Little Raven
On Walkabout
Given it away to whom?zjl56 said:If many of the women who got abortions just kept the fetus and let it live they could of just given it away. Life no matter how bad is better then no life.
Given it away to whom?zjl56 said:If many of the women who got abortions just kept the fetus and let it live they could of just given it away. Life no matter how bad is better then no life.
If you take that as a definition of humanity, you have to expect debate on the consequences of said definition.Akka said:Because I've already gone times and times again into this argument, and I'm tired to repeat again and again and again myself, so I do simplify. And I know that if I go in deep into this, it will ends up in a splitting hair session that will be completely pointless toward the actual debate.
So I make it simple : a person is the combination of a character, memories, the ability to feel, and emotion. I've no need to enter further in this, as an embryo COMPLETELY LACK ALL THIS ALTOGETHER.
So wether or not I make these factors a treshold or if I evaluate the "value" of a human proportionnally to them, is irrelevant, because in any case the embryo has a total score of ZERO in any of these.
I understand perfectly the importance of voluntary. But the thing is pregnancy is the result of a voluntary act, if not the product of rape(pregnancy as a consequence from rape is another matter and much more complicated).Akka said:According to your own reasoning, "work = use of the body" and "pregnancy = use of the body". Well, rape is also using the body. Draw your own conclusion as to why this reasoning is completely stupid, and then it will by itself shows the absurdity of comparing pregnancy with work.
I'll give a hint : work is you using your body voluntarily. Rape is someone else using your body against your will.
Forced labor is someone else make you using your body against your will.
I'll let you find what forced pregnancy is.
Immoral in your opinion.Akka said:Because it's a word that imply a negative value.
Forcing an immoral act onto someone is negative. A negative word is then in order.
That's not true. See my reply to TLC. The essential resources are vast and are not beign depleted at all. We can already get fresh water out of salty water, and there are plenty of renewable and clean energy generation technologies. Once we get fusion working, there will be no virtually limits.Akka said:In fact, most of the liveable space is actually occupied by human. The rest is space that can be occupied, but isn't easily "liveable", except by draining even more natural ressources.
The food we can produce, can be only by using artificial and polluting means, that are in the end draining the natural ressources and wearing the Earth. As such, they are only temporarily usable, and sooner or later we will either dry out the Earth and die, either reduce the population to a level that is sustainable by the planet (or find space travel and dry out other planets).
Little Raven said:No, they aren't. They're mostly wrong, which is not at all the same thing.
The history books are full of false prophets of doom, and it's easy to believe that because our civilization has managed to defeat every obstacle it's come across so far, we will surely triumph over every obstacle we come across in the future.
But look a little deeper, and you'll see that sometimes...the doomsayers are right. Or at least, we assume they were right, because records about doomsayers don't tend to survive the collapse of a civilization.
Yes, our civilization is smart and adaptable. I'm sure the ancient Mayans were too. Like us, they had overcome every obstacle put in their path, and I'm sure, like us, they believed themselves to be invincible. And they were, until around 700 A.D., when something gave them a rude surprise.
Yes, doomsayers are almost always wrong. But don't confuse "almost always" with "always." Unfortunately, every once in a while, they're right.
It's you claiming it proves anything - I suggest you first explain how it proves it.luiz said:How not?
1) If the core of the non-sustainability argument isn't that we're using up resources at a non-sustainable rate, was is this core?That's not the real core of the non-sustainability argument. All of those doomsayers have a very distinctive political agenda, but I'll leave that to another debate.
Sources, please.My argument rests on the fact that we are not depleting even a fraction of the essential resources, the ones neede to support life.
I did say oil was an essential resource - I brought it up as an example of a resource that's used at a non-sustainable rate but despite this hasn't run out yet.Oil is not among those(and by the way if doomsayers were right there would be no oil today).
The ammount of oxygen in the world can support hundreds of times more people. With de-salting(if that's a word) technology we could have access to an endless source of water. Solar energy, if properly applied, could provide electricity for billions of years. The soil could grow many times more food then it currently does, and plenty of rich lands are still empty. Tell me, what exactly is depleated?
foster careLittle Raven said:Given it away to whom?
zjl56 said:foster care
Me said:Tell me, what is the difference between a 'human fetus' and a 'human being' that gives one the right to live, and denies it to the other? Show how this difference means more when a 'human fetus' displays it than when an aged, injured, or very young 'human being' displays it. Explain why your assertion is not the same as age-based discrimination. Explain why this difference which may be permanent in a 'human being', but which is certain to be temporary for a 'human fetus', can be used to legitimately discriminate against the 'human fetus', but the 'human being', even if permanently afflicted with the difference (say a permenently vegetative coma) still has full human rights.
FearlessLeader2 said:Let's not forget that the last one didn't 'wind down'. It ended after I asked a question that no one on the pro-abortion side had the stomach to answer.
There is a clear distinction between animal and a human.Mise said:The difference is nobody cares about a clump of cells. And I'd like to ask how the pro-choice crowd is any more hypocritical that the pro-life crowd. YOU EAT BABY COWS!!! HOW CAN YOU BE PRO LIFE!!!
May I ask when this "clump of cells" becomes human?Mise said:As is the distinction between a clump of cells and a human.