Abortion is an integral part of the reproductive health care continuum. Stripped of moral, religious, and legal considerations, abortion is simply the termination of a pregnancy. There is nothing simple about abortion or at least, debates over abortion, and the contest over whether and when abortion should be legally permissible has been at the center of the alleged culture war. The abortion debate has shaped party politics, electoral campaigns, legislative agendas, and judicial appointments. It has led to political rallies, protests, blockades, bombings, and the killing of abortion providers. The lasting conflict and the reach of the controversy into debates over stem cell research, sex education, fertility treatments, population control, and more ensure that abortion will remain newsworthy.
Many people are faced with the problem of deformation of the fetus. According to the sacred generals, abortion is not permissible in this situation; otherwise, it would have given us the right to kill people with a physical deformity. And why build hospitals to treat these people if the principle is the same? If we give ourselves the right to kill the fetus malformation, what would prevent us from killing him when he grows up? Both cases are problematic in the eyes of people. And why not think about medicine that can evolve and contribute, in one way or another, to find a solution to this problem. About the Opinion that medicine is able to conduct a thorough diagnosis that reveals the presence of physical defects that make the enviable fetus, as when one observes the presence of a fetus not yet skull "This question may have an association with the ethical aspect of the problem, namely the question of life. The life of the creature she is an ordinary issue that may refer to physical conditions? In other words, is it logical to say that a creature will be born and I kill because I do not want trouble? On the other hand, we believe that some cases fall outside the realm of the impossible because the medicine has made progress in these areas, which should encourage us to give him the opportunity to live. Even people who suffer from incurable diseases should they not live and suffer if they followed this rule? This is a matter of principle.
Part Two - Argument
The debate over fetal homicide laws has underscored just how bitterly divided the country is over the issue of abortion and fetal rights. The April 2004 signing of the Unborn Victims of Violence Act, a federal fetal homicide law, by President Bush (R) has only intensified the dispute over the issue.
Opponents of abortion rights see fetal homicide laws as a new front on which they can push for the recognition of unborn children. As Mel Martinez, the secretary of Housing and Urban Development, said at a recent pro-life rally in Washington, D.C., the passage of the Unborn Victims of Violence Act will be "a taste of greater victories to ...