Ddrak wrote:You're conflating the legal argument with a touch-feely-moral one now, and that just doesn't work. The fundamental question is do you believe that a woman should be legally bound to serve as an incubator for another human for a time, (and here's the double kicker for your position) even if that woman did nothing voluntary to put herself in that situation?
Yes and yes. The fetus didn't do anything voluntarily either, did it.
Ddrak wrote:
You are giving the baby more rights than the mother, and more importantly, breaking the fundamentally conservative rule that someone's rights stop where someone else's begin. You are very strongly saying the baby's rights subvert any and all of the mother's rights, and that the government should be involved in suppressing those rights of the mother in the interests of the baby.
Dd
I'm giving the baby the same rights as the mother. The right not be killed on a whim. And I am not saying the baby subverts all rights of the mother, and your attempt to portray a mother as some sort of slave is disingenious. The mother is free to go where she wants, enter into contracts, drive a car, hold property, etc. A pregancy isn't a death sentence, as much as Kulaf would like to paint it that way.
What you are trying to do is say a life, in a certain circumstance, is forfeit if it inconveniences another person. Yet we don't allow the taking of life for that reason in any other way, do we? Here's a good example...
You're driving down the road in winter. You see a small child walking alone, so you pick her up (guess what, you inadvertanly just became a care-giver). You drive a bit and ask her where she lives, and if you could take her home. You can see she's very sick. She tells you where she lives, but that is too far away from where you want to go. The hospital too, is out of your way. So you decide you no longer want to deal with this interruption of your life, so you stop the car, and tell the sick little girl to get out, and you drive away. Sick little girl dies of exposure. You go to jail. Why? You have a duty of care to another human being, and its a legally recognized principle.
The fact is, legally, if the fetus is a human being, it has basic human rights. Those human rights must be weighed against the rights of others. The right to life of a human being is the most basic of human rights, and it just about trounces any other right out there.
Dd.. if the fetus is a human, killing it for whatever reason, is murder.
Correction Mr. President, I DID build this, and please give Lurker a hug, we wouldn't want to damage his self-esteem.
Embar
Alarius