Author Topic: wtg pp  (Read 2956 times)

Offline LoneStarBuckeye

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wtg pp
« Reply #90 on: June 03, 2004, 01:14:27 AM »
Quote
Originally posted by flyingaround
Just so you know, your condescension is misplaced, as I likely have forgotten more about constitutional jurisprudence than you will ever know.
Interesting how your so superior to all.  Obviously (per. you) your vastly above the members of the U.S. Supreme Court (what do they know right?) , and myself, in regard to intellectual thought as to be liken unto a God.
Seriously...  try a Philosophy 101 course.  MOST of what we are delving into here is covered first couple weeks.  You, being so tremendously smart, (although you seem to be a tad. forgetfull) will have no problem with the course, and MIGHT be better equipped for this discussion.  
I'll go slow this time... k?  Wouldn't want you to forget any more constitutional jurisprudence.



The fact that some have made "viability" the main issue with respect to abortion is of little moment. Some?  OMG this is one of the hotest debated arguments, and viability is one of the (if not the) MAIN issues in the abortion debate.  Essentially your saying that the vast multitude of better minds on this planet (dunno which one your on), who have hotly debated this issue counts as SOME in your book.  Amazing!  Please do just a LITTLE bit of research on this topic.  It has been covered in countless books, articles, and journals by many far greater men and women than you or I.  Oh wait. I'm so calloused, what was I thinking.  That would cause you to lose some more jurisprudence.  You can just Google it.

What 5 of 9 that wear black robes and sit in Washington, D.C. think is important means even less.
Incredible.  I refer you back to my what planet ref.   Good to know your so above the law as to consider the Supreme Court trivial.

my question remains: why is viability the sine qua non of life?
ok..i'll take this one.  (not that i havn't covered it, quite well i might add, already twice)
Is a fetus a human until it can exist seprate from the woman.  Or better even (must respect your superior knowledge and understanding here) take the fetus out of it.  If I bake a cake, and instead of letting it cook for an hour, I pull it out at 20 min. Is it a cake?  Viability is reached when a "thing" becomes that which it will be.  Until it reaches that point, it isn't.   Until it cooks for an hour, it's just a bunch of batter, not a cake.  Until a fetus can exist outside the womb, it has not become a human.  That is the argument of viablity re. abortion.  If it is not a human, it is not murder.

If one cannot test viability until the child is outside the womb and given a chance to survive on its own, it's not much good as a test of whether or not an abortion should be permitted, is it?
This was a joke right?  Seriously, it's not even well thought out.  We know when a fetus is viable, because that comes up fairly often.  Pre-mature births are not uncommon, nor are accidents etc. that cause labor, or emergency deliveries rare.  Due to advances in medical technology (please see prev. post.  mr. forgotten more than) we can push the point of fetal viability closer to the beginning of the pregnancy.  So we have a pretty good idea at which stage of fetal development we are able to keep it alive outside of the womb.

If you think that whether or not an unborn child/fetus is "alive" depends on the current state of medical technology, where one happens to be located in the world, or what year it is, you've gone over the edge, as far as I'm concerned.
Ref. back to my Philo 101 suggestion.  Perspective should also be covered.  What was considered viable 30yrs ago, is different from today.  Why?  Perspective.  At 28 weeks a fetus was considered viable.  Then we gained medical knowledge, and it was 27.  Then 25 and so on.  It's all hand in hand.  Some day, (as was prev. covered AHEM) conception will be considered viable.
First of all, I edited out the inappropriate comment in my post before you posted this, and as I wrote there, I'm sorry for having written it.  Really, I am.  

Second, have you actually read Roe?  In it, the majority claims that there are three choices for when life begins--conception, viability, and birth--and admits that it cannot, indeed won't even try, to decide which of those three view is correct.  It sidesteps the issue by claiming that the unborn child's "potential life" is enough to ultimately countervail the latent "right to privacy" in the penumbra of the 14th Amendment's guarantee of substantive due process (another concept, like the right of privacy, that the Court invented).  Aside from the considerable question of whether that analysis is flawed, the more fundamental point is that if there is, as the Court admits, a possibility that life begins at conception, mustn't we protect that possiblity by erring on the side of caution?  Shouldn't the Court have excluded that possiblity in order to justify its holding?  We make the state prove that someone is guilty beyond a reasonable doubt before sending him to jail for six months.  If there is a non-neglible possiblity that he is innocent, he walks.  Shouldn't similar reasoning apply here, given the dire consequence of being wrong?  It certainly seems so to me.

Third, I don't know what you think isn't even well thought out.  I know from personal experience that even after a baby is born at 25-26 weeks, the doctor cannot tell whether it is viable until it actually lives or dies.  He certainly could not have made that determination in utero.  Medicine, obviously, is not an exact science.  And even if it were true that we have a "pretty good idea," since when is that a solid enough basis to decide to terminate that which may be a life?

And, finally, I actually do understand the argument re: viability.  I just don't buy it.  Here it is in the words of the Roe Court:

With respect to the State's important and legitimate interest in potential life, the "compelling" point is at viability. This is so because the fetus then presumably has the capability of meaningful life outside the mother's womb.

I'm sorry, but I just don't find that compelling.  

In any event, if you're willing to analogize an unborn child to a half-baked cake, there really is no point in continuing this "discussion" (which, with the admitted indiscretion of my edited-out comment, I tried to maintain at a civil level).

Offline LoneStarBuckeye

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« Reply #91 on: June 03, 2004, 01:17:23 AM »
Quote
Originally posted by Sandman
You do realize that Ashcroft subpoenaed medical records?


Medical records are included in the Privacy Act of 1974.


The courts made the right call.


Oh... and in case you hadn't noticed, abortion is LEGAL in this country.
I don't disagree with what you've written here, but I don't see how it's relevant.  Not trying to be contrary, I just don't see your point.

Offline Sandman

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« Reply #92 on: June 03, 2004, 01:19:51 AM »
The PBA was struck down on privacy issues. That's it. That's all there is. The court isn't revisiting Roe v. Wade. It's not going to happen any time soon.
sand

Offline LoneStarBuckeye

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« Reply #93 on: June 03, 2004, 01:32:16 AM »
Quote
Originally posted by Sandman
The PBA was struck down on privacy issues. That's it. That's all there is. The court isn't revisiting Roe v. Wade. It's not going to happen any time soon.
Ok, fine.  I don't remember suggesting that the court was going to revisit Roe; if I did I didn't mean to.  (I really haven't thought about it, but I'd imagine that it depends on the next appointee or two.)

Oh, I see.  I just re-read your post.  I'm sorry, it's late and I misinterpreted it and wrote a response to a non-existent argument.  I'm not having a great night :)  Please accept my apologies.

Offline flyingaround

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« Reply #94 on: June 03, 2004, 01:46:16 AM »
Quote
Originally posted by LoneStarBuckeye
First of all, I edited out the inappropriate comment in my post before you posted this, and as I wrote there, I'm sorry for having written it.  Really, I am.  

Second, have you actually read Roe?  In it, the majority claims that there are three choices for when life begins--conception, viability, and birth--and admits that it cannot, indeed won't even try, to decide which of those three view is correct.  It sidesteps the issue by claiming that the unborn child's "potential life" is enough to ultimately countervail the latent "right to privacy" in the penumbra of the 14th Amendment's guarantee of substantive due process (another concept, like the right of privacy, that the Court invented).  Aside from the considerable question of whether that analysis is flawed, the more fundamental point is that if there is, as the Court admits, a possibility that life begins at conception, mustn't we protect that possiblity by erring on the side of caution?  Shouldn't the Court have excluded that possiblity in order to justify its holding?  We make the state prove that someone is guilty beyond a reasonable doubt before sending him to jail for six months.  If there is a non-neglible possiblity that he is innocent, he walks.  Shouldn't similar reasoning apply here, given the dire consequence of being wrong?  It certainly seems so to me.

Third, I don't know what you think isn't even well thought out.  I know from personal experience that even after a baby is born at 25-26 weeks, the doctor cannot tell whether it is viable until it actually lives or dies.  He certainly could not have made that determination in utero.  Medicine, obviously, is not an exact science.  And even if it were true that we have a "pretty good idea," since when is that a solid enough basis to decide to terminate that which may be a life?

And, finally, I actually do understand the argument re: viability.  I just don't buy it.  Here it is in the words of the Roe Court:

With respect to the State's important and legitimate interest in potential life, the "compelling" point is at viability. This is so because the fetus then presumably has the capability of meaningful life outside the mother's womb.

I'm sorry, but I just don't find that compelling.  

In any event, if you're willing to analogize an unborn child to a half-baked cake, there really is no point in continuing this "discussion" (which, with the admitted indiscretion of my edited-out comment, I tried to maintain at a civil level).


Just a guess, but you seem to be a pro-lifer of the opinion that it's a baby at conception, and hey... that's ok.  To each their own.  I'm personally pro-lifer, but vote pro-choice.  Doubt you'll agree w/ me and vice. versa.

You MUST be in the law field.  So far, you have said alot, without really saying anything.  You also seem to have a penchant for twisting words. I never compared a fetus with a cake.  Took the fetus out of the equasion.  Was explaining a concept.

btw.  what's your solution?  You are decent at telling me what you think is NOT correct.  Let's hear a better idea.  Give me YOUR opinion.  Solve this thing, or at least go out on a limb and take a stab at it.  Everybody is a good armchair quarterback.  Get in the game.  And don't pull the "won't debate you whaaa" crud because it's your turn.  Let's hear your take on it.  

Not buying viability?  Ok fine.  What DO you buy.  Enlighten us.  Quit saying we are all wrong.  Tell me WHY we are wrong.  



BTW apology accepted, and one given out mysefl.  Last post WAS a bit rough.  unfort. i'm far 2 lazy to edit it, so consider anything i said that was mean edited out.

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Offline LoneStarBuckeye

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« Reply #95 on: June 03, 2004, 02:08:46 AM »
Quote
Originally posted by flyingaround
btw.  what's your solution?  You are decent at telling me what you think is NOT correct.  Let's hear a better idea.  Give me YOUR opinion.  Solve this thing, or at least go out on a limb and take a stab at it.  Everybody is a good armchair quarterback.  Get in the game.  And don't pull the "won't debate you whaaa" crud because it's your turn.  Let's hear your take on it.  

Not buying viability?  Ok fine.  What DO you buy.  Enlighten us.  Quit saying we are all wrong.  Tell me WHY we are wrong.  
Sure, I'm never shy about telling folks what I think.

To me, it 's very simple.  Black and white.  I do believe that life begins at conception and therefore I see no alternative but to conclude that abortion is wrong.  (As to why I choose conception over viability, see my criticism of the Roe decision.)

I understand that there are competing interests and that the mother has an interest in maintaining control over her own body.  Nonetheless, if you accept that the fetus she is carrying is a life, that trumps any interest that the mother has that doesn't rise to the same level.  Which leads me to . . .

I will admit to struggling with the case of the life of the mother being in jeopardy, but there I think it's best to leave it to her (or the father, if she is unable to make a decision at the critical moment).

I will take issue with your assessment that I didn't really say anything in my post.  I think that I explained, fairly succinctly, why, in my estimation, the Roe Court got it wrong.  That you disagree with my argument doesn't mean that it isn't there.

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« Reply #96 on: June 03, 2004, 06:26:39 AM »
Quote
Originally posted by Sandman
The PBA was struck down on privacy issues. That's it. That's all there is. The court isn't revisiting Roe v. Wade. It's not going to happen any time soon.


Why do you think the liberals are going to such unfettered extremes to prevent this president from having his judicial nominees even come before a full senate vote?  His nominees thus far have been for appointments to the federal courts at a time when there is a shortage of judges and an abundance of cases.  The backup is reported to be colossal and yet the liberal demagogs are blocking every nominee with only one test, what is the apointees stance on Roe v Wade.  Every nominee the Bush administration has presented has been given a "well qualified" rating by the American Bar Association (it's highest rating) and none of them have been permitted to go before the senate for a yes or no vote.  This is a first in our history.  But none the less the pendulum is swinging.  Most people have had their fill with you liberals and your social experimentation.  Expect all your Icons to be revisited.  November is coming.  Maybe you'll lose a few more senate seats.

Offline Sandman

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« Reply #97 on: June 03, 2004, 11:31:35 PM »
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Originally posted by LoneStarBuckeye
Ok, fine.  I don't remember suggesting that the court was going to revisit Roe; if I did I didn't mean to.  (I really haven't thought about it, but I'd imagine that it depends on the next appointee or two.)

Oh, I see.  I just re-read your post.  I'm sorry, it's late and I misinterpreted it and wrote a response to a non-existent argument.  I'm not having a great night :)  Please accept my apologies.


No worries, sir. :)
sand