Welcome to The Cave of Dragonflies forums, where the smallest bugs live alongside the strongest dragons.
Guests are not able to post messages or even read certain areas of the forums. Now, that's boring, don't you think? Registration, on the other hand, is simple, completely free of charge, and does not require you to give out any personal information at all. As soon as you register, you can take part in some of the happy fun things at the forums such as posting messages, voting in polls, sending private messages to people and being told that this is where we drink tea and eat cod.
Of course I'm not forcing you to do anything if you don't want to, but seriously, what have you got to lose? Five seconds of your life?
And, technically speaking, it's not so much women as it is people who own a uterus. Men/non-binary people/genderfluid people can get abortions too, if they own a functioning uterus and create a zygote in it.
Abortion isn't the point. Reproductive freedom is. Denying women access to abortions is denying them reproductive freedom.
I'm not disagreeing with you here. The question is, where is the line between respecting a woman's right to her body, and respecting a baby's right to life? You see, I have a moral dilemma when it comes to late-term abortion. The libertarian in me says "let the woman have the abortion whenever the fuck she feels like it," but I also don't see a difference between a baby (fetus) five minutes before and after birth, developmentally at least.
That is a really fucking awful argument. Late term abortions are pretty much always cases where either the fetus is not going to survive regardless or the mother is going to die if she does not abort. These are not cases of somebody deciding that they want to abort very late in the pregnancy! Please do not represent them as such.I'm not disagreeing with you here. The question is, where is the line between respecting a woman's right to her body, and respecting a baby's right to life? You see, I have a moral dilemma when it comes to late-term abortion. The libertarian in me says "let the woman have the abortion whenever the fuck she feels like it," but I also don't see a difference between a baby (fetus) five minutes before and after birth, developmentally at least.
That is a really fucking awful argument. Late term abortions are pretty much always cases where either the fetus is not going to survive regardless or the mother is going to die if she does not abort. These are not cases of somebody deciding that they want to abort very late in the pregnancy! Please do not represent them as such.
Also, I'm not sure partial-birth abortions even exist. I'm under the impression they were banned as an attempt to try to outlaw abortion in general.
I don't believe in using abortion as a form of contraception, for instance, having a "there's no point using a condom, I'll just have an abortion" mentality, however I question how many people actually believe that and would rather go through the motions of having an abortion rather than using preventative contraception. I think that mindset is perpetuated by people who disagree with abortion, because - well, really?! I cannot think of a single swaying argument that would make abortion preferable to using a condom or taking the pill (or both).
I am 100% percent pro-choice- even if I'm not sure I could ever go through with such a thing myself. The basis for my views is very much that if it's not your baby, it's not your business; advocates of illegalising abortion have most likely never had an abortion themselves (if you were in a situation in which abortion was the preferable outcome, for lack of a better word, and you underwent one, I doubt you'd want to illegalise that if it could have meant hypothetically dealing with the far less savoury choice).
Crisis pregnancy centers (CPCs), the nonprofit pregnancy-testing facilities set up by antiabortion groups to dissuade women from having abortions, have become fixtures of the antiabortion landscape, buttressed by an estimated $60 million in federal abstinence and marriage-promotion funds. The National Abortion Federation estimates that as many as 4,000 CPCs operate in the United States, often using deceptive tactics like posing as abortion providers and showing women graphic antiabortion films. While there is growing awareness of how CPCs hinder abortion access, the centers have a broader agenda that is less well known: they seek not only to induce women to "choose life" but to choose adoption, either by offering adoption services themselves, as in Bethany's case, or by referring women to Christian adoption agencies. Far more than other adoption agencies, conservative Christian agencies demonstrate a pattern and history of coercing women to relinquish their children.
In 1994 the Village Voice investigated several California CPCs in Care Net, the largest network of centers in the country, and found gross ethical violations at an affiliated adoption agency, where director Bonnie Jo Williams secured adoptions by warning pregnant women about parenthood's painfulness, pressuring them to sign papers under heavy medication and in one case detaining a woman in labor for four hours in a CPC.
From 2000 to 2001, a Midwestern grandmother named Ann Gregory (a pseudonym) fought doggedly for her son, a military enlistee, to retain parental rights over his and his girlfriend's child. When the girlfriend became pregnant, her conservative evangelical parents brought her to a local CPC affiliated with their megachurch. The CPC was located in the same office as an adoption agency: its "sister organization" of eighteen years. The CPC called Gregory's son, who was splitting his time between home and boot camp, pressuring him to "be supportive" of his girlfriend by signing adoption papers. The agency also called Gregory and her ex-husband, quoting Scripture "about how we're all adopted children of Jesus Christ."
What followed, Gregory says, was "six weeks of pure hell," as she felt her son and his girlfriend were "brainwashed" into adoption. She researched coercive adoption and retained a lawyer for her son. When the mother delivered, the attorney had Gregory notify a hospital social worker that parental rights were being contested, so the baby wouldn't be relinquished. Two days later, as the adoption agency was en route to take custody, Gregory filed an emergency restraining order. The matter had to be settled in court, where Gregory's son refused to consent to adoption. The legal bill for two weeks came to $9,000.
Both parents went to college, and though they are no longer together, Gregory praises their cooperation in jointly raising their son, now 8. But she is shaken by what it took to prevail. "You've got to get on it before the child is born, and you'd better have $10,000 sitting around. I can't even imagine how they treat those in a worse position than us. They say they want to help people in a crisis pregnancy, but really they want to help themselves to a baby."
"A lot of those moms from the '50s and '60s were really damaged by losing their child through the maternity homes," says Gregory. "People say those kinds of things don't happen anymore. But they do. It's just not a maternity home on every corner; it's a CPC."
Of course, I would actively support gay marriage in my state, but you have to remember marriage isn't a natural right like sexual or reproductive freedom; it's a completely man-made institution..
Hiikaru ♥;485750 said:Okay, so your view is like "well, yeah, gay people should be allowed to get married, but it's not a natural right, so it's fine to ban them from that," isn't it? (feel free to correct me if that's not it!)
Well, marriage isn't the only thing that you can say isn't a natural right. Like, computers aren't a natural right. You don't need a computer to live. You don't even need a computer to be happy. So, like, would it be fine if a state decided gay people couldn't have computers? I mean, it's not your natural right to use a computer. Humans made up computers.
Or like, what if they took away marriage for black people? Is it still the state's right to do that? Black people don't need marriage. It's not a natural right. It's a man-made institution.
Or what if they gave marriage to only gay people and took it away from straight people? Or what if they took away marriage from people with big noses, or people with yellow hair, or people who can't reach into jars and pull out a thing?
my view on abortain is this. one has to think of the child first. if the child's quality of life is going to be so low that it will be in pain, isn't mean to bring it into the world?
(disclaimer. as a female, i don't think i could ever do that. what i said is simply another side of a many sided argument.)