C
commenter
Guest
Why is there so little opposition to abortion, even among people who would prefer prolife? Here are some things I hear:
- “Abortion is important, but so is everything else”. I see parishes where every cause gets equal time at the microphone. If the bulletin talks about abortion one week, it will equally promote other issues the other 51 weeks.
- “Abortion was important in the 1970’s but why are you bringing it up now?”. The media treats abortion as a settled question, urgent in its time like World War II but (they say) now we have to focus on whatever is important in 2013.
- “Prolifers are all single-issue fanatics”. This label is thrown at people who spent their life responding mostly to other concerns, like Mother Theresa. The implication is we choose either to be prolife (and hard, insensitive to all other concerns); or else we can choose to be compassionate to all people, for all seasons, and silent on abortion.
- At one parish, they would invite prochoice peace and justice groups to talk about other political topics. They did not promote abortion in the parish, but just the fact they were given a Catholic platform gave them - and prochoice - a new respectability. “Maybe there are 2 sides to the abortion question after all…”
- People in my diocese demand that the diocesan paper repeat all the social issues that are already in the daily paper, “to keep our credibility”.
- Local “Catholic” colleges invite prochoice speakers “for diversity” (But why doesn’t diversity ever bring them to invite prolife speakers?)