Real0ne
Posts: 21189
Joined: 10/25/2004 Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: tazzygirl Our definition of freedom presents specific challenges on some high-profile issues. Abortion is a critical example. By one account, the fetus is a rights-bearing person, and abortion is therefore an aggressive violation of individual rights that ought to be punished by government. By another account, the fetus does not have rights, and abortion is a permissible exercise of an individual liberty, in which case government regulation of abortion would be an unjust violation of a woman’s rights. Rather than take a stand on one side or the other (or anywhere in between), we have coded the data on state abortion restrictions but have not included the policy in our overall index. Another example is the death penalty. Some would argue that a murderer forfeits her right to life, and, therefore, state execution of a murderer does not violate a basic right to life. Others contend that the right to life can never be forfeited, or that the state should never risk taking away all the rights of innocent individuals by mistakenly executing them. State sentencing policies short of the death penalty could also be debated. We do not include the death penalty or incarceration rates in the freedom index, although we have coded the data and made them available online at http://www.statepolicyindex.com. Why does their definition prevent the inclusion of abortions of the death penalty? 1. We recognize that children and the insane must be treated differently from competent adults and also that some rights may not be alienated even by consenting adults. Yet isnt this all about the individual freedoms of consenting adults? Taz a person is both flesh and blood and a state fictitious entity. the state version of person is not created until there is an official title given, that being the name on the BC. Even if you give your fetus a name it is not a person recognized by the state until it pops because it is handled by the state the very same way you would handle a calf or a kid goat. It does not become an asset to you until it is born. We do not have ecclesiastic law in the states so the living person inside the woman "technically" does not count. Hence abortions are not illegal. You can thank brit law and our wonderful legislators for throwing everything into one basket for you such that trusts, corporations, titles, and living people are all "persons" and equal under the law. You are and have the rights of a chattel fiction get used to it!
< Message edited by Real0ne -- 3/30/2013 11:17:39 AM >
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"We the Borg" of the us imperialists....resistance is futile Democracy; The 'People' voted on 'which' amendment? Yesterdays tinfoil is today's reality! "No man's life, liberty, or property is safe while the legislature is in session
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