So you actually are okay with the death of a child in the case of rape. Earlier you seemed to have denied it.
I didn't say I was "ok" with the death of a child in the case of rape. Sure, it bothers me. But there's a bona-fide moral dilemma in the case of a rape victim. Do you somehow think that one commandment displaces other commands, or that the Bible is so clear that it's unmistakable as to what it means in all cases across the board, at all times, everywhere? I'm going to say no. And what's more, I already gave you some reasons for my position, and you haven't addressed those. But I notice that you just sort of do the ol' sweep-it-under-the-rug-and-pretend-nothing-was-said-routine. Unfortunately, I very well notice that rhetorical tactic when people use it, and I don't tend to let it pass.
Do not murder is pretty clear.
And so is "Do not Lord it over each other..." What part of that is hard to understand?
Furthermore, since we're nit-picking about biblical minutiae, I get the sense that you don't perceive the contextual, social contours, or the conceptual boundaries, of a single command such as "You shall not murder" when it's placed in juxtaposition to a fact such as, "This woman has been raped and impregnated by a perpetrator." And if there's one thing I can't stand, it's when people handle the Bible without Hermeneutical and Exegetical awareness or acumen, remaining oblivious to additional historical, cultural and/or social facts that contextualize the ancient remnants of the literature that we call "the Bible" and then forcefully move to instantiate their misunderstanding into today's situations. In fact, when I see people ignore all of that, whether they're Christian or Atheists, it's rather sickening to me. ...... I would hate to think that in the case of your wife, or your sister, or daughter being raped and impregnated, you'd overtly insist that she carry on the pregnancy even if she's not only not willing to do so, but even emotionally dysfunctionalized through trauma and unable to bear it each day. Surely, you wouldn't be that callous to do so in that situation.
Now, with that said, and with everything else I've cumulatively said in this thread, I think it's safe to say that I'm against approximately
~99% of what transpires today in relation to decisions among men and women to advocate for, or to pursue, abortion.
And, let me remind you, I've already stated that, in line with your OP, it's wrong for democrats to push for acculturating men to take a "step up" in support of abortions as a normative option.