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@Polytheist-Witch
Most of these late term abortions are black babies, so you won't see a tear from the racist left.
1. Citizenship shall not be given until birth, legal protection is to be given from conception. If a woman did not know she was pregnant and drank, she would not be in violation of the law.
2. My point is that sperm and eggs are not beings. None of what you said changes my point.
Argue all you want this boils down to a woman walking into an office, saying I just can't be a mom two days before birth, not wanting to give the kid away and letting someone pull the head out enough to kill the child. It's not the same as a regular abortion and saying it is makes you an evil prick. Funny in other conversations the evil pricks would say their is no evil or morality. So there you go. It's like arguing with a pedophile that a three year old wasn't asking for it. They can't see they are evil.
Again if her health is at risk, birth will be risky. Killing the baby doesn't have anything to do with that. A c section would.
Keep lying about me and what is being discussed. Evil prick.
Known as the Reproductive Health Act, the measure replaces a 1970 state abortion law that was passed three years before Roe legalized abortion nationwide. It codifies many abortion rights laid out in Roe and other court rulings, including a provision permitting late-term abortions when a woman’s health is endangered. The previous law, which was in conflict with Roe and other subsequent abortion rulings, only permitted abortions after 24 weeks of pregnancy if a woman’s life was at risk. (1)
Abortion, which states that an abortion may be performed by a licensed, certified, or authorized practitioner within 24 weeks from the commencement of pregnancy, or there is an absence of fetal viability, or at any time when necessary to protect a patient's life or health.
It seems that the late-term abortion can only be used when the women in question is in danger. I don't know if this is the law that you are referring to, but if you ask me, it seems more justifiable than what you just described.
The new law, signed by Governor Andrew Cuomo on Tuesday, safeguards rights laid out in Roe v. Wade and other court rulings, including a provision permitting late-term abortions when a woman's health is endangered, The Associated Press reports. The state's previous law, which had been on the books for nearly 50 years, only permitted abortions after 24 weeks of pregnancy if a woman's life was at risk.
Consider for example a risk to life: using your obtusely poor logic, abortion is already “on demand”, because continuation of any pregnancy at any time broadly introduces some “risk to life” of “life is in danger”