[net.abortion] Steve Rice Cubed !

marco@andromeda.RUTGERS.EDU (the wharf rat) (07/23/86)

>Note that this argument only justifies abortion for the handicapped and
>minority children, 

	I beg your pardon ?  My justification for allowing abortion
is that a person can do what she wants with her body, and that a non-
viable embryo is *not* a human being.  

Re: when it's a baby....
>>
>Maybe you could explain why you set these two criteria as alternatives?
> [...]
>I'm sure you would wan't more precision in the criteria
>that your right to live would be judged with 

 	Sure.  Independent survival is one of the criteria I use
to seperate "human" from "human being".  As in my liver is human,
but is not a human being.  As to the second criterion, I would
I would accept the brain wave patterns characteristic of concious
thought or dreaming. 
	By the way, if *I* ever get to the point where *I* am neither
capable of independent survival nor exhibit any signs of brain activity,
I hope someone is brave/caring enough to end my "life" .

>> Please understand that we (the non-ignorant
>>ones) do not support abortion, merely a woman's right to choose.
>
>So you *do* support abortion if woman choose it.  
>
	NO.  I SUPPORT A WOMAN'S RIGHT TO CHOOSE.  Are we
caught in a loop here or what ?

>on from there.  Since the fetus is human offspring, it makes sense to
>consider it innocent of being "non-human" (with regard to a human's right
>to life) until proven guilty.  The pro-choice camp has never proven the
>fetus guilty.  This is an a priori condemnation.  From what I've seen
>they are very unwilling to even consider the idea that the fetus might
>be innocent after all.
	
	I don't understand all this guilt and innocence stuff.  The
simple fact is that a teaspoonful of partially differentiated cells
is not a human being.  Of course it's innocent; it is incapable of
independent thought or action.  As to the idea that someday we might
prove that the things are "human" in the way you use the term, and
should treat them accordingly : what if they prove cows have personal 
lives someday ?  Better not kill any more cows.  What if someday a
cockroach talks ? We'd have to give them a seat at the U.N.  See ?
That kind of argument ("But maybe someday in the future...") is false
since carrying it out to it's logical conclusion leads to an absurdity.
(This is <dis>proof by reductio ad absurdum)

Re: poor & large families :
>also reasons that they don't particularly *want* birth control as well
>as abortion.  Organizations like Planned Parenthood have to go in and 
>*convince* these people that they should use it.  The reasons they
>[...]
>in  mind.  They just want fewer poor people around.

	And organizations like the Peace Corps have to go in and
*convince* them to keep the village well sanitary.  And other
organizations have to go in and *convince* them to have their
kids vaccinated.  Unfortunately, ignorance is often coincident
with poverty. I refuse to believe that all those pregnant 14 yr
olds did it on purpose to provide for their old age, nor will I 
believe that a young mother of 6 on welfare did it because
she loves children.  How can such a person pull themselves out
of poverty ?  Why is it wrong to teach them that they should learn to
wait, get a skill,get a job, get *financially secure*, and then 
you can have a family ?  You've got a wire crossed somewhere, bub.

re: whose decision and whose support ?
> Having it both ways gives the woman almost as much power over
>the man as she has over the fetus.

	Sometimes I think the last sentence holds the (a) key
to the anti-choice stance:  These guys resent the power given to
women by the ability to bear children, and thus seek to control
the act.  I've said it before, and I'll say it again:
	The day he can have the baby himself is the day he gets
to decide whether or not it's born to term.  His contribution to
the pregnancy is *minimal*.  *That's* why he can't force her to
bear his children.

>what if your girl-friend becomes pregnant, refuses to get
>an abortion (or changes her mind and decides not to).  Will you support
>her without feeling trapped by her desires instead of your obligation 

	The only time this happened to me, I was perfectly ready 
to help her in any way she chose.  Yes, I did feel trapped.  But
I wanted her to be at peace; if I didn't care that much we wouldn't
have (almost) had a child together.

                                                I remain,
                                                      W.rat
And it's *not* killing a baby.  (What t-shirt ?)