A Couple of Inconsistencies
In the public controversy and debate over abortion, many on
both sides have had difficulty with consistency. For example, many religious opponents of abortion believe that aborting a
fetus at any stage is an act of forestalling a soul's chance to develop as God intended all souls
to do. However since millions of spontaneous abortions of fetuses occur each
year though natural miscarriages, this belief cannot be reconciled with their
other belief in intelligent design by a
benevolent deity, one who could have designed things so as to preclude
miscarriages but did not.
On the other side, leftists proponents of abortion face a
fundamental difficulty in the fact that they favor a nearly libertarian freedom
of choice in regard to abortion and a regime of paternalistic control and
regimentation in almost everything else, making the impossible claim that this one area of human action is special and
deserving of liberty while most others are not. A recent example illustrates
this inconsistency well. Conservatives in some states have passed bills
requiring those performing abortions to have admission privileges at a nearby hospital, claiming to do so in the
interest of safety. Libertarians who believe people should be free to select
any sort of treatment they want from anyone
willing to provide it have no difficulty opposing these laws, but
leftists who support almost every other sort of so-called safety rule and
regulation - no matter how authoritarian, intrusive, foolish, or inconvenient –
cannot do so consistently. It is just hard to argue that a woman should be completely free
to decide from whom to have an abortion but not to decide how large a Coca Cola
she wants to drink.
These are only a couple of obvious examples. There are others as well. Of course few in either group seem to notice or worry about
such inconsistencies or to attempt to develop more cogent arguments, but they
are interesting to an outside observer
and perhaps a challenge to do a better job of thinking things through
regardless of what opinions one holds on the question.
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