Site News Christian Links Christian Stories Sponsor a Child Opinion Articles Inspirational Stories Funny Stories Funny Pictures Funny Chat Logs Poems Fiction Stories Music Spreadsheets Last Days of Socrates The Powerpuff Girls Comics Variety Site Forum Other Fun Links My Email: [email protected] |
|
---|
Each person may present his or her reasons to others to convince them or present them directly to a legislator. If your reasons convince the legislator or someone you have convinced convinces the legislator, you have affected the law and exercised your personal freedom. Pro-Choice Advocate D: Um, no all you've done is probably made life miserable for any number of other people. For example, you "convince" a Christian legislator to ban gay marriage, and you've basically screwed a couple thousand people out of their personal freedom. Nathan: It's legal to do so. Do we need a law that prohibits citizens from voicing their opinions to protect their freedom? Pro-Choice Advocate D: At this point, abortion is still legal too. Is that "right" in your eyes jus because it's "legal to do so?" Nathan: You dodged my question. I can say I honestly think there should be a law against abortion, but can you say you honestly think there should be a law against the citizens voicing their opinions? And if you do think so, how could you justify your giving of that opinion as a citizen since you think the very thing you'd be doing should be illegal? Pro-Choice Advocate D: No there shouldn't be a law against voicing your opinion, but there @#$% well should be a law against inhibiting the rights of others. I'm pretty sure you can figure out why. Nathan: Sounds fair enough. "Your rights go as far as they don't inhibit the rights of others"? I think US was founded on such a law. We had slavery and some inequalities to get rid of still, but the basic idea was there. Pro-Choice Advocate D: Yeah, so what stop that from applying here? (The right to an abortion "inhibits the right of others" to life.) |
|
More on Abortion |
|
|