Lord Mhoram wrote:What I make it seem like, Fist, is that when the fetus leaves the womb, and is born, it becomes a person. Why? What is a person? "being an individual or existing as an indivisible whole; existing as a distinct entity." - Webster's Dictionary Therefore, a fetus isn't a person. Why not? Just because it is human, containing DNA (again, like a hair follicle, for example), doesn't make it a person.
LM, take a deep breath, clear your head, and read what you wrote. By your Webster's definition, a fetus is an individual due to it's
unique DNA (unlike a hair follicle, which was a horrible comparison).
Lord Mhoram wrote:But consciousness and sentience - thinking about ourselves, expressing ourselves, being aware of ourselves - separates us from the animal world. We do not become people until we are conscious. Consciousness comes after our birth. We do not remember our second birthday, for instance. Now you'll probably say "Oh, so therefore we can kill a two-year old!" No. It is still a person who no longer physically endangers another human being's life.
Please provide something to back this statement up. What makes consciousness equal a person? How sure are you that an 8-month fetus isn't conscious on some level? You're attaching all sorts of qualifiers to humanity, but when anyone points out the inconsistancies in your qualifiers (and there are many), you attempt to exclude them.
Lord Mhoram wrote:Two people in one - a mother and a fetus - cannot have equal rights. One must excercise power over the other. In many ways, the fetus is a danger to the mother. Therefore, if the mother so chooses, she should be able to choose to abort the fetus. After birth, it enjoys human rights.
What many ways is the fetus a danger to the mother? We all agree that if the mother's life is in jeopardy, an abortion is allowed, but you make it sound like every pregnancy puts the mother's life at risk. This isn't the 1600's.
Lord Mhoram wrote:Abortion can't be murder. The fetus is not physically or mentally independent. We don't know when sentience comes about, so therefore physical independence is a good divider for this issue.
Again, I ask you to support this statement. A baby isn't physically independent either, but you don't propose that we destroy them. I argue that fetuses are mentally independent, because they have their own brain, and they do respond to stimuli.
At the risk of offending you, I think you were probably raised in a pro-choice household (as I was), and you're a Democrat/liberal (which I was), and you're towing the line on this issue (as I did). To be blunt, asserting that a fetus magically becomes human the second it leaves the mother's body is preposterous, especially considering that there is no set time for gestation. It might be 290 days, it might be 200 days, but they're all human, right? Or is a newborn only human 280 days after conception?
What's really surprising is that you're so quick to marginalize and dehumanize a fetus, given your pro-human views on everything else.
"There is only one basic human right, the right to do as you damn well please. And with it comes the only basic human duty, the duty to take the consequences." - PJ O'Rourke
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"Men and women range themselves into three classes or orders of intelligence; you can tell the lowest class by their habit of always talking about persons; the next by the fact that their habit is always to converse about things; the highest by their preference for the discussion of ideas." - Charles Stewart
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"I believe there are more instances of the abridgment of the freedom of the people by gradual and silent encroachments of those in power than by violent and sudden usurpations." - James Madison
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