zephcom
Well-Known Member
- Jul 9, 2017
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- Deist
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- Married
I'm not a Christian, and I'm opposed to elective abortion. It's tragic and very undesirable. But I'm more opposed to using the police power of the state to criminalize it. Terminating a healthy pregnancy is bad, but that's a worse evil.
I think nearly everyone involved in this issue finds abortion to be tragic and very undesirable. I, too, think that criminalizing abortion is the wrong approach to dealing with the issue.
I feel confident that elective abortion could be reduced to a level that it is almost not happening without ever passing any law prohibiting it if our society were to address the social issues which lead to a woman deciding that abortion is the right path.
If we would provide comprehensive sex education in schools, allow better access to birth control we would reduce the pregnancy occurrences tremendously. That would greatly reduce the need to ever make such decisions in the first place.
But more importantly, society needs to change its attitude toward women who become pregnant and then CHOOSE to give birth. Instead of the stigma of being a 'fallen woman', society viewed them as valuable citizens who value life and are willing to commit to preserving it at whatever the cost to them is.
These women SHOULD be viewed as desirable for marriage by men because of their willingness preserve those lives. They should be valued by employers and given full wages instead of 'woman's salary' because of their commitment to human life.
A woman should not be faced with deciding to keep a pregnancy knowing that they face a life of scorn, poverty, and undesirability for marriage or quietly aborting to preserve their future and the future of any subsequent children through marriage.
WE created this mess by creating a myth about women and their 'purity'.
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