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Alabama Passes Bill Banning Abortion
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I think we disagree, then, Pixie, on the definition of "person".
I don't have a religious angle. Don't believe in the "soul". Don't believe that a fertilised egg turns into a sentient human being in ten minutes, but am pretty sure (without being an embryologist) that what's in the womb after six months is a human being which has a nervous system, not a "thing" to be discarded if the burden of "support" becomes inconvenient.
I don't have a religious angle. Don't believe in the "soul". Don't believe that a fertilised egg turns into a sentient human being in ten minutes, but am pretty sure (without being an embryologist) that what's in the womb after six months is a human being which has a nervous system, not a "thing" to be discarded if the burden of "support" becomes inconvenient.
Another example of the slippery-slopism associated with these liberal causes, the advocacy for which is nearly perfectly parodied (only he doesn't mean it that way) in Jim's "only in very extreme" and "with deep regret" and ""safeguards to avoid abuse" (I lie: he didn't use that last phrase).
I supported then, and support now, the decriminalisation of homosexuality in the sixties and the David Steel campaign to liberalise abortion legislation. But, not satisfied with their victory, the gay crowd has now punished its former oppressors by criminalising the assertion in public by followers of some religions, though not all, that homosexuality is a sin. While abortion has "progessed" from being illegal, to being legally allowable to (in many cases) the preferred method of contraception.
I supported then, and support now, the decriminalisation of homosexuality in the sixties and the David Steel campaign to liberalise abortion legislation. But, not satisfied with their victory, the gay crowd has now punished its former oppressors by criminalising the assertion in public by followers of some religions, though not all, that homosexuality is a sin. While abortion has "progessed" from being illegal, to being legally allowable to (in many cases) the preferred method of contraception.
//It's not a method of contraception, I get so sick of hearing that bull!/
Under what normal circumstance would a person need an abortion given the availability of cheap and effective contraception.
PS: that's a rhetorical question because the possibilities of getting an intelligent response are, as they say, "vanishingly small".
Under what normal circumstance would a person need an abortion given the availability of cheap and effective contraception.
PS: that's a rhetorical question because the possibilities of getting an intelligent response are, as they say, "vanishingly small".
This is interesting.
Late term abortions from the pro life propaganda is few and exceptional is in fact not true.
Have a look at this
This is another one regarding abortion and rape and abuse victims, often underage.
https:/ /www.fa cebook. com/Mat tWalshB log/vid eos/237 1541013 118164/ ?notif_ id=1558 0225132 85447&a mp;noti f_t=liv e_video _share
Late term abortions from the pro life propaganda is few and exceptional is in fact not true.
Have a look at this
This is another one regarding abortion and rape and abuse victims, often underage.
https:/
It's trotted out all the time, ve, that comment is to everyone who says it.
I don't agree with late term termination unless it's for medical reasons. I even think the UKs termination limit is too high (maybe with the exception of teenagers or rape victims)
Most consenting adults know they could be pregnant very early on.
I don't agree with late term termination unless it's for medical reasons. I even think the UKs termination limit is too high (maybe with the exception of teenagers or rape victims)
Most consenting adults know they could be pregnant very early on.
// Under what normal circumstance would a person need an abortion given the availability of cheap and effective contraception. //
They could just be simply reckless and stupid. Not unheard-of. In any case, I don't buy your slippery slope argument, which seems to me to usually boil down to "we shouldn't do the right thing now because we might do the wrong thing later".
They could just be simply reckless and stupid. Not unheard-of. In any case, I don't buy your slippery slope argument, which seems to me to usually boil down to "we shouldn't do the right thing now because we might do the wrong thing later".
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