Scott DeWar
Prof. Emeritus-Supernatural Events/Countermeasure
Then you clearly missed your calling and should be either a politician, or talk show host.
I will not be duped.
I will not be dragged in!
I am now walking away.
Then you clearly missed your calling and should be either a politician, or talk show host.
One of the reasons I never refer to it as "pro-life"- because most of them aren't. It's more properly anti-choice.Yeah, that really turned me off to the whole pro-life movement, even though some of them don't actually take it to that level.
I'm.....disheartened, saddened, I suppose, that in all this conversation, nothing has been said to effect that regardless of when you accept "personhood" in term of pregnancy, that every pregnancy represents the potential for human life.
Whether you believe "life" begins at conception, 18 weeks, 24 weeks, 30 weeks, a pregnancy represents an opportunity to bring another sentient being into the world. To enjoy life experiences. To explore their creative potential. To enjoy the privilege of living.
How many works of fiction have we lost to abortion? How many world-renowned paintings? How many symphonies and arias, how many songs? Can loss of potential be quantified this way? I don't know.
I personally believe that life begins at conception, but recognize that the world I live in has determined that until 24 weeks post-conception, an unborn child does not have a fundamental right to life.
This will likely not change, and any attempts to do so are likely futile at this point.
As a result, I can only offer the observation that under many circumstances, an abortion is tragedy, in the truest literal and metaphysical senses.
Obviously when the mother's life and health are at risk, or the child is the product of rape or incest, certainly a safe, legal abortion should be an available recourse. But in so many cases, an abortion is a tragic failure---and perhaps I am not fully without blame in the tragedy.
It's a failure on the part of the man and woman who initiated the pregnancy to evaluate the risks and take even the easiest of steps to prevent it if the pregnancy is unwanted.
It's a failure on the part of government and yes, concerned citizens unwilling to pay increased taxes to support health choices, increased opportunities for medical care, and general financial support for a woman who might choose to carry a pregnancy to full term. I would gladly double my current tax burden if it meant an immediate 50% reduction in the number of abortions performed annually in the United States.
In many cases it's a failure born of broken socioeconomics, of endemic poverty, lack of education and opportunity.
I also recognize that in some cases it is not a failure of any of these, but is a function of a lifestyle choice consciously made. Perhaps it would be these I would most hope to change.
If abortions will be deemed legal, so be it. My charge must then be to work to gently persuade those to choose a different course.
What you should do is spend your time improving the state of adoption/child protective services. If those systems weren't the clusterbleep that they are, and if people who purported to be 'pro-life' actually cared about children after birth then the alternatives to abortion would be much more appealing. But 'pro-life' really means pro-birth. After that you are on your own and no church cares about you like they do the unborn.
I'll bite: I'm pro-life, and I do not oppose 1-4 in their entireties.
I'm not a fan of birth control, but since not everyone is a Catholic like me, believe the safest ones should at least be available OTC.
I favor paid family- not maternity- leave. Some families, it makes more sense for Dad to be caregiver because Mom is Breadwinner #1. What I am unsure of is the amount of said leave and what percentage of base pay it should be.
I don't think maternity care (prenatal and postnatal) should be universally free. That is probably NOT economically feasible. Instead, I'd add a simple means test: the less maternity care you can afford, the more said care gets subsidized.
I've seen some wonderful ideas from all over the world about governmental postnatal programs. There is one Scandinavian country that sends every newborn's mother a box full of vitamins, a blanket, and other goods...and the box doubles as some kind of baby care device (I forget exactly what). They've been doing it for decades, and it dropped several categories of infant health/mortality issues in their country by statistically significant amounts for not a lot of money.
Our adoption/welfare/foster care system is a hot mess.
The devil is, of course, always in the details...
Single payer is a lot cheaper than the alternatives - and maternity care is a drop in the ocean when compared to either elderly care or dialysis (both of which the US government covered even pre-Obamacare).
Single payer is a lot cheaper...
Single supplier is a far safer bet to drop per-person cost for medical care than single payer.
Beyond that, single payer for medical insurance doesn't do anything to address the fact that insurance (meant to spread economic risk among large amounts of people) is a poor way to effectively deal with services that are inherently not economically risky (like, say, pre-natal care).
There are things in health that can work by the insurance model - like dealing with broken bones, or cancer when you are young. But getting your vaccinations, or antibiotics for bronchitis in the winter, or prenatal care aren't among them.