AProudLefty
The remora of JPP
Yes you are. You constantly talk to each other.Ahhhhh, so you're actually jealous? Got it.
Nope.
@gfm7175 @IBDaMann @Into the Night
Yes you are. You constantly talk to each other.Ahhhhh, so you're actually jealous? Got it.
Nope.
All I need is a heartbeat and human DNA.Could be. You'll need evidence. All you have is heartbeat and brain activity.
How are contract killings legal when they are illegal?I did. I think it's truly horrendous that many tens of millions of living humans EACH YEAR are having hit jobs placed on them before they're even born.
Correct. One cannot suffer when one is dead. This must be the DNC's plan to end world suffering.I also suspect that "further suffering down the road" is part of what life is.
Hence, the Party of Death, the party of "No More Suffering."Suffering is a part of life for everyone; it's unavoidable.
It's no surprise to ANYONE who has been paying attention. Convenience has been on the rise like a hot air balloon.Yes, it's sad that roughly 5 million children between newborn and five die in a year (idk offhand if 2023 is a good representation of a "typical year" or not, but let's say that it is). It's also sad that almost 100 million children die each year between conception and birth (a much shorter timeframe), with 75%+ of those deaths occurring via contracted killings.
My action is to make a law similar to "You break it, you buy it", e.g. "No killing your own children" or "If you actively get yourself inseminated, you nurture the living human you create." A woman can have all the unwanted pregnancies she wishes, but she is just not allowed to kill any living humans.GOAL: End most/all "abortions" (hitjobs targeting unborn living humans)
ACTION: Try saving the lives of already born living humans.
@IBDaMann Is this a particular ACTION that you, as a rational adult, would take (given the GOAL)?
No heartbeat required. A human fetus will always produce a human baby. It will never be any other species.This is a stupid request. You are well aware that I have defined "living human" here on JPP dozens of times across dozens of threads.
A being with a heartbeat and human DNA.
Simpler than that. No heartbeat required.There is NOTHING vague about that term. It's been VERY clearly and unambiguously defined.
Living --- has a heartbeat (as an undeniably clear indicator of life... no fauna with a heartbeat has ever been considered "dead")
Human --- homo sapien species
^^^ continued usage of dehumanizing language to obfuscate the fact that living humans who have not committed any crime nor expressed any desire to die are being CONTRACT KILLED by hired hitmen (to the tune of many tens of millions each and every year).
Ergo, the species IS human. We agree on this.
Right. A living human IS a living human, no matter which stage of growth/development a living human happens to be in, whether fetus or elder. Age is irrelevant. A contract killing is a contract killing, no matter if the human being contract killed is 7 years old or 77 years old.
Nope. Both words are CLEARLY and UNAMBIGUOUSLY defined. It is YOU who wishes to muddy the waters (and dehumanize the human being contract killed) by using words such as 'fetus', 'unplanned pregnancy', 'terminate a pregnancy', et al.
Yes, I damn well DO want to curtail contract killings. Not you, though...
I don't give a rat's ass what precise stage of development humans are being contract killed via hired hitmen (but a lot of them ARE happening during the fetal stage of human life). I just want the contracted killings of living humans to STOP.
Not really. We just happen to have similar views in politics.
At issue is when is it alive. You are a Christian and you believe that life begins at "conception." I don't deal in the realm of beliefs as much as I deal in knowledge. I readily admit that prior to having a heartbeat, the fetus might very well be alive; however, I know that once there is a heartbeat, there is life. Ergo, when it comes to making my definitions, I define "living human" as "a being with human DNA and a heartbeat" ... and I can get everyone, including you, to agree that anything meeting that definition is indeed a living human.No heartbeat required. A human fetus will always produce a human baby. It will never be any other species.
I call it bad metaphor fallacy.The actual name of this fallacy is an association fallacy. It attempts to associate random stuff like meteors, etc. with a controllable event, namely the so-called 'unplanned pregnancy'.
Another example describing the association fallacy.
Good question. Since he considers human life so valueless, that includes his own.
Why is such a distinguishment important (or even relevant in any way)?For me, and, I imagine, most if not all people on the pro choice side of things, it's crucially important to distinguish between a human fetus and a human who's life is not sustained by a woman's body.
So it is not a murder below that?All I need is a heartbeat and human DNA.
Nah. In actuality, it is a random dictionary that you treat as 'holy' that defines 'abortion' as "the termination of a pregnancy" or "the removal of a fetus from a pregnant woman who doesn't want to carry said fetus to term", and those particular definitions stroke your confirmation bias, making you feel all fuzzy inside.And here is where [we] disagree- it all comes down to how we define abortion. I define it as the termination of a pregnancy, or the removal of a fetus from a pregnant woman who doesn't want to carry said fetus to term.A doctor (in this case, a professional killer)
[snip]And here is where [we] disagree- it all comes down to how we define abortion. I define it as the termination of a pregnancy, or the removal of a fetus from a pregnant woman who doesn't want to carry said fetus to term.
I don't accept either of those definitions for 'abortion' because they purposely use dehumanizing verbiage in order to mask the horror of what is truly happening.
The first definition completely removes the existence of a living human by solely referring to pregnancy rather than referring to the living human that is created and is growing/developing inside of the mother's womb during the pregnancy process.
The second definition dehumanizes by using the term 'fetus' (as if the "thing" inside the mother's womb were some other "invasive" species) instead of the term 'living human' or 'child' or 'offspring'.
Okay. I'm happy to specifically go through each of these definitions and explain to you how they are using dehumanizing language in order to mask the horror of what is truly happening.Actually I have, though perhaps not to you. It all has to do with how I and many others define abortion. I've listed some examples in the past of how abortion is defined in some dictionaries. I'll quote some again here:
Remember, you've already agreed with me that "the fetus" is a living human.
When Living Human A (the hitman, the "doctor")
Oh wow. This definition comes right out and admits that death is being caused by this process (which inherently implies that life existed beforehand).from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.:
**
- noun the removal of a fetus from the womb prior to normal delivery in a manner such as to cause the death of the fetus; also called voluntary abortion, or when performed by a physician, therapeutic abortion.
Source:
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It, however, still refuses to use the words 'living human', instead opting for the dehumanizing word 'fetus'.
BTW, a physician/therapeutic is supposed to be a HEALER, not a killer.
I noticed that. That's part of the whole "dehumanizing verbiage" thing that I keep explaining to you.Note that the word killing is never used. Instead, words such as "termination of a pregnancy..." and "removal of a fetus" are used instead.
Oh I understand it VERY clearly.I think a lot of people don't really understand the power of words to shape our perceptions.
It's MUCH easier to gamble when it isn't YOUR life that's at risk....instead of risking pregnancy and if actually -getting- pregnant, perhaps deciding to have an abortion? I think we can agree that hindsight is 20/20. As I've mentioned before, I think of life as something like a casino, where we make gambles. Sometimes the gambles pay off, sometimes they don't. I think it's safe to say that when we're making the gambles, we think they're the best options. Later on, we may have second thoughts. That's life.Wouldn't it be better off to not engage in behavior that can initiate a pregnancy [snip]
... and that goes back to what I just said about it being MUCH easier to gamble when it isn't YOUR life that ceases to exist when "the House wins".Sure. Goes back to what I've said about gambles in life.Here, I want to be very clear that when you use the words "what to do when a woman gets pregnant and wants to terminate her pregnancy", you aren't implying that pregnancy is something that "just unexpectedly happens" but rather is something that can very well result from the choice to engage in heterosexual intercourse (even when those people are actively trying to prevent pregnancy via usage of condoms, pills, etc).
I suppose that you're not if you don't live in the USA, but I live in the USA, so I DO care about it.I suspect some people might not agree that the former U.S. Supreme Court decision was unconstitutional, but I'm not that interested in the subject myself.
I am considering these specific items as parts of the overarching category of "convenience":
I am considering these specific items as parts of the overarching category of "convenience":In other words, you are defining as "convenience" any cases where rape, [incest] or life of the mother is not the reason given.
To be clear, I do not dislike any vaccines.I actually agree with IBD on several issues, such as his dislike of Covid vaccines.
I staunchly oppose anyone being forced or otherwise coerced into receiving any vaccine.
Yes. When we speak about "viruses", we are assuming a particular model that might be discarded tomorrow for some new model, and there is nothing preventing you from being the person who develops that new model.At one point, he even suggested that my belief that biological viruses might not be real might be correct.
Yes. When we speak about "viruses", we are assuming a particular model that might be discarded tomorrow for some new model, and there is nothing preventing you from being the person who develops that new model.At one point, he even suggested that my belief that biological viruses might not be real might be correct.