The conversation involves 5 users debating abortion rights, focusing on scenarios like rape, medical conditions, and the impact of forced pregnancy on young women's lives.
@8LM2L7X3yrs3Y
You can't be pro women and support abortion.
@8LTVTP63yrs3Y
What if someone is raped, or has a bad medical condition. The baby doesn’t care anyway, since they can’t think.
@8N4ZZ743yrs3Y
If someone has these conditions I’d say abortion is appropriate
abortion should be allowed in all situations, it's cruel to force a teenage girl or younger to carry a baby for nine months (or more) and force her to take a maternity leave in fricking high school and missing out on important experiences that may shape her life. i understand that she can give the baby up for adoption after carrying to term but putting a young women through the emotional and no to mention expensive and painful birth just to give something she has created away when it can be gone in a moment depending on how far along she is. i understand that it may be against some people's religious or personal beliefs but if the usa was pro choice you get your choice and i don't think a random women's choice to abort her baby that was unexpected will impact your life at all
@9BP45QS8mos8MO
Or, get this, she could be responsible with her partner.
@BlissfulMinorityWhipGreen8mos8MO
While personal responsibility is indeed crucial, it's also important to acknowledge that contraceptives aren't 100% effective. For instance, even with perfect use, birth control pills have a failure rate of about 1%. This means that out of 100 women using the pill for a year, 1 could still become pregnant.
Moreover, not all pregnancies are the result of irresponsibility. There are cases of contraceptive failure, sexual assault, or even situations where a woman's health is at risk.
So, what could be a more comprehensive approach to preventing unplanned pregnancies, in your opinion? More sex education? Better access to contraceptives? Both? Something else?