We went over that too. That's also incorrect.
You have assumed that childbirth causes harm and argued that since it's assumed to cause harm it should be considered a crime. But you have completely and repeatedly ignored the harm caused by banning childbirth, attempting to justify any harm done by stating that it's allowed to cause harm in order to prevent crimes. That reasoning only works if you postulate that childbirth is a crime. If you don't postulate that it's a crime, you must consider the harm done by banning childbirth, otherwise you end up with a contradiction.
That honestly doesn't make any logical sense. That is not how crimes are determined.
Then you have a contradiction. Because if it's enough to say that knowingly and intentionally causing harm is a crime, then the act of banning childbirth is a crime.
Well that's just bad faith arguing. You know this isn't true. I don't know why you went here but it's somewhat dishonest.
Says the guy who accused me of wanting to force people to give birth. "Somewhat dishonest"...
Do you know how I know that it's dishonest? Because right above you said "you just dismissed that harm by saying that since childbirth is a crime, it's okay to cause harm to prevent it". This sentence attributes the opposite notion to me as the one you attribute above. These two statements of yours:
"you just dismissed that harm by saying that since childbirth is a crime, it's okay to cause harm to prevent it"
"You're the only one of us who has insisted that causing harm to someone else is a crime, regardless of the circumstances."
are at complete odds. One of them is wrong. And you know which one it is, and you knew that when you typed it. This makes it very difficult to carry on with this conversation, but it seems like you're here to argue, including lying about me.
They are not at odds with each other. Both statements are highlighting the fact that you haven't completed the analysis, you haven't argued why it's
childbirth that should be considered a crime instead of the
act of criminalising childbirth. You have prematurely concluded that childbirth, in your opinion, causes harm and therefore it's justified to call it a crime. You have, to some degree, accepted that banning childbirth also causes harm but justified that by stating that it's okay to cause harm when preventing a crime. When pressed on this issue you have then reversed and tried to deny and ignore that banning childbirth would cause harm.
You tried to ascribe to me the opinion that I want forced childbirth, merely from the fact that I pointed out that even voluntary antinatalism causes harm. But I have never claimed that causing harm is enough to consider something a crime, that is your own opinion.
To be clear, what I said is that when someone chooses not to have a child, no one is harmed. And you said that they are. Note how that does not involve criminalizing anything. I honestly don't know how you can support this idea, but your use of the word harm is very strange to me.
How do you define harm then?
I don't think you and I use the word "harm" in the same way. And perhaps this led to some level of confusion over this (and other aspects of this discussion). You seem to be using "harm" to mean that someone just doesn't like it.
Not at all. Physical and emotional pain, suffering, economic damage, loss of individual freedom, for example. I have no idea how you have read "just doesn't like it" into it, it's certainly not from any of my posts.
Like, for example, if I don't have a child and you have a shop, and as a result, someday you don't have a customer at your store. That's not you being harmed, that's just something you don't like.
I have provided a few examples of harm in previous posts, for example that you have to rely on other people's children to provide for you when you get old. That's an economic damage, tiny sure, but that's assuming that there are relatively few antinatalists.
I'm glad to hear that you don't think you can force someone to have children. But it makes your position harder to understand for me.
It's not rocket science. Banning childbirth causes harm, so banning childbirth on the grounds that childbirth causes harm is a contradiction. Even voluntary antinatalism causes harm if applied on a large enough scale. I have never proposed that we should force people to have children and I have no idea how you could have reached that conclusion in good faith.
Your words, not mine. I said it's what they really wanted. If avoiding "economic collapse" is something you want, you don't get to harm others to get it.
Your use of quotation marks implies that you don't agree with the opinion that antinatalism applied on a large scale would lead to economic collapse, hence my question. An economic collapse would lead to great harm, it's not just something we really want to avoid.