ty for your words nova. i think i am done with this thread. it was nice to once again be able to speak to you about a matter we can not agree on in a reasoned tone. i would rather leave this thread on that note.
nova please dont think for 1 second you upset me hun. we allways disagree but i have nothing but respect for you. i will pm you and give details. :blowkiss:I certainly hope I didn't chase you away, sherri. I know we sometimes disagree, but it has always been respectful between us.
I certainly never meant to imply that your views on abortion are anything but principled and well reasoned.
Unfortunately, public debate on this subject is often anything but (on both sides), and a lot of us tend to respond to the craziest arguments we hear in the media.
(ETA: if have things to add that you don't want to post in public, you are always free to PM me, sherri. I will be happy to read anything you want to write.)
I am sorry about your cousin. I'm sorry he felt suicide was the answer to his problems.
That's great that you will gladly adopt your daughter's child if she ever got pregnant. You're too good. But no one is forcing her to have an abortion, if the guy who got her pregnant asks her to have an abortion, its her right to say "no" and that's what being pro-choice is all about. Its about being able to make a choice for your body and yourself.
I'm confused here though? I thought pro-lifers believe women should face the consequences of their actions and accept responsibility for getting pregnant in the first place? My question is, how is taking in your daughter's baby going to teach her to be responsible for her actions?
Infertility sucks! We tried really hard for almost five years for a viable pregnancy. Luckily we found the right doctor and he helped make our family complete. I know just how much you love your daughter because I am the same way with my children.
Do you want the option of abortion to be there for your daughter? To me, that is what directs my feelings.
Amanda, my daughter, is 17. As much as I hope and pray that she won't become pregnant until she is ready, that is all it is. If she did find herself in that situation, I would help her explore all of her options. I really, really love babies so I wouldn't mind if she did go through with an unplanned pregnancy. However, I also know what it is to be alone through a pregnancy and being the one with all of the responsibility, the one looked down upon because you have a child out of wedlock. (Even though a heck of a lot of people doing the looking were pregnant before they married.) If she chose to have an abortion, I would understand and support her decision.
It don't think it is an easy decision for anyone. I am just glad the option is available.
Im prolife, I truly believe that every baby is a gift. It is part of my religion but going through infertility when I wanted very much what so many women and girls throw away made me realize how special and how hard they can be to come by, even with fertility treatments there are many who will never give birth to a baby. I sincerely hope many women look at adoption as being available.
Im not a hard jerk though, I always feel you should help others in need. I do it every yearI donate to a charity for young moms who need help with clothes and baby equipment. I also donate each year to help families who are not able to to have christmas for their kids, toys for tots.
I do not feel they should "tough it out" ever. Raising children is not easy . I would not want her to ever miss out on an education just to me teaching her a lesson. I feel it is my job to be there for her along the way to support her and encourage her. I did not receive that as a child and it is very important to me that she feels always loved and that she can always come to me. It would have changed many things for me if I felt I had that. She is going to be responsible for many things throughout her life, she is now with picking up her toysI am prolife but Im also supportive of my child. I may not agree with her decisions but she will always feel the love from me.
I hope for adoption options but it is not my place to judge anyone's decisions. I guess Im in the middlenot really prolife 100% but not prochoice, but I am 100% supportive of my daughter.
I recently went through pregnancy - the more I know about it, the more pro-choice I am. Aside from all of the issues about when the brain first develops, embreo, etc. - we have a life that will only happen if someone decides to sacrifice their own body for it.
We don't make that a requirement anywhere else. If you get tested for a bone marrow match, match to a person dying of leukemia - you aren't required to be a donor - even as low risk and short term as that minor donation is, even if that person will die without your bone marrow. Or, for a better analogy - should you be forced to donate a kidney (you can spare one!) if someone needs it, and you're a match? A liver lobe? Heck, you can't even be forced to donate blood!
But, let a woman get pregnant, any which way, and she's suddenly expected to sacrifice her body for 9 months - actually, more like a year and a half. Men don't have that penalty. 9 months - morning sickness for 3-4, serious extra weight for 3, a few hours of pain, some days of recuperation, in the best of cases. In 20%, you get gestational diabetes - a pretty serious problem - you become diabetic, 50% of the time (1 out of every 10 pregnancies!), it becomes permanent within 5 years. There's all kinds of other fun problems - I got AFLP to go with my gestational diabetes, my sister got some fun preeclampsia, my other sister had a wonderful pregnancy, relatively, but delivery broke her tailbone - it can't be fixed. Real life-threatening and life changing consequences exist for women that don't for men, even if they take all of the financial burden of a child.
Birth control isn't foolproof, people make mistakes, and pregnancy is too much to put someone unwilling through. The first 3 months, no brain waves means to me there is nothing human, nor even animal there (even a cat has brain waves), I see no reason why any woman should be forced to continue at that stage. In the second trimester, it's a bit different, there's more there, but if there are real medical reasons, then, again, the life of the mother takes precedent. In the last trimester - it had better be true, life-threatening issues - and these do exist. But the father - no, he's not doing the pregnancy. If he is so concerned about the lives of the children he creates, he had better talk to the woman about it BEFORE he has any type of sex at all.
The trimesters are very important - there's a huge difference between an abortion a few months in, and something late term. And the law reflects that too - what I described is pretty much what the law is everywhere.Great post, Details. I hadn't thought of the kidney transplant analogy before. I know it isn't a perfect comparison (and you weren't saying it is), but it is certainly food for thought.
I also like the way you break down the trimesters. My thinking is very much the same.