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Posted
2 minutes ago, KRC said:

 

When you need to fabricate other people's opinions just so that you can complain, you have lost.

 

 

He came in with his preconceived bias.

 

His attempt at glibness with his calling his viewpoint  (my bias is liberty, science, and reason,)  gives away his whole purpose.

 

It is certain that he did not really attempt to see what the articles or videos said, why bother ?  He knows that his bigoted narrative can't be wrong.

 

 

 

.

  • Like (+1) 1
Posted
4 minutes ago, row_33 said:

 

that is quite a leap into metaphysics and your little metanarrative there

 

that's not reason or logic or science

 

 

at least 4 levels of straw man in your comment

please show some sign that you have reason and science and logic in your mind at all, pretty please??

 


Those are some nice triple word scores you have there, unfortunately, the definitions aren't relevant at all.

A zygote, embryo, or fetus is not a person any more than a tree is a house, a cow is a steak, or a piece of steel ore is a BMW.

It's almost universal that different laws and regulations apply to materials and organisms in different  states of existence, because as human being we can understand all of the above to be true. The issue comes when you start to involve religion, because then all of that basic understanding goes straight out the window in lieu of following stories in a book that most proponents probably haven't even read.

Without religion, the amount of anti-choice proponents would probably not be statistically significant.

  • Like (+1) 1
Posted (edited)

 

https://www.babycenter.com

 

14 weeks Your baby's kidneys are producing urine, and he releases it into the amniotic fluid. He can make facial expressions and may have discovered thumb-sucking.
15 weeks Your baby can see light that filters in from outside your womb, even though her eyelids are still shut.
16 weeks Your baby's sex may be detectable at your mid-pregnancy ultrasound, which typically happens between 16 and 20 weeks.
18 weeks If you haven't felt your baby move yet, you probably will in the next few weeks. It'll take a couple of weeks longer for other people to feel your baby's movements from the outside.
19 weeks Your baby can hear your heartbeat and sounds that come from outside your body, such as your partner's voice. Her skin is wrinkly and is covered by a protective, waxy coating. She measures about 6 inches from head to bottom and weighs about 8 1/2 ounces.
23 weeks Your baby's sense of movement has developed, so he can feel the motion if you dance. His sense of hearing continues to improve. You may sometimes be able to see him squirming under the surface of your belly.pregnancy-week-23-hearing_square.png
24 weeks Your baby's taste buds are developing. Her brain is growing very quickly, and her hair may be growing, too. She's almost a foot long and weighs just over a pound.
27 weeks Your baby's lungs are developing but won't be fully functional for several more weeks. He's "practicing" for life on the outside by inhaling and exhaling amniotic fluid, sleeping and waking up at regular intervals, opening and closing his eyes, and sucking his fingers.

Third trimester

28 weeks Your baby may be dreaming. She has eyelashes, and her eyesight is improving. Billions of neurons are developing in her brain. She weighs about 2 1/4 pounds and is about 15 inches long, head to heel.pregnancy-week-30-amniotic-fluid_4x3.jpg
32 weeks He's grown cute little fingernails and toenails. Your baby is also starting to plump up in preparation for birth. He's almost 17 inches long (head to heel) and weighs about 3 3/4 pounds.
34 weeks Your baby's lungs and central nervous system are continuing to develop. Her skin has become soft and smooth, and she's filling out and getting even rounder. She's almost 18 inches long and weighs about 4 3/4 pounds.
37 weeks Your baby is now considered "early term." Babies born now usually do well, but ideally he'll stay in your womb for a couple more weeks to give his brain and lungs time to fully mature.
39 weeks Your baby is now considered full-term and is ready for life outside the womb. The average weight of a newborn is about 7 1/2 pounds, and the average length is about 20 inches.
41 weeks You've passed your due date and your baby is now considered "late term." (If you're still pregnant at 42 weeks, she's "post term.") Your baby's health may be monitored with tests such as a nonstress test or biophysical profile. To avoid complications, your doctor will probably talk to you about inducing labor in the next week or two.

 

Not sure if it's really a human, are you. 

Edited by Nanker
  • Like (+1) 1
Posted
8 minutes ago, BullBuchanan said:

Without religion, the amount of anti-choice proponents would probably not be statistically significant.

 

Then again, science has given people a greater understanding of the development of a fetus into a human baby while in the womb. Science has provided images which allow people to see exactly how alive that "piece of steel" is inside their bodies. 

 

... But sure, put it all on religion like one who believes in "liberty" does. 

Posted
1 minute ago, Deranged Rhino said:

 

Then again, science has given people a greater understanding of the development of a fetus into a human baby while in the womb. Science has provided images which allow people to see exactly how alive that "piece of steel" is inside their bodies. 

 

... But sure, put it all on religion like one who believes in "liberty" does. 


Sure, that's cute at all, but it's not relevant. It's not a person. You can watch a BMW being made in the shop and at a certain point it can look like a car, but you can't drive it.

Everything has to have parameters

Posted
6 minutes ago, Nanker said:

 

https://www.babycenter.com

 

14 weeks Your baby's kidneys are producing urine, and he releases it into the amniotic fluid. He can make facial expressions and may have discovered thumb-sucking.
15 weeks Your baby can see light that filters in from outside your womb, even though her eyelids are still shut.
16 weeks Your baby's sex may be detectable at your mid-pregnancy ultrasound, which typically happens between 16 and 20 weeks.
18 weeks If you haven't felt your baby move yet, you probably will in the next few weeks. It'll take a couple of weeks longer for other people to feel your baby's movements from the outside.
19 weeks Your baby can hear your heartbeat and sounds that come from outside your body, such as your partner's voice. Her skin is wrinkly and is covered by a protective, waxy coating. She measures about 6 inches from head to bottom and weighs about 8 1/2 ounces.
23 weeks Your baby's sense of movement has developed, so he can feel the motion if you dance. His sense of hearing continues to improve. You may sometimes be able to see him squirming under the surface of your belly.pregnancy-week-23-hearing_square.png
24 weeks Your baby's taste buds are developing. Her brain is growing very quickly, and her hair may be growing, too. She's almost a foot long and weighs just over a pound.
27 weeks Your baby's lungs are developing but won't be fully functional for several more weeks. He's "practicing" for life on the outside by inhaling and exhaling amniotic fluid, sleeping and waking up at regular intervals, opening and closing his eyes, and sucking his fingers.

Third trimester

28 weeks Your baby may be dreaming. She has eyelashes, and her eyesight is improving. Billions of neurons are developing in her brain. She weighs about 2 1/4 pounds and is about 15 inches long, head to heel.pregnancy-week-30-amniotic-fluid_4x3.jpg
32 weeks He's grown cute little fingernails and toenails. Your baby is also starting to plump up in preparation for birth. He's almost 17 inches long (head to heel) and weighs about 3 3/4 pounds.
34 weeks Your baby's lungs and central nervous system are continuing to develop. Her skin has become soft and smooth, and she's filling out and getting even rounder. She's almost 18 inches long and weighs about 4 3/4 pounds.
37 weeks Your baby is now considered "early term." Babies born now usually do well, but ideally he'll stay in your womb for a couple more weeks to give his brain and lungs time to fully mature.
39 weeks Your baby is now considered full-term and is ready for life outside the womb. The average weight of a newborn is about 7 1/2 pounds, and the average length is about 20 inches.
41 weeks You've passed your due date and your baby is now considered "late term." (If you're still pregnant at 42 weeks, she's "post term.") Your baby's health may be monitored with tests such as a nonstress test or biophysical profile. To avoid complications, your doctor will probably talk to you about inducing labor in the next week or two.

 

Not sure if it's really a human, are you. 

Are migrants humans? Hypocrite 

Posted
Just now, BullBuchanan said:


Sure, that's cute at all, but it's not relevant.

 

It's entirely relevant and makes your argument that if not for religion people wouldn't care moot. 

 

But keep on bashing religion. That's what liberty means to you after all.

Posted
3 minutes ago, Deranged Rhino said:

 

Then again, science has given people a greater understanding of the development of a fetus into a human baby while in the womb. Science has provided images which allow people to see exactly how alive that "piece of steel" is inside their bodies. 

 

... But sure, put it all on religion like one who believes in "liberty" does. 


You have your right to believe in religion, and live in a way that accords with it, as long as it doesn't infringe on the rights of someone else to live theirs.

Just now, Deranged Rhino said:

 

It's entirely relevant and makes your argument that if not for religion people wouldn't care moot. 

 

But keep on bashing religion. That's what liberty means to you after all.

Being able to bash religion is EXACTLY what liberty is, just as your right to believe in it is also EXACTLY what liberty is.

Go ahead and tell people that having an abortion is wrong or morally bankrupt. That's your right.

What isn't your right is supporting a cause that prevents them from exercising their own choice

Posted (edited)
50 minutes ago, Tiberius said:

Are migrants humans? Hypocrite 

 

yes they are human, no they are not citizens of the  USA. 

 

No one is trying to abort the migrants.

 

But just like abortions, I don't want to pay for them!

 

What's your point?

 

 

Edited by Gary M
  • Like (+1) 1
Posted
12 minutes ago, Gary M said:

 

yes they are human, no they are not citizens of the  USA. 

 

No one is trying to abort the migrants.

 

But just like abortions, I don't want to pay for them!

 

What's your point?

 

 

 Good, how about treating them like humans that need help? 

  • Like (+1) 1
Posted
5 minutes ago, Gary M said:

Scapegoating people is not treating them with respect or in a civilized manner 

 

Sorry Trump, Immigration is Still Associated with Less Crime and Safer Communities. The presidential candidate's attempt to correlate immigration and crime is ...
 
Posted
3 minutes ago, Tiberius said:

Scapegoating people is not treating them with respect or in a civilized manner 

 

Sorry Trump, Immigration is Still Associated with Less Crime and Safer Communities. The presidential candidate's attempt to correlate immigration and crime is …
 

 

Who did those links scapegoat? 

Posted

Why a third trimester abortion is even a discussion is beyond me.

 

The circumstances of the pregnancy are already long decided by the third trimester.

 

Women have a chance to abort an unwanted pregnancy early on. 

 

Going thru the pregnancy and then all of a sudden late in the pregnancy they want to abort the baby? Let that sink in.

Posted (edited)

Gary................quit chasing the ?️ ?️ ?️

 

 

Biden Flips Again on Hyde Amendment, Now Supports Taxpayer Funded Abortions

 

 

 

 

Edited by B-Man
Posted

i just learned today that the procedure isn't covered...

 

through Biden Agonistes on the matter

 

 

 

 

Posted
3 hours ago, BullBuchanan said:


Those are some nice triple word scores you have there, unfortunately, the definitions aren't relevant at all.

A zygote, embryo, or fetus is not a person any more than a tree is a house, a cow is a steak, or a piece of steel ore is a BMW.

It's almost universal that different laws and regulations apply to materials and organisms in different  states of existence, because as human being we can understand all of the above to be true. The issue comes when you start to involve religion, because then all of that basic understanding goes straight out the window in lieu of following stories in a book that most proponents probably haven't even read.

Without religion, the amount of anti-choice proponents would probably not be statistically significant.

Dumbass hasn't even heard of a treehouse.

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