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#1
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Every practice that is outlawed continues to some degree. There is drug abuse. There is underage drinking. There is insider trading. Yes, there are other varieties of murder. But obviously the incidence of these things goes down when they are outlawed and punishment after due process is applied. Ever watch the investigative dramas about police work? There are many, many characters depicted that are in a bind, maybe they murder to end exploitation or blackmail, or they got carried away with an emotional reaction, or they were just stone cold evil. In every case, the sorting out of the case is left to the courts. The apprehension and charging of the suspect is uniformly carried out by the police, and then the case is adjudicated by the court. That is all fiction of course, but it should say something about how we view the law and how we teach our kids (the ones not aborted), about right and wrong. The idea that we would let a heinous practice continue to be legal just because people will continue to do it is not one that I would support. |
#2
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![]() Quote:
This "heinous practice" was legal until about 1867, then illegal nationwide roughly until 1970, when NY State legalized it, and had a 45 percent drop in maternal mortality the following year. So we had a 100 year window to see the effects of making it illegal. Today, there are roughly 1,100,000 abortions a year. During the 1950s and 1960s, estimates on numbers of illegal abortions range from 200,000 to 1,200,000 a year. (That's in a population of 180 million in 1960, as opposed to the 282 million we have today.) So yeah, making it illegal sure did dissuade women from getting them (pause while my eyes roll back in my head).
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