Aside from my personal political bias on the topic, which only adds to the numbers here, I recall from one biology class or another that fertilized human eggs often don't attach or find ways to disappear such that the woman would even realize she had conceived and that it happens quite frequently. How to differentiate those from the ones that will go full term or close to it is pointless nightmare of a problem, much less attempting to regulate.
If one believes that failure to sustain life (as defined by conception) is murder, then I strongly suggest that the people with such strong moral qualms refrain from any form of sex which could possibly lead to conception as a matter of personal integrity. Of course, to be fair they would also have to find ways to prosecute practically every living woman who has ever conceived. Making this view known to their sexual partners would seem courteous. Dealing with the mothers or potential mothers in ones own family could be problematic, with possible Darwinian consequences.
Re: Mississippi Personhood Amendment 26
If one believes that failure to sustain life (as defined by conception) is murder, then I strongly suggest that the people with such strong moral qualms refrain from any form of sex which could possibly lead to conception as a matter of personal integrity. Of course, to be fair they would also have to find ways to prosecute practically every living woman who has ever conceived. Making this view known to their sexual partners would seem courteous. Dealing with the mothers or potential mothers in ones own family could be problematic, with possible Darwinian consequences.
Bob