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Senate Passes Bill Limiting Abortion

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  • #61
    About time.

    Comment


    • #62
      Let's have a reality check shall we? This law will be hit with a stay as soon as Bush signs it. The Supreme Court shot down a nearly identical law from Nebraska three years ago so there is no real chance they will change there minds this time around. This bill is DOA.

      The fool Congressman who wrote this bill said he included 15 pages of his "legal opinions" as to why this abortion proceedure shouldn't be covered under Roe v. Wade (the case which made abortion legal) as if the opinions of a ludite who never went to law school matter. He's just another right wing ideologue who's fishing for votes by passing legislation he knows doesn't stand a snowball's chance in hell.

      He needs to read the Constitution more and arch-conservative magazines less. The Judiciary, and not Congress, reviews laws for their constitutiality. The Judicary has already ruled on this case and bringing up the same dead horse each year isn't going to change that.

      This issue has always been a lost cause and the fair right should let it go...
      Last edited by Dinner; March 13, 2003, 23:26.
      Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.

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      • #63
        Roe v. Wade needs to be modified anyway, since it uses a rather vague "viability" standard.


        Well, Mike, that was the point right? The Supreme Court, in the only wise part of that opinion, IMO, said that since it wasn't medical experts and since an in utero child can live outside the womb earlier and earlier due to science, they figured it wouldn't be right to set a limit then.

        It may be vague, but very smart.

        He needs to read the Constitution more and arch-conservative magazines less. The Judiciary, and not Congress, reviews laws for their constitutiality. The Judicary has already ruled on this case and bringing up the same dead horse each year isn't going to change that.


        Hmmm... perhaps you should read the Constitution? According to Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey (which validated, but limited Roe), after 'viability', or when the fetus can live outside the womb, Congress can ban abortions. This bill is an attempt to do so.

        Oerdin, perhaps you should go back and read those decisions and see this law may indeed be held up as Constitutional.
        “I give you a new commandment, that you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.”
        - John 13:34-35 (NRSV)

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        • #64
          Once, when I was 17, I went to my doctor's office to get a physical. I was told that the doctor couldn't see me unless I had a parent with me. What makes an abortion different that any other medical procedure that a minor can get one without parental noticification?

          Comment


          • #65
            Originally posted by Lincoln
            And Monkspider I cannot see how you can encourage Sava in his outrage over someone trying to save the life of the innocent. I thought you were a peace and love advocate? What kind of love is it when the innocent are violently killed by those who happen to be wielding power over them? This whole abortion issue has nothing to do with women's health. Anyone who believes that needs to look up some statistics. Abortions are for the convienience of the mother.
            That's a very fair question Linc. To be honest, I have always been totally on the fence on the issue of abortion, sometimes swaying one way or another. I consider it something of ambigious morality, and as such, I don't feel that I should make a definitive stance on it and it should remain something of choice. So I sympathize with you, but I just can't join you in fighting to make it illegal.
            http://monkspider.blogspot.com/

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            • #66
              I don't think there are really easy answers on this issue.

              "The right to one's body" is quite a weird arguement, seing how we banned volountary organ trade, and lots of drugs, and in any case I don't believe in rights.

              I hope I'll get the most utilitarian solution:
              I'd ban all second and third trimester abortions, unless there is a life risk involved.
              I'd have a commission of medical and social workers decide on any other abortion.
              I'd allow "the night after" pills.

              The teens' privacy should remain intact, unless there is a severe health-risk.

              what do you think?
              urgh.NSFW

              Comment


              • #67
                I'm generally pro-choice, but partial birth abortions are a big no-no...
                "The issue is there are still many people out there that use religion as a crutch for bigotry and hate. Like Ben."
                Ben Kenobi: "That means I'm doing something right. "

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                • #68
                  Originally posted by FrantzX
                  Once, when I was 17, I went to my doctor's office to get a physical. I was told that the doctor couldn't see me unless I had a parent with me. What makes an abortion different that any other medical procedure that a minor can get one without parental noticification?

                  That is stupid, Doctors should be able to make a judgement as to whether the patient is capable of consenting. What if the kid was being abused by his parents and wanted to talk to his doctor.
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                  • #69
                    Originally posted by obiwan18
                    So murder is ok, so long as fewer than a million are done?
                    Begging the question.

                    Unless you can show that these fetuses are in fact sentient, your accusation has no merit.
                    (\__/) 07/07/1937 - Never forget
                    (='.'=) "Claims demand evidence; extraordinary claims demand extraordinary evidence." -- Carl Sagan
                    (")_(") "Starting the fire from within."

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                    • #70
                      February 13, 1984
                      President Ronald Reagan
                      The White House
                      Washington, DC



                      Mr. President:

                      As physicians, we, the undersigned, are pleased to associate ourselves with you in drawing the attention of people across the nation to the humanity and sensitivity of the human unborn.
                      That the unborn, the prematurely born, and the newborn of the human species is a highly complex, sentient, functioning, individual organism is established scientific fact. That the human unborn and newly born do respond to stimuli is also established beyond any reasonable doubt.

                      The ability to feel pain and respond to it is clearly not a phenomenon that develops de novo at birth. Indeed, much of enlightened modern obstetrical practice and procedure seeks to minimize sensory deprivation of, and sensory insult to, the fetus during, at, and after birth. Over the last 18 years, real time ultrasonography, fetoscopy, study of the fetal EKG (electrocardiogram) and fetal EEG (electroencephalogram) have demonstrated the remarkable responsiveness of the human fetus to pain, touch, and sound. That the fetus responds to changes in light intensity within the womb, to heat, to cold, and to taste (by altering the chemical nature of the fluid swallowed by the fetus) has been exquisitely documented in the pioneering work of the late Sir William Liley -- the father of fetology. Observations of the fetal electrocardiogram and the increase in fetal movements in saline abortions indicate that the fetus experiences discomfort as it dies. Indeed, one doctor who, the New York Times wrote, "conscientiously performs" saline abortions stated, "When you inject the saline, you often see an increase in fetal movements, it's horrible."

                      We state categorically that no finding of modern fetology invalidates the remarkable conclusion drawn after a lifetime of research by the late Professor Arnold Gesell of Yale University. In "The Embryology of Behavior: The Beginnings of the Human Mind" (1945, Harper Bros.), Dr. Gesell wrote, "and so by the close of the first trimester the fetus is a sentient, moving being. We need not speculate as to the nature of his psychic attributes, but we may assert that the organization of his psychosomatic self is well under way."

                      Mr. President, in drawing attention to the capability of the human fetus to feel pain, you stand on firmly established ground.

                      Respectfully,

                      Dr. Richard T. F. Schmidt, Past President, A.C.O.G., Professor of Ob/Gyn, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH

                      Dr. Vincent Collins, Professor of Anesthesiology, Northwestern University, University of Illinois Medical Center

                      Dr. John G. Masterson, Clinical Professor of Ob/Gyn, Northwestern University

                      Dr. Bernard Nathanson, F.A.C.O.G., Clinical Assistant Professor of Ob/Gyn, Cornell University

                      Dr. Denis Cavanaugh, F.A.C.O.G., Professor of Ob/Gyn, University of South Florida

                      Dr. Watson Bowes, F.A.C.O.G., Professor of Material and Fetal Medicine, University of North Carolina

                      Dr. Byron Oberst, Assistant Clinical Professor of Pediatrics, University of Nebraska

                      Dr. Eugene Diamond, Professor of Pediatrics, Strict School of Medicine, Chicago, IL

                      Dr. Thomas Potter, Associate Clinical Professor of Pediatrics, New Jersey Medical College

                      Dr. Lawrence Dunegan, Instructor of Clinical Pediatrics, University of Pittsburgh

                      Dr. Melvin Thornton, Professor of Clinical Pediatrics, University of Texas (San Antonio)

                      Dr. Norman Vernig, Assistant Professor of Pediatrics, University of Minnesota (St. Paul)

                      Dr. Jerome Shen, Clinical Professor of Pediatrics, St. Louis University

                      Dr. Fred Hofmeister, Past President, A.C.O.G., Professor of Ob/Gyn, University of Wisconsin (Milwaukee)

                      Dr. Matthew Bulfin, F.A.C.O.G., Lauderdale by the Sea, FL

                      Dr. Jay Arena, Professor Emeritus of Pediatrics, Duke University

                      Dr. Herbert Nakata, Assistant Professor of Clinical Pediatrics, University of Hawaii

                      Dr. Robert Polley, Clinical Instructor of Pediatrics, University of Washington (Seattle)

                      Dr. David Foley, Professor of Ob/Gyn, University of Wisconsin (Milwaukee)

                      Dr. Anne Bannon, F.A.A.P., Former Chief of Pediatrics, CityHospital (St. Louis)

                      Dr. John J. Brennan, Professor of Ob/Gyn, Medical College of Wisconsin, (Milwaukee)

                      Dr. Walter F. Watts, Assistant Professor of Ob/Gyn, Strict School of Medicine, Chicago, IL

                      Dr. G. C. Tom Nabors, Assistant Clinical Professor of Ob/Gyn, Southwestern Medical College, Dallas, TX

                      Dr. Konald Prem, Professor of Ob/Gyn, University of Minnesota (Minneapolis)

                      Dr. Alfred Derby, F.A.C.O.G., Spokane, WA

                      Dr. Bernie Pisani, F.A.C.O.G., President, NY State Medical Society, Professor of Ob/Gyn, New York University

                      Comment


                      • #71
                        Originally posted by MichaeltheGreat



                        Also, although I've heard all sorts of "pro-life" advocates claim infanticide/"live birth" abortions, what I've seen for source material comes down to one woman who claimed to work for a lab that collected post-mortem fetal specimins, but she claimed to do this for thousands of fetal specimins over six states - apparently, she was the only employee this lab had, so they needed to send her over a nearly thousand mile range to collect thousands of specimins. Interesting that the lab that was that busy couldn't afford to hire anyone else (or maybe they just weren't organized, so they had everyone run around all over the midwest, from Kansas to Ohio ), and that despite all that time driving, and just being a specimin runner, she got invited into these anonymous doctor's offices to watch the drowning of live fetuses. She not only had time to do that, but she never bothered to report what she witnessed to law enforcement. Real credible source, that is. I don't remember her name, but I've seen her claims touted on at least three different anti-abortion sites - whether they borrowed material from each other, or whether she made the same claims to different organizations, I don't know.

                        On the other hand, "liberal" Massachusetts successfully prosecuted and issued a ten year sentence for voluntary manslaughter to Dr. Kenneth Edelin for performing an abortion on a 26 week fetus, in violation of Massachusetts law. The jury held that Edelin made no serious attempt to determine the age or viability of the fetus, and ignored indications it was more advanced in age than claimed, so he was criminally liable.

                        So I'd like to see some real evidence of "live birth" abortions being routinely practiced.

                        As far as one idiot advocating infanticide, (culling), there are idiots who decide life is so sacred, they should kill doctors. Neither is representative of the mainstream position.
                        Illinois to Consider Restricting Live-Birth Abortions

                        SPRINGFIELD, ILLINOIS, March 26, 2001 (RFM NEWS)--On Tuesday, March 27th, the Illinois Senate Judiciary Committee will debate Senate bills 1093, 1094 and 1095. This legislation would give equal protection under the law to all premature babies born alive--regardless of their age or whether their mother wants them or not; would require medical evaluation of all live births; defines "human being" in Illinois statutes; and sets up legal groundwork for civil liability.

                        State Senator Patrick O'Malley, the sponsor of the legislation, introduced the package of bills due in part to an abortion procedure being used by some hospitals in Illinois. O'Malley was on the Board of Governors of Christ Hospital and Medical Center in Oak Lawn, until he resigned last year after it was revealed the medical facility was using something called the "live-birth abortion" method. The hospital, which is in O'Malley's district, implements a procedure in which a woman is pharmaceutically induced into labor. The baby then drops through the birth canal, sometimes alive, but is then left to die--without any medical assistance or intervention.

                        O'Malley has been an outspoken critic of Christ Hospital and its parent organization, Advocate Health Care Systems, which includes seven other hospitals in the Chicago area.



                        There is much more if you really want meto do your homework for you.

                        Comment


                        • #72
                          Unless you can show that these fetuses are in fact sentient, your accusation has no merit.
                          UR-

                          Sava's point begged the question, and I tried to show how if it is murder, then it does not matter whether we kill one or 1 million.

                          But indeed, I assume that abortion is murder, so I must show and explain why abortion is murder to avoid begging the question. This I do in my post to MtG, since he does not beg the question himself.

                          The unborn child is a living and human, for the reasons I cite, and since all other living humans have the right to life, why not the zygote?
                          Scouse Git (2) La Fayette Adam Smith Solomwi and Loinburger will not be forgotten.
                          "Remember the night we broke the windows in this old house? This is what I wished for..."
                          2015 APOLYTON FANTASY FOOTBALL CHAMPION!

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                          • #73
                            MtG:

                            Good points.

                            I'll start with the easy one.

                            At some point in the process, there's more than one body. The debate is centered on which point in the process.
                            Not really. Biology says that after conception, there are two individual bodies, the unborn child's and the mother's. Look at in-vitro fertilisation. How can an embryo be a part of the mother's body when we can see her outside of her mother's body?

                            So if having a seperate body were the only issue, then we would have to recognise personhood beginning at conception.

                            Being genetically distinct won't be a valid distinction now that we're technologically at or very near the point of being able to clone humans.
                            Not me you are arguing with, MtG. I never said here that one must be genetically unique from your parents in order to be a human person. In fact, I've said the opposite. That's why I drop the term 'unique' which many others use in this prolife argument.

                            At the moment of conception, you have a single celled organism not yet attached to the uterine wall from which it will draw nourishment for nine months, and from which it will be dependent for it's survival for five or six.
                            How is this different from an infant? An infant cannot survive without nourishment provided by the parents.
                            The unborn child draws nourishment from the mother's uterine wall, but the infant breastfeeds. Same source, just slightly different food composition.

                            At 7 weeks, there are still anatomical differences, and structures that are not in human form, and there's no question of any chance of survival independent of the uterine attachment.
                            This is almost the standard form & function argument for personhood. A person is only a person if it looks like a person, or can act as one.

                            We don't base personhood on looks. What about someone horribly deformed? Could we not say by this standard that they are somewhat less then human?

                            The problem with viability is that this is not a measure of the intrinsic qualities of the unborn child, but of extrinsic technology. We see this in the definition of Roe v. Wade. When SCOTUS set down the law, they established viability at the end of the second trimester, around 26 weeks. Now viability, due to improvements in technology, stands at 21 weeks.
                            (note, you admit this yourself, so current ability to survive outside the womb is irrelevant to personhood.)

                            There was no reason to measure brain activity, but obviously it was there, and the structural development of the brain is complete, so to me, the standard has to be well before 16 weeks, say a maximum of 12-13 weeks.
                            How does the brain develop over time in the womb? Incrementally. There is no one point where the child can be said to change from a completely undeveloped brain to a developed one. The ultrasound you saw was a snapshot of one moment of fetal development, showing that your child had a brain at that moment. But what about a few days before? The brain would still be there, just not as well formed.

                            This is why I feel the conception standard is superior because this is a decisive moment. One moment we can see an egg surrounded by sperm, while the next, the egg has been fertilised forming the zygote.

                            Absent a scientific (or at least secular) consensus defining a human person, it isn't permissible to adopt a standard based on a religious preference.
                            Now you're quoting SCOTUS!

                            Scientific consensus sets human life beginning at conception. Society must decide when legal personhood occurs. This is why the scientists say that it is righfully the domain of the legislatures and the judiciary to decide this question.

                            Now the toughy.

                            Yes we do - the Constitution doesn't enter into private relationships (i.e. minority and parental consent), but minors may own property, may sue or be sued (there's no blanket immunity, although liability may extend to parents), they have due process rights in the legal system,
                            Ownership should be extended, in that you can will your property to an unborn child, in the expectation that they will be able to inherit when they are born.

                            Sue or be sued? We had a case in Canada where a child damaged by a botched abortion sued the doctor and won. So again, you have the right for a born person to sue someone for damages incurred while unborn.

                            Be sued doesn't see like a substantive case. Has a child younger than 5 been sued for their actions? In such a case, would not the parents be liable?

                            Would these distinctions be impermissible according to the constitution, while maintaining a right to life within the womb?
                            Scouse Git (2) La Fayette Adam Smith Solomwi and Loinburger will not be forgotten.
                            "Remember the night we broke the windows in this old house? This is what I wished for..."
                            2015 APOLYTON FANTASY FOOTBALL CHAMPION!

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                            • #74
                              Originally posted by FrantzX
                              Once, when I was 17, I went to my doctor's office to get a physical. I was told that the doctor couldn't see me unless I had a parent with me. What makes an abortion different that any other medical procedure that a minor can get one without parental noticification?
                              Which state do you live in? In California you don't need your parent's permission to see a doctor as long as you have the money.
                              Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.

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                              • #75
                                Originally posted by Imran Siddiqui
                                Roe v. Wade needs to be modified anyway, since it uses a rather vague "viability" standard.


                                Well, Mike, that was the point right? The Supreme Court, in the only wise part of that opinion, IMO, said that since it wasn't medical experts and since an in utero child can live outside the womb earlier and earlier due to science, they figured it wouldn't be right to set a limit then.

                                It may be vague, but very smart.
                                Blackmun had problems with it, because viability is hard to define, and a law (especially criminal) needs to be specific enough that a reasonable person can tell whether or not an action violates that law. SCOTUS never got into issues like whether viability is deemed to exist if some medical experts say so, but others say not, or if there is any chance at all to successfully support the fetus with unlimited degree of medical intervention, or if there has to be some specific probability, likelihood, or reasonable certainty standard.

                                He needs to read the Constitution more and arch-conservative magazines less. The Judiciary, and not Congress, reviews laws for their constitutiality. The Judicary has already ruled on this case and bringing up the same dead horse each year isn't going to change that.


                                Hmmm... perhaps you should read the Constitution? According to Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey (which validated, but limited Roe), after 'viability', or when the fetus can live outside the womb, Congress can ban abortions. This bill is an attempt to do so.

                                Oerdin, perhaps you should go back and read those decisions and see this law may indeed be held up as Constitutional. [/QUOTE]

                                The Interstate Commerce basis for regulating abortion at the Federal level is a tough sell. ScaliaThomas et al don't like spurious Interstate Commerce Clause claims very much, so it would be interesting that to see how SCOTUS would handle that. Now state regulation after viability, that's a different story.

                                This Federal law, inserts ICC language (by definition, any person is "in or affecting interstate commerce" unless you live on a farm and are 100% self-sustaining - SCOTUS currently seems to require that the act regulated itself must have a bearing on interstate commerce, or be so integral to a business operation that the regulated act can not be separated from interstate commerce issues (i.e. employment of personnel).

                                The "medical necessity" issue is addressed only by a legislative finding of fact, which is nice, as long as it's not a subject matter for expert opinion. Oooops. I have not seen any credible claims that this procedure is medically necessary, but I don't know. If there IS any credible expert dispute on medical necessity, then a lay finding of fact by Congress won't be adequate to address prior SCOTUS rulings.
                                When all else fails, blame brown people. | Hire a teen, while they still know it all. | Trump-Palin 2016. "You're fired." "I quit."

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