An atheist asks on
Reasonable Faith.org why, if it is right to use lethal force in the defense of an innocent person whose life is in danger, we should not use lethal force against abortion doctors.
radical_logic wrote:
So if a fetus is really a person, with a full set of human rights endowed by his creator, and if abortion constitutes murder, then why would it not be perfectly justifiable to use lethal force against abortion doctors when they are about to commit murder?
My Response
In my opinion, if a fetus really were a person with a full set of human rights, and if all other conditions were equal, I think you would have a case. However, the idea that a fetus is a person is a very new idea and not universally accepted. Not even children have full legal rights as persons. We need to be at least 18 years old to to have full legal rights on all levels. In some cultures, a penis is also a requirement.
I realize you are talking about human rights as opposed to legal rights. If you wish to look at human rights, you need to also take into consideration the rights of the mother. Under what conditions did she become pregnant?
Are we talking about an eleven-year-old girl who was raped by an older brother or cousin? Or a situation where neither child understood what they were doing due to lack of education?
Are we talking about date-rape? Or any other kind of rape?
If we are talking about a situation where a mother is forced or coerced to keep an unwanted pregnancy, what will be the consequences for that child and future generations?
Take into consideration the implications of emotional or physical child abuse. The chances of child abuse are much higher for unwanted children than for children who are wanted. According to the studies of one specialist, abuse tends to be transmitted from one generation to the next for up to ten generations.
People who have not experienced severe rejection of their total selves by their own parents, and all who should have loved and protected them as human beings, cannot imagine the crippling effect it has on a person's capacity to operate as a decent law-abiding human being. There is evidence that the experience in the womb has a lasting impact on the individual's attitude toward him or herself.
I know I was a wanted child, but it seems my mother was disappointed in me early on and I was never able to gain her approval. My next sister was all she could have wished for. The emotional abuse and rejection were severe. However, I have a memory of a time that I believe was pre-birth when all was peace and calm. That memory is what carried me though.
Because of it, I knew there was more to life than what I was getting. It guided me as an adult and convinced me that the pursuit of peace through impossible barriers would pay off in the end. I have not been disappointed.
I shudder to think what would have happened had I not been wanted in the first place. I would likely either be in jail for serious crime against humanity or a suicide statistic. The human psyche can only take so much negativity.
Thus, it is because of the enormous risk of child abuse, and the very serious consequences of child abuse, that I think abortion must be a legal option for unwanted pregnancies, no matter how the pregnancy was acquired. We are talking about future generations; the mother is but one figure in the picture and not a very important one. On the other hand: The hand that rocks the cradle is the hand that rules the world.