Abortion should be legal
The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.
After 5 votes and with 3 points ahead, the winner is...
- Publication date
- Last updated date
- Type
- Standard
- Number of rounds
- 4
- Time for argument
- Two weeks
- Max argument characters
- 10,000
- Voting period
- Two months
- Point system
- Winner selection
- Voting system
- Open
PGA (Peter) and I will take on the abortion debate. Neither of us will be arguing an absolute position and understand there must be room for nuance. Peter allows abortion when the mother's life is threatened by pregnancy. I accept Roe V Wade has laid out reasonable limits on abortion. I anticipate our main point of contention will be, not in the fringe, but, where abortion is most common. Ie. Most abortions occur at or before 13 weeks of pregnancy. I will argue this should be legal, and Peter will argue against it. Each debater will have their own burden to meet.
There will be no new arguments in the final round - only rebuttal and closing.
- I am willing to accept Con’s stats showing *legal* abortion increased after Roe V. Wade. This is not surprising or beneficial to my opponent’s case. As stated in round one, restrictive laws regarding abortion do not appear to reduce abortion overall. What they actually do is force more abortions to be unsafe. According to Guttmacher, “estimates of the number of illegal abortions in the 1950s and 1960s ranged from 200,000 to 1.2 million per year. One analysis, extrapolating from data from North Carolina, concluded that an estimated 829,000 illegal or self-induced abortions occurred in 1967.” [16] The causes of pregnancy related death percentages are not surprising either. The percentages are in the context of legal abortion, and as my opponent seems to suggest, these are relatively low numbers. The stats he has provided would be part of 55% of safe abortions (worldwide) I mentioned in round one since abortion is legal (and safe) in the US. On the other hand, 93% of women of reproductive age in Africa live in countries with restrictive abortion laws, and Africa is the world region with the highest abortion related deaths - 9% of maternal deaths in Africa are from unsafe abortion. [20] A clearer demonstration of the harm illegal abortion attributes to can be had by comparing abortion related deaths in Eastern Asia (where abortion is largely unrestricted) to Sub Saharan Africa (where abortion is much more restricted). Eastern Asia has abortion related deaths at .8% whereas SSA is at 9.6% (as of this report in 2014). More than 10 times as many women die in SSA over Eastern Asia due to abortion - making abortion illegal makes it less safe, not less prevalent. [21 Table 1]2
- Con ask about the “health and harm” of the unborn. He might as well ask about the health and harm of self-defense. Is it unfortunate harm can come from protecting oneself? Yes, but the alternative is much worse: no right to do so. Also, the various surgical abortion procedures described are not the norm and might be required when a woman’s life is in danger – which Con himself allows for. This is another inadvertent ‘own-goal’ [17] (Nazi argumentation from rnd 1) and as Con admits himself - an emotional appeal. However, the typical abortion (occurring before 13 weeks) utilizes medication (not surgery) and Con’s emotional appeal has limited applicability (if any) to the notion that a person has a right not to be used by another.
- Equality means everyone has the same rights. Con is not advocating for everyone to have the same rights, but rather for the unborn alone to have a special right. This is not equality.
- The adverse health effects described by my opponent are not an argument against abortion any more than they are an argument against rights overall. Defense of one’s person and personal sovereignty (for example) comes with the potential for harm to the self and others, but this certainly doesn’t mean it is unwarranted. Also, I dispute some of the effects listed. For instances, surgical procedures, which typically happens later in the pregnancy and/or out of necessity (the mother’s life being in danger) do not come into play in most abortions. Additionally, abortion does not affect women’s mental health more than not having an abortion. [18] [19].
Fact 3: Killing innocent human beings is unjust. The unborn is an innocent human being.
Pro never outright disputed the status of its innocence or humanity but did so subtly with semantics.
Fact 4: The Nazis lessened the value and status of many groups of human beings living within Germany by their laws and propaganda, leading to the Holocaust.
A section of my R2 established that Nazi law and Nazi practices devalued and dehumanized particular groups within German society. Pro never disputed those facts, although he argued my comparative analogy between unwanted groups (Jews) and the unborn were unfound. Not true. In both cases, the language undercuts the humanity and personhood of the group(s) it isolates.
Fact 5: Abortion is a colossal human Holocaust unsurpassed by numbers killed to date in the history of the world (over 1.5 billion human beings legislated out of existence since 1980). [1]
Fact 6: Pro could not establish the unborn was not a personal being from conception. He granted it for the sake of this argument. His one supporting citation as evidence of non-personhood [2] was highly speculative, loaded with uncertain language,
"In 1973 the Supreme Court had refused to resolve the question,"
"...the scientific point of view...concluded that biology alone is not able to determine the point at which personhood is established,"
"scientists expressed their view,"
"Reasons for not defining the fetus as a person included the negative impact on providing medical services to the mother and the fetus,..."
"further explorations of the question are necessary."
Although Pro did not prove it was a non-person (his onus), he is okay with stripping it of any legal rights. I argued that from conception, the unborn is a person by its very nature from a philosophical as well as logical perspective. Pro failed to challenge my contentions adequately, even conceding for the sake of this debate that it is a person, yet treats it differently from other persons. In America, what other innocent people can you kill because you don't want them? Hence, Pro has a double standard unless its lack of personhood is proven.
Two Main Arguments - Health and Bodily Rights
a) Woman's Health
Pro was unable to establish that the woman's death rate from pregnancy, was lesser numerically, to the unborn death rate from abortion. Statistically, the death rate from abortion is far higher than the death rate for pregnancy complications. Pro says that "restricting abortion does nothing to reduce its frequency." Even if this were true (due to choosing an illegal abortion as the contributing factor of those deaths, not pregnancy), that does not make two wrongs a right. Even if illegal abortions contribute to just as many deaths as do legal abortions when did ever breaking the law or ignoring the most basic right to life for innocent human beings justify doing something wrong?
Pro never established but only claimed the moral right of abortion (for any reason), especially for bodily rights as being right. Morally, Pro pushed for human equality, citing the UN Declaration on Human Rights, at the same time undermining such rights with his stand on Pro-choice. He says we should treat all human beings equally then proceeds to argue the innocent unborn human are not equal. His position is a glaring deficiency and contradiction.
Only "a small proportion of women who have abortions do so because of health concerns or fetal anomalies, the large majority choose termination in response to an unintended pregnancy." [3]
"Worldwide, the most commonly reported reason women cite for having an abortion is to postpone or stop childbearing." [4]
Again, the reasons are not usually health-related but unwantedness for a variety of factors. Sub Sahara Africa does not fare well in family planning. Abortion becomes a method of contraception there as well as in Asia, such as in Japan (89%). [5]
In the USA, the risk to maternal health is 2.8%; with fetal health, the risk is 3.3%. [6] Health reasons, other than for Pakistan and India play a tiny percentage in why women opt for abortions. [7]
The data available is considered inconclusive and unreliable in many countries. The primary health factor could be for psychological reasons - e.g. ostracization, guilt, shame. For fetal defects, the sex of the child factors into such evaluations in the pregnancy (the Chinese bias to want sons). Health concerns play a minor part in abortions.
b) Bodily Autonomy
Regarding bodily autonomy, Pro wanted to absolute the woman's bodily autonomy. He repeatedly argues that others should ask the woman's consent before using her body, rightly so, yet the unborn is unable to do this. What is more, by the woman consenting to sex, she understands the possibility of pregnancy occurring. With most cases of pregnancy, she agrees to sex. Rape related abortions count for about 1% of all abortions in the USA. [3]
The Violinist
Pros misapprehension here is that the innocent unborn is a stranger (the unborn shares a part of her DNA) who was forcibly attached to the woman's body. In most cases, the sexual union carried with it her consent with the possibility of pregnancy occurring and is a natural biological result of sexual union, not a forced one. Non-consensual sex or rape is the 1% exception to willing intercourse in the USA.
People Seeds
Pro mistakenly thinks that I equate sex to automatic pregnancy. My point is there is a moral responsibility involved with sex that happens with pregnancy. By consenting, there is a chance of forming a new life. I addressed his argument of the woman's bodily "sovereignty" under absolute rights. Nowhere should any person have absolute rights over their body to do with it whatever they like if it involves killing another innocent human being. Pro gives the woman greater rights than men.
Human Rights
Pro continually led me to believe he conceded the personhood argument, so I did not pursue it further, yet in R4, he again puts the onus on me. He has the burden to prove it is not a person of which he did not do.
As mentioned previously, human rights are the weakest part of his argument as explained in Facts # 2-6.
Morality and Law
Pro does not consider my moral or legal arguments to be "strong" for illegalizing abortion. Pro is wrong; he pushes legal abortion as "morally preferable" not as morally right. The harm done to the unborn is irrevocable. Pro does not recognize the "offspring" as a separate "independent entity," but has the illusion it is part of or and "extension" of the woman's body. Therefore he believes the woman can do with it as she pleases. His logic is faulty. If the unborn is part of or an extension of a pregnant woman, she would have four arms and legs, a separate, distinct DNA and blood system, and sometimes a penis. The unborn is its own entity, a different organism, directing its personal development internally. These are scientific facts that Pro conflates and confuses with false assertions. Granted, the unborn relies on the woman's womb and nutrients for its temporary home and food source. Perhaps Pro mistakenly thinks that the only analogy is one of sustenance, but it is one of moral right and wrong, per the heading.
Furthermore, Pro equates harm to the unborn in killing it as lesser harm that the woman endures in carrying it for nine months then perhaps putting it up for adoption. As for the charge that I equate the unborn and abandoned baby as equal, what does that mean? They are equal from a moral perspective, not a developmental perspective, just like a baby and a teen are somewhat different developmentally but no less a human being.
The Loaded Dehumanizing and Depersonalizing Language of Abortion
Although Pro and many Pro-choicers are most likely unaware, they used the same kind of dehumanizing language used by oppressive totalitarian authorities to marginalize opposing groups of society for their purposes. [8] By applying a different legal standard to such groups, Roe V Wade set a precedent for abortion. Roe V Wade questioned the personhood of the unborn, was wrong in its historical summation and used devaluing language to sway public opinion to change laws. Pro used suggestive, dehumanizing, and devaluing language during this debate, with terms like "potential life" or suggestions that the gamete is "sufficiently different from what is typically recognized as 'human'" to lessen what the unborn is.
He made misrepresenting, unscientific statements like "what makes humans special isn't our cells or DNA (which is pretty much all there is at conception)," but that DNA is what does make us unique for it directs the human organism to be what it is. The unborn is more than a collection of cells. At conception, the unborn is a separate, individual, unique human entity with everything it needs internally to direct its growth to its full potential. Like every other human entity or personal being, it needs an environment and nutrients ( that the woman supplies) to aid it in its development.
I thank Pro for willingly debating this important subject!
Pro Arguments: Womans Health, and Human Rights.
Con Arguments: Human Being, Personhood, Unjust Societies (Nazi), Dehumanizing Unborn,
Pro made a strong case about Womans health. Great details and stats. Showed harm if pregnancies are banned. I believed what was being said. Con focused a bunch on personhood, and Nazi's Implying that having legal abortions is like running an unjust society not better than the Nazis. Con also kept repeating that everyone is treated equal under the law.
Pro did a good job questioning the definition of personhood, giving some std and cancer examples.
The debate is about the law. Pro made better arguments about the impact of having legal abortion. Con did not paint a clear picture on if abortions are illegal.
Pro's arguments were clearer, and more plausible.
Both did great.
After Protest, I supplement my original vote and apologize to the parties.
Pros position on Womans Health, and Human Rights were far more tangible, especially when taken into consideration with their opening argument being illegality does not necessarily reduce the occurrence. In addition, Pro did a better job of staying focused on the issue at hand and repeatedly tried to bring the conversation back to that point. It is something that I appreciate.
Con attempted to change the definition of the woman to woman and unborn in stats framing. This for me was an area of no return. Con had just argued about the independent personhood of a fetus. Con then argues that a woman and fetus are one, for the pure purposes of trying to misapply CDC statistics on the acquisition of abortion to woman health, at which point it could be argued there was an adoption of the Violinist theory.
Con also miscategorized the rights differences brought yup between a man and a woman and how they use their body, Their application of the term inalienable does not meet legal standards (inalienable does not mean irrevocable as Pro pointed out)
Finally, credibility is substantially eroded when Nazi's are brought in for comparative purposes. It just undermines the entire argument from Con.
RFD given here: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1Qahk3ymdFQsyUq0pAEeFs8htdvRIv8O92vo_GZlr7io/edit?usp=sharing
Tougher choice this time around, though the tl:dr is that I feel Pro did a better job weighing his points with the given resolution, whereas Con was a little too focused on a single point to place it solidly in the broader context of the debate.
Women's Health: Pro argues, with citation, “Of all abortions, an estimated 55% are safe (i.e., done using a recommended method and by an appropriately trained provider)..." This is not a convincing percentage to argue that abortion is "safe" since it acknowledges that there are degrees of safeness. Con argues, with citation, ""CDC...confirmed that there were more than 3,400 pregnancy-related deaths over a five-year period in the United States," and that, "The estimated abortion deaths, same time period --> 3,156,876 - 5,335,59" The two citations indicate that there are a thousand-fold more abortions than pregnancy-related deaths, which suggests that "women's health" is, at best, a relative term, along with "safeness" and not a credible leading argument for abortion.
Person: Con is consistent in the definition of what constitutes "person" as being human, whereas Pro vacillates in that definition.
Rights: Con argues that the unborn, being acknowledged as "persons" and humans, have rights afforded to human. Pro, due to the above vacillation, cannot argue from form both sides of the table and maintain credibility. Example: Pro argues, as a definition, that "Human rights are rights inherent to all human beings, regardless of race, sex, nationality, ethnicity, language, religion, or any other status." It's the "any other status" that hangs all other Pro claims that the right to life belongs only to the woman, and not the fetus, since "Every person has a moral right to control their own body," when Pro also argues, "Freedom, justice, and peace rests on fundamental human rights such as ‘freedom from slavery, freedom from torture, equality, and the right to life." Pro has not successfully argued that a human is not human at conception, even though arguing that a "person" is not established at conception, hanging "person" on a nebulous hook of "consciousness." Pro has not demonstrated by evidence that a fetus has no consciousness, and must do that to deny a fetus the right that freedom and justice demand.
S.L.E.D. depends on a value being "taken" from the pregnant woman by the fetus, that value being nutrients, even if, in the transfer of nutrients, the woman's body is deprived of them to the degree they are "taken" by the fetus. What in the process specifically requires that "give" is not at least an equal to "take" in that the "give" is not a conscious act by the woman any more than "take" is a conscious act of the fetus? After all, Pro argues that consciousness is not a feature endowed to the fetus.
1. Health
Pro uses sources to prove a clear harm for almost no gain (prevented abortions).
Con uses YouTube videos in an attempt to get voters to ignore the offered evidence. He does also throw numbers around, but I’ll trust in professional analysis from Guttmacher or other sources above his interpretation. Pro of course defends using expert contextual analysis.
2. Human Rights
Pro uses comparative rights to men to show further harm to women, with the slavery analogy.
With his second and sixth contentions, con revisits this to say that the unborn are the real slaves.
Pro defends that rights should not be stripped away from people. And further that sex is not always consensual, thus there’s cases that side step pro’s entire argument.
Pro further uses the people seeds and violinist analogies (on the Violinist one in particular, con claims pro was refuted on it, without bothering to refute it; or better yet show why an audience member would be obligated to be enslaved as a life support system for someone else...).
This area could be well summarized ith “there is no right to use the body of another without consent.” Given that con dropped things like consent and rape until the final round after pro could no longer respond, and then barely touched them, he doesn’t have a case in favor of human rights.
3. SLED
Pro preemptively argues that no one has the right to forcibly take resources from another, even if that is the only means for them to survive.
With his first contention, Con revisits this to try to make some point out of already conceded material.
4. Personhood
Con asserts (and then later under another slightly different name) that the unborn should have full personhood from the moment of conception.
Con further turns this into a Gish Gallop by repeating it under multiple slightly different named contention headings.
Pro used nih.gov to refute pro’s claims about scientific concensious on when personhood begins. He further uses “human cancer” to show that if con’s argument holds, all cancer treatment in humans must be ceased as human cancer would be a person.
Pro further uses human STDs being treatable to bolster this point.
5. Nazis
Con lengthy declares that pro is a nazi.
Pro points out the obvious fallacious, and hilariously shows that Nazis were also against abortions.
With con continuing this in R2, it’s very hard to take his case seriously.
---
Arguments:
See above review of key points. Somewhat of a messy debate, but the outcome doesn’t seem to favor con in any area, and to vote him would call for likewise voting against cancer and STD treatments.
"To be frank, the after debate discussion is far more important than the debate itself. It gives a chance for both sides to expose hidden and unexpressed points that may be missed."
Given that the vote is still active, this can't really be considered an 'after debate discussion'. I generally don't discuss the debate publicly until the vote is over. However, in this case, I decided to make an exception so that I might defend myself from misrepresentations and counter the ongoing extra-debate perpetuated by my opponent.
"Therefore, since neither you nor science can determine when personhood begins, the unborn SHOULD be given the benefit of any doubt since we are talking about human rights."
You're misrepresenting my position suggesting that my "uncertainty" (6 or 7 month of pregnancy is what I am willing to allow) equates to the unborn automatically being considered persons. How does that follow? This is nothing more than an attempt to shift the burden to me rather than making a case for the personhood of the unborn. That's broken thinking, bud.
"Me: "Irrelevant. A homeowner who kills a burglar does not suffer the same degree of harm. Demanding equal harm would disallow self-defense in general - that's not how self-defense works."
You: No, granted, not in that case, but there are additional considerations here. As I said, the harm is relative when you compare two different things that are not overly related.
1. The burglar is (usually) a stranger. The unborn shares her DNA.
2. The burglar is guilty of wrongdoing, an immoral act. The unborn are innocent of wrongdoing.
3. The burglar is accountable for his actions, able to reason about breaking the law and invading personal space. The unborn are not yet accountable.
4. The unborn is NOT part of the woman's body, although it is attached. Thus, she is doing harm to ANOTHER body, not her own."
All responses will be in regards to the unborn 13 weeks or less:
1. No - you yourself have said that the DNA of the unborn is distinct (ie. not shared) You can't have it both ways...
2. Without a consciousness, the unborn cannot be guilty or innocent.
3. Not accountable - agreed, but no place to hold others accountable either.
4. She (just like everyone else) can withhold her body from anyone she chooses.
"Only one has the choice to kill the unborn - the woman."
No, everyone has the right to choose the use of their body.
"I have never said pregnancy is a given with sex.
Great - you agree consent to sex is not agreeing to 'inflict' anything on oneself - except maybe a good time.
"The definition you provided in our first debates..."
...is irrelevant to the definitions, arguments, and positions laid out in *this* debate. Focus.
"Second, you were the person that equates personhood to legality. Hence, my response, "I focused more on HUMAN rights which can include personhood." I'm defining what I mean. You are the one who only includes or equates personhood to birth."
I am relying on the status quo. If you want to challenge that, you'll need to do better than shift the burden. If you were able to argue for the personhood of the unborn without causing absurdities or conflicts, you'd have my vote. I personally don't see how it can be done. I think I've been more than fair on this particular point given that I have allowed it may be acceptable for personhood to be granted at some point before birth when the capacity for consciousness exists.
To be frank, the after debate discussion is far more important than the debate itself. It gives a chance for both sides to expose hidden and unexpressed points that may be missed.
And I'm saying all this not to be nasty to you but in the hopes that the realization will strike home in what you are doing.
What it boils down to is do you believe that every human being should have the most basic right - the right to life. You do not. Join the ranks of elitists on the scale of dictators with this particular view. They make up excuses on why some human beings are less than others to exploit or eliminate them. The woman who chooses an abortion is doing likewise. Her 'unwant' of it causes her to justify its death as an inconvenience, and after all, it is not the same as her. She is of far greater worth! So, what is her excuse? You named some of them:
Post 139: "Inconvenience or unwantedness are sufficient reasons for abortion when the fetus lacks consciousness - and at 13 weeks (where most abortions occur) consciousness does not exist."
Yet where do you apply the terms "inconvenient and unwanted" to justify killing another human being other than with the unborn in such a serious manner? If you deem me inconvenient and unwanted should you be permitted to kill me?
Post 128: "I pointed out (even by your reasoning) abortion is justifiable in that it can be seen as a type of self defense and an UNWANTED pregnancy represents a threat to a person's EDUCATION, CAREER, BODY, and life."
The first word capitalized is like waste product, the kind you throw away or get rid of. Education, career goals, bodily rights are the excuses used to justify taking the unborn individual human beings life.
Back up to Post 131 if you want my definition of fully functioning. You are trying to misrepresent what I said again.
Post 131: "Its internal system is functioning in the desired manner to help it grow and develop. By fully functioning, I mean that it has everything required in its internal genetic makeup to develop and mature. The thing impeding it from maturing is not its inner workings but an external factor, the woman's choice."
Sorry, I missed these points:
YOU: "You showed no example of my language in this debate being "dehumanizing", therefore your charge is unwarranted.
Is a zygote viable, Peter? If not, it is clearly *not* fully-functioning. Retreating to philosophical ambiguities to make your language seem more legitimate is no defense and its disingenuous."
Any language that portrays a human being as less than it is can be classed as a form of dehumanization, infrahumanization when not overtly obvious. I could go through each round to demonstrate cases of this, The constant fact is that you do not give it the same rights you give the woman - the basic right to life - speaks volumes of how you perceive it. Not granting it this right says the woman is a more valuable human being in your estimation otherwise you would be fighting like I am for its dignity and human worth.
As I said, it is fully functional. In its development at that stage, it is no different than any other human beings at this early stage. It is functioning as it should as a human being at that stage of growth.
I
ME: "Can you say with certainty that science has determined when a person starts?"
YOU: "Can you? Of course not. I don't understand why you continue to appeal to science when you've been burned on that line of reasoning in this debate - science doesn't draw any conclusions on personhood.
There you have it. You state that "science doesn't draw any conclusions on personhood." Therefore, since neither you nor science can determine when personhood begins, the unborn SHOULD be given the benefit of any doubt since we are talking about human rights. Human rights were the weakness of your debate. You sidestepped the question nicely, IMO!
Again, I ask you, how is the law just if it does not apply the same standard of human rights to all individual human beings? How is justice served if the most basic of all human rights is not applied equally under the law to all human beings?
Let me clarify my statement below:
R1: Person: A human being regarded as an individual.
https://www.debateart.com/debates/241/abortion-the-woman-should-not-have-the-right-to-choose-with-one-exception
ME: "And that is the point I was making. The harm is not equal in degree."
YOU: "Irrelevant. A homeowner who kills a burglar does not suffer the same degree of harm. Demanding equal harm would disallow self-defense in general - that's not how self-defense works."
No, granted, not in that case, but there are additional considerations here. As I said, the harm is relative when you compare two different things that are not overly related.
1. The burglar is (usually) a stranger. The unborn shares her DNA.
2. The burglar is guilty of wrongdoing, an immoral act. The unborn are innocent of wrongdoing.
3. The burglar is accountable for his actions, able to reason about breaking the law and invading personal space. The unborn are not yet accountable.
4. The unborn is NOT part of the woman's body, although it is attached. Thus, she is doing harm to ANOTHER body, not her own.
The "right" to personal autonomy should not bar another person having identical/equal rights - the right to life. Both the woman and the unborn have separate bodies. Do you want to go down the road of me not having the same right to life as a human being that you do? If you do, then what does it matter if the elite (those in charge) deem the female unequal to the male regarding life, as seemed to be the preference in China with the one-child policy? The smoker's right to smoke is limited by the non-smoker's right to protect their lungs, so not all rights apply to every situation when they interfere with the most basic of rights that every innocent human being SHOULD have, the right to life. The 'sovereign' right to bodily autonomy only extends so far. There are limits to your personal freedom concerning your body yet you are giving the woman greater control than you have in doing what she wants. You do not have the right to kill an innocent human being yet you think she should.
***
ME: "The psychological harm is often self-inflicted."
YOU: "1. I did not say psychological - I said physiological referring to the strain pregnancy puts on a body."
My mistake. I apologize. How is the physiological harm greater to the woman? She still lives. Her most basic right is still intact.
YOU: "2. Something cannot be self-inflicted when two people are necessarily involved. Not to mention, you're assuming pregnancy is a given with sex (It isn't)."
Ever heard of the saying, 'No means no?' The woman has the choice of whether to engage or not. Although it takes two for pregnancy to happen, by refusing to engage for the reason that she could become pregnant or because she is not ready to have a child is a sufficient reason for the man not to engage. Without her consent, the pregnancy does not happen, except when her personal rights of consenting are violated.
PLUS, you are arguing for harm to her in carrying the unborn since it is her body that receives and nurtures the unborn. She is the one you are arguing is experiencing physical and/or psychological harm.
Only one has the choice to kill the unborn - the woman.
The part about sex = pregnancy is a misrepresentation you perpetuated in the debate and you are doing it here too. I have never said pregnancy is a given with sex. Ever. I'm arguing for the case WHEN sex produces pregnancy not the case that sex automatically produces pregnancy.
***
ME: "I focused more on HUMAN rights which can include personhood."
YOU: "Human rights necessarily includes personhood."
ME: "You: Hence, the name - HUMAN."
YOU: "Human =/= person. Example: human cancer."
The definition you provided in our first debates is at odds with "Human =/= person." Let me remind you:
R1: Person: A human being regarded as an individual.
That PERSON has cancer. Human cancer would be cancer that human beings or personal beings get. Humans are not cancer. (Human = cancer) Cancer is something they get. That statement says nothing of whether human beings are personal beings. It is your burden of proof to show that personhood begins at birth, not just assigned there by Blackmun's bias.
Second, you were the person that equates personhood to legality. Hence, my response, "I focused more on HUMAN rights which can include personhood." I'm defining what I mean. You are the one who only includes or equates personhood to birth. You made that clear in your first debate. Not only that, but the association was purely subjective, and assertive, not backed up by science, neither was the Blackmun opinion.
You've provide much assertion already addressed in the debate, so I'm not going to respond to that again. I hope you'll forgive me, but I'd rather not ride the debate version of a merry-go-round, so I'll focus on the extra-debate material.
"And that is the point I was making. The harm is not equal in degree."
Irrelevant. A homeowner who kills a burglar does not suffer the same degree of harm. Demanding equal harm would disallow self-defense in general - that's not how self-defense works.
"The psychological harm is often self-inflicted."
1. I did not say psychological - I said physiological referring to the strain pregnancy puts on a body.
2. Something cannot be self-inflicted when two people are necessarily involved. Not to mention, you're assuming pregnancy is a given with sex (It isnt).
"Human rights necessarily includes personhood."
"You: Hence, the name - HUMAN."
Human =/= person. Example: human cancer.
"I did challenge the person's right to kill another because of inconvenience or unwantedness."
Inconvenience or unwantedness are sufficient reasons for abortion when the fetus lacks consciousness - and at 13 weeks (where most abortions occur) consciousness does not exist.
"Can you say with certainty that science has determined when a person starts?"
Can you? Of course not. I don't understand why you continue to appeal to science when you've been burned on that line of reasoning in this debate - science doesn't draw any conclusions on personhood.
And that is the point I was making. The harm is not equal in degree.
ME: "Men and women both have the right to defend themselves from harm. This is equality."
Thank you for this conversation!
Yes, they do, but neither has the right to kill an innocent human being without their life being threatened by it, a human being that has done nothing wrong."
YOU: "In the debate, I provided the harm that can come from an unwanted pregnancy. I don't accept your arm-hitting analogy as valid. The consequences a woman faces are long lasting and may have permanent repercussions. I would argue the physiological/biological strain alone is sufficient to warrant self defense should the pregnancy occur without consent."
Harm is a relative term and must be applied in relation to something. The degree of harm done to the woman is not equal to the harm done to the unborn. The woman still lives. The unborn does not. The woman is a human being, but so is the unborn. So, how is the value equal here?
What percentage of pregnancies result in the death of the woman?
What percentage of pregnancies result in the abortion of the unborn?
The psychological harm is often self-inflicted. A good percentage of women consider the unborn to be a blessing so it is how the unborn are looked at negatively that causes the issues. Our society is good at playing the victim when they don't want something they were originally complicit in creating. It can be a form of justification.
ME: "I focused more on HUMAN rights which can include personhood."
YOU: "Human rights necessarily includes personhood."
Hence, the name - HUMAN. Not only this, in our first debate you gave a definition of a "human being" as a "person." The two-terms are usually used interchangeably.
***
ME: "The legal issue is one of justice. Pros opening statement mentioned the UN declaration on human rights yet not once were equal rights applied to ALL."
YOU: "You don't seem to grasp that the reasoning you use is overly broad and allows much more than just the unborn. ie. Cancer and STD's shouldn't be granted rights in the attempt to extend rights to the unborn. Essentially, if we followed your view, we would extend rights to *more* than all."
Is the unborn a human being? You said yes.
Are the same rights being applied to it as with other human beings? The answer is obvious. They are not. Thus, the UN Declaration on human rights is discriminatory. It does not apply EQUALLY to ALL human beings. It has the pretension of being just but it is not. Justice is equal treatment under the law. An innocent human being/victim should not be condemned to death.
As I said before, and it was believed by the framers of the Declaration of Independence, some truths are self-evident, and one of those is that of the right to life. That right is a natural right that SHOULD apply to all human beings or else any kind of atrocity is permissible in the hands of the elite and powerful.
ME: "Pro was SILENT on when personhood begins. He can't answer that question with certainty, thus the benefit of personhood SHOULD be given to the unborn since Pro does not know whether it is a person. Not only this, but he also conceded the argument. I had no need in pursuing it further."
YOU: "Given that personhood is a legal designation, I can answer when personhood begins with certainty: birth. Also, you mistakenly deem an internal critique of your argument as a concession on my part. In that critique, I pointed out (even by your reasoning) abortion is justifiable in that it can be seen as a type of self defense and an unwanted pregnancy represents a threat to a person's education, career, body, and life. You did not challenge this as I remember."
I did challenge the person's right to kill another because of inconvenience or unwantedness. (see Woman's Health, R2, P2; under Bodily Autonomy, and under Judith Jarvis-Thomson, R3; and with every argument for justice and equal rights, for instance, which opposes your "abortion is justified/self-defence" argument).
Personhood is an arbitrary legal designation. Blackmun did not know when "person" begins. His interpretation of Texas law can be argued to misrepresent what they believed back then on personhood. Can you say with certainty that science has determined when a person starts? Thus, we are dealing with a philosophical and moral issue. Therefore, I asked you when personhood begins. All you could give is your personal belief.
What is more, what makes his view or your view (since you agree) a just view? The heart of the debate, IMO, is about morality and the law. The word "should" is vital. It implies a moral imperative. You said:
"law and morality are not interchangeable terms. Law is the "system of rules which a particular country or community recognizes as regulating the actions of its members and which it may enforce by the imposition of penalties". [5] On the other hand, morality is [a] particular system of values and principles of conduct, especially one held by a specified person or society". [6]"
My point was that equal rights require that everyone is treated the same under the law. The law has to do with fairness, with equal rights, or else there is no justice. Thus, any law that discriminates against innocent human beings and does not treat them equally is an unjust law because of its partiality. Abortion, except in rear circumstances, therefore, is an unfair law.
Regarding self-defence, does defending myself permit me to use undue force if my life is not threatened? If I cause you some discomfort, does that permit you to kill me? If someone puts me on your land against my will, and I have no means of communicating this, does that allow you to take the law into your own hands and kill me? If the paperboy is delivering a paper next door and cuts across the corner of my property, can I kill him while he is on my property? I'm defending it against an "intruder." And what is an intruder? Is it your biological dependant? If so, why can't a woman legally kill her two-year-old because she doesn't want it anymore?
"You: "Men and women both have the right to defend themselves from harm. This is equality."
Thank you for this conversation!
Yes, they do, but neither has the right to kill an innocent human being without their life being threatened by it, a human being that has done nothing wrong."
In the debate, I provided the harm that can come from an unwanted pregnancy. I don't accept your arm-hitting analogy as valid. The consequences a woman faces are long lasting and may have permanent repercussions. I would argue the physiological/biological strain alone is sufficient to warrant self defense should the pregnancy occur without consent.
You showed no example of my language in this debate being "dehumanizing", therefore your charge is unwarranted.
Is a zygote viable, Peter? If not, it is clearly *not* fully-functioning. Retreating to philosophical ambiguities to make your language seem more legitimate is no defense and its disingenuous.
Me: "How are a man's rights equal to hers?"
You: "Men and women both have the right to defend themselves from harm. This is equality."
Thank you for this conversation!
Yes, they do, but neither has the right to kill an innocent human being without their life being threatened by it, a human being that has done nothing wrong. Plus, if I hit you hard on the arm with my fist, (malicious intent to hurt your arm) do you then have the right to kill me? What if I had no intention of hitting you hard on the arm but I was trying to hit something else and accidentally hit you instead. Do you then have the right to kill me?
What intent do you think the unborn has to use the woman's body? Do you think it has in mind to harm her? It was not mindful of causing harm if that is what you want to call it. Many women look upon it being there as a blessing, not a curse. It did not place itself there. In 95-99% of cases, the woman consented to have sex knowing, as you adequately explained, that not all sex leads to pregnancy. When it does it was her consent that was partly responsible for it being there. It was her choice to engage in sex. How can you blame the unborn for being there?
"I did not refer to the unborn as any of these things in this debate. This is a strawman, Peter. Also, it cannot be accurately stated the unborn (a term which applies to a broad range of development) is a "*fully-functioning* actual human being". This is one of the objections I have to your language. You misrepresent the biological facts and then (wrongly) accuse me of misleading language."
'You' can be used in the generic sense as referencing the pro-choice position or in the specific sense in referencing you as a person. Having said that, I believe you did, whether overtly or covertly. Personally, it is nothing I hold maliciously against you. It is an observation I am making about the language used to inform the reader of what is taking place. That was my point in the debate. Dehumanization is taking place in the way the unborn is looked upon and described by pro-choicers. Sometimes the person doing so is unaware they are doing so. When someone says "a group of cells, potential human beings" they do not take into consideration that it is a complete and separate entity from the woman. I believe you used this misrepresentation when you said it was "a part of the woman's body" in a previous debate. It is not a part of her body. If it was the woman would have four arms and four legs, and possibly a penis. That kind of language misleads people into believing it is not its own individual being. It merges and lessens its importance.
Speaking of biological facts, I believed you misrepresented what I said multiple times. That may have been because you misunderstood what was said, or I said it poorly. After voting is complete, I will highlight some of these areas to inform others. I will probably use some of the examples in my current debate since the subject is on whether a comparison is valid between the language used by the Nazis and the pro-choice movement in devaluing life.
"It cannot be accurately stated the unborn is a *fully-functioning* actual human being."
Is it an actual human being? In Roe v. Wade, do you think Blackmun was right in his assessment of "potential life is involved?" Potential life? It either is living, or it is not. If it is living, then it is no longer potential.
Is the unborn functioning as a human being? Or is it only half functioning or half working as a human being? How do you draw the line on what I mean by fully-functioning? If it is only half functioning as a human being, then what other kinds of being is it functioning as? In other words, what kind of a being is it functioning as? Semantically, can there be a difference between fully functioning and fully functional? What context is the term used? To find out, you must consider the rest of the text. Besides, are any of us fully functional, utilizing every function a human being has?
Its internal system is functioning in the desired manner to help it grow and develop. By fully functioning, I mean that it has everything required in its internal genetic makeup to develop and mature. The thing impeding it from maturing is not its inner workings but an external factor, the woman's choice.
"How are a man's rights equal to hers?"
Men and women both have the right to defend themselves from harm. This is equality.
"Extreme and intense in the dehumanization that takes place - yes. When you refer to a human being as an animal, disease, virus, waste, parasite, a group of cells, potential human beings, unwanted, instead of a fully-functioning actual, individual human being, to justify killing it, I think that is extreme."
I did not refer to the unborn as any of these things in this debate. This is a strawman, Peter. Also, it cannot be accurately stated the unborn (a term which applies to a broad range of development) is a "*fully-functioning* actual human being". This is one of the objections I have to your language. You misrepresent the biological facts and then (wrongly) accuse me of misleading language.
"Pro was SILENT on when personhood begins. He can't answer that question with certainty, thus the benefit of personhood SHOULD be given to the unborn since Pro does not know whether it is a person. Not only this, but he also conceded the argument. I had no need in pursuing it further."
Given that personhood is a legal designation, I can answer when personhood begins with certainty: birth. Also, you mistakenly deem an internal critique of your argument as a concession on my part. In that critique, I pointed out (even by your reasoning) abortion is justifiable in that it can be seen as a type of self defense and an unwanted pregnancy represents a threat to a person's education, career, body, and life. You did not challenge this as I remember.
"I focused more on HUMAN rights which can include personhood."
Human rights necessarily includes personhood.
"The legal issue is one of justice. Pros opening statement mentioned the UN declaration on human rights yet not once were equal rights applied to ALL."
You don't seem to grasp that the reasoning you use is overly broad and allows much more than just the unborn. ie. Cancer and STD's shouldn't be granted rights in the attempt to extend rights to the unborn. Essentially, if we followed your view, we would extend rights to *more* than all.
"Leveraging something so extreme falls under number of logical fallacies."
Extreme in what way? Extreme and intense in the dehumanization that takes place - yes. When you refer to a human being as an animal, disease, virus, waste, parasite, a group of cells, potential human beings, unwanted, instead of a fully-functioning actual, individual human being, to justify killing it, I think that is extreme. I think it paints a very unfavourable picture of what the unborn is. And I believe pro-choicers hold this extreme view because they are influenced to feel this way.
They are extreme in defending the "woman's rights" but think nothing of the unborn's life or rights. As I have said many times, the greatest nature right is the right to life.
"When the CDC looks at "Woman's Health (and the Harm Done) Health can be argued for the woman and the unborn. " You are combining the health number of one, to the other. Effectively calling them one organic machine."
No, I am not calling them one, I am comparing the number of deaths of two different groups. I am saying that the death toll is far higher for the unborn. It exceeds that of the pregnant women who die giving birth or from complications. I am saying that the hurt to the unborn is more significant, for they lose their lives. They never get to experience the rest of their life. The woman is portrayed as the victim, yet she is alive while the unborn is dead. She chooses to kill it. In perhaps 95-99% of cases, sex was consensual. Sex comes with possible risk and responsibility that is way to often shuffled off when pregnancy occurs with an easy fix.
"Pro made a strong case about Womans health. Great details and stats. Showed harm if pregnancies are banned. I believed what was being said."
It amazes me how you guys only see harm from the woman's side. What about the unborn? What about the harm done to it? Have you every considered that?
"Con focused a bunch on personhood, and Nazi's Implying that having legal abortions is like running an unjust society not better than the Nazis. Con also kept repeating that everyone is treated equal under the law."
I focused more on HUMAN rights which can include personhood. Did that argument even register? I asked the question of how laws are just if they are not applied to all human beings? I showed how even though the unborn are human beings they are not treated equally under the law. I showed how unjust laws lead to gross human atrocities, such as in Nazi Germany, and I gave stats on how an even greater human toll is taking place with the unborn death toll. The keyword in "Abortion should be legal" is the word "should. The word "should" carries a moral requirement. Contrary to what Pro said, it is not only a legal matter but also a moral issue.
"Pro did a good job questioning the definition of personhood, giving some std and cancer examples."
Pro was SILENT on when personhood begins. He can't answer that question with certainty, thus the benefit of personhood SHOULD be given to the unborn since Pro does not know whether it is a person. Not only this, but he also conceded the argument. I had no need in pursuing it further.
What do STDs and cancer have to do with abortion?
"The debate is about the law. Pro made better arguments about the impact of having legal abortion. Con did not paint a clear picture on if abortions are illegal."
The legal issue is one of justice. Pros opening statement mentioned the UN declaration on human rights yet not once were equal rights applied to ALL. He made the statement of equal rights for all human beings but could not demonstrate the unborn were being treated equally. Throughout the debate, the only side considered by him was the woman's rights. Where is the justice here? A woman, usually for selfish reasons is permitted to kill another INNOCENT human being without penalty. How are a man's rights equal to hers?
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>Reported Vote: TheJackle // Mod action: Not Removed (borderline)
>Points Awarded: 1:0; 1 point to Pro.
>Reason for Decision: See Votes Tab.
>Reason for Mod Action:
The vote was borderline. By default, borderline votes are ruled to be sufficient.
Remember:
To cast a sufficient vote in the choose winner system, a voter must explicitly, and in the text of their RFD, perform the following tasks:
(1) survey the main arguments and counter arguments presented in the debate,
(2) weigh those arguments against each other (or explain why certain arguments need not be weighed based on what transpired within the debate itself), and
(3) explain how, through the process of weighing, they arrived at their voting decision with regard to assigning argument points. Weighing entails analyzing how the relative strength of one argument or set of arguments outweighed (that is, out-impacted) and/or precluded another argument or set of arguments. Weighing requires analyzing and situating arguments and counterarguments within the context of the debate as a whole.
While this vote did not do a great job, it touches enough bases to be borderline.
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>Reported Vote: DrSpy // Mod action: [Removed]
>Points Awarded: 1 point to Pro
>Reason for Decision:
Pro did a better job of staying focused on the issue at hand and repeatedly tried to bring the conversation back to that point. It is something that I appreciate.
Pro brought up some valid fallacy issues with Con's arguments.
Con attempted to change the definition of the woman to woman and unborn in stats framing. This for me was an area of no return. Con had just argued about the independent personhood of a fetus and then argues that a woman and fetus are one, for the pure purposes of trying to misapply statistics on the acquisition of abortion to woman health, at which point it could be argued there was an adoption of the Violinist theory.
Con also miscategorized the rights differences brought yup between a man and a woman and how they use their body.
Finally, credibility is substantially eroded when Nazi's are brought in for comparative purposes. It just undermines the entire argument from Con.
>Reason for Mod Action: The voter did not meet the requirements of awarding argument points per the Voting Policy.
In order to award argument points, a voter must explicitly, and in the text of their RFD, perform the following tasks:
Survey the main arguments and counterarguments presented in the debate
Weigh those arguments against each other (or explain why certain arguments need not be weighed based on what transpired within the debate itself)
Explain how, through the process of weighing, they arrived at their voting decision with regard to assigning argument points
Pro's arguments were recounted as fallacies, but the voter never explained what those fallacies were or why they were persuasive. Additionally, the bulk of the arguments from Pro's constructive was excluded too. That's ok if you explain why most of the arguments don't factor into your decision, but you have to do that.
I apologize for the inconvenience. Please PM me if you have any questions.
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I am surprised at your aggression in your response to my vote. Please protest if you feel it does not meet the community standards for an RFD.
A few points, you stated that the Nazi example is extreme. That does not take away from my perception. Leveraging something so extreme falls under number of logical fallacies. When the CDC looks at "Woman's Health (and the Harm Done) Health can be argued for the woman and the unborn. " You are combining the health number of one, to the other. Effectively calling them one organic machine.
You may not view it that way. And I will fight for your right to disagree with me.
"Con also miscategorized the rights differences brought yup between a man and a woman and how they use their body."
How is that? I agreed that both men and women have a right to defend themselves against malicious attacks. Nowhere do I believe that equal justice is applied in the situation the woman finds herself in (pregnant). The natural home of the unborn is in the womb. You would not exist if that home were denied you. Do you think that the discomfort for nine months the woman experiences justifies an even greater response of killing the unborn?
"Finally, credibility is substantially eroded when Nazi's are brought in for comparative purposes. It just undermines the entire argument from Con."
The Nazi point is an extreme example that drives home the issue of the injustice that is taking place here. The model shows that a group of human beings are being discriminated against and dehumanized, just like the Nazis discriminated against and dehumanized Jews. It does not undermine my entire argument. Six million-plus Jews killed because people became oblivious to the injustice taking place or failed to speak up against it in that society. They were slowly convinced that the Jew, the gypsy, the Slav, the deformed, and many others were not of the same quality of humanness that the German was. 1.6 billion unborns since Roe v Wade have been killed to date, and people are oblivious to the carnage. The numbers spiked during the sexual revolution and with Roe V Wade. The value of human life was cheapened. Thus, the topic is very relevant since we are doing the same thing with the unborn that the Nazis did to the Jewish people. We are killing groups of human beings in numbers never before experienced in modern human history. Abortion and pro-choice advocacy has lead to the greatest genocide to date in modern history.
"Pro brought up some valid fallacy issues with Con's arguments."
He listed fallacies. He never proved the case.
"Con attempted to change the definition of the woman to woman and unborn in stats framing. This for me was an area of no return. Con had just argued about the independent personhood of a fetus and then argues that a woman and fetus are one, for the pure purposes of trying to misapply statistics on the acquisition of abortion to woman health, at which point it could be argued there was an adoption of the Violinist theory."
How did I change the definition of the woman to the woman and unborn and what does that mean?
I NEVER argued that the woman and the unborn are one. I objected to Pros statements on how the unborn was part of the woman's body. The unborn is its own separate entity.
What I tried to show was that the unborn are killed in far greater numbers than women who die during childbirth.
As I pointed out, the violinist scenario was not equal to the unborn scenario. The violinist is a total STRANGER. The unborn shares the same DNA with the woman and is her biological son or daughter. Words like fetus and zygote are words that "infrahumanize" the unborn. Although they describe different stages of development of the human being they have come to be seen in a negative connotation. That is to say, they make the unborn appear less than it is, a fully alive human being. While perhaps acknowledging it is a human being people then proceed to treat it as a less equal human being.
"Pro did a better job of staying focused on the issue at hand and repeatedly tried to bring the conversation back to that point. It is something that I appreciate."
The issue at hand was whether abortion SHOULD be legal. That is not only a legal issue but a moral issue. If not all human beings are being treated equally under the law how is that just or moral? Pro could not show why treating unborn human beings equally was just. He could not show how abortion was a just law. He gave the woman rights that no other human being should have, the ability to chose whether other INNOCENT human beings live or die.
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>Reported Vote: Nevets // Mod action: Removed
>Points Awarded: 0:1; 1 point to Con.
>Reason for Decision: See Comments Tab.
>Reason for Mod Action: Removed by request of voter.
>General feedback on the vote:
To cast a sufficient vote in the choose winner system, a voter must explicitly, and in the text of their RFD, perform the following tasks:
(1) survey the main arguments and counter arguments presented in the debate,
(2) weigh those arguments against each other (or explain why certain arguments need not be weighed based on what transpired within the debate itself), and
(3) explain how, through the process of weighing, they arrived at their voting decision with regard to assigning argument points. Weighing entails analyzing how the relative strength of one argument or set of arguments outweighed (that is, out-impacted) and/or precluded another argument or set of arguments. Weighing requires analyzing and situating arguments and counterarguments within the context of the debate as a whole.
The voter acted in such a way to suggest they did not give fair weighting to the debate content.
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Nevets
7 hours ago
Criterion Pro Tie Con Points
Winner ✗ ✗ ✔ 1 point
Reason:
Have read Pros definitions, womens health, human rights, morality and law, defense, morality and law, defense, people seeds, the violinist, r1 human rights, r1, womens health, R3 Human rights, Judith Jarvis Thomson, conclusion, womens health, human rights, mortality and law, people seeds, violinist argument, grammar and spelling, final word.
Its a great article. But there is something crucially missing. The Pro himherself fails to include the central argument. Which is the baby.
Where-as Con gets right to the Central argument with his very first statement 1) What is the unborn?
And that "is" the central argument.
The "unborn" should have had a place in pros black headlines along with womens health and human rights and violinists.
Instead he/she talked a lot about Nazis ecetera. Completely failed to give any importance to the central point in his/her own argument.
Con did.
There is no need to apologize for voting against me. I have no problem with that so long as it is based on the debate. Whiteflame has voted against me in the past, and his vote could not be legitimately challenged. It was a solid vote highlighting the strengths and weaknesses of each debater, and my case was weaker.
I understand the abortion issue can be emotionally charged, and I feel for your loved one. I have been on the other side of that and have seen a young lady make the difficult choice to have an abortion. Afterwards, she completed college, has a family, and is financially stable. I also have another friend with a promising future who became pregnant and dropped out of college. She and her daughter live with her mother - or at least she did last I spoke with her. Both of these ladies made a choice regarding their future and have very different lives because of it. Don't get me wrong, both chose their own path and I'm sure neither would be willing to give up their current life to undo that decision. I support the choice each made.
As for responsibility (duty and obligation) and the pill (contraceptives) - this was not left unaddressed in this debate.
Apologies i voted against you. I did so because i felt your opponent considered the most important thing of all, the baby. Having had a relationship with a woman that had a nervous breakdown after she miscarried at an early stage, i know abortion is not an easy thing for most women to consider.
There are things called "pill" and responsibility which should be encouraged before abortion.
I feel Con was more sympathetic to this side of the argument
What is the unborn? Does it matter what we do with the unborn? Personhood? The Dehumanizing of the Unborn.
I apologise for agreeing with your opponent and costing you points.
Ok thank you.
You misunderstand me. I'm not disrespecting your vote. I'm not attacking you. I'm explaining what is missing from your analysis, and how you could go about fixing it. It's called constructive feedback, and it's very distinct from a personal attack. It's your choice if you decide to ignore me, but I'd rather that your vote was counted. At this rate, it won't be.
Can you please remove my vote. I volunteer it's removal, as it appears there is a debating process to go through before votes will be accepted. And i suspect that this debate will just continue, until they get the vote they want. Thank you
That is fine. I cast a vote. You dont respect it. You attack the voter. As you wish.
There's a difference between stating what points were made in the debate and actually analyzing them. The latter is what a voter is expected to do. You've got some analysis in that RFD, but it focuses entirely on what's missing in Pro's argument, which is a problem. You have to analyze the points he made, not just the points he didn't. Listing them off isn't analysis, hence this vote will likely be removed as well.
You are not expected to debate in the vote (ie. present your own arguments), but weigh the arguments actually presented against one another.
FWIW, Pro did not "talk a lot about Nazis" - that was Con. 😅
Thanks. Have tried to vote a second time in good faith. But if this fails i will not try a 3rd time. I am not looking to have a debate with Pro over the votes.
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>Reported Vote: [Nevets] // Mod action: [Removed]
>Points Awarded: 1 point to Con
>Reason for Decision: I feel Con had the better moral argument to begin with, and did nothing but strengthen that argument, whilst Pros argument did not quite make the same impact.
Source wise, they both used reputable valid sources.
And grammar wise Cons writine was easier on the eye.
Conduct wise they appeared to both conduct themselves immaculately
>Reason for Mod Action: Pursuant to the Voting Policy located in the Terms of Service, point allocations must include the following: The voter must (1) survey the main arguments and counterarguments in the debate, (2) weigh those arguments and counterarguments against each other, and (3) explain, based on the weighing process, how they reached their decision.
Unfortunately, while I am thrilled that debates are receiving input, the voter must adhere to these rules. Ergo, I must remove it. Apologies for any inconvenience. You will be allowed to re-vote provided that it matches the Voting Policy which I will include for your convenience: https://info.debateart.com/terms-of-service/voting-policy.
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Thanks for voting everyone.
Even though it didn't go my way, I thank you for reading it over. I'll console myself with your determination of the RFD being flawed. 👍
Rabbit hole all you wish, or don't. My vote, particularly the second, was entirely based on voting protocol from the policy:
"Weighing entails analyzing how the relative strength of one argument or set of arguments outweighed (that is, out-impacted) and/or precluded another argument or set of arguments. Weighing requires analyzing and situating arguments and counterarguments within the context of the debate as a whole." I submit, and, in fact, the second in the list of voting policies deal with my voting result: in a critical features of your argument, [personhood, and consent] you had opinion followed by no sourcing. I awarded where argument included sourcing. You were not awarded points on each of the issues I referenced in voting. Such as not sourcing your opinion that consent means having a body "used," when the matter of a symbiotic relationship, woman and fetus, have no conscious decision of having anything taken or given.
I'm not going to run down the rabbit trails with you and debate what has already been provided over a two month period. All I ask is that you base your decisions on what has actually been written I never claimed 'the unborn has no right to life". I never claimed personhood from conception - I have allowed it for the sake of argument. Also, I barely mentioned rape in this debate. It seems you've misinterpreted "consent" to be in relation to sex rather than as intended which is consent to have a persons body used in a non sexual way, as in, life support.
I've said my piece- I'll leave it to the moderators.
Thanks for voting again!
Regarding Fauxlaw.
We were all new to the standard once. I stand by my assessment of the first vote as falling short (while showing no signs of malice), but make no assessment of the second. The advice I gave, was not to demean or insult, it is the same in gist to advice I have given dozens of times. It was intended solely as a precaution due to the new vote being challenged; a vote to which I firmly withhold judgement and have already passed moderation duties on to others to handle.
Fauxlaw seems like a genuinely positive contributor. I humbly apologize for any harm I have unwittingly inflicted with my earlier advice.
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>Reported Vote: fauxlaw // Mod action: [Not Removed]
>Points Awarded: 1 point to Con
>Reason for Decision:
Women's Health: Pro argues, with citation, “Of all abortions, an estimated 55% are safe (i.e., done using a recommended method and by an appropriately trained provider)..." This is not a convincing percentage to argue that abortion is "safe" since it acknowledges that there are degrees of safeness. Con argues, with citation, ""CDC...confirmed that there were more than 3,400 pregnancy-related deaths over a five-year period in the United States," and that, "The estimated abortion deaths, same time period --> 3,156,876 - 5,335,59" The two citations indicate that there are a thousand-fold more abortions than pregnancy-related deaths, which suggests that "women's health" is, at best, a relative term, along with "safeness" and not a credible leading argument for abortion.
Person: Con is consistent in the definition of what constitutes "person" as being human, whereas Pro vacillates in that definition.
Rights: Con argues that the unborn, being acknowledged as "persons" and humans, have rights afforded to human. Pro, due to the above vacillation, cannot argue from form both sides of the table and maintain credibility. Example: Pro argues, as a definition, that "Human rights are rights inherent to all human beings, regardless of race, sex, nationality, ethnicity, language, religion, or any other status." It's the "any other status" that hangs all other Pro claims that the right to life belongs only to the woman, and not the fetus, since "Every person has a moral right to control their own body," when Pro also argues, "Freedom, justice, and peace rests on fundamental human rights such as ‘freedom from slavery, freedom from torture, equality, and the right to life." Pro has not successfully argued that a human is not human at conception, even though arguing that a "person" is not established at conception, hanging "person" on a nebulous hook of "consciousness." Pro has not demonstrated by evidence that a fetus has no consciousness, and must do that to deny a fetus the right that freedom and justice demand.
S.L.E.D. depends on a value being "taken" from the pregnant woman by the fetus, that value being nutrients, even if, in the transfer of nutrients, the woman's body is deprived of them to the degree they are "taken" by the fetus. What in the process specifically requires that "give" is not at least an equal to "take" in that the "give" is not a conscious act by the woman any more than "take" is a conscious act of the fetus? After all, Pro argues that consciousness is not a feature endowed to the fetus.
>Reason for Mod Action: While I consider the RFD flawed, there is nothing that explicitly violates the Voting Policy guidelines.
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A double miss. Re: human speciality, my argument did not point to cells or DNA. If you will read my argument [goes both ways, bud] I questioned your parenthetic clause, by asking for THAT source.
The nature of either "multiply and replenish the earth," or "There is grandeur in this view of life..." is that pregnancy, whether caused by consent, or not, establishes a symbiotic relationship but neither woman nor fetus can claim right over the other. In fact, the fetus is the ultimate innocent in the whole affair. As you cannot decide whether you accept personhood from conception [you claim both sides of that argument, against it in round 2, and for it in round 4], I say your arguments negate themselves, and Con's consistent argument prevails. You did no show argument supported by sourcing that demonstrates which condition, sex by force or consent, is the greater condition of pregnancy. As long as you are concerned about frequency of abortion before/after Roe and as relevant regarding abortion vs. restrictive laws, you must cite your sources that consent is a viable argument. Your sourcing is all about the numbers of abortion, but not for consent/no consent. You speak to the matter of consent in round 1 under "human rights," but have no sourcing. You address it again in round 45, but again, do not cite sources. As your argument is simply that the woman must always be granted legal right of preference, it is flawed on that basis.