So if a candidate doesn’t support abortion, every war he suggests is OK? That’s what you kinda suggest. That’s what I think a lot of pro-life Catholics did in 2004. Closed their eyes to the misery Bush was creating, ignoring the Catechism’s words about what constitutes just war (
2307-2317) which starts with the words, before laying out the very stringent conditions under which a war may be considered just:
“
All citizens and all governments are obliged to work for the avoidance of war.”
Just because war
may be morally licit under just war theory doesn’t make every war OK. And it was clear to me that Bush’s invasion of Iraq did not fit into the narrow confines of just war doctrine.
To say that “war CAN be morally licit” but “abortion CAN NEVER be morally licit” is not an adequate way to decide how to vote. If you’re looking at war in general, perhaps, but for a particular war, not at all. You’re comparing a generality to a particularity, and that’s not a valid comparison.
Given the lack of major difference in per-capita abortion rates between 1860-1940 and today, as I have documented in my comments above, which suggests that Roe v. Wade didn’t significantly change of abortion rates, how can anyone say that it’s OK to support an unjust war that killed at least
half a million Iraqis (as a lower-bound estimate that largely missed the 1.1 million people living in displaced-persons camps – before ISIS took over).
Most deaths occurred between 2003-2007, so if you take the annual average death rate from the war to be 100,000 Iraqis and divide by the population of Iraq in 2003, the annual average war-related mortality rate was about 397 per 100,000 population. By contrast, in the U.S. in 2010, there were an estimated 1,120,775 (
ChristianLifeResources.com), with an estimated population of 308,745,538, generating an abortion-related mortality rate in the U.S. of 363 per 100,000 population. Now, unless you’re willing to tell me that there were just fewer Iraqis whom it was OK to kill to (hopefully) limit abortion in the U.S. (an entirely utilitarian argument totally against Catholic moral teaching), it sounds very much to me that the death rates in Iraq as a direct result of the unjust war brought about by Bush produce
proportionate reasons for voting against him.
This discussion also illustrates to me the flaws in the “non-negotiables” approach to political theology.