Instigator / Pro
4
1417
rating
158
debates
32.59%
won
Topic
#2473

On Balance, Abortion Should Remain Legal

Status
Finished

The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.

Winner & statistics
Better arguments
0
3
Better sources
2
2
Better legibility
1
1
Better conduct
1
1

After 1 vote and with 3 points ahead, the winner is...

MisterChris
Parameters
Publication date
Last updated date
Type
Standard
Number of rounds
5
Time for argument
One week
Max argument characters
30,000
Voting period
Two weeks
Point system
Multiple criterions
Voting system
Open
Contender / Con
7
1762
rating
45
debates
88.89%
won
Description

This concerns worldwide policy.

"Should": benefits outweigh the negatives.

Con is for ban, with the exception of Maternal life.

Criterion
Pro
Tie
Con
Points
Better arguments
3 point(s)
Better sources
2 point(s)
Better legibility
1 point(s)
Better conduct
1 point(s)
Reason:

This debate was a bit messy, largely because I feel that large sections of it could have been collapsed when points were being repeated. Despite those issues, I do feel that there’s a clear outcome to the debate, and it plays out largely in Con’s first contention. As per usual with abortion debates, the biggest arguments on the table are those regarding access to basic human rights, namely life and liberty. Economic impacts, while stated to be large, get a little murky because it’s unclear where that money is being yanked from or how it would be used. I buy that it exists, but as Pro points out in R4 and Con stated previously, it’s difficult to compare these economic impacts with those affecting life and liberty more directly. I could see points being made for how economics could affect life and liberty, but they go unstated in the debate, so I drop this impact out. I also do drop Pro’s economic impacts, despite his claims within R4 (not sure why you’d do this) that his economic impacts matter more because it affects quality of life due to coming directly out of the pockets of these new families. I guess I see that, but while the personal scale of the problem definitely makes the impacts clearer, I’m not sure how that automatically weighs in a debate about more fundamental rights. If it doesn’t matter that governments don’t have the resources to help these people because there aren’t enough people to generate those resources, then it doesn’t matter if individuals lack those resources. You can’t have your cake and eat it, too.

That doesn’t really hurt Con, though. The preservation of life argument holds up pretty strongly throughout the debate, and though I have personal misgivings with the framing of both the burdens in the debate (I don’t think Pro was required to take on the burden of proof that Con put on him simply because he is the instigator) and of some aspects of the uncertainty principle, these largely go uncontested. Pro just doesn’t do all that much on this argument beyond stating that Con must prove certain aspects without engaging on the BoP reasoning that Con gives, and providing an argument for why liberty shouldn’t be infringed upon that is, at best, tangential to the point being made. The point is that uncertainty in the question of whether a fetus is a person should favor the fetus being a person, otherwise abortion becomes a means to end a terribly huge number of lives solely on the basis that we don’t know. He points out connections to those in comas and those who are sedated as examples: we need to recognize that, no matter whether someone feels pain or is conscious, their life is precious. Pro’s responses, particularly on the comatose, miss the mark. Euthanasia is a very different issue because there is at least the capacity for an active choice in that person’s life. Any choice made by someone else would also have been designated by that person. I can see where you were trying to go with this, but it’s a weird point and it doesn’t get at the basic argument Con is making: that life doesn’t gain or lose value (at least not in the eyes of the community at large) simply because one is unconscious or not capable of feeling pain. Pro does make a point about suffering and how these children may be subject to terrible lives, and while that has merit, he doesn’t do enough with it and allows Con to easily outweigh it by simply saying that that loss of life is the greater harm.

So Con is winning this point, and there’s not a lot left to be done with the debate. Con repeatedly argues that life precedes any even substantial loss of liberty for the women carrying these children, which Pro never substantially disputes. There are some loss of life arguments presented by Pro regarding illegal abortions, but the numbers are unclear by the end and they come nowhere near Con’s numbers. There’s also this point about overpopulation, which just becomes a bit of an unclear mess by the end. It’s an issue, it’s important, but it’s unclear that banning abortions would trigger a massive rise in the population or that any resulting rise would put us over the brink. It’s a linear impact at best, enhancing existing problems rather than putting us in dangerous new territory, and while that may be a valuable impact in most debates, it’s not going to do much against Con’s main impact of life loss.

Con clearly takes this debate. He pushes a strong narrative from the outset, focusing heavily on the link between human beings and personhood, and remains largely unchallenged on that narrative throughout the debate, practically granting him his biggest impact without substantial mitigation. I don’t think it’s possible to win an abortion debate where that happens, regardless of how good the opposing arguments are.