JohnStOnge wrote:∞∞∞ wrote:
Even if the technology exists and a woman wants to abort it, let her. If she wants to pass it on to some machine for the state to take over, let her. But it should be her choice as it's her body.
That bears upon one of the biggest problems with the pro choice position. It's largely based on the idea that a woman has a right to do what she wants with her body. Hard to argue with a person's right to do what they want with their own body.
The problem is that there are two bodies involved. The unborn individual is a living member of our species. The woman is not making a choice about her body alone. She is choosing to end the life of another individual.
It's a very inconvenient situation. A very difficult situation. But the argument "it's her body" just doesn't cut it because there is another body involved. She's not making a choice for herself only.
While the cells are unique to human beings, they haven't connected the dots yet to create consciousness or self-awareness. Pain at a certain point is felt, but it's pain without consciousness (an abstract concept, but not pain in how we react to it). It's a living member of our species as much as any other collection of cells is.
Want to argue the spiritual route because you're religious? I can at least understand that conviction.
But I'm coming from a very sterile viewpoint. I won't give rights to a bunch of (parasitic) cells instead of a fully-developed human who is born, conscious, and protected by the Constitution.