dgs49 wrote:You can have your own opinions, but you can't have your own facts.
Would you agree that distinguishing fact from opinion also requires recognizing what words actually
say, rather than the meaning one wishes they had? For example:
“I SWEAR by Apollo the physician and Æsculapius, and Health…I will not give to a woman a pessary to produce abortion...”
I adjusted the bolding to draw attention to the fact that the highlighted words are included because they mean something i.e. if Hippocrites wanted to include a prohibition on ALL abortions, he would have said so, and not included a qualifier which limited the prohibition to a specific form of abortion i.e. the use of a vaginal suppository or tampon infused with a drug or drugs which would induce an abortion. Because, as I said, such substances were in themselves noxious enough to pose a danger to the woman, and fatal infections often resulted, which today we understand to be toxic shock syndrome.
So thanks for providing that citation and proving my point.
The idea that abortions were prohibited because they were not safe to the mother is nothing but made-up bullshit.
Then why did abortion remain legal in most states until the mid-1800's, and in some states until close to 1900? Was the concept of the personhood of the fetus something that developed spontaneously in the 19th century that explains this legislative vacuum? Most abortion statutes included exceptions for rape cases. Why, if, as you allege, the wellbeing of the woman was not a factor? Was a fetus who was conceived in rape considered to be less of a person than a fetus conceived otherwise? Many statutes imposed penalties only person performing the abortion, and not on the woman procuring it. If abortion laws were all about protecting the fetus, why weren't women universally prosecuted for their complicity in killing the fetus? Abortions were illegal in most states at the time of RvW, and they were medically "safe" when done by trained physicians for many decades before then.
You don't kill a baby because its life is inconvenient.
Leave it to a man to call pregnancy an "inconvenience". If a born person attempted to inflict the degree of disability that a pregnancy causes, it would justify deadly force to repel it. That's all the justification necessary to abort a fetus doing the same thing.