Some of my views
I disagree with EVERY man who says he shouldn't have a choice in the matter. You just wait until you are paying child support for a child you didn't want the woman to have, then you might have wanted a say in it.
Unfortunately though, men never will be able to have a say because it IS always the womans choice. Women should listen to a mans opinion but more often than not, women don't.
I am pro choice. What is the big deal with us feeling that the human life is so damned unexpendable? We have this divine right to life yet we take it away from every other species without relent.
If you are pro life - would you deem a tape worm in your stomach dispensible? You may think I am being ridiculous but an unwanted child is equally parasitic. Women sometimes die during child birth and if not, their bodies are left distorted.
I am also opposed to capitol punishment. It's too expensive and you may say that "justice shouldn't have a price" but those millions of dollars that are wasted on those trials could have gone to the local police force which might have aided in keeping that POS from murdering whoever he did. Taxes in cities with criminals on death row are very high.
If you do some research you will find that capitol punishment is not a deterant to crime. There is no correlation whatsoever. I would post a link here but the information was taken away with my other computer.
There are lots of suicides in prison. David Hammer was quoted in saying that he couldn't wait for his execution. Why give the criminal what he wants? Those men could be living in shame and guilt.
Many don't know that when you are dying, oxygen goes to the right temporal lobe in the brain. This causes a feeling of extacy and floating. Our bodies are designed to make death a pleasant experience.
The government still operates under religious influence here in America and we are just in a hurry to get our criminals off to hell "where they belong".
Capitol punishment is a religious practice. Have you ever heard of "An eye for an eye."
Separation of Church and state? I'd like to think so. . .