Instigator / Pro
15
1500
rating
1
debates
0.0%
won
Topic
#5487

Even if abortion is legal, it should always be allowed for doctors to refuse.

Status
Finished

The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.

Winner & statistics
Better arguments
6
12
Better sources
4
8
Better legibility
4
4
Better conduct
1
4

After 4 votes and with 13 points ahead, the winner is...

Barney
Parameters
Publication date
Last updated date
Type
Standard
Number of rounds
4
Time for argument
Two days
Max argument characters
10,000
Voting period
One week
Point system
Multiple criterions
Voting system
Open
Contender / Con
28
1815
rating
53
debates
100.0%
won
Description

No information

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@Barney

I didn't know any of that. Thanks for the trivia, interesting stuff.

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@whiteflame

Thanks for the vote.

Fun bit of trivia, Alien 3 was actually Alien 2.

The studio began pre-production on Alien 2, then James Cameron became a big deal. Anything with his name on it that they could find got the green light (some were never finished, like 1994's Spider-Man... Actually, apparently that one was not finished because his name was on it, and that got the rights to the character disputed). It turned out he had written a spec script for Aliens, so Alien 2 was canceled in favor of it.

When the time came to make a sequel to Aliens, there were any number of fantastic scripts out there (William Gibson's being my favorite). But the studio realized they could save a tiny bit of money by using a script they had already purchased... Thus Alien 2 was retrofitted into Alien 3, with all changes from Aliens having to be done away with in the first minute or two of the movie.

The shittiness of what the studio did was so bad that Michael Biehn (Hicks) successfully sued to keep his likeness out of the finished product. That Hicks survived is largely considered canon, and he was nearly in Alien 5 by Neill Blomkamp; but Ridley Scott shat his pants and gave the studio Alien Covenant in exchange for them not making Alien 5.

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@TheUnderdog
@Savant
@itsnotago

Thanks for voting,

May you never be forced to carry a Xenomorph to term!

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@lSang5

It was good facing you, and I hope you see more of your debates in future. If you'd ever like assistance with the setup for a debate, please don't hesitate to ask.

Have you seen The Good Place? The Trolly Problem episode ends with the perfect rebuttal on this topic. When a doctor is faced with being forced to murder one person to harvest organs for five (five who he ran over with the trolly earlier in the episode), he puts his foot down and refused no matter the consequences for him. As a doctor he took the Hippocratic Oath, and killing the one would be a harm even if it resulted in the net benefit of more people living.

That and morals are easy when there's no dilemma, if we back down from them every time sticking to them is the harder path, it proves the weakness of our convictions. While maybe efforts should be taken to force a doctor under rare circumstances, the doctor should not give in if being forced.

Well that was a quick debate

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@gugigor

There are a few angles Con can take on this, but it's going to require more than just arguing semantics, which is what a lot of these debates have become. Despite the "always" in the resolution, it's going to be hard to trap Pro completely. Outargue, sure, but that requires more effort than a semantic trap.

If Pro is on the level of Oromagi at least, I could imagine Barney losing for the first time.

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@Barney

> as a lawyer I know pointed out, if someone adds value to a business, they are a fixture of that business and aren’t allowed to ever quit

That does sound like a lawyer, lol

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@Savant

> Airborne combat medics are movable between locations.

Only with great effort, but add the weight of an extra couple degrees (with frames we’re talking about as much as two pounds!) and I’m not sure it’d be possible without assistance of a crane.

Plus, as a lawyer I know pointed out, if someone adds value to a business, they are a fixture of that business and aren’t allowed to ever quit; and the 13th amendment doesn’t apply because the involuntary servitude is being forced…
(I didn’t say it’s a lawyer I respect; rather he’s one I’m going to crush)

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@Savant

->If being a doctor implies consent to performing an abortion, and consent can be revoked, then the doctor could revoke that consent when an abortion is requested.

Good point, and this is my position; that doctors shouldn't be forced to do abortions (but should be allowed too if they are pro choice).

I can tell that if the Overton window shifts on this issue from, "Should a pro-choice doctor be allowed to act on their beliefs and get an abortion?" to, "Should a pro-life doctor be allowed to act on their beliefs and refuse to perform an abortion when asked to by a woman who (obviously) is pro choice?" and a bunch of ARFs (Abortion Receiving Females) came out as republican, then there would be the initial right wing outrage of, "How dare they try and turn our party into the left on this issue", but then as soon as the ARFs come out and say that pro life doctors shouldn't be forced to perform abortions (kindof like when Dave Rubin said religious cake makers shouldn't be forced to make a gay cake), then just as the right accepted Dave Rubin being homosexual once he leaned into a right wing talking point rather than call himself a conservative, the right would be pro ARF (aka pro choice) (but only for the right wing ARFs that lean into right wing views on abortions). It would make conservatives more electable while giving the left a win on the issue of abortion.

Once the right lets the ARFs in as they did with the homosexuals, they can no longer claim they want Christain values in this country. But hey; nothing says, "Owning the libs" by adopting their policies from 5 years ago.

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@TheUnderdog

No, I mean before the abortion even starts. If being a doctor implies consent to performing an abortion, and consent can be revoked, then the doctor could revoke that consent when an abortion is requested.

And if people aren't allowed to do only half of something because it's dangerous, then this has bad implications for abortion proponents. After all, an abortion is cutting a pregnancy short halfway through.

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@Savant

->Sure, but then the doctor could also revoke consent to performing the operation (or even being a doctor at all).

You aren't legally required to be a doctor. But what doctor performs half of an abortion? If they are pro-choice, then they do the full abortion. If they are pro-life, then they don't do it at all.

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@TheUnderdog

Sure, but then the doctor could also revoke consent to performing the operation (or even being a doctor at all).

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@Savant

->Most abortion advocates would say that consent can be revoked at any time.

For certain things, EVERYONE says that (like sex; consent can be revoked at any time). If the woman wants the abortion to stop, then she is allowed to have it stop. Pro choices agree with this because "her body, her choice" and pro-lifers agree with this because they view abortion as murder.

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@TheUnderdog

Most abortion advocates would say that consent can be revoked at any time.

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@Savant

To play Devils Advocate, if they don't want to do that, then they just don't become a doctor. Like nobody is saying you should be forced to fix my sink if it breaks, but if you are unwilling to fix my sink, then don't expect me to pay you for fixing my sink. If fixing your sink somehow violates your religious or moral beliefs, then don't work for a plumbing company. Like, I'm vegan; I believe eating animals is unjustified in modern society. If I work at a restaurant and someone wants to have a chicken sandwich, then I have to serve them a chicken sandwich even if what they are doing I believe is an unjustified homicide. But if you are a vegan, then you wouldn't want to work at a farm where they are killing animals.

It seems to be more pragmatic to just have the abortion done by a pro choice doctor and let the pro-lifer do some other work; maybe prescribe someone medicine while the abortion is being done.

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@Barney

Airborne combat medics are movable between locations.

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@Best.Korea

->most big hospitals dont approve much of the doctors who refuse to do the work.

There is other work for anti abortion doctors to do.

I noticed how the Overton window shifted on abortion. It's no longer, "Should a pro-choice doctor be allowed to perform an abortion on a consenting woman?", it's, "Should a pro-life doctor be allowed to refuse to perform an abortion on a consenting woman?" This question implies a pro-choice doctor is allowed to do it, which if this were the national goalpost, then abortion would be legal in all 50 states if a pro-choice woman is getting an abortion by a pro-choice doctor, not that abortion isn't victimless due to the unborn child dying as a result. Although, unlike the former goalposts, religious reasons can be used as a cop-out since it only affects the pro-life doctor.

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@Savant

I'm not sure if that can be applied to Doctors, since chattel is movable between locations... Doctors seem more like real property, which is to say buildings.

Forcing unwilling doctors into servitude as chattel for another, is by definition making them a slave.

A funny stupid argument entered my head, so I suddenly can't resist!
👾

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@TheUnderdog

I guess, but most big hospitals dont approve much of the doctors who refuse to do the work.

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@Best.Korea

The rape exception at least is backed by 85% or so of Americans. It will be easy to find a doctor who would abort.

But this debate would mostly be about the meaning of the word "allowed".

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@TheUnderdog

Same exceptions for abortion being illegal, like rape, mother's life being endangered by fetus and fetus dying anyway.

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@Barney

Like what?

I can think of a couple exceptions.

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@lSang5

I believe an overwhelming majority of people, even among pro choice people, are fine with a doctor refusing to perform an abortion. The woman can get it done somewhere else, usually in the same building. There are 10 doctors there; if 6 of them are pro choice (60% of Americans are pro choice), then one of the pro choice doctors can perform the abortion.