>>29655193
Human life is not inherently valuable.
.
Before you finish reading this sentence, six people somewhere in the world will have died tragically, and you will never know who they were or how they died, nor will you care. The only time it would affect you is if it happened right in front of you, and even then, you'd be fine after about a week and the world would keep on turning.
.
That same exact principle applies to the so called "pro-lifers". They only care about the poor, widdle wide-eyed BAYBEE that exists only in their imaginations, crying in its mother's belly, pleading not to die, as if a fetus has any such understanding. Pro-lifers make themselves feel like "good people" whenever they oppose such a thing. The feeling of being a good person is what they're after. They don't actually care about human life anymore than the pro-choicer.
.
I could die right now, and only 2 people in the world would know or care. For most people on this board, that number might be slightly higher, but otherwise it's still true.
.
I've worked plenty of jobs right here in America, where I was born, and the employer expected me to do something that was dangerous, against OSHA regulations and so on, and I'd be fired if I didn't do it. They'll just hire another, then another, until someone does it. If they die, they'll just claim "our hearts and prayers go out" over this "tragic accident", pay the million-dollar fine to whoever, then keep right on. They're too big to fail and none of us really matter.
.
I once worked in a medical ward where I was expected to pass meds to patients. I'm not qualified, nor certified, and I've never been to any med school. They wanted me to do it anyway -- the patients are old, if they die that means we have another bed open. Now go pass the meds. I literally made it my full time job to report this place. I wrote emails and made phone calls to *EVERY* regulatory agency in my city. None of them did anything. Nothing.