This idea also ignores the risks associated to pregnancy, and the fact that a woman is 14 times more likely to die from carrying a baby to term than they ever are from a legal abortion.
The transplant analogy... to me, it doesn't wash, because this seems like a case where the existing state of affairs matters. Saying "unless something goes wrong, you must continue what you're already doing a while longer" is very different than grabbing some random person and saying "I need an organ, so I'll have it off you." Especially when, under normal circumstances, the woman in question made choices that led to the pregnancy. (That a man also made said choices would matter here only if it were possible to pass the pregnancy off onto him.)
As for bringing an unwanted child into the world being a cruel thing to do... it's less cruel than killing one, on the presumption (which I do not hold, but it's the reason for falling back to the "parasite" argument in the first place) that the fetus is as much a person as anyone else.
Again, I'm NOT arguing that abortion should be illegal. I'm not arguing that it's immoral (except perhaps once the fetus is viable.)
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