Well I support the woman's right to choose, though I do not generally support third trimester abortions (unless there are special reasons to justify it).
Furthermore fetuses, and even young infants do not really have higher brain functions. Reflexive actions and recognition are not evidence of such. Heck my goldfish when they were still alive would recognize me when I entered the room the tank was in by displaying specific behavior. They also displayed their own separate personalities too. Potential is also not a good argument as that can be spun out in all kinds of absurd directions. Actuality (the then and now) is all that matters. Btw with cloning, a cell with complete genetic material is all you need to start a new life.
As for men having a say, well I am sorry but no you have no rights to the woman's body. If the technology ever comes where the child could be transferred to you (or an artificial womb), then and
only then would you have an equal say in the matter. This applies to the woman wanting to abort the baby only though. The opposite way is far more dicey as both parties should have a say on keeping the baby (or the financial results of keeping it). If a woman absolutely insists on having the child and the male does not want it from the start, should the male have to pay child support? Hard to say IMHO.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Aramike
(Post 1195676)
The people who harp repeatedly on overpopulation always gloss over two very important things: First, the Earth can not, by nature, support more human beings that it can support. That's would violate the first fundamental law of logic. Secondly, technology is always increasing the amount of human beings that the earth can support.
We're not going to see disasterous overpopulation because it is impossible. If the earth can't support 10 billion people, for instance, the difference between that number and what the earth CAN support will perish.
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I'm sorry but I have to totally disagree with that statement.
The problem is you are not looking at the big picture, its not a question solely of how many humans the earth can sustain, but how many the earth can sustain with out trashing the ecosystem (which is essential to our own survival; destroy the ecosystem and you destroy ourselves with it). Right now with the current population we are straining the ecosystem to the limit. The problem is not as much apparent in the west (though we are a major contributor to the problem globally), where birth rates are about equal with death rates. It exists in the 2nd and 3rd world countries where birth rates are at astronomical levels, and the resources don't exist to support them. These populations survive by plundering the local ecosystem (and by world aid) trying to survive in the short term by destroying any long term future. They are the ones hacking down the forests, and causing mass extinction.
It also takes time to hit the population wall where the effects hit home. You can observe this when ever a certain animal population gets out of control. Lets take deer for example:
Deer have been known to have massive population explosions, where they have a really good year, or the predator population which keeps them in check has a really bad year (or gets wiped out). The next year there are far more deer then the ecosystem can take, but there are still enough resources for the deer to continue to grow, at the expense of their ecosystem (they start stripping the bark off trees and other stuff which damages their food supply). The year after that they start to run into the wall, but have not yet damaged their ecosystem sufficiently to halt the problem. At this point the ecosystem is taking major damage, and the plants the deer rely on are being destroyed by all the hungry deer. By the next year they have caused massive damage to their ecosystem, not only is there not enough food to support the current population, but the ecosystem is so badly damaged by their feeding that there isn't even enough left to support 1/8th of their normal population. This results in mass starvation and further damage to the ecosystem by the survivors. Not only does this affect the deer, but it affects all the other creatures in the chain both plant and animal. The populations all drop to very low levels, and after many decades the ecosystem will slowly recover (assuming it wasn't damaged beyond the point of repair).
Right now we are the deer, and we are pushing the ecosystem of the entire world to the breaking point. Our capacity for destroying the ecosystem of the globe far exceeds that of any other creature. From my perspective from all the information I have gathered, we have already hit the wall, and the global ecosystem is rapidly reaching the breaking point. The big problem with us though is the wall is not as hard as it is for the deer in a forest. Our world is much bigger then theirs, and it takes far longer before the effects are completely clear for everyone.
The problem is there is no magic number. We just expand and take over all that is around us. But when we do that we take the risk of destroying ourselves, as we are forever linked to the ecosystem of the planet. We destroy the wrong thing in our foolishness and we get taken down with it.