
yo jack - thotbomb this... you already know where you stand on the pro-choice vs. pro-life debate. you’ve seen the rhetoric + propaganda from both sides. but it’s getting complicated. unused embryos. stem cells. clinic violence. supreme court appointments.
everyone has a opinion of when life begins. where are you on the spectrum?
http://www.thotbomb.com/day24pro
PICKED IT CUZ IT WAS "DAY 1". IF YOU BEGIN ON 'DAY 2' THEN IT IS NO LONGER 'DAY 2' BUT 'DAY 1'.
ReplyDeleteIN ALL SERIOUSNESS: LIFE BEGINS AT CONCEPTION. AND TO PUT IT LOGICALLY, SINCE THERE IS NOT A POINT AT WHICH THEY CAN FIND OTHERWISE AS TO WHERE LIFE BEGINS, THEN LOGICALLY WE HAVE TO ASSUME THAT IT STARTS AT THE BEGINNING.
Brian, that didn't make any sense.
ReplyDeletelife begins at conception.
ReplyDeletei could write practically an essay on it, if you'd like.
5 days. Between 3 and 5 it's still a blastocyst. A mass of roughly 50-150 cell that are undifferentiated. They're just cells. No heart, no organs, nothing. Just cells.
ReplyDelete'anonymous' is a great name.
ReplyDeletelife does not begin incrementally; it's an "event" that only happens once in the human experience. We are not any more alive today than we were the day before, or the day before that, going all the way back to the unique moment of conception(day 1).
Roe v. Wade is in fact unlawful and unconstitutional because regardless of the popular opinion of the day, the Fourteenth Amendment already protects the unborn. That Amendment states: No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.
The Fourteenth Amendment, which includes this key phrase: nor shall any State deprive any person of life, was ratified in 1868. At that time an unborn child was considered to be a "person," including by the American Medical Association. Hence, it was understood that any person, including an unborn child, shall not be deprived of life. For Roe v. Wade to be constitutional, Congress must pass an Amendment to supercede the Fourteenth Amendment.
does that make more sense?