Abortion - Not as diametrically divisive as often thought?

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With which statement do you agree?

I want it to be illegal for a very poor teenager who was impregnated from being raped by an immediate family member to get an abortion even in the first week of pregnancy even if the doctors can and did detect the baby has severe genetic disorders and that the pregnancy if taken to term would have complications greatly risking the life of both the mother and would-be baby.
7
9%
I want it to be legal for a wealthy woman who is 5 days past her due date (of birth) to get an abortion even though doctors are sure that the healthy baby would be delivered safely and relatively easily otherwise and even though many safe, healthy, loving families are willing to adopt the would-be newborn immediately and even pay the woman significantly for that.
14
18%
I do not agree fully with either one of the above statements.
59
74%
 
Total votes: 80

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Eckhart Aurelius Hughes
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Re: Abortion - Not as diametrically divisive as often though

Post by Eckhart Aurelius Hughes »

I think we can see now that we all have almost unanimous agreement. The only people who are surely wrong are those that cry out at almost half the population as anti-choice or pro-death in terms of the abortion debate. We can see nobody is anti-choice or pro-death since we almost all even those crying out such divisive rhetoric actually want abortion to be legal under certain circumstances and illegal under others. It's simply where in the infinitely divisible spectrum of gray between the two points of agreement one draws the line.

Yet once we all see that, then it does show the spectrum is made up of a lot more gray than black-and-white if you excuse the metaphor. For instance, take the rape issue. Some have said that the fact that one of the hypothetical women was raped is the deciding factor for wanting that instance of abortion to be legal while others not. Even that one factor itself is not black and white of course. Consider the spectrum between the most forcible rape to the most consensual, irresponsible utterly unprotected sex such as statutory rape, drunk sex, accidental-condom-breaking, freak-vasectomy-failures and pregnancy-related contract violations such as someone hiring a surrogate mother bailout out. So even when we isolate the difference down to one issue, it still isn't black-and-white.
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Schaps
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Re: Abortion - Not as diametrically divisive as often though

Post by Schaps »

The discussions here vindicate why a democratic system of voting for one's choice (even with all the difficulties of a "democracy" ) is perhaps the best method for applying policy in these matters.
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chazwyman
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Re: Abortion - Not as diametrically divisive as often though

Post by chazwyman »

I do not think that a poll of these options can begin to address the division in opinion on abortion.

The fact that anyone would vote for option A is a shocking indictment of the tendency for the religious community to control other people.

Option B is just silly - I wonder how many people who voted for it actually read it properly. It is no different from an induced birth in which the doctor then kills a healthy baby. As such it is ridiculous.

Option C is the only same option for these reasons.

-- Updated Mon Jun 25, 2012 8:28 am to add the following --
Scott wrote:I think we can see now that we all have almost unanimous agreement. The only people who are surely wrong are those that cry out at almost half the population as anti-choice or pro-death in terms of the abortion debate. We can see nobody is anti-choice or pro-death since we almost all even those crying out such divisive rhetoric actually want abortion to be legal under certain circumstances and illegal under others. It's simply where in the infinitely divisible spectrum of gray between the two points of agreement one draws the line.

Yet once we all see that, then it does show the spectrum is made up of a lot more gray than black-and-white if you excuse the metaphor. For instance, take the rape issue. Some have said that the fact that one of the hypothetical women was raped is the deciding factor for wanting that instance of abortion to be legal while others not. Even that one factor itself is not black and white of course. Consider the spectrum between the most forcible rape to the most consensual, irresponsible utterly unprotected sex such as statutory rape, drunk sex, accidental-condom-breaking, freak-vasectomy-failures and pregnancy-related contract violations such as someone hiring a surrogate mother bailout out. So even when we isolate the difference down to one issue, it still isn't black-and-white.
Can you explain to me why option B is any different from a typical induced late birth except that the doctor kills the healthy child? This is no option at all.
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Re: Abortion - Not as diametrically divisive as often though

Post by Eckhart Aurelius Hughes »

Exactly chazwyman! The tiny few people who would actually support either extreme seem to be clinging to an unreasonable, unjustifiable, black-and-white view. Rather, nobody is absolutely "pro-life" or absolutely "pro-choice". Rather almost everyone is a little of both, almost everyone acknowledges that there is no simple black-and-white point at which the would-be baby suddenly goes from having no personhood or no right to life at all with no requirement at all for the would-be parents to endure even the slightest inconvenience to maintain that would-be babies potential for life to suddenly having the strongest one imaginable such that the mother is like a slave forced to do all she can to nurture that would-be baby and keep it 'alive' until birth, especially not at the arbitrary moment of either fertilization or birth. Rather, we all realize that there is a huge gray spectrum between these two black and white points between a single-celled zygote and the most viable fetus, multidimensional if you take into account extenuating circumstances like rape, poverty, adoption availability and detected birth defects, and we all know somewhere vaguely on that spectrum abortion goes from something we clearly want to be legal to something we clearly want to be illegal with a vast gray-area in-between where it is no clear, that somewhere it vaguely goes from something almost identical to using a condom to something almost identical to infanticide of a newborn. Philosophically, trying to sort out this vague spectrum might be of interest, but we can now easily see the fanatics on either side are wrong, not necessarily because they might hold to one of these two extremes that makes them fanatic, but that they treat the debate like it's black and white and like the other side is absurdly diametrically opposed to their own. This is predictable behavior in a way because potential fanatics will presumably give themselves the benefit of the doubt, metaphorically and quietly patting themselves on the back for being reasonable enough not to choose something like option A or option B, but then they loudly villianize this 'other side' making the 'other side' out to be some unreasonable group absurdly diametrically opposed to their more reasonable albeit strongly opinionated views. This is wrong. There is no diametric opposition. The villianization by extremist groups of the other side is the sociopolitical equivalent of a strawman fallacy, but in real life the consequences are severe from nutjobs blowing up abortion clinics to politicians abusing the issue as a wedge to get elected while selling out to a bipartisan group of wealthy special interests. We've got two riled up opinionated sides each viciously despising a ridiculous fictional other side, mistakenly thinking each other is that fictional, unreasonable other side that is diametrically opposed to their reasonable side.
My entire political philosophy summed up in one tweet.

"The mind is a wonderful servant but a terrible master."

I believe spiritual freedom (a.k.a. self-discipline) manifests as bravery, confidence, grace, honesty, love, and inner peace.
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chazwyman
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Re: Abortion - Not as diametrically divisive as often though

Post by chazwyman »

Scott wrote:Exactly chazwyman! The tiny few people who would actually support either extreme seem to be clinging to an unreasonable, unjustifiable, black-and-white view. Rather, nobody is absolutely "pro-life" or absolutely "pro-choice". Rather almost everyone is a little of both, almost everyone acknowledges that there is no simple black-and-white point at which the would-be baby suddenly goes from having no personhood or no right to life at all with no requirement at all for the would-be parents to endure even the slightest inconvenience to maintain that would-be babies potential for life to suddenly having the strongest one imaginable such that the mother is like a slave forced to do all she can to nurture that would-be baby and keep it 'alive' until birth, especially not at the arbitrary moment of either fertilization or birth. Rather, we all realize that there is a huge gray spectrum between these two black and white points between a single-celled zygote and the most viable fetus, multidimensional if you take into account extenuating circumstances like rape, poverty, adoption availability and detected birth defects, and we all know somewhere vaguely on that spectrum abortion goes from something we clearly want to be legal to something we clearly want to be illegal with a vast gray-area in-between where it is no clear, that somewhere it vaguely goes from something almost identical to using a condom to something almost identical to infanticide of a newborn. Philosophically, trying to sort out this vague spectrum might be of interest, but we can now easily see the fanatics on either side are wrong, not necessarily because they might hold to one of these two extremes that makes them fanatic, but that they treat the debate like it's black and white and like the other side is absurdly diametrically opposed to their own. This is predictable behavior in a way because potential fanatics will presumably give themselves the benefit of the doubt, metaphorically and quietly patting themselves on the back for being reasonable enough not to choose something like option A or option B, but then they loudly villianize this 'other side' making the 'other side' out to be some unreasonable group absurdly diametrically opposed to their more reasonable albeit strongly opinionated views. This is wrong. There is no diametric opposition. The villianization by extremist groups of the other side is the sociopolitical equivalent of a strawman fallacy, but in real life the consequences are severe from nutjobs blowing up abortion clinics to politicians abusing the issue as a wedge to get elected while selling out to a bipartisan group of wealthy special interests. We've got two riled up opinionated sides each viciously despising a ridiculous fictional other side, mistakenly thinking each other is that fictional, unreasonable other side that is diametrically opposed to their reasonable side.
Can you explain why 3 people voted for B?
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Re: Abortion - Not as diametrically divisive as often though

Post by Eckhart Aurelius Hughes »

No, since nobody has explained why they voted for anything besides C. If I had to guess, I think they may have misinterpreted what I wrote, probably thinking that the abortion wouldn't kill the would-be baby or thinking that due date meant conception date.
My entire political philosophy summed up in one tweet.

"The mind is a wonderful servant but a terrible master."

I believe spiritual freedom (a.k.a. self-discipline) manifests as bravery, confidence, grace, honesty, love, and inner peace.
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chazwyman
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Re: Abortion - Not as diametrically divisive as often though

Post by chazwyman »

Scott wrote:No, since nobody has explained why they voted for anything besides C. If I had to guess, I think they may have misinterpreted what I wrote, probably thinking that the abortion wouldn't kill the would-be baby or thinking that due date meant conception date.
I think the difficulty with B is that hypotheticals have to make reasonable sense. As I said, your chosen paradigm is exactly the same as a doctor inducing a late pregnancy and then killing a healthy baby. It is basically ridiculous. No one expect a psychopath would go for that choice. In view of which your test is made null and void, and does not begin to test the proposition you are investigating.

In third world countries, and in ancient times infanticide was socially acceptable practice for a range of reasons. You might do better to ask a question about this.
Aghiani
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Re: Abortion - Not as diametrically divisive as often though

Post by Aghiani »

Your case, sir, is very weak indeed. You would like to suggest that the public at large is not polarized on the issue of abortion. This suggestion, you claim, is supported by the the poll you offered on this website (first problem with it, prejudiced pull of respondents). The poll asks to agree with either one of two purported-to-be polarized positions, or none of the two. Whereas the form of the questioner would be correct, two unforgivable mistakes are made: 1, the polarized positions are not factual; 2, whereas the two purported-to-be polarized positions require full commitment to a statement, the option-out requires the small commitment of not agreeing fully with either one of the two statements, rendering the option-out answer more desirable not on the basis of belief, but on the basis of reserved judgement (a virtue for many).

The issue of abortion has many parts indeed, and may be confusing in many ways. But not on the positions the majorities take: one, believing in life at conception, argues that abortion is a crime, and then breaks off into smaller credos on which exceptions trump their belief (one such exceptions is when the life of the mother would be put in jeopardy by giving birth); the other majority, believing the evolving of the fetus to be a process leading to life (which starts at quickening), argues that a woman has a right to terminate her pregnancy for reasons she deems pertinent.

So, if the questioner asked, 1, Do you think a woman should be able to abort, if she believes that to be the better course? 2, Or do you think abortion should only be allowed in few extreme cases, for example the mother would stand considerable risk of dying during pregnancy? 3, Or none of the above? Then the questioner would have come closer to gathering data as to the level of polarization on the issue of abortion. As it stands, it gives us no viable information.
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Re: Abortion - Not as diametrically divisive as often though

Post by Bricklayer »

If those who started wars were as willing to get up close and intimate with the actual killing as mothers are in an abortion, war may enjoy the same respectability as does abortion. Few soldiers and even fewer generals and even fewer polititions are as committed to the death of another as a mother is in an abortion.

We will never be rid of war or abortion because there is a time to kill.
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Re: Abortion - Not as diametrically divisive as often though

Post by Keen »

I could not help but vote C. Both are enormous extremes, but I'd tend to prefer B over A. Although B is in my opinion (if not) very close to murder, bringing to world a potentially disordered and suffering human being and risking his mother's life in the process seems much worse to me.
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Re: Abortion - Not as diametrically divisive as often though

Post by Newme »

Bricklayer wrote:If those who started wars were as willing to get up close and intimate with the actual killing as mothers are in an abortion, war may enjoy the same respectability as does abortion. Few soldiers and even fewer generals and even fewer polititions are as committed to the death of another as a mother is in an abortion.

We will never be rid of war or abortion because there is a time to kill.
When is it "time to kill"?

And who decides when that time is?

Are there requirements: like one must be a certain age & be able to voice his/her opinion?
“Empty is the argument of the philosopher which does not relieve any human suffering.” - Epicurus
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Re: Abortion - Not as diametrically divisive as often though

Post by Spiral Out »

One can be Pro-Life AND Pro-Choice simultaneously. You can hold the belief that life is sacred and act according to that belief, and you can also hold the belief that everyone has the right and responsibility to choose for themselves and act according to that belief as well. The two beliefs do not conflict and are not mutually exclusive. It's only when one desires others to adopt and adhere to his/her own specific beliefs that conflict occurs.
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Re: Abortion - Not as diametrically divisive as often though

Post by Newme »

Spiral Out wrote:One can be Pro-Life AND Pro-Choice simultaneously. You can hold the belief that life is sacred and act according to that belief, and you can also hold the belief that everyone has the right and responsibility to choose for themselves and act according to that belief as well. The two beliefs do not conflict and are not mutually exclusive. It's only when one desires others to adopt and adhere to his/her own specific beliefs that conflict occurs.
According to your line of thinking, all children being ripped apart limb by limb AFTER all their body systems are intact (at 8 weeks gestations), including the nervous system... all these children want to live if their mother wants them to live & want to die if their mother wants them to die?

You might want to watch an ultrasound of an abortion & see if you still see the child's input as insignificant...
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Re: Abortion - Not as diametrically divisive as often though

Post by Spiral Out »

Newme wrote:According to your line of thinking, all children being ripped apart limb by limb AFTER all their body systems are intact (at 8 weeks gestations), including the nervous system... all these children want to live if their mother wants them to live & want to die if their mother wants them to die?

You might want to watch an ultrasound of an abortion & see if you still see the child's input as insignificant...
Your response and attached Pro-Life bleeding-heart video should have come with "AGENDA ALERT!" before it.

This is an over-emotional response. You use the tactic of aggressive, exaggerated and inflammatory language to make your view seem more righteous. Emotional people can't see past their own tears so I won't try to argue this with you. No degree or amount of extremely biased and macabre videos will change my view. I've seen this all before. There is no shock value to it anymore as it has been an over-utilized tactic. You are obviously a Pro-Lifer with tunnel vision. You want everyone to do as you demand, no question, no freedom. Be Pro-Life and just leave people alone and let others make their own choices, mistakes, regrets or whatever. You can be Pro-Choice, or do you think that makes you an accomplice to these "evils"?

-- Updated August 13th, 2012, 5:05 pm to add the following --

Newme, would you care to also discuss the numerous atrocities committed in the name of religion as well?
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Alexdelarge
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Re: Abortion - Not as diametrically divisive as often though

Post by Alexdelarge »

Scott wrote:
  • Choice B: I want it to be legal for a wealthy woman who is 5 days past her due date to get an abortion even though doctors are sure that the healthy baby would be delivered safely and relatively easily otherwise and even though many safe, healthy, loving families are willing to adopt the would-be newborn immediately and even pay the woman significantly for it.
Does this actually happen in real life? Whereas option A is (unfortunately) very realistic and more common than anyone would like to believe, option B sounds like a silly parade of imaginary horribles. I can appreciate the intent of your didactic nonetheless, but, extremity aside, I'm skeptical of the value of any conclusions that might be drawn from answering the question.
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