Originally posted by Flosshilde
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I think examples of the operation of safeguards in the UK are all around us and in all walks of life. Whether we drink water, eat food, take medication, drive, take the train, fly, go into hospital, go into school or any other kind of institution these activities are all hedged round with innumerable safeguards. The whole climate of "health and safety", and minimisation of risk has changed out of all recognition since I was born six decades ago. At that time, and for decades after, it was quite common for children, borstal inmates and vulnerable patients in care to be physically and sexually abused. Now, thanks to the changed climate and the implementation of safeguards, this is far less likely.
And abortion is indeed relevant to this discussion. After all, its opponents claimed - and still claim - it was legalised killing contrary to the will of the victim. There was strong opposition to its legalisation and yet the strength of the campaign in favour of it - and evidence that women were taking matters into their own hands in dangerous and unregulated ways - carried the day. I'm sure the arguments of that time made play of the dangers of abuse, premature termination etc, and yet that has not happened. It is a procedure heavily regulated by legal and medical restrictions and they seem to work.
Here is Terry Pratchett's 2010 Dimbleby lecture on assisted dying, and he repudiates the suggestion that it is only opponents who think carefully about safeguards and the protection of the vulnerable.
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