^^^ Exactly. 

I don't think this is correct.
It is not unreasonable, unworkable, or impractical to owe due prenatal care to incarcerated pregnant people's children.I redirected this from the Crime and Punishment Thread
Yes I think that was the real point of the headline, albeit possibly not the article itself.
I don't think this is correct. The external environment of the mother can have a non-negligible impact on the fetus. Even putting aside the secondary factors that are incidental to the mother's physical environment, ie., people in jail (or homeless, or in a warzone, impoverished area, highly polluted area, etc) are more likely to experience and/or engage in xyz, harmful to the fetus... simply increasing the mothers stress level, can have direct negative impacts on the development of the fetus. So the reality appears to be, that imprisoning a pregnant woman, unavoidably potentially harms the fetus, based on location alone, obviously absent any culpable conduct on the part of the fetus.
The overall point seems, that every example is a good example of why fetal personhood is complicated, unworkable, impractical, and therefore difficult at best, to be enforced in any sort of consistent, logical way.
But I'm guessing there are plenty who would object to seeing it done.
Seems like you're conflating two different things. Fetal personhood is difficult... if pointing out the difficulty somehow makes people treat pregnant women better, great...It is not unreasonable, unworkable, or impractical to owe due prenatal care to incarcerated pregnant people's children.
But I'm guessing there are plenty who would object to seeing it done. Barbaric, but here we are.
If it takes the concept of fetal personhood to shed meaningful light on what is almost certainly a mass ongoing wrong(and has been for a long time) I think it takes a special type of person to stand and be counted in opposition.
While the head of the FDA is a position appointed by the President (& approved by the Senate), I'm not a fan of any President overruling their decisions (that goes for most government agencies - the EPA, the Dept of Health & Human Services, etc.) though. We saw how badly that can go under Trump who would "shop around" for heads who just agreed with his politically-motivated decisions. This is not meant as a comment on this particular issue, just a general statement that while, yes, Biden could probably engineer a response he desired from the FDA, I don't view doing so as A Good Thing. The President should ideally appoint capable heads of these agencies & then not interfere with what the experts decide.The FDA is a federal agency under executive control, right? So the president has absolute control over what they do? Does they mean that it is Biden that makes the ultimate decision as to if mifepristone is categorised under the REMS programme?
I agree with much of what you say. However when most of politics is just inching the needle of the overton window one way or another, if the "goodies" only do things the way things should be done, and the "baddies" do things the way that pushes the needle most effectively then the goodies will lose.While the head of the FDA is a position appointed by the President (& approved by the Senate), I'm not a fan of any President overruling their decisions (that goes for most government agencies - the EPA, the Dept of Health & Human Services, etc.) though. We saw how badly that can go under Trump who would "shop around" for heads who just agreed with his politically-motivated decisions. This is not meant as a comment on this particular issue, just a general statement that while, yes, Biden could probably engineer a response he desired from the FDA, I don't view doing so as A Good Thing. The President should ideally appoint capable heads of these agencies & then not interfere with what the experts decide.
many laws are apparently difficult to enforce with logical consistency. we observe this all the time, even in cases where it shouldn't be hard. this is usually a failure of the system or individuals deliberately undermining it, sometimes both.The overall point seems, that every example is a good example of why fetal personhood is complicated, unworkable, impractical, and therefore difficult at best, to be enforced in any sort of consistent, logical way.
While the head of the FDA is a position appointed by the President (& approved by the Senate), I'm not a fan of any President overruling their decisions (that goes for most government agencies - the EPA, the Dept of Health & Human Services, etc.) though. We saw how badly that can go under Trump who would "shop around" for heads who just agreed with his politically-motivated decisions. This is not meant as a comment on this particular issue, just a general statement that while, yes, Biden could probably engineer a response he desired from the FDA, I don't view doing so as A Good Thing. The President should ideally appoint capable heads of these agencies & then not interfere with what the experts decide.