Certainly, I have no weight in my opinion above any other person, but I personally define a person as a human being that is capable of consciousness.
What is consciousness and how is it measured?
Certainly, I have no weight in my opinion above any other person, but I personally define a person as a human being that is capable of consciousness.
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And it shouldn't be about when the brain develops, as the soul is present before there is a brain, and the presence of a soul is what determines of something is alive in the ultimate and spiritual sense, though I understand that not everyone understands that the soul exists.
@teacherone: Thank you for the welcome.
Perhaps I may soon find this thread in the state of debate, but I am not concerned as much with so many individuals' feelings about the matter. What I would like to know, is how Ron Paul would answer the questions I pose.
You're the first from-conception-on opponent of abortion rights from this forum I've seen, with a definition of human life that mentions or includes the soul. The "Life at Conception Act" Ron Paul cosponsored earlier this year doesn't mention the soul either. They have an atheist definition of human life when it comes to the subject of abortion.
Lets not confuse the issue: being able to have an abortion is not about human liberty (it is a moral issue of who can rightfully be to be an arbiter of life),
and it is not about the woman's body, it is about the child's body.
it shouldn't be about when the brain develops, as the soul is present before there is a brain, and the presence of a soul is what determines of something is alive in the ultimate and spiritual sense, though I understand that not everyone understands that the soul exists.
Morality is subjective.
The government has no business setting moral norms. The government only has the responsibility to ensure that one's actions do not deprive another of liberty.
It is about what point the two can be viewed as separate persons with separate rights.
However, a society under social contract should not create laws based on belief systems.
One's religious beliefs and morals should not another's mundane liberty.
It is about what point the two can be viewed as separate persons with separate rights.Morality is subjective. The government has no business setting moral norms. The government only has the responsibility to ensure that one's actions do not deprive another of liberty.
That is a religious belief, and between you and your creator. The soul may or may not exist, or may or may not be present a certain times during gestation. St. Thomas Aquinas, for instance, believed that we were first mineral, then vegetable, then animal, and then became human during the quickening (usually moments before pregnancy). However, a society under social contract should not create laws based on belief systems. As rational beings we should base our laws in science and logic, not emotions of faith. One's religious beliefs and morals should not another's mundane liberty.
What business is it of anyone but that woman if she is pregnant or not?
If she chooses to keep it under wraps and hires an undocumented person to perform the procedure would we even know enough to care?
If she chooses to involve her family or go to her regular physician, who is the public to demand her personal records from her private relationships?
From my standpoint... NO PUBLIC INVOLVEMENT IN ABORTION.... NO PUBLIC FUNDING TO PLANNED PARENTHOOD.
What they do with their private lives and private funds is none of my business.
What is consciousness and how is it measured?
It is about what point the two can be viewed as separate persons with separate rights.
Sorry all laws are based on the morallity of the society they are written. There is no natural law based on science and logic why I can't kill you and take your property and freedom. If it enhances my life and family to take yours why shouldn't I based on science and logic? Would it be wrong to do so, yes but that's moral.
would anyone care if someone killed their 4 year old in private? that seems to be how people are treating this. certainly its better that the child is killed with private funds rather than public funds but the fact remains that a child was killed and the government, at least at the local or state level, absolutely has the right, IMO, to protect the life of this child. abortion is murder and murder is not okay in a free society.
Your inability to kill someone within the confines of the law does not require, and perhaps is not at all rooted in morality. To kill someone would be an interference with their liberty and life, both protected by the Constitution.
While I agree that social contracts are often tainted with moral and religious beliefs, neither is necessary to ensure a just law.
What is a just law?
Is the pertinent question, "How to convince pro-choice* women and men to vote for Ron Paul?".
[* or pro-abortion if that works better]
I would advocate the following,
* Stress all the ways Ron Paul would free individuals to address their own medical concerns without state intervention (hello RU-486 - if heroin is legal, how can RU-486 be illegal? )
* Stress getting government OUT of the patient-doctor relationship
* Ron is pro-freedom and that is more important
* The likely worst case scenario is that an individual's state passes some unpalatable law and the Supreme Court - not Ron Paul - upholds their right to do so. So the battle is on the state and judicial levels.
* Issues like viability, stem-cell research, birth control technologies are always changing as are the morals about these issues. Ron Paul does not want the Federal government exceeding its constitutional power.
* The only risk is if a constitutional amendment is passed. This requires 2/3rds of the House and Senate and 3/4ths of the state legislatures (or ratifying conventions which has been used only once, to repeal prohibition). The President has ZERO authority to pass or block an amendment. (Am I wrong?)
* Argue that, while some AND Ron Paul care vary deeply about the abortion issue, most of us want to restore our republic and not fall like the the USSR or get owned like Greece by foreign creditors.
* Add getting rid of the Patriot Act and other unconstitutional snooping powers which may be how a ban is enforced. A law that can't be enforced is - however unpalatable - not as harmful/effective.
Anywho, I think the thread/argument is best focused on how to market Ron Paul to people who are hardliners one way or the other. This battle won't end here regardless of the presidential vote.
I agree with this. If there is a federal ban on abortion we'll see an increase in women dying from unsafe procedures. Does that loss of a life not bother a pro-lifer? I don't think women have a right to an abortion but rather the option. Yes, I think it's sad that many women feel this is their only option but it's none of my business nor is it anyone else's, as long as the procedure is not paid for with tax dollars.