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There is no previous legal precedent to cite in reference to a person living inside of another person a la mother and offspring.
Thus, if an F or an E too were recognized as a person in law, it's a whole new legal ballgame.
If an F or an E too were indeed recognized as a person, then, America being America, it would not be as a second class person, I assure you.
Thus with two essentially "all created equal" first class persons to now deal with in this manner, each person's right to life would be paramount, clearly overriding both the right to security and the right to freedom of the other, not to mention rendering arguments of contrived sophistric constructs even more laughable than they already are.
I don't think "a can of worms" even begins to describe it, let alone the nightmare that will be for women and childsupport-fearing men in real-world practicial application.
No, I would think at this time that without a truly middleground solution long-resolved and championed by both sides in the true spirit of poll-response option #1, any such nutty premature SCOTUS decision would be an absolute disaster for many.
Now clearly our evolutions in intellectual awareness, emotional maturity, and medical technology are moving in the direction of indeed one day pushing the legal definition of person back to before birth.
But that's still a little ways off, I would argue.
Nevertheless, it would behoove us all to begin making the necessary preparations now -- to make abortion safe, legal and rare -- long before that prenatal personhood day arrives.
I really don't think we want to wait until the last minute to get prepared for this one -- no, not at all.
The legal precedents saying that no person has a right to the use of another's body for life-support are easier to find, I admit, because there the parallel is clear - and probably enough to keep abortion legal. However, there are legal precedents that say that no person has a right to put one of their body parts inside one of the body cavities of another without that other's consent - forced vaginal and anal penetration are considered rape, and the body part does not have to be a sex organ, and forced oral penetration or ear penetration would be considered legally a form of physical assault. The only exceptions I know of, and they are highly unpopular, have to do with medical cases where the person whose body cavities are penetrated is unconscious or is considered medically to be legally incompetent temporarily or permanently because of some injury or disease - or in cases in pregnancy where a woman does not want a caesarian and the doctor insists to save the life of the woman and/or fetus at the time of childbirth labor. While a person is conscious and one has no sound basis to claim his or her legal incompetence, nobody gets to have one of their body parts or even put an instrument inside of one's body. It's the basis for which one can refuse medical treatment, among other things.
The slippery slope here is that, if you override this, any would-be rapist could decide to rectally penetrate any man against his conscious will, any physical assaulter could forcibly hold your mouth open and punch you in the mouth and to h--- with your teeth because, after all, it won't kill you. Anyone could forcibly punch a finger in your ear and break your eardrum and so what? A physician could give you any sort of internal exam against your will, and if it injured you permanently, so what, since you're not going to die. A person who needed a blood transfusion to live could force you bodily to be hooked up to him or her, even for nine months, and drain you of energy and make you sick and so what, even if there is a risk that you could be permanently physically disabled, and so what? You still get to live.
I would not want to continue living in a world where people have the right to do that to me or anyone. It not only violates persons physically but in other ways, including probably violating freedom of religion. There is a line somewhere in the New Testament that describes Satan as the force that makes your body act against your will, the implication being that both sin and disease come from the loss of rational individual control over one's own body. Though the US is not a Christian nation (no matter what some extremists think), I have no doubt that most US people read and were influenced by this concept and that is why bodily integrity and liberty have been so valued. And the idea that the right to life triumphs those values for most people is belied by their behavior whenever they are really threatened with the above. Sometimes, life just is not worth it.