PHOENIX PHIL
AH ambassador
I would just like to preface my comment by saying that I do not seek to diminish anyone’s point of view on this topic, nor do I think lesser of anyone for believing differently than I about it.
In my opinion, the central question is whether one can ever have a right to another’s body. To illustrate what I mean, imagine a hypothetical situation in which you are in the hospital and another patient goes into full renal failure. In order to save that patient’s life, the doctor attaches your body to them so that your kidneys are what is keeping them alive. Given such a situation, does the other patient’s right to life supersede your right to bodily autonomy? I would argue that it does not.
I always appreciate your opinions even if I disagree with them. But quite frankly you're obfuscating here with this example. I must confess I've never ever heard of this situation where a doctor uses one person's healthy body to save the life of another against that person's wishes. I can't even imagine how that would logistically work.
What you're obfuscating from is my point of when is a baby in fact a human and is afforded it's right to life?
What I typically find and it seems the case here is that those who take the "right to privacy/choice" stance do not want to even consider the right to life, that that right has no place in the discussion. But certainly it must be part of the discussion. I would have more respect if those that believe in the right to choose simply declared that they believe this right to choose supercedes at all times the baby's right to life.
Again I'd disagree with that position but at least it's being intellectually honest. Instead it seems those bent on protecting that right to choose simply ignore the right to life like it doesn't even exist. I'm inclined to say that as I believe those who take that stance know in their hearts that at least at some point in a pregnancy it's wrong.