Moderator: Dictators in Training
Gidan wrote:Would this more or less be considered as the 2 of them performing an abortion? What are the laws in regard to who can actually perform an abortion?
Under a law signed June 20, 2003, and effective September 1, 2003, the protections of the entire criminal code extend to "an unborn child at every stage of gestation from fertilization until birth." The law does not apply to "conduct committed by the mother of the unborn child" or to "a lawful medical procedure performed by a physican or other licensed health care provider with the requisite consent." (SB 319, Prenatal Protection Act)
Raymond S. Kraft wrote:The history of the world is the history of civilizational clashes, cultural clashes. All wars are about ideas, ideas about what society and civilization should be like, and the most determined always win.
Those who are willing to be the most ruthless always win. The pacifists always lose, because the anti-pacifists kill them.
Gidan wrote:The major problem I see here was ther he was convicted of murder beyond any resonable doubt. They can not prove he actually killed the fetus/baby/whateer you call it. On the charge of murder, how can you convict him?
The whole thing should never have arised. If she didn't want the child, she should have gone throught the proper steps to deal with it. It was the wrong way to handle it.
Is he an idiot? Yes. Is she an idiot? Yes. Should he spend the rest of his life in jail? No, He is not a danger to society.
This is a situation where the law as it is written has problems. You have 2 individuals doing the exact same thing. 1 of them will spend his life in jail the other gets off with nothing. What is the difference between him aiding her in something that would be the same result as an abortion and an abortion doctor doing it? What makes his crime result in life in prison and the doctors completely legal?
The only equalities in this world are in mathematics.
Gidan wrote:The major problem I see here was ther he was convicted of murder beyond any resonable doubt. They can not prove he actually killed the fetus/baby/whateer you call it. On the charge of murder, how can you convict him?
The whole thing should never have arised. If she didn't want the child, she should have gone throught the proper steps to deal with it. It was the wrong way to handle it.
Is he an idiot? Yes. Is she an idiot? Yes. Should he spend the rest of his life in jail? No, He is not a danger to society.
This is a situation where the law as it is written has problems. You have 2 individuals doing the exact same thing. 1 of them will spend his life in jail the other gets off with nothing. What is the difference between him aiding her in something that would be the same result as an abortion and an abortion doctor doing it? What makes his crime result in life in prison and the doctors completely legal?
xaoshaen wrote:Gidan wrote:The major problem I see here was ther he was convicted of murder beyond any resonable doubt. They can not prove he actually killed the fetus/baby/whateer you call it. On the charge of murder, how can you convict him?
The prosecution didn't necessarily have to prove that his were the blows that killed the twins, just that his actions would have resulted in their deaths with or without the mother striking herself.
xaoshaen wrote:This is a situation where the law as it is written has problems. You have 2 individuals doing the exact same thing. 1 of them will spend his life in jail the other gets off with nothing. What is the difference between him aiding her in something that would be the same result as an abortion and an abortion doctor doing it? What makes his crime result in life in prison and the doctors completely legal?
Well, one individual is a medical professional, performing an operation he's been trained to do. The other is some halfwit fuckstick stomping on his girlfriend's stomach. I'm not sure about Texas law, but I know that performing abortion, or most other surgical procedures for that matter, is a crime in some states.
Lueyen wrote:Gidan wrote:Would this more or less be considered as the 2 of them performing an abortion? What are the laws in regard to who can actually perform an abortion?
What I could find on the Texas LawUnder a law signed June 20, 2003, and effective September 1, 2003, the protections of the entire criminal code extend to "an unborn child at every stage of gestation from fertilization until birth." The law does not apply to "conduct committed by the mother of the unborn child" or to "a lawful medical procedure performed by a physican or other licensed health care provider with the requisite consent." (SB 319, Prenatal Protection Act)
lyion wrote:About 20,000 women a year seek abortions after the 21st week, which marks roughly the midway point in a pregnancy. Perhaps 1,000 terminate after 24 weeks, when the fetus is generally considered viable. The practice, though rare, makes many Americans uneasy. While 60% say abortion should be legal in the first trimester of pregnancy, 12% say it should be legal in the third trimester, according to a Harris poll conducted in February.
Harrison wrote:20k legal murders a year, awesome.
Rust wrote:Harrison wrote:20k legal murders a year, awesome.
I think you meant 1k, since 21 weeks is generally pre-viability. Of the roughly 1k abortions done post-24 weeks, how many are for the mother's health as opposed to elective? Or maybe you meant 20k.
Given the AMA's position prohibiting elective third trimester abortions, I'm not shocked most doctors would not perform them unless there was a risk to the mother's life and health. Obviously the state cannot have a compelling interest in prohibiting abortions at *any* stage when the mothers life is in danger (pre-eclampsia or the like). But I would believe most physicians would simply induce labor in any woman past 24 weeks if it was possible, but some women would probably die in labor.
--R.
Wrath Child wrote:When will that "clump of tissue" stop being just that and a protected human, I wonder? After he or she is removed from the robowomb? If that's the case, what's to stop the rich from breeding them for spare parts? Or is that OK in your opinions if and when it happens? And it will.
Tuggan wrote:im kinda thinking if a woman gets this 'artificial womb' pregnant, it wont be an accident and abortion wont have to be considered?
youre a lil crazy there buddy.
Gidan wrote:The major problem I see here was ther he was convicted of murder beyond any resonable doubt. They can not prove he actually killed the fetus/baby/whateer you call it. On the charge of murder, how can you convict him?
The whole thing should never have arised. If she didn't want the child, she should have gone throught the proper steps to deal with it. It was the wrong way to handle it.
Is he an idiot? Yes. Is she an idiot? Yes. Should he spend the rest of his life in jail? No, He is not a danger to society.
This is a situation where the law as it is written has problems. You have 2 individuals doing the exact same thing. 1 of them will spend his life in jail the other gets off with nothing. What is the difference between him aiding her in something that would be the same result as an abortion and an abortion doctor doing it? What makes his crime result in life in prison and the doctors completely legal?
lyion wrote:The quagmire of destroying embyro's for their stem cells which many people have moral objections over.
It relates to the last paragraph Wrath wroteWrath Child wrote:When will that "clump of tissue" stop being just that and a protected human, I wonder? After he or she is removed from the robowomb? If that's the case, what's to stop the rich from breeding them for spare parts? Or is that OK in your opinions if and when it happens? And it will.
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