffer depression after child birth.
- Do you think we should we outlaw giving birth based on this?
-
- >My point, which I hope is understandable, is this...
- >
- >My understanding of this whole "choice" thing is that a women should have
- >absolute rule over her own body (which by the way, I agree with).
- >
- >So, why shouldn't I have the same absolute rule over mine?
-
- I think you should.
-
- >You really can't argue that in one case the person is causing themselves
- >permanent and irrevocable disability. That may also be true of the
- >women who chooses to abort, although it may be emotional rather than
- >physical.
- >
- >However, there are other "precedents" in our society that would make this
- >an inequality.
- >
- >Voluntary or "elective" amputation is a good example, I think. What's more,
- >one could argue about whether or not my leg that is amputated
- >is a "human being". It should be obvious to most, with NO twisting of
- >terminology, that cutting off a leg is not the end of a human being
- >(ie mine), but aborting a child in the womb simply IS.
-
- Many people will disagree with you on this. Fetuses are aborted, not
- children. They may be human, but are they human beings? There is a
- difference.
-
- >There is no difference in terms of survivability between me, the amputee,
- >or the mother, who had her child aborted. We both are still alive.
- >
- >My leg isn't, and the child isn't either. But one at least had the
- >_potential_ of a _thinking_, sentient human being, whether one chooses
- >to call it a human being in or out of the womb.
-
- Every egg and sperm cell has the potential to be a thinking, sentient human
- being. Should we outlaw menstruation and masturbation?
-
- >Jim Graham
-
- .... Heather.
-