Comments

You must log in or register to comment.

IBlazeMyOwnPath OP t1_jdhzf5s wrote

FTA: NH democrats along with five republicans passed multiple bills limiting the Fetal Life Protection Act, and even came within one vote of repealing it entirely.

They “passed bills eliminating criminal penalties targeting abortion doctors and codifying a right to abortion up to 24 weeks, a move Democrats argued is necessary in the wake of the overturning of the Roe v. Wade Supreme Court decision.”

181

AMC4x4 t1_jdi53l4 wrote

So all is not lost then. Good.

>"When does life start?" said state Rep. John Sellers, R-Bristol. "You just heard it's an electrical signal. OK, fine. But someone created that electrical signal."

Oh FFS. Maybe someone should show Sellers what a fetus looks like at nine weeks.

The "fetal heartbeat" thing is such a scam.

137

ericools t1_jdi6xto wrote

I never understood the "when life begins" arguments.

Life is continuous you can't make a baby with dead sperm.

It also seems completely irrelevant to what if anything the government should have to say about it.

63

moneyforsoy t1_jdigvsq wrote

It’s a red herring. There’s no “scientific” answer for when life starts, it’s all people’s personal or religious beliefs.

64

Carteeg_Struve t1_jdij4vw wrote

But there is a scientific answer for when life starts. Life started 3.7 billion years ago. The sperm is alive, and the egg is alive. But they aren't a human being. There is a gradient process that changes those two things into a single human being. It's not an instantaneous process.

31

moneyforsoy t1_jdik4uo wrote

Exactly, the answer of when they become a human being isn't precise. It's not like at 12 weeks gestation they are suddenly a human. All these discussions around it just distract from the real issue of bodily autonomy. What a person decides to do with their body is between themselves, whatever god they do or don't believe in, and their medical provider. The government has no business in the doctor's office.

27

FruityRogelio t1_jdjvj00 wrote

Human life begins when it is breathing independently

5

moneyforsoy t1_jdjwrto wrote

That’s the belief of Judaism, but Catholicism believes it starts at conception. Your own belief of when it starts is what dictates your moral compass when making decisions regarding reproductive health. That’s the point I’m making. The government shouldn’t get to decide.

17

HangInTherePanda t1_jdkbbpc wrote

Even the Bible is up for debate as to when life begins.

According to Genesis 2 - The beginning of Adam's life in verse 7:

Then the Lord God formed man from the dust of the ground and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life, and the man became a living being.
Clearly, life begins when you draw your first breath. That is when God places your soul in your body. Your soul enters your body with your first breath and it leaves with your last

I personally am very pro-choice and I wish the government would stay out of women's bodies.

13

FruityRogelio t1_jdjz2q5 wrote

I agree that government should not get to decide, religion aside. Separation of church and state, etc.

7

vexingsilence t1_jdio4ys wrote

>What a person decides to do with their body is between themselves, whatever god they do or don't believe in, and their medical provider.

The answer of they become a human being isn't precise. It's not like at 12 weeks gestation they aren't suddenly a human. Bodily autonomy should recognize that at some point, which will forever remain undecided, there are two bodies, one of which is unable to protest against their impending murder. The government absolutely has business in cases of criminality such as the taking of a human life.

−22

moneyforsoy t1_jdiou11 wrote

You should look up the case of McFall v Shimp. Even if a fetus is a person from the moment of conception, no person is entitled to the use of someone else’s body to maintain their own life. Based on your last line, the court should have ordered Shimp to go through with the bone marrow donation to save McFall.

Edit: not to mention that while a bone marrow donation is an uncomfortable procedure, it is not even close to the permanent physical trauma caused by pregnancy.

11

vexingsilence t1_jdir5tg wrote

>no person is entitled to the use of someone else’s body to maintain their own life.

You also aren't entitled to end someone else's life for the sake of your own convenience. This isn't a case of taking an organ or marrow or anything like that. Those are medical procedures. The reproductive process is not a medical procedure, it's a natural process.

>permanent physical trauma caused by pregnancy

Pales in comparison to having your life terminated.

−16

moneyforsoy t1_jditckz wrote

But the main point you’re missing is that in the eye of the law, a fetus is not a person. If it were, give them a social security number, let them get insurance, count them as a dependent. And when life begins/when a fetus becomes a person is a personally held belief that differs between people and religions. Catholicism says it’s at conception, Judaism says it’s at the first breath. And nobody is right or wrong because such a belief is so deeply rooted in spirituality that the government has no business deciding what is “true.”

And people aren’t getting abortions out of “convenience.” Often it is a matter or life or death because pregnancy literally puts a mothers life at risk. High blood pressure, blood clots, and homicide kill pregnant people all the time.

As far as your last comment goes, a fetus has no capacity to feel pain until 24 weeks, let alone have sentience to understand life or death or anything like that.

19

Cantide756 t1_jdlouz7 wrote

>in the eye of the law, a fetus is not a person.

If you kill a pregnant woman, don't you get charged for both murders?

2

vexingsilence t1_jdiwo5w wrote

>But the main point you’re missing is that in the eye of the law, a fetus is not a person.

The law used to regard certain people as not being people. The law is not infallible. That's why we have the ability to change it.

>And people aren’t getting abortions out of “convenience.” Often it is a matter or life or death because pregnancy literally puts a mothers life at risk.

Not easy to dig up data on this one, but I did find this with their sources linked at the bottom:

https://www.johnstonsarchive.net/policy/abortion/abreasons.html

The vast majority are due to lifestyle decisions (convenience).

>As far as your last comment goes, a fetus has no capacity to feel pain until 24 weeks

There are grown adults with conditions that prevent them from feeling pain. Can we terminate them?

−15

moneyforsoy t1_jdixcso wrote

Nice strawmans you got there. And, hey man, if you’re so against abortions, don’t get one. But why are you so deadset on making sure nobody else gets one? I don’t believe that a fetus is a person, you do. There’s no way to determine who’s right and who’s wrong and for that reason alone, we cannot codify laws preventing people from getting abortions. I’ll leave you with this quote:

>The unborn” are a convenient group of people to advocate for. They never make demands of you; they are morally uncomplicated, unlike the incarcerated, addicted, or the chronically poor; they don’t resent your condescension or complain that you are not politically correct; unlike widows, they don’t ask you to question patriarchy; unlike orphans, they don’t need money, education, or childcare; unlike aliens, they don’t bring all that racial, cultural, and religious baggage that you dislike; they allow you to feel good about yourself without any work at creating or maintaining relationships; and when they are born, you can forget about them, because they cease to be unborn. You can love the unborn and advocate for them without substantially challenging your own wealth, power, or privilege, without re-imagining social structures, apologizing, or making reparations to anyone. They are, in short, the perfect people to love if you want to claim you love Jesus, but actually dislike people who breathe. Prisoners? Immigrants? The sick? The poor? Widows? Orphans? All the groups that are specifically mentioned in the Bible? They all get thrown under the bus for the unborn.

Pastor David Barnhart

12

vexingsilence t1_jdiz16f wrote

>But why are you so deadset on making sure nobody else gets one?

I'm generally anti-murder. I'm weird like that.

>There’s no way to determine who’s right and who’s wrong and for that reason alone, we cannot codify laws preventing people from getting abortions.

Given an unknown, the ethical choice is to do the least harm. Ending a life is clearly more harmful than allowing the reproductive process to continue.

I love it when pro-abortion folks suddenly become religious in a debate. Now that's a sign of an argument that has no logical defense. Suddenly one must act on faith! Sorry, no sale there. Tell God I said hi if you see Him.

−3

moneyforsoy t1_jdizfvh wrote

I’m not religious, and it’s not murder. Cope.

10

vexingsilence t1_jdj7ske wrote

>I’m not religious

Ahh, so you're just using religion as an appeal. Nice.

1

moneyforsoy t1_jdj8gms wrote

wtf are you talking about? I can be agnostic and still agree with aspects of a religion or even just the sentiment of a pastor. you should take your username to heart and shut up for once lmao

5

vexingsilence t1_jdj9lfc wrote

By replying, I see that as you wanting to have a discussion. Otherwise, why would you? Feel free to fuck off at anytime.

1

moneyforsoy t1_jdji1fa wrote

I do want to have a discussion, but clearly we aren’t going to get anywhere meaningful. I hope you have a nice weekend.

6

pinetreesgreen t1_jdj12bm wrote

So you don't think a woman should get one to save her life? That is pretty pro manslaughter.

9

vexingsilence t1_jdj8qok wrote

Like I linked elsewhere in here, convenience/lifestyle-choice is the vast majority of abortions. You're referring to the extremely small percentage of cases. I'm not.

1

pinetreesgreen t1_jdjeuxg wrote

I'm not even sure you can describe a definition of a convenience abortion. What is that? Is having an abortion so you can take care of your other kids a lifestyle abortion? Probably by your definition. But not to the woman caring for 2 kids and already struggling.

If you approve of one kind of abortion when the womans life is in danger, you don't actually think it's murder. It would still be murder. You just want to control a woman's body based on some outdated notion of morality, but understand her dying without an abortion is really messed up and unpopular.

7

vexingsilence t1_jdjj6kq wrote

>If you approve of one kind of abortion when the womans life is in danger, you don't actually think it's murder.

Didn't say I approved of it, did I? You were using a very weak debating tactic. It's like people that bring up disabled people or children in a discussion that isn't about them, just to try to divert the flow.

1

pinetreesgreen t1_jdjk6no wrote

You said before women should be able to get abortions if their life is in danger.

So now we are just debating if You get to control them in all other situations or not based on arbitrary personal morality. The murder thing clearly isn't real, just an excuse for control. It can't be murder only in one situation, but not in another, correct?

6

moneyforsoy t1_jdkmi09 wrote

>It’s like people that bring up disabled people or children in a discussion that isn’t about them, just to try to divert the flow.

this guy a few comments ago:

>There are grown adults with conditions that prevent them from feeling pain. Can we terminate them?

I tried, too. You’re better off saving your energy for someone more receptive and capable of thinking critically.

1

vexingsilence t1_jdlgc97 wrote

Context matters. Saying it's okay because they don't feel pain, a rare disorder involving not feeling paid is relevant despite being rare since it's directly on point.

Like I said in the first quote, bringing up a thing that isn't about it.. that's a situation where something isn't on point.

One of these things is not like the other.

0

vexingsilence t1_jdlgg4l wrote

>It can't be murder only in one situation, but not in another, correct?

If you kill someone in self defense, is that murder? You have the thinking skills of a rock.

0

Cantide756 t1_jdlrfyh wrote

Logic won't change their minds, in their hearts, they know its wrong because they use pro choice instead of pro abortion. They want it as birth control, so they don't have to worry about being responsible for remembering to take a pill or use a condom. The purpose of sex throughout the history of life is to procreate, but no one wants the responsibility, just the pleasure. If they put into law that the father could "abort" the financial responsibility, you would hear them saying all this stuff about a baby is a natural consequence of sex and they agreed to the risk when they agreed to sex. Double standards are rife when it comes to being pro abortion. And the reasoning they use to try and justify it are smoke screens, try and compromise by saying "to save the mothers life" or "for instances of rape and/or incest" doesn't satisfy them because they know that's only a token amount of the numbers. Vast majority are for selfish reasons, even the word convenience shouldn't be accepted. If you are in a situation where you can't afford or handle or want a baby and you don't want to use, can't afford, or can't use the myriad of other forms of birth control, you should abstain. Oh, they want to protect women from getting back alley abortions because they are going to find a way, even if image and illegal? That's their choice, they don't make a robbery legal to protect the life of a criminal do they? And you can't forget the racial component, I think the count reached 20 million black children being aborted? FFS, planned parenthood was started by a eugenics enthusiast.

At the end of the day, pro abortionists are selfish narcissists, using the same faulty logic they used during slavery to dehumanize a class of people to make it ok to murder them. They will spin whatever they can to make a "right" out of not having to take responsibility for their actions.

0

pinetreesgreen t1_jdit6ut wrote

There is simply no guarantee the fetus will be born alive. So the only real person in this situation is the women who is growing the fetus. Her decision should be the only one relevant. it is her body/energy/nourishment being used, and in a not very pleasant manner, either.

12

vexingsilence t1_jdiv741 wrote

>There is simply no guarantee the fetus will be born alive. So the only real person in this situation is the women who is growing the fetus.

That's absurd. This is some "Schrodinger's cat" type of logic. We do know that abortion will end the life. Without any unethical medical intervention, a live birth is the likely outcome.

> Her decision should be the only one relevant.

Not if you're going to argue bodily autonomy. There are two bodies. You can't dismiss one simply because they can't consent.

−6

pinetreesgreen t1_jdiw7oy wrote

I mean, its likely, but not 100%. Is the woman who is being made to donate to the potential person live? Certainly. So it should be her decision.

You think people should be forced to share blood or undergo the reorganization or organs, tissue, risk permanent death or disability for something they don't want? Thats dystopian.

5

vexingsilence t1_jdixwgz wrote

>I mean, its likely, but not 100%. Is the woman who is being made to donate to the potential person live? Certainly. So it should be her decision.

By your logic, the chances of the woman surviving the abortion are not 100%, therefore we shouldn't allow her to have one.

>You think people should be forced to share blood or undergo the reorganization or organs, tissue, risk permanent death or disability for something they don't want?

What force is occurring? Reproduction is a natural process. Giving blood, donating or receiving organs and such are not natural processes. Those are medical procedures. Two very different things. It's the opposite of force, it's doing nothing.

1

pinetreesgreen t1_jdizc2w wrote

It is hard to discuss this with men, bc they will never understand that being pregnant is not fun for most women. It is painful and wretched and does not feel natural whatsoever. We do it bc we want kids. To make someone go through that without wanting one for a million different, individual reasons is inhumane. You can dispute it all you want, but that is what it is. Just accept you will never understand being pregnant, so you can never understand vehemently not wanting to be pregnant.

We lose women at less than one per year due to abortions. It is infinitely safer than giving birth. Your logic fails to hold up anyway since you are arguing in essence women should not get abortions even if it kills her, giving birth.

10

SuperD00perGuyd00d t1_jdjppmc wrote

>What force is occuring?

Not everybody lives by tradition, and there are some horrible people in the world that cause a force...especially for women.

3

skigirl180 t1_jdjy6ut wrote

If you don't want an abortion then don't fucking get one. Period.

3

vexingsilence t1_jdlfyfr wrote

Don't want to be murdered? Then don't get murdered. Period.

Amazing insight.

0

skigirl180 t1_jdjy0qj wrote

Who is more important. Living breathing person or clump or cells that is unable to survive on it's own?

8

vexingsilence t1_jdlfw92 wrote

You'll never convince anyone by using language like "clump of cells", which you didn't even spell correctly. Why waste people time posting replies that? Desperate for karma or something?

1

skigirl180 t1_jdm4ndl wrote

Ahhh your right, spell check changing of to or is a real waste of your time.

Are you trying to score extra karma points with your god by stopping people you don't know, will never know, have no idea about, from having a medical procedure or something?

0

ericools t1_jdjl8t9 wrote

That's not really a scientific answer. It's a ball park guess made based on some evidence, that scientists generally sort of agree on, but there isn't really any way to know for sure, as nobody really knows how non living mater becomes living in the first place.

3

largeb789 t1_jdinofl wrote

Could have been much earlier if life on earth originated outside our planet.

2

musicdude2202 t1_jdka91p wrote

There is a very scientific answer to this lol. Life begins at conception. When a sperm meets an egg and is implanted in the wall of the womb. Upon the completion of this process a new life has scientifically begun. The debate is when human rights to life should be conveyed upon a fetus/baby. Whether your beliefs stem from a religious, moral, or scientific point of view there is only one answer to when life begins, conception. Don’t kid yourself an abortion is the killing of a human life. How you choose to justify it or be against it, is of your own accord and there are many points of view on this. Personally I can see both sides as very compelling.

−4

moneyforsoy t1_jdkf7bt wrote

When a sperm meets an egg and is implanted in the wall of the uterus, that is conception, the formation of an embryo. An embryo that will develop into a fetus, and so on. Technically you’re describing the start of a pregnancy. The idea of “life” is defined in many varying ways by many different belief systems. The concept of life, which people are using to dictate whether or not a fetus/pregnancy deserves human rights is based in spiritual beliefs about when “life” begins is amorphous. It’s an abstract idea that there’s no answer.

8

musicdude2202 t1_jdkhjfv wrote

Not exactly. I’m defining life not as a moral belief but in scientific terms. At conception a new life form is established with its own DNA sequence separate from that of the parents. The embryo is just one stage of the development of the fetus but is in fact a separate life form at that point. This is just basic biology. I specifically don’t define life in moral or religious terms because there are so many varying views and is nothing more than opinion.

2

Crazy_Hick_in_NH t1_jdkorht wrote

Not for nothing, but should we always “trust” the science? Better yet, the scientists conducting/completing such experiments…what if they have an agenda? Just sayin…anything’s possible. 😅

−4

musicdude2202 t1_jdksefo wrote

One should always question science as that in itself is scientific. There are some things that are just not really disputable however. Life beginning at conception is a quantifiable and well established truth and having an abortion is in fact ending that life. The morality of it all is really the only thing up for debate.

2

Crazy_Hick_in_NH t1_jdktf7s wrote

“One should always question science as that in itself is scientific”

Where were you during COVID vaccination discussions? Err, I mean requirements. Just when I needed you most. LOL

−2

AMC4x4 t1_jdidbna wrote

People have to make all kinds of nuanced decisions. This is why this argument will go on forever and forever be used as an effective wedge issue.

Public policy should be to educate, provide contraception, and basically make abortion as unnecessary as possible, but it seems some want to have it both ways - don't educate, don't allow abortion, providing free contraception is condoning (or encouraging) "free sex."

The worst cases are the women who need D&C's due to ectopic pregnancies and the like and can no longer get them or have to go through hoops to get them, and then there are those whose babies have severe abnormalities and who will only live for a while after birth and women are being forced to carry to term.

This is "compassionate conservatism" I guess.

21

ericools t1_jdjkz66 wrote

What people should do is mind their own business. There is no reason this should be something the government has anything to do with.

16

FruityRogelio t1_jdjxczy wrote

Even in cases like the recent lady in the news. Even after it affected her, she was still reticent. Conservatives just do not have the ability for compassion.

8

Crazy_Hick_in_NH t1_jdkpbty wrote

Now wait one gosh darn minute…I have compassion; does that make me…oh no…one of them there liberalies? I say BULL SHEEEEOT!

As you were.

−5

AnythingToAvoidWork t1_jdilqj3 wrote

It begins when it can survive and become a healthy adult outside of the womb.

Before that it's a parasite.

6

OccasionallyImmortal t1_jdiydia wrote

If the requirement to survive on their own is a requirement, then plenty of adults fail this test as well.

9

FruityRogelio t1_jdjwx98 wrote

True. They have at least one of the necessary independent traits to survive, though, no? Independent heart/dependent lungs, vice versa. Brain function. Something. Machines can do a long but They cannot do everything. Mother does everything until delivery. Then it's up to the delivery from there. Birth/life begins at delivery

2

OccasionallyImmortal t1_jdkofj7 wrote

The fetus has what it needs. It's just that those parts aren't working correctly yet, but they will in the future... like the adults. The fetus gets what it needs through a tube just as some adults are fed from a feeding tube or breathe from a respirator which pumps air into them.

Even a fetus taken out at 24 weeks can survive on life support just like an older adult. Delivery is irrelevant.

−2

XEssentialCryIceIs t1_jdjgqvk wrote

I think this is actually the best definition. Once it can maintain homeostasis organically, and I would argue without extreme interventions, it's a living individual. Until then, a fetus is no more a "person" than your liver is. Sure, it's living tissue, but it can't function or survive independent of the body it's attached to.

7

largeb789 t1_jdiodk8 wrote

It's hard to classify a fetus as a parasite since it's of the same species.

6

FruityRogelio t1_jdjwjqa wrote

Parasitic needs to persist better? I dig what you're saying.

0

carpdog112 t1_jdivvdp wrote

So, conservatively 21 weeks?

2

Glucose12 t1_jdj4yu0 wrote

Right around the time that brain waves typically can supposedly be found in a fetus/unborn(typically 25 weeks)

Which makes it consistent with the law in most states that affects whether or not a person(adult or not) is alive or dead. Do they have the full/usual complement of brain waves? If not, they're not alive in any way consistent with the law(s) affecting all other humans.

I think, FWIW, that always attempting to aim for legal consistency is a good thing. It lends greater credibility and enforceability. Having the legal system be a hodgepodge of inconsistent patchwork will always lead to social discontent/upset.

5

carpdog112 t1_jdja9c7 wrote

All I'm saying is that viability has been demonstrated to be as early as 21 weeks. Drawing a line is obviously something that needs to be done, but it's a sticky wicket with continuously shifting standards.

5

Glucose12 t1_jdjjzr4 wrote

21 weeks surprises me - how can the fetus/unborn survive outside of the womb if the brain isn't fully functional yet. Perhaps that 25-week wakeup of the brain isn't consistent, and can be earlier or later for some individuals?

1

ericools t1_jdjlbjr wrote

So never for about half the population.

2

FruityRogelio t1_jdjvzxd wrote

Completely agree. Finger wagging to say the verbiage will work against your argument, but it's true. Until it's independently surviving (breathing, with a pulse, and with self-sufficient metabolism), it is still an appendage/parasite/growth.

Edit: that leaves out in the cold a shot load of independent people that can't do those things, of course. But flopping into earth requires at least an independent pulse

1

Double-Abalone7052 t1_jdrp4cu wrote

Exactly and I don’t have to host a parasite just like you don’t have to give up your kidney even if a living breathing person will die without it. Even if you died I still don’t have a right to make you give up your kidney for your child even if it will die without it. So I don’t have to host a parasite

1

llambo17 t1_jditr8k wrote

>Before that it's a parasite

What an interesting view of life...

−2

AnythingToAvoidWork t1_jdiuvee wrote

It is what it is.

If it can't be removed from the mother and become a functional human why would you call it a human?

11

FruityRogelio t1_jdjy1q3 wrote

That's exactly what it is. It's a biological lifeform requiring all metabolic function from its host.

Call it parasitic tendencies if it makes it seem less spooky to think about. The mother and father both hopefully love it as they will their potential future child. In the mean time, they regard it as nourishing, providing, gestation, etc.

3

ThunderySleep t1_jdje75v wrote

Go drop a baby off in the middle of the woods without an adult caring for it and see how long it survives. Your comment is brain-dead, even for /r/newhampshire standards.

−3

FruityRogelio t1_jdjxwx6 wrote

Fwiw, Nordic cultures routinely leave infants outside for hours on end. They're wrapped up, etc. Not sure who you were responding to; new to reddit. Get your point, but if you're saying kids still need care that is true. Care =/= being biologically viable with said care

2

Double-Abalone7052 t1_jdrp0fy wrote

And it’s kind of irrelevant, I don’t have to host a parasite regardless of when life begins. You don’t have to give up your kidney for your kid even if it will die without getting it, I don’t have to let one feed off my body

1

ThunderySleep t1_jdjemxt wrote

This. But most people don't see it that way, so it's a question of "when life begins" to most of them.

At the end of the day we assign different value to different lives and most people just don't want to admit it. Which still leaves it a contentious issue because now it's a question of where's the line where it's life is valuable enough to be protected instead of whether or not it is life. If one thing's clear it's that people disagree on where it should be.

0

valleyman02 t1_jdjqxrp wrote

How can you have a heart beat before you even have a heart.

6

HappyFarmWitch t1_jdkhojb wrote

Thank you so much for this link!!

2

littleirishmaid t1_jdkl4ql wrote

1

russlar t1_jdmmme9 wrote

ok, now show hungry kids in dilapidated schools. Oh, right, the pro-life crowd only cares about "life" until it's born

1

littleirishmaid t1_jdmzhym wrote

So, you looked at the images. Your comment indicates it is clearly not a clump of cells at that point.

2

llambo17 t1_jditeaq wrote

>Maybe someone should show Sellers
>
>what a fetus looks like at nine weeks

9 weeks is a bit different then at 24 weeks which the bills just passed.

2

AMC4x4 t1_jdiu294 wrote

I get it, but I'm referring to the GOP attempts (stated in the article) at getting the 6-week ban passed. 24 weeks is pretty much the "standard" all around the world, and was itself a compromise based on Roe, which obviously is not in force now.

11

XEssentialCryIceIs t1_jdjf6ak wrote

The question just exposes his ignorance. The sperm that inseminates the ovum is "alive", as is the ovum itself. Living things come from other living things; there's no spontaneous generation going on anywhere in this process.

What he's really trying to ask is 'when is it a person', and that's a significantly more difficult question to answer.

2

NewAcctCuzIWasDoxxed t1_jdiepn1 wrote

Dope. Now read the state motto again and legalize weed.

I don't even smoke but it makes us look bad shouting Live Free Or Die!!! ^butneversmokepot

Finally be able to use the tax revenue to fix that pothole on S Willow that gave me 2 broken rims.

56

wriestheart t1_jdlofg9 wrote

Won't get it till it's legal federally. Gotta milk it like we do with the booze and we can't do that till they fix the banking regs

3

FreezingRobot t1_jdik8jb wrote

This is why they needed to sneak the previous restrictions through via the budget bill. They know they don't have the votes to do anything terribly serious (like the Southern states can do with a voice vote).

21

Crazy_Hick_in_NH t1_jdko85y wrote

I know 4 things:

  1. Violence against and/or murder of a pregnant woman should result in 2 identical charges, regardless.

  2. On both ends of the spectrum, if you exist by way of being tethered to another (human/machine), you ain’t living.

  3. My body, my choice.

  4. I’m a middle-aged man.

13

P0Rt1ng4Duty t1_jdlclvs wrote

I mainly applaud your statements, but the weird part of my brain wants to know how you feel about conjoined twins.

2

vanillagorrilla23 t1_jdilfru wrote

Wonder what's the next step, is this another thing people thing will be stopped in the Senate like the marijuana bill? I'm anti abortion, but I think it should be legal for the safety of those who need it. I think that term of "need" might be up for debate but it should be legal at least.

−37

BelichicksBurner t1_jdism8l wrote

So...you're pro-choice. That's literally what that means: people get to choose. The good news for the actual anti-abortion people: we think they should get to choose, too.

41

vanillagorrilla23 t1_jditb9q wrote

Yeah, but I'm guessing that's the only part we would agree on is legality for safety reasons 😂

−11

llambo17 t1_jdiuino wrote

Should be legal for medical purposes that can lead to complications and or death situations, or r#pe. But for just a regular abortion, personally I believe it shouldn't be done after a heartbeat is detected but I am also pro freedom of you own body so allow the operations to be done just don't use taxpayer money. You want it done then you can pay for it out of pocket.

−27

skigirl180 t1_jdjz0j0 wrote

So a woman can only have autonomy over her body once it has been violated? That is what you are arguing when you say abortion is okay after rape. That is bullshit. A women should be able to decide with her doctor about her own medical choices and health all the time, not only after she is raped.

23

llambo17 t1_jduzk45 wrote

Maybe read the rest of my comment and you would see where I state I also believe in people's freedoms so if they want to have an operation that's not because of a medical situation then allow it, just don't use taxpayer money.

1

vanillagorrilla23 t1_jdiuryw wrote

Yep, that's pretty much my exact stance actually. But when I called myself pro choice I was attacked so yeah, any idea if this goes to Senate next or what's the next step?

−17

FaustusC t1_jdit93t wrote

24 weeks termination up to fucking 6 months in, end of the second trimester?

A Baby born early at 24 weeks has a 60-70% chance of survival. How does this not sicken people? At that point it's indisputably a baby. I'm all for exceptions for assisting when the baby is terminal or won't be able to survive, but fucks sake. Allowing an otherwise healthy baby to be terminated at 6 months in is just horrifying.

−69

opperior t1_jdiuzco wrote

No one terminates a pregnancy after 6 months because they want to, and forcing a grieving mother through a legal battle to decide if a pregnancy is an acceptable exception is cruel. The decision should be between the woman and her doctor; no one else needs to be involved.

75

Tullyswimmer t1_jdwlief wrote

> No one terminates a pregnancy after 6 months because they want to

Then it shouldn't be a problem to restrict it after that based on medical necessity, no?

1

opperior t1_jdwlve1 wrote

Did you read the rest of my sentence?

1

Tullyswimmer t1_jdwnjjy wrote

Yes, I did. Now can you answer my question? If nobody would have an elective abortion after 24 weeks, and would only have one at that point because of a medical issue, then what is the problem with restricting elective abortions after 24 weeks?

1

opperior t1_jdwqvk3 wrote

The rest of my sentence answers that exact question, but I'll expand on that anyway:

Say a woman is forced to have an abortion to save her life. There are only a few ways this could go:

  1. She has the abortion first. She is now required to defend the decision she and her doctor made while still dealing with the loss of her child. As has happened. And while the charges were eventually dropped under public outcry, the whole ordeal should never have happened in the first place, and the door remains open for it to happen again.

  2. She must get approval for the abortion, which can take time and lead to unnecessary complications. As has happened.

  3. She risks death for herself or the fetus. If the fetus dies and she lives, she still risks arrest. As has happened.

The point being, if you make it illegal after a set point, there must be a procedure to determine if a pregnancy is an acceptable candidate for termination, a procedure to determine if an unexpected termination was deliberate or not, and a punishment if a termination happens when it wasn't pre-approved. Forcing a grieving woman through this procedure with no fore-knowledge of whether or not she will be punished for something out of her control is the very antithesis of justice and humanity.

Edit: to expand further: This restriction also results in higher death rates for both women and infants, so if the goal is to save lives, it fails.

1

Tullyswimmer t1_jdwxvdj wrote

> She has the abortion first. She is now required to defend the decision she and her doctor made while still dealing with the loss of her child.

Why? Why would she have to defend it? If it's "between the doctor and the patient" as you describe, wouldn't it be on the doctor to defend it, since they were the one who said it was necessary? The only case in which a woman would have to defend it if it was necessary is if a medical professional said it wasn't and she wanted it anyway, which is the definition of elective.

In the case you cited, it never once mentioned if it was medically necessary or not, or if she had consulted with a physician. If it's not medically necessary, that's elective, again.

>She must get approval for the abortion, which can take time and lead to unnecessary complications. As has happened.

Can you explain to me how that situation at 18 weeks would have be affected by restrictions after 24 weeks? I'm not sure I see the connection there. Even at 22 weeks, if your water breaks, you're probably going into labor. I know because it happened to my wife.

>She risks death for herself or the fetus. If the fetus dies and she lives, she still risks arrest. As has happened.

I'm sorry, are you equating losing a pregnancy due to methamphetamine use with a medically necessary abortion? And again, how would losing a pregnancy at 17 weeks be affected by restrictions affecting pregnancies past 24 weeks? I seem to be missing something here.

1

opperior t1_jdx138y wrote

Why should a doctor have to be put on trial for doing what they think is best for their patient? Does a legal body have a better understanding of the medical issues involved?

Can you explain to me why the situation would be different at 24 weeks as opposed to 18 weeks? The same processes and procedures are in place, regardless of time frame.

Does the reason why a fetus is not viable matter? Would the situation be any different if the cause was the genetic anomaly as the report stated? Is it okay to let the woman die if drugs are involved? Again, why does the time frame matter? Pregnancies can be lost at more than 24 weeks for many reasons, including natural ones.

What you are missing is the idea that getting more people involved in a personal and highly traumatic decision - people who are less qualified to make that decision at that - will only make problems worse. Why do you think more restrictive states have higher fatalities?

1

Tullyswimmer t1_jdx3o15 wrote

> Why should a doctor have to be put on trial for doing what they think is best for their patient? Does a legal body have a better understanding of the medical issues involved?

At no point did I say that the doctor should have to defend it, or be put on trial. They shouldn't. But if anyone has to defend the decision to do something out of medical necessity, it should be, you know, the medical professional who said it was necessary?

>Can you explain to me why the situation would be different at 24 weeks as opposed to 18 weeks? The same processes and procedures are in place, regardless of time frame.

I asked a question about why we couldn't restrict abortions after 24 weeks if they were never done for elective reasons after 24 weeks. I'm not sure how 18 weeks is after 24 weeks. Last I knew, 18 weeks was before 24 weeks, so anything that happened at 18 weeks would not then be covered by restrictions after 24 weeks. Unless my math is way off.

>Does the reason why a fetus is not viable matter? Would the situation be any different if the cause was the genetic anomaly as the report stated? Is it okay to let the woman die if drugs are involved? Again, why does the time frame matter? Pregnancies can be lost at more than 24 weeks for many reasons, including natural ones.

Declaring the fetus not viable would be permitted. As long as it was truly not viable, and not like Iceland where they consider Down's syndrome a legitimate reason to terminate. Yes, the situation would be different if there was an actual genetic anomaly and not substance abuse. No, it's not OK to let a woman die because of drug use but literally nobody is making that argument except as a straw man. And again, that case was at 17 weeks, I specifically asked about a ban after 24 weeks.

>What you are missing is the idea that getting more people involved in a personal and highly traumatic decision - people who are less qualified to make that decision at that - will only make problems worse. Why do you think more restrictive states have higher fatalities?

Again, if a doctor says it's medically necessary, and that's all that's needed, who else is involved in that decision? And states that are more restrictive tend to have lower quality healthcare, and less access to healthcare, in general, that states that are less restrictive. Surely that could contribute to higher fatality rates, no? Or if they magically made abortion unrestricted up until the moment of birth, no questions asked, (as you want), would they suddenly not have higher fatality rates despite no other changes to healthcare quality and access?


I will ask the question one more time, since I still have not gotten an answer. If nobody is going to terminate a pregnancy after 24 weeks for elective reasons, why is it a problem to restrict abortion access to only non-elective reasons after 24 weeks?

Everything you've provided as a citation or example, thus far, would either be elective, didn't happen after 24 weeks, or is hypothetical.

1

opperior t1_jdxfum2 wrote

The part you are missing is that the time frame doesn't matter. My original point is that, by 24 weeks, any abortion would be because it is medically necessary. That medical necessity is the point, whether it happens at 24 weeks or at 17 weeks.

If there is a law in place that an abortion isn't allowed after a given time (whatever that time is) unless medically necessary, then any such abortion must be legally defended. Otherwise, what would be the point of the law? If all that is necessary is for a doctor to say it's necessary, then the law would be unenforceable.

So if abortions that late are medically necessary, and such a law is unenforceable, why have it? At that point it just causes more harm.

1

Tullyswimmer t1_jdxlyf4 wrote

> The part you are missing is that the time frame doesn't matter. My original point is that, by 24 weeks, any abortion would be because it is medically necessary. That medical necessity is the point, whether it happens at 24 weeks or at 17 weeks.

It absolutely does matter. A 17 week fetus is not viable. A 24 or 25 week one is. If the law says "elective abortions are legal until 24 weeks, and only medically necessary after that" how does that "medical necessity" affect a 17 week pregnancy?

>If there is a law in place that an abortion isn't allowed after a given time (whatever that time is) unless medically necessary, then any such abortion must be legally defended. Otherwise, what would be the point of the law? If all that is necessary is for a doctor to say it's necessary, then the law would be unenforceable.

So again, there wouldn't be a problem with it? What you're arguing for is a law where elective abortions would be available until birth with no questions asked. If those never happen, why is it so critically important that they're legal?

>So if abortions that late are medically necessary, and such a law is unenforceable, why have it? At that point it just causes more harm.

Because you and I both know that elective abortions can and do happen after that point. Simple as that. You can try and dance around it all you want, but at the end of the day, if it was really that uncommon for them to happen, you wouldn't have a problem with restricting them.

1

pinetreesgreen t1_jdivfy5 wrote

Making someone else grow something in their own body without a choice is far more horrifying. A fetus may never make it to being born alive. The women already is a real, live person. Trust her to make the correct decision for her own situation/health.

35

schtroumpf t1_jdiz30m wrote

The source you’re citing appears to be making the opposite point: that 24 weeks is the viability threshold. Other sources (like this one: https://healthcare.utah.edu/womenshealth/pregnancy-birth/preterm-birth/when-is-it-safe-to-deliver) say it’s more like 40-50%, and talk about how when babies DO survive birth at 24 weeks or earlier, it’s often with extreme and life-threatening defects.

If what concerns you is the question of viability, I suggest you look here: https://healthcare.utah.edu/womenshealth/pregnancy-birth/preterm-birth/when-is-it-safe-to-deliver abortions in the third trimester are incredibly rare,(1% of the total) and when they do occur it’s often due to medical necessity. This makes sense when you think about it: why would a woman go through the genuine effort of six months of pregnancy only to change her mind frivolously in the home stretch? Indeed, it’s those medically necessary abortions, which more moderate pro-lifers may deem acceptable, that are most endangered by focus on the supposed murder of nearly-at-term fetuses.

I respect that many pro-lifers come from a place of love, even though I disagree with their conclusions. But there is also a strong element of the pro-life movement that is less concerned about love and more concerned about control of women’s bodies, and reducing their role in society to that of child-bearing alone. The latter is adept at misusing fringe examples as a way to pull at the heart strings of the former, to the point of unreason. I hope you belong to that former group, and you come to see that true compassion includes the mothers and women whose lives are changed irrevocably by pregnancy, and who are best-positioned to choose for themselves what’s right.

28

quaffee t1_jdj4b20 wrote

I'm afraid your generous benefit of the doubt may not be correct -- check their post history.

16

TrafficAppropriate41 t1_jdj5y33 wrote

That's fine that you feel that way, but why should lawmakers with no obstetrics background be dictating appropriate pregnancy care for doctors and their patients?

17