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Pro Life / Pro Choice Debate

It also means that you've been to school so long you think homosexuality is okay and stuff like that.
 
It also means that you've been to school so long you think homosexuality is okay and stuff like that.

Oh. Gotcha. So “over-indoctrinated.”
 
I strongly feel that abortions should only be allowed up until 6 weeks post birth.

Gotta hold that thing a little bit to truly know you don’t want to return it.
 
To be fair, we have completely different systems across the states for adjudicating killing an adult or child. If you kill someone in Florida and Connecticut under the exact same circumstances, you can get completely different outcomes. Assuming you think viability arrives at any point at all during pregnancy, why should killing a fetus be any different in terms of states' ability to regulate it differently? It would be weird to have a national abortion law while we don't have a national murder law (except in very limited circumstances).

Yeah, but you could have a national medical privacy law that makes medical decisions between Drs, patients and insurance companies and no one else's business.
 
Posobiec looks like the name of medication to stop male pattern baldness.
 
This might be a question for a lawyer, but what happens when a woman in Texas (or Alabama, or Oklahoma, etc) dies of an ectopic pregnancy, something that could have easily been treated with an abortion, but that specific medical procedure is banned so she dies a painful horrible death...Who does the woman's family get to file a wrongful death lawsuit against? The Drs.? The Hospitals? The state Government? Alito personally? Chuck Schumer for not killing the filibuster and codifying Roe? Manchin? All of the above?
 
This might be a question for a lawyer, but what happens when a woman in Texas (or Alabama, or Oklahoma, etc) dies of an ectopic pregnancy, something that could have easily been treated with an abortion, but that specific medical procedure is banned so she dies a painful horrible death...Who does the woman's family get to file a wrongful death lawsuit against? The Drs.? The Hospitals? The state Government? Alito personally? Chuck Schumer for not killing the filibuster and codifying Roe? Manchin? All of the above?


Nobody.

It’s god’s will, obviously.
 
This might be a question for a lawyer, but what happens when a woman in Texas (or Alabama, or Oklahoma, etc) dies of an ectopic pregnancy, something that could have easily been treated with an abortion, but that specific medical procedure is banned so she dies a painful horrible death...Who does the woman's family get to file a wrongful death lawsuit against? The Drs.? The Hospitals? The state Government? Alito personally? Chuck Schumer for not killing the filibuster and codifying Roe? Manchin? All of the above?

Who am I to judge God's will?
 
Can you sue someone for not doing something illegal to save a life?
 
Yeah, but you could have a national medical privacy law that makes medical decisions between Drs, patients and insurance companies and no one else's business.

So if someone discusses murdering someone with his doctor, it is nobody else's business? Makes perfect sense. Or if the patient kills the doctor, then it is even better. Complete doctor-patient immunity!
 
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