Edit:
In America, I need to know:
Where is the place for people like me,
who feel it is important for a civilized society to make abortion safe and available for those who need it
and who also believe that the ending of a pregnancy,
however it happens,
also releases a tiny spirit into the air?
~ Marie Myung-Ok Lee, the author of Somebody's Daughter: A
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I think the better argument is that no sex chooses to be the sex it is, so why is the opinion of a man held against him simply because he does not have a uterus? Is he penalized for his penis? Did he choose to be a man? If I could, I would choose to have a uterus so that I could bear a child. I feel like oftentimes, many women who make this argument are just too quick to fall back on double standards of when men are allowed to and when men are not allowed to contribute to a decision, but shouldn't the person making a decision consider the viewpoints of all those that are important to her, even if that includes listening to a man?
2) Those are good questions, but again, I feel that they do not rest upon assumptions that would be made by everyone, that is, 1) the assumption that what is inside the womb is a child, and 2) whether what is inside has any rights.
In the next part, to answer your question, I will use parents to mean the person(s) who are going to be raising the child, should it live to make it out of the womb.
Regardless of what it is called, though, I think the parents do have a right to decide, but perhaps conditional abortion was something they should have discussed before even choosing to have a child. Certainly opinions may change once things are more finalized (i.e., they may not have wanted to abort a zygote/fetus/etc. with a disability before they even conceived, but upon conception and finding out that the z/f/e. has a disability, they may change their mind), but that does not change their right. We as a country, and I think even as a species, believe that parents hold rights over what they
3) I'm not sure I understand your argument here. Why not? And if not that, then what?
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I say this because I think it is why the "pro-choice" and "pro-life" camps will never be able to see eye to eye: They use different language. The former tries to argue rights and liberties and the latter tries to argue morality. How can either team debate or create a solution if they don't have the same basic givens?
I will take your word that you do not intend to make an argument based on the assumption that all people accept that abortion is the taking of a life. But I do ask you to re-read number 1 of your initial argument and perhaps watch your wording more carefully in the future. And if I have not made it clear why it seems as if you are making that assumption because of your linkage between abortion and a "moral decision," please let me know.
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As for your last statement, the key words are potential and possible. Like I've tried to address, if I were to get an abortion, what would weigh heavily in my mind is now versus later. I know what life is like now, but I don't know what life will be like in the future. I must base my decision on whether or not I am satisifed by what the past and present show me.
Whether or not this is the "right" or preferred thought process is another issue, but I think that this is what it would be.
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By the way, if you're online and have AIM (and want to), you can IM me at keneticmotion.
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