• Zaktor
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    1 year ago

    Do women have bodily autonomy? No. My mom should not be able to go and hurt herself too the point of being hospitalized/instatutionalized.

    This is an absurd dodge. Do women, in full possession of their faculties and well informed about their options, have bodily autonomy? Accepting that this case may not have involved well-informed medical decisions.

    As long as the health of everyone involved is taken into consideration that is all i care about. The tricky question is when is the fetus considered a person?

    This is a long way to say “no”. Do you support forced organ donation? You don’t have an answer for when fetuses are people, but people certainly are people.

    The “dont touch my butt” statement is a joke. You/they live their lives how they want. Just don’t infringe upon my life and my rights aka “dont touch my butt”.

    So then what is your “within reason” for LGBTQ+ rights then? Because you put your joke about sexual assault is in the same place you put your sincere belief about abortion. And what’s the actual joke, because “it’s just a joke” requires there to be humor involved. Explain the joke to me.

    • Dashi@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      It wasn’t a dodge it got my point across. “Do women, in full possession of their faculties and well informed about their options, have bodily autonomy?”

      Yes they do.

      You will have to excuse me, i do not understand your meaning behind “forced organ donation” in this context, could you explain that?

      I believe i already started my within reason for lgbtq+ rights. I support them until they infringe upon my rights. The same as how i support other religions/races/genders/little people i support their causes as long as they don’t infringe upon my rights.

      As for explain the joke, no, I’m not going to. You may not find it humerous and maybe it’s just not a great translation to text.

      You may believe i don’t support these causes, and that is your right, i do believe i support them and agree with them within reason and that is my right.

      • Zaktor
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        1 year ago

        It wasn’t a dodge it got my point across. “Do women, in full possession of their faculties and well informed about their options, have bodily autonomy?”

        Then it shouldn’t matter how far along the pregnancy is, because any rule where you say “you can’t remove this from your body in the safest way possible” is infringing on that.

        You will have to excuse me, i do not understand your meaning behind “forced organ donation” in this context, could you explain that?

        If someone needs a kidney and you are match for them, would you support the government forcing you to donate one of yours?

        • Dashi@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          “you can’t remove this from your body in the safest way possible” is infringing on that.

          Ahh so in my opinion, that is the crux of our different stances. I have the belief that everyone has their rights until it infringes upon my rights or the rights of others. To me, in my opinion, at some point that fetus becomes a child/person and has rights of its own, now i don’t know when that is i would say 3rd trimester maybe? again in my opinion. So unless there is danger to the mother or child eventually at some point the mother should bring the child to term. I think if you hit that 7th month you should know if you want to keep the baby and bring it to term. Whether you give the child up for adoption or raise it yourself is another matter entirely.

          If someone needs a kidney and you are match for them, would you support the government forcing you to donate one of yours?

          No, now what does that have to do with this?

          • Zaktor
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            1 year ago

            So unless there is danger to the mother or child eventually at some point the mother should bring the child to term.

            Proceeding to birth is both a physical hardship and a more dangerous method for removing the fetus. Why does the state get to tell the potential mother to spend the next two months pregnant (likely missing work at some point along the way) and then go through something with a risk to their life and with potential lifelong impacts on their body? Birth isn’t a costless physical act.

            If someone needs a kidney and you are match for them, would you support the government forcing you to donate one of yours?

            No, now what does that have to do with this?

            The person in need of the kidney has a right to life and your refusal infringes on it. If you’re willing to tell women they must risk their health for a potential child, you should approve of the government forcing you to risk your health for a person who needs it. It’s just a balance of rights, is it not?

            • Dashi@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              The person in need of the kidney has a right to life and your refusal infringes on it. If you’re willing to tell women they must risk their health for a potential child, you should approve of the government forcing you to risk your health for a person who needs it. It’s just a balance of rights, is it not?

              I would disagree here. Their right to life cannot infringe upon my rights. In my opinion that is a different scenario. I can understand if you disagree.

              You are saying that a woman in full control of her facilities and in no danger of medical complications one day before her due date should be able to abort the fetus? What about giving birth half way babies head is out of the mother, can abort the baby? What about still connected before they cut the umbilical cord? Still able to abort?

              • Zaktor
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                1 year ago

                I would disagree here. Their right to life cannot infringe upon my rights.

                How do you not get that this is exactly what you’re demanding of pregnant women?? The fetus’s right to life cannot infringe on the prospective mother. And that’s just a fetus, the transplant recipient is a full unquestionable person with a myriad of relationships, obligations, and contributions to society.

                You are saying that a woman in full control of her facilities and in no danger of medical complications

                This is not a situation that ever exists. Birthing is a traumatic process that incurs risk of death and long-term damage to the body, even when everything is going well right up until it starts. You don’t seem to know much about pregnancy.

                I’m ignoring your other questions because they’re stupid.

                • Dashi@lemmy.world
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                  1 year ago

                  I get that, i believe i asked or infered the question earlier about when the fetus becomes a “person” is basically what this whole discussion revolves around.

                  You didn’t want to answer the questions because while they are stupid, much like forced organ donation, they are awkward to answer and they go against “100% her body, her choice” there is a line out their that at some point aborting the fetus is “murder” what that line is? I have no idea but we have laws for things like that. Much like we have laws that can force you to do things you don’t want to do for the health of others and yourself, go to jail if you are a violent criminal, go to the psych ward, court mandated therapy etc. At some point you shouldn’t be able to abort a child. You want to you want to abort a child for the first, second, third, up to the fifth month? Sure no questions six and seven? Kinda pushing it in my mind eighth or ninth? Kinda seems rediculous to me.

                  You are right i don’t know a lot about pregnancy I’m not a doctor, I’ve never given birth. Just what i read and have seen from friends/ family and being their for them during their recoveries.

                  At this point i think we are going in circles in the discussion, I’d be happy to continue but i don’t see the point. I hope you have a great week and thanks for taking the time to have a semi civil conversation with me about a very charged subject.

                  • meco03211@lemmy.world
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                    1 year ago

                    Jumping in here. Would you accept forced blood donation? If someone desperately needed a blood transfusion and no volunteer donors come forward, would you accept a government finding an eligible person and drawing blood by force if necessary? Why or why not?