View Poll Results: Should abortion and abortifacients be legalized through the RH bill?

Voters
70. You may not vote on this poll
  • Yes

    13 18.57%
  • No

    57 81.43%
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  1. #301

    Quote Originally Posted by mannyamador View Post
    Such strawman arguments are useless. Neither the egg nor the sperm has 46 chromosomes. It is only when they are united that the 46 chromosomes needed to define a person's traits are present. Implantation is only a change in location, but the process began at fertilization.
    Great! Now we can arrest all menstruating women as murderers.

    Okay. A fertilized egg is NOT A BABY. 1.- a fertilized egg can be Frozen, then thawed and then implanted and then develop normally. Tell me when you can do this with an adult, a full-term baby, or even an implanted embryo? 2. Most fertilized eggs never reach the uterine wall, and thus are expelled naturally. So when that happens is a baby coming out of her? No. Its a clump of CELLS...

    source: Digg forums
    Last edited by giddyboy; 06-01-2009 at 09:40 PM.

  2. #302
    Some really poor logic from the Digg forums up there.

    Just because you can't do certain things to an adult yet doesn't mean that only those things you can dio are proper to human persons. We couldn't clone them a few decades ago either. And menstruation is a natural part of the process, which requires NO human intervention. Abortion through abortifacients DOES require intervention. One is a natural occurrence, the other is a deliberate inhuman act.

    KEEP THE PEOPLE FREE! NO TO THE COERCIVE PROVISIONS OF HB5043!
    --
    Please sign the petition AGAINST the so-called Reproductive Health Bill (HB5043)
    http://www.petitiononline.com/xxhb5043/

  3. #303
    Right to choose vs right to life
    A LAW EACH DAY (Keeps Trouble Away)
    By Jose C. Sison
    Updated May 22, 2009 12:00 AM
    Right to choose vs right to life | The Philippine Star >> News >> Opinion

    The most common ground cited for the passage of the RH bill is the alleged need for family planning of couples especially the poor. For this purpose, the proponents say it is necessary for them particularly the women to be properly informed of their sexual and reproductive health rights and to have access to reproductive health services so that they can exercise their right to a well informed choice.

    The RH bill thus aims to enshrine in our legal system the reproductive health rights allowing women to choose from an entire range of family planning methods including artificial means that cause abortion. This is the pro-choice stance widely recognized in the US that links the right to have abortion to “reproductive health” which is now the official policy of the Obama administration. And it is a policy that Obama aims to spread to other countries. In fact one of his first moves was to restore taxpayer funding to groups that promote or perform abortion overseas. In his first budget to be submitted to Congress, Obama will not only restore funding to the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) but also increase it to $65 million. This is the UN body involved in and supportive of the Chinese one-child policy that includes forced abortion and sterilization.

    A coalition of abortion advocacy groups including the Catholics for Choice, the Center for Reproductive Rights, the Guttmacher Institute, International Planned Parenthood Federation (the presumed architect of the RH bill), International Women’s Health coalition, National Organization for Women and Population Action International is also asking the Obama administration to increase funding for international family programs to $1 billion arguing that “more than 200 million women in the developing world wish to delay, space or complete childbearing but do not have access to modern contraceptives” that are undeniably abortifacients.

    Regrettably, some Filipino Catholics among them legislators also have this “pro-choice” stance allegedly for “humanitarian reasons”. They adamantly insist that women should have the right to choose the methods they believe would be more effective in planning their family to alleviate them from poverty. Hopefully they may be enlightened by Pope John Paul II’s answer to why he had repeatedly condemned any legalization of abortion which has even been defined as “obsessive” by certain cultural and political groups professing “humanitarian reasons” on their side — the side that has led governments to permit abortion. The Pope said:

    “For man, the right to life is the fundamental right. And yet, a part of contemporary culture has wanted to deny that right, turning it into an “uncomfortable” right, one that has to be defended. But there is no other right that so closely affects the very existence of the person! The right to life means the right to be born and then continue to live until one’s natural end. “As long as I live, I have the right to live.”

    The question of conceived and unborn children is a particularly delicate yet clear problem. The legalization of the termination of pregnancy is none other than the authorization given to an adult, with the approval of the established law, to take the lives of children yet unborn and thus incapable of defending themselves. It is difficult to imagine a more unjust situation, and it is very difficult to speak of obsession in a matter such as this, where we are dealing with the fundamental imperative of every good conscience — the defense of the right to life of an innocent and defenseless human being.

    Often the question is presented as a woman’s right to free choice regarding the life already existing inside her, that she carries in her womb: the woman should have the right to choose between giving life or taking it away from the unborn child. Anyone can see that the alternative is only apparent. It is not possible to speak of the right to choose when a clear moral evil is involved, when what is at stake is the commandment Do not kill.

    Might this commandment allow of exception? The answer in and of itself is no, since even the hypothesis of legitimate defense, which never concerns an innocent but always and only an unjust aggressor must respect the principle of non culpable defense. In order to be legitimate that “defense” must be carried out in a way that causes the least damage and, if possible saves the life of the aggressor.

    This is not the case with an unborn child. A child conceived in its mother’s womb is never an unjust aggressor; it is a defenseless being that is waiting to be welcomed and helped.

    It is necessary to recognize that, in this context, we are witnessing true human tragedies. Often the woman is the victim of male selfishness, in the sense that the man, who has contributed to the conception of the new life, does not want to be burdened with it and leaves the responsibility to the woman, as if it were “her fault” alone. So, precisely when the woman most needs the man’s support, he proves to be a cynical egotist, capable of exploiting her affection or weakness, yet stubbornly resistant to any sense of responsibility for his own action.

    Therefore, in firmly rejecting “pro-choice” it is necessary to become courageously “pro-woman”, promoting a choice that is truly in favor of woman. It is precisely the woman, in fact, who pays the highest price, not only for her motherhood, but even more for its destruction, for the suppression of the life of the child who has been conceived. The only honest stance, in these cases is that of radical solidarity with the woman. It is not right to leave her alone. The experiences of many counseling centers show that the woman does not want to suppress the life of the child she carries within her. If she is supported in this attitude, and if at the same time she is freed from the intimidation of those around her, then she is even capable of heroism. As I have said, numerous counseling centers are witnesses to this, as are, in a special way, houses for teenage mothers. It seems therefore, that society is beginning to develop a more mature attitude in this regard, even if there are still many self styled “benefactors” who claim to “help” women by liberating them from the prospect of motherhood” (Crossing the Threshold of Hope, 204-207).

    ***

    No to abortion; no to the RH Bill!!!
    Last edited by mannyamador; 06-01-2009 at 10:19 PM.

  4. #304
    Quote Originally Posted by mannyamador View Post
    Some really poor logic from the Digg forums up there.

    Just because you can't do certain things to an adult yet doesn't mean that only those things you can dio are proper to human persons. We couldn't clone them a few decades ago either. And menstruation is a natural part of the process, which requires NO human intervention. Abortion through abortifacients DOES require intervention. One is a natural occurrence, the other is a deliberate inhuman act.
    well, admit it or not but definitely there is a point from Digg forums.

    "Most fertilized eggs never reach the uterine wall, and thus are expelled naturally. So when that happens is a baby coming out of her? No. Its a clump of CELLS..."

    actually this is not poor logic. it simply questions the life-begins-at-fertilization thingy. in fact, but in technical terms, these are the same arguments from experts who happen to believe life begins at implantation, contrary to experts who believe otherwise.

    and don't even try to liken in-vitro w/ cloning...
    Last edited by giddyboy; 06-01-2009 at 10:26 PM.

  5. #305
    we always insist on our rights, adults as we are, male or female; but why should we not consider the right of a "developing organism", very much having life of its own, but very vulnerable and very dependent on the woman that carries it? After all, its genetic composition, albeit still on development, is human, and when fully develop into a human being, it is unique yet also a brother or a sister to us. I hope everyone, the woman or any other, will also consider that such has a right to live in our world.

  6. #306
    i will disagree with this topic, i'd rather agree to legalize divorce in our country.........

  7. #307
    Quote Originally Posted by giddyboy View Post
    "Most fertilized eggs never reach the uterine wall, and thus are expelled naturally. So when that happens is a baby coming out of her?
    This is a strawman. It maybe isn't a "baby" as far as looks are concerned, but it is human life that has been terminated (if the egg has been fertilized). Just because it did not continue to develop does not make it any less human. If so, then any human being who has been killed must be now be considered "non-human". This is, of course, absurd.

    Quote Originally Posted by masterjanuarius
    I hope everyone, the woman or any other, will also consider that such has a right to live in our world.
    Well said!

  8. #308
    C.I.A. grlnxtdor16's Avatar
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    i dont think nga ma approve judn i xa nga bill EVER... simply because we are a catholic country. and dako jud kaau impluwensya sa simbahan sa atong mga tinuohan. but also we have embodied our own values in our lives. so dapat di jud ni xa madayon kai luoy kau ang bata even if wala pa xa na born tungod kai dapat dili xa ang mu bayad kung nasayop man gani ang parents niya. sa rason nga family planning, there are OTHER methods nga pwede ma gamit para di ma buntis.. grabe naman jud ng e abort oie. it is not an option.

  9. #309
    Quote Originally Posted by masterjanuarius View Post
    we always insist on our rights, adults as we are, male or female; but why should we not consider the right of a "developing organism", very much having life of its own, but very vulnerable and very dependent on the woman that carries it? After all, its genetic composition, albeit still on development, is human, and when fully develop into a human being, it is unique yet also a brother or a sister to us. I hope everyone, the woman or any other, will also consider that such has a right to live in our world.
    but the thing is, whether a fertilized egg, developing organism/cell, murola or whatever u want to call it, has already life of its own or not is still open to worldwide expert debate...

    as for me, i don't have any problems using the condom, my wife using IUD or the pill. my only problem will be if my wife will be using another man for those...teheee

    call me un-Catholic or a lesser Catholic, i don't care. i would prefer be called spiritual rather than religious. besides, i don't really go for the institutional God, coz i'd rather be more with my personal God.

  10. #310
    Quote Originally Posted by giddyboy View Post
    but the thing is, whether a fertilized egg, developing organism/cell, murola or whatever u want to call it, has already life of its own or not is still open to worldwide expert debate.
    Not as far as science and logic are concerned. if one denies that the fertilized egg is already human life, then one undermines any other argument for the start of life at any other point. Aside from the moment of conception at fertilization, there is no other time when it can be said to begin unless one is totally arbitrary. That is not rational.

    call me un-Catholic or a lesser Catholic, i don't care. i would prefer be called spiritual rather than religious. besides, i don't really go for the institutional God, coz i'd rather be more with my personal God.
    The proper term is UNFAITHFUL Christian. Christianity involves obedience to Christ's teachings, not making up what simply suits oneself.
    Last edited by mannyamador; 06-01-2009 at 10:52 PM.

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