Visualise "There's a limit for sex, because sex under 16 is having sex with a child who may not be fully understanding of what 'having sex' is all about, it is put in place to protect children.Either a woman has control over her body or she doesn't. The fact that there is a time limit on abortion suggests that at 24 weeks, all of a sudden, the foetus is now a living human baby with more rights than the mother."
Blimey, can you really not see how those are exactly the same situations? At midnight on someone's 16th birthday, all of a sudden, they are deemed to be able to consent to sex, while one minute earlier they were a child unable to consent.
When it comes to drink driving, 80 milligrammes of alcohol in 100 millilitres of blood means you are unfit to drive, but 79 mg in 100ml and you're completely fine.
Is a 16th birthday, or 80mg/100ml, or 24 weeks of pregnancy, a magical, determined-by-nature limit? Or are these in fact, obviously boundaries which have been agreed upon as the best possible compromise between conflicting and naturally messy, grey-area reality?
The great majority of laws are about trying to balance different autonomies and rights. Obviously by defining which things are ok and which are not, you are going to end up with sharp lines separating things (such as 24 weeks of pregnancy, and 23 weeks 6 days), which are not in fact sharply distinct from each other. That is a necessary consequence of trying to balance different rights and wrongs.
We do not have absolute control over our bodies. We are not allowed to sell blood, organs or to rent our wombs out for surrogacy. We are not allowed to consent to sadomasochistic acts, constituting assault. We are not allowed to self-harm or amputate parts of our bodies without the likely intervention of medical/legal professionals.
As stated repeatedly it is NOT illogical to draw boundaries and that is reflected in the fact that the vast majority of people have the sense to do so. There are very few "pro lifers" who would want a woman to die rather than take a morning-after pill which would save her life, and there are very few pro choicers who would support a woman's right to terminate a pregnancy at any gestation for any reason. Those people are not illogical, they are not hypocrites, they are intelligent people responding to a complicated and difficult ethical question with no simple answer.
I find the blind insistence that IF YOU ARE PRO CHOICE YOU MUST BE PRO CHOICE UP TO THE MOMENT OF BIRTH OTHERWISE YOU'RE A HYPOCRITE a weird and frankly tangential point, as it's irrelevant to the overwhelming majority of cases. To be honest I have no idea what point you even think you're making.