Okay, let’s see here. If I am a Catholic and I am terribly interested in “properly instructing” my children, then, Catholics ARE "terribly interested in ‘properly instructing’ their young children on this issue.
I was unaware that individual Catholics were encouraged to decide for themselves, apart from the institution of the Church, what constituted moral and ethical behavior.
- The Catholic Church (which was made up of Catholics the last time I looked) refuses to sanction the use of photos of children who died by the use of force in abortion as part of their education classes for children in their own schools and churches. Catholic clergy overall do not advocate the use of these images in front of young children.
2)You and your friends are claiming that there is no form of effective or adequate education about abortion without the use of such photos with children as young as possible “before it’s too late and their values are formed,” that to even suggest that attempting to shield a child from such is tantamount to throwing them to the winds and being a bad parent.
then:
3) Catholics overall are pretty demonstrably not terribly interested in “properly” instructing their children on abortion by your standards.
One of the two is in error on the proper way to instruct young children about abortion. More likely to be the Catholic Church as a whole, or a comparatively few individual Catholics who advocate a method diametrically opposed to traditional Catholic practice?
Murder is violence. Photos of the aftermath are not. Two entirely distinct entities.
Sorry, but no, that dog won’t hunt. By that logic, a photo of a man pulling a trigger is an image of violence, a photo of the same scene seconds later as the blood and brains spurt from the shattered head of the murder victim is not.
The photo of a man wielding a sword as it passes through the neck of a bound victim is an image of violence. Seconds later, the photo as the head is falling from the neck or rolling away, with blood spurting in all directions, is not an image of violence.
This is simply another example of the disconnect those who advocate the use of this particular strategy in this particular way (knowingly showing these photos to young children) have to maintain from our societal norms of behavior and, evidently, language usage as well, in order to justify this particular behavior to themselves.