Originally posted by okinrus
No, your claim was that there was only a small number of rape victims who actually became pregnant.
A claim that I supported with scientific study...
However, my claim was that pro-choicers, especially ultra-feminist, are often times sexually assaulted.
Often times? Here we go again. Often implies a high frequency relative to some other baseline. So you are saying that men rape "ultra-feminist pro-choicers" than other groups?
That is something I'd really like to see some backing for.
Something to remember - just because a paticular group in America gets a lot of press doesn't mean it represents a large percentage of the population in question.
Thus, it's not a rational conclusion to become pro-chioce, but an emotional appeal to protect themselves.
But following your logic, weren't they already "ultra-feminist" and "pro-choice" when they got raped? You sound like you're putting the cart before the horse here. :think:
While the statistics would be helpful, there is practically no way to get statistics on this without asking alot of people embarrasing questions.
Yet that is no reason
not to do studies to answer questions. If researchers used your logic, then hardly any studies about behavior would ever be done.
I was giving the figure from memory, but it's around 30% who will abort.
http://www.cathinsight.com/morality/altern.htm
OK, let's try the exercise one more time...
This is another illustration of the difficulty some pro-choicer's have in carrying on a coherent argument. Notice that you've now changed your numbers without conceding that you've done so...
In post 27, you originally claimed that around 50% of pregnancies resulting in rape will end in abortion. I then asked you to provide source information, you did so, and I appreciate that.
Then, in the same post that you provide the source info you:
- a) change your number from 50% to 30% and
b) provide a source that supports neither number!
You kindly provided the article "Rape Victims Find Abortion Alternatives" from the "Catholic Insight" web site. In the article it states the following
in the very first paragraph:
... Mrs. Makimaa has done research on how many children are conceived by rape, and she just published a book, "Victims and Victors," about violated women. According to a 1996 study by the Medical University of South Carolina, 32,101 pregnancies result from rape each year in the United States. Of those, about 20,000 are aborted.
Since you now have actual numbers, a simple mathematical calculation (dividing the number of abortions by the number of pregnancies resulting from rape) gives you the figure you need.
Dividing 20,000 by 32,101 and converting it to percentage gives you 62.3%. That tranlsates into "almost 2/3rds of pregnancies from rape were aborted". That's a very different number from the one you remembered and then even more different from your new changed number.
This is the kind of credibility issue that I am commenting on. You make a statement using numbers. Your opponent challenges you to prove those numbers are accurate. You then change your number without mentioning why and provide statistical evidence
that contradicts your figures. :doh:
Well, depending on the topic. Most .edu sites have accurate information.
I used to do national survey research for a living. Accuracy in a survey depends on design issues like validity as well as response rate. Some surveys are well-designed, some are not. But even the best design will not overcome a poor response rate. Non-academics can
hope that sites with an education domain will have accurate information but that is unfortunately not always the case. It pays to read the article thoroughly. If you do not have a science background, you'll have to rely on your intuition (always a risky thing in research). When a number seems out of line with what your gut tells you, check it out and verify it elsewhere...
Yes, I don't think it was ever published. Must only have a small result set.
Could be. Without tracking down the author, we'll probably never know for certain.