Abortion Ethical Issues

1869 Words4 Pages

To kill an unborn baby with dreadful procedures is an immoral way to handle an unwanted pregnancy and should be illegal. Abortion has been a controversial issue since the 1960s. One of the duties of the U.S government is to protect lives of the innocent and this includes the ones of unborn babies. Fetuses have potential lives and deserve a chance in the world. Voluntarily killing a guiltless human without a reason regarding health concerns for either the woman or child is unethical. Abortion is an unsafe procedure. Also, abortion is considered murder and is unconstitutional. Having restrictions on a procedure so controversial is not enough to fix the problem and make everyone happy. In the U.S. it is known to be a political, religious, ethical …show more content…

It’s really important to make sure people do not use abortion as a contraceptive, “Representative Henry Hyde (R, Illinois) succeeds in passing the Hyde Amendment through the House of Representatives as a “rider” law that is subject to change. The Amendment prohibits the use of federal funds for abortion except in cases of rape, incest, or health dangers for the woman” (“Abortion & Reproductive Rights”). Basically, the article is saying that an amendment was passed to restrict any federal funds to abortion procedures that do not have moral reasoning. Although having this procedure goes against the “pro-life” beliefs, many people against abortion believe these specific scenarios are valid factors of getting one. But, these reasons would have to be the only ones for having an abortion. The point needs to get across to all Americans so that there are less abortions each year. This way, abortions would become “unpopular” and it would not be the primary fix to the situation of being pregnant with an unwanted baby. Naturally, statistics on preformed abortion procedures would be reduced and more babies would be born each …show more content…

Most of the time, “pro-life” supporters argue against abortion using their religious and ethical views and less on a woman 's right to decide what to do with her own body unlike “pro-choice” supporters. The majority opinion apparently makes the laws for abortion in the United States when the decision should be based on much more, “Abortion restrictions violate Supreme Court precedent, and the majority of Americans agree that Abortion should remain legal” (“By the Numbers: State Abortion Laws”). It is easy to disagree with this statement because since the article focuses on how abortion restrictions contradict with Supreme Court precedent, it overlooks the deeper problem on the safety of the child and the baby. It can be strongly argued that the protection of a human being is more important than this. The “majority” of Americans agreeing that abortion should remain legal is not fact because it does not give specific numbers on how many Americans believe that vs. how many believe abortion should become illegal. Fence-sitters on this controversy need to understand and realize that so many lives could be saved everyday, every month and every year if abortion was illegal. Although it is fair to agree with this article 's argument up to a point of the fact that restrictions on abortion go against the Supreme Court standard on similar cases, it cannot be accepted that the overall conclusion

Open Document