Then we have differing opinions on bodily autonomy. Not prioritizing it is how you end up with government officials and doctors deciding to euthanize sick people and taking their organs. Because it WILL go that way. The very idea that people don't have control over their body will lead to dystopian shenanigans.
If someone is in a coma, does he have any more control over his body than does a newborn baby?
They are not attached to another being for existence, and I have already addressed that it can lead to some disturbing ideas like legalized infanticide if taken too far. But since nobody is taking it that far, and pro-choice activists are only concerned with ensuring that women don't get forced to bear the children of their rapists or mistakes, we can let that lie for now.
Later, of course, we can deal with it. But personally, I don't think a child is a person until the umbilical cord is cut anyway. Until then, I treat it as just another extension of its mother.
It's not. The baby is a distinct organism from the mother - different DNA - every cell is different from the mother's.
It's a bit creepy that here you are going beyond when the baby is just a ball of cells, beyond when it could survive if the mother died and the baby had to be surgically removed, beyond when the newborn child takes his or her first breath of the outside air... to a new arbitrary distinction.
Did you know that the umbilical cord is physiologically part of the baby, not the mother? It's a cable connecting the baby to the placenta - also made of the baby's cells. Where the placenta attaches to the inside of the womb is where the actual mother/baby interface is.
Did you know that?
And of course, all individuals have full autonomy over their own bodies and souls.
That's nice.
So you agree that I have the right to refuse to be vaxxed?
How about conscription?
Oh here's a good one: if a woman who is a Jehovah's Witness has the right to have her baby killed if she does not want it, does she have the right to refuse blood transfusions for her child, when the child is still too young to understand?