Wrath Child wrote:Although I already did, I'll offer another compliments of Gidan:
Gidan wrote:As for the argument of if that pharm doesn't offer just goto another. Well the town I grew up in had 1 pharmacy, the next closets one was over an hour away on a good day.
Welcome to the twenty-first century where we have internet ordering in addition to the traditional forms of mail order.
That is what we're talking about. You and the others are just to gutless to look at the big picture. You're acting like a bunch of dodgy liberals who are afraid to discuss when a fertilized egg becomes human because they don't like the answer since it violently erodes their argument for any and all abortions. Especially those liberals who are anti-death penalty.
Actually, from a legal standpoint, when an egg becomes human is irrelevant: it's the government regulation of privately-owned inventories that is the problem. Bringing out the big picture accusation is another shining moment of hypocracy for you: the issue at hand transcends the nature of the product in question. It wouldn't matter whether the retailer was being ordered to provide birth-control pills or diet soda.
This guy is nothing but another example in a long list of examples of pharmacist imposing their morality on others because their religion teaches them that birth control is a SIN! And if you help a sinner commit a sin, what does that make you? A SINNER!
Of course, it's perfectly acceptable for
you to impose your morality on the pharmacist and force him to sell something he chooses not too. *cough*Hypocrite!*cough*
If the only pharmacy around for 100 miles is owned by a devote Muslim, does he have the right to impose his religious views on women who enter his business?
NO SHIRT
NO SHOES
NO BURQA
NO MALE RELATIVE TO ESCORT YOU
NO SERVICE!
It is his business, after all.
Covered under anti-discriminatory legislation, which clearly does not apply in this case. The pharmacy owner was not refusing to provide a service to a portion of his customers while denying it to others.
You can't possibly be this dumb, can you? The point I made is that if this guy believes he's responsible for what a customer does with the birth control product he sold them - in many religions using birth control is a sin - then he must also be held responsible when one of his customers become addicted to the pain killers he sold them or for all of the harm caused by him selling cold medicine to his customers, who then turn around and make Meth out of it.
Either he's responsible for what his customers do with the products he sells them or he isn't. He can't pick and choose. If he does, he's a hypocrite.
And then you turned around in the next paragraph and contradicted yourself. This makes you a hypocrite as well. I understand that you probably don't even realize how you did it, but it doesn't lessen the inconsistency. On the upside, at least it fits with your running theme of hypocracy.
I guess using your silly logic means we shouldn't lock up murderers. Whether you die at the hands of a killer or from cancer, the result is the same. You're dead! So why waste all those billions keeping killers locked up.
Not even close to being analogous. The sociological effects of punishing murderers have nothing to do with rectifying the crime for which they are being punished.
That would depend on your definition of "as human as you are". Is a paraplegic "as human as you are"? A quad amputee? How about someone who's been in a coma for 20 years and has no chance of coming out of it? "Are they as human as you are"?
Does a person who needs a ventilator to survive revert from being human to a clump of tissue? After all, they need "sufficient medical support" to survive, which seems to be your definition of being human.
Human enough to be awarded inalienable rights.
My belief on when a fertilized egg becomes human - thus deserving of rights - is based on science, not by some random roll of the bones. You on the otherhand, clearly believe that a clump of tissue MAGICALLY becomes human ***POOF*** right after birth and only after the umbilical cord has been cut.
It's fairly clear that you're entirely clueless as to what I believe, which is odd, as I clearly articulated it in my previous post. The funny thing is that everyone who picks an arbitrary point in time at which humanity is realized uses exactly the same rationalization as you do: "It's SCIENCE!". Of course, some of them can actually provide an argument to support their belief as opposed to waving their hands and proclaiming it "SCIENCE!"