Think of Judah. There are parts of the bible where someone is put to death for 'spilling the seed', and not producing children for the tribes of Israel. Then other parts where because the wife conceived through 'harlotry', she is put to death along with her unborn child.
So if we're going old testament; anyone who either spills their seed or conceived via harlotry should be put to death.
Then there's instances of wives being poisoned by jealous husbands because the wife committed adultery. It's fair to say the old testament views on abortion and killing aren't exactly black and white, ie 'no abortion'.
It isn't really consistent in its teachings of harlotry, and incest among other things. Daughters getting fathers drunk on wine and having sex with them. Etc, etc etc.
These Old Testament stories are often metaphors and stories, not to be taken as teaching (in themselves with each specific detail), nor as 'what a person should do in the case of .... such and such'.
Jesus came along, and what did he teach; to let the sinners sin. To give people CHOICE, and even when they make the wrong one (adulterous woman for instance), to forgive them.
Some things can't be conquered, and won't be conquered, and shouldn't be 'conquered' anyway. Conquering isn't anybody's calling apart from the one who has the authority to conquer.
The logic that applies to the world we actually live in didn't seem to do much, maybe the biblical instances and teaching will.