- Sep 4, 2005
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I see this happening more and more coming from certain liberals (not all, but certain).
On particular hot-button issues, they tend to exploit the tragic situations of the few to justify things they'd simply use for convenience.
The two I'll use are abortion and marijuana legalization.
On the abortion topic, they'll use the 0.8% of the abortions that take place due to rape & medical reasons to justify making abortion legal for the 46% who get them because they didn't use contraception.
On the marijuana topic, they'll use the cancer patients who benefit from it to justify it for the majority who just want to get high for fun.
When people oppose contraceptive abortions, they accuse them of wanting to kill pregnant women with health issues.
When people want tighter restrictions on medicinal marijuana, they accuse them of wanting to deprive cancer patients from comfort. (BTW, I have a lot of respect for what Colorado did, at least they're not exploiting misfortune to get what they wanted)
Would this kind of logic hold up in any other scenario? If I were to cite the rare fluke instances that a person survives a car crash because they weren't wearing their seatbelt, would that justify a position of "no more seatbelts in cars"?
On particular hot-button issues, they tend to exploit the tragic situations of the few to justify things they'd simply use for convenience.
The two I'll use are abortion and marijuana legalization.
On the abortion topic, they'll use the 0.8% of the abortions that take place due to rape & medical reasons to justify making abortion legal for the 46% who get them because they didn't use contraception.
On the marijuana topic, they'll use the cancer patients who benefit from it to justify it for the majority who just want to get high for fun.
When people oppose contraceptive abortions, they accuse them of wanting to kill pregnant women with health issues.
When people want tighter restrictions on medicinal marijuana, they accuse them of wanting to deprive cancer patients from comfort. (BTW, I have a lot of respect for what Colorado did, at least they're not exploiting misfortune to get what they wanted)
Would this kind of logic hold up in any other scenario? If I were to cite the rare fluke instances that a person survives a car crash because they weren't wearing their seatbelt, would that justify a position of "no more seatbelts in cars"?