Originally Posted by
ajaxfetish
I'm not sure that 'hedging your bet' is an adequate justification for making something an all-or-nothing issue. Going to prison for a crime you didn't commit, or even getting a criminal record, can be devastating and have lifelong ramifications, and our criminal justice system is rarely if ever able to achieve 100% certainty of guilt. Should we hedge our bets by not prosecuting crimes, since we don't know if they really did it, so as to have no chance of destroying the lives of innocents? I think the benefits to public order justify prosecuting in spite of uncertainty, though the system should certainly be nuanced to try to avoid injustice as much as possible. Similarly, prohibiting abortion from the moment of conception means we know we won't be taking a human life, but it sacrifices the woman's rights to self determination and control of her body. I think that's too great a sacrifice to make, just to be 100% sure. I think again we need a nuanced system to try to avoid destroying the lives of innocents to the best of our knowledge and understanding while still operating in that gray area between conception and birth. (we need to be convinced it's not yet a human being beyond 'reasonable doubt', as it were)
Ajax