since i'm exponentially more intelligent than you, this is doubtful
The Dude claims to have an accounting and MBA degrees. I've yet to see any proof of it.
Ask him but I can tell you what kind of answer you'll get.
since i'm exponentially more intelligent than you, this is doubtful
You know about immoral acts reject
Not on topic. Moving on.
Now, force me to answer. What's that? You can't. I know.![]()
Irresponsible behavior is amoral, not understanding your question?
You know about immoral acts reject
Yes, I am absolutely advocating that abortion be legal in the case of rape/incest. And no, I do not believe that should be a matter for states to decide, because you would eventually wind up with the Texas matter that has been mentioned in this forum already.
For those not familiar with it: Texas Republican Senator Matt Schaefer put forward an Amendment that would "...prohibit the performance of an abortion at the facility on the basis that the fetus has a severe and irreversible abnormality...".
His reasoning? Get this: Suffering is “part of the human condition, since sin entered the world.”
So because he believes we should suffer due to sin entering the world, he would have women carry a pregnancy to term even if the fetus is dead, has severe, irreversible abnormalities, or is the result of rape.
And that is why instead of relying on the states to handle something so deeply personal you make it Federal, so everyone is treated equally.
Imagine being a woman who is pregnant due to rape and having to either travel hundreds of miles out-of-state to get an abortion, or to not be able to get the abortion at all.
That is an unconscionable burden on both the woman and society.
I will also say that I do not advocate for abortion as a form of birth control. There are contraceptives for that.
But in the end, if the decision to abort a fetus does not affect me, then I have no right to force someone else to my way of thinking as it is simply not my decision to make.
the very opposite of that happens almost daily around the country. people who aren't affected personally have no care about those laws passed.....until they actually do.the cold indifferences of fellow citizens "if it doesn't affect me personally, than why should I care" would result in all kinds of laws repealed. Until of course it does affect you personally.
The Dude claims to have an accounting and MBA degrees. I've yet to see any proof of it.
Ask him but I can tell you what kind of answer you'll get.
The Dude claims to have an accounting and MBA degrees. I've yet to see any proof of it.
Ask him but I can tell you what kind of answer you'll get.
In other words, you oppose the Constitution and what it says about things not delegated to the federal government belonging to the states?
You support the choice where abortion is used for birth control. NO difference.
Since the matter of abortion is of interest to the common welfare, it would certainly fall under the auspices of Congress' legislative powers.
i would love to hear the rationale for this.

Access to abortion in cases of rape, incest and abuse, or where carrying the baby to term would cause the death of the mother is in the interest of the common welfare.
It could be very easily argued that while such circumstances are rare, access to the procedure necessary to terminate pregnancy is in interest to the common good and that as such cases are rare, ensuring that legal access is cemented in law would ensure the common welfare in such situations while not causing undue burden on the People.
SmarterthanFew thinks he has a right to murder police and federal agents, but women shouldn't have the right to control what happens to their own bodies.
if they are rare, then how can that possibly rise to the situation that requires triggering the US constitutional mandates of congress?
if they are rare, then how can that possibly rise to the situation that requires triggering the US constitutional mandates of congress?
of course it's the issue, unless you're saying that congress should be making laws because the act or denial of something to a single individual affects the general welfare of a nation.Rarity isn't the issue.
Considering that some states would inevitably enact laws banning abortion regardless of the reason, having a law in place which while used rarely but is so obviously for the good of citizens who find themselves in such a situation is neither contrary to Constitutional authority nor a burden on the country.
Do you want me to find your quotes?