Jeff250 wrote:I think that if Christianity is correct, abortion has single-handedly saved more souls than any evangelist could have ever dreamed.
You're assuming there's a single, unified, "correct Christian position" on what happens to babies who die -- that they go to heaven.
I don't remember Jesus or any passage in the Bible ever addressing the question. There's nothing about what happens to babies who die, or what happens to that guy on a desert island who never hears of Jesus, or what happens to retarded people, or what happens to Martians or Klingons. God doesn't seem interested in telling us what happens to others who don't have the chance or ability to respond to Him; He only seems interested in telling us how we personally should respond. We can sort of guess at what happens to others, but there's not really a "correct Christian position" on what happens to babies when they die. Whatever position we come to is just philosophy combined with guessing.
A lot of people conclude anyone who dies before they're old enough to know right from wrong automatically goes to heaven. Others believe such people just cease to exist, or that they never had a soul in the first place. Still others believe they get another chance through reincarnation, an alternate universe, some sort of simulation, or God just knowing how they *would have* done. So I don't think you can argue that abortion leads to those people all being saved, because we just don't know what happens to them.
On the other hand, we do know that God tends to get very angry at people for harming or killing the innocent. That's one of the major themes throughout the Bible. (We also have some indication that children aren't always "innocent" in God's eyes, sometimes due simply to their place of birth.) Furthermore, if God wanted to make people start out in heaven, I don't think He'd have bothered making the universe -- He'd have just spawned souls directly into heaven. God obviously considered it better for people to start on earth with only a chance of joining Him in heaven than for everyone to start in heaven. All that is to say, "kill the innocent so they'll make it straight to heaven" isn't even a remotely valid Christian position.
(Not really on topic, but related: I did once hear a Christian comedy routine by
Mike Warnke that went something like this:
"If you're easily offended, you're in the right place, because I'm going to offend you. Now, if anybody attempts to approach the stage to rebuke me, let me warn you, there are Hells Angels standing guard right under the edge of the stage here. I figure, someone as righteous as you needs to be sent to meet with God right away so that you won't have any time to backslide.")
Money! wrote:I think once a baby is released from the mother and living independently (i.e. umbilical cord cut) it is wrong to kill it. Until then, it isn't. You cannot compare abortion and my point to killing Jews or Blacks, because the baby has not experienced anything, and doesn't have any memories, and is not being killed for it's RACE OR RELIGIOUS BELIEFS but for the pain it will cause both parties .
So you're saying a baby, 5 seconds before it's born, hasn't "experienced anything" and therefore it's still OK to kill it? Once the cord is cut, the baby magically begins "experiencing things"? I think you should study a bit more biology.
As Zuruck mentioned, some neural activity begins only a few weeks in to pregnancy. By week 8, there is a clear pain response and clear brain waves. By 20-24 weeks the brain is reasonably well formed. I can respect someone taking a principled stand at any of these phases, because it actually makes sense to say the baby doesn't experience things before it has a brain. But it doesn't make the slightest bit of sense to say its experience begins when the cord is cut.
Remember, there are those who would argue blacks or Jews or whoever else aren't real people, that they're "sons of monkeys and pigs", that killing them will save them the pain of life, or at the very least that killing them will save someone else some pain. There are those who argue the same with the retarded -- that it's better to kill someone with Downs Syndrome than let him experience life that doesn't meet our standards. How arrogant! Yet you make the same argument with respect to someone who would be poor and whose parents wouldn't want them. Who are you to say that any particular person will have a life not worth living? Who are you to say that, because someone won't have parents who love them, or will have limited mental capacity, or will be born paralyzed, that their life is worthless?
Bettina wrote:Answer to question 1:
Because this was NOT an act between two people who made a mistake. It was a forced abduction and rape against her will and she should not have to bear the responsibility of going thru labor at 12 or 13 still holding on to her doll, being crucified in school, and basically having her life ruined.
But if it's just a blob of tissue, why does that matter?
If it's just a blob of tissue, then rape victims shouldn't have to bear the responsibility... but neither should people who were fooling around and accidentally got pregnant. If it's just a blob of tissue, then it doesn't matter how it was formed, it's OK to kill it. Why force a 13 year old who made a mistake to have her life ruined?
To get at the heart of the matter: can you give me a principled reason why rape victims should be able to have abortions AND why non-rape victims shouldn't?
You prefer not to allow it, but are willing to compromise. I want to know what your vote would have been if you were the govenor of South Dakota. Would you allow for abortion under 40 days or not.
It's not up to the governor to decide that. It's only up to him to decide whether to vote "yes" or "no" on the bill he's been handed. IIRC, his did not allow abortion under 40 days.
I'd have voted "yes" on that bill. I'd have also voted "yes" on a bill that did allow for abortions under 40 days. Yes, it might force the 13 year old girl who isn't ready to have a baby to have one, and it might ruin her life. But on the other hand, it will protect thousands of babies each year. One life gets ruined, while thousands are saved. That's a trade I'm willing to make.
My next step would be to see what we could do for the 13 year old rape victim so that her life wouldn't be ruined by having a baby. I'm not in the life-ruining business. If I passed a bill I knew would make a mess of some people's lives I'd also do what I could to make sure their lives didn't get messed up too badly.