NASA abortion and abortion

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Word
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Re: Obama readies to blast NASA

Post by Word »

vogue wrote:So, if your partner wouldn't have been as brave as this woman, would you have told her to suck it up and face the risk? :roll: Keep avoiding the questions, it shows what a weak character you have.
I didn't avoid your question, otherwise I wouldn't have replied in the first place (and 2 times). I had to make a couple of decisions in my life which my 'weak character' somehow survived, but I'm not going to expose something like this on an internet forum. Even more absurd when the accusation comes from someone whose main occupation seems to be harassing people anonymously.
sinewav wrote:It's clear what the answer is. If she chose herself over the unborn child, he would know that she wasn't the right woman for him and leave her.
I don't know why you think that's clear, but it's not. As I've said in my previous post, caesarian sections are usually more harmless than abortions (apart from the fact that they have a different result). It just doesn't make sense. The text Liz has linked doesn't even mention 'abortion' as an option. If I'm not mistaken Mrs Stout's decision was delivering the baby before getting her tumour removed and not the other way round, so she didn't even consider to abort it. Also, note that the unborn baby's chances to survive were 70% when its mother chose the C-section. I don't know about the chances of such a tumour operation (an 'average' heart operation alone is already complicated enough), but it would just be unreasonable to abort the child and cause the woman even more pain in such a state when there's still hope. why would you have chosen to first kill the baby and then risk your own life when a c-section was the better, less painful way to remove it from your stomach? C-sections make only sense when babies still have a chance to survive - long after the phase in which normal abortion is still legal but in the same phase in which the baby's size and movements can threaten the mother. Even the quality of pain is said to be milder compared to a vaginal birth. When you abort in the classical way, you have a vaginal birth, except that the baby is dead. it would simply make no sense. I'd tell my wife to do whatever she thinks is right but I'd warn her that it's extremely dumb to consider abortion when it causes more risks than it possibly helps.
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sinewav
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Re: NASA abortion and abortion

Post by sinewav »

Ok man, you can enjoy your fantasy world. I don't have anything more to contribute. I know Germany has a problem with declining birth rates and you guys are lucky enough to have resources to accommodate thousands of unwanted babies. Good for you. Outside your borders it's a different story, and it doesn't have a happy ending. If you haven't noticed we already have ever-growing shortages of food and water in many parts of the world.

Here, compare the attached maps of birth-rates and food-shortages and happiness. See if you can spot a trend. Remember, it's not a lack of love that makes people want to have abortions, it's a lack of resources -- that includes lack of suitable adoptive parents. Aside from all the emotional baggage the abortion debate carries, on a global scale the numbers don't look good. In some cases it's simply irresponsible to have an unwanted child, and in other cases immoral.

The End.
Attachments
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:World_happiness.png
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:World_happiness.png
http://www.youngzine.com/article/not-enough-food-all
http://www.youngzine.com/article/not-enough-food-all
http://www.mapsofworld.com/thematic-maps/world-birth-rate-map.html
http://www.mapsofworld.com/thematic-maps/world-birth-rate-map.html
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Re: NASA abortion and abortion

Post by Word »

I'm not talking about a fantasy world. Encouragement of abortions is a symptom of a corrupt society, just like hunger or a high crime rate - and not a solution. It doesn't go to the root of the problem or stop that trend. There are already credible statistics which suggest that China's one-child policy will cause them the same problems we have. Only better governments will help Africa in the long run, providing better education. They have lots of resources and water wouldn't be a problem with a better infrastructure. The reason that won't happen is our culture's egoism. Abortions are an indicator for misery and desperation but that doesn't make them any better or excusable, you'd say the same about war crimes; or a plane that crashed on an island and whose passengers are all alive and become cannibals.


As for the Third World, why do you think do aid agencies build hospitals and similar buildings there, or teach the people there the facts of life? Certainly not because they want more abortions [or poverty, hunger...].
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Re: Obama readies to blast NASA

Post by Phytotron »

Well, first off, Word didn't reply to one bit of my previous post, including my direct questions about condom use and other contraceptives. Oh well. Secondly, I'm just gonna go in order here, rather than trying to organise it, so read the whole thing or not at all. Yep, it's stupid long.

Word wrote:I'm not even arguing that a sperm or an egg cell is a baby - the united gametes contain everything needed for a fully developed organism.
A potential for life is not a life. At that point, it has every bit (actually, greater) the potential to fail. It is not a life; it has no thoughts, no feelings, no interests. It deserves no moral consideration.
and this is basically a moral question, believing in God plays a subordinated role here.
The act of a pre-viable abortion is, in and of itself, NOT a moral issue, for the above reason; it's a value-neutral medical procedure. You consider it a moral question precisely because of your very particular theistic religious doctrine which claims existence of a soul, and infusion of that soul (ensoulment) at conception. But of course, this hasn't even always been the case, as the Catholic Church has at various points in history claimed ensoulment occurs at the quickening or even after the point of a fully-formed fetus, and has approved of abortion prior to that state. Unerring, unchanging, direct line to God, eh. Not even credible within your own religion, dude, nevermind reality.

The legitimate moral conversation centers not on the non-viable "unborn," but on the woman, and religious patriarchal men who seek to control her. And note, that's woman, not mother; she isn't yet a mother.
and there's always another option (adoption for example)
So the 9 months that the woman is forced to carry is irrelevant? Do you have any clue what it takes, what it entails—the toll on a woman's body, for part—to carry a pregnancy? You clearly do not. And, again, it's patriarchal sexual slavery to force that on a woman against her will.

And, again, while the anti-abortionists make a big deal about the supposed emotional trauma resulting from an abortion, they make no mention of that which results from carrying, delivering, and giving away an actual child. And, like I said, are typically "pro-life from conception until birth," then they're on their own, even if that means a high infant mortality rate awaits. You would rather a slow death of less than five years to an abortion.

But even if the eventual child might have a wonderful life, it's irrelevant because the body, life and choices of the actually existing mother are the real issue which you completely ignore. She is not aborting a life, a baby, a child, and it is not denying a life. There is no life to be denied. She is aborting an undeveloped, non-viable fetus, zygote, or embryo from her body. It is not your choice.


Nelhybel wrote:This thread was derailed by Phytotron, who injected anti-Christian sentiment into his post. Should hate speech go unchecked? I don't believe so...
First of all, a Billy Graham avatar? Good Halloween costume; he and his son are indeed demons. How's that for anti-Christian sentiment?

Secondly, to reiterate and expand on what Z-Man and sinewav already rightly said: It is a demonstrable fact that much of the anti-science mentality in this country is traceable to Christian fundamentalism, which views science as some giant conspiracy deliberately out to undermine said religion. To point that out is not "hate speech." For someone to rightly note that "creationism is religion, not science" is not "hate speech."
First, regarding creationism / evolution: you misinterpreted my relatively simple statement.
Nope, I understood it quite well, and your subsequent comments demonstrate that.
I did not make any comment regarding which is correct. I simply said that anybody who might not agree with consensus opinion (because that's what is is)
You see. Science is not opinion. It is not philosophy. Creationism (nor ID) is not on equal footing with science. To state that creationism doesn't belong in science is not an attack.
as the intellectual elite turn their attacks from objective ones into hate speech against Christianity.
Also false. If you reread my first response to your silliness, you'll get the same rebuttal. Reread that post, carefully. More below.
Second, regarding man's role in climate change: you again misinterpreted my relatively simple statement by totally disregarding half my sentence. I don't deny the climate changes - who does? Yesterday was sunny, today is rainy.
Which proves you don't know diddley squat about the subject. Weather is not climate. Learn the difference before you say anything else on the subject.
(not to mention the fact that there is plenty of evidence against the belief man is causing climate change).
Provide it, sourced from reputable scientific journals.
What I said was that people who oppose the belief that negative climate change is the direct result of man-kind
It's not a belief. It's well-established science. That's what you don't get. Science is not a matter of opinion or belief.
find themselves exposed to broad attacks regarding their morals and religion
Again, as with objections to evolution, the objections to man-made climate change are not scientific. Rather, they originate largely with the religious (even if they dress it up in scientistic-sounding language). The other source: fossil fuel corporations. That's it. So, once again, I refer you to my first response.
It happens every day, on these forums
Right, because these forums are representative of American society. :roll: And literally every day.
on the news
You're joking, right?
in the classroom
Here you must also be joking. The religious right are the ones who have been attacking science curricula, with science teachers absolutely cowed by them, afraid to say anything that might be interpreted as the slightest bit offensive to creationists. You must honestly believe that the very act of teaching science properly is an attack on your religion. Guess what, that proves my point. You are an extremist.
in every day life.
Where? And drop the persecution complex. I know it's central to your religion, but it doesn't hold water with reality. And, why is it acceptable for Christians to attack science and scientists in every domain, but it's not OK for people who support science to offer a critique of that? You seem to have this notion that you get to parade around attacking science, but scientists and other folks can't rebut it. Hypocrite.
Nelhybel wrote:gimmieagoddamnbreak
Now now, don't blaspheme.

I also find it hilarious that you deleted the link in your signature about the "real purpose" of these forums, now that you've contradicted your manifesto on that subject by jumping in this thread to, apparently, proselytize.

Word wrote:I'm not advocating that mothers should be enforced to give birth
Um, yes you are.
it's not the embryo's fault that the mother was raped
Right, it's the mother's fault, isn't it.
In a wealthy society like ours there are a couple of institutions that do everything possible to make abortions unnecessary
And what institutions would those be? Certainly not the Catholic Church, since it opposes contraception, sterilization, and population reduction programs—those are what will reduce the need for abortions. And, once more, the option to abort is necessary. Unintended pregnancies happen, and there's nothing wrong—and oftentimes everything right—with terminating them.
The baby itself is rarely the reason for an abortion - it's the mother's psychological, or social circumstances.
Even if we stipulate that's true, so what? That's plenty of reason. It's not your decision to make. It doesn't even have to be any of these psychological, financial, or "social circumstances" reasons that people keep on giving. There are all kinds of good reasons to terminate a pregnancy. A simple unintended pregnancy is good enough reason. (And you Catholics would oppose use of contraceptives or sterilization to prevent unintended pregnancies.) Not wanting to go through carrying a pregnancy to fruition is a good enough reason. Heck, not wanting to get fat and develop saggy breasts is a good enough reason. It's not your decision to make.

sinewav wrote:Go ahead and continue believing evolution [is] opinion. That doesn't stop the cells in your body from mutating.
Psst, that's not how evolution works. :) The DNA within reproductive cells mutates.

syllabear wrote:Just gonna jump in quickly (and out after this post) and state that at least in the UK, and in many other countries there "has to be a good reason" for the abortion i.e. several reasons that are listed in this topic, not limited to danger to the mother/child, rape and foetal defects.
Perhaps you're thinking of late-term, post-viability abortion?

Word wrote:A caesarian section is an alternative to abortion.
What? It is not, you ninny. An abortion terminates a (usually) non-viable fetus, embryo, or zygote. A c-section is done primarily for delivery of a viable infant. A c-section is an alternative to vaginal birth, not abortion.

You're not trying to argue that a c-section as an alternative method of abortion is acceptable, are you?

I'm not sure you know what the hell you're talking about. (Frankly, I'm not sure how much sex ed you've even had.)
And by the way, abortions have more, and worse risks [than c-sections]
Lies. Performed by a medical professional, most typical abortions (that is, not including particular complications) are extremely safe, and can be administered routinely on an out-patient basis in a clinic. It's when abortion is outlawed and women are forced to get "back alley" and "coat hanger" abortions that it becomes dangerous and deadly. That's right, abortion will continue even if you outlaw it, only then it will become dangerous, as it has been in the past.

And I'll tell you where c-sections really become an issue. When a company like Catholic Health Initiatives comes in and takes over even public hospitals and institutes draconian Catholic healthcare directives, which include prohibition on sterilization procedures like tubal ligations. When do a lot of women (who usually already have children) decide to have a tubal? Following a caesarian delivery, since it's a safe and convenient way to do it, without having to go in for a second surgery. But with CHD in place, they would have to be shipped to another hospital in order to get that done, which not only exposes a violation of her privacy, but also puts her at risk for something that's usually routine.
Encouragement of abortions is a symptom of a corrupt society
Bullshit. There's something extremely corrupt about fascistic, patriarchal, religious extremists who want to dictate women's reproductive health decisions.
Abortions are an indicator for misery and desperation
No they're not. They're an indication of a valid, sensible, sometimes very moral solution to an unintended pregnancy. The choice and availability of abortion is an indication of a humane society. Restricting abortion is inhumane.
you'd say the same about war crimes; or a plane that crashed on an island and whose passengers are all alive and become cannibals.
WTF? Seriously. WTF? What does that even mean?

[Africa has] lots of resources and water wouldn't be a problem with a better infrastructure.
Wow, you're so clueless.


And I missed (well, half-watched so couldn't fully enjoy) the first quarter and a half of Monday Night Football for this. :x
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Re: NASA abortion and abortion

Post by Kijutsu »

Did Word even read the wikipedia page he linked me to?

"In the US, the risk of maternal death from abortion is 0.567 per 100,000 procedures, making abortion approximately 12.5 times safer than childbirth" So what are you even talking about with your "abortion" isn't safe bullcrap? Obviously it's not gonna be safe when it's done in a country where people like you disallow it (Phytotron already pointed out that irony.)
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Re: NASA abortion and abortion

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phyto you are quote crazy
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Re: NASA abortion and abortion

Post by Word »

Phytotron wrote:Word didn't reply to one bit of my previous post, including my direct questions about condom use and other contraceptives
I did, I just haven't had the time yet to translate the text I linked. it just wouldn't help to post one small bit.
Since I can't translate the whole thing on one day I'll just post at least one page per day, in the following post.
Phytotron wrote:A potential for life is not a life. At that point, it has every bit (actually, greater) the potential to fail. It is not a life; it has no thoughts, no feelings, no interests. It deserves no moral consideration.
Just because you can't measure it.
Phytotron wrote:The act of a pre-viable abortion is, in and of itself, NOT a moral issue, for the above reason; it's a value-neutral medical procedure.
There are people who would say the same about death penalty or euthanasia.
Phytotron wrote:So the 9 months that the woman is forced to carry is irrelevant? Do you have any clue what it takes, what it entails—the toll on a woman's body, for part—to carry a pregnancy? You clearly do not
If you're considering abortion as an option, you do it usually in the first 2-4 months.
Right, it's the mother's fault, isn't it.
Never said it was, i said several times that it's the bad circumstances.
It's not your decision to make.
Bullshit. There's something extremely corrupt about fascistic, patriarchal, religious extremists who want to dictate women's reproductive health decisions.
At the risk of repeating myself, I'm aware it's not my decision. I just don't find it right. If you're pro-choice it's strange that you can't accept when someone wouldn't choose abortion.
You're not trying to argue that a c-section as an alternative method of abortion is acceptable, are you?
To clarify that, a c-section helps if a woman's life is endangered by her baby - like an abortion is supposed to help. If you consider abortion a healing method, a c-section is an alternative.
Phytotron wrote:Wow, you're so clueless.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_re ... _of_Africa
vogue wrote:Did Word even read the wikipedia page he linked me to?
we were talking about abortion in a phase when the baby threatens the mother's life.
Last edited by Word on Tue Nov 01, 2011 12:09 pm, edited 4 times in total.
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Re: NASA abortion and abortion

Post by Word »

Page 201 (this is obviously more of an introduction and doesn't really offer many arguments yet, but it's probably important to understand the text's motivation)

more to come in the next days/weeks/months
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Re: NASA abortion and abortion

Post by Clutch »

Funnily enough, my English teacher told me that we have to write two essays about abortion, one advocating it and one attacking it. What an extremely lucky coincidence :P


(Just to be clear, I'm not going to just blatantly copy everything you guys have said, but I will use what I've learned so far.)
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Re: NASA abortion and abortion

Post by ItzAcid »

þsy wrote:phyto you are quote crazy
/me concurs :P

I'm against abortion from a religious standpoint, but... we are getting a little bit too crowded for what we can handle. I'm not commenting either way, because I'm not sure of a viable solution that takes care of both sides. Interesting article imo:

http://www.livescience.com/16781-global ... olicy.html
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Re: NASA abortion and abortion

Post by -*inS*- »

I don't know why you guys bother to argue about this, it's not like you're going to change anyone's opinion. Oh and being pro-life does not necessarily make you a member of the far right or even religious at all and vise versa.
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Re: NASA abortion and abortion

Post by Kijutsu »

I like how all these anti abortion, pro life morons are men. Easy to talk when you're never gonna carry a child inside your body.
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Re: NASA abortion and abortion

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vogue wrote:I like how all these anti abortion, pro life morons are men. Easy to talk when you're never gonna carry a child inside your body.
Many theologians from the generation that refuses abortion the most were part of families with 8-10 children, or even more, they grew up in a time with far worse medical conditions and far more of their silblings died without abortion, either in childbed or the WW II chaos. Disqualifying them just because they're men is idiotic.
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Re: NASA abortion and abortion

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vogue wrote:I like how all these anti abortion, pro life morons are men. Easy to talk when you're never gonna carry a child inside your body.
I'm not an anti abortionist.

I would rather have the tiny spec of a human killed before birth than have that child grow up on tax payer money with no family or life to go with.
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Re: NASA abortion and abortion

Post by þsy »

I think discussions like these are interesting - it's good to share ideas, but not so productive to try and take each other down

It's more complicated than just whether abortion is right or not I think. When abortion is readily available, it can lead to some women using it as a method of contraception, which has far more complicated ethical concerns than just an unintentional conception

However, without those capabilities, it robs women of the 'right' to abort or not which is arguably a decision they should make themselves?

Liz does have a point - it's easier for men to be pro-life, there is a lot more female involvment in giving birth than male. Though having said that, the thought of being a Father is terrifying in the wrong circumstances, though arguably scarier for the Mother?

To put forward my own opinion to this discussion, I would definitely say this:

Babies are beautiful!
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