
Originally Posted by
Elok
I think the whole argument--why should I have the kid, why should I support a kid if I didn't want to refrain from aborting it--is a symptom of our infatuation with individual rights being carried just a smidge too far. I mean, yeah, she's pregnant when she didn't want to be pregnant, and that's bad. But she's also undergoing a perfectly normal, routine function of human biology which has happened several trillion times already, so why are we flapping our hands and talking about it like it's a big cosmic injustice and the whole universe is out to screw her over?
Her individual choice may be very intimate, but it has serious and far-reaching consequences, as evidenced by the widespread problem of sex-selective abortions, or the targeted elimination of Down's Syndrome. Even if you ignore the child's livelihood entirely, which is generally case, mom isn't the only one affected by her decision. It has enormous demographic repercussions on a long-term, aggregate scale.
Of course, you could say the same thing about whether or not to have sex in the first place, etc. But as it happens, almost nobody today decides, over the long term, to not have sex. Some of them are married/in long-term relationships, some are not; I don't know the ratio. I think it's fair to say that our culture tends to glorify no-strings attached sex--which, I'm sure, is fun. But sex is never really no-strings attached, unless you're gay or sterile and you're certain your partner has no VD (and that's assuming no emotional issues). Sex exists for the primary purpose of procreation. That purpose can be thwarted to a very large extent, but nothing can completely stop it. Abortion exists to seal up that little crack. And so we act like it's a BFD when the seal is denied and we can't completely escape responsibility for the choices we make (with the obvious exception of rape, etc., which is a more complex issue).
That, I submit to you, is carrying individuality a little too far. If you're not prepared to accept even the slightest risk of becoming a parent, you shouldn't be having sex, one way or another. And certainly the child should not be the one to suffer for your recklessness. Of course, I'm arguing this from a purely moral and theoretical standpoint. Public policy is likely to prove depressingly intransigent, the more so because people and groups like the RCC can't fathom the separation of church and state.
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