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Discussion and Debate
Discussion and Debate
Ethics & Morality
Death Penalty for Abortion
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<blockquote data-quote="CurtisNeeley" data-source="post: 68558717" data-attributes="member: 285006"><p>No person would ever be required to remain pregnant <em>against their will </em>after Arkansas Act 301 is copied nationwide.</p><p></p><p> I am as OK with anyone getting an abortion as I am with the death penalty. These are both morally repugnant. No human should cause the end of another life.</p><p></p><p></p><p>I am the <em>amici </em>who attempted to intervene as a party and appeal the Eighth Circuit panel's recent allowance of the Eastern District Court of Arkansas invalidating AR Act 301 and ignoring public duty to protect the right to life beginning with a heartbeat.</p><p></p><p>Then you are only partly wrong... Ha. Those who allowed life terms in 1787 did not do this to minimize popular sentiments pressuring judges or to prevent mob rule. They did this because there were few imported law schools and lawyers. The pool of legally trained people was absolutely empty and took almost a century to fill. Not electing judges directly was enough separation in the EU and had been decided by experimentation rather than revolt.</p><p></p><p> The outlook is bleak unless one knows how close the U.S. is to a peaceful collapse. The corporate oligarchy control will collapse and be overtaken by the government developing in the EU without a shot needing to be fired.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="CurtisNeeley, post: 68558717, member: 285006"] No person would ever be required to remain pregnant [I]against their will [/I]after Arkansas Act 301 is copied nationwide. I am as OK with anyone getting an abortion as I am with the death penalty. These are both morally repugnant. No human should cause the end of another life. I am the [I]amici [/I]who attempted to intervene as a party and appeal the Eighth Circuit panel's recent allowance of the Eastern District Court of Arkansas invalidating AR Act 301 and ignoring public duty to protect the right to life beginning with a heartbeat. Then you are only partly wrong... Ha. Those who allowed life terms in 1787 did not do this to minimize popular sentiments pressuring judges or to prevent mob rule. They did this because there were few imported law schools and lawyers. The pool of legally trained people was absolutely empty and took almost a century to fill. Not electing judges directly was enough separation in the EU and had been decided by experimentation rather than revolt. The outlook is bleak unless one knows how close the U.S. is to a peaceful collapse. The corporate oligarchy control will collapse and be overtaken by the government developing in the EU without a shot needing to be fired. [/QUOTE]
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