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Rate of Abortion is highest in countries where it is illegal

Joshua G.

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S.ilvio

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I'm amazed that there's no provsion for a referendumin America. As you say we, in Ireland have them relatively regularly. It's the purest form of democracy and our referenda results cannot be trumped by our Supreme Courts. The People are supreme, not the courts, when it comes to Constitutional matters...
 
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mathetes123

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Abortion rates are higher in countries where the procedure is illegal and nearly half of all abortions worldwide are unsafe, with the vast majority in developing countries, a new study concludes.

Experts could not say whether more liberal laws led to fewer procedures, but said good access to birth control in those countries resulted in fewer unwanted pregnancies.

The global abortion rate remained virtually unchanged from 2003 to 2008, at about 28 abortions per 1,000 women aged 15 to 44, a total of about 43.8 million abortions, according to the study. The rate had previously been dropping since 1995.

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Rate of abortion is highest in countries where practice is banned - Health News - Health & Families - The Independent

I know that in OBOB, many of us are hopeful that making abortion illegal would somehow prevent it... but this article's stats tell us that that just isn't the case.

What do you think? :(

Why would you suggest there is a cause and effect relationship which implies that making abortion illegal causes more abortions?

Either abortion is wrong and should be illegal or it is not wrong.

From a biblical standpoint, you cannot defend the practice.

Psa 139:13 For you formed my inward parts; you knitted me together in my mother's womb.
Psa 139:14 I praise you, for I am fearfully and wonderfully made. Wonderful are your works; my soul knows it very well.
Psa 139:15 My frame was not hidden from you, when I was being made in secret, intricately woven in the depths of the earth.
Psa 139:16 Your eyes saw my unformed substance; in your book were written, every one of them, the days that were formed for me, when as yet there was none of them.
 
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mathetes123

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I'm amazed that there's no provsion for a referendumin America. As you say we, in Ireland have them relatively regularly. It's the purest form of democracy and our referenda results cannot be trumped by our Supreme Courts. The People are supreme, not the courts, when it comes to Constitutional matters...

Democracy is two wolves and a sheep fighting over what is for dinner.

In America, we are a constitutional republic. We are governed by the rule of the law, not mob rule.
 
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S.ilvio

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Democracy is two wolves and a sheep fighting over what is for dinner.

In America, we are a constitutional republic. We are governed by the rule of the law, not mob rule.


Are you saying we are not..?
 
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S.ilvio

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No. I don't know anything about your government. I am making a general statement about the nature of pure democracy.

Well let me put your mind at ease. We in Europe are also governed by the rule of law... And in Ireland we have amended our Constitution to protect the unborn by inserting a Pro Pife Amendment into it via a referendum...
 
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MKJ

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Hmmm, I just keep wondering how we would view a past politician or group of people fighting for civil rights (for minorities) when it wasn't popular, creating political inertia with their whining. I doubt it was only in the 60s that people were fighting for equal rights. And even in the 60s, minds and hearts were not converted by any means. The Domcratic party took a HUGE loss at following (being coerced into) Lyndon Johnson's lead. The Democratic Party WAS the party of the South. They were the utterly racist party. In fact, Jimmy Carter led supporters in south to believe that he agreed with their racist views until he was elected governor and literally on the day of his inauguration let the cat out of the bag and past legislation that furthered civil rights. These people are considered heros for these very acts even though they disregarded a significant portion of their constituency... betrayed them. But in reality they didn't betray them because they didn't just do this to pass some law about using a cell phone while driving or a new tax. They furthered the cause of innate human rights. They did what was the right thing to do regardless of if people's hearts were changed or not. They didn't wait around until most everyone could calmly see their point. They bulldozed things through. That doesn't mean they thought with civil rights legislation racism would be gone... or even necessarily lessened. The racist probably got more racist. But the question is not what happened to them... but what happened to their children nd their grandchildren. As racist as some ares of the States may be they are nothing like their grandfathers' time.

So, I suppose we can just calmly wait for everyone to see our point (they never will as long as choice is an option, people never ever ever like to give up choice even if the choice is a literal piece of crap) or we can do what we need to do to lead the cause for human rights. That includes (and is not limited to) passing legislation that says that the government does not support this violation either.


And democrats use welfare, and countless do-good government programs as a wedge issue. Does that mean a person discount them as unimportant? Oh yeah, they also use choice as a wedge issue. I often listen to NPR and I love how I will hear people outrightly say "I couldnt vote for him because of his stance against abortion" and that is respected because the left has done a great job at making any polititian who is against abortion out to be a stupid caveman or heartless slaveowner. But then they will have topics dedicated to the mysterious "one-issue voter" ALWAYS referring to pro-lifers who won't vote for a candidate because he or she supports abortion.

I will agree with you that many (most) don't really care about abortion. They care about it as much as their constituecy does. I don't think McCain really cared about it (I didn't vote for him). However, some do and even when they don't, if their constituents can put enough pressure on them it can effect funding.

Perhaps mroe than that, it's about having someone who is lukewarm on the issue of abortion as opposed to someone who is ardently pro-choice which is much scarier. Because of Bush's nominations, we are still able (BARELY) to hold on to what is widely believed to be a majority (5-4) pro-life supreme court. If it had been Kerry and then Obama, it would be a decidedly pro-choice Supreme Court and during the time (or since) Bush there was a case regarding Dilation and Extraction where it was stuck down. It was not a landmark case for us... but still important because of what it DIDN'T allow to slowly creep in as the new norm (of what is a right).

But we really don't have that kind of situation - there is a vocal, funded pro-life voice and lobby, but we do not see that kind of activity of the 60's at the political level.

The civil rights movement started before the 60's got into swing and it began to be seen making waves in government - its origins were grassroots. The 50's or even 40's IMO are a better comparison to where we are today.

My point about the political leaders is that while I know some are sincere, the political machines - and there are really only two in the US - see this as a cause best used to serve their needs. The Dems. have many flaws, but in this case I think the Republicans are more important - they are essentially Strausians - people who think religion is useful because it controls the population, not because it is true.

I think the fact that abortion has allowed itself to become so political in the US is a major disadvantage to actual change. It has become primarily a political issue in peoples minds, and connected with other political issues. Many people think you cannot left politically if you are pro-life, that it implies you must believe in other things they cannot support.

Whenever an issue is hijacked to serve other ends, the issue itself suffers, and I think that has been allowed to happen in the US. We may be a bit better off in Canada on that account as one can find people on both siudes of the issue in all pareties (though there are of course other obstacles.)

It should. Would it. I don't knwo. Are we not going to try because it might. It CERTAINLY won't if we have a series of pro-choice presidents who pakc the supreme court with those who are blinded on this issue. I don't knwo how Canadian politics works on this.

This isn't about smoking. As much as I am passionately for banning smoking in public areas (it makes my blood boil) this is not the same thing in any important way (as important as that is). This is about human rights.

But no one is saying that education shouldn't be a part of it. It NEEDS to be a huge part of it. The biggest part of all. But by that I don't mean that legality is less important. It's just that education has to be fought on so many fronts. It's very complicated... it needs to be on-going for a long time.
In the past 20 years, anti-smoking campaigners have made radical legal changes to smoking laws, changed social attitudes about at a shocking level, and made tobacco companies among the most hated business entities in the world.

How much progress has the pro-life lobby made?

That is what I am getting at. You cannot wage a battle without having a plan. It means knowing your own strengths and vulnerabilities and capabilities, and those of your adversary. It means understanding the environment - in this case the legal and social environment. It especially means knowing your final objective with absolute clarity and laying out the intermediate and immediate objectives required to get there.

If you do not have these things in order, you cannot make sure your efforts are directed in the way that has the most effect and you will use up your reserves before you need them. You will simply end up in the wrong place, boxed into a corner.

Campaigns that don't keep their eye on the plan and run the right kind of campaign fail, even if they have truth behind them. Ending abortion is the final objective. Making it illegal, in one fell swoop or incrementally, is one intermediate objective - we evidently do not have the tools we need to do that yet.

IMO, right now it is a hearts and minds campaign - one directed to winning support - and using the bulk of effort on a legal campaign is compromising that by diverting resources among other things.

I think people feel like they want to be in a conventional war at the polls, because it seems clear cut - it has the attraction of purity of doctrine. In some cases it is very easy for people to feel like they are doing something by voting for the pro-life side.

But when doctrine won't change to fit the situation you get the British in America, or the Soviets in Afghanistan.

But you advocate a government protecting a woman's right to do that. I'm not screaming at you. I really do get your point and I know (hope) you don't see this as a "right". I hope it is merely taht you see this as a pragmatic way to get to the point one day where in your mind it makes sense to outlaw it.

If that is so, I am very comforted that we are arguing on the same side of the fence. If you believe it is a human right ot be able to abort then we are different sides of the fence. I'm still not screaming at you and I do respect YOU but you are wrong on your stance and I will say that as emphatically as any pioneer of human rights has had to say that in the days when what they believed was not popular. (not that I am a martyr, but I am on the less popular side of things and am looked at like a green martian... especially being a public school teacher).

I have to run... running late.
I don't advocate the government doing that - it is what the government does. It is what the government will do until the law changes. Saying "change the law" is like saying use the giant laser on the moon. There is no giant laser, and laws are changed in the US and Canada at the moment primarily due to significant social pressure - and sometimes not even then if it is not in the interests of those with power. The question is, what needs to happen to achieve the conditions necessary for a change in law? Additionally we know that winning an intermediate objective too early can actually compromise an entire campaign, because it can always be lost again before it is of use if we cannot protect it, or sometimes it can be made redundant if the adversary can see how you plan to use it.


I want abortion to be ended, and how that can be achieved will depend on the place it is happening. Right now in North America the pro-life lobby seems to me to have allowed itself to become a political tool and in a real way that nullifies its effectiveness. And there seems to be no plan but a bunch of people out there sabotaging the chance of actually convincing people to change their perspective or using their energy where it is not useful.
 
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MKJ

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Well let me put your mind at ease. We in Europe are also governed by the rule of law... And in Ireland we have amended our Constitution to protect the unborn by inserting a Pro Pife Amendment into it via a referendum...

You talk about it like amending the constitution is easy. Here, we have had referendums on constitutional issues though they are not required. But what is really required is a majority in the House of Commons, the Senate, and a proportion of the provinces 2/3rds if I recall.

It isn't something we can snap our fingers and do, it really means a lot of people have to believe in it. That is why Canada passed same sex marriage pretty clearly and it has held up - a large proportion of people wanted the change.

Saying "change the law" will not do anything itself, you have to create the right conditions first.

I think the idea that direct polling of individuals is the purest form of democracy is - well, its a problem for me. Does that mean when the majority support abortion access it is ok? What if they are ignorant?

Democracy itself isn't without inherent dangers - Aristotle who was no slouch thought it was the worst form of government and Plato said it would lead to chaos. That's why most stable systems have safeguards against the tyranny of the majority.
 
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S.ilvio

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You talk about it like amending the constitution is easy. Here, we have had referendums on constitutional issues though they are not required. But what is really required is a majority in the House of Commons, the Senate, and a proportion of the provinces 2/3rds if I recall.

It isn't something we can snap our fingers and do, it really means a lot of people have to believe in it. That is why Canada passed same sex marriage pretty clearly and it has held up - a large proportion of people wanted the change.

Saying "change the law" will not do anything itself, you have to create the right conditions first.

I think the idea that direct polling of individuals is the purest form of democracy is - well, its a problem for me. Does that mean when the majority support abortion access it is ok? What if they are ignorant?

Democracy itself isn't without inherent dangers - Aristotle who was no slouch thought it was the worst form of government and Plato said it would lead to chaos. That's why most stable systems have safeguards against the tyranny of the majority.

Referenda on core issues are relatively easy to organise and execute. We've had around 10 in the last decade or so. Most in reference to the European Union ,but we've also had referenda on the power of Parliamentary Committees, Judges pay and other such issues. Our Pro Life amkendment was inserted in 1983.

If the vote was lost then obviously legislation would have to have been introduced to legislate on access to abortion... It's not rocket science...
 
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MKJ

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Referenda on core issues are relatively easy to organise and execute. We've had around 10 in the last decade or so. Most in reference to the European Union ,but we've also had referenda on the power of Parliamentary Committees, Judges pay and other such issues. Our Pro Life amkendment was inserted in 1983.

If the vote was lost then obviously legislation would have to have been introduced to legislate on access to abortion... It's not rocket science...

Introduced by whom? Our PM, the leader of the party most likely to do this will not let his MPs speak about it.

How do you make sure it gets passed?
 
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S.ilvio

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Introduced by whom? Our PM, the leader of the party most likely to do this will not let his MPs speak about it.

How do you make sure it gets passed?


Our Parliament. They would be bound by the vote of the People. It happens with every referendum result if required such as when we passed the divorce referendum in the mid 1990's...
 
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MKJ

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Our Parliament. They would be bound by the vote of the People. It happens with every referendum result if required such as when we passed the divorce referendum in the mid 1990's...


Yes, fine. Very lovely for Ireland. (I am curious how issues are approved to go before the public for referendum. And what if the thing people choose is kind of evil - say, to persecute a particular ethnic group or say women are not allowed to be educated?)

But you keep telling those of us in entirely different political landscapes that we should just change the law and if we aren't on that right now we like killing babies.

But maybe what is required to end abortion here is going to follow a different trajectory. (And, after all, you actually still have significant challenges with ending abortion in Ireland, so making out like you've got it figured out is a bit hard to take.)
 
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Gwendolyn

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The fact that the decision of Roe VS Wade was based on a fictional circumstance should be reason alone to call the ruling into question. But I think the abortion lobby has too much political power and stands to lose too much tax payer money to allow it to be reversed.

I don't understand what you mean. How was the court case fictional? Lying is perjury.
 
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I think both Silvio and MKJ want to see abortion totally GONE, you just both have a different approach.

I'd love to see it illegal TOMORROW, but I am sad to say that it'd be like what happened with prohibition. You'd see plenty of women doing it and a lot of doctors who'd oblige and call it a "D & C" or some other "procedure" or a back ally special or something else. We can't make any change until, as MKJ says, we change hearts and minds. People need to be educated. And I think Christians haven't done a good enough job of witnessing to it.

Also, a good economy and prosperity tends to discourage abortion. We need to get our country back on track and care about the middle class and poor more to stifle abortion; we also need to not be saying on one hand that we want to punish the poor and strip them of any federal or state aid while simultaneously telling them they shouldn't abort.

If we fix education, health care, and economy, abortions go down. Education of the sin and the need to respect life needs to be stronger. Politics alone is a band aid on a beheading if you ask me.
 
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underheaven

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I think both Silvio and MKJ want to see abortion totally GONE, you just both have a different approach.

I'd love to see it illegal TOMORROW, but I am sad to say that it'd be like what happened with prohibition. You'd see plenty of women doing it and a lot of doctors who'd oblige and call it a "D & C" or some other "procedure" or a back ally special or something else. We can't make any change until, as MKJ says, we change hearts and minds. People need to be educated. And I think Christians haven't done a good enough job of witnessing to it.

Also, a good economy and prosperity tends to discourage abortion. We need to get our country back on track and care about the middle class and poor more to stifle abortion; we also need to not be saying on one hand that we want to punish the poor and strip them of any federal or state aid while simultaneously telling them they shouldn't abort.

If we fix education, health care, and economy, abortions go down. Education of the sin and the need to respect life needs to be stronger. Politics alone is a band aid on a beheading if you ask me.
The only post here worth reading .:amen:
 
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Joshua G.

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I just want to clarify that although I strongly disagree with the pragmatic approach of leaving it legal, I do see those with this point of view as true allies in the fight.

What necessarily fundamentally separates is belief in the dangerous myth that right to abort is human right. To be pro-life one must be clear that this is not a human right regardless of what a nation decides is so. It is an affront to God and humanity at the deepest level. So, there are many who agree on me with this even if they take a more pragmatic approach on the legal issue not fighting for the law to stay in place but not seeing it as useful to expend resources and energy there until it is a practical objective. We both agree that abortion is evil and defilement of humanity and that it needs to stop. We both agree that education offered in compassion, nonjudgmentalness and understanding need to be the first line of defense and offense regardless of how the law may or may not change. On that principle, I unite with them in respect and pray for those who have been trained by society to believe that such could even be a human right.

Josh
 
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