How are you to know that the infant that is okay to be thrown away wouldn't be the one to cure cancer in 20 years?
I just have to say, regardless of my opinion of euthanasia and abortion, I think it best to avoid making spurious arguments of the "what if?" variety.
The problem? The same basis could be used to say, "Well, what if you don't have sex with your partner tonight? The baby you
might have conceived could have done something remarkable! How can you not have sex?" (and, of course, remember that the same baby could have grown up to be Jeffrey Dahmer).
Besides, of course, it signifies the value of the child not as an inherent quality but merely as a measure of its usefulness to society. THat's probably the opposite of the argument you'd like to make here.
Until it can survive on its own outside the womb, it's in mom as a parasite.
Um, no.
The fetus actually is comprised of half of the material from its mother, spawning from a biological process that is part and parcel to her own body. It's not an outside organism using her body, it actually begins as part of her body operating according to healthy biology.
The only problem might be, at times, if the mom conceived from an act of sex she did not desire nor wanted to take responsibility for.
I think modern society has to get over this idea that we are totally in control of our bodies and we only get pregnant if we want to. We're not, even if we can control pregnancy a great deal. We're still biologically animals and subject to the process of nature, so all that has to be taken into account when we choose our behavior.
Because it's talking about killing babies!!!!

It's just a gut reaction to a yucky subject.
Pretty much.
I'm a parent. I have known my kids from the moment of their birth. Yes, I feel repulsion at the idea. A lot of repulsion, actually. I'm squishing it down right now.
But I still think it can be discussed from a rational angle, to see if there is any delineations that can be drawn. And no, the OP wasn't really discussing "relationships" or "right/wrong" from someone's moral pov, it was describing utility and trying to determine if there was any point at which a developing human being passes from "not self" to "self."
Maybe the topic is too repulsive to be approached from BW's angle here.
And I suspect that this is just a social experiment of BlueWings to further advance his theory of crazy NF's and their crazy feelings that shouldn't have any place in society.
Or it might not be about you at all.
In any case, if you believe he is doing this, should you play along? Or is it inevitable because he's violating your values?
This is such an odd weird meta-thread. I'm learning more from watching people's responses than from the actual content of the responses themselves.

My xxxJness has drawn too quick a conclusion and bitten me in the ass, I do believe.
It's okay. We all have a few bite marks on our ass, it's part of being alive.

(And tasting good.)
What really is the difference between an embryo/fetus compared to a baby that has been birthed? The baby is outside of the mother, woopty-doo. It is still equally dependent the mother, its brain is barely developed and its skull will have to harden with time, it cannot consciously control its movement, it has no discernable thought other than primal insticts (food, poop) and its attempts to express these needs can barely be distinguished from one another, it has no traits to distinguish it as an individual other than genetic phenotype and will continue being a bland organism until personality starts developing in toddlerhood.
Yeah. Especially nowadays, when babies that have only gestated for 5-6 months can actually survived being born (even if they might suffer health problems, perhaps for the rest of their lives, from the premature birth).
In some ways, "birth" is a logically arbitrary measure of personhood. But it sure is an intuitive one, isn't it? "Common sense" says as soon as that baby is outside the mom, it looks like a separate tangible entity and we respond to it as such = hence, they are now a person.
But again, that's not a logical thing, it's common sense and partly emotional.