Hi there.
If I didn't find life sacred, I suppose I wouldn't take a stand on human rights issues.
I am opposed to Capital Punishment because though many of these criminals are horrible murderers, there is still value in a life, and they can live theirs out in a life sentence without parole. When I think of how Saudi Arabia decapitates people for instance, it's barbaric.
I support Gay marriage because I feel people should share equal rights in a society. If they want to marry, who are we to say they cannot?
I oppose most wars because they seem senseless, and innocents are killed in mass numbers. So many die for some misguided, puffed-up view of patriotism which is a whole nother matter here.
I don't consider life sacred, and I oppose capital punishment, support gay marriage, and object to war.
I oppose capital punishment because I regard it as a form of torture, I consider it unnecessary and uncivilised, and I am troubled by the potential for miscarriages of justice.
I support gay marriage because, like you, I think that there is no relevant difference between gay couples and straight couples which should prevent the former from enjoying the same legal rights.
I object to most wars because, like you, I object to the murder of innocents - not because life is sacred, but because causing someone to fear for their life is an horrific form of torture, and wars cause people to lose loved ones, to be horribly maimed, to lose their homes and other property, &c.
I'm just trying to be logically consistent with the value of life. What is it, disturbing condor eggs is a crime but aborting a human fetus is not?
Because the law about not disturbing condor eggs is not a law which is there because condor life is sacred, but because condors are presumably an endangered species which your government is attempting to preserve for aesthetic reasons or for the protection of some ecosystem. Human beings are definitely not an endangered species. It's not a valid comparison.
Or, NASA is concerned that astronauts may contaminate extra-terrestrial microbes so they are considering ways to use robots as explorers as to not kill off bacteria, but a human fetus is valued less? I'm just trying to see the logic in that.
Again, you're not making a valid comparison. I assume that NASA's view is that we have a duty not to endanger extra-terrestrial flora and fauna, again for aesthetic reasons, in the hope of future discovery, or for the preservation of biodiversity. It has nothing to do with the life of micro-organisms being sacred.
By your example, I ascribe more value to a human fetus than a stray dog, though I love animals and would never shoot a stray dog either.
Well, what I was offering was an analogy to explain why killing an unwanted foetus is not murder but killing a wanted one is.
I would really like you to explain from where this special, apparently intrinsic value of human life comes. In what does it consist? Are you simply asserting that human life is sacred? Shall I then just assert that it isn't? I think the burden of proof is on you to show how, why, and in what way human life comes to have this special value.
I'm open to any conversation, so I thank you for this exchange. Perhaps you will show me some logic in your position and I can consider it.
Well, I've tried. Do tell me if and how you find it to be inconsistent.