mistermack wrote:Warren Dew wrote:Seth wrote:hadespussercats wrote:Parents are not generally granted the right to force their daughter who wants to carry to term to have an abortion.
They should be. If they have the legal authority to consent to their daughter's desire for an abortion, the legal authority to force the child to have an abortion is implied in the same way that the legal authority to consent to a child having an appendectomy is equivalent to the legal authority to force the child to have an appendectomy against the child's wishes.
At least you're consistent on this.
Only because he doesn't want to look a complete fool. He clearly didn't think it through before posting earlier.
Wrong. I knew exactly what I was writing, and I am consistent in my abortion arguments.
His religious buddies wouldn't agree that a parent should be able to force their daughter to have an abortion.
Of course they wouldn't, but that's irrelevant. It remains the fact that parental authority over the health, safety and welfare of their children is extremely broad, and you cannot formulate a rational rebuttal to my statement, so you have to attack me instead. Typical.
It's all a bronze age mentality. People are indoctrinated with all that stuff as children, and then many don't have the balls to reject it when they grow up.
True enough, but that applies to Atheists too.
Like circumcision. This is clearly child abuse, which has endured for thousands of years. In the Bronze age, you could kill an unwanted child, with no comeback. And they did. It was extremely common in the Roman Empire.
Circumcision in the modern age was thought to have health benefits that made it a useful procedure. Even today the evidence is quite clear that circumcision helps reduce HIV infection rates. It's hardly "child abuse" because it's a recognized medical procedure performed by physicians according to their best medical judgment.
We are slowly getting rid of this attitude that parents can do whatever they want to their kids.
That "attitude" has been long gone, at least in the US and most of Europe.
Now they have to educate them. They have to feed them. They can't be cruel to them.
All by law. It's progress.
Yup.
It's about time mutilation was outlawed too, and forced worship of imaginary beings.
I'm of mixed mind about circumcision for religious reasons, but before I'd agree about "forced worship of imaginary beings" you'd have to provide the standard critically robust and falsifiable evidence that these "imaginary beings" you claim children are being "forced to worship" do not actually exist. Until then, it may be that prudence dictates that children be brought up to worship a "god" because the consequences of not doing so are quite horrific and far more harmful than the religious teachings.
And certainly, no parent should have the right to force a daughter to have an abortion.
That is a ludicrous situation, worthy of Roman times.
Why shouldn't they? As I said, a parent has the authority to judge whether or not it is in the best interests of the child to require the child to have an appendectomy or chemo for cancer or corrective hip surgery for a deformity or plastic surgery to correct a cleft palate. So what is it, specifically, about an abortion (or refusal to grant an abortion) that makes it any different from any other medical procedure that's deemed to be in the best interests of the child's physical, mental and emotional welfare?
What is the objective criteria that makes a girl's desires sovereign in that situation and not in any other?
Or are you saying that a child can refuse to have a tonsillectomy or cleft-palate surgery as a matter of right and overrule the decision of the parents?
What's your rational argument in support of your claim that it's "ludicrous" and "worthy of Roman times?"
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