then by all means, explain what you mean by encroachment
While still remaining coy...I'll give you a subtle descriptive clue: bodily encroachment.
That should give your brain cells exercise for the day.
then by all means, explain what you mean by encroachment
I don't see pregnancy as a punishment or violation, so I'd phrase it, here she assumed the risk of a foreseeable, natural consequence to her actions.In other words, unlike the rape, she brought her pregnancy upon herself.
Necessity and the right to be create it as surely as her actions create the consideration...else, she has issued a de facto invitation and cannot then claim trespass. She has, in essence, given the unborn a nine month lease.Yet, this distinction fails to demonstrate exactly how the unborn may violate the rightful principle which disallows one human individual continual access to another's person sans explicit assent.
In order, only if we assume the right that shouldn't exist if we address the argument that should have preceded its invention...and nothing was obfuscated.As a matter of right, there need not be any other. Your explication regarding the pair serves little, save obfuscation.
Rather, as I've said more than once, the argument I make isn't a moral argument or instrument.:doh: The mortality status of the unborn is not a salient point...in an abortion debate?!
The reason I suspect you're pursuing this approach is that you need for me to be making a moral, subjective and/or emotional argument. Because if I do that then I'm essentially just like you and everyone else creating arbitrary lines in the sand and the matter becomes right by fiat and show of hands. Rather, the argument is rational (which needn't be the exclusive wheelhouse of the academic) and remains on course.You really are off course aren't you....is this merely academic to you?
I've noted more than once that serious questions of right have moral parallels, that legal, rational restraints frequently carry moral consequence. Now one person may feel or value differently than the next and then see the moral outcome differently. So if you believed that a woman had a right to reproductive freedom that gave her the authority to have an abortion you could see Roe as a moral instrument, or perhaps an incomplete and flawed one. Conversely, were you inclined to believe in the sanctity of life from conception you'd see Roe as preserving some good amid a good bit of moral ill.Though, for it's application (those very ends met by argument's means) morality is an utter necessity. You simply cannot parse the two for argument sake.
That's not a rebuttal to what I noted. I haven't argued that the majority of old men who fashioned Roe weren't influenced by a social climate and clamor. I believe they were, demonstrably were, to the point where it overwhelmed good reason.Or else, the power and voice of women had finally risen to a commensurate level of discourse upon the issue.
Necessity and the right to be create it as surely as her actions create the consideration...
else, she has issued a de facto invitation and cannot then claim trespass. She has, in essence, given the unborn a nine month lease.
In order, only if we assume the right that shouldn't exist if we address the argument that should have preceded its invention...and nothing was obfuscated.
Rather, as I've said more than once, the argument I make isn't a moral argument or instrument.
The reason I suspect you're pursuing this approach is that you need for me to be making a moral, subjective and/or emotional argument. Because if I do that then I'm essentially just like you and everyone else creating arbitrary lines in the sand and the matter becomes right by fiat and show of hands. Rather, the argument is rational (which needn't be the exclusive wheelhouse of the academic) and remains on course.
I've noted more than once that serious questions of right have moral parallels, that legal, rational restraints frequently carry moral consequence. Now one person may feel or value differently than the next and then see the moral outcome differently. So if you believed that a woman had a right to reproductive freedom that gave her the authority to have an abortion you could see Roe as a moral instrument, or perhaps an incomplete and flawed one. Conversely, were you inclined to believe in the sanctity of life from conception you'd see Roe as preserving some good amid a good bit of moral ill.
That's the problem with moral arguments, they only have gravitas to the extent the parties involved accept the same premise/standard. Reason doesn't care how you feel about a thing. It only cares that the thing is logical and logically defensible.
That's not a rebuttal to what I noted. I haven't argued that the majority of old men who fashioned Roe weren't influenced by a social climate and clamor. I believe they were, demonstrably were, to the point where it overwhelmed good reason.
The parallel is in principle. It's potent enough for the point and isn't offered as more....The vast difference between property and physicality; absent legal, explicit terms of contract subject to both parties ...renders this analogy less than potent. It again begs the very question of legality.
:chuckle: Mea culpa, though now I lose your point.Mortality not morality.
I don't see how, given my argument. I mean we may be, but if we are it's not because of the argument. Unjustifiable is another matter. That it demonstrably is.The just/unjust death of the fetus via the abortion procedure is where we're in opposition.
The problem with that is you're only really finding a way to recontextualize the particular situation we're addressing. In what other situation would the notion of uncontested access have meaning? None if the argument is necessity and what other context is there?Likewise, by a pure rational standard, you cannot deny the principle in play whereas one human individual has no uncontested right of access to another human individual.
My argument has nothing to do with subjective valuation save the founding principle of law can be called that...which is an argument, but everything that proceeds from it cannot be so situated or the law becomes nothing more or less than an incoherent plea to power.The difference in either rational approach lies exclusively within the realm of moral discernment and subjective valuation.
Well, honestly, I'm just kicking around side bars. None of that is really a part of my argument. I'm poking around within your contextual assertions for the sake of clarity. If/then, if you would. If you're going to compare the unborn to a rapist I'm going to note the absence or real parallel outside of the response on the part of the woman who decides that both are unwanted intrusions on her sense of personal, physical autonomy.specifically, you cannot claim that the mother's "foreseeable" consequence binds her to the unborn's right to exist in lieu nor in spite of said principle without such appeal.
Rather, the Court erred by failing to consider what it should have as a logical necessity, instead allowing itself to be moved by the climate of the day to create a thing that as the dissent ably pointed out, cannot be reasonably approached by an argument of due process and is otherwise a near legislative cobbling, an illustration not of reason, but of the capitulation of power divorced from either a moral compass or a rationally inclusive approach. As to genies and bottles and stuffing...I am guilty in the same sense of a man wrongly convicted and arguing on appeal for the consideration he was due and denied...except that I am arguing for right itself and what must come from that.Then the court had more than ample reason to have allowed the voice of women to be heard, represented and deliberated upon..effectively releasing that genie in the bottle you're so vainly attempting to stuff back in.
Rather, the Court erred by failing to consider what it should have as a logical necessity, instead allowing itself to be moved by the climate of the day to create a thing that as the dissent ably pointed out, cannot be reasonably approached by an argument of due process and is otherwise a near legislative cobbling, an illustration not of reason, but of the capitulation of power divorced from either a moral compass or a rationally inclusive approach. As to genies and bottles and stuffing...I am guilty in the same sense of a man wrongly convicted and arguing on appeal for the consideration he was due and denied...except that I am arguing for right itself and what must come from that.
And this is evidenced by the continued irrational attack on women's rights in general, to enforce by any means necessary, and at anyone else's cost, an individual subjective opinion about abortion.This is not a rational dispensation of justice but rather a tyrannical rationale to deny one.
Reason isn't arrogant. Attempting to meet it with appeals to emotion and circular declarations, however, might well be.The arrogance of your position
Given the only "right" that failed to exist before Roe is the right to legal abortion, that's a curious criticism and a neat circle.Given the sorry state of women's rights prior to Roe/Wade
Roe rather pointedly makes the case that no one denied women "their voice". Everyone with standing deserves to be heard on the law if they can advance a meaningful point of consideration. In fact, it was that very thing that led to my argument, considering the merits of all involved within the context of the law.While the accompanying dismissive arrogance to deny women their voice only exacerbated the issue.
You're mistaken in nearly every count. Supra on the hearing bit. What I've said is that the reproductive right Roe establishes regarding abortion doesn't exist in Roe past the point where that same decision arbitrarily assigns right to the unborn and denies the mother the right to interfere with it. I've noted that their line in the sand isn't any more self evident than any other and that, given the argument I've set out prior, none of them should reasonably control. Roe is predicated on emotionalism and arrogance of the worst sort, a monument to public pressure and a failure of consideration.Your admission in denial of such only serves to evince that your "incontestable" appeal to the unborn's right to life cannot stand upon its own merit
Well, no. The imposition is Roe, which creates a thing at odds with reason then rejects its own cobbled right the moment that right meets an arbitrary valuation and assignment. Roe is only consistent in its inconsistency.and therefore must impose - by design - a grave injustice upon women in an indulgent effort at sustaining its oppressive (mis)representation of right.
Only true of those who support Roe or any arbitrary, arrogant, presumptive assertion of the right to determine and deny essential human dignity against reason itself.This is not a rational dispensation of justice but rather a tyrannical rationale to deny one.
That still seems a bit arbitrary to me but once implanted it becomes much more likely to develop a central nervous system and thus a capacity to be a person in time.For me, the distinction is that a new life has begun at fertilization. That constitutes person hood IMO. The very latest that a new person is growing is about 5 days after fertilization in the fallopian tubes, the zygote then works its way into the uterus and implants itself into the uterine wall, the endometrium. At the point of implantation person-hood is 100% established.
Given the only "right" that failed to exist before Roe is the right to legal abortion, that's a curious criticism and a neat circle.
What I've said is that the reproductive right Roe establishes regarding abortion doesn't exist in Roe past the point where that same decision arbitrarily assigns right to the unborn and denies the mother the right to interfere with it.
It's nothing of the sort and conflating abortion with a continuation of suffrage is about as mistaken.That's interesting bluster considering the history of women suffrage. Check the time-line for yourself.
Rather, Roe creates an arbitrary line in that biological progression to assign right. It's no more rationally compelling than any other arbitrary distinction.Roe simply recognizes the developmental progression inherent to gestation.
No, it's a subjective valuation draped in robes and power.It's a pragmatic approach
It's not minimizing risk to the infant at all. It's disregarding the infant except in consideration with its own hubris.whereas the court/state is compelled by an adaptive point in adjusting right and well-being of both the unborn and mother in direct correlation to the former's level of development; minimizing imminent risks to suffering and death to all parties concerned, as a necessary consideration.
Using "this" as though something which hasn't been established rationally must have been, because you find it pragmatic, is neither argument nor truth.This reflects the impracticability and absurdity of preserving rights for a zygote and/or denying protections to an embryo moments prior to birth.
Rather, only in protecting the unborn at every point of being can we guarantee the absence of assuming a power to which we understand there is no right.Either extreme is unacceptable for reasons given prior.
It's nothing of the sort and conflating abortion with a continuation of suffrage is about as mistaken.
Rather, Roe creates an arbitrary line in that biological progression to assign right. It's no more rationally compelling than any other arbitrary distinction.
No, it's a subjective valuation draped in robes and power.
It's not minimizing risk to the infant at all. It's disregarding the infant except in consideration with its own hubris.
Using "this" as though something which hasn't been established rationally must have been, because you find it pragmatic, is neither argument nor truth.
Rather, only in protecting the unborn at every point of being can we guarantee the absence of assuming a power to which we understand there is no right.
Some believe that. Most don't. As with assignment all we can say uniformly is that at some point we possess them. The rest goes back to the argument.All rights are arbitrary
The nature of the thing.We've exhausted these points.
"Them" is vague. How do we specify the particulars non-arbitrarily?Some believe that. Most don't. As with assignment all we can say uniformly is that at some point we possess them. The rest goes back to the argument.
Only if you developed amnesia. In which case, you already agreed with me. Otherwise, we're talking about right and vestment."Them" is vague.
There's argument, but it doesn't matter if rights are absolute in establishment or cobbled wishcraft. I'm not trying to convince you that rights exist outside of men's desire for them (though the case can be and has been made, philosophically) especially since it doesn't really alter or impact the arguments I've made. That is, whether or not right itself is an arbitrary designation, the right to exist is the foundation of every proceeding right. It is indispensable, the first cause from which arises every other protection. There is no disagreement on the point that can move it without undoing every other. So it is necessary that we safeguard it and the self-interest it promotes and protects. And so my arguments follow.How do we specify the particulars non-arbitrarily?
Only if you developed amnesia. In which case, you already agreed with me. Otherwise, we're talking about right and vestment.
There's argument, but it doesn't matter if rights are absolute in establishment or cobbled wishcraft. I'm not trying to convince you that rights exist outside of men's desire for them (though the case can be and has been made, philosophically) especially since it doesn't really alter or impact the arguments I've made. That is, whether or not right itself is an arbitrary designation, the right to exist is the foundation of every proceeding right. It is indispensable, the first cause from which arises every other protection. There is no disagreement on the point that can move it without undoing every other. So it is necessary that we safeguard it and the self-interest it promotes and protects. And so my arguments follow.
True. The things that can abrogate it are pretty horrific violations of the compact though, largely taking the life of another without justification. Rape was on that list for a while. Treason still is. In other words, if you take the rights from another, or endanger the rights of everyone within the republic you could stand to lose that foundational protection.Sure, though the right to exist is not without exception.
Abortion doesn't have the predicate, the gross and willful violation of another's right and/or injury absent some fairly rare circumstances that we've touched on prior. Outside of the thorny problem of endangerment and self-defense it's simply not in the ballpark.In the case of abortion, one, contrary to other such exemption, is deemed inexorably by you as having no standing for just deliberation.
Abortion doesn't have the predicate, the gross and willful violation of another's right and/or injury absent some fairly rare circumstances that we've touched on prior. Outside of the thorny problem of endangerment and self-defense it's simply not in the ballpark.
As no right can have meaning without the ability to exercise it, life is by rational necessity preeminent among them. In recognition of that, the willful abrogation of it carries the most severe penalty a social compact can impose. And even then many argue against it. Abortion doesn't approach the litmus in nearly any case and by no means as the rule.And that ballpark was designed and designated by who and what non-arbitrary measure?