tzor wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:For Christians, the ultimate question is "what does God intend". That, to me, not a scientific point, is the real question.
I have no idea what God intends. I do know what God intended. Beethoven was an example, who was very close to being killed by chemical abortion.
While no one can know for certain, to be Christian means seeking that out and attempting to follow God's plan. How we do that differs, but I believe that is a fundamental goal.
The second.. is just an irrelevant point of trivia, if even true. It has no more bearing than the fact that arsenic and leeches were used frequently in that time.
tzor wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Do you really want a world in which a woman can be imprisoned for battery, neglect or intentional harm if they do something that might possibly result in a miscarriage that happens before they even really know they are pregnant?
Do I? No. But it is already happening.
Woman Who Is Just 12 Weeks Pregnant Charged With Child EndangermentA woman in Montana has been charged with criminally endangering a child, which is a felony, after testing positive for illegal drugs. According to court records, she is in her first trimester of pregnancy. The case clearly illustrates how an increasing number of states are using fetal harm laws to criminalize pregnant women’s behavior and blur the lines about exactly when personhood begins in the eyes of the law.
We live in a country where if a woman looses visual sight with her four year old child even though she knows that the location the child is in is perfectly safe, she can be charged with Child Endangerment.
Sadly true, though we are not quite yet at the point where a woman who does not know she is pregnant and who miscarries can be charged. At any rate, are you saying this is OK?
tzor wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Women already feel enough guilt when they have a miscarriage. And, it is far, far, FAR more common that you likely think.
I think it is fairly common, but that's beside the point. The general lack of support groups is.
No, it is EXACTLY the point. And sorry, but support groups are not a fix to being accused of having an abortion, to women who have miscarried being treated like they are having or have had an abortion.
Even that a woman who has had a D & C or similar procedure might have to explain why.. and of course be questioned if they were 'really telling the truth". These are utter obnoxiousnesses that no male has to undergo and that all too many women do, in large part because so many men (and women) feel they don't need to get all the details before making judgements or restricting women's access to medical care.
Well, thank you for the prayer. Personally, my faith teaches more individual prayer, but it is not God with whom I have an issue, it is with people. God's prayers can help us endure people's irrationality, but it is still up to us to challenge and debate, particularly debate that engenders false witness as so much of the general abortion debate does (not making a back-handed accusation at you. Mostly, I think you are an honest debater, though you of course get things wrong as do I. I will most definitely point out any areas I think are in error

-- and expect no less from you. )
tzor wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:The Roman Catholic church does draw some lines. In vitro fertilization and the like are not allowed. However, the church has not taken a consistent stand on operations and interventions on very sick children in womb.
I wasn't aware that such stands were needed. Such operations are becoming commonplace these days.
Exactly. Unfortunately, our ability to keep children alive does not also mean an ability to give those children happy, healthy lives. And, this means that now not only are folks to feel guilty over miscarriages, but if they do decide, for whatever reason, to not go through with a full lifetime of very significant, almost continuous surgeries and therapies.. or, worse, if they want to have that, are even effectively promised that these things will be provided, only to have the cut out during the latest budget crunch (as is happening right now in PA)...
The anti-abortion groups want that decision to be made in isolation, as if how it impacts the family, society, as if medical care available, etc, etc, (never mind how to pay for the medical care.. that is the "elephant in the room", along with education costs) as if all of that were not a part of these decisions. They are, and I argue that the church has a role in guiding individuals that MUST go beyond "do whatever you can". If, for no other reason than it is not the church, but society that winds up paying for these kids. The truth is that insurance companies and the government medicaid offices are making these decisions all the time. Does it really make sense that we pay millions to keep one child alive and then turn around and say we cannot afford to fund homeless shelters, vaccination programs, school and out-of school meal programs for kids? Add in job training, college education...
The truth is that pretending these are not real choices is to allow those with no religious, no faith, often even without any kind of ethical thought to make these decisions. I am not saying that The Roman Catholic church should do turn-arounds and say 'abortion is OK, don't do anything for premie kids". That would, of course be repugnant. I am saying that we are approaching some serious "grey territory" in all these issues and the simple "just support life" is no longer enough, is no longer OK. Even if we have not already reached the point at which the church, (any church) should say "no -- stop here, beyond this point it is not OK" -- then we are fast approaching that point. Without discussion, those choices will be forced upon us by the worst of society, instead of the best.
tzor wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Many folks in the anti-abortion movement, however, parade around with slogans like "all life is precious" and so forth. From the outset, just think of the impact of those words on someone facing a true tragedy -- a child in the womb with very, very, very serious problems, such that they are unlikely to survive or that they will have a very limited life, even a highly pain-filled life. Add in insurance issues and the fact that if such a child is born, then the parents are legally obligated to not just give up their lives tending to that child, but also to give up most of their financial resources for that one child.
One of the reasons why I was trying to avoid mentioning the "Christian" angle. What part of lay down your life don't you understand?
The part where you don't get the right, where Christ does not give us the right, to demand that of others.
tzor wrote:I can spot the Scrooge / Sanger argument a mile away. I side with Tiny Tim.
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