- Thread starter
- #121
It's been answered already, dumbass. You ignored it.Exactly.Neither dubious nor diverting. Trying to understand your concerns over constitutionally. Of course they're Constitutional. All laws are Constitutional until overturned by the judicial branch.That brings us back to.... so what?
Will you answer this time?
Unless you are being dubious or you are fishing for some sort of diversion, why are you wanting to engage in a hypothetical when we have real life factual information to work with?
So again, for the third and last time.... so what?
Laws are presumed to be Constitutional until the courts rule otherwise.
The thread premise is attempting – and failing – to advance the ‘argument’ that because fetal ‘homicide’ laws seek to punish those who cause the death of a fetus are subject to criminal prosecution, then abortion should likewise be rendered illegal.
This ‘argument’ fails as a false comparison fallacy.
Fetal ‘homicide’ laws protect the right of the mother to decide the outcome of her pregnancy, should she either wish to terminate the pregnancy or carry it to term.
Indeed, such laws have provisions which exclude lawful abortions from the scope of the law, as we see in this measure from Colorado:
“For purposes of a prosecution of a homicide or assault offense, the bill does not apply to:
An act committed by the mother of her unborn child;
A medical procedure performed by a physician or other
licensed medical professional at the request of a mother of
her unborn child or the mother's legal guardian; or
The lawful dispensation or administration of lawfully
prescribed medication.”
http://www.leg.state.co.us/CLICS/CL...613C6C1787257E15006272AA?Open&file=268_01.pdf
So many Sparkys, so little time.
Under this and many other fetal HOMICIDE laws, The charge for killing a "child in the womb" in a criminal act is MURDER.
Here is the question leftardz like yourself will not give a straight forward answer to.. "what does the charge of MURDER say about the personhood status of the victim killed?"
"So what" is not an answer.
If you think it is an answer.... how about I use it for every question you tards ask from now on.