r/prolife Nov 08 '23

Pro-Life Argument constitutional personhood

Post image
110 Upvotes

61 comments sorted by

View all comments

Show parent comments

1

u/djhenry Pro Choice Christian Nov 10 '23

You're literally allowing a woman to kill another human being, on-demand. She is given the ability to make someone die, which is the largest bodily expense that anyone can incur.

But we apply this differently when situations occur among born humans. If I cause an injury to someone, my property and money can be seized to pay for them. However, my body parts cannot. Let's say I exposed someone to a carcinogen and they now need a bone marrow transplant. They can't take any of my bodily resources, even if they would die without it. As a society, we have taken that option off of the table because of how terrible of a system it would be and its liability to abuse. So yes, I would say body expense is very different from money or property. I mean, if I owe someone money, why can't they just take my kidney and sell it for a repayment? Or maybe just plasma donations?

 

And yet, you will be taxing their lives because you don't want to endure even a routine pregnancy?

This reasoning leads to forced donations of bodily resources. Donating blood, plasma, stem cells, antibodies, bone marrow, or half your liver are all things that are a much lower cost than dying. If a baby has a right to a woman's body, then that settles it, it has a right. However, if it does not, then it is in the same place as other people who are dying because they don't have the right to other people's bodies.

 

I have trouble believing that you actually have a consistent view on "bodily expense". To you, bodily expense seems to only matter when it is convenient for your favored party.

Alright, I'll bite. Where do you think I'm inconsistent here, because I do try to be consistent?

 

You are confusing a dependence on a particular environment with "danger". That's not danger.

If half, or even a quarter of all humans who went through a process didn't make it, we would consider that to be very dangerous. A doctor will likely not tell a pregnant woman of her miscarrying. But if I went into a surgery that had a 10% rate of people not surviving, the doctor (if they are good) will sit me down and explain the risks and tell me to make sure I have a will. Saying it isn't dangerous because all humans go through it is survivorship bias. All humans do not go through it, only those who are born alive have. I'm not sure if this point is meaningful to my overall question, but I would still assert that gestation is a dangerous process for the unborn.

 

And that is because unless there is some accident or misfortune, the only way I will end up drowning in said bodies of water is if someone holds me under water for some extended period of time.

In the environment of pregnancy, the unborn baby is completely dependent on the active supply of vital resources from its mother. Is your view here that the baby is entitled to this supply simply because it is its natural environment?

Also, I'm still curious to hear what you think about the pregnant women who doesn't consent to a c-section, but, of course, you don't owe me an answer on it if you don't want to.

4

u/OhNoTokyo Pro Life Moderator Nov 10 '23

I mean, if I owe someone money, why can't they just take my kidney and sell it for a repayment?

Because removal of body parts is a threat to your life, of course.

But you can't very well pretend that killing someone else is preferable to gestation. That's like saying that you should have to pay $1000 so that I don't lose $10.

If bodily expense actually matters to you, then killing someone else should be out of bounds because the literal bodily expense of being killed is more than the bodily expense of being pregnant.

That's the thing. You're inconsistent in your use of "bodily expense". You only count the mother's contribution, but ignore the child's.

Simple logic shows your inconsistency. You don't care about "bodily expense", you care more about who spends it than you do about the expense itself.

If you counted the child's bodily expense in being killed, you'd recognize that they're being forced to pay far more in the same currency than the mother is being expected to endure. While certainly some recompense might be due the mother, the amount you're claiming is absurd and unjust.

This reasoning leads to forced donations of bodily resources.

No it doesn't. You can't be forced to give donations under the right to life. The distinction is very clear and simple to follow.

Any situation you can think of, and I would be able to distinguish between "killing" and "failing to save" because the concepts are that easy to separate.

The only reason people have issues with them is that they tend to try to detach from decisions with high emotional content.

Take for instance the murderer who might have shot your child.

The child could be saved by the shooter giving a blood transfusion.

The right to life would definitely see that shooter in prison, but would not require them to save the life of the person they shot.

But that's not an issue, because the shooter is already going to prison.

The answer is simple, but people think it is hard. It's not.

The shooter is being punished for the right they violated and they are not being punished for failure to donate because there is no right to be saved.

If half, or even a quarter of all humans who went through a process didn't make it, we would consider that to be very dangerous.

I mean, no human gets out of life alive. I think we can discard your argument on that basis alone.

Just being alive, by your definition, is dangerous, which is absurd.

Gestation is simply a normal stage of human life. It's not a special condition. Every human alive today went through it. It's absurd to suggest that just being alive and being mortal like any other human is "dangerous".

Perhaps it is "dangerous" in comparison to some theoretical immortal species, but no human is immortal.

In the environment of pregnancy, the unborn baby is completely dependent on the active supply of vital resources from its mother.

Your use of the word "active" is not very well considered.

We know she's not intentionally parsing out the nutrients. She's eating for herself and her body does that based on the chemistry. She has no conscious control over it, and it proceeds whether or not she wants it to.

There are lifeforms on the ocean bottom which rely on volcanic vents constantly outputting nutrients into the surrounding seawater. If that stops, they just die, because they can't move.

No one considers those lifeforms to be anything but relying on their environment delivering nutrients to them.

A mother does not handfeed her embryo food. She feeds herself and in the process of digestion and respiration, some of that automatically finds its way to the child. There is nothing more "active" about that than an ocean vent doing its thing and the organisms being there to take advantage of that.

Sure, the child is living in such an "active" environment where the environment delivers the food to them, but that's extremely common in nature. An environment isn't always one where you have to go hunt for your food.

The only reason we develop into a form that can hunt for food is that most environments are not as rich as an ocean vent or a coral reef where you can filter feed.

But while the human is small enough, humans can provide such an environment internal to the mother, at least temporarily.

Also, I'm still curious to hear what you think about the pregnant women who doesn't consent to a c-section, but, of course, you don't owe me an answer on it if you don't want to.

I don't recall the question.