Rights can't be applied retroactively. In 2015-2016 nearly 2,000 babies were born with addictions to various hard drugs. Their birth mothers are not prosecuted for any damage done to the baby because babies do not have any rights until born, even under your trap or delayed murder analogy.I don't really see how there's a rights-before-or-after-birth problem here.
If I cut your brake lines, I only touched an item, yet I can perfectly well be held responsible for your death.
In this case, the guy cut the body of the unborn baby - at that time an item, I guess, by a legal definition. After birth, the child, at that time a person, dies because of the damage the assailant did to an item, to whit, the soon-to-be-inhabited body.
Aye. This is quite relevant and will most certainly be used by this guy's defense if he's charged with the baby's death.Rights can't be applied retroactively. In 2015-2016 nearly 2,000 babies were born with addictions to various hard drugs. Their birth mothers are not prosecuted for any damage done to the baby because babies do not have any rights until born, even under your trap or delayed murder analogy.
Look up cases about fetal alcohol syndrome children trying to sue their parents. They are dismissed as no crime took place, even though significant brain damage occurred and will impede their life, they eventually gained rights after birth, but did not have the right to life, nevermind an alcohol free womb, prior to birth.
Sure about that?I stopped in at the grocery store over lunch and saw that Time Magazine's cover is lionizing Andrew Jackson.
It looked like it might have been a special issue or something, but it was definitely Time, and definitely Andrew Jackson. I didn't think to take a picture of it.
It's a $14 special edition. Nope.It looked like it might have been a special issue or something, but it was definitely Time, and definitely Andrew Jackson. I didn't think to take a picture of it.
I'm absolutely not meaning to be kidding or downplaying this when I say my next statement: already being done with regards to what's the minimum genetic diversity necessary for a self-sustaining Mars colony. Any research of that type could easily be masked under such a title, then applied to anywhere you wish it to be.I'll really start worrying once I see them start funding studies about ideal minimum population size to maintain genetic diversity.
--Patrick
For the record smoking related treatments are estimated to cost the NHS between £3-6 billion every year. Direct tax revenue from the tobacco industry is £12 billion annually. So if anything smokers should get priority for their health-care (and I say this as a non-smoking UK resident).https://www.forbes.com/sites/theapo...rgery-due-to-budget-constraints/#623b79993b99
New guidelines from the NHS (UK healthcare system) disallow certain operations for smokers and those with a BMI of over 30. It's projected to save millions of dollars a year by cutting off many surgical options to well over 25% of the population. (26% obese, 17% smokers)
The article also lists a number of other NHS policies that result in cost savings to the detriment of their patient's health..
The Commonwealth Fund, the "think tank" that did that ranking, has a history of massaging data, cherry picking, and including useless categories to bump socialist medical systems up their "rankings" and shit as much as possible on the US's health care system. Basically, they've got the world's biggest socialist axe to grind and plenty of willing dupes to signal boost their spurious pseudoresearch.For the record smoking related treatments are estimated to cost the NHS between £3-6 billion every year. Direct tax revenue from the tobacco industry is £12 billion annually. So if anything smokers should get priority for their health-care (and I say this as a non-smoking UK resident).
However since we're criticizing the NHS I'd like to give some good news about it - a US think tank ranked it number 1 out of 11 countries for health-care. The UK was top or near the top in 4 out of the 5 different themes being looked at (Care Process, Access, Administrative Efficiency & Equity). The only theme it didn't score well in was err...Health Care Outcomes. But I'm sure that's not important, right?
And yet, they felt they had to lie about it to do so.The US system is terrible and should be shit on.
Ok, Dan.I didn't say I support them despite misrepresenting data. Just said they were right the US system is shit.
It was a reference to Dan Rather not caring that the Bush memo was a forgery because its "contents were accurate."I don't know what that means, but that's ok. I'm sure it was dismissive and condescending and I just have no interest in it.
So I was right. Yippee for me.It was a reference to Dan Rather not caring that the Bush memo was a forgery because its "contents were accurate."
Follow-up time: Why city projects cost too muchToronto man builds park stairs for $550, irking city after $65,000 estimate
Thoughts? It's not perfect, but not crap either, and literally better than nothing.
Not as bad as this, but personal experience: no they won't.For what it's worth, there will most likely be a point sooner rather than later, where those kids feel awful about it and will deal with that guilt for the rest of their lives. I'm not saying they don't deserve punishment for what they've done, but as 12 year olds they were almost definitely not aware of the real ramifications of what they did.
I'm not saying they don't deserve punishment for what they've done, but as 12 year olds they were almost definitely not aware of the real ramifications of what they did.
Of course you were. We all were. But real, true bullies are a special breed of asshole that is not common or run-of-the-mill.It's like whenever I'm around teenagers and middle schoolers now and I wonder if I was that dumb at that age, because holy fucking christ.
The truly bad, horrible bullies are generally getting it worse at home. Which is also sad.Of course you were. We all were. But real, true bullies are a special breed of asshole that is not common or run-of-the-mill.