Moderators please do not SNIP this copy. I'm bringing it forward for a reason. I'm looking at you, Shades. ;-)
Markk wrote:Jersey Girl wrote:
I don't disagree with you. I do have other ideas that compete with that concept. For example, a woman's right to make choices about her body, how she views her body, and exercise her beliefs in what constitutes a life, a baby, etc.
I can't bring myself to impose my beliefs on her. I don't live in her head. I don't live her life. I don't experience the world as she does. I am not her. She has as much a right to exercise and act on her beliefs as I do.
We should both have the right to exercise our beliefs and that's what we have. At the moment at least.
I think you have it right especially as you demonstrated in your examples regarding priesthood and slavery. I'll admit those comparisons were unexpected, but the comparison to slavery in particular tells me how you understand it and I do think you understand it.
I'll go you one better. How were women viewed in those old Bible times?
Again, I don't disagree.
But I will tell you this, too. I would just as easily support an unwed mother who wanted to keep her baby as I would accompany and provide after care for one who chose not to.
In my world, both hands would get held.
Where it get mo sticky...
Do you believe in late term abortions, say a week or two before birth? My guess is many if not most pro lifers don't. So in these cases it turns from the woman's
right to choose, to the
right of life for the child.
Just on this thread there are different lines, and most just move the time line of rights for the mother and rights for the child around. Government intervention (enforced laws) are implied , but not admitted too.
In regards to this conversation, my example about personhood and priesthood is getting lost...the example is to show certain people, living persons, are excluded from certain rights...slaves were, and the other tribes were, the brotherhood of carpenters do not allow the brotherhood of electricians to do carpenter work on a union job...etc. The point is, the term
fill in the blank-hood is a man made ideology to limit others certain rights. I'll make one up here...there is a brotherhood of ex-Mormon's here, the some never-Mo's here that can not join this brotherhood.
To say a person in the beginning stages of life, whether from fertilization, different trimesters, birth, infancy, adolescent, puberty, adulthood, and old age are not persons, is a man made concept to support ideologies. We do this to justify our conscience, for convenience, for money, for power...etc.
Racism uses this also...with slavery certain person were not given certain rights, based on the concept of personhood...if I am misunderstand this happened...please show me my error? we can P-hack the heck out of it...but the bottom line is generally american slavery did not allow perosonhood to slaves. And like wise many do not assign personhood to the child in the womb, which the right to life.
Not a easy discussion and I certainly don't have all the answers.
Mark, it may not be clear and apparent to you and others, but when I involve myself in a topic as serious and complex as this, my comments are typically in direct response to what you (in this case) have stated, they are intended to build the conversation in a fairly methodical fashion, and I
intentionally plant the seeds of possible sub-topic lines of discussion that are relevant to the topic. I did so in the post above.
When I get a response from you, I do not see a direct response to what I have written. It seems to me that you simply copy my post, and move forward on your own without consideration to what I have stated or questions I have posed.
Previously, you made comment regarding your understanding of "personhood". You drew out an example from the Old Testament. I validated your comparison in my posts and I asked you a question relevant to the sub-topic of "personhood". It went unanswered.
When I think that a critical point has not been addressed, I tend to dig in my heels until it is addressed. You and others may see my insistence as nit picky. I see it as important to maintaining the continuum of dialogue. I'm never happy hopping from one issue to another without reaching a point of understanding before moving forward. We're not talking about what music we like. We're attempting to discuss a topic, the complexities of which are near impossible to address on a message board but damned if I'm not knocking myself out here trying to pull from my end to painstakingly build these exchanges with you.
It takes two. You have my near undivided attention here. I would like to have yours in return.
So, before we move forward, I should like you to answer the question that I posed for it plants the seeds to further discuss the issue of "personhood", a concept that is critical to the overall topic and something you have gone on to address in your above. I think you are missing critical points regarding "personhood". If you answer this question, I think we can reach back far enough to see where the concept begins in terms of law as it relates to women to increase our understanding of how it developed into what we see today.
How were women viewed in those old Bible times?
Go for it.