QUOTE(Yogurt @ Feb 23 2006, 01:04 PM)
This isn't a bill. It's a stunt. If it happens to kill a few women in the process,
Versus the assured infanticide of 800 babies?
How is it respectful of life to force women to become breed mares bringing unloved and unwanted children into the world?
And how difficult is it to keep one's legs crossed? Free-willed peoples make decisions every day, many have consequences. This particular one involves the creation of a human life. One needs to evaluate the consequences as part of the decision process, don't they?
Oh absolutely,
Yogurt. This isn't going to be a pro-life vs pro-choice debate. But both yours and my remarks seem to have invoked some passionate responses. However when you say "one needs to evaluate the consequences as part of the decision process" I sure hope you're including
men in the process, because that crack about how difficult it is to keep one's legs crossed seems like its directed primarily toward
women.
It takes two to make a baby, but only one to give birth. I am biased toward giving the maximum of options to the women that carry the children, and not the men who provide the sperm.
There is an hostility to the rights of women to make their own biological decisions that teeters on the edge of outright misogyny. And there are some men (and women) whom in their denoucement of abortion go right over that edge.
QUOTE(Jobius @ Feb 24 2006, 06:28 PM)
I'm amazed by the statements of some of my fellow pro-choicers...
QUOTE(nighttimer @ Feb 23 2006, 09:21 AM)
This isn't a bill. It's a stunt. If it happens to kill a few women in the process, what does that matter to the overwhelmingly male members of the South Dakota legislature? They just want to go down in history as the first state to jump into the Way Back Machine and take women back to the Bad Old Days.
nighttimer, you've got a real gift for imputing bad motives to your political opponents. It's not possible that the legislators want to protect the unborn, so they must hate women. I'm sure they want to bring back slavery and witch trials, too.
I wouldn't call it a "gift,"
Jobius, as I would call it an unwillingness to see this pernicious piece of legislation as an anti-choice, anti-woman's health bill. I didn't say the South Dakota legislature hate women. I'm sure some of them are probably married to women and may even have produced a daughter or two. But let's not tap dance around the ramifications of this bill shall we?
If this bill is signed into law and enforced it means any woman in South Dakota who is unlucky enough to be raped, a victim of incest or would die by delivering a baby would have to suck it up and take her chances rather than receive an abortion.
That is an extremist position. Your references to slavery and witch trials aside, I'm not "imputing bad motives to my political opponents" as much as I'm accurately characterizing what this legislation
is and what it will
do to women. Interpret that anyway it pleases you to do so.
QUOTE(DaytonRocker @ Feb 25 2006, 12:19 AM)
QUOTE(nighttimer @ Feb 23 2006, 12:21 PM)
The Court should uphold Roe vs. Wade as settled law. The states are free to place limits on abortion, but to eliminate it entirely even for rape, incest and the life of the mother is at risk is a position only a extremist could approve of. How is it respectful of life to force women to become breed mares bringing unloved and unwanted children into the world?
nighttimer, before Roe vs. Wade was settled, it was
already legal to have an abortion for rape, incest, and the life of the mother in Texas (where the case was filed). All Wade vs. Roe did, was allow a woman to murder her baby because it was convenient. Now the woman that started this regrets that decision.
As previously stated, nothing in the constitution addressed killing babies. Putting an amendment in to allow indiscriminate killing (95% of abortions are used as birth control of babies was activism. Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness is guaranteed for all of us - even those who can't speak.
Just because The Constitution doesn't explicitly say so
Dayton Rocker does not mean the right doesn't exist. Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness
was not guaranteed for all of us. It was guaranteed for White, male, property owners and not until the Constitution was amended were women and non-Whites legally guaranteed to join in on the fun.
I have never bought the line that women "murder" their babies out of convenience. That suggests women are so shallow they'd extinguish a life because they don't want to gain weight or suffer from morning sickness. Once again, this ISN'T a abortion debate. Abortion is legal in America and it should stay that way.
QUOTE(Blackstone @ Feb 25 2006, 02:50 AM)
QUOTE(nighttimer @ Feb 23 2006, 12:21 PM)
If it happens to kill a few women in the process
Hmm, another attempt to slander those who disagree with you instead of debating in good faith. Gee, never expected that to happen.
By the way, the law has an exception for when the life of the mother is in danger. Nice try, though.
So if a woman gets knocked up by a rapist or her own father or brother, then she should start shopping for blue or pink baby clothes? That's perverse.
If you don't think there aren't going to be doctors in South Dakota who won't be willing to perform an abortion under
any circumstances because they'll be afraid that some cop or politician might question if the woman's life is in danger or not, you're kidding youself,
Blackstone. A South Dakota doctor who has to perform an emergency abortion on a woman bleeding out shouldn't have to consult with his attorney first.
The Supreme Court recently decided in a New Hampshire case on parental notification that didn't have a provision permitting an abortion exception for a woman's health did not invalidate the entire law. Here in Ohio, our predominantly Republican legislature will be taking up HB 228 that makes NO exceptions for abortion.
The bill, if passed
Prohibits abortion throughout all stages of pregnancy without exception. Prohibits state funds from being used to pay for insurance coverage of abortions.
These types of poison pill bills are be taken up in statehouses all over the country. There is NO "good faith" being exhibited by the anti-abortion activists. They are simply spoiling for a fight over
Roe vs Wade and determined to have the issue fought out in the Supreme Court.
For example:
When State Rep. Tom Brinkman Jr. introduced a bill banning all abortion in Ohio, he knew it violated Roe vs. Wade, the 1973 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that legalized abortion. That's exactly why he did it.
By introducing House Bill 228 to the Ohio House of Representatives April 28, Brinkman (R-Mount Lookout) joins pro-life lawmakers across the country who are pushing anti-abortion legislation. Their hope is that at least one bill will end up in front of the Supreme Court in three or four years, by which time they expect President Bush to have appointed at least one justice sympathetic to their cause.
The movement isn't terribly organized, but there's a reason for differences between his sweeping bill and, say, South Dakota's more tempered one, according to Brinkman.
"If we all passed the same (bill), then when they knocked out one of us they'd knock us all out," he says. "So it's our opportunity to put different ones across the plate, hoping that one will be the magic bullet." http://www.citybeat.com/2005-05-11/news.shtmlThe blatant hypocrisy from pandering opportunitists like Brinkman comes shining through when he dismisses bills with provisions allowing abortions when a woman's life is endangered.
Based on the political leanings of their governors and legislatures, Ohio and 18 other states would quickly ban abortion, says Kellie Copeland, executive director of NARAL Pro-Choice Ohio.
In only 13 states would abortion probably not be at risk, she says.
Anticipating that, Brinkman's bill also prohibits transporting a woman across county or state lines for an abortion. Doing so would carry the same charge as an in-state abortion: first- or second-degree felonies punishable by up to 10 years in prison.
Only when it's medically necessary to save a woman's life would Brinkman's bill allow abortion. But that never happens anyway, he says.
"It's a fallacy perpetrated by the Planned Parenthood people," Brinkman says. "My doctors tell me they're never in that type of dilemma." HIS doctors? Oh, does he mean the ones that write the prescriptions for Viagra but not for R.U. 486?
It is transparent that in South Dakota and elsewhere, the anti-abortion zealots are only interested in forcing a Constitutional fight. That, and hoping John Paul Stevens or one of the moderate Supreme Court justices come down with bird flu.