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To: Mark Bahner
Explained at length in post #308.
346 posted on 02/06/2003 5:38:32 AM PST by MrLeRoy ("That government is best which governs least.")
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To: MrLeRoy
"Explained at length in post #308."

One paragraph...filled with logical inconsistencies.

You say only humans have the "potential" for "reasoning free-willed individuality."

And you later agreed that anencephalic fetuses have no right to be born. (Presumably because they have no potential for "reasoning free-willed individuality.")

But there are PLENTY of animals (chimps, parakeets, dogs, dolphins) that are far more "reasoning free-willed individuals," than various human beings who have extremely damaged brains.

So your criteria for what deserves the "right to life" is essentially "whatever Mr. LeRoy says."

In contrast, *my* suggested guidelines are far more consistent (although they are "specie-ist"):

1) Nothing without any brain has a right to life,

2) Entities that have a human brain, no matter how poorly functioning, have a right to life. HOWEVER,

3) Those entities also have a "right to die." And,

4) If those entities are in another entity's body, the host entity also has rights. (Including the right to abort the entity, if that entity was conceived through involuntary sexual intercourse.) Finally,

5) In most cases, the woman who is the host entity is likely to be the best judge of what is best for the entity inside her.

Summary: I still don't see the point in having the government involved in protecting something that has the POTENTIAL to have a brain. When that something actually HAS a brain, then I can at least see the potential wisdom of having the government involved.
347 posted on 02/06/2003 12:49:24 PM PST by Mark Bahner
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