I think > 24 hours is sufficient in allowing one to catch up, so...
Cú Chulainn wrote:
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The state can never be allowed to risk executing individuals. That's insane.
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Right, because the law is never wrong, and everyone accused of murder or rape everywhere has always been guilty.
which more than implies that because there is a chance that an innocent individal may get the chamber, it shouldn't be risked.
but...
I have posted evidence that there is a very strong likelihood that life is present as early as 20 - 40 days of the gestational period of a fetus, yet, abortion is just fine.
The point being, there is enough of a reasonable argument that it is very possible that is is indeed taking a life.
So explain to me why the state (where it is state subsidized) should be trusted with abortion (when the same concerns of wrongful death are as present here as in the argument you just made against state subsidized execution) but not with capital punishment? After all, there is some serious controversy surrounding just wen life begins...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death#Legal.
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The possession of brain activities, or ability to resume brain activity, is a necessary condition to legal personhood in the United States. "It appears that once brain death has been determined ... no criminal or civil liability will result from disconnecting the life-support devices."
I refer you to this once again:
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Brain function, as measured on the Electroencephalogram, "appears to be reliably present in the fetus at about eight weeks gestation," or six weeks after conception. J. Goldenring, "Development of the Fetal Brain," New England Jour. of Med., Aug. 26, 1982, p. 564
Obviously for the brain to function, it needs blood and oxygen, so the functionality of the cardio-pulmonary system is a given.
Funnily enough, a failure in seeing the irony of these two positions implies, if not a lack of, at least a rather unrefined capacity for abstract thought...