> Your link does not support your belief that it is in some way partially correct.
Not my belief. I have evidence, so it's what I know, since previously I did not know. I found your arguments compelling and looked it up.
> In case you missed in the post you are replying to:
Nope. You decided to ignore a statement you agreed with for another you wanted to attack.
The largest pro life groups (as a body made up of pie slices) does evidently (ie have evidence) that supports:
> they are not just anti abortion, they are also anti birth control
Which is what was being referenced by at least a partial correctness, since it was a following statement. Not sure who you're trying to fool.
> Yes? The four humors theory of health and medicine was based on reason and logic. It was also wrong
Wrong is a matter of evidence. For the time, it was right as right can be. That's how science works and is in accordance with rationality. Proving a theorem, does not mean that bringing it up as a theorem was/is wrong. Over time, changes in knowledge are part of the process.
Good luck with your religious convictions to these issues.
Then why not present it? Until you establish it is fact, then yes it is your belief.
>You decided to ignore a statement you agreed with for another you wanted to attack.
I have no idea what you mean.
>The largest pro life groups (as a body made up of pie slices) does evidently (ie have evidence) that supports
The link you provided says otherwise. It very clearly shows the largest pro-life group has no position on birth control.
>Which is what was being referenced by at least a partial correctness
That does not make logical sense. The statement "conservatives support abortion because they hate women and want to control their bodies" is not proven to be partially correct even if you believe that all conservatives oppose birth control. Opposing birth control is not hating women.
>For the time, it was right as right can be
No it was not. Incorrect isn't correct if you simply don't know any better.
>Good luck with your religious convictions to these issues.
I find it interesting that you ignore what I say, try to attribute what I say to malice, claim your belief is objective fact, and still suggest that I am the one with religious conviction here. "Conservatives hate women because I say they do" is not fact, no matter how many times you repeat it.
Not my belief. I have evidence, so it's what I know, since previously I did not know. I found your arguments compelling and looked it up.
> In case you missed in the post you are replying to:
Nope. You decided to ignore a statement you agreed with for another you wanted to attack.
The largest pro life groups (as a body made up of pie slices) does evidently (ie have evidence) that supports:
> they are not just anti abortion, they are also anti birth control
Which is what was being referenced by at least a partial correctness, since it was a following statement. Not sure who you're trying to fool.
> Yes? The four humors theory of health and medicine was based on reason and logic. It was also wrong
Wrong is a matter of evidence. For the time, it was right as right can be. That's how science works and is in accordance with rationality. Proving a theorem, does not mean that bringing it up as a theorem was/is wrong. Over time, changes in knowledge are part of the process.
Good luck with your religious convictions to these issues.