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Politics 2: Electric Boogaloo — Page 357

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TV’s Frink said:

Warbler said:

TV’s Frink said:

chyron8472 said:

yhwx said:

Warbler said:

TV’s Frink said:

Warbler said:

TV’s Frink said:

Warbler said:

TV’s Frink said:

Is a boy more into sports because he has a penis or because his Dad liked sports and the other boys liked sports and they all looked down on him until he liked sports?

I’m guessing it’s the latter.

What about transgendered people? When they are young, aren’t they given the clothes and the toys of the gender everyone things they are and they sometimes reject them and prefer the toys and cloths of the other gender?

Often, yes.

Not sure what your point is, unless you’re just agreeing with me.

My point is that maybe there is something about what gender your brain is that affects what you like that don’t like. You said that maybe the only reason a boy likes sports is because his Dad did and how other boys would look down on him for not liking sports. If what you said is true, then a person born with the mind of girl but the body of a boy would still end up liking sports and the same would true of toys and clothes, yet we know it doesn’t work like that.

Newsflash: Some girls like football and Star Wars, some boys like My Little Pony Friendship is Magic. A person with the mind of a girl but the body of a boy absolutely can end up liking sports and “boy” toys and clothes. You may think it doesn’t work like that but I guarantee you are wrong.

Newsflash: More boys than girls like football and Star Wars, more girls than boys like My Little Pony Friendship is Magic. A person with mind of girl but the body of a boy tends to reject the boy clothes and toys the person is given and instead favors the girl cloths and toys the same is also true of sports. You may think it doesn’t work like that but I guarantee you are wrong.

Newsflash: Parents want their kids to conform to their preconceived stereotypes. If their kid is a boy, they’re more likely to try to get them to act like a boy. Kids see stereotypes of gender in media. They carry these throughout their life. Kids can also be bullied if they don’t like the “right” thing. You may think it doesn’t work like that but I guarantee you are wrong.

Do any of you have kids?

I am a father to a 2.5 year old daughter, and her preferences, while influenced by me, are so very obviously to me not altogether of my or my wife’s making. She likes pink. She likes yellow. But that’s not because we actively encourage it by pushing it on her. As a parent, I am learning how much of who God made her to be, as well as trying to train her in the ways I think is best for her.

As a parent, I grow increasingly annoyed at accusations that parents brainwash or wrongfully indoctrinate their kids.

I have two girls, 6 and 9. They love Star Wars and My Little Pony. I’m almost certain they only love Star Wars because my wife and I do as well.

Are you sure it has nothing to do with Stars Wars being a good movie?

It doesn’t matter how good or bad a movie is if you don’t know anything about it. They only watched it the first time because we showed it to them.

So they love every single thing you’ve showed them?

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 (Edited)

CatBus said:

yhwx said:

Warbler said:

CatBus said:

Warbler said:

CatBus said:

Warbler said:

But the point is, they start doing that before they even know they are transgendered. They don’t go “oh! I transgendered! Now let me see how everyone thinks girls should act and I will act like that”, I think it is more like they start out preferring girls and then realize later on that they are transgendered.

Sure. As far as they know (with the examples I know), they’re a girl and they have a penis. They’re not trans, they’re a girl.

Wait, I’m not allowed to a call a transgendered person, transgendered anymore? When did that happen?

Context. If you’re talking about a four-year-old trans child, they don’t have the vocabulary to say trans, but they do know boy and girl. It’s okay to use words children don’t understand, but don’t expect them to understand you.

And sure, they’ve heard adults say that boys have penises and girls don’t, but they can look down their own pants for proof the adult is wrong, QED. It’s not until they learn a little more about society works that they identify as trans. Until then they’re just a girl like any other girl.

And despite everyone trying brainwashing them with how people with penises should act and what they should like, they still end up liking girl things.

No, that’s the thing. There are very few penises in your average media or parental message to kids. The message is that boys do this and girls do this, and they by and large accept these messages. It’s just when someone tells them that only boys have penises that they roll their eyes because they’ve got the proof right there.

I am not so sure of that. I don’t think A four year old trans child realizes yet that they are a girl with penis. I think they are only realize that they are different from other boys and prefer girl things. I think they only realize they are a girl with penis when they are little bit older.

From the sounds of it, CatBus has “dealt” with these children before. Therefore, what you think is moot. He’s the only one with experience in this conversation.

Yep. My kid’s school is kindof a magnet for parents of trans kids, basically because if you hear that there’s a school somewhere in the country where your kid won’t get the crap kicked out of them for being your kid, you pack your bags. A trans parent mass migration.

Awareness of sex differences in general is wildly variable. I’ve got an almost-five year old who really just figured out boys and girls, and I’d say he’s slightly later than most. But he still has trouble with using the right pronouns, which is more of an unrelated language/grammar issue. Some trans kids know with certainty right away, right out of the gate (about four): I’m a boy, period. Some have an uneasy feeling about the whole topic for a while and finally declare around eight or so. Some take a lot longer (adulthood). But if you ask them how long they’ve known, they reach pretty far back… often saying they’ve always felt this way but never felt confident enough about what this feeling was to finally put a name on it until now. Or worse, that they felt that had to go incognito until they moved out of their parents’ house.

I’m going to give my personal experience here because humans are selfish:

If you asked how long I knew I was a man/boy who is biologically male, I couldn’t give an answer. It’s not really something I found out all of a sudden and had to declare to the world, it’s just that it feels like it’s always been there. Maybe I just don’t have memory of the moment I “found out,” since I don’t really have many memories before age five or six, but my gender identity has felt like a constant.

I wonder if most people are like this.

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CatBus said:

yhwx said:

Warbler said:

CatBus said:

Warbler said:

CatBus said:

Warbler said:

But the point is, they start doing that before they even know they are transgendered. They don’t go “oh! I transgendered! Now let me see how everyone thinks girls should act and I will act like that”, I think it is more like they start out preferring girls and then realize later on that they are transgendered.

Sure. As far as they know (with the examples I know), they’re a girl and they have a penis. They’re not trans, they’re a girl.

Wait, I’m not allowed to a call a transgendered person, transgendered anymore? When did that happen?

Context. If you’re talking about a four-year-old trans child, they don’t have the vocabulary to say trans, but they do know boy and girl. It’s okay to use words children don’t understand, but don’t expect them to understand you.

And sure, they’ve heard adults say that boys have penises and girls don’t, but they can look down their own pants for proof the adult is wrong, QED. It’s not until they learn a little more about society works that they identify as trans. Until then they’re just a girl like any other girl.

And despite everyone trying brainwashing them with how people with penises should act and what they should like, they still end up liking girl things.

No, that’s the thing. There are very few penises in your average media or parental message to kids. The message is that boys do this and girls do this, and they by and large accept these messages. It’s just when someone tells them that only boys have penises that they roll their eyes because they’ve got the proof right there.

I am not so sure of that. I don’t think A four year old trans child realizes yet that they are a girl with penis. I think they are only realize that they are different from other boys and prefer girl things. I think they only realize they are a girl with penis when they are little bit older.

From the sounds of it, CatBus has “dealt” with these children before. Therefore, what you think is moot. He’s the only one with experience in this conversation.

Yep. My kid’s school is kindof a magnet for parents of trans kids, basically because if you hear that there’s a school somewhere in the country where your kid won’t get the crap kicked out of them for being your kid, you pack your bags. A trans parent mass migration.

Awareness of sex differences in general is wildly variable. I’ve got an almost-five year old who really just figured out boys and girls, and I’d say he’s slightly later than most. But he still has trouble with using the right pronouns, which is more of an unrelated language/grammar issue. Some trans kids know with certainty right away, right out of the gate (about four): I’m a boy, period. Some have an uneasy feeling about the whole topic for a while and finally declare around eight or so. Some take a lot longer (adulthood). But if you ask them how long they’ve known, they reach pretty far back… often saying they’ve always felt this way but never felt confident enough about what this feeling was to finally put a name on it until now. Or worse, that they felt that had to go incognito until they moved out of their parents’ house.

I am still willing to bet that some start to prefer the things of the gender opposite from their physical gender, before they realize they are transgendered.

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 (Edited)

Warbler said:

CatBus said:

yhwx said:

Warbler said:

CatBus said:

Warbler said:

CatBus said:

Warbler said:

But the point is, they start doing that before they even know they are transgendered. They don’t go “oh! I transgendered! Now let me see how everyone thinks girls should act and I will act like that”, I think it is more like they start out preferring girls and then realize later on that they are transgendered.

Sure. As far as they know (with the examples I know), they’re a girl and they have a penis. They’re not trans, they’re a girl.

Wait, I’m not allowed to a call a transgendered person, transgendered anymore? When did that happen?

Context. If you’re talking about a four-year-old trans child, they don’t have the vocabulary to say trans, but they do know boy and girl. It’s okay to use words children don’t understand, but don’t expect them to understand you.

And sure, they’ve heard adults say that boys have penises and girls don’t, but they can look down their own pants for proof the adult is wrong, QED. It’s not until they learn a little more about society works that they identify as trans. Until then they’re just a girl like any other girl.

And despite everyone trying brainwashing them with how people with penises should act and what they should like, they still end up liking girl things.

No, that’s the thing. There are very few penises in your average media or parental message to kids. The message is that boys do this and girls do this, and they by and large accept these messages. It’s just when someone tells them that only boys have penises that they roll their eyes because they’ve got the proof right there.

I am not so sure of that. I don’t think A four year old trans child realizes yet that they are a girl with penis. I think they are only realize that they are different from other boys and prefer girl things. I think they only realize they are a girl with penis when they are little bit older.

From the sounds of it, CatBus has “dealt” with these children before. Therefore, what you think is moot. He’s the only one with experience in this conversation.

Yep. My kid’s school is kindof a magnet for parents of trans kids, basically because if you hear that there’s a school somewhere in the country where your kid won’t get the crap kicked out of them for being your kid, you pack your bags. A trans parent mass migration.

Awareness of sex differences in general is wildly variable. I’ve got an almost-five year old who really just figured out boys and girls, and I’d say he’s slightly later than most. But he still has trouble with using the right pronouns, which is more of an unrelated language/grammar issue. Some trans kids know with certainty right away, right out of the gate (about four): I’m a boy, period. Some have an uneasy feeling about the whole topic for a while and finally declare around eight or so. Some take a lot longer (adulthood). But if you ask them how long they’ve known, they reach pretty far back… often saying they’ve always felt this way but never felt confident enough about what this feeling was to finally put a name on it until now. Or worse, that they felt that had to go incognito until they moved out of their parents’ house.

I am still willing to bet that some start to prefer the things of the gender opposite from their physical gender, before they realize they are transgendered.

Hard to say. For those who like things that don’t match their biological sex, that liking would also pre-date lasting memories. So if they started liking girl things at two and feeling they were a girl at four, or vice-versa, by the time they’re old enough to relate their story, both go back as far as their memories so there’s no way to say.

Nevertheless, I can say that I know at least one trans girl who is biologically a boy and likes boy things, and always has. The trans tomboy, as I mentioned. I’d say the rate of kids who prefer the activities of the other gender is the same among trans kids as it is among cis kids–that is, pretty low. The lower trans population makes it harder to find examples, and I know only one.

Project Threepio (Star Wars OOT subtitles)

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 (Edited)

Warbler said:

TV’s Frink said:

Warbler said:

TV’s Frink said:

chyron8472 said:

yhwx said:

Warbler said:

TV’s Frink said:

Warbler said:

TV’s Frink said:

Warbler said:

TV’s Frink said:

Is a boy more into sports because he has a penis or because his Dad liked sports and the other boys liked sports and they all looked down on him until he liked sports?

I’m guessing it’s the latter.

What about transgendered people? When they are young, aren’t they given the clothes and the toys of the gender everyone things they are and they sometimes reject them and prefer the toys and cloths of the other gender?

Often, yes.

Not sure what your point is, unless you’re just agreeing with me.

My point is that maybe there is something about what gender your brain is that affects what you like that don’t like. You said that maybe the only reason a boy likes sports is because his Dad did and how other boys would look down on him for not liking sports. If what you said is true, then a person born with the mind of girl but the body of a boy would still end up liking sports and the same would true of toys and clothes, yet we know it doesn’t work like that.

Newsflash: Some girls like football and Star Wars, some boys like My Little Pony Friendship is Magic. A person with the mind of a girl but the body of a boy absolutely can end up liking sports and “boy” toys and clothes. You may think it doesn’t work like that but I guarantee you are wrong.

Newsflash: More boys than girls like football and Star Wars, more girls than boys like My Little Pony Friendship is Magic. A person with mind of girl but the body of a boy tends to reject the boy clothes and toys the person is given and instead favors the girl cloths and toys the same is also true of sports. You may think it doesn’t work like that but I guarantee you are wrong.

Newsflash: Parents want their kids to conform to their preconceived stereotypes. If their kid is a boy, they’re more likely to try to get them to act like a boy. Kids see stereotypes of gender in media. They carry these throughout their life. Kids can also be bullied if they don’t like the “right” thing. You may think it doesn’t work like that but I guarantee you are wrong.

Do any of you have kids?

I am a father to a 2.5 year old daughter, and her preferences, while influenced by me, are so very obviously to me not altogether of my or my wife’s making. She likes pink. She likes yellow. But that’s not because we actively encourage it by pushing it on her. As a parent, I am learning how much of who God made her to be, as well as trying to train her in the ways I think is best for her.

As a parent, I grow increasingly annoyed at accusations that parents brainwash or wrongfully indoctrinate their kids.

I have two girls, 6 and 9. They love Star Wars and My Little Pony. I’m almost certain they only love Star Wars because my wife and I do as well.

Are you sure it has nothing to do with Stars Wars being a good movie?

It doesn’t matter how good or bad a movie is if you don’t know anything about it. They only watched it the first time because we showed it to them.

So they love every single thing you’ve showed them?

Of course not. What are you even talking about?

The point is that if they were boys and we never showed it to them, they’d probably seek it out anyway because their friends would have seen it, wear the shirts, play with the toys, etc…and generally because those parents encouraged it. Because they’re girls, the likelihood of them seeking it out without us encouraging it is much lower. This has nothing to do with their gender and everything to do with the way society treats gender.

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CatBus said:
I’d say the rate of kids who prefer the activities of the other gender is the same among trans kids as it is among cis kids–that is, pretty low.

when you say “of the other gender” in regards to trans kids, are you talking about their physical gender or the gender they identify with?

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Time

TV’s Frink said:

Warbler said:

TV’s Frink said:

Warbler said:

TV’s Frink said:

chyron8472 said:

yhwx said:

Warbler said:

TV’s Frink said:

Warbler said:

TV’s Frink said:

Warbler said:

TV’s Frink said:

Is a boy more into sports because he has a penis or because his Dad liked sports and the other boys liked sports and they all looked down on him until he liked sports?

I’m guessing it’s the latter.

What about transgendered people? When they are young, aren’t they given the clothes and the toys of the gender everyone things they are and they sometimes reject them and prefer the toys and cloths of the other gender?

Often, yes.

Not sure what your point is, unless you’re just agreeing with me.

My point is that maybe there is something about what gender your brain is that affects what you like that don’t like. You said that maybe the only reason a boy likes sports is because his Dad did and how other boys would look down on him for not liking sports. If what you said is true, then a person born with the mind of girl but the body of a boy would still end up liking sports and the same would true of toys and clothes, yet we know it doesn’t work like that.

Newsflash: Some girls like football and Star Wars, some boys like My Little Pony Friendship is Magic. A person with the mind of a girl but the body of a boy absolutely can end up liking sports and “boy” toys and clothes. You may think it doesn’t work like that but I guarantee you are wrong.

Newsflash: More boys than girls like football and Star Wars, more girls than boys like My Little Pony Friendship is Magic. A person with mind of girl but the body of a boy tends to reject the boy clothes and toys the person is given and instead favors the girl cloths and toys the same is also true of sports. You may think it doesn’t work like that but I guarantee you are wrong.

Newsflash: Parents want their kids to conform to their preconceived stereotypes. If their kid is a boy, they’re more likely to try to get them to act like a boy. Kids see stereotypes of gender in media. They carry these throughout their life. Kids can also be bullied if they don’t like the “right” thing. You may think it doesn’t work like that but I guarantee you are wrong.

Do any of you have kids?

I am a father to a 2.5 year old daughter, and her preferences, while influenced by me, are so very obviously to me not altogether of my or my wife’s making. She likes pink. She likes yellow. But that’s not because we actively encourage it by pushing it on her. As a parent, I am learning how much of who God made her to be, as well as trying to train her in the ways I think is best for her.

As a parent, I grow increasingly annoyed at accusations that parents brainwash or wrongfully indoctrinate their kids.

I have two girls, 6 and 9. They love Star Wars and My Little Pony. I’m almost certain they only love Star Wars because my wife and I do as well.

Are you sure it has nothing to do with Stars Wars being a good movie?

It doesn’t matter how good or bad a movie is if you don’t know anything about it. They only watched it the first time because we showed it to them.

So they love every single thing you’ve showed them?

Of course not. What are you even talking about?

You seemed to be arguing that they only loved Star Wars because you show it to them. I think there is more to it than that.

The point is that if they were boys and we never showed it to them, they’d probably seek it out anyway because their friends would have seen it, wear the shirts, play with the toys, etc…and generally because those parents encouraged it. Because they’re girls, the likelihood of them seeking it out without us encouraging it is much lower. This has nothing to do with their gender and everything to do with the way society treats gender.

I am sure society is terrible to girls that like Star Wars.

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 (Edited)

darth_ender said:

Ryan McAvoy said:

yhwx said:

everybody likes choice

Not everybody. That’s the point isn’t it?

So if someone opposes abortion, that means they oppose choice?

Yes.

If you support taking abortion away, then you also support taking people’s choice to have said abortion away to. It can’t be any other way surely?

darth_ender said:

It doesn’t mean they hold life sacred from conception? It doesn’t mean they value the future of the child?

Those are possible reasons for opposing letting somebody have the choice.

VIZ TOP TIPS! - PARENTS. Impress your children by showing them a floppy disk and telling them it’s a 3D model of a save icon.

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 (Edited)

Warbler said:

CatBus said:
I’d say the rate of kids who prefer the activities of the other gender is the same among trans kids as it is among cis kids–that is, pretty low.

when you say “of the other gender” in regards to trans kids, are you talking about their physical gender or the gender they identify with?

Heh, good catch. Trans talk is fun, no?

So what I’m saying is that for biological boys who identify as male and prefer traditional girl activities, that’s a pretty low rate but it exists. For biological girls who identify as female and prefer traditional boy activities, that’s also a pretty low rate. Among the small-but-larger-than-most sampling of trans kids I’ve met, I’ve met one trans kid whose preferred activities match their biological sex and not their identification. Admittedly completely anecdotal, and using a sample size that goes down to one, that does not seem out of line with the rates for the other cis-gendered kids above. So I don’t really see any evidence, from what I’ve seen, that trans kids are more inclined to stick to the activities prescribed by their gender identification than any other kids.

EDIT: Also, I only know a handful of trans adults, and the story is totally different. Absolutely every single one came out as an adult (although they knew they were as long as they can remember), so the whole concept of kids who say they’re trans out loud while still in grade school or even earlier is as new to them as it is to me.

Project Threepio (Star Wars OOT subtitles)

Author
Time

Trumpy makes threats, now North Korea ups the ante. This isn’t looking good.

Where were you in '77?

Author
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 (Edited)

Warbler said:

TV’s Frink said:

Warbler said:

TV’s Frink said:

Warbler said:

TV’s Frink said:

chyron8472 said:

yhwx said:

Warbler said:

TV’s Frink said:

Warbler said:

TV’s Frink said:

Warbler said:

TV’s Frink said:

Is a boy more into sports because he has a penis or because his Dad liked sports and the other boys liked sports and they all looked down on him until he liked sports?

I’m guessing it’s the latter.

What about transgendered people? When they are young, aren’t they given the clothes and the toys of the gender everyone things they are and they sometimes reject them and prefer the toys and cloths of the other gender?

Often, yes.

Not sure what your point is, unless you’re just agreeing with me.

My point is that maybe there is something about what gender your brain is that affects what you like that don’t like. You said that maybe the only reason a boy likes sports is because his Dad did and how other boys would look down on him for not liking sports. If what you said is true, then a person born with the mind of girl but the body of a boy would still end up liking sports and the same would true of toys and clothes, yet we know it doesn’t work like that.

Newsflash: Some girls like football and Star Wars, some boys like My Little Pony Friendship is Magic. A person with the mind of a girl but the body of a boy absolutely can end up liking sports and “boy” toys and clothes. You may think it doesn’t work like that but I guarantee you are wrong.

Newsflash: More boys than girls like football and Star Wars, more girls than boys like My Little Pony Friendship is Magic. A person with mind of girl but the body of a boy tends to reject the boy clothes and toys the person is given and instead favors the girl cloths and toys the same is also true of sports. You may think it doesn’t work like that but I guarantee you are wrong.

Newsflash: Parents want their kids to conform to their preconceived stereotypes. If their kid is a boy, they’re more likely to try to get them to act like a boy. Kids see stereotypes of gender in media. They carry these throughout their life. Kids can also be bullied if they don’t like the “right” thing. You may think it doesn’t work like that but I guarantee you are wrong.

Do any of you have kids?

I am a father to a 2.5 year old daughter, and her preferences, while influenced by me, are so very obviously to me not altogether of my or my wife’s making. She likes pink. She likes yellow. But that’s not because we actively encourage it by pushing it on her. As a parent, I am learning how much of who God made her to be, as well as trying to train her in the ways I think is best for her.

As a parent, I grow increasingly annoyed at accusations that parents brainwash or wrongfully indoctrinate their kids.

I have two girls, 6 and 9. They love Star Wars and My Little Pony. I’m almost certain they only love Star Wars because my wife and I do as well.

Are you sure it has nothing to do with Stars Wars being a good movie?

It doesn’t matter how good or bad a movie is if you don’t know anything about it. They only watched it the first time because we showed it to them.

So they love every single thing you’ve showed them?

Of course not. What are you even talking about?

You seemed to be arguing that they only loved Star Wars because you show it to them. I think there is more to it than that.

Of course there is more than that. But the rest is irrelevant to the point.

Warbler said:

I am sure society is terrible to girls that like Star Wars.

What?

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 (Edited)

SilverWook said:

Trumpy makes threats, now North Korea ups the ante. This isn’t looking good.

Never engage Trump in a pissing match. It’s his element. There will be liar and worry like the world has never seen.

Project Threepio (Star Wars OOT subtitles)

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Jeebus said:

darth_ender said:

chyron8472 said:

darth_ender said:

Warbler said:

Do you include me in your list of “self-righteous jerks”? You did say “I can’t engage with any of you.”.

I’m tired and irritable and not in the mood to put up with how liberals describe my views on abortion. You’re not part of that crowd. This thread is just not fun anymore, and this is why hardly post in it anymore.

Oh, shut up. We weren’t describing your views on abortion. We were discussing what labels regarding stance on abortion may (or may not) be more (or less) accurate in general, and our individual opinions of why they might or might not be accurate.

Now, instead of using liberal as an epithet and putting everyone of apparently opposing view in a box while complaining about how they put you in a box, why don’t you be an adult and actually try having an intelligent rational conversation.

I’m very sorry that I offended you by stating that the Left is overgeneralizing. How dare I broach such a sensitive topic with such callousness. I feel awful that I hurt your feelings!

Ryan McAvoy said:

yhwx said:

everybody likes choice

Not everybody. That’s the point isn’t it?

Jeebus said:

What about pro and anti-choice?

So if someone opposes abortion, that means they oppose choice? It doesn’t mean they hold life sacred from conception? It doesn’t mean they value the future of the child?

They oppose someone having the choice to abort.

Pro-choice people take away the child’s choice.

In the medical field, if a patient requires emergency treatment or even surgery that would require consent, but is unable to give consent (i.e. the patient is unconscious), medical staff may provide treatment in what is termed “implied consent.” It is assumed that, without any contrary evidence, the person wants to live and the medical team will be obliged to provide all possible care to save that patient.

In the case of a fetus, I see the same as applicable. That fetus is a very young, immature human that will continue to grow and develop barring any interruption of the natural process of development. In my mind, that fetus has given implied consent to the mother and all others involved in her care to continue to allow that fetus to thrive.

Let’s even take it a step further. Let me give you a choice: if I had a time machine and I told you that your mother was not financially capable of raising a child when she was pregnant with you, and I told you that she seriously debated whether or not she should abort you, would you consent for me to go back in time and perform that abortion?

I know that a lot of this may seem silly or too hypothetical for you, so I will provide one last example: the fetus facing abortion will likely develop into a baby, who will develop into a child, who will develop into an adolescent, who will develop into an adult. All throughout the remainder of that fetus’s life, he/she will be faced with millions of choices. But because of the choice of one other person, that entire future of choices was taken from the fetus. All because someone felt that it was her right to disrupt the natural flow of human development, that fetus will never have the choice to do anything in life. I am pro-the-child’s-choices.

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Since when are children capable of making all these crazy lifelong decisions? I mean, a couple years ago it was common knowledge that 100% of kids have no idea what they’re talking about 99% of the time.

The Person in Question

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 (Edited)

…and this is why you need to be more active here, darth_ender. Not because you’ll find a lot of agreement, and not because you’ll find a satisfyingly wide range of opinions, because who am I kidding?

But because without a vocal conservative on board (and I’m intentionally excluding our libertarians because they agree with liberals half the time anyway), there’s no balance. Not the Fox News “Fair and Balanced” where bullshit is provided to balance out facts (Fo, we hardly knew ye), but real balance, where fundamental differences in values make for a consistent, logical, and fundamentally different view of the exact same facts we all share.

Thanks for the time and effort you spent spelling it out. And no I don’t agree with you, but that’s okay. I’d still be happy to invite you over for beer soda water sometime 😉

Do you think it’ll work, guys? Do you think I suckered him in? Boy I sure hope so! (maniacal liberal laugh)

Project Threepio (Star Wars OOT subtitles)

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TV’s Frink said:

darth_ender said:

Pro-life is a distortion? Are you telling me that those who choose the label ‘pro-life’ are not accurately in favor of life? And let me ask here, how many of the pro-choice crowd have said at least once in a recent discussion about abortion that those who oppose it are somehow opposed to women (i.e. War on Women, want to keep women in the kitchen, etc.)? Is that not a distortion?

If you say you are pro-life, and you care about more than ridding the world of abortions, I believe you. But I never hear about solutions from the vocal side of the pro-life argument. All I hear is “ban all abortions” and I hear nothing about what comes next. Those are the people who are distorting the term “pro-life” when it really just means “anti-abortion.”

Perhaps this is because you only witness pro-life crowds on the news shouting their opposition to abortion. Have you considered the charitable work that numerous conservatives do? Perhaps it’s not in government social programs, but in local charities, churches, and other contributions. Have you considered the private organizations that contribute to the health and well-being of Americans of all demographics? Small government does not necessarily mean opposition to kindness. In fact, numerous studies show that religious people tend to be most generous.

https://www.americamagazine.org/content/unconventional-wisdom/blue-states-get-dinged-almanac-american-philanthropy

And yes, I’ve seen articles that disagree, particularly those that throw out every penny that is donated to religious organizations because, oh, that’s just piety, not real generosity. I’m also aware of those studies about children in day cares. But read the above article, which shows that generosity abounds among the religious and bear in mind that there are opposing studies.

Also, consider the motivation for conservative policies. Whether you agree or not, most Republicans believe that when the wealthy thrive, all Americans thrive; they believe that they are helping the poor when they help the rich. Considering that most of the poorer white socioeconomic class is conservative, you might want to give that more consideration. Furthermore, conservatives believe that the people should be more independent, not as an act of cruelty but as a means of fostering strength. Yes, they may be narrow-minded and not recognize that some people cannot help their condition, but most conservatives believe that anyone can make it in this country, and that some might have to work harder at it, but ultimately will be stronger for it.

It’s not a matter of caring little for the poor. It’s a matter of how they feel one should care for the poor.

TV’s Frink said:

moviefreakedmind said:

As for pro-life being a rightwing distortion, I don’t necessarily see how. It’s technically accurate.

The right does not support life as much as they are against abortion. Hence anti-abortion being more accurate.

Here’s another example - Republicans (in general) favor tax breaks that favor the rich while pulling government support from the poor. They care about making sure a fetus comes to term, but then don’t care at all what happens after it is born. That’s not pro-life either, that’s anti-abortion.

Is that not an oversimplification? Is there really this belief that Republicans are just out to punish the poor? Even if you oppose fiscal conservatism, it seems wrong to me to ascribe motives like not caring how the child fares after birth. I am more moderate than most conservatives and favor more social programs than your average Republican, but nevertheless, are you not generalizing that most who oppose abortion and favor individuals and families taking more personal responsibility for their economic well-being are really “not caring” about how the child does after birth?

Sure, I’m generalizing, but you said it yourself - you favor more social programs than average Republicans. The Republican/Conservative motto, and correct me if I’m wrong, is as limited a government as possible. People who are truly pro-life should want to limit unwanted births as much as possible (including sex-ed and contraception, not just abstinence only) and should be as passionate (if not more so) about helping the needy as stopping abortion. Do they only want to stop the poor single raped mother from having an abortion, or do they also want to help her after she gives birth?

I agree, the view is narrow-minded once again. The fear is that allowing for such things gives the government too much say in how to raise a child or allows people to justify premarital sex. They are not opposing it so that they can force women to have babies. They are opposing it because they believe they are promoting a more moral nation.

That said, I see the reality of it as: a) people will have sex; b) the more resultant pregnancies will lead to more abortions, therefore; c) we should do what we can to limit unwanted pregnancies so we can avoid abortion. I wish everyone shared my morals, but since they don’t, I’d love to do anything I can to limit abortion.

I thought that if a group chooses to identify by a certain term, that is their right to choose. I am pro-life. Most conservatives, even the overzealous Evangelical brand, care a great deal about people from conception until death. I’ve seen stereotypes in this thread about how every conservative belief is motivated by sexism or racism or socioeconomic superiority. Most of them are good people who think they are doing what is best for the general populace. I get just as irritated at them when I hear stupid generalizations about liberals.

Perhaps I’m wrong, but all I hear overzealous Evangelical brand of conservatives doing is trying to end every single abortion regardless of impact or context, and putting way more emphasis on that then what to do with all the unwanted babies.

I attended a General Conference for my church in person at Salt Lake City more than a decade ago and was surprised to see that, amid those who were vocally opposed to my church’s doctrines were those protesting Mormon abortion policies! I could hardly believe it. It turns out, it was because of the exceptions we allow. Yes, there are those who are extreme. There are anti-abortion terrorists who will shoot up abortion clinics. Do they represent the whole? Hardly. Many pro-life advocates are reasonable people. How often have you watched an anti-abortion protest on the news where the protester said, “I want to donate to more charities so I can help raise those unwanted children”? Somehow, I doubt that’s the focus of those protesters or the news agencies that cover the protest. But if you bother to look elsewhere, you will find that there are crisis pregnancy centers devoted to helping women seek alternatives to abortions, enrolling them in social programs and connecting them with post-partum support.

http://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2017/07/24/538556088/crisis-pregnancy-centers-help-pregnant-women-enroll-in-medicaid

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Ryan McAvoy said:

darth_ender said:

Ryan McAvoy said:

yhwx said:

everybody likes choice

Not everybody. That’s the point isn’t it?

So if someone opposes abortion, that means they oppose choice?

Yes.

If you support taking abortion away, then you also support taking people’s choice to have said abortion away to. It can’t be any other way surely?

If you support taking the right to bear arms away, they you also support taking people’s choice to own said arms away. It can’t be any other way. And don’t call me Shirley.

Please note that all laws limit our freedom to choose certain things. The reasons for these laws is because, hopefully, they maximize the freedom of choice for the most people.

Take, for example, murder (just take the example, don’t take it out of context, as I am not equating). If I were to complain, “Hey, this ain’t no free country! I’m not allowed to kill my neighbor who let his dog poop on my flowers!” You might respond, “Hey, if you kill your neighbor, you are limiting his freedom. The purpose of the law is to grant the most people the most possible freedom, and therefore it requires limitations on certain activities.”

Yes, I am anti-certain-choices. So are you. It’s called civilization.

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moviefreakedmind said:

Since when are children capable of making all these crazy lifelong decisions? I mean, a couple years ago it was common knowledge that 100% of kids have no idea what they’re talking about 99% of the time.

Times change, my friend.

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CatBus said:

…and this is why you need to be more active here, darth_ender. Not because you’ll find a lot of agreement, and not because you’ll find a satisfyingly wide range of opinions, because who am I kidding?

But because without a vocal conservative on board (and I’m intentionally excluding our libertarians because they agree with liberals half the time anyway), there’s no balance. Not the Fox News “Fair and Balanced” where bullshit is provided to balance out facts (Fo, we hardly knew ye), but real balance, where fundamental differences in values make for a consistent, logical, and fundamentally different view of the exact same facts we all share.

Thanks for the time and effort you spent spelling it out. And no I don’t agree with you, but that’s okay. I’d still be happy to invite you over for beer soda water sometime 😉

Do you think it’ll work, guys? Do you think I suckered him in? Boy I sure hope so! (maniacal liberal laugh)

Thanks for the kind words, sir. And I’d love to come over to your place some time and, er, whispers maybe I’ll have one of those Dr. Pepper things…

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CatBus said:

…and this is why you need to be more active here, darth_ender. Not because you’ll find a lot of agreement, and not because you’ll find a satisfyingly wide range of opinions, because who am I kidding?

But because without a vocal conservative on board (and I’m intentionally excluding our libertarians because they agree with liberals half the time anyway), there’s no balance. Not the Fox News “Fair and Balanced” where bullshit is provided to balance out facts (Fo, we hardly knew ye), but real balance, where fundamental differences in values make for a consistent, logical, and fundamentally different view of the exact same facts we all share.

Thanks for the time and effort you spent spelling it out. And no I don’t agree with you, but that’s okay. I’d still be happy to invite you over for beer soda water sometime 😉

Do you think it’ll work, guys? Do you think I suckered him in? Boy I sure hope so! (maniacal liberal laugh)

I do wonder where Ferris has been.

Where were you in '77?

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Punching hippies last I checked.