I agree with gcomeau.
I add that "outsiders" who would stop a particular woman
from getting an abortion,
might not even know if she is pregnant!
How can they know if a woman is pregnant,
unless she tells them?
They *do not* have any Right To Know Who Is Pregnant!
She does *not* have any Duty to tell anyone.
Not even her husband (although a wife *does* tell her
husband unless she has such good reason not to that
the marriage is in very bad trouble anyway)!
A pregnant woman certainly has the Right to withhold
that information from anyone else!
If she wants anyone to know, she will tell them.
If she wants help from anyone, she will ask for it.
If she *does not* tell any particular person,
or group of people,
Then it is *not the business* of them or him!
They have *no right* to that data.
Even asking for it is an intrusion.
Acting on such information, or guesses, is *wrong.*
Acting without information, is *worse!*
Attempting to control a woman's body, against her will,
is Tyranny.
Howard "True Map-addict" Wilkins, Pointy-Headed Liberal
gcomeau wrote:Daryl wrote:The difficulty is in the definition of what constitutes a baby.
It's really not. That's just used to confuse the issue. And to illustrate the point let's deal with something that there's no debate over.
A 1 year old.
Now, our example 1 year old has, through no fault of his own of course, been exposed to a hazardous chemical. As a result his liver has failed.
There is precisely one identified compatible donor. The kid is dead in hours without a liver transplant. There is no time to identify another candidate.
Can we compel the identified donor to undergo the procedure to save the kids life against their will? If they choose not to go through with it the kid will die. Guaranteed.
The answer of course is that we cannot. The kid's right to life does not extend to appropriating the use of another person's body against their will to preserve that life.
What if that person, through a freak coincidence, was the one careless enough with said chemical to cause the accident that has led to us being in this situation?
EVEN THEN, the answer is still a solid and unequivocal NO. They cannot be compelled against their will to undergo a surgical procedure and have bits of them removed.
And let's be clear, donating a piece of liver, while surgery and so obviously not trivial, is not any more of an imposition by any stretch of the imagination that an involuntary 9 month pregnancy and a birth.
You simply cannot force people to use their body for someone else's purposes against their will. Period. And no appeal to that other person's "right to life" alters that one iota.
So even if we consider a zygote or a fetus a "someone" or call it a baby, which it isn't, it changes squat. You still can't force a woman to use her body as an incubator against her will with any appeal to some "right to life"... down that road lies legally defining women's bodies as community property.