I vote with Kreskin's last post on this. The very names of the opposing camps, pro-choice and pro-life, are pure political spin, and I don't think they represent the issue at all. The old pro-choice argument about a woman having a right to control her own body is a fraud; if she really could, the issue wouldn't arise, Unwanted pregnancies happen simply because people can't control their bodies. The old pro-life argument about the sanctity of a human life is purely religious; I've never heard an argument against abortion that isn't fundamentally religiously based, and as an unrepentant old atheist I just can't buy any of them.
The real issue is this: under what circumstances is it permissible to kill another human being? There is no right to life when life can be taken from you by an act of random violence, all the bills of rights in the world can't do anything but provide redress for your heirs and survivors, it won't give a life back. If you really had a right to life in any legally meaningful sense, you could sue to get it back. But you can't; once you're gone, you're gone forever. Your successors can obtain legal redress, but you're not coming back.
But to address the OP's question specifically, pro-choice becomes pro-abortion when the people promoting pro-choice decide abortion is the only option for dealing with an unwanted pregnancy. It's not, they'll always be wrong about that, it's never the only option, but I don't think even Planned Parenthood counsels women to have an abortion; as I understand their program, they lay out the options with some sort of cost-benefit analysis and the decision is up to the pregnant woman.
Personally, I don't think this is an issue the law should be involved in at all. The law doesn't mandate what my physician should do if I have a particular medical condition, that's a judgment arrived at between me and my physician, and abortion should be the same, a decision arrived at between a woman and her physician.
Ah, but what the Hell do I know, I'm a man, I'm never going to face that decision with the same immediacy a woman will. I'm not even sure I'm entitled to have an opinion, but I have one anyway, and it's this: it's not really my business. Not even if I were the father would it really be my business. I'll never be the one to carry the child for 9 months, or nurse it; I may have some feelings about it, but the woman's preferences trump mine every time.
So if we all raise our sons right, they won't be knocking up anybody who doesn't want to be knocked up, and the issue will maybe go away...
The real issue is this: under what circumstances is it permissible to kill another human being? There is no right to life when life can be taken from you by an act of random violence, all the bills of rights in the world can't do anything but provide redress for your heirs and survivors, it won't give a life back. If you really had a right to life in any legally meaningful sense, you could sue to get it back. But you can't; once you're gone, you're gone forever. Your successors can obtain legal redress, but you're not coming back.
But to address the OP's question specifically, pro-choice becomes pro-abortion when the people promoting pro-choice decide abortion is the only option for dealing with an unwanted pregnancy. It's not, they'll always be wrong about that, it's never the only option, but I don't think even Planned Parenthood counsels women to have an abortion; as I understand their program, they lay out the options with some sort of cost-benefit analysis and the decision is up to the pregnant woman.
Personally, I don't think this is an issue the law should be involved in at all. The law doesn't mandate what my physician should do if I have a particular medical condition, that's a judgment arrived at between me and my physician, and abortion should be the same, a decision arrived at between a woman and her physician.
Ah, but what the Hell do I know, I'm a man, I'm never going to face that decision with the same immediacy a woman will. I'm not even sure I'm entitled to have an opinion, but I have one anyway, and it's this: it's not really my business. Not even if I were the father would it really be my business. I'll never be the one to carry the child for 9 months, or nurse it; I may have some feelings about it, but the woman's preferences trump mine every time.
So if we all raise our sons right, they won't be knocking up anybody who doesn't want to be knocked up, and the issue will maybe go away...