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Culture War Roundup for the week of October 17, 2022

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Abortion may or may not be morally wrong, but forcing a particular choice would violate the mother’s bodily autonomy, so we think it’s for her to decide.

Can't reduce it down to be quite that simple, as there are enough possible variations that might be relevant.

Because you can make an argument that the woman already 'decided' when she agreed to and participated in unprotected sex with a guy.

Or we argue that women don't understand that pregnancy is a risk of sex, which is pretty demeaning in it's own way.

And obviously if she did not agree to it, she was raped, and that DOES violate her bodily autonomy.

And, going further, if the argument is about bodily autonomy, should a woman be allowed to agree to unprotected sex for the purpose of procreation, take affirmative steps to increase the odds of pregnancy, get pregnant, willingly carry the fetus with the stated intent of giving birth, then around 3 months (12 weeks) or so into it just changes her mind and decides "nope, my body my choice. Disregard the fact that I made a different choice several times before now" and get an abortion?

And in that scenario, does the father's interest come into play at all, since he was relying on her to carry her end of the 'bargain' and bring the fetus to term?

I'm not trying to engineer 'gotchas,' I'm just pointing out that reducing it to bodily autonomy does not settle the full moral question here, unless you bit the bullet and say abortion should be available 'on demand and without apology' in all cases.

Which almost nobody actually believes.