You've lost me, GG. I said--and when you quoted me, you left out the most important, pertinent line:
It's that last line you left out, so your comment:
makes no sense. Merriam-Webster's definitions of "life" and "alive" make VERY clear that life begins at birth. So what is it you're not understanding about my point? The point is that life begins at birth and ends at death...
I can't disagree with any of that, as it's basically how I feel, too. It's just that--for me--I don't think it's my right to tell another female what she can or cannot do with an unwanted pregnancy. But as I've said, I'm NOT okay with elective [not medically necessary] abortion past the point of viability.
But now you're talking anti-choice propaganda. The number of late-term abortions--or, as the anti-choicers prefer to call it, partial birth abortions--is minuscule. Late-term abortions are NOT frequent by any stretch of the imagine.
However, with that said, I have to add that I CANNOT figure out how a person can go through an entire pregnancy and THEN decide to have her baby--and it IS a baby by then--killed. WTF? At that point, why not just give birth and put the baby up for adoption?
And you've never been raped. Nor have you gotten pregnant by rape. Guess what? I have, on both counts. As a teenager. I didn't have to do the "abortion or no abortion" thing, as the pregnancy ended spontaneously with a miscarriage. However, the emotional impact of realizing I had been pregnant--with a rapist's baby--triggered a PTSD-type dissociative disorder that I still struggle with to this day. It affected every aspect of my life from that day forward. So, sorry, but the "two victims" argument makes my blood boil. The FEMALE who is raped is the innocent victim; if there's a pregnancy that results and she decides to terminate it, I TOTALLY get that. A blastocyst/zygote/embryo or even a fetus cannot compare with a LIVING human being who will have to deal with the emotional ramifications of giving birth to a rapist's baby for the rest of her life, regardless of whether she adopts it out or keeps it, the trauma is still there. (And, yes, I know some women do carry rapists' babies and give them up for adoption or keep them, and somehow manage to deal with it. Great! More power to them. Not all females can, or should have to, do that.)
Thank you for sharing that.
No, it's not...really. Its ability to "live" is wholly dependent on its mother's body; until it's capable of sustaining life on its own, outside its mother's body, it's not alive. You have to be BORN to be alive; see M-W's definition of alive and its related definition of life, which includes this:
5 a : the period from birth to death
5 a : the period from birth to death
Originally posted by GreyGeek
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When an unborn baby's life is terminated I see that as executing the death penalty on the baby for the crimes or inconveniences of the parents. I cannot understand how the mother or father's failures to use contraceptive measures requires the death of the baby which was so conceived. Such deaths frequently turns out to be for no other reasons that inconvenience.
I cannot understand the logic that says allowing the baby's head to pass out of the birth canal into the free air, and then sticking a spatula into the hole in the base of the skull and squishing the baby's brain into pulp is not a direct, murderous assault. To me, it is identical to the propaganda that dehumanizes other human beings in order to justify their extermination.
However, with that said, I have to add that I CANNOT figure out how a person can go through an entire pregnancy and THEN decide to have her baby--and it IS a baby by then--killed. WTF? At that point, why not just give birth and put the baby up for adoption?
Nor can I understand why the criminal act of a rapist is justification for making two victims instead of one.
My wife and I were, for several years, house parents for boys from 10 to 18 at a children's home. Forty years later one will occasionally drop by and share what has happened in their lives since we were their "parents". The most vivid memory I have in my life is the time when my mother accidently stepped on my hand as I slept on the concrete basement floor. She was leaving with my half brother (by her previous husband) and leaving behind one son (me) and two daughters by my father, whom she grew to hate. Being unwanted brings jarring and painful emotions, but being unwanted doesn't mean being unworthy of life. I grew up without my mother but she taught me one thing: your parents are the ones who raise you, not the sperm or egg donor.
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