bluejeangirl76 wrote:ohsherrie wrote:Now what I'd like to know is how many video cameras are going to be watching everybody's lives to make sure all of the above requirements are met so that this law can be effectively enforced?
Late term abortions should absolutely be illegal unless the woman's life is in danger and that can be enforced if doctors who perform them are prosecuted. But, you can't drag a woman or girl through the legal system for months trying to determine if her case meets and the above mentioned requirements until her pregnancy is to too far advanced.
Denying every woman or girl the right to an abortion regardless of the circumstances just because there are some who abuse the right is as absurd as denying the right to extract stem cells from fetal tissue that has already been aborted or embryos that were left over from in vitro fertility procedures with the permission of the donors.
I'm glad they're making headway on using other sources for the stem cells, but the idea that religion can dictate what medical procedures and advances will be allowed sounds medieval to me.
Bravo. Good points, sherrie. And nowhere in the proposed legislative action did it say anything about stem cell research, which I thought was the topic at hand here,

and was in fact part of the argument halfway up the page. Where'd it go? We went from stem cell research to underaged sex, and abortion providers who don't report it, which is a whole separate matter entirely.

Where do stem cells come from? Aborted fetuses. As smart as Man fancies himself he's not that smart. They don't simply rise from thin air. Abortion and stem cells go together. No abortions, no stem cells.
You're right I did forget about the stem cell part. So to answer you, like I have answered time and time again, I am for stem cells so long as we don't purposely have to destroy someone else to get there. This new research that the OP brought before us sounds exciting, we should put more of our focus there.
So, Stem Cells, if I were up for election I would make it illegal to purposely bring about a child that is a carbon copy of their little sis, ala, cloning. To bring such a person for the sheer purpose of cherry picking them for their stem cells, organs, skin, what have you is WRONG. By following this path, you take away their person hood, their individuality and make them some thing to be slung aside when all doesn't end well.
If however, their is an existing sibling who just happens to a match for blood marrow, what have you, that should be allowed so long as their is a hearing on the donor child's behalf to determine if this is indeed the best course for them. In addition, there should be tight controls to protect the welfare of the donor child so they don't become a human guinea just to slow down an enveitable life course of the donor recepient- death.
There is quite the interesting book on this subject, My Sister's Keeper by Jody Picoult. It is a work of fiction, but incorporates the reality that exists today. In it, it describes just the situation that I descibe, a child born for the sole purpose of curing her sister from Leukemia. The only problem is, the treatments don't work. But they keep going anyway. They keep taking and taking, not taking into account the health of the donor and the fact that the donor doesn't want to exist solely for the benefit of keeping her sibling alive. This is where I believe we are at. We're so about what others want, and the good of the populace that we forget the individual. We forget the soul.
To those that compare a fetus to a common period, ugh okay. Periods don't bleed arms and legs. They don't have developing hearts and minds. So explain this to me again? There was some comment made about how we get all up in arms when a sperm appears. Like it can just appear. When two people get together, of course things happen, sometimes a child. It used to be that people accepted consequences and gracefully. Not anymore.