- Bshoc I don't think you understand the scientific method.
You said...
You found out, considering there have been no studies (becuase in the end nobody can revert to a fetal stage and experience existance for themselves), you were lied to, and brainwashed, by agendists - not at all unlike those poofter rights activist judges.
In science it does not require for us to have 'absolute proof' in order to come to a reasonable conclusion. Just because we have no first hand accounts from fetus's of what they feel, does not mean we can not examine other evidence to decide whether based off of that we feel there is. Of course we can never know with absolute certainty, but that isn't that important, what is important is that we use the best knowledge available to us at the time to make our decisions.
- I don't think you understand statistics.
You said...
Firstly I want you to admit that 1407 people in the country do not speak for the other 22 000 000.
Do you not understand the nature of statistics? The very purpose is to give a rough approximation of the views of a greater population by using a sample to give a statistically significant result with a (small or large) margin of error.
More evidence...
most people dont realize it but probably 99% of your beliefs are determined by agendists rather than you.
Lol. Ad-hoc statistics make me <3.
And that you just don't seem to have any real clue about how the public feels....
Combine that with the fact that we never had a vote on abortion laws (decided for us by agendist judges, whereas had the entire population voted abortion would be illigal) -
See
http://community.boredofstudies.org/2464718/post-3.html
- Biology
I don't think you have a basic grasp on the necessary biology to discuss this issue with any meaning, you seem to thinks that 1st trimester fetus's can feel pain where the vast majority of published researchers disagree with you. You can claim they're just activists or whatever, but that just puts you in the 'conspiracy nut' category with all the other people no one cares about.
You said...
If a brain and a nervous system do not constitute suffient structure for pain receptors, by you opinion, then what does?
Erm
the myelin sheath, the insulating cover on nerve pathways that is required for efficient conduction of pain signals, does not begin forming around nervous system cells (neurons) in the spinal cord until about 24 weeks, and not till after birth in most of the cerebral cortex.
Myelination begins at 6 months of gestation and continues into adulthood. This is the sixth and final stage of CNS development. The glial cells (those support cells that are part of the "conveyor belt") produce myelin. Myelin is a fatty covering that eventually coats and insulates many axons to provide for rapid impulse transmission. The cerebrum has both an outer layer (the "cerebral cortex") and an inner layer (the "cerebral medulla"). The cerebral medulla contains many bundles of myelinated axons which give it a white appearance (hence the name "white matter"). The myelinated axons fire more rapidly and efficiently than non-myelinated fibers. True maturity of the CNS only occurs after the Myelination process has fully developed.
http://www.pediatrics.emory.edu/neon.../dpc/brain.htm
They also back that claim up with;
Moore, Keith L. and T.V.N. Persaud. 2003. Before We Are Born: Essentials of Embryology and Birth Defects. Saunders, Philadelphia, Penn. pp. 350
Morowitz, Harold J., and James S. Trefil. 1992. The Facts of Life: Science and the Abortion Controversy. Oxford University Press, New York, NY. pp. 119
Usable connections between the thalamus and the higher cortex don't begin to form until about 20 to 26 weeks, with significant development of neuronal activity continuing after birth
http://www.spiked-online.com/Printable/0000000CA93C.htm
Chugani HT. Biological basis of emotions: Brain systems and brain development. Pediatrics 1998; 102: 1225-1229
Anand KJS, Hickey PR. Pain and its effects in the human neonate and fetus. New England Journal of Medicine 1987; 317: 1321-1329
Derbyshire SWG. Locating the beginnings of pain. Bioethics 1999; 13: 1-31