radiojake wrote:Abortion should be mandatory ...
Then so should public executions of hippies from the 60s and 70s that STILL haven't figured out that it is no longer 1973.
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radiojake wrote:Abortion should be mandatory ...
muy_thaiguy wrote:radiojake wrote:Abortion should be mandatory ...
Then so should public executions of hippies from the 60s and 70s that STILL haven't figured out that it is no longer 1973.
radiojake wrote:muy_thaiguy wrote:radiojake wrote:Abortion should be mandatory ...
Then so should public executions of hippies from the 60s and 70s that STILL haven't figured out that it is no longer 1973.
That's rather discriminatory isn't it? Atleast with my idea race, gender. religion, political ideologies are irrelevant - plus i don't think i've seen too many hippies left from the 60's or 70's
I think humans have had their chance with being the major inhabitant's of the planet, and we've done a really shit job of it - time for some other species to have a go, a less destructive one anyway
muy_thaiguy wrote:radiojake wrote:muy_thaiguy wrote:radiojake wrote:Abortion should be mandatory ...
Then so should public executions of hippies from the 60s and 70s that STILL haven't figured out that it is no longer 1973.
That's rather discriminatory isn't it? Atleast with my idea race, gender. religion, political ideologies are irrelevant - plus i don't think i've seen too many hippies left from the 60's or 70's
I think humans have had their chance with being the major inhabitant's of the planet, and we've done a really shit job of it - time for some other species to have a go, a less destructive one anyway
Fine then, we'll include ones from newer generations as well.
And, how does making abortion mandatory make such things as political ideology, religion, such irrelevant? That is, of course, if you completely ignore them and do what people have done in the past and do some major screw ups, to say the least.
And with that last comment, I take it you really don't see anything positive, do you.
muy_thaiguy wrote:Well, I have yet to see you post anything in a positive light, thus making it seem that you have a "life sucks, you suck, nothing good ever happens, just finish off the entire race now" kind of attitude.
Napoleon Ier wrote:In re your tangible benefit bollocks; slavery had huge tangible benefits for the US economy. Did this make it any less immoral? No, it made it moral and practical, but didn't re-inforce it's morailty.
tzor wrote:Napoleon Ier wrote:In re your tangible benefit bollocks; slavery had huge tangible benefits for the US economy. Did this make it any less immoral? No, it made it moral and practical, but didn't re-inforce it's morailty.
That can certainly be debated. It was debated even back in the day; federalists like Hamilton were strongly attacking the very notion that the whole system that underlined that "peculiar institution" was helping the economy of the new nation. Slavery is, for all practical purposes a byproduct of the agrarian landed nobility mentality. This mindset opposed federalism, opposed the creation of strong federal financial institutions and kept the south from moving into an industrial mindset. Ironically it took a man from the industrial north, Eli Whitney, to add enough industry to make the cotton trade a viable enterprise which then in turn justified the need for continued slavery in the South.
PLAYER57832 wrote:It is well over a hundred years since the south experienced legal slavery and they are only now really and truly recovering.
Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.
tzor wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:It is well over a hundred years since the south experienced legal slavery and they are only now really and truly recovering.
But that wasn't "slavery" at that point, that was "bigotry." Industrialism entered the south shortly after the civil war and thanks to that blunder of technology called air conditiong factories in the south would eventually replace factories in the north.
But bigotry wasn't unique to the south. The north was doing their own brand long before slavery became profitable in the south. New England and New York prohibited Roman Catholic Priests from the colony and made it a crime punishable by hanging to preach to the Natrive Americans ... in the early decades of the 18th century. Anti-Papist legislation and rhetoric continued well past the civil war. Papist immigrants, the Irish and Italians were especially persecuted when they arrived on our shores by political parties like the "Know Nothngs." This was also practiced in the South and continues today in the South.
When Alan Keys ran for the Republican Nomination for President in 2000, he faced a double whammy in the South of being boh African American and Roman Catholic. He didn't get any votes there.
Ironically this is really on topic. Abortion is all about dismissing a class of people and flat out ignoring their rights. If we are all created equal and if our rights are inalienable, then they cannot be either given or taken away. The pre-born and the eldery. As Jefferson insisted life and liberty cannot be disjoined. As long as there is life there is a right to liberty.
African Americans aren't people, Papists aren't people, pre-born aren't people ... these are all false arguments which any moral person should fight with every fiber of their being.
tzor wrote:Napoleon Ier wrote:In re your tangible benefit bollocks; slavery had huge tangible benefits for the US economy. Did this make it any less immoral? No, it made it moral and practical, but didn't re-inforce it's morailty.
That can certainly be debated. It was debated even back in the day; federalists like Hamilton were strongly attacking the very notion that the whole system that underlined that "peculiar institution" was helping the economy of the new nation. Slavery is, for all practical purposes a byproduct of the agrarian landed nobility mentality. This mindset opposed federalism, opposed the creation of strong federal financial institutions and kept the south from moving into an industrial mindset. Ironically it took a man from the industrial north, Eli Whitney, to add enough industry to make the cotton trade a viable enterprise which then in turn justified the need for continued slavery in the South.
The Death Penalty is just retribution, vindicates the Law and may act as a deterrent.
Neoteny wrote:That was rather well written. Do you feel the same way about death row inmates and political leaders with crimes against humanity?
tzor wrote:Neoteny wrote:That was rather well written. Do you feel the same way about death row inmates and political leaders with crimes against humanity?
For the most part yes. As long as there is an effective system where true criminals can be contained and prevented from committing more henous crimes then that should be the most effective form of punishment and deterrant. The death penalty has a number of problems associated with it; the death of the innocent, the creation of a "martyr" figure, and the notion that once you get the highest penalty possible anything more you can do is in fact done without penalty.
Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.
PLAYER57832 wrote:You are half right. The difference is that in this case, medicine backs up the beliefs. Wherease medical science proves there is no real difference between races, other than skin and hair ...and that those are so arbitrary within humanity as to be invalid, with fetal life, there is an absolute difference between the 4 cells that make up a fertilized egg and the 7 month, all but fully formed child. What is in question is not whether a bunch of cells will become human, but at what point they become human.
tzor wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:You are half right. The difference is that in this case, medicine backs up the beliefs. Wherease medical science proves there is no real difference between races, other than skin and hair ...and that those are so arbitrary within humanity as to be invalid, with fetal life, there is an absolute difference between the 4 cells that make up a fertilized egg and the 7 month, all but fully formed child. What is in question is not whether a bunch of cells will become human, but at what point they become human.
Yes there is a difference between the embryo and the "all but fully formed child." But there is very little difference between the "all but fully formed child" a few hours before birth and the "all but fully formed child" a few minutes after birth. Both of these facts seem to point out that both absolute sides don't have much to stand on. Yet again the whole question is far to vague, what is "human" in the first place? What is sentient? is being or is potential for being important? Is a person in a comma less or more human because they have the potential to come out of it and resume a sentient conscious state?
This is where you need to form general zones of being. The embryo is distinct from the emplanted embryo, the fetus is distinct from the developed (pain feeling) fetus, is distinct from the pre-viable child who is starting to feel andhear the world around it and is reacting to it, and which is distinct to the clearly viable but pre-born child. Morally all is a loss, abortions at any stage, natural or man made diminishes us all and the bell tolls for everyone. Then practical consierations must be considered and addressed because for better or worse we all live in the real world.
PLAYER57832 wrote:Except, that is a religious issue as much as a medical one.
And, I can GAURANTEE that things look a lot different when it is you, your child or your wife. I never have liked abortion. But, laws are for everyone, not just me.
In the real world, we all have different values. In the real world, some children are not born "OK". In the real world, some children are not wanted. And, in the real world, as painful as it is to admit, some children really are better off not being born.
I find it interesting that some of the same people who want abortions criminallized are the same ones who take issue with raising the minimum wage, who would like to get rid of welfare ... etc.
Maxleod wrote:Not strike, he's the only one with a functioning brain.
PLAYER57832 wrote:Except, that is a religious issue as much as a medical one.
And, I can GAURANTEE that things look a lot different when it is you, your child or your wife. I never have liked abortion. But, laws are for everyone, not just me.
In the real world, we all have different values. In the real world, some children are not born "OK". In the real world, some children are not wanted. And, in the real world, as painful as it is to admit, some children really are better off not being born.
I find it interesting that some of the same people who want abortions criminallized are the same ones who take issue with raising the minimum wage, who would like to get rid of welfare ... etc.
Napoleon Ier wrote:
murder is acceptable iff it benefits the collective good of society
Snorri1234 wrote:Napoleon Ier wrote:
murder is acceptable iff it benefits the collective good of society
Like war and the death penalty.
tzor wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Except, that is a religious issue as much as a medical one.
And, I can GAURANTEE that things look a lot different when it is you, your child or your wife. I never have liked abortion. But, laws are for everyone, not just me.
In the real world, we all have different values. In the real world, some children are not born "OK". In the real world, some children are not wanted. And, in the real world, as painful as it is to admit, some children really are better off not being born.
I find it interesting that some of the same people who want abortions criminallized are the same ones who take issue with raising the minimum wage, who would like to get rid of welfare ... etc.
It is not much a "religious" issue as a human rights issue. Most religions tend to be big on the human rights issue.
tzor wrote:
Note it is always a bad idea to talk in absolutes.
tzor wrote:There are many children who die because of abortion. Not all these children have terrible life threatening and quality of life screwing problems.
There are also many who want children. They want them so badly that they have to look to foreign countries for children for adoption.
tzor wrote: Are there some children who are "better off not being born?" I have no clue. I've never not been born so I can't say. As the old saying goes, "life sucks, but it's better than the alternative."
tzor wrote:OK on the side issues. As I always say I can't speak for others and every group has those wacky people who you only tollerate because you need them for the bigger issue. I generally take issue with the minimum wage for this reason only ... as long as there is a potential supply of illegal labor it is possible to get workers below the minimum wage. I don't want to get rid of welfare but I don't want it to be a trap or a prison. Even retired people should get out and do something because that's good for a person's overall health. Oh by the way,I do admit that I do tend to appreciate and overuse the etc. I also love ...
PLAYER57832 wrote:
Within the first trimester, yes. After that, the number of truly healthy children aborted is very, very low.... (despite Napoleon's claims to the contrary).
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