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1) You claimed pregnancy was normal. I countered that it was abnormal because it occurred for so much less time than non-pregnancy. However, earlier I had noted that pregnancy involves partial immunosuppression and symptoms of illness, e.g., morning sickness.Because it was absent from you original criteria, and only tacked on after the absurdity of your original criteria was exposed by having it apply to other behaviors that don't take place most of the time.
I applied your criteria for normalcy to sleep (another bodily function) and it turns out sleep is abnormal according to your own criteria (the originally presented criteria):
This is you adding more criteria to your absurd original claim to make it less ridiculous. So much for being "logically, naturally, culturally, empirically" anything.
The point is that pregnancy is abnormal for two reasons. One is that it is not the presumed healthy state of the body and the other is that a woman ordinarily spends far more time not being pregnant, just as the average person spends far more time in a healthy rather than ill state.
2) To challenge my criteria for normalcy, you noted that we spend more time awake than asleep and asked if this made sleep abnormal. But there is a problem in the comparison. All people experience both waking and sleep states and regular diurnal sleep is needed for health and survival of the individual person, but not even all women experience both non-pregnancy and pregnancy, and pregnancy isn't needed for health and survival of individual women.
4) But I went further. Just as pregnancy is not needed for an individual woman's survival, so the sex that causes the pregnancy is unneeded for the survival. You seem to think I have made my case ridiculous by this reference to sex. However, we have an instinct that makes us sleep and can't continue to stay awake without taking a sleep break, but many people can easily control their supposed instinct to have sex and therefore don't have it or get pregnant at all.
I fail to see that my case is ridiculous, so if you still think so, you'll need to explain.
Roe had great influence on the thinking of people in the US and the world about abortion. Because of that, it became an historic SC decision. "The British are coming! The British are coming!" is no longer said as a warning to the American revolutionaries, but to suppose it was nothing and is now just gone is to have no appreciation of its historical and psychological value.Any state can pass abortion rights. Roe has nothing to do with it. It's gone. Give it a rest.
Decades earlier Roe was a thing. Decades before that it was not. And now it isn't again. Constitutionality in that regard has been restored.
You seem to think that the overwhelming majority of pro-choice people in the US and the free world will all go back to being just as they were before Roe v Wade ever existed. This will not happen.
Do you not realize that we will work toward a Constitutional amendment to make individual autonomy a basic personal right unchallengeable by a state anti-abortion law because of Roe's existence?
You appear to think you and the anti-abortion forces have done something you haven't. Yes, you murdered Roe v Wade in cold blood. Rejoice that you killed a living thing in a crime of liberticide, but understand that it is because of the immortal spirit of that decision that you have completely "underestimated the depth of outrage" you have made a permanent condition in our hearts - which we will pass to later generations.
You see, we will never go back and we will refuse to let the anti-abortion people go back, too.
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