Rafael wrote:
Ignoratio elenchi fallacy.
How do you figure? My argument very much speaks to the issue in question.
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This is a fallacy. Insurance contracts are private agreements between the insurer and the insured.
Insurance companies are regulated by the state, and must provide coverage for certain services, including reproductive health services. Furthermore, insurance contracts are rarely negotiated on an individual basis. They have a product, and if you work for a company, you use that product or have nothing.
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Because STD's are typically covered in contracts does not establish why abortions should be.
Which was not my point, and this explains to me why you tossed out a logical fallacy that does not apply. I was showing that pregnancy, like STDs, is a possible *consequence* of sex.
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Nor have you established any reason why they are similiar other than they both result from sex, and to say insurance should cover both is saying insurance contracts must obey false generalization fallacies.
No one made a false generalization. The law sees pregnancy as if it were any other illness. It is a possible consequence of having sex. Just like STDs. A possible consequence of smoking is to get cancer. A possible consequence of driving is to get into an accident. A possible consequence of playing with guns is to get shot.
Pregnancy is neither a certain outcome, or necessarily an intended outcome, of having sex. It is simply a possible outcome.
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No, it's consenting to the possibility of pregnancy.
We all understand the risks, and work to mitigate those risks. When I get into my car, I accept that there are risks involved. I am not getting into my car to get into an accident. When I consent to have sex, I am not doing so in order to get pregnant, necessarily. It is simply a possible outcome.
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A head-on collision does not result from getting into your car, it results from being in an accident which is not consensual. Sex is.
Sex is not necessarily consensual. However, that is what we are talking about. Then again, when I get into a car, I consent to the risk of driving.
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Except you are ignoring that people who posit an abortion constitutes a violation of rights of another individual, the unborn baby. I'm not saying I agree with this, but it has yet to be subsantiated one way or the other, if a fetus has rights or not.
I'm not ignoring it, I am saying that a fetus does not necessarily have rights, and that a mother's rights don't just go away because she became pregnant. I do very strongly believe that there is a point during a pregnancy when a human blueprint becomes and actual human being, and that elective abortion should be ceased at that point (around the third trimester, basically). However, I believe that the mother's life and health should not be forced into danger via her pregnancy. Even late term abortions should be legal if there is a risk to the life and health of the mother, or the child is not viable.
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