PostmodernProphet
fully immersed in faith..
astonishing pregnancies not aborted are not ended by abortion?........you should get the Nobel Prize for Biology.....Not 100% of the pregnancies, which, obviously, is the relevant comparison.
astonishing pregnancies not aborted are not ended by abortion?........you should get the Nobel Prize for Biology.....Not 100% of the pregnancies, which, obviously, is the relevant comparison.
The evidence suggests you can't even promote it, much less enforce it.
Again, the issue isn't abstinence versus non-abstinence.
By being forced to choose between bringing an unwanted pregnancy to term or suffering criminal penalties for ending it.
Yes, fetuses do not have a right to life. That's long-established law, not only in the US but in pretty much every advanced nation.
Quote Originally Posted by evince View Post
men control their bodies
It's a dishonest debate tactic...That's because one is much better than the other.
So it's not even a moral question at all?Purposely taking away the life of a fetus is neither right nor wrong.
An unborn child is an unthinking clump of cells?It's like taking away the life of a clump of fat cells during liposuction -- ideally you'd avoid it by not getting fat in the first place, but since an unthinking clump of cells have no right to life, it's not a great tragedy, either.
An unborn child is not conscious?Individual life is not, in itself, sanctified. We destroy it in the millions each and every time we wash our hands, for example. It is CONSCIOUS life that is special.
It is the most effective way to not become pregnant. It has a 100% success rate (excluding the miracle of the baby Jesus).Abstinence-focused education is less effective.
Abstinence leads to no disease and no unwanted pregnancies.Yes, and education that focuses on encouraging people to do that is less effective at preventing disease and unwanted pregnancy than education that focuses on prophylaxis.
Creationism has nothing to do with biology. Biology is science, while Creationism is religion. Of course, some religions masquerade themselves as science, such as Global Warming, the Big Bang Theory, and the Theory of Abiogenesis, for starters...Teaching both an effective lesson and an ineffective lesson is, of course, better than only teaching the ineffective lesson. But it's also worse than spending the whole time on the effective lesson. It's akin to spending time in biology class teaching creationism. The more time you spend on it, the less time available for something worthwhile.
It is a child. Children have the right to life.What makes you think that?
Yup... She seems to be carefully choosing words like "fetus" and "clump of cells" in an attempt to dehumanize the child to make it seem okay to terminate it's life. It's amazing that she thinks that a baby 8 months into the pregnancy cycle is a "clump of cells"...
"fetus" is the stage of human development between "zygote" (five or six days) and embryo (8 weeks) it would be a rare situation for a fetus to be aborted, as most women would not be sure of pregnancy before 8 weeks.....
No, there quite literally aren't. In this specific framework of swimming, if you do not swim, then you are definitely not going to drown. There is no better alternative to avoiding drowning than not swimming in the first place. Yet, if you DO decide to take the risk and swim, then there are ways to reduce that risk of drowning. The risk is always there, but it can be reduced by taking certain precautions. Same with your driving example from another comment. The only way to remain 100% safe is to not even drive in the first place. But if you DO decide to drive, there are precautions that one can take to reduce their risk of ending up in an accident.That's a bit like saying that if you don't want to drown, don't go swimming. That would work, but there are better alternatives.
Why not? They can be taught both ways. They can be taught of the risks that they are taking, and that it would be better if they waited until they were more equipped to take on the risks, but if they did take the risk anyway, that there are ways to reduce that risk.And if you focus on not going swimming as the way to prevent drowning, you're just increasing the chances that when people ignore you and swim anyway, they won't be armed with the practical information that could keep them from drowning.
Actually, that is close-mindedness... and faith is not a sin. Faith is circular reasoning. A circular argument is otherwise known as an argument of faith. Circular reasoning is not a sin...It's true that superstition is common enough that it's probably hard-wired, to some extent... and not just in humans. Studies have shown that even pigeons behave religiously. BF Skinner showed that if you feed pigeons at random times, they'll start to recognize non-existent patterns and engage in meaningless prayer-like behavior to try to trigger the feedings. Fortunately, some humans are smart enough and open-minded enough to rise above the sin of faith.
Yes.. unborn children do.
astonishing pregnancies not aborted are not ended by abortion?........you should get the Nobel Prize for Biology.....
and the evidence is conclusive that if you tell children its okay to kill their unborn children they will often do it......
If you want to teach your children that particular religious taboo, .
there's no reason to charge women criminally.....all you have to do is hang the abortion providers.....
What makes you think fetuses have a right to life?
there is nothing advanced about killing your unborn children
Many of those women's health physicians are, themselves, women. You're talking about murdering someone for running afoul of your religious taboos. It's like trying to talk to a member of the Taliban.
you are a fucking idiot if you think killing your unborn children is advanced.......the day will come when abortionists will be treated like the slave owners of the 1800s........The legal right of women to end unwanted pregnancies is something that nearly all advanced nations have in common. The barbaric nations, by comparison, tend to agree with you.
It's a dishonest debate tactic...
So it's not even a moral question at all?
An unborn child is an unthinking clump of cells?
An unborn child is not conscious?[/quotes]
Fetuses are not conscious.
It is the most effective way to not become pregnant. It has a 100% success rate (excluding the miracle of the baby Jesus).
First, let's aside the various myths about virgin births (of which Jesus is a relatively late addition). No point telling each other fairy tales, when we have a practical matter at hand.
Anyway, we're back to that same old argument. It's like saying you can't drown if you never go near the water, or you can't get in a car accident if you refuse to get into a car, or the only way to avoid shooting yourself is never to touch a gun, etc. The problem isn't with the statements, which are true. It's in the value of the lesson. If the focus of your drown-proofing training is "don't go near the water," you're setting your students up to drown, because they will, in fact, go near the water, and when they do they won't be armed with the lessons you might have given them as to how to minimize risks while doing so.
Of course, some religions masquerade themselves as science, such as Global Warming, the Big Bang Theory, and the Theory of Abiogenesis, for starters...
Global warming isn't a religion. Neither is the Big Bang theory, or the hypotheses around abiogenesis. They are testable science.
It is a child. Children have the right to life.
It is a fetus. Fetuses have no right to life, either morally or under the law in most advanced nations (though, granted, in more primitive nations they sometimes are treated as having such a right).