I am still waiting for someone to tell us what the proportionate reasons are that would allow a Catholic to vote for Obama.
OK, here goes.
First of all, it doesnât matter whether I actually vote for Romney or Obama - because I live in Massachusetts and Obama is going to win this state no matter what.
However, I support Obama over Romney, because even though I donât like many of his policies, I believe he a good leader who really cares about the middle class, got us out of a terrible economic crisis, passed health-care reform, ended the war in Iraq, and killed Bin Laden.
In my eyes, Mitt Romney has done nothing other than act as turn-coat and say anything to get elected president. I do not believe he cares about average Americans - they are just numbers on a spread-sheet to him. I do not support any of his economic or foreign policies, because they fail to factor in the cost of human suffering. I believe they will hurt America, hurt the poor, and hurt the middle class.
Regarding âlifeâ issues:
I support a federal ban on abortion on the basis that an embryo is a person and therefore has the right to life.
I do not support Scaliaâs argument in Planned Parenthood vs. Casey that the federal Constitution does not guarentee a womanâs reproductive rights and therefore it is a matter for the states to decide.
If a womanâs reproductive rights are not protected by the federal government, then any state can prohibit a woman from having an abortion. However, by the same token, any state can prohibit a woman from having a child - like they did in China. Or it could coerce women into becoming pregnant - like they did in Romania under Ceausescu. If a woman has no federally protected reproductive rights - the states can vote to do anything it likes with her body.
For those reasons, the rights of both parties must be
affirmed - even if in the end the Court decides that in the specific case of elective abortion, one (the childâs right to life) takes precedence over the other (a womanâs reproductive rights).
Obama clearly does not believe an embryo is a person who has a constitutionally protected right to life under the United States Constitution. So he is no help there. That does not make him evil - even Saint Augustine wasnât entirely certain about when a fetus became a person. However, he does defend a womanâs reproductive rights and supports government programs that help mothers & children. I believe a sense of security reduces the likelihood that a woman will seek out an abortion - so Obama gets credit for that.
Six years ago, Mitt Romney was a pro-choice Republican. During the primaries, he said in an interview that he supported the personhood amendment in Mississippi, but at the same time, he is the only GOP candidate who has
refused to sign the
Personhood Pledge. In my mind, thatâs just more evidence that he has no integrity and cannot be trusted. I seriously doubt he would lead the charge for personhood at the federal level in the next four years when it couldnât even get passed in a place like Mississippi. It could ruin his chances for a second term.
If anything, he is more likely to limit abortions by appointing justices to the Supreme Court who side with Scalia and would undermine a womanâs reproductive rights, which I cannot support for the reasons already given.
So here is the absurdly simplified breakdown:
Personhood: Obama (No), Romney (No)
Reproductive Rights: Obama (Yes), Romney (No)
Economic Security: Obama (Yes), Romney (No)
If the GOP had chosen
any other candidate I would have been seriously conflicted - since they all support Personhood and that is the key to everything. Unfortunately, they chose the only one who refused to take a stand. Now all I want is for Romney to go away so that the GOP can nominate a better man (or woman) in 2016.