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Saturday, October 29, 2016

Answering the Pro-Abortionists' Objections about Choice, Privacy, and Rights.

Restating My Thesis:

Premise 1:  All acts that intentionally take the life of an innocent, human person are immoral acts and should be illegal.  

Premise 2:  Abortion is an act that intentionally takes the life of an innocent, human person.  

Conclusion:  Therefore, abortion is an immoral act and should be illegal.


This is a valid argument.  


Which means, if the premises are true, then the conclusion is necessarily true.  For more on validity and arguments go here.  For a further treatment of my thesis go here.  

Objections to my thesis tend to fall into one of the following categories:
  • The objection on the being of the fetus.
  • Objections from choice, privacy, and rights.
  • Objections from the lesser evil.
  • Objections concerning endangering the mother's life or women's health.
  • The objection base on the Violinist Argument.
  • The objection that I should not shove my morality down someone else's throat.  a.k.a. "You cannot legislate morality."



In this post I address the second group of objections: Objections from choice, privacy, and rights.  

I'll address the later objections in other posts.

Objections from choice, privacy, and rights:


            These objections say abortion deals with a woman’s body and no one has the right to tell a woman what she can and cannot do with her body.  Abortion is wholly and solely the woman’s choice, they say.  This is probably the most frequent objection hence the name pro-choice.  In fact, some pro-choice advocates refer to the other side of the debate as anti-choice.  Others will just have to deal with it when a woman makes a choice concerning her body, they say.
            A related objection is the right to privacy.  Whatever a woman asks her doctor to do is a private medical matter and the government has no right to legislate anything that would invade that privacy.  This objection appears often in matters of parental consent for minors or for spousal/partner consent.  If a woman wants an abortion she can have it and that is all there is to it, they say.

            Some think since the United States Supreme Court ruling in Row v. Wade made abortion legal it is therefore morally acceptable.  Pro-choice advocates think this makes the issue of abortion a closed matter since it is “constitutionally guaranteed.”  They say it’s a constitutional right to have an abortion and to anyone who tries to take away a person’s constitutional right is criminal (since they're violating someone else's constitutional rights).  The Supreme Court ruled on the matter; the matter is closed.  Do not take away our rights, they say.

Response to objections of choice, privacy, and rights


Is Abortion Merely a Matter of Choice?

It is misleading to say that a woman (or anybody) has a right to do whatever they choose to their bodies .  Sure, a woman has the right to make many choices: hair styles, body piercing, clothes styles, which church to attend (if any at all), for whom to vote, etc.  They are also free to choose to pursue other areas where their choice is not the sole determining factor in the decision.  They may choose to apply for a certain job, but others make the decision to hire her or not.  She may choose to ask a man to marry her, but he still has a right to say no.  Every person has many choices in life that others also have a voice in the matter.  No person – man or woman – is in complete control over every aspect of their life.  An certainly no person has absolute rights to do things with their life, or their bodies, when others are directly related to the consequences.
There are also some choices that we are not to make – even to our own bodies.  If someone is suicidal, others do not sit back and say, “Well, it is their choice.  We shouldn’t interfere.”  The same situation would apply to a woman in cases of anorexia, bulimia, drug abuse, alcohol abuse, staying with an abusive spouse, or self-mutilation.  We would not be outraged if someone else intervened and urged the woman to make a different choice – we would applaud such actions by that other person.  There are some choices we do not allow others to make even to their own bodies.  Therefore, it is not necessarily wrong to make laws forbidding actions against one’s own body.
But, as I have shown, the fetus is not a part of the woman’s body; the fetus is in her body, but the fetus is not a part of her body.  So, the argument of a woman saying she has the right to have an abortion because she has the right to do to her body whatever she wishes fails on two grounds:  1.) the fetus is not a part of the woman’s body and, 2.) she does not in fact have the right to do whatever she wants to her body especially when the outcome of that action has effects on someone else.
Abortion is not a matter of a woman doing something to her own body.  It is a matter of a woman destroying another's body - an innocent person's body.  No woman has a right to do that!
The objection from a matter of choice is not valid.

A Constitutional Right?

Does a woman have the right, even the constitutional right, to kill her child (because that is what is happening during an abortion) for any reason she so chooses?  Absolutely not!  Even though there are currently legal decisions “giving” her that legal right, we must remember that legal rights are not always morally right.  
It was once legal to own slaves and treat them as you wished, but was it right to do so?  No!  Even though slavery was legal, it was not morally right.  The legal right was even upheld by the Supreme Court, but it was later overturned by one President.  The laws of men are not set in stone.  Therefore, the argument from Supreme Court approval is not a valid argument either.
The pro-choice objection from a matter of "constitution" rights is not valid.

A Matter of Privacy?

What about the woman's privacy?  Well, privacy is not an absolute right either; this applies to everyone.  There are many things that I could do in the privacy of my own home - or anywhere else I may have privacy at the moment - that could get me arrested, but I do not do them and then plea that my privacy needs protected.  The same goes for everyone else.  
Say a woman takes her toddler to her doctor and says, “Here, get rid of this child.  I can’t deal with her anymore, she's getting in the way of other things I have planned for life; but, oh, let’s keep this whole thing just between you and me.”  Would the rest of us be expected to say, “Oh, well, she did it in private, so it’s none of our business”?  Certainly not!
Now some object that I am talking about a toddler and they are talking about a non-viable group of cells.  Once again, I say that an innocent human is an innocent human regardless of the point of development.  Age and location of the human are not qualifiers for a life-ending act.  Privacy is not an issue when it comes to terminating the life of an innocent human being.
The pro-choice objection from a matter of privacy is not valid.

Privacy is not an issue when it comes to terminating the life of an innocent human being.


(For a further treatment of my arguments for every fetus being an individual human being separate from the mother, go here and my treatment against the pro-choice objection of personhood of the fetus go here.)