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Culture War Roundup for the week of April 13, 2026

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I think the passenger analogy doesn't really apply well here because the passenger in a car still displayed agency in determining the risk/reward of getting into the car. A baby doesn't display any agency on being conceived.

But if you want me to stake a position, then even if the passenger in my car accident I caused was in needed an organ donation from me. I still have the bodily autonomy to say no. It's my body and you can't morally compel me to use it.

Of course a baby doesn’t display agency, because it ‘can’t’. Therein lies the problem.

… even if the passenger in my car accident I caused was in needed an organ donation from me. I still have the bodily autonomy to say no.

The baby didn’t stake an original claim on your body. You’re the one who chose to commit the act. What it’s “fighting” for is on behalf of its own existence.

The baby didn’t stake an original claim on your body.

The baby is dependent on me for survival. If I wish to use my body for something other than its survival and would like to remove it, I am within my rights to remove it. If someone else would like to put it in their body or test tube for its survival they may. It's not my concern. If the baby would like to form a contract with me to exchange value for its continued use of my body, then it should make an offer.

You’re the one who chose to commit the act.

I chose to take a risk. Much like when I decided to smoke a cigarette. Just because the lung cancer became a sentient clump of cells doesn't entitled it to my body or preventing me from attempting to get rid of it.

What it’s “fighting” for is on behalf of its own existence.

I forgot the "fighting for existence" is such a moral rectitude that it permits the overriding of any other beings rights. Let me quickly go tell my boss he needs to pay me a bajillion dollars because I am "fighting for my existence"

You brought up the point about organ donation. You’re not engaging in “organ donation” in the normal process of pregnancy. “Your body” is no longer “your body,” at the point it involves the life and death of someone else. That’s the entire point.

I chose to take a risk. Much like when I decided to smoke a cigarette. Just because the lung cancer became a sentient clump of cells doesn't entitled it to my body or preventing me from attempting to get rid of it.

Precisely. You chose the risk. And now you live with the consequences of said risk.

Let me quickly go tell my boss he needs to pay me a bajillion dollars because I am "fighting for my existence"

You realize fighting was in quotation marks, right?

“Your body” is no longer “your body,” at the point it involves the life and death of someone else. That’s the entire point.

We are going to disagree irrevocably about this. "My Body" is always my body, morally it is wrong to remove bodily autonomy from a being regardless of the reason. I don't think you can convince me that any form of slavery regardless of the cause will ever be ok. I'm not a consequentialist, and am not a utilitarian. The freedom to bodily autonomy is a quintessential natural right and it requires Tyranny to override that.

I'd go as far to say you benefit from this as we currently aren't harvesting your organs against your will because it will save the lives of multiple other people. Afterall "your body" is no longer "your body".

I also did not bring up organ donation, please highlight where I did.

Precisely. You chose the risk. And now you live with the consequences of said risk.

Show me the law or the penal colony where we condemn smokers to die of lung cancer without any chance of treatment.

"My Body" is always my body, morally it is wrong to remove bodily autonomy from a being regardless of the reason.

Do you support abolishing prison? Or law enforcement entirely, since almost all criminal law enforcement requires taking people's bodies and holding them against their will (and threatening them with bodily harm if they don't comply)? I can't think of any moral framework that includes absolute bodily autonomy without resulting in absurd results in all other walks of life. And we're not talking about weird edge cases here, we're talking about normal things a society needs in order to function.

I mean this gets into how a social group enforces rules, there are a lot of gray areas. For example, if I kidnap you and hold you hostage is that ok because society believes that imprisoning people is ok? What if I commit you to an insane asylum against your will while you are perfectly sane?

I'd argue that holding someone against their will for no reason other than you can is wrong, and there are a bunch of different lens you could use to explain why.

However, if I violate some social compact around what constitutes lawful behavior in my tribe what are my options? Non-Exhaustively:

  • I could fight tooth and nail to prevent punishment, this will likely lead to my permanent expulsion from the tribe, or attempts to harm/revenge me for my transgression.
  • I could accept the punishment for that transgression of my own free will, after which I might be allowed back into the tribe. This doesn't preclude me from professing or agitating for my innocence or a reduction in the punishment under circumstances.

Scale these up from tribes to modern society and I'd argue the intuitions follow. Realistically a criminal could fight their incarceration, its up to them if they think losing/being treated as an enemy of a society is worth that cost. They could escape to the wilds and form their own tribe, or wait until such unjust rules are overthrown. They can accept the punishment in hopes of re-integration afterwards. They have lots of options, but fundamentally they have the right to bodily autonomy, just as members of a society/tribe have the right to associate with individuals they want to. There's tension there, but I don't see the conflict.

d argue that holding someone against their will for no reason other than you can is wrong

Sure, but law enforcement/prison (usually) isn't a "just because we can" thing. Similar to how many people oppose murdering babies (which, by the way, violates their bodily autonomy) "just because we can". I.e. when "it's inconvenient for my lifestyle and/or the baby will have Down's Syndrome or similar" which accounts for roughly 95% of abortions. I'm personally a pro-life absolutist who opposes it even in danger to the life of the mother type situations (though I've grown into that position over time, I sadly used to be more "moderate" in my support of child murder), but for the modal abortion it's essentially done out of convenience, not necessity.

which, by the way, violates their bodily autonomy

I made a response to this same argument: here. The baby is violating my bodily autonomy, me removing them from MY body does not violate their bodily autonomy. Their inability to survive outside of MY body is not my problem. Pro-lifer's want to assign more moral weight to a baby than to a human, but I have yet to hear a compelling reason for it.

To be clear you are asking me to unpack a very complex and complicated topic that only marginally relates to the abortion topic in that they affect similar values. For similar levels of effort I'd like you to address how you can be pro-life yet not immediately donate your body and all your organs to help everyone who needs organ transplants. After all if bodily autonomy is not sacrosanct, and some humans have more moral worth than others, shouldn't we forcibly remove organs to help those of more moral virtue?

Or we can stay on the topic at hand...

pro-life absolutist

At least you are honest and consistent. I can respect that. I am near enough to a pro-choice absolutist, so I doubt we'll ever agree. Furthermore since I think humans are of equal moral worth (barring edge cases) and I am not religious, I don't see how I will ever consider a "child" (even granting a clump of cells is a child) of more moral worth than an existing human being. And thus be willing to abrogate the rights of one to support the rights of the other.

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Realistically a criminal could fight their incarceration, its up to them if they think losing/being treated as an enemy of a society is worth that cost.

Not realistically. There is no right of exile that Society recognizes for the condemned. Fighting will result in severe violation of bodily autonomy, death, 99% of the time. Because it takes a lot of skill to be a fugitive that is not found and executed in a 20 v 1 fire fight or hauled off to the cage.

but fundamentally they have the right to bodily autonomy

They definitely have no such thing. At no point in my life have I felt like I have had full bodily autonomy. It's not really a position the West has ever taken. Most people in the West from Edward I onwards have had their bodies treated like objects for significant portions of their lives. That court case that was cited in the OP was like it came from outer space. Had the judge never heard of serfdom, slavery, childhood, incarceration, taxes, clothes laws or seatbelt laws?

There is no right of exile that Society recognizes for the condemned.

There used to be, Britain famously exiled people to Australia. There are other examples if you want me to fish for them. Obviously modern society is a lot more complicated, and I'd say American Society is more on the retributive side of the spectrum.

A right to bodily autonomy does not automatically mean no one may ever physically constrain you under any circumstances. It usually means your body is not available for arbitrary use, domination, or violation by others. Imprisonment, on this view, is not justified because the state suddenly owns your body. It is justified, if at all, as a limited response to prior rights-violations under a public system of rules. Incarceration is one of the ways a society tries to reconcile one person’s liberty with everyone else’s security

They definitely have no such thing. At no point in my life have I felt like I have had full bodily autonomy.

And you somehow think this is a good thing, the pinnacle of moral virtue that we should aspire to? Just because the system is flawed doesn't mean we can't dream of a better one, a more principled one.

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Your body always is “your body,” right up to the point in involves someone else’s body. Just as your right to swing your fist ends where my nose begins. This is the first time I’ve come across someone equating pregnancy to slavery, but it’s surely interesting. And this is what I was getting at earlier:

… It always struck me as disingenuous how the blue tribe seems to get collective amnesia and forget how to be literate when it comes to the matter or abortion…

Not saying to belong to the in-group, but the logic sure does seem to get pretty fuzzy whenever the topic is brought up. Words lose their meanings so fast to its advocates, probably because it’s the only way they can square this circle.

Contrary to your last point, the reason either of us are benefiting at all entirely comes from the moral wealth of my side of aisle, I’d argue. The reason someone doesn’t have the right to come along and end my life without retribution comes from the self-worth and dignity of each person. Which is also why I’m against abortion.

comes from the self-worth and dignity of each person

People vary in both of these.

The reason someone doesn’t have the right to come along and end my life without retribution

What do you think about the Iranian schoolgirls the United States killed? Do they deserve retribution? Or do they lack as much self-worth and dignity as Americans?

People vary in both of these.

As I tell those close to me. True self-worth is derived through God’s eyes. Seek His approval, not man’s.

What do you think about the Iranian schoolgirls the United States killed? Do they deserve retribution? Or do they lack as much self-worth and dignity as Americans?

Yes?

I’m one of the most critical people of US foreign policy you’ll probably find on this site. And I’ve been lambasted for it before.

As I tell those close to me. True self-worth is derived through God’s eyes. Seek His approval, not man’s.

God let Sodom and Gomorrah sin and then destroyed them for it. It is not your role as a Christian to stop strangers from having abortions. It's their own evolutionary self-destruction. It benefits you, it doesn't harm you. So legal pro-lifeism is shooting yourself in the foot.

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And this is what I was getting at earlier:

But I'm not blue tribe, I'm a libertarian. It should be pretty clear that I value the sanctity of bodily autonomy very highly. So it would follow that I view the removal of that right as pretty catastrophic.

Can you make the actual argument around collective amnesia clear. Because if you are just arguing the teleology of sex then I point you to this comment I just made link. What was said about Christian assumption of a default universalism applies to your comment/argument as far as I can tell.

Just as your right to swing your fist ends where my noise begins.

Technically so does the babies... which is why I can remove their body from mine, after which I have no say in their bodily autonomy. Their rights end where my body begins. Their dependence on my body and their lack of right to my body is morally consistent. If the technology existed to incubate those babies until they were fully formed then I imagine it would be considered correct by my morals to do so. After all who doesn't want to keep existing. However the lack of a technology existing does not suddenly make morals change.

Contrary to your last point, the reason either of us are benefiting at all entirely comes from the moral wealth of my side of aisle, I’d argue.

I didn't realize your moral side was now claiming total ownership over any and all children and births across the universe? Isn't that a bit of an arrogant and grandiose claim? My parents were trying intentionally for children. I don't think you can claim me. What about my dignity to not be enslaved? Of if I dress a certain way and walk down a certain street in a bad neighborhood do I lose that dignity?

I'm not blue tribe, I'm a libertarian.

I said as much.

Technically so does the babies... which is why I can remove their body from mine, after which I have no say in their bodily autonomy…

If it was possible to simply “remove” their body from yours, this wouldn’t be an issue.

Their rights end where my body begins.

Except by your own words: you calculated and risk and took it. Now deal with the consequences.

Their dependence on my body and their lack of right to my body is morally consistent.

You forfeit your right to a child’s dependence on you when you accept the risk that getting pregnant is a serious possibility. If you didn’t want to take the risk, you didn’t have to. Just like you own example provides: you get into a car you accept a risk to drive. You drive drunk, you accept the increased risk of an accident.

If the technology existed to incubate those babies until they were fully formed then I imagine it would be considered correct by my morals to do so.

Then by your own admission, you don’t really deny that you’re terminating a baby’s right to life. After all if it were just a clump of cells (just like you and I are right now) there’d be no moral imperative to preserve what isn’t life.

After all who doesn't want to keep existing. However the lack of a technology existing does not suddenly make morals change.

It certainly does by your logic it seems.