More like "answer the question and gtfo"*Yawn*
More dodging and trolling.
Answer the question or GTFO.![]()
:shrug:
More like "answer the question and gtfo"*Yawn*
More dodging and trolling.
Answer the question or GTFO.![]()
And now I'm thinking of the NASA/Boeing turkey story. I suppose that was inevitable.
Still, though, I wouldn't want to clean the kitchen after this sandwich is made.
How could anyone really?Even though you were on the phone, were you able to keep a straight face as you recited the Turducken question?
Still dodging..lightgigantic said:More like "answer the question and gtfo"
I wasn't aware I moved ... however if we examine your behavior ...How could anyone really?
I will never look at a whole roasting bird's preparation in the same way again. The Turducken will haunt me for a long time.
Still dodging..
Why are you ignoring the absurdity of a qualitative distinction between a full term fetus inside the womb and that same fetus seconds later outside of it? Why instead are you obsessed with the irrelevant absurdity of the mechanics used to demonstrate it?Oh no, your comment was absurd on its own.
I imagine some women could conceivably get their kicks from an abortion procedure, but I’m not aware of any. It certainly wasn’t the case for my wife many years ago.Because women often kill a full term foetus for fun?
She said Dr. Gosnell told her “the baby is big enough that it could walk to the store or the bus stop.”
Eventually the baby boy went in the freezer, Cross said.
Abrams was 17 when she went to the Women’s Medical Society for a late-term abortion on July, 12, 2008. Earlier in the trial, Abrams testified that she was 29 weeks (slightly more than 7 months) pregnant and that the abortion sent her to the hospital for two weeks with complications, including a blood clot in her heart. Abortions after 24 weeks are illegal in Pennsylvania
http://cnsnews.com/news/article/gos...n-survivor-was-swimming-toilet-trying-get-out
Then like any other brain dead person, you pull the plug.What about if it is a "brain dead full term baby"?
So the only thing preventing this elective near full term abortion wasn’t the lack of desire by the OB/GYN, but the lack of facility.So how do you draw lines in the case of a healthy fetus?
It's hard. Essentially I have to say to myself, "Is this a very compelling story?" And I feel very bad about that because who am I to say, "Well, it's compelling because you're 11," and then I see a similar case when the girl's 14 and I think, okay… but then, what if you're 15, what if you're 16? How do we draw these lines? What is the ethical difference between doing an abortion at 29 and 32 weeks? Is there a meaningful ethical difference? Can I justify it? Will I have to justify it, and to whom?
It comes down to a question of safety, many times. If I feel that there is a likelihood that there will be complications, and I won’t be able to finish the procedure in the office—and we’re an office, not a surgery center—I will only do the procedure if there is a fetal anomaly. Not for elective procedures. And I say “elective” as if the woman is choosing between pairs of shoes, and it’s not like that, not even close, but I will turn that patient down. For example, in the movie, I had a patient from France and she just desperately did not want to be pregnant—but she was 35 weeks, and gestational age is plus or minus three weeks, so she could've been at 38 weeks, and that’s just too far along. It wouldn’t be safe.
http://thehairpin.com/2013/09/susan-robinson
Personhood is what a particular society decides it is and how it's applied. As far as fetal rights, they already exists to some extent in various federal and state legal code.I'm sorry, no. You don't get to assign personhood and then limit it. If you assign personhood, then that person is equal under the law and it has human rights that must be protected absolutely.
Did your young children have the right to drink alcohol, drive a car, marry, receive Native American tribal benefits, vote, engage in sex, perform or receive abortions? At some point were some of your children due to age and capability entitled to more rights than others? Do all adults and children outside your country enjoy rights equal to your own?Physical ability.. Is it less of a person if it is disabled? Intelligence? Can it count to 100 in the womb by tapping against the mother's belly?
As a parent, at no time did I place my kids in such a pecking order, nor would I ever accept or allow anyone to limit or assign their rights based off any of the ones you listed.
Wow, what a complicated concept, comparing the rights of two entities migrating to a foreign territory. Why would anyone in their right mind use an immigration analogy to describe a fetal personhood policy?I'm sorry, what? Are you going to claim that a 40 year old man, for example, who is trying to enter into a country illegal is the same as a 30 week old foetus because he has ties to his native society that helped him to develop and provided him with sustenance?
*Chortle*..
Wow, that's a new one.
Tell me, are you still tethered to your mother's uterus? After all, you had a social, legal and biological tether to her womb, not to mention the fact that she provided you with society in the 9 months you spent there and all of your sustenance.
What about most mothers like yourself who keep their babies, are they exempt from child welfare laws?Mothers are already shackled with a degree of responsibility by the state in regards to child rearing.
Nope. A mother can give her child up for adoption without ever laying eyes on it. She can take the baby and leave it in front of someone's doorstep. She can have someone else raise her child. No one can force a person to "parent" or be responsible for their children. If you could, then there would not be over 400,000 children in the foster care system and certainly not over 100,000 children up for adoption in the US.
I was talking about a hypothetical expansion of child welfare laws to deal with the welfare of a viable fetus. As you and I both know the case in Texas concerned a nonviable mother and fetus, and was rightly resolved on that basis.In Texas, they kept a dead woman alive on a machine to grow a baby in her uterus without her consent or her family's consent. And you think it has yet to go there in the extreme? Really?
If only they hadn’t cut the cord.As one of the 4 doctors who performs such procedures in the US commented, they are rare and all of the reasons she is given are valid, because these are not decisions that are taken lightly or done without much thought, most of it agonising, and she won't perform them when they are full term.
Study: Depression, Fear of Abandonment Can Lead Moms to Kill Babies
Media reports of women killing their newborn babies always rocket to the top of websites’ most-read lists. The prospect of moms killing newborns is so grotesque it’s as if everyone is wondering the same thing: who are these mad mommies?
Turns out they’re not necessarily the psychotic nut jobs we think they are. Low maternal self-esteem and emotional immaturity are behind many of the killings, according to new research published online in the fetal and neonatal edition of the Archives of Disease in Childhood, a journal of the British Medical Association.
http://healthland.time.com/2010/12/22/what-kind-of-mom-kills-her-baby-its-not-who-you-might-think/
Because the mechanics you have used to demonstrate it are so absurd that one cannot focus or concentrate on the issue without being distracted by the idiocy. I mean really, stuffing it back in? What in the world were you thinking? I mean who even comes up with something like that? How?Why are you ignoring the absurdity of a qualitative distinction between a full term fetus inside the womb and that same fetus seconds later outside of it? Why instead are you obsessed with the irrelevant absurdity of the mechanics used to demonstrate it?
You asked what if the baby was stuffed back into the mother and its umbilical cord attached. It defies logic. Unless you wish to compare a woman to a turkey or other form of animal that is often stuffed..If I proposed that on the surface of the sun your weight on a scale would read 28 times greater, would you take it as a lesson in mass and gravity, or express astonishment over the absurdity of a person standing on a scale in a 5000 C plasma environment?
This isn't about my sensibilities. It is about unrealistic and frankly stupid analogies.Since Tiassa made severance of the umbilical cord conditional to personhood, maybe I should’ve made it easier on your sensibilities and left out the dramatic embellishment of surgical replacement.
And if it couldn't get any more ridiculous, there you go.I imagine some women could conceivably get their kicks from an abortion procedure, but I’m not aware of any.
No procedure is without risk. Childbirth is one of the riskiest things a woman can endure, especially if you have the obstetrician I was unlucky to have had. Abortion is one of the safest medical procedures a woman can endure. Unless your doctor is a butcher.This young woman wasn’t too thrilled either.
But what if the mother is brain dead? Personhood means that the mother can do nothing to harm the child. So if she falls ill, then she cannot be treated if it could harm the foetus. Look at some of the countries in South America, where personhood is now law. Women are dying because they are now carrying a "person". Women who have cancer are denied cancer treatment if they are pregnant, because they are carrying a "person". Hell, look at Kansas. Hell, in the UK, they wouldn't even conduct scans and blood tests when a woman, 37 weeks pregnant, went to hospital suffering from extreme back pain. She was sent home with pain killers and had to be rushed back when she suffered seizures. She died a few weeks after birth due to a brain tumour. Or another woman in the US, who miscarried and was refused treatment because the "person" inside her was still alive.Then like any other brain dead person, you pull the plug.
No. It is because to do so would have been too dangerous for the mother.So the only thing preventing this elective near full term abortion wasn’t the lack of desire by the OB/GYN, but the lack of facility.
Universal human rights. You should read them sometimes.Personhood is what a particular society decides it is and how it's applied. As far as fetal rights, they already exists to some extent in various federal and state legal code.
Entitlement. Really, it's not that hard, is it?Did your young children have the right to drink alcohol, drive a car, marry, receive Native American tribal benefits, vote, engage in sex, perform or receive abortions? At some point were some of your children due to age and capability entitled to more rights than others? Do all adults and children outside your country enjoy rights equal to your own?
Because people who have sat in a boat for heaven knows how long are exactly the same as a foetus.Wow, what a complicated concept, comparing the rights of two entities migrating to a foreign territory. Why would anyone in their right mind use an immigration analogy to describe a fetal personhood policy?
Is there a reason why they should be?What about most mothers like yourself who keep their babies, are they exempt from child welfare laws?
Again, why deal with hypotheticals when the world abounds with reality?I was talking about a hypothetical expansion of child welfare laws to deal with the welfare of a viable fetus. As you and I both know the case in Texas concerned a nonviable mother and fetus, and was rightly resolved on that basis.
It's very easy to joke about severe post natal depression. Until you walk in their shoes that is.If only they hadn’t cut the cord.
If you fire a Turducken out of a cannon, does that mean you need three birds to kill one plane?
lightgigantic said:I wasn't aware I moved ... however if we examine your behavior ...
Bells said:
This isn't about my sensibilities. It is about unrealistic and frankly stupid analogies.
still not listening to answers ... from syne, wynn, electric fetus, myself, and now capracus.Still not answering the question?
Can you link where they answered the questions?still not listening to answers ... from syne, wynn, electric fetus, myself, and now capracus.
Congratulations.
Only an exceptional person could possibly succeed in simultaneously asking questions yet refusing to hear answers involving so many different people with so many differing opinions on the subject.
:shrug:
Not only can I show you where they answer, but I can show where they berate you for displaying pigheaded reluctance for refusing to discuss the question you insist no one is answering.Can you link where they answered the questions?
On the contrary, it is *you* who is imagining stuff and trying to coerce posters into fulfilling these pre-conceived roles that no one is actually advocating.Thus far, you have all been making up fantastic scenarios instead of answering very simple questions that pertain to personhood, and you have been running screaming and acting offended by real life issues where personhood is declared and women left to die and refused and denied treatment and even arrested while in labour because the mother decided to have a home birth with a midwife present (which is actually not illegal and exceptionally common).
Feel free to find a reference for that being the consequence of a triage model (as discussed by persons in this thread ... aside from your hysterical self of course).All of these are your triage model in action and every single one of the real life situations linked in this thread really happened and are happening, and every single one of them distinctly show what happens to women when her unborn foetus is declared a person. Why can none of you address any of them and explain what happens to a mother when personhood is declared? Why do every single one of you change the subject when we discuss real life situations when personhood is declared?
legal definitions?What makes a foetus a "person" by legal definition of a person, with full legal rights that a person has?
Triage models explain what happens to her "life".What happens to the woman when the zygote-foetus she is carrying is declared a person? What happens to her rights over her body, her life and her personhood?
Bells said:
What about of the case of a young woman ...?
Lightgigantic and ElectricFetus
There was recently a case in South America, where in many countries, abortion is illegal full stop, no exceptions. Personhood is applied from the moment of conception... But in this case, a 17 year old pregnant girl, was denied life saving chemotherapy because she was pregnant and chemotherapy drugs would harm or kill the "person" inside her. When she sought an abortion so she could commence her life saving treatment, she was told no. The 17 year old girl subsequently died of her untreated cancer, along with the foetus. Could you please apply your triage model in this scenario?
What about of the case of a young woman, who was quite ill and dying. She wished to have a bit more time and when her doctor advised her that she would not make it to the 28th week of her pregnancy, she sought to make the time she had left more comfortable and extended for as long as possible - since she realised the foetus she was carrying had also suffered from lack of oxygen due to her illness and would have had little chance of surviving if she had a c-section then. However, because she was pregnant, she was forced to have a c-section against her and her family's wishes.
Her desire and her family's desire to prolong her life and die with some comfort were deemed secondary to saving the "potential for life" she was carrying. Her daughter lived for just 2 hours and upon hearing that her daughter had died, she died 2 days later. Should a woman be condemned to die sooner, even against her wishes, in such a situation, because people unconnected to her deemed it more worthwhile to try to save the potential for life, the person, she is carrying? Or should her right to remain alive as long as she could have been paramount? Her rights were extinguished, and she was denied the right to her bodily integrity. How would your triage model apply here? Would the mother's wishes to remain alive factor in? Or is the "person's" right to life more valid than the mother's personhood?
How does your triage model apply to a woman's bodily integrity and her right to refuse treatment? Fetus appears to argue that women should be forced, against their will, to undergo treatment because someone has deemed it necessary to save the "person" she is carrying. Do you believe that women should be forced to undergo medical treatment and denied the right to even go to the hospital of their choosing and denied any say in their medical treatment? Is that acceptable? For example:
Should women have rights to determine their medical care as they see fit while pregnant?
Or should the Government take over the care of the foetus, and thus the woman's womb, to treat the person she is carrying, whether she wants it or not?
You have a right to refuse treatment and surgery, as such, if you say you do not want to have a particular operation, they are not meant to operate on you. That is your right as a person and an individual. Women are increasingly denied that right and they are now, in too many cases to ignore, being forced, sometimes arrested and held and sedated by force, to relinquish their rights over their own bodies and self determination, because the State has, literally, taken over control of their wombs and forcing them to ensure life threatening surgeries without their consent. Is this acceptable, in your honest opinion? Is this what the triage model deems necessary?
As I said, what happens to the woman's rights when the foetus is declared a person from whatever stage of its development. And in each and every single situation this has happened, it has resulted in the woman, and her spouse and family, losing all of her rights and integrity and say over her own body. From forced medical procedures to forced bed care and incarceration in prison and hospital, to forced dangerous surgeries which in one case at least, endangered a woman's already fragile state and facilitating her death.
Because Fetus' argument and your triage argument, renders the mother as being expendable. Her rights and her freedom over her body and her rights to privacy and health care cease to matter because all that matters is ensuring the protection of the "person" she is carrying. It infringes on her intrinsic human rights.
The anti-abortion crowd consists almost entirely of political and religious conservatives. As I stated earlier, conservatives as a demographic are far less intellectually oriented than liberals. Both sides tend to base arguments on their feelings, but liberals have to let their brains review them and conservatives aren't as troubled by that need. So for a group of conservatives to completely ignore logic is hardly remarkable.Really, though, did you ever notice the anti-abortion demand that we restrict the discussion to exclude the events and processes that are actually occurring, in reality?
Jon Stewart noted that the contest was between teams from Washington and Colorado, demonstrating the advantages of legalized marijuana.While I can no more prove the accusation than I can prove that I experienced the confusion and disappointment of wondering what the hell I was watching as my hometown, lifelong team cruised to its Super Bowl victory . . . .
Didn't I already say that conservatives are extremely weak on logical reasoning?. . . . I find myself ever more convinced that the anti-abortion movement really has nothing, since they're down to demanding that it is impolite to start a conversation that they don't have an answer to and thus must change the subject in order to accommodate their comfort.
No. In order for them to "know" they're wrong, they'd have to be able to reason. And like most conservatives, that's their weakest skill.The thing about sociopaths and other APDs is that they generally don't think there's anything wrong with them. What separates them from this crowd is that the anti-abortion movement knows it's wrong, knows it has nothing, and wants what it wants anyway.
You still don't get it. You can't "objectively prove" something to a person who neither believes in logical reasoning nor is capable of it.I wish I could objectively prove this cowardice to people.
My wife was a medical social worker for many years, and her career spanned America's cultural shift on that issue. She worked on a psych ward and saw the patients who were "put on drugs and forced therapy." Not only was she not impressed, but she felt like barfing.I believe that some people would be better off forced to undergo certain kinds of treatment, pregnant or not, male or female, for example mentally insane people for would be better off put on drugs and forced therapy then roaming the streets homeless and talking to walls.
I'm quite happy with my ex's standard: GO BACK TO YOUR DAMN SPORTS BAR AND LET US WOMEN DECIDE! In a less polite mood, it comes out, "I'll give a flying fuck what men think about abortion, the first time one of you assholes gets pregnant."It all depends on what standard you use to start applying rights . . . .
My wife was a medical social worker for many years, and her career spanned America's cultural shift on that issue. She worked on a psych ward and saw the patients who were "put on drugs and forced therapy." Not only was she not impressed, but she felt like barfing.
After the 72-hour limit became standard, seeing them sleeping in parks, panhandling for food, and shouting biblical verses at motorists was much easier to tolerate. As for talking to a wall, she never saw anyone doing that outdoors, but had seen it often in the hospital!
In our observation, homeless people as a demographic are smart enough to migrate to places like Los Angeles, where you can sleep outdoors comfortably 350 nights a year, and like Washington DC, where the feeders at the federal trough are so guilt-ridden that our homeless here have wheelie suitcases instead of rusty shopping carts, and down sleeping bags instead of piles of newspaper. Not to mention the D.C. government has an iron-clad policy that when the temperature drops below 20F (if I have that right), every homeless person is taken to a shelter, and if the shelters are full they put them up in hotels. Those who simply refuse to go are given warm clothing.
It's a tough decision. But everyone I've ever discussed it with has said, "If you see me out there one day, please leave me ALONE! I'd rather die free under the stars, than live in a looney bin, drugged into a stupor." I'm curious as to how you feel about it?
I'm quite happy with my ex's standard: GO BACK TO YOUR DAMN SPORTS BAR AND LET US WOMEN DECIDE! In a less polite mood, it comes out, "I'll give a flying fuck what men think about abortion, the first time one of you assholes gets pregnant."
Sure, maybe that's a little unfair. But we've been treating women unfairly since... since... well I guess since the Neolithic Era. We can afford to let the unfairness go the other way now for a few thousand years.
As for being fair or unfair to the unborn children... Children are ALWAYS affected by their parents' attitudes and decisions.
- The risk of going hungry because they decided to drop out of school and can't get a good job.
- The risk of being a paraplegic because they spent the money for repairing the brakes on lottery tickets.
- The risk of being raised by "Sesame Street" and a nanny who doesn't speak fluent English, and growing up with a language handicap, so they can both make lots of money.
- The risk of a dead-end life because they live in a ghetto where drug dealers are the only prosperous role models.
- The risk of dying from a preventable disase because they're Christian Scientists.
The risk of becoming one of the 70% of male prison inmates who were abused by their fathers.
So the risk of being aborted, because they happen to believe in the procedure, is only different in degree, not in principle.
In other words, it's not about the "person" but the woman. While you may supposedly claim to not believe in LG's triage model, you actively advocate it. You are either lying or do not understand what it is you are advocating. Which one is it?Again I don't believe in this triage model, more so I don't believe in making abortions illegal. If the fetus was not viable an abortion would be the most logical option, if the fetus was viable c-section of the fetus care in an incubator would be the next option assuming viability is the stage used to start add rights as a person.
You clearly did not read the link. The doctor advised the foetus had no chance of surviving and agreed that forcing her to undergo surgery would kill her faster. The hospital directly sought to kill the mother faster and the baby died within 2 hours. Is this a more moral outcome for you?Again if we use viability as the stage to start adding rights then yes, if the women is dying, extraction of the fetus makes sense. Of course if we add in more standards like a few morals from eugenics, we could say "well if the fetus is deformed or defective in *some* way, then viability does not apply." of course this means admitting that deformed and crippled people are less of a person to you.
You advocate forced abortions as well?Heck she might have lived longer had she been forced to get an abortion far earlier, just saying.
If you find this real life scenario introducing different ethical problems, then perhaps your moral's are lacking. The choices were very simple. Kill the woman faster by getting her non-viable baby out or allow the woman to live a bit longer. Gee, what a surprise, they, and you probably, would choose to kill the woman faster. After all, she is expendable and her life is not even worth considering.These scenarios your present, introduce many different ethical problems beyond abortion rights. Is quality of life or extension of life better? What rights in wishes does a dying person have?, can they for example take with them to death one of their children just because it would comfort them? Again for this kind of scenario if viability is the standard then it should be extracted, if eugenics are added in then it should die with the mother, the problem is not the rights of the fetus or the rights of the mother it the conflict of both rights, and for different situations and different ethical standards who morally wins that conflicts changes. If you use the standard that it must be completely outside the mother body to be a person, then in that situation she has the right to die how over she wants. Also a mother has the right to kill a perfectly viable fetus, these scenario being probably more common then the former of terminally ill pregnant women.
Will your dumbass trolling ever end? You take so much time to deliberately misrepresent what people say here, frankly, you should be ashamed of yourself.I believe that some people would be better off forced to undergo certain kinds of treatment, pregnant or not, male or female, for example mentally insane people for would be better off put on drugs and forced therapy then roaming the streets homeless and talking to walls. Again since I don't use this triage model I can't say that what the outcome would be for that. It all depends on what standard you use to start applying rights, if the standard is that it must be outside the mother's body to be a person, then accept the ethical consequence that it allows the mother the right to kill perfectly viable fetuses, regardless of how rare that is, it is morally acceptable to you, but that means your previous comment on viability are all null and void, and need be replace line by line with "its feet aren't dry". Anyways I think this is a point for you to make some progress with your ethics, we have now determine that threat to the women's rights are still possible because of viability, therefor viability is not a standard for you, you now moved to Tiassa dirty/eer "dry foot" standard, now all you need to do is accept the ethical consequences, such as 3rd term abortions are morally acceptable for you, or that a mother who in labor can decide for what ever reason, valid or not, to kill the fetus and have it vacuumed out rather then risk her life in child birth, now you can say "well that never going to happen" but that does not change that it is morally acceptable to you via the ethical framework of the "dry foot"
Many people disagree with seatbelt laws and with laws that make drink driving a crime. But if you can't tell the difference between being forced to have your stomach cut open without your consent because the Government does not think you should be allowed to determine whether to deliver naturally or not, or because your doctor might want to charge you for more for surgery than a natural birth which requires much less care, and being told to wear a seatbelt.. Then perhaps you should put on your helmet and go for walkies outside.If viability is the standard, then during late stage pregnancy, a mother right to determine her own medical care could be waived, assuming what she has determined is consider too risky for her self or her child by medical experts. Tell me do you agree with seat-belt laws, why should the state fine me for not wearing a seat-belt, is that not violating my rights to care for my self how ever I want?
Well when you are king of the world or you have taken over and imposed laws that dictate the wombs of women.. sorry.. "breeders"..If viability is the model the goverment need only take over so long as to remove the fetus. The doctors could thus force a C-section but not force a women to continue a pregnancy.
Then you can google to prove what you believe is true.I would disagree with increasingly,what time span is that over, years, decade, centuries, all of which I would wager women in generally have been gaining rights not losing them, I would need to see statistical evidence not just select cases to believe otherwise.
The only person using viability as a standard here is you. So there is no "we".Again if we use viability as the standard, then a women could be held accountable for child endangerment, regardless if it still inside her or not, as long as it viable. Also the state would have to ensure life saving surgeries, not threatening, what ever optimize the chance for both the mother and child survival, if guess if the situation really had to come to kill one or the other then we would need to consider many other moral standards adding in ethical questions beyond the range of normal abortion debate, if the mother was consider terminally ill and the fetus was consider viable and healthy, and the mother wanted it to die with her, then I would say the state has a right to intervene, as neither the viability, extension of life, quality of life, or eugenics standards would side with her.
Once again, the only person going on about viability here is you.Well then don't ever bring up viability as an argument for pro-choice, you obviously don't believe in it. A fetus is only a person as soon as it leaves the mother, that is your moral stance, accept it, accept the ethic consequences of it, state clearly "If a mother want to kill her fetus at any stage of pregnancy even if its halfway through the cervices in birth, that her right, because it not a person until it leave her body!"
You should move to China.I disagree, the mother rights are important, it just post-viably the fetus has rights are well which can conflict with the mother's right and a decision has to be made per situation. The choices after viability should be limited to either let the mother have her way or cut it out of her and declare her an unfit parent, cases of forcing her to remain pregnant in a manner she does not wish would be immoral, in-viable fetus though would have no rights. Add in other standards like eugenics and forced abortions become possible for criminal or insane mothers before viability, why should the goverment pay to have this person born into becoming a ward of the state? Then again eugenic standards can be applied with dry-foot at any point in pregnancy. Since such individuals are striped of some of there rights as a person (as they are criminals, prisoners or under state guardianship) why can't abortions or c-sections be forced?
Why are you still allowed to post here?In the cases of corpses if viability is the standard then a beating-heart-cadavers with a viable fetus would warrant keeping a corpse alive only so long as needed to extract the fetus, if not viable it should die with the corpse. Then again if "dry foot" is the standard then as soon as the women dies as long as her wishes were not to be resuscitated the fetus should die with her, regardless if it could be save or not, regardless if it was just minutes way from full-term birth, "Nope can't cut it out of her, we have her DNR here on file, sorry sir, but since we won't remove it you can fit them both in one casket."