Originally Posted by
hawkesnightmare
All of the things you've listed are developed over time, and at 13 weeks (the point by which 92% of abortions are performed in the US) all of these things are barely developed.
^ That's a 'fetus' at 10 weeks. Looks pretty human to me.
Since you focused on the 13th week, let's have a look at what's developed by this point...
- The fetus reaches a length of about 15 cm (6 inches).
- A fine hair called lanugo develops on the head.
- Fetal skin is almost transparent.
- More muscle tissue and bones have developed, and the bones become harder.
- The fetus makes active movements.
- Sucking motions are made with the mouth.
- Meconium is made in the intestinal tract.
- The liver and pancreas produce fluid secretions.
- From week 13, sex prediction by obstetric ultrasonography is almost 100% accurate.
Originally Posted by
hawkesnightmare
Only 8% of abortions performed after 13 weeks, a large chunk of which are adolescents who waited longer because they didn't know what to do, feared their parents' reaction, etc., and only 1% of abortions are at 21+ weeks, which is the point at which the brain is fully developed and functioning properly.
You're honest with your statistics and I respect you for that. Unfortunately, to most pro-lifers, and me, these statistics are irrelevant. I wouldn't react any differently if most abortions were carried out after 20 weeks, or if most abortions were carried out before 4 weeks. You must understand that time-framing is the systematic approach to devaluing life. I stand by the notion that if it's a human being, then you can't kill it. Publicly recognising the notion that if it's a human being, you can only kill it if it meets certain criteria is the road to fascism. Call me dramatic, call me insane, this is what I believe, and I want to make it clear to you that the timing is irrelevant to most pro-lifers, so it's not a sound argument at all. The only reason I touch on the developmental stages is because I know the pro-choice side cares about that stuff. Obviously, cutting back the cut-off point is going in the right direction, but I want to see it gone completely, and we'll only do that if we don't muck about on this topic.
Originally Posted by
hawkesnightmare
One neutral point of view coming up: The pro-life side would have all future mothers be forced to carry their pregnancies to term, regardless of their wishes, the wishes of their parents, the fetus' ability to survive once born, and the mother's ability to survive during the process, effectively nullifying the rights the mother has over what she wants to do with her own body.
That's not a neutral point of view because already the neutral point of view has demonstrated that it does not believe the fetus to be a human being. If it did, then it wouldn't have any problem with the mother being restrained from killing the unborn child. Simply, there's no middle ground in this argument. I could care very little about people's wishes when a human life is involved. You cannot wish for somebody's death; you don't get that right.
Originally Posted by
hawkesnightmare
The pro-choice side allows the mother to choose whether she wants to abort the fetus, carry it to term and give it up for adoption, or carry it to term and keep it. While there are many points of view on when a fetus should be granted human rights, and when it is still acceptable to abort the fetus, 95% of US citizens live in a state that allows abortions halfway into the second trimester, which allows every party involved ample time to make a decision.
Okay.
Originally Posted by
hawkesnightmare
Life starts at conception, yes. That is undeniable.
Thanks for the clarification. Now I know who I'm talking to.
Originally Posted by
hawkesnightmare
The part that is argued is at what point we decide to give it the same rights as a human being. That 95% of the US mentioned earlier, if they all waited until the last minute to have an abortion, will have missed 4-5 periods, will have a noticeable amount of plumpness in the abdominal region, and will currently be pumping hormones and nutrients into a quickly growing fetus, which is just starting to have full brain function, and is 4 inches long. Anything after this point in my opinion, the mother has either waited too long, or has made the decision to keep it. If an abortion must be performed, it will be for medically serious reasons.
That's your stance, and that's fine. I see it as an improvement over the current policy, but it still follows the same notion, and I'm not sure if I can argue against that particular notion. It's one you either believe in 100%, or don't.
Originally Posted by
hawkesnightmare
That may be your stance on sex, and you are free to do as much procreating as you want, difficult as it may be for you, but the culture has changed. It's left you behind. Hell, even apes are doing it for non-productive reasons.
Okay, but I don't exactly want to do what animals are doing. When I'm arguing in favour of vegetarianism, I don't point to the herbivorous animals, or point at our behavioural omnivorous traits, I argue with morality, and I believe the same applies here. Having sexual intercourse and not worrying about the possible result is a common problem nowadays because of the massive propaganda and sexual revolution that has grown ever since the demise of Christianity. Yes, the culture has changed, but that doesn't necessarily imply an improvement, does it?
Originally Posted by
hawkesnightmare
What's more responsible, a woman carrying her baby to term, giving birth, keeping the child, forcing her to give up her dreams to care for it, struggling financially, creating a harsh environment not only for her, but also the child OR going to the clinic after taking a pregnancy test, getting an abortion, and continuing her schoolwork to become a virologist, creating the cure for AIDS and saving 37 million lives globally?
Both situations are hypothetical of course, but 60% of single mother families are living below the poverty line, and I would hazard a guess that even complete families that are not financially ready to care for an infant will struggle to stay above the poverty line.
Single mothers are a massive problem, and we have to look at the source of what's causing this. It's obviously the demise of marriage
(US statistics here), and we've undermined it for so long. Commitment used to be an admirable quality.