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Peter Singer on post birth abortions : In his own words
Salon ^ | June 25th, 2001 | Viktor Frolke

Posted on 10/03/2009 5:35:30 AM PDT by Halfmanhalfamazing

Question from the bottom of page 2: Most proponents of the right to die would agree with your ideas about euthanasia. But you lose them when you suggest that it's OK to kill a baby before it's 28 days old, because until that time, it is not self-aware and "doesn't have the same right to life as others."

Answer: I wrote that in 1995. I have changed my position. Now I believe you should look at every individual case.

(Excerpt) Read more at dir.salon.com ...


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Government; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: abortion; bioethics; murder; petersinger; postbirthabortion; radicalleft
Pay close attention. He didn't change his mind.

All he's done here is changed his wording to be more careful; from "it's ok to abort all babies up to 28 days old" to "it's ok to abort some babies up to 28 days old".

1 posted on 10/03/2009 5:35:30 AM PDT by Halfmanhalfamazing
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To: Halfmanhalfamazing
I may just keep this tagline until the killing is stopped and America's most important founding principles are once again respected and adhered to.

"We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. — That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men..."

2 posted on 10/03/2009 5:41:12 AM PDT by EternalVigilance (If you're not a Reagan Personhood ProLifer, you're a holocaust enabler, either actively or passively)
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To: Halfmanhalfamazing

Pardon my stupidity....

Who is Peter Singer? A czar?


3 posted on 10/03/2009 5:50:47 AM PDT by BelleAl
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To: Halfmanhalfamazing

Back in ‘87 they claimed that babies’ brain waves started at about 32 weeks. My boy was born at 25.5 weeks and by 28 weeks, his little eyebrows would lift as he tried to open his eyes, whenever I came in and spoke to him (the NICU lights were very bright)


4 posted on 10/03/2009 6:01:26 AM PDT by Shimmer1 (Don 't argue with an idiot; people watching may not be able to tell the difference.)
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To: Halfmanhalfamazing

Peter Singer claims that he’s “used” to being compared to Nazis but the fact is, he would have fit right in with the euthanistic philosophy that permeated Nazi Germany.

Hell, he would probably have been a very effective administrator for der Fuehrer.


5 posted on 10/03/2009 6:08:13 AM PDT by mkjessup ("der 0bumher vants ALL der children to know he is counting on their *loyalty* !!")
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To: BelleAl
Peter Singer is an Animal Liberationist, Human-Animal Sex advocate, abortion-infanticide-euthanasia-and-suicide enthusiast, prolific writer-lecturer-promoter, and professor of Bioethics at Princeton.
6 posted on 10/03/2009 6:23:51 AM PDT by Mrs. Don-o (Whisper sweet words of epistemology in your ear and speak of the pompitous of love. SteveMillerBand)
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To: Mrs. Don-o
an Animal Liberationist, Human-Animal Sex advocate, abortion-infanticide-euthanasia-and-suicide enthusiast, prolific writer-lecturer-promoter, and professor of Bioethics at Princeton.

Oh, you mean he's the next Democrat Presidential nominee in 2016?

7 posted on 10/03/2009 6:28:57 AM PDT by theDentist (fybo; qwerty ergo typo : i type, therefore i misspelll)
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To: Halfmanhalfamazing
Now I believe you should look at every individual case.

Then he still believes it's OK.

8 posted on 10/03/2009 6:31:09 AM PDT by Tribune7 (I am Joe Wilson!)
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To: Halfmanhalfamazing

So, like, if I look at the individual case named Peter Singer, and I decide he doesn’t have a sufficient degree of self-awareness (in my subjective judgment), then I have the right to kill him, right?


9 posted on 10/03/2009 6:34:26 AM PDT by Stosh
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To: Halfmanhalfamazing
I've got to agree with Peter Singer (conditionally). If it's okay to abort a baby just before birth, it's also okay to abort one just after birth. A human organism shortly before birth is identical to one shortly after birth in nearly all respects. There's no magical soul-implantation that occurs at parturition.

The left is terrified of this idea. They cannot admit there's no magical soul-implantation at birth, because it will force people to consider when personhood really does begin. A few, like Singer, will decide it comes after birth. The vast majority will decide it occurs before birth.

10 posted on 10/03/2009 6:44:58 AM PDT by Caesar Soze
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To: Mrs. Don-o
Reading his biography, I find it amazing that his parents were Viennese Jews who escaped the holocaust, and yet he insists on perpetuating another one against the unborn.

What is it about these Jewish Intellectuals? Their behavior is becoming proof that the holocaust might have been partially self-inflicted! Too many of them went along with it!

And now, the best that Jewry has to offer, the Israelis, are being persecuted by our own pResident for being willing to defend themselves.

11 posted on 10/03/2009 6:50:18 AM PDT by Redleg Duke ("Don't fire unless fired upon, but it they mean to have a war, let it begin here." J Parker, 1775)
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To: Caesar Soze
I have to respectfully take issue with you on your comment about "Magical soul-implantation".

I believe the soul is assigned by God when conception takes place. I do not believe that occurs after the birth takes place.

Liberals have to be in control at all times. They cannot truly "Let Go and Let God".

12 posted on 10/03/2009 6:53:11 AM PDT by Redleg Duke ("Don't fire unless fired upon, but it they mean to have a war, let it begin here." J Parker, 1775)
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To: theDentist
Oh, you mean he's the next Democrat Presidential nominee in 2016?

Oh no, not at all. As you can see from the interview, he's just a modest, humble, down-home, aw-shucks kind o' guy. He'd never even think of running for political office, of being in the spotlight. He can't understand why people make so much out of his ideas. He's just your average joe who's smarter than the rest of us, who thinks carefully about all this stuff, is peaceful, minds his own business. The rest of us are stoooooooopid, extremists, too dumb to see how calm and careful and nuanced he is. He'd never stoop to becoming a political advocate of this stuff. That's beneath him. He's urbane, above the fray, thoughtful.

He thinks he's doing a far more important Mission by providing the careful, sophisticated, urbane, elegant argumentation for baby-killing and bestiality.

See, he doesn't advocate bestiality and he'd never do it himself.

He just provide Princeton-level cover for the beastie-boys.

You may think I'm just poking fun. I'm deadly serious. Unless we understand how he understands himself and how his fellow liberal and Ivy-League wannabee, NYTimes reading "sophisticates" of our society understand him and understand themselves, we're fighting with one arm tied behind our backs.

We should not demonize him. His ideas are indeed demonic, but we have to understand that he sees himself and a lot of people see him as the urbane, sophisticated, cool, calm, collected, wise guy. Hate the sin but respect the sinner is important here. Demonize his ideas but be careful not to portray him as a fool or demon. I'm not saying you, theDentist did that. You were just trying to make a point by making a joke and that's fine.

But I am saying that some of the people who protest him do fall into the trap of focusing too much on him as a person.

13 posted on 10/03/2009 6:54:34 AM PDT by Houghton M.
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To: Mrs. Don-o

A Princeton man? The Ivy Leagues are full of something these days, and it doesn’t have a good smell.


14 posted on 10/03/2009 6:56:00 AM PDT by pepperdog (As Israel goes, so goes America!)
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To: Halfmanhalfamazing
All he's done here is changed his wording to be more careful; from “it's ok to abort all babies up to 28 days old” to “it's ok to abort some babies up to 28 days old”.

Any baby that signs a notarized and witnessed statement saying he/she does not want to be aborted should have his/her wishes respected. Any baby that does not bother with the paperwork probably wants to die anyway.

Sick (pick the word you think fits best here).

15 posted on 10/03/2009 6:56:33 AM PDT by Cheburashka (Stephen Decatur: you want barrels of gunpowder as tribute, you must expect cannonballs with it.)
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To: Redleg Duke

I think the point is that those who find a way to justify abortion to themselves do it based on an idea that an unborn baby is not really human because of ... x,y,z. In some cases, they believe it is not really human because it hasn’t been given a soul until after birth... maybe when it takes it first breath or something (to justify partial birth abortion).

But I have to agree with that previous poster. If there is nothing different between a baby just before it is born and just after it is born, then why do we draw the line at “birth.” This is a great way to go with the debate, really. Start really challenging the widely held beliefs about abortion.


16 posted on 10/03/2009 7:02:38 AM PDT by ican'tbelieveit (Join FreeRepublic's Folding@Home team (Team# 36120), KW:Folding)
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To: Houghton M.; theDentist
He thinks he's doing a far more important Mission by providing the careful, sophisticated, urbane, elegant argumentation for baby-killing and bestiality.

From my FR archives in 2000, I found this mention of Singer:
... I wouldn't mind laying to rest the onslaught of semantics by which Peter Singer, PETA and others might consider my dog a person but not the handicapped with whom I've worked or known throughout my life. I don't know, of course, if that's the direction you're headed but I'm certainly curious to know what you mean.
--another poster

PETA, wow, that didn't even go through my mind, though, now that you mention it, my vegetarian cousin who 'won't eat anything with a face' (though she'll eat a McDonald's fish sandwich in a pinch--I guess its square brown form is sufficiently unfishlike) seems to think her dog is a person. It's true that animals have varying degrees of consciousness, of experiencing and expressing emotion. For this reason one shouldn't be cruel to them. It doesn't mean we shouldn't eat them. It just means we shouldn't act like a cat before doing so.

No, I'm referring to the fact that personhood, in terms of a unique personality and self-awareness, is an aspect of being human that develops somewhere between conception and the first few years of life. It's inherent in our nature but, like sexual maturity, is something that develops in its own due course. It's something that can be altered or destroyed by drugs or disease (both genetic and otherwise); however, it's not something upon which stands or falls one's right to life.

This distinction is misused by those who call for pulling the plug on brain-dead adults and then reason that the lack of adult-like brain activity in a fetus is sufficient reason for pulling its plug. They reason superficially. The reason pulling the plug on the brain-dead is seen by many as acceptable is because it's virtually certain that the brain-dead will never again regain consciousness. However, in the case of the fetus, it's virtually certain that it will become conscious, become aware, develop a personality, and be able to enter into relationships with other people. It's a natural consequence of development. But its humanity underlies and precedes its personhood. Its right to life is based on its being human, not just being a person. This is why people want to shift the focus to 'person', such as when they ask, "Just when does a fetus become a person with Constitutional rights?" They've begged the question. They play off the qualitative aspect of defining a 'person' in order to ignore the absolute fact of life. This qualitative game has always been used by people in power to define others out of existence. Such a distinction should be acknowledged for the purpose of showing up their 'quality of life' game for what it is--a means of having things their way regardless of the consequences for others.

Such a distinction is at the heart of the old moral view vs utilitarian view of capital punishment. Moral: Someone may forfeit his life because he broke contract with the rest of human society. Utilitarian: Capital punishment is just a means of ridding society of undesirable elements or of serving as a deterrent to undesirable behavior. The unborn fetus has not even had a chance to enter into society. The quality of life crowd permit abortion as a means of a woman ridding herself of an undesirable element in her life.

On the other hand, even those who are flat-out materialists recognize that there could be persons who are not human. There is a hope among many that there exist, somewhere out there in the universe, other intelligent beings which would have the status of being persons or people. Others, whose worldview is not so limited, also acknowledge this possibility but also recognize that God is a person, though not a human being, except as he lived as Jesus. The created spiritual beings known as messengers or guardians or--for those who have gone over to the other side--as demons, are persons, though not human beings.

For some strange reason, the thought of someone not human from the vicinity of Betelgeuse delights the first group whereas the thought of someone not human whose being transcends nature disgusts/angers/frightens them. I suppose that in the first instance they could think, "Well, if necessary, it's them or us". But in the second, there's nothing they can do. Someone said that man's greatest fear was being alone in the universe. I don't think so. I think man's greatest fear is that he's not alone, that there's someone else's will he's expected to live up to, that he doesn't want to do so, and is both frightened and pissed off that he's going to be held responsible for it. Isn't that remarkably like "Hey, who the hell do you think you are, trying to impose your morality on me by telling me I can't have an abor--uh... a right to choose!" while imposing something far more severe than morality on those who literally depend on them for life?

17 posted on 10/03/2009 7:15:41 AM PDT by aruanan
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To: Tribune7

I think he’s narrowing it down to just those babies that “need killin’”


18 posted on 10/03/2009 8:12:39 AM PDT by tiki (True Christians will not deliberately slander or misrepresent others or their beliefs)
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