Corolinth wrote:
A woman's ability to have a baby at the time of her choosing with the man of her choosing is a fundamental element of her freedom. A woman who lacks this ability is oppressed on the most basic and fundamental level. Through decades of not just opposing abortion, but also birth control, contraception, and sex education, conservatives have presented to the rest of society that the only acceptable solution is absolute chastity. As a consequence, everyone else thinks that conservatives oppose women's rights. I'm sorry if you don't think abortion is, or should be a major element of women's rights, but the fact remains that right now, it is.
Conservatives don't oppose sex education and excepting some Catholics, don't oppose birth control. She has the right to make her own choices regarding reproduction as long as that right is not in conflict with another life. I'm sorry if you don't think a fetus is alive, but the fact remains that it is.
Corolinth wrote:
The late term fetus bears a much closer resemblance to a post-birth baby than it does to the newly fertilized zygote. Meanwhile, the zygote bears a closer resemblance to the sperm and ovum that are its constituent parts than it does the mostly-developed fetus, let alone the actual baby. I will grant you that if one is uncomfortable with terminating a barely sentient three month old baby, then it is reasonable to restrict abortion towards the end of a pregnancy. That concession, that respect for your position comes at a price. You will grant that if one does not consider the monthly menstrual cycle a terrible tragedy, and a nocturnal emission an act of genocide, then a restriction on abortion towards the beginning of a pregnancy is not reasonable.
Neither an ovum nor a spermatid alone are capable of growing into a child unless the other is present. The components of life are either there or not. If the fetus is not alive at conception then there needs to be clearly defined criteria as to when the fetus/infant has crossed the threshold.
Corolinth wrote:
I am sensitive to the idea that some people feel uncomfortable with abortion because it strikes them as murder, and reducing or eliminating abortion is a worthy goal on its own merits, however the path forward does not run through banning or restricting abortion. Neither does it run through accusing scared and confused young women of murder. By the by, insisting that abortion was murder, and by extension the young women seeking them were murderers, undoubtedly helped the left to paint conservatives as heartless monsters who hated women, minorities, and poor people. I would suggest that the best thing to do would be to flip the script on the heartless conservative narrative. That means you're going to have to stop using the word "murder" in discussions about abortion, and reevaluate your position on the other aspects of women's reproductive rights.
The easier it is for women to make informed decisions about procreation and obtain birth control, the fewer abortions you are going to see. The more options women have, the less concerned we're all going to be about abortion in particular. An outright ban on abortion may require full federal funding for birth control for all women of reproductive age. I do not personally support this, as I take the position that taxation is theft, but realistically this is what's going to be required to ban abortion.
I pretty much agree with the above 2 paragraphs. I have always been a believer that convincing women abortion is wrong should be through encouraging responsibility. I also feel it's important for pro-life people to support women through the process of a difficult pregnancy, which is why I donated (when I had income before med school) to Crisis Pregnancy Centers every month. Not every person standing outside a Planned Parenthood clinic with a protest sign is showing up to call girls "whores" and "murderers." Some are actually there in the hopes of directing a mom toward resources that will support her as she bears through the pregnancy.
As it stands though, you're already being taxed to pay for women's abortions. I'd compromise by funding certain methods of contraception if it meant defunding Planned Parenthood. I know Catholics wouldn't join me on that though.
Corolinth wrote:
Right now, conservative rhetoric around reproduction degrades family values. The term "planned parenthood" is considered to be a profanity, just like our favorite four-letter words. Meanwhile, when conservatives argue against abortion, they talk about "accepting consequences". Conservatives treat pregnancy like it's a car accident, and in the same breath denigrate a carefully considered decision to start a family.
I could make jokes here, but I'll refrain. The term "planned parenthood" is considered profanity because it is synonymous with the opposite. The organization itself is not in the business of helping soon-to-be parents with planned pregnancies and postnatal care. And when conservatives try to convince people that the act of creating life is best reserved for relationships better positioned to providing a better life than single motherhood, they get called puritans. The left has not shown any desire to promote family values and we see this as the culture continues to try to divorce the relationship between sex and building a family. Now it's considered just fine that people will have sex with someone they would feel uncomfortable saying "I love you" too, and that is an unhealthy thing.