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- Newsgroups: talk.abortion
- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!nigel.msen.com!heifetz!rotag!kevin
- From: kevin@rotag.mi.org (Kevin Darcy)
- Subject: Re: Pro-choicers must condone infanticide
- Message-ID: <1992Dec29.095118.21147@rotag.mi.org>
- Organization: Who, me???
- References: <1992Dec23.103815.21024@hemlock.cray.com> <1992Dec25.042418.4549@rotag.mi.org> <1992Dec28.093545.11533@hemlock.cray.com>
- Date: Tue, 29 Dec 1992 09:51:18 GMT
- Lines: 68
-
- In article <1992Dec28.093545.11533@hemlock.cray.com> mon@cray.com (Muriel Nelson) writes:
- >In article <1992Dec25.042418.4549@rotag.mi.org> kevin@rotag.mi.org (Kevin Darcy) writes:
- >>In article <1992Dec23.103815.21024@hemlock.cray.com> mon@cray.com (Muriel Nelson) writes:
- >>>In article <1992Dec22.174359.23172@ncsu.edu> dsholtsi@csl36h.csl.ncsu.edu (Doug Holtsinger) writes:
- >>>>In article <1992Dec15.180606.27847@cbnews.cb.att.com>
- >>>>jap@cbnews.cb.att.com (james.a.parker) writes:
- >>>>
- >>>>> I argue for pro-choice on the basis that the mother is under no obligation
- >>>>> to provide support to the child. This is independent of the question of
- >>>>> personhood.
- >>>>
- >>>>During most abortions, the child's right to bodily autonomy is
- >>>>violated. If the child is a person, then you cannot support
- >>>>unrestricted abortion-on-demand using the notion of bodily
- >>>>autonomy.
- >>
- >>Yes, the fetus'es (not "child"s) right to bodily autonomy is violated, but the
- >>violation of the fetus is a LESSER violation, in terms of human suffering,
- >>than the alternative 9-month violation of the pregnant woman. So, where we
- >>HAVE to choose between the two, i.e. before the point of viability, it is
- >>valid to choose violation of the fetus'es BA.
- >>
- >>>Gee, Doug. When are we going to see some evidence
- >>>from you that a fetus is _capable_ of bodily autonomy?
- >>
- >>Does it need to fill out a form, or what?
- >>
- >>No, Muriel, any human organism which _could_ function outside of the womb
- >>is by definition "capable" of bodily autonomy. This is, in fact, why
- >>viability is such an all-important dividing line.
- >>
- >Is it "capable" of reaching that state on its own?
-
- Is a woman capable of realizing her bodily autonomy versus a viable fetus
- "on her own"? No, she needs medical assistance in order to do so. Similarly,
- a viable fetus needs medical assistance to realize -its- bodily autonomy. It's
- the same operation, of course, that allows -both- humans to concurrently
- realize their respective bodily autonomies.
-
- >As long as it's a fetus, it's _not_ "capable" of bodily autonomy.
-
- What do you think bodily autonomy _is_, Muriel? The word "autonomy", by
- itself, implies freedom from outside interference. The combined form "bodily
- autonomy" would seem to imply freedom from outside interference with one's
- body, would it not? Certainly, it implies nothing about one's ability to
- ASSERT that right in a verbal way -- just because a fetus can't shout "get
- that goddamned scalpel away from me!" from inside the womb doesn't necessarily
- mean it doesn't have any BA rights. Born humans, for example, have BA rights,
- whether they're sleeping, unconscious, in a coma -- it's not much of stretch
- then to say that humans could be considered to have BA rights in the
- non-conscious developmental stage between viability and birth.
-
- >Which is why viability is such a red herring.
-
- Before viability, the fetus'es BA comes only at the expense of the woman's,
- so it is forfeit, but AFTER viability, the fetus'es BA is essentially
- independent of the woman's, so there is a valid if not compelling case for
- trying to balance the value of its BA against the mother's interests. To
- assert an -automatic- override of the fetus'es BA is to subjugate the whole
- BA concept to some other belief system -- e.g. Feminism, Individualism,
- Utilitarianism, Humanism, Christianity or whatever. I therefore consider it
- somewhat a betrayal of the fundamental principles underlying the Bodily
- Autonomy argument. BA rights, in their purest formulation, apply across-the-
- board. If you're going to apply them selectively to one entity, but withhold
- them from another, I'd like to hear a justification for the disparate
- treatment.
-
- - Kevin
-