kirisutogomen (
kirisutogomen) wrote2011-09-28 03:03 am
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Entry tags:
Chinese advertisements
The answer is the tag, rot13'd, but to save you the trouble, I'll tell you. First, the original ad before I mucked with it. (Yes, it was left-right mirrored like most people guessed. I'm still curious as to why among people who are entirely illiterate in Han characters the mirroring was blatantly obvious to some and not at all to others.)

And another for the same service from a competing provider:

These are ads for abortion clinics. Chinese abortion clinics advertise on prime-time television. They offer student discounts. Not sure if they have special holiday sales, nor if you get abortion coupons with your newspaper.
Now, unless you take the position that a fetus at any stage has the moral standing of a lintball but that magically at the moment the head crowns it suddenly becomes a full human person endowed with a complete set of inalienable rights plus a stylish carrying case, there's got to be a point at which you say, "Hrm. My liberal sensibilities tell me that I should advocate fiercely for a woman's right to choose, but I don't actually want people to treat abortion like a trip to the hair salon. What does my victory condition actually look like?"
And then there's the issue of sex selection, which really kicks over a Pandora's hornets' nest of other issues.
And another for the same service from a competing provider:
These are ads for abortion clinics. Chinese abortion clinics advertise on prime-time television. They offer student discounts. Not sure if they have special holiday sales, nor if you get abortion coupons with your newspaper.
Now, unless you take the position that a fetus at any stage has the moral standing of a lintball but that magically at the moment the head crowns it suddenly becomes a full human person endowed with a complete set of inalienable rights plus a stylish carrying case, there's got to be a point at which you say, "Hrm. My liberal sensibilities tell me that I should advocate fiercely for a woman's right to choose, but I don't actually want people to treat abortion like a trip to the hair salon. What does my victory condition actually look like?"
And then there's the issue of sex selection, which really kicks over a Pandora's hornets' nest of other issues.
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The brain development is pretty constant and things like the circulatory system having been working for a while, it's more than at birth, the respiratory and digestive systems "go live."
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I'm not seeing the final point you're building up to, though. (Put another way, I see a bunch of interesting facts, but not how they tie together.)
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I mean, just because they haven't separated yet, doesn't mean they aren't separable.
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How does this tie into whether what a person does with their own body is or isn't legal?
I think you're discussing when legal oversight of a child begins and ends (or perhaps, what kinds of legal autonomy a child should have until the age of majority, whenever that is), which is important, but a different matter.
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So I'm back to repeating
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This is just a variant of the quarantine or smoking examples: you can do whatever you want with your body, so long as it doesn't affect anyone else.
What's your basis for this sharp bright line? The people are separable well before they typically separate.
One is completely dependent on the other before birth, and not afterwards. We-ll, actually, that's not strictly true: see astra_nomer's point about saving the life of the mother.
I also still don't see the connection to the legal issue. I see a moral issue here, certainly, but not a legal connection.
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First breathe of air is an arbitrary point to award a baby/fetus status as "anyone else" ("so long as it doesn't affect anyone else"), especially in a day and age when such a thing (birth) can be scheduled and preemies regularly live to adulthood.
Plus they're pretty dependent after they take that first breathe too.
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From the original post:
Now, unless you take the position that a fetus at any stage has the moral standing of a lintball but that magically at the moment the head crowns it suddenly becomes a full human person endowed with a complete set of inalienable rights plus a stylish carrying case, there's got to be a point at which you say, "Hrm. My liberal sensibilities tell me that I should advocate fiercely for a woman's right to choose, but I don't actually want people to treat abortion like a trip to the hair salon. What does my victory condition actually look like?"
The legal issue is: what degree of self-determination does a person have over their own body?
You're bringing up interesting biological questions, but I don't see how they relate to the legal issue. They are quite interesting from a philosophical standpoint, or a biological standpoint, or a moral standpoint.
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I wasn't actually debating the legal issue, though I do think that things are complicated enough that boiling it down do a bright line and a one sentence slogan misses a lot of important stuff.
As to what degree of self-determination *does* a person have over their own body, my guess is that legally the answer is currently quite a lot, but less than 100%. (Though I think Cael was pondering replacing "does" with "should.")
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By the way, there are also substantial biological changes that happen in a short period at birth, particularly with vaginal births. Those changes may or may not define what is or isn't human, but it's far from a smooth, continuous change.