If you're just consistently arguing that the government has no place funding anything but regulation, well.. this is not the thread for me to explain why I think you're wrong. I suggest digging up the Socialism thread, unless that got locked. I forget what happened to it. But, if you were to grant that there are services or goods the government ought to fund (just treat that as a given), would you believe abortion should or should not be one of those services?
Essentially, do you have an objection other than, "Taxation is wrong"? If so, we can argue with that one. If not, then I don't think that we have a problem on social progressive issues, though we could probably have many a multipage derail on economic principles, and those principles lead us to wildly different conclusions about how best to advance social progress. Unless I'm wrong about the scope of the thread, in which case I apologize to Vector.
Essentially, I'm saying that it's theoretically possible that Cuppsworth doesn't oppose women having a right to freedom with their bodies and thinks that privatization would actually enhance the ability of the market to provide women with fair and safe abortion services. While I don't agree with that reasoning, and think it'd probably a result of blind faith in the virtues of capitalism, if that is the root of his argument, then we're not going to get anywhere in this thread without a massive derail. While I fully support continuing to argue over that because I do believe the correct conclusion is that federal funding for these programs is the right choice, if his argument is actually economic and logically consistent, then it needs to be addressed appropriately and without crippling this thread's ability to discuss the social issues I think it's meant to.
Again, apologies if I'm wrong on that, or if I'm drawing an unnecessary divide between economic and social things.
EDIT: Oh, and it's also possible that he's using economics as a more palatable explanation for beliefs that actually originate in seeing women's rights as less important, and if that's the case, then I hope trying to get him to address the dichotomy between the two will make him realize that.