[Search for users] [Overall Top Noters] [List of all Conferences] [Download this site]

Conference turris::womannotes-v1

Title:ARCHIVE-- Topics of Interest to Women, Volume 1 --ARCHIVE
Notice:V1 is closed. TURRIS::WOMANNOTES-V5 is open.
Moderator:REGENT::BROOMHEAD
Created:Thu Jan 30 1986
Last Modified:Fri Jun 30 1995
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:873
Total number of notes:22329

733.0. "safer abortions, but not for you." by CIRCUS::KOLLING (Karen, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif.) Mon Feb 22 1988 17:25

    There's an article on the front page of this morning's New York
    Times, about a drug available in Europe.  It induces abortions and
    is safer than any other method currently available in the U.S. during
    part of the pregnancy (I forget if it's early or mid).  It won't
    be available here, however.  Various right-to-life groups have
    threatened drug companies with boycotts if they make it available,
    so the drug companies won't touch it.  The boycott will be invoked
    even if the drug is made available for other medical conditions
    for which it is the drug of choice (my fuzzy recollection of the
    article is that indications are that it may relax the vagina enough
    to permit some natural births where Caesarians would otherwise be
    required).  I haven't typed in more details due to lack of time.
    
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
733.1more info?OPHION::HAYNESCharles HaynesMon Feb 22 1988 22:148
    Hi Karen,
    
    I don't have the Times readily available, could you please post
    at least the name of the drug, and if possible the European producer?
    I feel a letter coming on...
    
    	Thanks,
    	-- Charles
733.2CIRCUS::KOLLINGKaren, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif.Tue Feb 23 1988 15:4218
    I have temporarily stolen the Times from the Reading Room here.
    The drug is RU 486.  Companies mentioned as being threatened or
    as working with this or similar drugs in Europe but with no plans
    to do so here are Upjohn,
    Hoechst-Roussel Pharmaceuticals Inc. of Somerville, N.J. (holds
    the option rights to apply for government approval to market
    RU 486 in the U.S. but has declined to do so), and Sterling Drug.
    
    The article also mentions possible uses for RU 486 in treating
    endometriosis("the third leading cause of infertility in the United
    States"), and breast cancer, as well as what I mentioned before
    ([could lead]... "to an enormous decrease in Caesarians").  Upjohn
    apparently gave up its research into fertility drugs a couple of
    years ago after a boycott by the same group, National Right To Life;
     I assume those drugs may have been similar in effect to RU 486.
    
    European developer of RU 486 is Roussel-Uclaf Company of France.
    
733.3VIDEO::TEBAYNatural phenomena invented to orderTue Feb 23 1988 16:0510
    Great-it is not enough that the FDA delays medical research
    now prolifers do.
    
    By the way endometriosis is a leading precursor to cancer also.
    
    Hum- a drug that will help to prevent female causes of cancer,
    have a safe abort,and probably something to do with infertility.
    
    Second class medical care for the second class.
    
733.4CIRCUS::KOLLINGKaren, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif.Tue Feb 23 1988 16:163
    I actually expected to see at least a tiny mention of this on the
    network news last night.  I mean, it starts on the front page of
    the Times and takes up a half page inside.  Naivety lives.
733.5This is not suppressionWHYVAX::KRUGERTue Feb 23 1988 17:1610
    re .3
    
    While this news isn't good, I can't see a basis for calling this
    an anti-woman issue. Pro-lifers are wrong, but lots of them are
    women.
    
    Does anyone know the percentages? How many of the pro-lifers affiliated
    with a group are women? Just curious.
    
    dov
733.63D::CHABOTRooms 253, '5, '7, and '9Tue Feb 23 1988 17:441
    Lots of women are anti-women.
733.7Aunt Janes we don't need.CIRCUS::KOLLINGKaren, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif.Tue Feb 23 1988 17:554
    Re: .5
    
    Yes, it is suppression.  The suppressees are women.
    
733.8So I either support murder or I suppress women?CVG::THOMPSONQuestion realityWed Feb 24 1988 13:069
    Personally I am very offended by the equating of people opposed to
    murder with suppressers of women. Now perhaps you don't consider
    abortion to be murder but please understand that many people do.
    These people, myself included, don't oppose abortion because we
    want to suppress women but because we value life. To say that that
    makes me a suppresser of women is both untrue and offensive.
    
    		Regards,
    			Alfred
733.9CIRCUS::KOLLINGKaren, Sweetie, Holly; in Calif.Wed Feb 24 1988 15:405
    Re: .8
    
    So, Alfred, what do you say to the husband of a woman who has died
    during a Caesarian because the drug was not available?
    
733.10Explain pleaseCVG::THOMPSONQuestion realityWed Feb 24 1988 16:1613
    RE: .9 What does the drug not being available have to do with 
    someone dying of a Caesarean? Are you saying that everyone should
    have a safe abortion rather then take the risk of having a baby?
    Last I heard there were lots of safe ways to prevent becoming
    pregnant in the first place. I've heard that abstention is 100%
    effective for example. Not as much fun perhaps but you take the
    risks in life that you are willing to pay for. Perhaps abortions
    should be allowed if the pregnancy is a risk to the life of the
    mother. Other then that it seems pretty hard to justify the taking
    of a human life.
    
    			Alfred
    
733.11Kill the baby for the parents sins?CVG::THOMPSONQuestion realityWed Feb 24 1988 16:215
    RE: .9 So, Karen, what do you say to all the unborn babies killed
    because it was inconvenient or not fun for their parents to practice
    birth control?
    
    			Alfred
733.12If It's Murder, Then It's Murder!FDCV03::ROSSWed Feb 24 1988 16:4419
    RE: .10
    
    > Perhaps abortions  should be allowed if the pregnancy is a risk 
    > to the life of the mother. Other then that it seems pretty hard 
    > to justify the taking of a human life.
    
    
    Alfred, I guess I'm always confused when someone says that, perhaps,
    if the mother's life is at risk, then abortion should be allowed.
    
    If one believes that abortion is murder, period, then "situational-
    ethics" should not be a determinant.
    
    Either you believe that abortion is murder or not. It IS binary.
    
    I do believe in abortion, if a woman so chooses, whatever her reasons.
    
      Alan
    
733.14good grief!3D::CHABOTRooms 253, '5, '7, and '9Wed Feb 24 1988 16:505
    The issue is, the drug is being blocked because some lobbying groups
    believe it would be used to initiate non-surgical abortions.  By
    so doing, they are preventing the drug from being used *even*in*
    other uses, such as an alternative to caesarean surgery.  That's
    what Karen was pointing out Alfred.
733.15abortion IS murder.SALEM::AMARTINnemoW SDEEN sraMWed Feb 24 1988 23:211
    
733.16questionVOLGA::B_REINKEwhere the sidewalk endsWed Feb 24 1988 23:272
    is abortion before the fetus is viable murder?
    
733.17answer, i think...SALEM::AMARTINnemoW SDEEN sraMWed Feb 24 1988 23:338
    If its alive..... yes.
    
    I have somewhat mixed feelings about this.  I do think that it is
    the decision of the woman (and sometimes the man also)  But I cant
    help thinking and feeling that aborting a fetus (fetus=life) is
    taking life thus murdering.  I dono, I think that there are a million
    ways that people can discuss this and never come up with a deffinate
    answer.
733.18AKOV11::BOYAJIAN$50 never killed anybodyThu Feb 25 1988 05:1936
    re:.12
    
    Now, I don't side with Alfred on this question, but I also disagree
    with you about "situational ethics" in relation to abortion. If
    "situational ethics" can be applied to murder trials (i.e. it was
    in self-defense or it was done in order to save a greater number),
    than there's no reason why it can't apply to abortions. Think of
    an abortion performed in order to save the mother's life as a
    case of self-defense.
    
    ******
    
    As for the "abortion is murder" argument, the whole thing depends
    upon the answer to the question "Is a fetus a human being?" The
    common sense answer is "yes", but there are complications. It's
    certainly not a fully formed human being. But it's a potential
    human being, you say. True, but so is an unfertilized egg. Is
    that a human being?
    
    To skip over further rhetorical dialog, what it really comes
    down to is where to draw the line. Some people believe that
    "potential human" becomes "human" at conception. Some others
    believe that it comes at birth. Still others believe that it
    comes at some estimate of when the fetus would become viable
    outside the womb.
    
    The way I see it, the burden of proof is placed on the pro-lifer
    to prove that the fetus is a human being. That it not only is a
    viable-on-its-own life, but that it can think, that it has a "soul"
    (or some temporal equivalent thereof). The pro-choicer shouldn't
    have to prove that the fetus' humanness isn't there. Occam's Razor
    applies: the simplest explanantion is the more likely. And that
    a fetus is nothing more than a complex cell culture is a far simpler
    explanation than that it's a human being.
    
    --- jerry
733.19Just a moment now...CHEFS::MANSFIELDThu Feb 25 1988 06:1918
    
    Re Alfreds' last reply
    
    Alfred, you cannot dismiss all unwanted pregnancies as being due
    to two people `not bothering' to use contraception. What about the
    victim of a rape, or a failure of contraception ?
    
    You could argue (on the second point) that abstinence is the only
    100% fool-proof method, but I'm afraid I think its unrealistic to
    expect people not to have sex unless they want a child. I drive
    a car to work each day, it is *possible* that one day I could have
    an accident and kill someone, but I don't stop driving just in case.
    
    I can appreciate your point of view that you think abortion is murder,
    but it makes me mad when people start assuming that every unwanted
    pregnancy is due to the `sins' of the parents.
    
    	Sarah.
733.20CVG::THOMPSONQuestion realityThu Feb 25 1988 08:458
    RE: .14 If that is what Karen was trying to say then she could (should)
    have said so more clearly. I don't believe in blocking the use of
    this drug for other uses. Those who know me well know that I would
    never stand in the way of something that could prevent Ceaseareans
    or make them safer. My wife delivered our son via Ceasearean so
    Karens inflammatory remark showed more heat then light to me.
    
    			Alfred
733.21MYCRFT::PARODIJohn H. ParodiThu Feb 25 1988 09:0211
  Since everyone else is trotting out their dusty old arguments for and
  against abortion, I thought I'd throw in two of my favorites:
 
  First, abortion is not murder by the definition of murder --
  murder is the *unlawful* taking of a human life.  

  Second, if a fetus is human, then why don't they hold a funeral 
  when a miscarriage occurs?

  JP
733.22CVG::THOMPSONQuestion realityThu Feb 25 1988 09:0229
>        Alfred, you cannot dismiss all unwanted pregnancies as being due
>    to two people `not bothering' to use contraception. What about the
>    victim of a rape, or a failure of contraception ?

    I know that not all pregnancies are due to not bothering to use
    contraception but that particular comment (reply .11) was only
    meant to cover that case. The case of rape is a hard one that I've
    not completely resolved. Obviously if abortion is wrong and in cases
    other then 'self-defense' of the mother then it's wrong in the case
    of rape as well. But forcing someone to carry that baby is pretty
    hard. Perhaps in some (many) cases the argument can be made that
    the mothers health (mental or otherwise) is threatened. I don't
    know but I'm not going to make blanket statements about all rapes
    because I don't know what it would be like for all (or perhaps any)
    women.
    
    Failure of contraception is easy. Abortion is not acceptable as
    a birth control method. If you have sex you should know and be willing
    to accept the risk (if that's the word you want to use) that you
    may become pregnant. Now this doesn't mean that you only have sex
    to have children but it does mean that you take responsibility for
    your actions. If you are 100% sure that you never want children
    then you either abstain from sex or act irresponsibly.
    
    I don't believe that every unwanted pregnancy is due to the 'sins'
    of the parents. I do believe that every unwanted pregnancy is due
    to the parents having sex (that is still how it works right?).
    
    			Alfred
733.23answerCVG::THOMPSONQuestion realityThu Feb 25 1988 09:1012
>< Note 733.16 by VOLGA::B_REINKE "where the sidewalk ends" >
>                                 -< question >-
>
>    is abortion before the fetus is viable murder?

    Yes. My wife and I still morn the lose of a human life from my wife's
    miscarriage (approx 2 months pregnant). I see no reason not to consider
    an abortion resulting in less of a death then a miscarriage. The
    big difference is that abortion is preventable and many (most)
    miscarriages are not.
    
    				Alfred
733.24food for thoughtLEZAH::BOBBITTis it soup yet?Thu Feb 25 1988 09:5418
    Is this the drug that was discussed in note 256 here?  Just curious...
    
    Also - if abortions are made unlawful, people desparate for an abortion
    will still seek them, in the most unhealthful and expensive conditions.
    I realize that there is no middle ground to this issue, and the
    main questions are:
    
    When does a fetus become a life? (thus defining the point in the
    pregnancy that abortion takes place as "murder" or "surgery",
    depending)
    
    Are there any exceptions we should make to the rule? (thus defining
    what conditions would permit abortion to be an acceptable alternative)
    
    -Jody
    
    
    
733.25MSD36::STHILAIREHappiness is Springsteen tixThu Feb 25 1988 10:4528
    I don't think anyone could ever convince me that abortion is murder.
     I, also, don't think that anyone could ever make me really consider
    an undeveloped fetus a "human being."  Sure, if it lives *someday*
    it *will* be a human being, but it isn't yet.  It can't survive
    on it's own.  It can't think, and talk, and walk, and say, Hey,
    I'm alive, I've got plans for the future and I want a chance to
    stick around and live.  I can feel pain and I'm afraid to die. 
    A 10 year old child, for example, or an adult does have those feelings.
     How can anyone equate an abortion with the murder of a fully
    functioning living human being?
    
    I firmly believe (and apparently, thankfully, so do many others)
    that no woman should be forced to have a baby grow inside of her
    if she doesn't want it to.  Yes, if people have sex there is a chance
    of pregnancy.  But, sex is part of life.  It's something people
    do, and getting pregnant is something that can happen.  It's up
    to us to deal with those conditions in the best way we can.  If
    we have the ability to have sex and not have babies even we get
    pregnant by accident - then Great! - isn't wonderful we figured
    out how to do it!  Isn't it great we're the most intelligent life
    form on the planet so we can solve these problems for ourselves.
    
    I basically believe that the life and wishes of the already living 
    pregnant woman takes precedence over the fetus right to live.
    
    Lorna
    
    
733.26And what about the man?BUFFER::LEEDBERGAn Ancient Multi-hued DragonThu Feb 25 1988 11:0223
    
    
    Let me see now....
    
    		If a man and a woman have sex  SHE might
    		get pregnant.  If she does then she has
    		to carry to term whether it is good for
    		her or not.  That is what she gets for
    		indulging.  So, a woman had better not learn
    		to enjoy sex, if she does then she will have
    		more pregnancys, that may or may not be good
    		for her.  So SHE should not have sex, then
    		she won't have to worry about getting pregnant.
    
    		So it is a woman's problem.
    
    _peggy
    			(-|-)
    			  |
    			  |
    				The Goddess is not perfect
    				and does not expect us to be.
    
733.27hmmm...SCOMAN::DAUGHANfeel like jumpin the gun!Thu Feb 25 1988 11:096
    someone asked me this question not too long ago: what if the man
    wants his girlfriend to have an abortion and is willing to pay for
    it and she wont? should he be made to pay child support for this
    unwanted child(on his part that is). 
    
    i really did not know what to say...
733.28hmmm...well...MSD36::STHILAIREHappiness is Springsteen tixThu Feb 25 1988 11:3324
    Re .27, I've thought about that before, too.  I *think* that I think
    that the man *should* be made to pay child support even if he didn't
    want the child.  The child is still his flesh and blood.  Men should
    realize when the choose to have sex with a woman that it is possible
    that a child could result.  They should not take it for granted
    that a woman will be willing to have an abortion if an accident
    happens.  I think the decent human feeling would be that, regardless
    of how it happened, there is a child on this earth that is mine,
    and therefore I am responsible.
    
    There are some roles we are forced into by nature I guess.  Women
    can get pregnant and because the child is in their bodies they get
    to decide whether they have an abortion or have a baby.  The baby
    just isn't inside the man.  That's the way it happens so he doesn't
    get to make that choice.  But, if the baby is born, it's his kid,
    and he's half responsible for taking care of it.
    
    Lorna
   
    P.S.  I admit it would be a bummer to have a woman you didn't love
    have a kid you didn't want.  But, it's just wrong to walk away from
    your own child, once it's here.  I believe in abortion but once
    the baby *is* born, ya gotta take care of it.
    
733.29murderCADSYS::SULLIVANKaren - 225-4096Thu Feb 25 1988 11:4032
	If someone were dieing because they needed a kidney, and
	your kidney was compatible, and if you gave it to them they
	would live, is it murder if you refuse?

	If their relatives came into your house and kidnapped you and
	hooked you up to the dieing person so that they were using your
	kidney and you woke up and made them unhook you, is that murder?

	If someone came into your home and started smoking and wouldn't
	quit and you had asthma and were about to go into an attack
	where you might die (or maybe your health might be affected some)
	and you forcibly removed them so they didn't have any place
	to go and there was a blizzard and they died, is that murder?

	If you are in the slums and someone is hungry and asks you
	for food and you refuse and they die, is that murder?

	If you were very careful and used birth control and got
	pregnant anyways, and you couldn't afford to take any time
	off your job because you would be fired, and you knew you
	couldn't afford to feed yourself properly to ensure a healthy
	baby and if your boss find out you might be fired anyways,
	and your family would cast you off and you had an abortion
	when the child was only an embryo, is that murder?

	If the answer to all the above is yes, then is murder always
	a bad thing?  Should we each try to deal with moral dilemmas
	according to our own beliefs?  Can I judge another's act
	without being in their position?

	...Karen

733.30fini for me on this topicCVG::THOMPSONQuestion realityThu Feb 25 1988 12:5432
.24>    Also - if abortions are made unlawful, people desparate for an abortion
.24>    will still seek them, in the most unhealthful and expensive conditions.

    If murder is made unlawful, people desperate to kill people still
    will. Some of them will get caught and either jailed or killed.
    Perhaps we should make murder legal and save them from that tragedy?

    RE: .26 and .27 If a man has sex he should be just as prepared and
    willing to raise and care for any child that might result. This
    is one of the reasons that sex outside of marriage and the resulting
    level of commitment and stability is stupid and unsafe. Why a women
    would have sex without commitment is beyond me. A man shouldn't
    either but the 'risk' is not as high which tends to make one more
    careless.
    
    RE: The topic of abortion in general. Jerry and I disagree about
    a basic assumption. He (and many of you) feel the simplest explanation
    is that the fetus is not yet human (until some time period that
    varies in different opinions). I believe the simplest and most
    logical explanation is that the fetus is human. This is mostly
    a philosophical/religious decision and therefore not likely to
    be resolved by debate. A debate on the rightness/wrongness of abortion
    was not the intent of my first reply in this topic. I was trying
    to make a point that calling anti-abortionists repressors of women
    showed a total lack of understanding of the reasoning behind opposition
    to abortion. It also shows a lack of valuing of differences that
    shocks me. Denying the right of people to prevent abortions (or
    to at least speak out against it) is the exact same thing as denying
    people the right to speak out against slavery, discrimination, or
    war.
    
    				Alfred (calling it quits in this topic)
733.31thank goodness3D::CHABOTRooms 253, &#039;5, &#039;7, and &#039;9Thu Feb 25 1988 14:504
    Speak: yes; prevent: no.
    ------------
    
    Lorna--thanks for those articulate replies!
733.32I tried not to reply I really didCVG::THOMPSONQuestion realityThu Feb 25 1988 14:5811
    Sorry can't help myself.
    
>    Speak: yes; prevent: no.
>    ------------

    Then I can count on you not to try and prevent rape and murder?
    Or is there a double standard in that people only have a right to
    prevent things you think are wrong? Not that I think rape and murder
    are ok but they are no worse then abortion.
    
    			Alfred
733.33Suuuuuuuuure you did3D::CHABOTRooms 253, &#039;5, &#039;7, and &#039;9Thu Feb 25 1988 16:215
    No, you can't count on me to do anything.  Except perhaps to agree
    that you have the right to speak your views, as long as your manner
    of speaking does not infringe upon anyone else's rights.  However,
    you persist in calling me "murderer", so I shall persist in calling
    you "repressor".  There, now isn't that a happy thing.
733.34MYCRFT::PARODIJohn H. ParodiFri Feb 26 1988 09:3213
  Alfred, this subject has apparently made you lose the calm rationality
  I've come to appreciate in your notes.  Rape and murder are crimes while
  abortion is not; therefore two standards are required.  

  That you think abortion is just as bad as rape or murder is an opinion --
  or a religious belief -- and one that is not shared by the Supreme Court.

  If by prevention, you mean working toward changing the laws, press on.

  JP


733.35CVG::THOMPSONQuestion realityFri Feb 26 1988 10:078
>  If by prevention, you mean working toward changing the laws, press on.

    This is exactly what I believe .31 was telling me I did not have
    the right to do. That does tend to make me lose by calm. I apologize
    for my tone. I just can not stand idly by while people are killed.
    Sorry if that is unpopular here.
    
    				Alfred    
733.36SCOMAN::DAUGHANfeel like jumpin the gun!Fri Feb 26 1988 10:557
    well alfred,if the law did get changed.
    the luckier women could fly out of the country(canada,mexico,bermuda).
    
    the poorer women would die or over burden the already over burdened
    welfare sysytem.
    
    kelly
733.37CHEFS::MANSFIELDFri Feb 26 1988 12:2512
    
    Can I ask a question here ?
    
    What exactly is the law on abortion in the US ? In England the law
    is that an abortion is permissible if to continue the pregnancy
    would (endanger) the mother's mental or physical health. (I put
    endanger in brackets because I can't remember the exact way it's
    put, basically in theory this means that abortion on demand is not
    legal, in practice I think it means that it is a matter of finding
    a doctor who does not oppose the idea of abortion.)
    
    	Sarah.
733.38CVG::THOMPSONQuestion realityFri Feb 26 1988 13:2818
    RE: .36 So then what you are saying is that if it's legal anywhere
    in the world it should be legal here? Is that it? Does that go for
    everything?
    
    I'm sorry. If something is wrong it shouldn't be allowed just because
    the rich can get away with it by leaving the country.
    
    You also ignore the fact that every women (except in the case of
    rape) has the option not to get pregnant in the first place. Being
    poor doesn't mean you have to get pregnant any more then getting
    pregnant means you have to die. Lot's of women bare children with
    out dieing. Your arguments do not wash.
    
    RE: .37 In the US any woman who wants an abortion can have it until
    the nth (I forget) month of pregnancy. The government in some areas
    will pay for it too.
    
    			Alfred
733.39NSG022::POIRIERSuzanneFri Feb 26 1988 13:3611
    
    
     a woman may have an abortion in a clinic during her first tri-mester.
     a woman must have an abortion in a hospital if it is during her
       second tri-mester.
     a woman may only have an abortion in her third tri-mester if carrying
       the baby to term will endanger her well being.
    
    I believe this is the way the law stands in the US with other
    restrictions on some minors and medicare in some state laws.
    
733.40Why cant it happen?GORT::MACKINNONFri Feb 26 1988 15:0034
    
    
    	Isn't the issue here WHY this drug is not being allowed in the
    United States NOT whether or not abortion is murder?  
    As long as woman are able to concieve the issue of abortion will
    always be with us.  I got pregnant while I was on the Pill.
    Unfortunately I was told that due to the fact that I was on
    the pill the fetus would be severly damaged.  So I made a conscious
    decision to abort the fetus.  Belive me I wouldnt wish this on
    anyone.  Making this decision and following through with it were
    incredibly difficult.  If I were given the chance to use a drug
    instead of going through an abortion procedure, beleive me I would
    have given anything to take the drug.
    
    	I went through a lot both emotionally and physically.  I have
    made peace with my decision, but it infuriates me that men are
    so adament in their opposition.  The decision is not theirs to
    make.  They are not the ones to actually experience the procedure.
    If only they were able to get pregnant I'm sure they would be
    alot more sympathetic.  The father of my child was so upset that
    I got pregnant in the first place.  He made up his mind that abortion
    was the only choice.  
    
    	Why dont these pro-lifers accept the fact that each individual
    case is different.  And that abortion is not something a woman
    wants to do.  In most cases it is the only alternative.  It amazes
    me that these people are so concerned about the life of an unborn
    person, but where are they when the child enters the world ?
    Where are they when these now living persons are not being taken
    care of or even abused?
    
         If this drug can benifit all woman not just those seeking
    abortions, then what is wrong with allowing it to be distributed
    in the United States?
733.42LIONEL::SAISIOpining awayFri Feb 26 1988 15:149
	Re .38
       	"You also ignore the fact that every woman (except in the case
				       ^^^^^^^^^^^
       	 of rape) has the option not to get pregnant in the first place."
    
	Fine, but understand that the only way for a woman to assure 
    	- as in 100% certainty - that she won't get pregnant is to be 
    	sterilized, or to remain celibate.  Do you think that these are 
    	reasonable options?
733.43CVG::THOMPSONQuestion realityFri Feb 26 1988 15:3919
    RE: .42 Yes, of course those are reasonable options.
    
    RE: .41 Do you really believe that *most* abortions are the result
    of that being the *only* alternative. In other words most abortions
    are the result of pregnancies were either the mother faces serious
    risk of death or that the baby will be severely deformed? Really? I don't
    but if you have statistics I'd like to see them. The great majority
    of abortions I've heard about are because the mother just didn't
    want to have a baby at that time. With all the people who want to
    adopt, abortion hardly seems like the only alternative in those
    cases.
    
    RE: The topic of abortion. I really don't understand how women
    can support the idea of abortion on demand. I'm sorry I really
    don't. It would be easy for a man to say it's not alive because
    he doesn't ever get to feel an other life in his body. But women
    do!

    				Alfred
733.44 3D::CHABOTRooms 253, &#039;5, &#039;7, and &#039;9Fri Feb 26 1988 16:0525
    Fine.  You don't understand it: now would you please stop calling
    those of us who do understand it "murderers".   If you can't stop
    that, would you like to go away and meditate for a few hours on
    how insensitive you've been to some members of this conference who've
    told us about their experiences.  Topics: have any of your friends
    admitted to having abortions? 
    	a) if yes, have you called her "murderer" to her face?  
    		. if not, why not?
    		. if so, what happened?
    	b) if not, do you suppose that some of them may have but have 
    	   not told you? 
    		. if so, why do you think they wouldn't tell _you_, and 
    		  if there is any reason in your behavior preventing 
    		  someone from telling you about their life, could this 
    		  perhaps be restricting the amount of information on the
    		  subject from which to base your own views.
    		. if not, how are you sure?
    
    >Do you really believe that *most* abortions are the result
     of that being the *only* alternative.
    
    I do not presume to judge.  Others have their own reasons for their
    paths in life; as an outsider, I cannot presume to know these reasons.
    I have met and talked with many women who have talked about having
    abortions: have you?
733.45LIONEL::SAISIOpining awayFri Feb 26 1988 16:4524
    re .43
    	  No I don't believe that most unwanted pregnancies are the result
    	of failed contraception.  I believe the reasons may include:

       	failed contraception
    	ignorance about birth control methods
    	lack of availability of effective birth control
    	irresponsibility
    	demand of the partner for sex without birth control

       	  The only point I am trying to make is, in your opposition
    	to abortion, don't trivialize the effect of an unwanted pregnancy
    	on a woman's life with the satisfying thought, "she was
    	irresponsible, it is her own fault" (which by the way ignores
    	the man's involvement in the whole thing).
    	  At least be honest enough to say, "A woman should not have
    	total control over her body if it is supporting another life.
    	If she get's pregnant against her wishes, too bad."
    	  BTW - an anti-abortionist has alot more credibility with me
    	if they support sex education and confidential birth control
    	counselling in the schools, and full federal funding for
    	family planning centers.  Also government subsidized day care.
    	And does whatever they can to remove the stigma from single
    	motherhood.
733.46Woman's Problem? Then Woman's Choice.PNEUMA::SULLIVANSinging for our livesFri Feb 26 1988 18:4722
    This is not a simple issue.  I would not want to have to
    face the issue of abortion for myself.  And it makes me sad that
    people that I care about have had to face that issue.  But one thing
    that's really clear in my mind is that we have to stop defining
    pregnancy as punishment for having sex.  Also as long as it is legal
    in this country for a woman to choose to terminate a pregnancy,
    it really seems wrong to me that women are being denied access to
    a non-surgical (and possibly safer?) procedure for exercising that
    legal right.   
    
    I think the right to choose is central to women's struggle for
    equality, but I really wish that abortions only had to happen in
    those rarer cases of danger to the mother or failed contraception.
    Not because I define abortion as murder... but because the women
    I've known who have had abortions have suffered greatly both
    physically and emotionally at having had to make that decision.
    In a better world, men and women will share the responsibility for
    avoiding unwanted pregnancy.  I often wonder how many anti-choice
    men have ever engaged in unprotected sexual intercourse with a woman...
    
    Justine                                                               
    
733.47I wanna talk, can I??SALEM::AMARTINnemoW SDEEN sraMFri Feb 26 1988 23:3633
    re:40
    I have been trying to keep from saying anything about this because
    it is a very touchy thing for me but you made a couple of statements
    that piss me right the ....off!
    1. Men are not the only ones that are "prolifers", I know of a couple
    of women that ARE, MY WIFE INCLUDED!
    2. You say that "It is not their decision" (meaning men).  OH REALLY?
    
    Hows this for expressing feelings!
    When I was 19 in the navy I fell in what I thought "in love" with
    (again what I thought) a wonderful women.  We made love when ever
    I came back home from a cruise.  She got pregnant, and while I was
    out to sea she had it aborted!  And as you and others say, I have
    no rights?!  It is not my decision!?  The hell it aint!!!  I "made"
    that human and I sure and hell have as much right to decide as she
    does. (granted it IS her body and no matter what I say it is her
    decision) She did not even tell me until I was home a month or so.
    SO, ALL you people out there, DON'T go telling me that I AS A MAN
    DO NOT UNDERTSAND!  I DO!  I know what it feels like to hurt, I
    know what it feels like to be told I don't matter.  
    I ave a 1 1/2 year old and my wife is due in a couple of weeks.
     I was not ready for another child and neither was my wife.  I have
    my business and school and she has her school.  It happened while
    she was on the pill.  Did sh/we abort? NO!  Why? Because it is life
    and it Is WRONG to take life.  YES, there is a chance that it will
    have problems, but it still is life!  I will love him/her whether
    ner/him is healthy/perfect or complications.  
    With the possibility that I might start sounding UNmacho or (god
    forbid) sensative, I must stop.  These memories/thoughts STILL bring
    back a bunch of PAIN.  Yes I DO FEEL PAIN.  
                                                 Al Martin
    
    PS. Bonnie, thank you.  I do feel better.
733.49speaking from the heartTWEED::B_REINKEwhere the sidewalk endsSat Feb 27 1988 08:227
    re .47 Al, thankyou for speaking out of your own experience and
    pain.
    Bonnie J
  
    also this is a slight rat hole, but in other notes on adoption women
    have inidcated to me that agencies are in general not very supportive
    of women who decide for adoption.
733.50Clearing things upGORT::MACKINNONMon Feb 29 1988 08:0446
    
    
    	RE: 47     
    
    	1. I did not make any reference to the gender of pro-lifers.
           I am very aware that they are both male as well as female.
           I was raised in an Irish-Catholic family which is full of
           pro-lifers both male and female.
    
    	2. Yes I stated that the decision is not the man's decision
           to make.  However, you stated "granted is is her body and
           no matter what I say it is her decision."  So you have
           proved my point that the ultimate decision lies with the
           pregnant woman.
    
    	3. As far as you as a man do not understand.  You are a minority
           in this case.  Yes you do have the right to your feelings
           and no one can take those away from you.  When I had the
           procedure done there were many other woman having it done
           as well.  And after talking to these woman about their
           situations, a common theme was apparent.  And that theme
           was that nearly 2/3's of the fathers demanded the abortions.
           This would tend to send a message that these particular men
    	   did not understand.  
    
    	   The point I wanted to make was that men can not fully understand
           the emotions that a woman feels surrounding this issue.
           I dont believe a man can fully understand what it is like
           to actually experience an abortion because they are not 
           able to go through the procedure.  I did not want to make
           the point that all men dont have any feelings about it.
           It is a very painful thing to have to go through, and
           yes some men experience the hurt because they really care.
           These men though seem to be a minority.
    
    	   As I stated earlier, I was raised in an Irish-Catholic
           family.  And it is against my religion to abort.  
           I aborted because I feel this world of ours is hard
           enough to survive in with your health and a stable
           family unit.  These I could not give my child.
           I was raised in a single parent home and I dont
           feel it is right to deny a child both parents.
           The father of my child was not going to make a
           commitment to his child.  I still feel I made the
           right decision.
           
733.51CVG::THOMPSONQuestion realityMon Feb 29 1988 09:3518
    I don't understand why people assume that I'm against sex education,
    government help in teaching people about birth control, etc just
    because I'm against abortion. I'm all in favor of those things.
    I also don't understand how in spite of several times talking
    about the man's responsibility I keep being unjustly accused of
    just 'blaming' the women for getting pregnant. I've said before
    that I think *both* people should be prepared to raise a child
    before having sex.
    
    As an aside, two women in my family have had abortions. No I did
    not tell them they were murders. Others did though and they both
    now believe they took a life. They each got pregnant at a time in
    their life when they felt they couldn't raise a child again (one
    was involved in an abusive husband situation) but the second
    time they gave the babies up for adoption. The family has been
    very supportive of them both in the second situation.

    			Alfred
733.52exitLEZAH::BOBBITTTea in the Sahara with you...Mon Feb 29 1988 10:1099
/This was forwarded to me from soc.women.  I thought it might interest
    you.
    --------------------------------------------------------------
    
Subj:	RU486

 
According to an article by New York Times reporter Gina Kolata, the
Pro-Life movement has conspired to prevent the use in the USA of a
new drug that could reduce the risks of abortion and make birth
easier and safer for many women.
 
The article appeared locally in the Albany TIMES-UNION under the
headline  "ABORTION DRUG BLOCKED BY FEARS OF RIGHT-TO-LIFERS" on
Monday, Feb. 22, 1988.
 
The article says the drug, RU486, when combined with prostaglandin,
is safer than surgical abortion and  is so effective that, "where it
is available, it may nearly replace surgical abortion in the first
trimester." It is expected to be approved for sale in France and
China in March, and is expected to be marketed within a year in
Sweden, the Netherlands and England.
 
Experts also say it may have a use in other situations, such as in
widening the birth canal, which would enable many women to avoid
Caesarian section. It may also be useful in treating some forms of
breast cancer and endometriosis, "a leading cause of infertility."
 
"Once a drug receives federal approval for marketing for any
purpose, physicians can prescribe it to patients at their
discretion."
 
But here comes the scary stuff. Hoechst-Roussell Pharmaceuticals,
Inc., of Somerville, NJ, which holds the rights to rights to market
the drug in the United States, has declined to ask for FDA
approval.  The reason given is simple: economic survival.
 
The National Right to Life and other anti-choice groups have
threatened to boycott any company that introduces RU486 or any other
abortion-inducing drug. Dr. Richard Glasgow, "education director" of
National Right to Life, has said that NRL would organize a massive
boycott of all the products of any company which did so, unless the
drug was "the only one available for the treatment of a life
threatening illness."
 
The medical profession is understandably upset about the intrusion
of a purely-political, non-medical organization into the sacred duty
of physicians to do what is in their opinion the best thing for
their patients.
 
Because of these anti-choice people, women are being denied a safer,
less expensive way to exercise their hard-won legal right to
abortion.  Indeed, experts predict that RU486 would eliminate
abortion clinics, allowing first trimester abortions to be done by a
woman's own gynecologist in the privacy of a routine visit.
 
And THIS is why the anti-choicers oppose the drug. It strips from
them their ability to monitor who is getting and performing
abortions. No more will the Federal Government be able to restrict
funding based on whether a clinic will perform a lawful abortion for
a woman patient, because they will not be able to tell. No longer
will anti-choice fanatics be able to intimidate, harass and
fire-bomb abortion clinics, since they'd have to do so to every
gynecologist, group practice, hospital and HMO in the country.
 
Something must be done!  Women must NOT be denied the significant
improvement in their safety and privacy which this new drug would
afford. But what can be done ?
 
1. Write your Senator and Representative about it.
 
2. Write NOW or other women's groups about it.
 
3. Organize an ANTI-BOYCOTT: pledge to PREFERENTIALLY BUY
   Hoechst-Roussell products IF they get approval for the drug.
 
4. Form a new corporation, deal with H-R to obtain the rights,
   and get approval. Since the new drug is the only product that
   the new corporation would market, it would be immune to boycott.
 
5. Sink REALLY low: boycott H-R if they DON'T seek approval.
 
Something really should be done. Imagine the difference if you could
discuss an abortion with just your gynecologist or family doctor,
rather than having to go to a stranger at an obvious abortion clinic.
 
Well, women of soc.women, here's the ball. You're a bunch of the
most networked women in the world. You're probably above-average in
economic clout. Many of you are dedicated to the liberation of women
from the oppressions of a male-dominated society.
 
Here's your chance. I think if option 4 above could be done, it
would make a BUNDLE in a very short years. Hell, I'd like to be a
stock-holder, if you'd have me. I could scrape a few K together.
Just don't let any anti-choice people buy stock; keep it a PRIVATE
corporation. Maybe NOW would buy stock ?
 
Good luck.
 
733.53agreed..it can go both ways then.SALEM::AMARTINnemoW SDEEN sraMMon Feb 29 1988 23:332
    RE: 50
     Point taken.  Thank you.
733.54Very complex issue, to my mindHUMAN::BURROWSJim BurrowsSat Mar 05 1988 00:37105
        Complex opinion on a complex topic. If you find contradictions
        in what I'm about to say, that's not too surprising. This is an
        extremely hard ethical issue.
        
        I am both pro-life and pro-choice. Kinda weird, eh?
        
        Personally, I believe that abortion is wrong. I don't know if
        I'd classify it as murder. It is the taking of a life, so far as
        I'm concerned, but there are lots of ways of taking a life that
        are wrong and not murder. I am definitely anti-abortion and I am
        because I am pro-life. 
        
        On the other hand, I recognize that when life starts and when a
        human becomes human is a judgement call, and reasonable people
        can make that call in different ways. I don't see how anyone can
        believe that at least a third trimester fetus with brain
        activity who could survive on its own if it were born premature
        isn't a baby, but before that, I can see that it's a really gray
        issue, and I will admit that just because I can't see doesn't
        make it wrong. So, in the end I'm pro-choice. We have to allow
        people to make the moral judgement themselves. 
        
        I think that the drug should be made available. It should be
        controlled just as any other drug is. It has other uses, uses
        that can save lives. It is a terrible thing to outlaw something
        that could save lives just because it can be abused. Regulate it
        if need be, but to ban it--either by law or by intimidation is,
        I think, wrong.
        
        Would I tell my friends who have had abortions that they are
        murderers? No. Have I told friends that have had or considered
        abortions that I think it is the taking of a life and wrong?
        Yes. I've also told them that I would support them in whatever
        they had to do. I have told them that it is a hard moral
        judgement to make and to live with. I have told them what my
        moral judgement is. I have advised them if they requested
        advice. But I have also told them that it is their decision, and
        that I love and respect them and that I will support them even
        if they make crucial moral judgment calls differently than I
        would. Isn't that what friendship is all about? Haven't we all
        made wrong calls in our lives? 
        
        Should we have funerals for miscarried fetuses? Well, in our
        case maybe it would have helped. Maybe it would have helped me
        to resolve my grief better than just weeping about it
        periodically over the last several months. Maybe it would have
        made it clearer to my six year old, so that when the due date
        came around he wouldn't have started talking about the baby that
        was growing in Mama's tummy and would come out soon, 4 months
        after we'd lost it.
        
        My baby died last summer. It doesn't matter that it wasn't born
        yet. It doesn't matter that my wife had been having problems
        during the pregnancy, and it probably would have had problems.
        It was still my baby, and it had lived and moved and gladdened
        our hearts and it died. At times I feel worse about that loss
        than about any of my other relatives that have died. They at
        least knew the joys of life, however briefly. Maybe if we'd
        treated it like the death it was it would be easier to live
        with.
        
        If you have sex when you can't or won't be responsible to raise
        the child, and a life gets started, something unfair and wrong
        is going to happen. The only question is what. By the time
        you're in the situation of an unwanted pregnancy you've already
        lost. My view here is very similar to my view on divorce. There
        is no fair outcome. If you break a single household into two,
        the ecconomic reality is that someone will suffer. The question
        is who. 
        
        Similarly, my own solution to the problem is to avoid the
        situation. There are several ways you can avoid it. Always be
        willing to be responsible for children you might create. Only
        have sex in the context of a relationship which you are willing
        to turn into a full-time at least 20 year commitment. Always use
        multiple effective forms of birth control. Once you've had all
        the children you want--consider sterilization. 
        
        The draw-backs of my solutions are the same, too. You can't
        completely wipe out failed marriages, and you can't wipe out
        unwanted pregnancies. Given that, unless you deny people the
        right to make moral choices, you can't eliminate divorce or
        abortion. BUT both could be reduced by a couple orders of
        magnitutde, if people would just take full responsibility for
        their lives. Both situations inevitably lead to suffering, and
        the situations are moderately avoidable. That we allow all of
        that suffering is tragic. 
        
        Rather than fight about abortion, divorce, and alimony, it would
        be far far better to work to avoid unwanted pregnancy, and to
        work to keep marriages working. It is more important to teach
        the coming generations how to take responsibility for their
        lives and to make their lives work, and to understand that in
        some situations there is no win, no fair solution.
        
        The solution is to focus on love, to love our spouses and the
        children we make, to love the children made by others who can't
        or won't raise them, to love our friends who are in bad
        situations and have no good way out. The solution is not to
        focus on our own selfish needs when we have helped to build a
        situation where someone will suffer. The solution is to not
        create situations where the rights and well being of the
        husband, wife and child are all in mutual conflict. 
        
        JimB. 
733.55Female Choice & Male NoChoice????YODA::BARANSKIWords have too little bandwidth...Tue Apr 05 1988 15:4969
"Second, if a fetus is human, then why don't they hold a funeral when a
miscarriage occurs?"

Many people do. 

RE: .12

'Why allow abortion is mother's life is endangered?'

The case where abortion should be considered is when the pregnancy/birth
threatens the mother's life to the extent that both the mother and the baby will
die, in which case performing the abortion allows the mother to live, even
though in either case, the baby would die.

I draw the line of where 'humanness' starts at conception.  Conception is a
discrete event, making it an easy place to draw the line.  It is harder to draw
a concrete line any other place between conception and birth.  Certainly in the
last months before birth, a fetus is human.  Consider what it would be like to
consider children nonhuman?  "Certainly by any adult standards, the little
buggers are *insane*!" 

RE: .26 "And what about the man?"

The man has to pay 1/3rd of his gross pay in child support for the next 18
years *or more*.  I consider that more devastivating then carrying an unwanted
child to birth.  To put it bluntly, I'd rather be @#&ed!

RE: .28  'Men should pay even if they wish to have the child aborted'

That sounds like blatent discrimination to me!  Let me get this straight;
you say that:

Women should be able to have an abortion for any reason.
Men should not have any say in whether their baby is aborted or not.
Men should not have any say in whether they support the child or not.

allow me to assume:

Women may choose to have their children adopted or not.
Men may not have any say in whether their children are put up for adoption.

What do those statements say to you, People?  To me, a man, I say they suck!

I have two lovely young sons, the first of whom was concieved when we were both
in school, and neither of us had a full time job.  Did we consider abortion? No.
Neither of these children were planned or wanted, but they have a right to life.

RE: .50

"As far as you as a man do not understand.  You are a minority in this case. And
that theme was that nearly 2/3's of the fathers demanded the abortions. This
would tend to send a message that these particular men did not understand. " 

Why do you feel Al (and I) do not understand?  Why, just because he is amoung
the ?minority? of fathers who want their children to have a right to life should
he not have any say in the matter?  By your rationale that fathers who do not
want the children do not understand, fathers who DO want the children should be
deemed as understanding, and *should* have some say in the matter!  As more and
more male are given a *CHANCE* to "parent" more will want their children, and
more will want the choice to "parent" their children and be supported by someone
else! 

Trivia:  Hearing men talk about sterilization, and women talk about abortion, I
have heard the women say that the feelings the men describe undergoing
sterilization to be very similiar to that of a woman having/had an abortion.

Oh, and about the topic?  The drug should be made available.

Jim. 
733.56It's her body; she makes the choicesOPHION::KARLTONPhil Karlton, Western Software LabTue Apr 05 1988 21:1030
    Re: .55
    
    Here is what I, as one man, do say
    
    o  Women should be able to have an abortion for any reason.
    
    o  Men should not have any say in whether the baby is aborted or not.
    
    o  The non-custodial parent should not have any say in whether they
       support the child or not. The responsibility is to the child,
       not to the other parent.
    
    o  If the custodial parent chooses to relinquish that burden, then
       the non-custodial parent should have an opportunity to become the
      custodian.
    
    The first two points are not gender blind because it is the woman
    who must carry the fetus in her body. It may not seem "fair", but
    that is one fact of life that has not be changed, yet.
    
    Re: trivia and men talking about sterilization: my feeling undergoing
    sterilization was merely one that my wife would no longer have to
    assume the risk of taking birth control pills. I cannot imagine
    that would be at all similar to "that of a woman having/had an
    abortion." Your "trivial" point, trivializes the real pain and
    suffering that some members of this conference, no doubt, have had
    deal with.
    
    PK
    
733.57MYCRFT::PARODIJohn H. ParodiWed Apr 06 1988 09:5012
  >>"Second, if a fetus is human, then why don't they hold a funeral when a
  >>miscarriage occurs?"

  >Many people do. 

  No they don't, Jim.  Many people hold a memorial service but that
  service almost never involves cremation or burial, as a funeral does.
  Therefore, there is a difference in the treatment of fetal remains and
  human remains. 

  JP
733.58MARCIE::JLAMOTTEThe best is yet to beWed Apr 06 1988 15:121
    Catholics hold a burial service after the fetus reaches six months.
733.59CASV01::AUSTINC&#039;mon Eddie, kiss your Aunt BunnyTue Apr 12 1988 12:0118
    I believe that a woman should have the right to do what she wants
    with her body, period!  
    
    But I can't see how there can be an argument about whether the 
    fetus is human or not.  That, to me, is just bullsh*t used to justify
    the act of abortions.
                         
    We all started out as fetuses right?  and if we were aborted
    we wouldn't be here right?  So whats the argument?
                         
    Woman have abortions for many reasons and thats their business, but
    all the junk about whether its killing a human life or not, in my opinion 
    is ridiculous.  Thats obvious!
                         
                         
   Tanya                      
                         
733.60Problem is, pregnancy isn't an EOEJENEVR::CHELSEAMostly harmless.Tue Apr 12 1988 19:4412
    To me, it's a case of irreconcilable positions.
    
    It's the woman's body and she shouldn't be forced to undergo the
    risks and discomforts of pregnancy unless she wants to.
    
    The child is a product of both the mother *and* the father, and
    neither has a right to deprive the other of that offspring *or*
    to force the other to provide that offspring.
    
    A woman who doesn't want a child can wind up carrying one to term.
    A man who really wants a child can wind up losing one before term.
    Biology is so inconsiderate sometimes.
733.61Abortion and AdoptionMARCIE::JLAMOTTEThe best is yet to beTue Apr 12 1988 20:1321
    .60
    
    "or force .....to provide for that offspring"
    
    The child is a product of both the mother *and* the father and they
    both should share equally in the emotional and financial support of their
    offspring.  This is a moral responsibility and their are legal
    requirements for the support of children which in some cases are
    not fair or equitable.
    
    Should a prospective father be able to prevent an abortion or insist
    on one...emphatically no.  But should there be some recourse for
    a man who was coerced into impregnating a woman?  Yes.  Should a
    man be able to adopt his child if the mother puts it out for adoption?
    Yes.  And last but not least should a father be able to force the
    mother to put the child up for adoption?  That's a tough one...but
    it is something we have to think about.  We (women) cannot have
    it all and if we do not have a contract (marriage) that spells out
    either explicitly or by implication the responsibilities of the
    partners we may have to accept the fact that if we choose to keep
    an unplanned child we may have to raise that child alone.
733.62No simple answersULTRA::WITTENBERGSecure Systems for Insecure PeopleWed Apr 13 1988 11:1947
>< Note 733.59 by CASV01::AUSTIN "C'mon Eddie, kiss your Aunt Bunny" >

>    I believe that a woman should have the right to do what she wants
>    with her body, period!  

    There are  limits to all freedoms. It's illegal in many states for
    a person to commit suicide, which is another limit on what a woman
    (or a man, for that matter) can do with her body.


>                         
>    We all started out as fetuses right?  and if we were aborted
>    we wouldn't be here right?  So whats the argument?

    And before  that  we were all zygotes, and gametes before that. At
    some  point  it  becomes  ludicrous  to  speak  of a small part of
    something has the same as the person (I wouldn't call each atom in
    a  body fundamentally human.) The fundamental disagreement between
    the  pro-choice  and  pro-life groups is over when life begins. It
    seems  that almost everyone agrees that it begins sometime between
    fertiliaztion and birth (inclusive).

    And if  our parents hadn't met some place we wouldn't be here, but
    I don't regard my parents meeting place as somehow human.


>                         
>    Woman have abortions for many reasons and thats their business, but
>    all the junk about whether its killing a human life or not, in my opinion 
>    is ridiculous.  Thats obvious!

    Do you really believe that killing humans is acceptable? Are there
    any  limits  on  who  I  can  kill?  This is patently absurd. Even
    genocidal groups (including the Nazis and the southern lynch mobs,
    among  others)  first  convince  themselves that their victims are
    somehow not human before they can justify the killings.


    I wish  I  could  see  this  issue  as  a simple one, but it isn't
    simple.  Most  real  world  problems  aren't and we do ourselves a
    disservice  by  trying  to apply simple solutions to problems that
    aren't simple.

    "For every  problem  there  is a solution that is simple, obvious,
    and wrong."

--David
733.63can you try a dead person?CADSYS::SULLIVANKaren - 225-4096Wed Apr 13 1988 11:5416
	RE: .62

	I'm sorry, I just had to laugh!  

�>    I believe that a woman should have the right to do what she wants
�>    with her body, period!  
�
�    There are  limits to all freedoms. It's illegal in many states for
�    a person to commit suicide, which is another limit on what a woman
�    (or a man, for that matter) can do with her body.

	What are they going to do, jail them?  Give them the death
	sentence? :-)

	But seriously, the fact that laws exist is never a justification 
	to a moral stance.
733.64They *Were* ProsecutedFDCV03::ROSSWed Apr 13 1988 12:1315
    RE: .63
    
       > What are thet going to do, jail them? Give them the death
       > sentence? :-)
    
    Karen, at one (still may be on the statute books) time in
    Massachusetts, a person who attempted suicide - and failed -
    was criminally prosecuted for his/her attempt.
    
    At the least, he/she was "institutionalized" against his/her
    will, for a period of time (Presumably until this aberrant
    tendency was cured).
     
      Alan               
    
733.65another way of looking at itVIA::RANDALLback in the notes life againWed Apr 13 1988 12:1720
    re: .62
    
    Every time you kill another person, it isn't considered a murder.
    Sometimes it's considered "justifiable homocide" or even just bad
    luck. 
    
    Self-defense is one well-known category.  So is killing in war. We
    don't blame a policeman for killing a criminal or a person who
    caused someone else's death in a traffic accident. Well, sometimes
    we do, depending on the circumstances, but generally it's just
    an unfortunate accident.
    
    For many of us, abortion falls in the same category.  We don't
    want to gloss over the fact that we're ending a human life when we
    have an abortion, but we acknowledge the mother's right to end
    that life rather than carry it to term.  
    
    That doesn't make it murder, though. 
    
    --bonnie
733.66updateGNUVAX::BOBBITTshowtime, Synergy...Fri May 06 1988 14:2616
    On the news this morning:
    
    Although it is suspected that this new drug could do more than cause
    simple abortions (with a Doctor's guidance - of course - the only
    safe way to use anything of this nature) - i.e. widen the birth
    canal for difficult births and also provide birth control of a sort
    - the company that has the rights to it will not even seek FDA approval
    in the US for distribution.  It is simply too controversial, and
    would result in too many people boycotting the drug company's other
    products (this from a company higher-up).  There were intimations
    of some sort of health risk associated with its use, but the company
    assured that, with proper guidance from a doctor, there are no great
    hazards associated with the drug.  
    
    -Jody
    
733.67how trivial...YODA::BARANSKIWould You rather be Happy or Right?Tue May 10 1988 20:0114
You may not have had any emotional reaction to being sterilized, but I know of
other men who have.  I think that in calling their experience 'trivializing' you
trivialize their experience.

I do not see any emotional difference between a memorial service and a funeral.
Aren't cases where there is no recoverable bodies also memorial services? I have
been to funerals called memorial services and vice versa, and have not seen a
difference. 

Some of the reasons for killing humans without it being murder mentioned
are: Self Defense, War, Accident, killing Criminals.  I do not see how abortion
fits into any of these categories and thus be 'killing but not murder'. 

JMB
733.68Abortion can never be "murder" if it is legal.STAR::BECKPaul Beck | DECnet-VAXWed May 11 1988 00:554
    Murder is an emotionally charged word, and is generally misapplied
    to abortions with the specific intent of stirring emotion. However,
    technically, murder is the *unlawful* taking of human life. Any
    abortion which is performed within the law is therefore NOT murder. 
733.69AKOV11::BOYAJIANMonsters from the IdWed May 11 1988 03:0722
    re:.67
    
    �Some of the reasons for killing humans without it being murder
    mentioned are: Self Defense, War, Accident, killing Criminals. I
    do not see how abortion fits into any of these categories and
    thus be 'killing but not murder'.�
    
    Why does it have to fit any of those categories? Is the list of
    "reasons for killing humans without it being murder" a closed
    set? Why can't abortion just be added to the list?  I'm not
    asking for your specific arguments against abortion. Forget that
    it's abortion that's being discussed. I'm just wondering why
    some action cannot be added to the list.
    
    As the previous note said, the law *defines* what is (and, by
    extension, what is not) murder. The listed "reasons for killing
    without it being murder" are not murder because the law says so,
    not because of a higher moral reason.
    
    > JMB
    
    --- the other jmb
733.70MYCRFT::PARODIJohn H. ParodiWed May 11 1988 09:4620
  >I do not see any emotional difference between a memorial service and a
  >funeral. Aren't cases where there is no recoverable bodies also memorial
  >services? I have been to funerals called memorial services and vice
  >versa, and have not seen a difference. 

  The point is that many families do not hold even a memorial service for
  a miscarriage while most families do opt for some kind of funeral for
  the death of an infant, child, or adult (whether or not the body is
  available for the service).  Therefore it is clear that there really is
  and has been a distinction between a fetus and a human in the minds of
  most people. 

  And that's why many people do not like statements of the form: "A human
  is a human from the instant of conception and taking the life of a human
  is murder."

  That is a matter of opinion and not at all obvious...

  JP
733.71(for a discussion of ectopic pregnancy, see 602.*)MOSAIC::TARBETThu May 12 1988 13:2053
    The following response is from a member of our community who wishes
    to remain anonymous at this time.
    
    						=maggie
    
    ===================================================================

    First, I want to explain I am not generally in favor of abortions -
    this is my own opinion.  I figure it's a woman's choice; it just
    doesn't happen to be my choice.  I also would never "judge" someone who
    had one, it's not my place or my business.  So, I've at least explained
    how *I* feel about it. 

    So, after reading all of the replies to 733, I was just wondering how
    the rest of you felt about a related question.  For all of the
    pro-lifers out there, what about an ectopic pregnancy? 

    Anyway, when a woman is having an ectopic pregnancy, the pregnancy must
    be terminated in order to save the woman's life.  There is no other
    option. Allowed to continue, the fallopian tube will rupture and the
    mother will hemorrhage and die.  For real.  Forever.  A lot of women
    come too close. 

    When an ectopic pregnancy is terminated, the fetus is still alive when
    the procedure begins, (even tho it is "doomed"), and the fetus ends up
    in the bottom of a stainless steel pan, destined for the path lab.  The
    woman ends up with a BIG scar, mentally and physically, all the pain of
    a major abdominal surgery, and more times than not, a lot of guilt. 

    An ectopic pregnancy is never planned.  As a matter of fact, I would
    venture to say that most pregnancies that end as an ectopic, were
    wanted pregnancies. 

    What I read in the replies to 733 by the pro-lifers is this:  The
    taking of a life is the taking of a life. 

    Should a woman who has had this unfortunate experience more than once
    be termed a "multiple murderer?"  I mean, it's bad enough to have the
    surgery, the dissapointment, the anguish, the grief, the self-doubt,
    the self-inflicted "blame", but to be "judged" by others a "murderer"
    ... well, that's really tough to take ... 

    Please don't flame me, please be gentle with me, I, unfortunately,
    speak from lotsa experience.  Four of them.  No more of them. 

    The logical side of me says "Who cares what other people think?  They
    don't have enough insight."  But the human side of me says "Please
    don't judge me, I've blamed me enough.  Don't call me a murderer; I
    didn't want to die, too. I love my husband and the one child we do
    have.  Instead, comfort us in our losses." 

                                               
733.72One of us is missreading somethingCVG::THOMPSONLet&#039;s move Engineering to FloridaThu May 12 1988 13:319
>        What I read in the replies to 733 by the pro-lifers is this:  The
>    taking of a life is the taking of a life. 

    I missed the reply that said that abortion that was medically necessary
    to save a woman's life was wrong. Which one was it? I'm sure it did
    not mean it was wrong in a case like this where neither mother *or*
    baby have a chance or choice. Please point out the reply I missed.
    
    				Alfred
733.73hmmmGNUVAX::BOBBITTshowtime, Synergy...Thu May 12 1988 14:5519
re: .68
>    Murder is an emotionally charged word, and is generally misapplied
>    to abortions with the specific intent of stirring emotion. However,
>    technically, murder is the *unlawful* taking of human life. Any
>    abortion which is performed within the law is therefore NOT murder. 

    a very good point.  Murder also implies that you want as your absolute
    main goal to kill whoever or whatever is being considered, with no
    consideration given to any other issues that may surround it.  You
    cannot murder something that you do not consider to be alive (for those
    who do not believe a human life is fully realized at the moment of
    conception).  Also, some people who have abortions don't want to stop
    the baby's life just for the sake of killing something, they simply
    realize that having the child may seriously damage their own life
    (physically, mentally, emotionally...), and the term murder would imply
    much malice aforethought where there may be none. 
    
    -the third JMB
    
733.74CASV02::AUSTINC&#039;mon Eddie, kiss your Aunt BunnyThu May 12 1988 15:0135
    re .72      
                
                
    I missed the part of the reply in .71 that quoted any reply or replies
    saying that "abortion that was medically necessary to save a woman's 
    life was wrong".  Please point out that quote in .71's reply I missed.
                                                                 
    I think YOU were missreading something.  BTW please correct me if
    I am assuming wrong Anon.  I think .71 is saying that what she got
    of reading all of the replies in 733 by the pro-lifers CAME across
    to her as saying "taking a life is taking a life" period! no if
    ands or buts.                                                
                                                                 
    Anon, I am very sorry about losses.                          
                                                                 
    Tanya                                                          
                                                                 
                                                                 
                                                                 
                                                                 
                                                                 
                                                                 
                                                                 
                                                                 
                                                                 
                                                                 
                                                                 
                                                                 
                                                                 
                                                                 
                                                                 
                                                                 
                                                                 
                                                                 
                                                                 
733.75ASD::HOWERHelen HowerFri May 13 1988 09:0812
	further to .71

	While the author did not state it explicitly, I believe that
	in the case of an ectopic (sp?) pregnancy, not only would the pregnancy 
	have killed the mother if allowed to continue, but the fetus would 
	not have survived anyway.  It isn't a case of "save the mother OR
	save the fetus" (a tough situation of its own!), but one of "save 
	anyone".  Which would seem to make it even more tragic that she
	feels that some would brand her as a "murderer" for choosing to live....

	
		Helen
733.76CVG::THOMPSONLet&#039;s move Engineering to FloridaFri May 13 1988 12:0123
    I understand that the person in .71 was saying that they felt
    that the anti-abortion people were saying that taking a life is
    taking a life period. The clear (to me) implication, since this
    person appears to be dealing with some guilt (externally pushed?)
    about abortion in her own case. It is also clear in her case that
    these abortions were clearly medically necessary but that she
    believed that anti-abortion people were putting her in the same
    class as someone who has an abortion just for the sake of birth
    control. Am I on the right track so far? My impression is that
    .71 said a) "that anti-abortion people said that abortion is
    taking a life" b) "that anti-abortion people said that taking 
    a life is taking a life" c) and that a + b implies that there
    are no justifiable reasons for taking a life.
    
    My point was that her assumptions (other then a) are wrong (at least 
    in the case of the people who have replied to this topic). Further I 
    was trying to say that anti-abortion people in this note have
    explicitly said that abortions required to save a mother's life are a 
    special case and are not evil things. I know of no anti-abortion
    person who disapproves of medically necessary abortions. (regret
    perhaps) 
    
    			Alfred