Ian Hunter

1.1K posts

Ian Hunter

Ian Hunter

@HuntersofPutney

Inscrit le Haziran 2025
36 Abonnements9 Abonnés
Ian Hunter
Ian Hunter@HuntersofPutney·
@MadelaineLucyH @jtheleast Why do you think these cases have to involve mutilation? The actual, real (albeit rare) cases haven’t.
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Madelaine Hanson
Madelaine Hanson@MadelaineLucyH·
@jtheleast Do I think a woman mutilating herself (with a serious risk of her own death) in secret should be punished? No. Do you want to punish people who try to commit suicide?
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Madelaine Hanson
Madelaine Hanson@MadelaineLucyH·
Ok lads, let’s practice some theory of mind. You are a lady who discovers she is pregnant because her period is late. So roughly 3-6 weeks pregnant. Uhoh! You absolutely don’t want it. Do you; a) take a pill as soon as possible to end the pregnancy b) wait for the morning sickness, the visible swelling, stretch marks, and difficulties with mobility and weight before getting round to an invasive and painful surgical late-term abortion 97% of women do A. The other 3% are dealing with horrendous health complications and fetal abnormalities.
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Ian Hunter
Ian Hunter@HuntersofPutney·
@jtheleast It’s quite hard at times to distinguish those who are genuinely ignorant from those who are simply pretending.
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James
James@jtheleast·
I think what's most upsetting about the abortion debate is out of literally any discussion I've known, it's conducted with both the most willful dishonesty and genuine ignorance. Tests the limits of democratic discourse.
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Ian Hunter
Ian Hunter@HuntersofPutney·
@MadelaineLucyH You imply that the behaviour that is being legalised is so awful - involving knitting needles or knives or similar - that it can’t possibly happen. Whereas the actual, real (albeit rare) cases where it has happened are very similar to lawful abortion, other than the obvious.
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Ian Hunter
Ian Hunter@HuntersofPutney·
@MadelaineLucyH But what Sarah Catt did at 39/40 is almost identical to regulated abortion care, except that she did it by deceiving the prescribing doctors as to her gestational status. Why is that behaviour being made lawful?
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Madelaine Hanson
Madelaine Hanson@MadelaineLucyH·
Comparing a woman mutilating herself in desperation to access a late-stage abortion to legal, regulated abortion care is like saying we should ban all cosmetic surgery because someone injected cement into their face at home and died. They are not the same thing.
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Ian Hunter
Ian Hunter@HuntersofPutney·
@MrTCHarris He looks so very uncomfortable throughout this. Delightful!
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Ian Hunter
Ian Hunter@HuntersofPutney·
@WarrenPeace_75 @Frances_Coppola @Lizardwizarde “General criminal law”? 🤔 You are going to have to try a bit harder than that. Medicnes regulation will regulate those in the medical and pharmacy professions. In these situations, they have either been deceived or are outside the jurisdiction.
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WarrenPeace
WarrenPeace@WarrenPeace_75·
@HuntersofPutney @Frances_Coppola @Lizardwizarde Yes, I’ve read it. The Abortion Act sets conditions for lawful treatment the offences sit in OAPA, the Medicines Regs, and general criminal law. Removing maternal liability doesn’t erase those. Your argument only works if you pretend OAPA was the sole source of criminality.
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Ian Hunter
Ian Hunter@HuntersofPutney·
@WarrenPeace_75 @Frances_Coppola @Lizardwizarde Others who assist the pregnant woman could be liable. Ironically, that makes her more vulnerable, as they will ensure she does iron her own. But in any event, the idea that doctors can still be prosecuted for offences in the type of situation I outline is for the birds.
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Ian Hunter
Ian Hunter@HuntersofPutney·
@WarrenPeace_75 @Frances_Coppola @Lizardwizarde It’s a lovely idea that an online pharmacy outside the UK can be liable under UK “Med Regs”. Fraud? But it’s the pregnant woman who would commit a fraud, if anyone, by lying to a doctor. I thought this legislation exculpates her and prohibits it being investigated?
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Ian Hunter
Ian Hunter@HuntersofPutney·
@WarrenPeace_75 @Frances_Coppola @Lizardwizarde My point is that there is a clear pathway through which a pregnant woman can procure abortion medication (either by lying to a UK doctor, or by buying it online from overseas) and there will be no criminal liability for anyone. Do you disagree with that? If so, why?
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Ian Hunter
Ian Hunter@HuntersofPutney·
@WarrenPeace_75 @Frances_Coppola @Lizardwizarde The Abortion Act doesn’t provide for any offences on the part of doctors or anyone else. I don’t want to sounds rude, but have you read it? You said above that there were other offences that are relevant. What are they, please?
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Ian Hunter
Ian Hunter@HuntersofPutney·
@MadelaineLucyH You say “obviously”, but that’s not true. There are two well known cases where this was not the case (Catt & Foster).
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Madelaine Hanson
Madelaine Hanson@MadelaineLucyH·
(Obviously, late stage abortions ONLY occur in situations where the fetus is not viable or the mother is at serious risk of fatality and injury.) I find these posts very revealing of the ignorance of the anti-abortion lobby. No woman feels 'empowered' by having to have an abortion after 9 months of carrying her child. It's not something anyone does because they didn't get round to ending a pregnancy for nearly a year. The biggest category for late stage abortions? When the fetus has died and is septic, or the mother is a child and unable to safely give birth or undergo caesarean. This is a far right fantasy of the 'monstrous corrupt woman'.
Lila Rose@LilaGraceRose

This is what late-term abortion looks like. A fully developed child is stabbed in the heart and poisoned to death. It’s not “healthcare” It’s not “empowering” It’s murder.

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Jingles ♀️🐈 🐈‍⬛🧵🧶 🇬🇧
The Abortion Act 1967 is still law. No one is going to be allowed to request an abortion over the 24 week limitation, unless they fit into the stringent criteria in that same act. Not one sane woman is ever going to request that. For those women who procure their own abortion, by illegal means, there is now no penal servitude. But they will not walk away scot-free. These women are either clinically insane, or they are being coerced by someone else. In either case, these women are not helped by imprisonment. They need lasting psychiatric care and support. The psychiatric care, in itself, will reveal exactly what they've done whilst insane or whilst being coerced by other(s). They will then have to carry that with them for the rest of their lives - they won't escape that life sentence, ever. They might even be rape victims, carrying that burden, too. But it's clear that these women are so absolutely desperate that see no other way - rather like suicides. This is the only that has changed. For those few desperate, insane, women.
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Allison Pearson
Allison Pearson@AllisonPearson·
Abortion time limit; 12 weeks: Germany, Italy, Greece, Denmark, Austria. 14 weeks: France, Spain. 24 weeks plus no penalty for mother aborting up to full term: Britain. Vying for the Infanticide Cup with People’s Republic of China.
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Ian Hunter
Ian Hunter@HuntersofPutney·
@Adele_Thames There are cases where women have done it despite the threat of prosecution. We can’t pretend it doesn’t happen. It would be naive to think it won’t happen more in the absence of that threat.
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Ian Hunter
Ian Hunter@HuntersofPutney·
@WarrenPeace_75 @Frances_Coppola @Lizardwizarde Doctors are of course regulated by their professional regulator. However, I can’t see the GMC bringing enforcement against a doctor who prescribes mifepristone in good faith to a woman following a remote appointment, in which she lies about her LMP date. Is this what you mean?
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Ian Hunter
Ian Hunter@HuntersofPutney·
@WarrenPeace_75 @Frances_Coppola @Lizardwizarde Above you said that the amendment “doesn’t erase every other offence”. What are these other criminal offences? It is the entire landscape (together with the Abortion Act, obvs). I am not sure why you are saying otherwise.
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Ian Hunter
Ian Hunter@HuntersofPutney·
@WarrenPeace_75 @Frances_Coppola @Lizardwizarde What are these other offences you think doctors may be committing? You seem reluctant to tell me? It’s s58/59 OAPA and defences thereto under the Abortion Act. That’s pretty much it, in practice. What am I missing?
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WarrenPeace
WarrenPeace@WarrenPeace_75·
@HuntersofPutney @Frances_Coppola @Lizardwizarde You're still treating ss58/59 as the whole universe. Mens rea attaches to the act the clinician intends, not to gestational facts a patient conceals. That's why telemedicine isn't criminal by default. The amendment still removes her liability only it doesn't repeal anything else
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