I am absolutely crying here at my computer.
You're so good Latrade thank you. All my life this battle. Why.
Im going to try and make a difference right now today by emailing all the TDs for my constituency and telling them I want something done.
There is a form [broken link removed] that lets you email them all at once. Although I will be changing the content as I want a referendum not legislation on a 20 year old case.
IMHO that would be an irrational knee jerk reaction for anyone to make. Despite this tragedy, ROI is one of the safest places in the world for a expectant mother. Safer than the UK which has abortion on demand.If I were pregnant and suffering a complication I would probably consider the drive to NI a safer option than going to the nearest Irish hospital.
I think time will tell that these spontaneous protests were organized prior to the story breaking in the media.Spontaneous protests in Dublin, Cork and London.
Perhaps because this thread has heretofore been dominated by a knot of pro-abortion posters agreeing with each other.To AAM users: it's good this debate can be had on a reasonable level.
Indeed, but that will depend on what you perceive to be vested interests.Glad that it's with long term posters as we can I think freely debate it and that it has not been hijacked by vested interests. Yet.
The FF/PD government fecked up the 2002 abortion (Protection of Human Life in Pregnancy) referendum - which was meant to undo the flawed x-case judgement - by including protection for destructive embryonic stem-cell research. This compelled a sizeable cohort of pro-lifers to vote against, and it was narrowly defeated (<0.5%).. . the only attempts by the government since the X-Case as far as legislation is to try to make the abortion law more strict in order to "clarify". Both attempts failed, both times the people of Ireland spoke despite CC influence.
IMHO that would be an irrational knee jerk reaction for anyone to make. Despite this tragedy, ROI is one of the safest places in the world for a expectant mother.
The FF/PD government fecked up the 2002 abortion (Protection of Human Life in Pregnancy) referendum - which was meant to undo the flawed x-case judgement - by including protection for destructive embryonic stem-cell research. This compelled a sizeable cohort of pro-lifers to vote against, and it was narrowly defeated (<0.5%).
dominated by a knot of pro-abortion posters agreeing with each other.
Ireland is also less than safe than many countries with liberal abortions laws. There is no doubt in my mind that the mother in this case would still be alive if she had presented to a UK hospital instead of an Irish one.Despite this tragedy, ROI is one of the safest places in the world for a expectant mother. Safer than the UK which has abortion on demand.
The anti-abortion people only fell silent when the thread was re-opened after this case came to light. Before the thread was closed, more than half the contributions were from anti-abortion people (it was about 60/40 excluding the neutrals/moderates) – the discussion of this case has been about 80/20 to the pro-choice people. As I said in a previous post, this case is just so indefensible and inexcusable, it is hard for an anti-abortion poster to say anything other than falling back on ‘let’s wait and see what the reports say’.Perhaps because this thread has heretofore been dominated by a knot of pro-abortion posters agreeing with each other.
While I'm generally pro-life (if that's the pc term), it seems to me that the rules change completely when the foetus will not survive, be that either full term within the womb or outside the womb immediately on birth.
If there's the slightest risk to the mother it seems imminently sensible to "call time" that bit quicker than nature would act. What's the point in risking a viable life for one that is about the end anyway.
Maybe you should read the post by oldnick (#125 in this thread) michaelm as that is a disgusting simplification of the views posted by many on this thread.Perhaps because this thread has heretofore been dominated by a knot of pro-abortion posters agreeing with each other.
I am of the opinion that any legislation enacted will be vigorously challenged in the courts by the pro life rabble.
The only viable solution would be to have a proper referendum asking a simple question of the people. Yes or no to abortion.
The only viable solution would be to have a proper referendum asking a simple question of the people. Yes or no to abortion.
And just to clarify, there is no stance known as pro-abortion which suggests that people wish for every pregnancy to be aborted leading to the end of humanity as we know it.
So, its quite reasonable to describe a position in favour of abortions as being "pro-abortion".
So people may be suspicious of why a man who often judges homosexuals, athiests, women who have or wish to have the choice of having an abortion at the drop of a hat and fills numerous columns with very thinly hidden bile,
I suspect if you ask a Yes/No question you'd get a No answer (remember how tight the divorce referendum was - and I would have said that was a no-brainer, ok we've moved on etc etc but ....). If it was Yes/No I'd vote No, and that would mean no legislating for the Galway case, which would be a very bad thing.
Better to have a referendum to get agreement with the Supreme Ct ruling, or some version of it, possibly get a Yes (I'd vote Yes) and then legislate off the back of that.
Are you in favour of:
- Abortion on Demand
- Abortion in the case of rape, maternal life, health, mental health, socioeconomic factors, and/or fetal defects
- Other choices with a subset of the above
- No abortion at all
Its also clear to me that the poster used the term deliberately to reflect their views and to depict a particular stance, known commonly as pro-choice, as a negative thing.
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