Fearless! So nice to have you back. Without your charming company this thread was beginning to lose some of its flavor.
FearlessLeader2 said:
I don't have to convince anyone of that that I consider worth the time to have a discussion with.
Oh my. You must not talk to very many people. Tell me, do you consider
this jury worth the time to have a discussion with? After all, they allowed four police officers to shoot an innocent man on the street and walk away free. Wasnt Mr. Diallo human? Didnt he have a right to life? Because if he did, and if every legal system on earth (including ours, I presume) supports this right, why did the jury acquit the four police officers?
There is no legal system on earth that is not based wholly or in part on the concept of a human right to life; so as long as you live within such a system, your beliefs are secondary to the base assumptions of that system.
I dispute the first part, but Ill wait to see how you answer the case of Mr. Diallo. As for the second
are you sure about that? Because if that is true, then arent
your beliefs secondary to the assumptions of
our system? For instance, the assumption that abortion is a legal right as established by Roe vs. Wade?
There is a right to life, and children (and you already agreed with me that embreyos et al count as such) have a right to the things they need to live. You said your STATE cut its CHIP program, that means it is in the USA.
*chuckle* Yes, last time I checked, Texas was in the USA. Grudgingly, I admit, but still there.

But just because you say there is a right to life over and over doesnt make it so. Our system allows people to die every day. We actively kill people every day. Texas has fried 12 this year alone, and were just getting started. If our system is really built around a right to life, why are we gunning down hundreds in Najaf? Why do we allow our police officers to engage with lethal force whenever they so much as suspect they may be in danger?
Could it be that our system does not value life as much as you seem to think it does?
No hospital in the US can turn a patient with a life-threatening condition away based on ability to pay, not one.
Depends. Hospitals have to provide emergency care, but hospitals do not have to provide indefinite care. If you come in requiring an emergency appendectomy, the hospital cannot turn you away. However, if you are in a coma with no ability to pay, the hospital does not have to artificially support your life indefinitely. Which would seem to run counter to your assumption that people have the right to everything they need to live. Or do people in comas not count?
If it happens and hospitals get away with it, it's only because people are believing that myth and noone is pressing charges against the parents for not getting help because they don't want to expose that myth and face the costs.
Or it could be because there is no basic assumption that people have a right to everything they need to live in our system. Given how many lawyers there are looking for work, which case do you think is more likely?
They are children. They have a right to the things they need to live. They have a right to life. The answer to my question is clear:
No, whats clear is that you like to pick a phrase and repeat it over and over. Im quite willing to be convinced that what you say is true. But youre going to have to start offering evidence, not just repeating a catch phrase over and over. If I want that, Ill tune into some political ads. Im confident you can do better.