Libertarians and abortion (user search)
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  Libertarians and abortion (search mode)
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Poll
Question: What does a genuine Libertarian think about abortion?
#1
They're pro-choice.
#2
They're pro-life.
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Partisan results


Author Topic: Libertarians and abortion  (Read 14085 times)
Ban my account ffs!
snowguy716
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Posts: 22,632
Austria


« on: June 13, 2015, 03:32:36 PM »

Anti-abortion libertarian here to explain myself. (And yes, I think "pro-abortion" and "anti-abortion" are better terms than "pro-choice" and "pro-life." Those are ridiculously loaded terms that miss the point.)

But anyway, here's how I see it:

-The government has no right to exert force of any type on a person (they must obey the Non-Aggression Principle)...unless it is to punish and prevent objective crimes, with victims. In general, murder is obviously a crime with a non-consenting party coming to harm (i.e. a victim), so it should obviously be illegal and thus fair game to restrict. In other words, the government's job is to ensure people's rights to life, liberty, and property. This is the key question: when does the fetus become a life?

-Here's my rationale: we have to draw the line somewhere. We currently draw it at birth, but that's rather silly. I don't fundamentally change when I exit my house, and a baby doesn't fundamentally change when they exit the womb. The only logical line to draw is, in my opinion, conception. Anything else is arbitrary, as it's nature doesn't explicitly change at a certain point to automatically make it eligible for unalienable rights when it wasn't before. The rational line to draw is conception, which means that abortion is within the limited jurisdiction of things the government should stop.

-Counter-point: if the fetus is not welcomed, the woman (or a doctor assisting the woman) has the right to use force to evict it. The reasoning is that it's trespassing. To me, this is wrong because the fetus has never consented to enter the womb. Yes, if you're trespassing on another person's property, you deserve to be punished, but if a third party put you in their property without your explicit consent, it's not your fault and you do not deserve punishment.

Should we be compassionate to women with unwanted pregnancies? Of course! We should encourage adoption, day-care, birth control, and comprehensive sex-ed (although preferably have all this be paid for as voluntarily as possible) to limit the need and make the consequences easier to live with.

Let me address some other points real quickly:

Does anybody who claims they think abortion is equivalent to murder actually act in a way that's consistent with that? If abortion is murder, then the people performing it, the people paying for it, the people requesting it, are all parties to murder and should be punished just the same as if they murdered a 30 year old, right? But as far as I can tell, almost nobody "pro-life" actually advocates doing this.

Lots of women have very hard situations, and that's the only thing they can see to do. Maybe no one has ever explained it to them in the way that I just did. Maybe they believe that it's just a blob of tissue, despite science and reason disagreeing (and let's be honest, a lot of people ignore science and reason).

From a legal perspective, maybe they'd be guilty of manslaughter. But I'm a compassionate sort who advocates mercy over justice, and rehabilitation over punishment, so I'd just focus on encouraging alternatives and helping people get through bad situations.

Personally, I'm  against abortion. That is, I could not make a personal choice to abort a baby I helped conceive. On the other hand, it is not the states business to be involved in the decision. Nor is it the states place to fund abortion.

No, that's not how it works, I'm afraid. You're libertarian-pro-abortion (as opposed to liberal-pro-abortion that would disagree with your last sentence).

Saying that you're against it for you but it's okay for other people is like saying your "for gun control" meaning that you don't own guns, or "against gay marriage" meaning that you're straight, or "for lower taxes" meaning that you don't pay taxes.

The issue is about what the government has a right to do. If the fetus is a life, the government has the right and even responsibility to protect that life. If the fetus is a blob of tissue, then I agree that the government has no business whatsoever to get involved (the same stance I take for marijuana, gay marriage, guns, Iraq, Libya, Vietnam, etc.).

Maybe I'm being a bit harsh, especially considering that the biggest political influence on me alive today (Ron Paul) has a similar position, but I kind of think this is an issue where you can't have it both ways.

I've never understood why so many Libertarians are willing to make an exception to their anti-government philosophy on this one issue but not say environmental regulation.

I'm quite happy to help the environment, but I also disagree that the government has the right to enforce things on people against their will, even for a good cause, unless it's in response to an objective wrong.

To your first point: Libertarians aren't necessarily "anti-government," we're "minimal government." We, at least minarchists such as myself, think that the government has a purpose: to ensure the rights of life, liberty, and property to it's citizens, and nothing more without the explicit consent of the governed. If I think that a fetus is a life, it is absolutely philosophically consistent to be in favor of making abortion illegal, just as how it would be absolutely philosophically consistent to be pro-abortion if you don't think a fetus is yet a life (based on what I think is a flawed premise, but still 100% consistent).
Thanks for arguing with yourself.  Not that pro-abortion isn't a ridiculously loaded term.  And since when are children or even fetuses property?  That's creepy, but you seem to imply it.  That you frame this as pro-abortion/anti-abortion says a lot.  Pro-choice/anti-abortion is more accurate.  You are either for allowing the choice of abortion or you are against it.  Pro-choice does not equal pro-abortion.  But it is understandable that anti-abortion advocates don't want to be labeled anti anything...so they call themselves pro-life.

I'm also wondering how the government should have no involvement in gay marriage?  Are you against ssm?  In the real world we live in where government is involved in marriage, it necessarily has to be involved with gay marriage to protect the right of gays to marry. 

I will assume you meant "jist git the gubmint out of it" while implying it should also get out of straight marriage.

If not, you are just another one of those libertarians.  The ones who, for whatever reason, pretend not to be Republicans as if we can't tell.
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