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- Newsgroups: talk.abortion
- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!nigel.msen.com!heifetz!rotag!kevin
- From: kevin@rotag.mi.org (Kevin Darcy)
- Subject: Re: Susan smears Holtsinger unjustly
- Message-ID: <1993Jan3.003510.10196@rotag.mi.org>
- Organization: Who, me???
- References: <1992Dec30.005219.9201@netcom.com> <1993Jan2.094941.7852@rotag.mi.org> <1993Jan02.164252.2282@watson.ibm.com>
- Date: Sun, 3 Jan 1993 00:35:10 GMT
- Lines: 91
-
- In article <1993Jan02.164252.2282@watson.ibm.com> margoli@watson.IBM.com writes:
- >In <1993Jan2.094941.7852@rotag.mi.org> kevin@rotag.mi.org (Kevin Darcy) writes:
- >>In article <1992Dec30.005219.9201@netcom.com> gordons@netcom.com (Gordon Storga) writes:
- >>>
- >>>Susan has proved to be one of the few people who are generally logical and
- >>>well-thought out in her responses and statements.
- >>
- >>Are we talking about the same "Susan", Gordon?
- >
- >Susan Garvin. But you knew that.
- >
- >>>If Susan was to post something that conflicted with my experience of
- >>>knowledge I would correct her. She hasn't as far as I'm aware.
- >>
- >>Here's an example from the top of a long list, Galen:
- >
- >That's "Gordon" (speaking of knowing who we're talking about... :-)
-
- Argh! That's the second time I've done that. Sorry, Gordon, I don't really
- MEAN to insult you like that...
-
- >>do you "know" that
- >>Kevin Darcy been arguing for restrictions on abortion? See .sig.
- >
- >We all do, since James Keegan posts an example every time you claim the
- >following is a lie.
-
- In what way do Keegan's regurgitations prove anything one way or another?
- Last time I asked you this, you "missed" my request...
-
- >>"Darcy has been consistently criticized for labelling
- >> himself 'pro-choice' while arguing for restrictions on abortion."
- >> Susie Garvin
- >> Sun, 18 Oct 92 20:37:06 GMT
- >> <1992Oct18.203706.21850@mnemosyne.cs.du.edu>
- >
- >This is true; you *have* been consistently criticized for exactly that.
-
- That part of the statement is true, and, one will note, NOT supported by
- Keegan's regurgitations; in fact, it's IMPOSSIBLE for the article that Keegan
- reposts to directly prove the "has been ... criticized" assertion, since it's
- MY ARTICLE that he reposts. I wonder if he thinks I was criticizing MYSELF
- in that article, or is he just regurgitating for the sake of regurgitating?
-
- The lie, however, resides in the "arguing for restrictions on abortion"
- part. No-one has proven, objectively, that I have EVER "argued for
- restrictions on abortion" (certainly the article Keegan regurgitates doesn't
- prove that, right?), so how on earth could I have been "arguing for
- restrictions" at the same time ("while") I was being criticized for it?
-
- >That you've disclaimed all previous arguments in favor of restrictions
- >doesn't alter the fact that you *were* criticized for them at the time
- >you made them.
-
- I was criticized for making them, Larry, sure, but not "while" making such
- arguments.
-
- >(You also *appear* to be continuing to argue for restrictions; although
- >you claim that's not what you're doing, the fact remains that your
- >arguments are indistinguishable from those of someone who is in favor
- >of restrictions.)
-
- My arguments are very distinguishable, Larry; you're just too dim and/or too
- lazy to make the distinction. Where a pro-lifer will say "abortion should be
- restricted in way X", I may say only "there is nothing inherently wrong with
- abortion being restricted in way X". Note the difference between "should"
- (= morally right) and "not inherently wrong" (= not morally wrong). The former
- expresses a positive opinion, i.e. that it would be better than not if the
- restriction existed, whereas the latter expresses a negative opinion (perhaps
- it could be considered a "double-negative" opinion), i.e. that there is no
- absolute moral exclusion of some (perhaps very limited) class of abortion
- restrictions. Nowhere have I expressed positive moral support for any abortion
- restriction whatsoever. I just disagree with the foolish and naive pro-choice
- absolutist assertion that all abortion restrictions are _per se_ morally
- wrong and must be vigorously opposed, regardless of the wishes of the
- populace. I think the moral pros and cons of _some_ abortion restrictions are
- sufficiently close and/or subjective that the matter should be left up to
- concensus. Protecting unilateral fundamental rights is all very good and well,
- but after the point of viability, the question of the fetus'es value starts
- to figure into some of the equations, and I think the question of fetal value
- can ONLY be decided by concensus. There's nothing inherently dirty or
- dangerous about Democracy, folks; it's one of the pillars upon which our
- society is built, and STILL the Proper Tool to apply to some socio-political
- problems. Instead of engaging in absolutism games -- e.g. is a barely-
- measurable (and therefore maybe not even real) difference in maternal risk
- worth the almost-certain destruction of viable fetus? -- why not just let the
- people decide what THEY think the value of a fetus is? It is THEY, i.e. the
- Common Man and Common Woman, who have to live with the bulk of the
- consequences, after all, not the absolutist ideologues...
-
- - Kevin
-