3052
Comments (217)
sorted by:
You're viewing a single comment thread. View all comments, or full comment thread.
1
loveshock 1 point ago +1 / -0

I imagine you agree with this because you likely have some issues with killing an unborn child that is one day away from being born

I straight up said I dont agree with late term abortion. Did you miss that part?

1
IntrepidBurger 1 point ago +1 / -0

That simply reinforces my point.

At what point does the baby go from "human life worth preserving because it has human experiences" to "just a clump of cells, no loss if it dies"?

1
loveshock 1 point ago +1 / -0

I just want to be clear: A baby is already a life worth preserving.

To me a zygote, an embryo, and early development fetuses are not.

You are under the assumption that there is a specific point. But that point does not exist. That's why I err on the side of caution and am against late term abortions.

But there is a large difference between a 38 week fetus and a 7 week one. It is dishonest to equate the two.

1
IntrepidBurger 1 point ago +1 / -0

That's just my point. There is no line. It's all just perception in the mind. People have a much easier time stealing from someone who is not physically present versus someone who is; this does not mean that it is a lesser crime than stealing from someone who is present! Same for someone they don't know vs. someone they do, etc.

Similarly, a developing zygote may not resemble a human as much as one that is about to be born, but that makes it no less a human life. If you can't delineate a point, then you agree that it is always the same - a human life with the same right to life as developed humans.

1
loveshock 1 point ago +1 / -0

I disagree that just because you cannot state an exact point of change that the two extreme ends are equal.

I could point out a color spectrum to you, and even if you said "this purple pixel is red and this purple pixel is blue" I could test you on this claim and prove you wrong by misidentifying them in a blind test. But it would be insanity to claim the red at the end of the spectrum was blue, as nobody would ever confuse the two (unless they had a colorblindness disorder).

There are more examples I could list, but the point remains that small changes added together makes a real difference!