"we have a moral obligation to not let innocent people die, but we can't save everyone."
I really don't know the best way to really give support or make my claim more sophisticated so I do ask those of you reading to ask questions/opposing views/evidence to help understand this topic.
ill start by this: Peter Singer has argued that we have a moral obligation to help those suffering from famine. This moral obligation is rooted in the concept of beneficence, an alleged moral principle. Singer formulates that obligation in the following manner: "if it is in our power to prevent something very bad happening, without thereby sacrificing anything of comparable moral significance, we ought to do it." from
http://www2.webster.edu/~corbetre/philosophy/moral/others/distant.htmlNow, the mom in abortion: does she have a moral obligation to the fetus? Yes. If you look at singers definition, you might assume quickly that the answer is no since the 'comparable' is the moms life. The problem is the theory of third parties. Here the mom can prevent the fetus from dying, but at the cost of her own life, so it seems logical to let the fetus die. But as I have argued, letting the fetus die would be murder.
How is letting the fetus die=murder?
Support:
Just because you don't directly kill someone or cause a big problem doesn't mean you could not have easily prevented it.
Example: 9/11. Let's pretend the airport CEO knew he just let hi jackers onto his planes. Is he guilty of the deaths/chaos associated with 9/11? Yes. Sure, he didn't fly the planes in, but he let people in to do the work basically.
Example: You see people walk into a store and knowingly know that it will explode soon. Now, I am sure people will believe you are fake at first, but did you stop there? Did you ask the manager/security to at least check for bombs in specific areas?
situation 1) they listen to you and find the bomb. Good
2) They don't listen and you honestly try your best. Good. You did you absolute best and thus if they still choose not to believe you, the blame shifts from you to the manager/those in charge.
Example: you are raped and are pregnant and don't want to have a baby. Moral obligations are also the refusal to infringe on peoples rights (like positive/negative). That baby has just as much rights as you do. It sucks you got raped, but if you get that abortion, you fulfill an obligation to yourself (keeping yourself alive), which in the above article is not very high on the moral scale, at the cost of someone elses life (very high). The reason this scenario isn't a life for a life example is because there is no third party involved.
Third party=trolley example. Please note that for the permissibility of the third party to choose means that the third party has no alternatives and actually must choose.
Example: If the woman asked for a vote to get an abortion or not as a means of it being morally permissible would not work since the woman actually has to 'kill' the baby herself. If the woman had no choice and a third party had to choose and do it themselves, they are now in the wrong since the situation does not put there decision over the lives of others.
A plausible situation for the third party involving abortion would have to be somewhere like this: God takes you to this place where you must decide to either kill mom, save fetus or kill fetus,save mom. You must make a decision right now or both will die.
These examples are the best way of me giving support at the moment.