R
Ridgerunner
Guest
I didn’t vote for him, so the question is meaningless.If YOU vote for Arlen Specter would YOU still go to Holy Communion?:
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Nor, given the information I have about him, would I have done so.
But that doesn’t resolve the question whether Rick Santorum should have supported him or not, which I think is where you’re really going with this. I don’t know, and will probably never know, why Santorum supported Specter over Toomey. I’m not from Penn and don’t know the situation there. I know one thing. If, despite the support many prolifers gave Toomey, he still didn’t have a chance (and no, I don’t want to go over old poll results), and if Santorum extracted Specter’s promise not to oppose the likes of Roberts and Alito in exchange for his support, and if Santorum knew he was sacrificing his political career to get that done, then Santorum is a saint, not a sinner in the deal. The more I think about it, the more I think it’s probably so. Had there been one more death or resignation on the S.C. during the Republican majority in the Senate, Santorum would almost certainly have singlehandedly ended “abortion on demand”.
This whole political thing is not, for prolifers, a matter of party, per se. It’s not even about political conservatism generally. It’s a matter of how to get done those things that are most likely to result in success in the future. Right now, the prolife cause and political conservatism are near allied. It might not always be, but right now it is.
Oh yes, and are you saying all Republicans are like Arlen Specter? You forgot to answer.