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- Newsgroups: talk.abortion
- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!darwin.sura.net!newsserver.jvnc.net!yale.edu!nigel.msen.com!heifetz!rotag!kevin
- From: kevin@rotag.mi.org (Kevin Darcy)
- Subject: Re: Blackmun calls the Roe v. Wade dividing line ""arbitrary""
- Message-ID: <1993Jan24.021204.21171@rotag.mi.org>
- Organization: Who, me???
- References: <1993Jan12.204434.21549@watson.ibm.com> <1993Jan15.172003.10270@rotag.mi.org> <1993Jan15.194015.15418@watson.ibm.com>
- Date: Sun, 24 Jan 1993 02:12:04 GMT
- Lines: 64
-
- In article <1993Jan15.194015.15418@watson.ibm.com> margoli@watson.IBM.com writes:
- >In <1993Jan15.172003.10270@rotag.mi.org> kevin@rotag.mi.org (Kevin Darcy) writes:
- >>In article <1993Jan12.204434.21549@watson.ibm.com> margoli@watson.IBM.com writes:
- >>>In <markp.726855013@joplin.wri.com> markp@joplin.wri.com (Mark Pundurs) writes:
- >>>>In <1993Jan12.073021.5818@netcom.com> ray@netcom.com (Ray Fischer) writes:
- >>>>
- >>>>>As is the case with pregnancy. May a woman therefore act towards the
- >>>>>fetus as she would a rapist?
- >>>>
- >>>>There's plenty of time to determine whether a fetus threatens your
- >>>>life; only seconds to determine whether a rapist does.
- >>>
- >>>It's not necessary to believe that the rapist threatens your life.
- >>
- >>Please specify the legal jurisdictions in which you know for a fact that the
- >>above statement is true.
- >
- >Everywhere, since I didn't mention law. The question was, "May a woman
- >act towards the fetus as she would a rapist?".
-
- So what kind of non-legalistic interpretation do you give to "the way to
- treat a rapist"?
-
- >Mark sidestepped it by
- >bringing up the question of whether the rapist threatened the woman's
- >life.
-
- It's not a "sidestep", it's the core of the issue. Ray introduced the rape
- analogy as an example of a non-lethal threat which is treated almost as
- seriously as a lethal one. Mark disputed whether rape can truly be
- considered non-lethal.
-
- >Whether he does or not is irrelevant to the woman's actions in
- >preventing herself from being violated.
-
- From a legal point of view, it is very relevant.
-
- >I realize that you mighty be upset because you couldn't find any jurisdictions
- >where the use of deadly force wasn't legally justified to stop a rape, but
- >please try not to drag in your pet peeves where they're not relevant.
-
- I haven't found any, because I haven't bothered to look, Larry. But then, the
- burden of proof isn't on ME. It's on those, like you and Ray Fischer, who keep
- bringing up rape analogies in an abortion group.
-
- >First Mark said rape is not OK even if the woman's life is not threatened,
-
- But added the proviso that in cases of rape, "often it is [threatened]"...
-
- >then, when asked if the woman could act towards the fetus as she would towards
- >a rapist, he brought up the question of whether her life was threatened.
- >I simply pointed out that that's not relevant to the question.
-
- No, no, no. You haven't been following things very carefully. Ray presented
- rape as an example of a non-lethal threat to which a woman was allowed "to
- act" as if it were a lethal threat (self-defense implied). Mark disputes
- whether rape is really considered "a non-lethal threat", since it is often
- accompanied by murder, or serious injury, and, besides, given the exigencies
- of the situation, it's reasonable for the woman to _assume_ that the threat
- is lethal, even if it isn't. The whole _crux_ of the discussion is whether
- rape is treated as "a lethal threat" or not. That's not a "sidestep". Stop
- trying to hijack the discussion off into irrelevancy-land.
-
- - Kevin
-