Abortion ISN'T "murder"

User Name

Greatest poster ever
Banned
Just as I can absolutely say that a miscarriage of justice occurred in the sentencing of Brock Allen Turner without being compelled to hunt him down and execute him.

Wrong. The word "murder" has a particular meaning--"the unlawful premeditated killing of one human being by another." "Unlawful" is a key word there. Abortion is legal in the eyes of the law, therefore it is not murder. It may be wrong, immoral, sinful, etc., but it isn't murder. So those who claim that abortion is murder have no legal standing upon which to make such a claim.
 

7djengo7

This space intentionally left blank
Wrong. The word "murder" has a particular meaning--"the unlawful premeditated killing of one human being by another." "Unlawful" is a key word there. Abortion is legal in the eyes of the law, therefore it is not murder. It may be wrong, immoral, sinful, etc., but it isn't murder. So those who claim that abortion is murder have no legal standing upon which to make such a claim.

Whose "law" is being referred to in your "particular meaning" of the word "murder", you God-despising, bloodlusting Satanist?

And, ok doser clearly employed the term, "miscarriage of justice", above. Is whatever you refer to as "law" that which you would say is the determiner of what's just and of what's unjust--of what's against justice?

Would you say that aborting babies could go from being unjust, on Monday, to being just, on Friday, as the result of an alteration, on the intervening Wednesday, in what you call "law"?

In places where slaveholding has been called "lawful" for a period of time, would you say that it was just, in those places, at those times, for men to hold other men in captivity as slaves? And, when a slave escaped from his/her captor, would you say that that slave was acting unjustly? Would you say that justice was served by the escaped slave's former captor recapturing that escaped slave?
 
Last edited:

quip

BANNED
Banned
Well, the brute fact is that if your own parents had decided to abort you then you wouldn't be here to discuss the issue. So, where do you personally stand on abortion?

Well, I wouldn't be here to discuss the issue.... a moot point.

I personally wouldn't advocate for someone to get an abortion else to save their life....at the same time, I wouldn't restrict their right to perform one otherwise.
 

Arthur Brain

Well-known member
Well, I wouldn't be here to discuss the issue.... a moot point.

I personally wouldn't advocate for someone to get an abortion else to save their life....at the same time, I wouldn't restrict their right to perform one otherwise.

Okay, so, you only advocate abortion in order to save a life and yet you wouldn't restrict other options?

C'mon man. That's double speak.
 

User Name

Greatest poster ever
Banned
Okay, so, you only advocate abortion in order to save a life and yet you wouldn't restrict other options?

C'mon man. That's double speak.

He's talking about personal advocacy versus public policy. He wouldn't advocate for someone to get an abortion personally, but still thinks it should be legal.
 

User Name

Greatest poster ever
Banned
Some just can't grasp the idea.

But if you were a "pro-life" Republican politician who just knocked up his mistress, you'd say, "Hey babe, guess what? I'm taking you down to the clinic to get an abortion! And guess what else! I'll pay for half of it!"
 

7djengo7

This space intentionally left blank
But if you were a "pro-life" Republican politician who just knocked up his mistress, you'd say, "Hey babe, guess what? I'm taking you down to the clinic to get an abortion! And guess what else! I'll pay for half of it!"

Wait....so you're agreeing that it is wrong for a "pro-life" (in other words, anti-life) Republican politician to be instrumental in the abortion of a baby?
 

quip

BANNED
Banned
But if you were a "pro-life" Republican politician who just knocked up his mistress, you'd say, "Hey babe, guess what? I'm taking you down to the clinic to get an abortion! And guess what else! I'll pay for half of it!"

That's because nobody truly considers the fetus inherently equal to a human child....its a political stance veiled as a humanitarian one.

I may post my the scenario again which points this out when I get more time. Some here may be familiar with it.
 

7djengo7

This space intentionally left blank
He's talking about personal advocacy versus public policy. He wouldn't advocate for someone to get an abortion personally, but still thinks it should be legal.

You call baby-murder--abortion--"legal"; you say it is legal, no?
Do you also say that it should be legal?

Obviously, these are two, distinct questions: one, a question of what is, the other, a question of what should be.
  1. On what do you base your claim that abortion is legal?
  2. On what do you base your claim that abortion should be legal?
 

7djengo7

This space intentionally left blank
That's because nobody truly considers the fetus inherently equal to a human child....its a political stance veiled as a humanitarian one.

I like how you just aptly called yourself "nobody", you vicious, bloodthirsty cur.
 

Arthur Brain

Well-known member
That's because nobody truly considers the fetus inherently equal to a human child....its a political stance veiled as a humanitarian one.

I may post my the scenario again which points this out when I get more time. Some here may be familiar with it.

Not inherently true and that's speaking as someone who isn't hardline on the issue in question...
 

User Name

Greatest poster ever
Banned
That's because nobody truly considers the fetus inherently equal to a human child....its a political stance veiled as a humanitarian one.

There are a very few, mostly devoutly religious who do, and they walk the talk. But for most, who make the false pretense to be "pro-life," you hit the nail on the head--"its a political stance veiled as a humanitarian one."

I may post my the scenario again which points this out when I get more time. Some here may be familiar with it.

Looking forward to it.
 

quip

BANNED
Banned
There are a very few, mostly devoutly religious who do, and they walk the talk. But for most, who make the false pretense to be "pro-life," you hit the nail on the head--"its a political stance veiled as a humanitarian one."

Looking forward to it.
https://theologyonline.com/forum/pol...n-legal/page13 (post 188)

It was a simple scenario:

Suppose a sudden, intense fire broke out in an in-vitro lab and you were the only one available to assist. In this particular lab, on a table, held a depository of 100 viable zygotes within test tubes. Next to these test tubes though lies a 3 month-old, helpless infant. You only have time to rescue one or the other...which shall it be?

Invariably, the intuitive respone is to immediately save the single child over the - 100 fold - lives in test tubes. Why do you think that is?

It's easy to claim a zygote is equal to a child in an abstract argument....a much harder ideal to follow as a matter of pragmatics.
 
Top