Unit2Sucks said:
You should be pretty happy then. Only 6 states (+DC) allow abortions after viability (other than for medical reasons). You've talked about what you claim are misguided tropes and said that a lot of the answers/defenses are wrong, but what exactly is your point?
I'm with Sycasey - people control their own bodies.
If we're going to start making medical and health decisions for other people, I sure as heck wouldn't start at abortion. There are a lot of terrible choices that people make (starting with diet) but it's a free country.
More absurd illogic games.
The "control your own body" trope with no parameters is one of the worst. One, it's vague (by design). Surely there are limits to bodily autonomy, no? What are they? Your diet analogy is pretty bad because it doesn't reflect life vs life (or potential life, whatever you want to call it). I can do whatever I want with my body so long as it doesn't result in my fist entering your face. Because you're a human with protected rights against being caused injury or death.
If you lived in my stomach fully grown as you are now until birth, which I created through my conscious choices, should I be able to kill you? The body autonomy trope as this sort of end-all hammer is simply a result of a lack of wanting to actually grapple with the issue. The question is, as always, at what point of gestation (if any) should an unborn's life warrant government protection. States vary on this. Moral or intrinsic value is not dependent on geography or possession, no? Nor does that vaginal canal confer personhood, right? At some point between conception and birth, the unborn is sentient/viable etc etc develops a hearbeat, nervous system, brain, etc etc.
Over 40, including liberal run states, disagree with you. 'Bodily autonomy' has limits that don't supersede an unborn's 'right to life' past certain markers of gestation. Liberal and conservative apologists for abortion point out that most states don't allow non-health related 3rd trimester abortions (true, and they are rare), but they're unmoved by the fact that some states STILL do. This is not a coincidence.
I understand why people employ this kind of all-encompassing ambiguity ('people control their own bodies'). It's safe, and it sounds virtuous (it sounds like you support women and their autonomy, what's not to like). But it doesn't stand up to even their own moral values.