T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1053.1 | pointers | LEZAH::BOBBITT | the phoenix-flowering dark rose | Tue Mar 27 1990 15:58 | 9 |
| See also:
Womannotes-V1
406 - Fetal Rights vs. Maternal Rights
Womannotes-V2
735 - two-legged incubators
|
1053.2 | Intent | SALEM::KUPTON | | Tue Mar 27 1990 16:18 | 6 |
| Isn't 8-1/2 months cutting it a bit close........34 weeks is viable.
I don't think the woman had the intent to kill....that's the
difference.
Ken
|
1053.3 | Who "rules" the womb? | WJOUSM::DECAMP | | Tue Mar 27 1990 16:41 | 10 |
| Ken,
Your point is well taken on the "intent". However, I wonder if a
clever pro-life attorney could argue the case of "negligent homicide"?
What concerns me about all of the cases cited is the establishment of
laws that govern the womb. The statement on the woman as a "vessel" is
particularly powerful in that regard.
Chris
|
1053.4 | I rule mine... | WFOV12::APODACA | Little Black Duck | Tue Mar 27 1990 16:48 | 10 |
| Seems like we are entering a stage in reproduction when you're damned
if you do, and damned if you don't. I think the statement that
so-called fetal rights are overtaking the rights of the woman "vessel"
pretty much hit the nail on the nose. Just makes me all that more
inclined to say I'll never have children.
Pretty sad. Aren't there other "rights" we as a society should
be worrying about?
---kim
|
1053.5 | Another pointer (a little less optomistic perhaps_ | TLE::D_CARROLL | Sisters are doin' it for themselves | Tue Mar 27 1990 16:49 | 6 |
| See also:
The Handmaid's Tale
(Margateret Atwood)
D!
|
1053.6 | | FSHQA1::AWASKOM | | Tue Mar 27 1990 18:28 | 21 |
| I have to say that the concept that a woman is somehow 'required'
to produce a healthy infant, or stand accused of a crime, is
unbelieveably frightening. *NO ONE* can guarantee, even with the
best will in the world, excellent pre-natal care, 'correct' levels
of exercise, good nutrition, etc. etc. that the infant which is
born will be perfect. The medical profession both disagrees and
changes, on a regular basis, the guidelines for what the mother
needs to do to have a healthy infant. (Remember when moms were
hospitalized if they gained more than 20 lbs? If I'm over 30 and
refuse an amnio, have I done a good or bad thing? If I run every
day, when should I stop? Doctors disagree.)
So many of the consequences of drug use and malnutrition impact
the embryo *before the woman is even sure she is pregnant* - shall
we blame the *woman* for her circumstances?
I despair that our society will ever manage to approach these problems
with the compassion and care that will result in 'justice' for both
the mothers and the infants.
Alison
|
1053.7 | | GEMVAX::CICCOLINI | | Wed Mar 28 1990 12:41 | 110 |
| This a very hot button for me. Since I've been given to ranting and
raving in the past, I'm going to just let this all out and if it looks
like paranoia or seems far-fetched, so be it. But this is what I truly
believe.
"The fetus" is the latest tool being used in society's desperate
attempt to retain control over women, which it has been losing steadily
since the 60s in general, the invention of reliable birth control in
particular. I really believed the abortion issue was so heated because
it was the last area of control over women. Once we secured the right
to determine our own fertility and could then embark on a work life
free from the specter of ever-impending pregnancy, we would be as free
as men. But I was wrong. From abortion, the arena is now shifting to
pregnancy itself. If the government can't decree that once pregnant,
women will remain pregnant, then it will change its focus to pregnancy
itself secure in the knowledge that that will involve nearly every woman's
life.
As women become increasingly autonomous and less dependent on having to
please men in order to get one in order to gain legitimacy, society
tries harder and harder to find ways to limit that autonomy, afraid, I
assume, that women will discover that they have another agenda and will
remove their support from the patriarchal systems which produce war,
which value gold and oil over human lives, etc. Government must insure
that women support patriarchy and male goals or risk losing a huge tax
base, a huge constituency, a huge cheap labor pool, a huge smut
industry, etc.
The fetus provides the perfect opportunity since very few would argue
against the goal of insuring healthy babies.
Where society used to pit men against women, it now pits women against
their wombs attempting to separate women from fetuses, dealing with
them as two distinct entities. The fetus's rights versus the mother's
rights. The fetus IS the mother and vice versa. Perhaps the
underlying belief of "society", (or those in it who would attempt to
separate out a part of a woman and claim it theirs rather than hers),
is that nature, (or a deity), was wrong or shortsighted or something
when it decided that humans would begin life as part of women. Society
seems to have an awful time accepting that all of its members must
begin life completely dependent on women - human women who run the full
gamut of behaviors, quirks, attitudes and habits that all humans do.
In separating out fetuses from women, society is suggesting that
suddenly, after all the years and all the humans who have managed to be
born healthy enough to overpopulate the planet, this dependence is a
dangerous thing and official steps must now be taken to "protect"
fetuses from women. Give me a break. Extrapolating this trend a
little, is it so difficult to imagine that in the next century
pregnancy itself might be illegal and parents will be expected to
incubate all their offspring in artifical wombs, (which now exist!),
where every aspect of their development can be controlled and "protected"
from the foibles of women? This is a dangerous trend and I really do
believe if left unchecked, it will continue on to this end.
This would be another good application of the article I entered in the
"Do women cost more" string. Alcoholism, drug dependence, violence,
aggressive driving, all these "bad" things that society is trying to
protect fetuses from is far more prevalent in the male than in the fe-
male. There is an increase in FAS and cocaine babies, that's true. But
by even thinking about enacting laws, our government is subtlely sug-
gesting that the reason is because women as a group are becoming more
irresponsible and therefore must now be controlled because they can no
longer be trusted with the job of bearing children.
More and more we will hear about women being prosecuted for these
ridiculous reasons and each time we do, a legal precedent is set and the
way is paved for more stringent controls in the future. If nothing else,
the hypocrisy alone betrays the underlying goal. Drug treatment centers
don't take pregnant women but the overcrowded jails will! In Boston
alone, criminals are being released early to ease overcrowding.
They're release also makes room for "bad mommies". If you had one jail
cell, one murderer and one pregnant woman who doesn't like exercise, who
would YOU put in the cell and why?
Somewhere back in the 40s or 50s, the American Medical Association took
pregnancy away from women. Before then, women delivered via midwives
and men pretty much were excluded. But then the AMA formed and lobbied
to make midwifery illegal. For about 10 years after that, the maternal
*and infant* mortality rate soared as physicians went through a
learning curve to gain the experience and wisdom the outlawed midwives
possessed. This dramatic increase in mortality rate certainly isn't
something the country was informed about but it is clear to me that an
increase in deaths for women and babies was not considered a problem -
or at least was considered just an unfortunate side effect of achieving
the goal - societal control of women via control of pregnancy.
The trend continues, now in the 90s, via this new wrinkle and we are
expected to swallow this pap that the government, (and doctors of
course), are soooooo concerned with healthy women and babies. It just
isn't true. Fetal rights are women's rights and vice versa. Fetuses
belong to women just as surely as women's heart do and that the
government would "use" fetuses as leverage in their battle for control
disgusts me. As a group, women have done and will continue to do a
superlative job of keeping the species viable. That this world is
overpopulated due in large part to governments withholding fertility
control from women is no mere coincidence!
I too would like to see all babies be born healthy and wanted. But
unfortunately, it was set up that new humans will have to come from "mere"
humans - some good, some not so good. Who is the government to decide
that this system isn't a good one - that the very humanness of women is
what makes them unfit for doing the job unsupervised and uncontrolled?
And how can we as women sit back and let these clowns try to convince
us of this? If we ever manage to coalesce into the strong political
force we could be, the first thing we need to do is to take back
pregnancy - put it back squarely in the hands of women. That is where
it was placed in the beginning and I for one have no delusions of
grandeur or self-importance or the arrogance to suggest that *I* know
better. But your government does. Beware!
|
1053.8 | rant and rave on!! | WJOUSM::DECAMP | | Wed Mar 28 1990 13:49 | 7 |
| That was certainly some of the best ranting and raving I have ever
read. I, too, share the fear that if we sit by and say "Gee, look at
that!" and never comprehend that the invasion of the womb by law is
gradually taking away our rights and freedom, we have started to
regress to a place where we may never return from. I can't sit by and
be complacent and I hope that many of you reading this cannot, also.
|
1053.9 | do I need to say this is sarcasm... | TINCUP::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Wed Mar 28 1990 20:31 | 17 |
| But Sandy, I think you're wrong about the effect of artificial wombs.
Just think about it. At puberty, when our eggs are fresh and men's
sperm is most virile, the government makes everyone donate a supply of
their future off-spring. They are then sterilized.
Now it gets good. Since we don't have to worry about people loving each
other the scientists can mix and match to produce super babies. They
can mix races till we have a nice average conglomerate sort of
individual produced. They can weed out birth defects and breed for
intelligence.
Now just don't worry about the fact that collie breeders created dogs
with pointy heads and no brains, or that quarter horse breeders created
horses with tiny feet that looked good but couldn't support the horse's
big bodies. We could have women with gigantic breasts and men with
enormous penises. And they'd all have the brains to know just what the
bastards did to them. Or not. liesl
|
1053.10 | The Real National Tragedy | USCTR2::DONOVAN | | Thu Mar 29 1990 00:18 | 12 |
| re: MEMVAX::Ciccolini
350,000 babies born in the USA were born last year were drug addicted.
That, to me, is worthy of some attention.
Crack cocaine is epidemic. It's appealing to women. It's killing our
children.
What do you want to do about it?
Kate
|
1053.11 | Plenty! | GEMVAX::CICCOLINI | | Thu Mar 29 1990 11:09 | 62 |
| What do I want to do about it? First off, treatment centers should
make pregnant women a priority and government funds should be available
for those who can't afford to pay. Welfare should stop penalizing
women, (and men), who find work. The system should not offer a free
ride, but should *supplement* the incomes of those who need it thereby
encouraging people to take control of their lives and plan for better
futures for themselves like all of us are trying to do. Don't give
people food stamps with which they can buy sara lee cakes and trade for
cash to buy booze and drugs, give them nutritious FOOD instead. You
can buy bubblegum with food stamps but you can't buy toilet paper.
If a *chance* for a better life exists and is dependent upon people
taking some initiative and control, (just as there is for the middle
and upper classes), then social pressure against those who lie
down and go belly up can be a more effective anti-drug tool than if
there is no place to go - nothing a woman can do to break out of the
poverty that too often leaves her fertility uncontrolled and the
uncontrolled fertility that chains her to more poverty.
Everyone knows the good feeling of accomplishment, the sense of pride
in making one's own way. This is the best tool we can use to break
this cycle but as our system is run now, that is removed. A woman
makes out much better financially by having a baby than by taking a part
time job in a restaurant as a dishwasher. The reward system needs to be
tied more closely to those aspects of humanity that are good for all - the
sense of pride and accomplishment. It won't turn around overnight,
but gradually it will begin to dawn on people that there IS a better way
and it is within their reach. And as success stories begin to unfold,
social pressure to take that route begins to grow and fewer and fewer
people will be subject to the abject hopelessness that is most often the
cause of true addictions.
Doctors too have a stake in this. Entrance to medical schools is
highly competetive so what is the one thing it "selects" for? Highly
competetive students. And that makes for a profession not of healers
so much as highly competetive people. And this is responsible for
the dramatic increase in "heroic" medicine and the subsequent decrease
in "general" medicine. Few doctors want to give free prenatal care to
a poor, pregnant woman but they love to "save" cocaine babies, do
transplants, invent prostheses. Remember these are highly competetive
people motivated toward personal success. Medicine is still a profes-
sion more of "fixing" rather than preventing and ever since the old
days of DeBakey in Texas and Barnard in South Africa, doctors have
acquired a taste for fame and some are even celebrities. Look at
Jarvik for a recent example. They don't want to administer vitamins to
poor pregnant women, they want to do the first brain transplant!
In short, the increase in drug-addicted babies, (and I include alcohol
and nicotine as drugs which the government of course, does not), is NOT
due to an increase in irresponsibility of women and we cannot allow the
government to bamboozle us into thinking that it is and that they will
simply jail these women because they don't have the money to start
them down the road to pride and self-accomplishment. It was spent on a
stealth bomber or a limo or a hooker for some visiting dignitary or a
lavish reception for Charles and Diana. You pay a lot of social
security too and our elderly are literally freezing and starving in
their homes. Why? Presidents regularly "borrow" from the Social
Security account because it's so flush! We have become a government of
the government, by the government and for the government and all of us
here at Digital were fortunate enough to get on the road to pride and
accomplishment such that we are able to protect ourselves against this
and live decently anyway.
|
1053.12 | Fetal Viability | EXIT26::POND | | Fri Mar 30 1990 10:37 | 2 |
| RE: .2 - For legal purposes, fetal viability begins at 28 weeks.
|
1053.13 | Gov't Stay Out | HYSTER::DELISLE | | Fri Mar 30 1990 11:22 | 21 |
| What if the basenote wasw slightly different, and read that the mother
had a newborn baby, one hour old, riding unprotected on the seat
beside her, when due to drunk driving she had an accident, and the baby
died as a result.
How would that change things? Would she be guilty of negligent
manslaughter because she was drunk? Or because he was not in a car
seat? Or nothing, because afterall he was only an hour old, and
afterall he was HER baby.
Unfortunately, I think government often attempts to step in on
tragedies such as this, and think that by passing a law, making a court
judgement or punishing someone, that this kind of tragic accident will
no longer happen. It just ain't so. It was an accident. Yes, I think
the mother was negligent, she should not have been driving, she should
not have been drinking. But these things happen, and no amount of law
making will prevent them.
Ultimately we are all responsible for only our own actions. That woman
has one hellish memory to live with.
|
1053.14 | Like this? | EGYPT::SMITH | Passionate committment/reasoned faith | Fri Mar 30 1990 16:56 | 5 |
| Do you mean like coming up with a new process (here at DEC) to deal
with a situation that was caused because someone didn't follow the
existing process? As if a better process would somehow eliminate
the inconsistencies, personal preferences and problems, etc., of human
beings?
|
1053.15 | :Ellen Goodman: Woman vs. womb | EGYPT::SMITH | Passionate committment/reasoned faith | Fri Mar 30 1990 17:27 | 59 |
| From Ellen Goodman's column in the Boston Globe, March 29:
"In 1990, the very words 'fetal protection' have taken on a meaning in
real life that is nearly as chilling as 'The handmaid's Tale' is on the
screen. They are used now to pit fetus against the woman. Indeed,
when we talk about ptoecting the fetus, the woman is now designated as
its enemy.
"No case makes this more evident than the true story that will be
retold before the Supreme Court.... brought by eight women who were
forced to choose between their fertility and their jobs.
"The Leadworker's Tale began back in 1982 when [Johnson Controls, Inc.,
in Milwaukee] banned 'women with childbearing capacity' from work in
jobs that involved high lead exposure.... another example of 'the
rights of women versus the fetus.' Once again, woman against her womb.
But it is not as simple, not as stark as that.
"By any measure, Johnson Controls, Inc., is less interested in fetal
protection from lead than in self-protection from liability suits. If
they win this case, any woman 'with childbearing capacity' could be
banned from jobs as diverse as those of flight attendant and
silicon-chip maker. Some 20 million industrial jobs could be closed to
women whether or not they planned to get pregnant.
"So in many ways, The Leadworker's Tale goes to the very heart of the
old question: Is a woman's life from 12 to 50 to be governed by the
possibility of pregnancy?
"The appeals court that upheld the Johnson policy said yes and based
their reasoning on a profound mistrust. They said, in effect, that a
woman 'might somehow rationally discount this clear risk' to her fetus.
They defended a policy to fuard any potential fetus against all fertile
women.
In contrast, another judge -- the Reagan appointed conservative Frank
Easterbrook -- wrote in a stinging dissent, 'No legal or ethical
principle, compels or allows Johnson to assume that women are less able
than men to make intelligent decisions about the welfare of the next
generation...'
"....Another dissenting judge compared the relative prospects of a
'pregnant woman, unemployed or working for minimum wage ... ill-housed,
fed and doctored' to that of her pregnant sister at Johnson and asked:
'Whose fetus is a greater risk?'
"And what of the father? A baby's health, like the baby itself, is the
product of both parents. Male exposure to lead, research suggests,
also affects their offspring. The passion to 'protect' fertile women
doesn't extend to men...
"In the fantasyland of Gilead, after all, men were not tested for
interfility, fertile women were not free and the countryside was a
wasteland.
"In America, 'fetal protection policies' protect women out of their
jobs and leave men at risk to their health. But worst of all, the
comforting myth leaves companies free to do their dirty business."
|
1053.16 | children | PGG::REDNER | | Mon Apr 02 1990 17:32 | 6 |
|
an 8 and 1/2 month "fetus" is a child...............
reproductive rights....nonsense!
|
1053.17 | clarification of intent requested | WMOIS::B_REINKE | if you are a dreamer, come in.. | Mon Apr 02 1990 23:05 | 18 |
| in re .16
it is true that a fetus at 8 1/2 months can live on its own
with little or no medical intervention...although until it
is born it is not yet a child. I doubt that anyone in this
file would contradict that statement..
but it is to me, totally unconnected to the second sentence in
your note..
how does a biological fact about the development of a fetus
in any way make reproductive rights 'nonsense' ?
are you just joining this discussion to throw out 'fighting words'
or are you seriously interested in discussion.
Bonnie J
=wn= comod
|
1053.18 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | if you just open _all_ the doors | Tue Apr 03 1990 08:01 | 12 |
| I think the 'nonsense' remark was in reply to .0 where the
lawyer called the court decision a victory for reproductive
rights. It wasn't. At *some* point the woman is not just
carrying a fetus, and owes the forthcoming child respect
and protection. (Don't know how to set the 'when?' but
that lawyer saying, in essence, that an 8.5 months-old fetus
is still abortable, made me cringe.)
At some point, to maintain credibility, the pro-choice movement
is going to have to take a hard look at the issue of when a
fetus becomes a child, and at what point is that unborn child
owed the same care as a born one.
|
1053.19 | Too hot of an issue to agree on | WFOV11::APODACA | It's a Kodak(tm) moment. | Tue Apr 03 1990 10:49 | 12 |
| re .18
You'll never get total agreement on that issue. My personal view
is that a child is a child with rights when it is born. Otherwise
it is still part of my body, therefore my rights reign. But to
others, they might not see it that way. It's far too personal and
judgemental of a situation to have everyone sit down and agree what
is what when.
I don't think anyone is going to find a happy compromise.
---kim
|
1053.20 | Either IN or OUT | SALEM::KUPTON | | Tue Apr 03 1990 11:08 | 29 |
|
If pro-choice advocates want the government to stay out of the
abortion issue, they must accept the alternative. Don't expect the
government to pay for them.
It is against the laws of God and Mankind to kill another human.
When death occurs through the action of another, we penalize that
other person. The penalty is paid for by taxing those that the person
committed crimes against, but is acceptable. The victim had his/her
rights taken away by the perpertrator as a willful act. An accident
is due to an unsafe act or unsafe condition. When an accident occurs
the person who is responsible gets sued under 'normal' conditions
because it's their fault. There is a very, very real legal dilema
being nurtured. If this woman shouldn't be prosecuted for the loss
of life due to her negligence, then why should companies and
individuals be prosecuted for accidents that are their fault?? Because
it has to do with this "right of the womb" is should be excepted???
In the case of this mother who lost the "fetus" at 8-1/2 months
because of her inappropriate actions, she will pay whatever penalty
is required under law for her actions while intoxicated. She will
pay physcologically for her lost fetus. That will probably cause
her to do one of two things. It will cause her to quit drinking
and pick up her life and go on. Or she will become a worse drinker
and possibly kill someone else.
You can't have it both ways.
Ken
|
1053.22 | ***co-moderator caution*** | LEZAH::BOBBITT | the phoenix-flowering dark rose | Tue Apr 03 1990 12:16 | 7 |
| Please remember to discuss abortion in the abortion topic (I believe
it's topic 183), and follow the guidelines in 183.779.
Thank you
-Jody
|
1053.23 | It's tough to decide this one. | NOVA::FISHER | Dictionary is not. | Tue Apr 03 1990 12:23 | 17 |
| It is a tough question to which I do not pretend to know the answer.
I do remember applauding the cases wherein murderers who had killed
a pregnant women were charged with 2 counts. Then when they killed
only the fetus, they were charged with murder or manslaughter. From
that precedent it's not very far to charging the mother with a crime
for some such actions.
It seems logical to me that filing murder or manslaughter charges
in both cases is at least a consistent view of law and IF the mother
should never be charged for a felony in such a case then neither should
a non-mother criminal.
I think the tough point is, as it always has been, where do we draw
the line and set statutes?
ed
|
1053.24 | imho | CSSE32::M_DAVIS | Marge Davis Hallyburton | Tue Apr 03 1990 13:12 | 4 |
| My preference is that the rules currently used to determine death be
reversed to determine life. That would center around brain activity.
Marge
|
1053.25 | | CSSE32::M_DAVIS | Marge Davis Hallyburton | Tue Apr 03 1990 13:22 | 15 |
| re: inconsistency on part of pro-life advocates.
Kim, you make a good point. I believe that all life is to be valued,
whether the result of a violent act or not. How incredibly unselfish of
a mother who has conceived as a result of an act of violence to bring
that life to maturation and birth.
On the other side, the mother has been through an extreme trauma. If
bearing the child would prolong that trauma, can she be excused for
wanting to abort? to end this trauma that has been imposed on her? This
is where the inconcsistency comes in and why pro-life people are split
on the issue of rape and incest. This is where the balance between
fetal rights and maternal rights is in the grey area.
Marge
|
1053.26 | Hmmmmmmm | GEMVAX::CICCOLINI | | Tue Apr 03 1990 14:37 | 9 |
| re -1 It sounds to me like you're saying some pro-life people believe
that a woman "earns more points", (or the fetus loses them), if the
woman has sufferred a certain degree of "trauma".
Who determines the kind or degree of trauma necessary for this and
has it been decided that past trauma, (rape or incest), is more relevant
to the decision than present or future traumas such as poverty, de-
pendence or disease? Is trauma defined only as something a woman
suffers directly at the hands of a specific man?
|
1053.27 | re -1 | WEEBLE::SMITH | Passionate committment/reasoned faith | Tue Apr 03 1990 14:54 | 5 |
| Some allow for abortion in cases of rape or incest as a form of
self-defense, the same way they allow for war. Check out the
Christian notes file if you are interested in this line of reasoning.
Nancy
|
1053.28 | | CSSE32::M_DAVIS | Marge Davis Hallyburton | Tue Apr 03 1990 14:56 | 14 |
| I don't know that there's a tally on "points" here, Sandy... the point I
was trying to make is that the rape/incest issue is not only difficult
for pro-choice people; it is also difficult for pro-life people. On
one side, if you are to value each life, then what's the difference if
it came as a result of rape or incest? On the other hand, if you feel
as I do that responsibility plays a key role then you delineate between
the life conceived as the result of a consensual act and that conceived
as the result of non-consensual violence (which is traumatic btw).
It is the degree of consent, not the degree of trauma which is
important IMHO.
regards,
Marge
|
1053.29 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Talkin' 'bout very free and easy.... | Tue Apr 03 1990 15:15 | 7 |
| I think a case can sometimes be made that a given rape victim would be stripped
of her mental/emotional health if _required_ to carry the product of a rape
to term, and it would be tantamount to killing the person she once was. In that
case, perhaps the termination of her pregnancy could even be justified by/to
pro-lifers.
the Doctah
|
1053.31 | | CSSE32::M_DAVIS | Marge Davis Hallyburton | Tue Apr 03 1990 16:49 | 7 |
| Again, Kim, the key is not trauma, but consent, that is the delineator.
Again, IMHO.
regards,
Marge
|
1053.32 | | HKFINN::KALLAS | | Tue Apr 03 1990 16:54 | 9 |
| Children conceived by consenting adults are not granted more rights
than children conceived by rape. No one would say it should be
legal to abuse a child conceived by rape. So, how can anyone who truly
believes that an embryo is the equivalent of a child believe that
abortion is ever right?
IMO, saying that abortion is allowable under certain conditions
reveals that the real motivation opposing abortion is what I've
always thought - not concern for children but a desire to punish
and control women.
|
1053.34 | responsibility and offsetting rights | CSSE32::M_DAVIS | Marge Davis Hallyburton | Tue Apr 03 1990 17:55 | 18 |
| re: 32
Steve, I don't think abortion is ever right; I think it is excusable if
the life was conceived as a result of force rather than as the result
of a consensual act. I don't hear any pro-life advocates espousing
abortion as being right and wonderful under any circumstances. In this
notesfile, you will find lots of pro-choice advocates stating similar
things about their views...that they don't think they would choose to
have an abortion, but wish to reserve that right to others. I think
you will agree that there is a parallel here... that pro-life advocates
can claim that it is not "right" but rather "acceptable" or even the
"lesser of the evils". If pro-choice advocates (please notice that I
do not use the slur "so-called") believe they can believe one thing for
themselves and another for the population at large, would you deny
pro-life advocates that?
regards,
Marge
|
1053.35 | | CSSE32::M_DAVIS | Marge Davis Hallyburton | Tue Apr 03 1990 17:59 | 8 |
| re .33:
I'm probably dense, Kim, but since it was Sandy who raised the points
system, I'd prefer she defend it.... Please forgive me if I'm missing
your point.
foggy dew,
Marge
|
1053.36 | Hey there! | WEEBLE::SMITH | Passionate committment/reasoned faith | Tue Apr 03 1990 18:05 | 3 |
| [Sigh]. Sometimes I feel ignore and I try to accept it with good grace
:} but if you're gonna continue along this vein, *please* note the
alternate explanation given in .27!
|
1053.37 | moderator response | WMOIS::B_REINKE | if you are a dreamer, come in.. | Tue Apr 03 1990 19:31 | 8 |
| moderator response
if you are going to discuss abortion take the discussion to the
abortion topic and follow the guidelines for that note.
Bonnie j
=wn= comod
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1053.38 | <*** Another Moderator Response ***> | RANGER::TARBET | Haud awa fae me, Wully | Tue Apr 03 1990 21:02 | 10 |
| Authors should take good care, when drafting future notes for this
string, not to (a) make slurring references to the opposing side or its
adherents; or (b) have any passage functionally equivalent to "the
pro-mumble side are fratz about foetal rights and thereby reveal
themselves to be pond scum".
Such notes will be summarily deleted as strayed, out-of-bounds
abortion-topic notes if detected.
=maggie
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1053.39 | Oh. | WFOV11::APODACA | It's a Kodak(tm) moment. | Wed Apr 04 1990 11:36 | 9 |
| re .33 (marge)
My apologies to you and Sandy if I seem to have spoken for her.
My intent was simply to voice my opinion on your question. Such
that you prefer Sandy's input, I have deleted my notes to alleviate
further confusion and since I guess they were more pointed towards
abortion itself rather than fetal rights (a very grey area in between).
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1053.40 | | CSSE32::M_DAVIS | Marge Davis Hallyburton | Wed Apr 04 1990 13:50 | 5 |
| Kim, I don't think there is any apology necessary. I simply don't like
to try to defend someone else's concept.
grins,
Marge
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1053.41 | | CSSE32::M_DAVIS | Marge Davis Hallyburton | Wed Apr 04 1990 13:56 | 6 |
| Maggie, I do feel the need to apologize for prolonging the discussion
unnecessarily in this topic. If anyone would like to continue, I'll be
happy to do so in 183.*.
regards,
Marge
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1053.42 | | SYSENG::BITTLE | good girls make good wives | Wed Apr 04 1990 22:39 | 15 |
| RE: 1053.32 (HKFINN::KALLAS)
> Children conceived by consenting adults are not granted more rights
> than children conceived by rape. No one would say it should be
> legal to abuse a child conceived by rape. So, how can anyone who truly
> believes that an embryo is the equivalent of a child believe that
> abortion is ever right?
That's a perspective I've never heard before in discussions of the
"no_abortions_except_in_the_case_of_rape_and_incest" philosophy.
It appears inconsistent to me also.
nancy b.
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1053.43 | | JARETH::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Thu Apr 05 1990 00:16 | 14 |
| Re .32, .42:
> So, how can anyone who truly believes that an embryo is the
> equivalent of a child believe that abortion is ever right?
There is such a view that I came across in a philosophy class: The
fetus, while human, does not have the right to affect the mother's body
without the mother's consent. (Note that this only answers the
immediate question above; it would still be inconsistent for a person
to believe abortion was okay in some circumstances and not in others --
the above view is only consistent for pro-choice.)
-- edp
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1053.44 | I've Used It | USCTR2::DONOVAN | | Thu Apr 05 1990 00:24 | 8 |
| re:.42
Nancy,
I've used that argument myself on many occasions.
Kate
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1053.45 | | DICKNS::KALLAS | | Thu Apr 05 1990 14:27 | 11 |
| re: -1
aw, shucks! and I thought I thought it up myself!
Sue (not Steve) Kallas
ps. thanks, EDP, for pointing out that this argument can
only logically be used by those of us who are pro-choice -
and, yes, I will take this to the abortion note if I can summon
the energy and stomach for it.
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