Then the question is, does that outweigh the negative benefits upon the people who then are legally obligated to support them? When the objection is financial it's not just the parent who gets to answer that question now.
What's a valid price for a life?
Good question. One that the medical institution will probably end up answering eventually. To many people, any amount of resources is fine, which is vaguely ridiculous. If one person needed your entire planet's worth of air, they'd be doing too much damage to everyone else. There is a point where the costs are too high.
They're not really compatible or defensible against one another, seeing as they're existing on two different wavelengths, which is what makes this debate intractable. Sweeping generalizations go!
Pro lifers don't necessarily believe that the woman doesn't have a "right," just that the fetus is also a person with rights - and no one to speak for it.
Pro choicers have moved passed the assumption that a fetus is not a person, generally, and therefore totally bypass the moral argument.
Better way of summing up my conundrum on it than I'd found. My personal morality is that a two week old embryo being much more of worth than, say, a kitty...heck, possibly a tree...is vaguely ridiculous. A baby being a week overdue and being aborted...also ridiculous, the other direction.
Economics alone, or parent inconvenience alone, doesn't work morally for most people, or, as you said, they would just be allowed to abort whiny 15 year-old angst piles that cost tons of money. Obviously a person has an intrinsic value at some point, for most people(for whatever reason). And being hooked up to biological life support systems inside someone is a weird line to draw, if they can be unhooked and live.
From there, my issue is figuring out when they're a person and should have rights-impossible to do for sure, therefore vagueness is preferrable, and to be honest, mistakes morally on this level can be made.
I have my own opinions about where the line is, but I'm not particularly interested in imposing them on other people.
What I
am interested in is a lack of hypocrisy. I see too little difference in the ability to abort a child at seven months and the ability to walk into a room with a seven month premature child and unplug the incubator to think there should be a legal difference. (Hell, that incubator child is costing
far more than the abortion one, day-to-day, in hospital bills. Are you telling me thousands of dollars of cost a day is really that much less inconvenient than them being inside a uterus?) If it was consistent and allowed the latter, I'd be...vaguely disgusted, but I'd respect that. As it is, the line's weird to me.