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Louisiana Republicans have voted to advance a bill out of committee making abortion from the moment of fertilization a crime, in which the mother can be charged with homicide.
That makes every miscarriage a criminal investigation and it makes terminating an ectopic pregnancy murder. Republican U.S. Senator from North Dakota Kevin Cramer says the fetus is worth losing the mother's life, says there's no exceptions. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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Since Roe was handed down 49 years ago, "pro-lifers" in the US have committed: -11 murders -26 attempted murders -4 kidnappings -42 bombings -667 bomb threats -100 butyric acid attacks -189 arsons -663 Anthrax /bioterrorism threats -25,000+ acts of phone harassment or hate mail Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
Since Detbuch is convinced that a fetus is a human being at conception
If the "fetus" is considered a human being, then it would be a constitutional basis. If a fetus is a person at 6 weeks pregnant, is that when the child support starts? As you can see, since you quoted it, I said "human being," not "person." Not sure how you missed that. Probably your usual twisting, lying business. Is that also when you can't deport the mother because she's carrying a U.S. citizen? I believe the criteria is that the baby must be "born" in the U.S. Can I insure a 6 week fetus, and collect for a miscarriage? Well, first you can identify as a woman, then claim you are pregnant, then work it out with and insurance agency. Maybe the radical clerics that issued the Fatwa against abortion will clarify it. Quote:
And I’m twisting things. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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That is why we generally don't call fetus's "persons." Doesn't mean we can't. But your use of it, in a legal context (child support) gives the "fetus" a connotative status that it has not yet achieved or developed. But, to answer your question, "at 6 weeks pregnant, is that when the child support starts?"--yes, it can. From Parker Bryan Family law: "in some cases, parents may have divorced before their child was born, or they may not have been married in the first place. Both scenarios leave parents facing situations where one of them (usually the mother) is shouldering the financial responsibilities during pregnancy. In such cases, should the mother be receiving child support during her pregnancy and before the child is born? In some states, the laws have provided for such scenarios, making it a requirement that both parents must support their unborn child." |
So what’s coming is not the states controlling abortion but that the Fourteenth Amendment, properly interpreted in your belief, would thereafter prohibit abortion in every state.
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Why R v W is needed from someone who lived thru an example
Pre-Roe, I was 8 yrs old. I came home from school to find my Mom lying in a puddle of blood. She was weak & asked me to call a neighbor. She was miscarrying, but the embryo would not abort. For 48 hours, she bled while doctors transfused blood, waiting. Abortions were illegal. My Father was required to bring my little sister & I to the hospital boardroom to prove to the board there were children to consider. I will never forget standing there, watching my Father get on his knees & BEG the board to save my Mother. The embryo was not viable, & yet, it was killing my Mom. I stood in that boardroom for hours, listening to a group of old men argue about saving a woman by removing an embryo. I didn't understand what they were saying except that my Mom was going to die if they voted against an abortion. My Father was crying. this strong man, who I had always felt so safe with, was crying because he was helpless in saving my Mom. If you don't think that affects a child, you are SO WRONG I never forgot that scene. I had so many questions, & no one to explain. 72 hours after it began, the board voted to abort the embryo & save my Mom. 72 hours of no sleep for my Dad. 72 hours of not knowing if my Mom would live. When Roe v Wade was decided I felt such a relief that no family member would ever have to go through the grief we went through. 2 years ago, my daughter had an ectopic pregnancy. It was attached to an artery & if it burst, she would bleed to death before she could make it to an ambulance. Because of Roe, her life was saved. She did not have 72 hours for doctors to "decide" if her life was worth I have 5 granddaughters. I shudder to think if one of them has a pregnancy that endangers their lives, that they may not be saved. We CANNOT GO BACKWARDS!! Do you know what actually saved my Mom's life? Our family doctor was Jewish. He threatened to leave the hospital if they were going to force their "Christian" values on this Jewish doctor. The Right-wing SCOTUS are #ChristianTaliban The @GOP have whined about "Sharia Law" as a boogey man, when they are ACTUALLY trying to FORCE their own religious beliefs on Americans. What happened to separation of church & State?? Trust me, most of them will never make it to the Pearly Gates. It was 60 years ago, but Monday night, when this story broke, I was 8 again, and had nightmares all night. That kind of trauma never leaves a child. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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But but this leak upsets you and conservatives more than Jan 6th Alito had to cancel public appearances because of concerns for his safety. OMG now common sense is outrageous Hang mike pence evacuate the entire capital But but OMG they put fences up around the court. Do you hear yourselves ? Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
As fences go up around the Supreme Court, a reminder they overruled a law that created 35ft buffer zones for abortion clinics because it “infringed on free speech”
But when it’s their own building they dont seem too worried. Huh. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
Claim: There is big support for ending Roe in America.
6 in 10 U.S. adults (59%) say that abortion should be legal in most or all cases, and public opinion hasn’t shifted much in recent years. Claim: After Roe, abortions skyrocketed. While the rate of abortions increased significantly in the decade after Roe v. Wade, it has since decreased to below the 1973 level. Claim: Abortion is dangerous. Pregnancy and childbirth are far more dangerous than getting an abortion, according to data from the CDC. Claim: People are getting abortions late in pregnancy. Over 90% of abortions happen in the first trimester (by 13 weeks). Claim: Fetuses feel pain early in a pregnancy. Medical researchers agree a fetus is not capable of experiencing pain until the third trimester, somewhere between 29 or 30 weeks. Despite this, 16 states have passed abortion bans based on the notion that fetuses experience pain at or around 22 weeks. Claim: People who are religious don’t get abortions. More than 60% of abortion patients have a religious affiliation. crime fell roughly 20% between 1997 and 2014 due to legalized abortion. The cumulative impact of legalized abortion on crime is roughly 45%, accounting for a very substantial portion of the roughly 50-55% overall decline from the peak of crime in the early 1990s." https://law.stanford.edu/publication...t-two-decades/ Poverty is the leading cause of crime .. Ps I love this new conservatives argument people can still get an abortion…. So the persons who can just pay for an abortion is now expect to fly or drive and get a hotels and return trips .. these are the same people who are upset they can’t walk into a store buy a gun and walk out .. a background check is infringing on their rights But but abortion we care so much until they are Born . Then they suit another political need welfare reforms because all these welfare queens are getting a free ride Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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Overturning Roe, and ending abortion, are two VERY different things. Do you not get that? Ending Roe doesn't ban abortion. It sends the issue to the states. If 59% of the voters in a state feel strongly that they want abortion, they'll elect legislators who will allow it. Many people think Roe was decided poorly. One's feelings about abortion, have nothing to do with whether or not Roe was decided correctly. "But but abortion we care so much until they are Born" There's no evidence democrats care more about people after they're born. "Claim: People who are religious don’t get abortions." I have never heard anyone make that claim. Have you? "Pregnancy and childbirth are far more dangerous than getting an abortion" To the mom, sure. To the baby, not so much. If it gets overturned, it's going to be harder to get one for many women, no doubt. Hopefully that will incentivize people to make better choices. |
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When did I say that? January 6th upsets me more. Maybe not for the same reasons it upsets you, but it upsets me more. The judges had their home addresses published on the Internet. That doesn't concern you? Alito had to cancel public appearances. Can you comment on that? |
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Your example is a valid reason, as has been done, to exempt a law against abortion in the case of danger to the life of the mother. But abortions on demand for varieties of convenience rather than a threat to the life of the mother presents many problems against such abortions that go beyond Christianity. You've probably heard all the arguments. Maybe not. Maybe your horrific example was too traumatic to give them any credibility. |
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abortion is a result of rape or imminent death to the mother. I love your mom. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
The people who oppose womens right to control their own bodies fail to acknowledge that at a minimum their are other faiths that do not oppose abortion but in fact require it in some cases.
Imposing beliefs that are held by some Faiths on all Americans is unconstitutional. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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is there anything else that happens, when abortion is not chosen? other than moms having to endure something admittedly difficult, is there anything GOOD that happens as a result of child birth? Can you think of anything positive? Anything? A baby being born means absolutely nothing to you? Not worth mentioning? Not a syllable? that’s very telling, about how slanted this issue is framed. As always, your side will only talk about the impact to the mom. and that’s an important part of this, but it’s not all of it. the impact to the baby is also part of this, and your side hates admitting that or considering it for a second. Why are so many people moving to red states, do you think? NH, TN, NC, SC, TX, FL? If those states are run by people who are so barbaric, why are people moving there? When you live in a place with low taxes that put hundreds of dollars in your pocket a month ( or more) yiu don’t need, or want, the state to provide some of those things. Pre exiting condition coverage is a terrific idea, sincerely. that was a real winner for them, and they deserve the reward. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
You aren't the brightest bulb on the tree, especially when you continue to claim people are flocking to these states due to politics. I'm back to my life, but happy to get a rise out of you, so you can carry on.
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running those states are so barbaric, can you tell me why people are are moving there? and like a good liberal coward, you completely dodged my question about whether or not it’s a good thing for babies to be born, at least from the baby’s respective? bright or not, i can ask you questions that you can’t answer. why does that say? Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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you have no response, because there isn’t a response that doesn’t make you look like a Nazi. so you talk about the woman ( who’s obviously part of this), then when the other side talks you put fingers in your ears and tell LA LA LA LA. must be exhausting to feel like you have to constantly dodge any challenge to what you believe. you're saying it's "idiotic" to feel that an analysis of abortion should consider both the cost to th emother and the benefit to the baby. I bet Hitler used the same argument, "hey, it's good for us, and there's nothing else to consider, right?" Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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If people, persons, human beings, want to live in this country, they should obey its laws. If women controlled their own bodies, the vast majority of abortions would not be needed. If our laws would stipulate that women, or men, or persons, or human beings, must totally control their own bodies, should they be punished when they don't control their own bodies? When not controlling their bodies leads to harming other bodies? Or does controlling your own body mean you can do whatever you wish, without interference by laws and government and society. |
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Stop being a drama Queen Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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easier to lob insults then to explain why it’s always OK when your side goes berserk when they don’t get their way, and the one time in your lifetime when republicans do it. you can’t go. a day without discussing it, 16 months later. you ever going to explain how gerrymandering helps one win a statewide race? or can you tell us why Alito is wrong on the law in thinking Roe should be overturned? Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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Nobody is saying anyone is required to get an abortion This country has a constitution that separates church and state. Our law’s constitutionally should not be representative of a religious belief. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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And that serious stuff was a response to your framing the right to abortion as the right of women to control their own bodies. I pointed out that if women actually controlled their bodies, there would be no need for the vast majority of abortions. If a woman doesn't want to get pregnant it is easy to control her own body so that she won't get pregnant. And, BTW, the fetus is not her own body. And I pointed out that the notion of wanting to control your own body isn't merely about abortion, and asked if their were societal obligations that accompanied this controlling your own body--if the right to control your own body should require penalties when you didn't control or willfully controlled your body in such a way that it harmed others. Or does controlling your own body mean you can do whatever you wish, without interference by laws and government and society. There are, of course, implications in that question that there might be penalties for harming the unborn because of not living up to your obligation to control your own body. But that would be a question for the people of various states to decide. You avoided responding to that and went off on what nobody was "trying" or "saying." And your bit about "The people who oppose womens right to control their own bodies" provokes the question of who exactly are those people? I don't know of such people, or as you might put it "nobody is trying to oppose womens' right to control their own bodies." That's just your tricky, propagandistic way of framing the issue to create some dictatorial, authoritarian, fascistic, etc. characterization of the attempt to reject the power of the federal government to impose Roe v. Wade and sending the issue back to the states where it belongs. And then, of course, you had to throw in the separation of church and state, as if anti-abortion is a church thing. For some it may be. But the constitutional argument against it is not about religion. It is about the overreach of the federal government. It is about the federal government usurping yet another power from local government. Yet another piece of power it accrues to itself as it grows out of control of the people and into an unconstitutional authoritarian state. |
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