Research at UCLA and UC Davis. Now, there’s a source that convinces me! …
Judging from his posts, SoCalRC is pretty far left and wants us to vote Democrat in the upcoming election, but has the abortion “hurdle” to get us past…
The research suggests that you are much more prone to trust perceptions over measurement or analysis. Low and behold, you rejected the research outright, based soley on your vague perceptions of the sources!
But, if you look at the research itself, it is pretty hard to rig. For example, in one of the UC experiments, participants simply looked at a computer screen, which displayed letters, then pressed the corresponding letter.
Of course, what makes this more interesting still is that we have research from supposedly ‘conservative’ sources as well. In fact, one of the earliest statistical indicators of the so called “reality gap” came from a graduate project where the student started with the hypothesis that fellow conservatives, like himself, would be better versed in facts surrounding current events.
Even the vague perceptions that you use to filter what you find credible are, themselves, seemingly not backed up by measurable reality. Condi Rice is a professor at Stanford here in CA, whose public policy school has conducted similiar research on conservative’s seeming distrust of measurable reality. And, of course, Mr. Yoo, whose recently disclosed memo has triggered a war crimes investigation, is a professor at UC Berkley, a school name that seems to trigger incontinence and convultions in many conservatives.
What I find especially interesting is your mental leap from my posts to voting Democratic. I have consistantly endorsed voting wholly and completely Catholic. As my user name suggests, I accept the Church’s role as set by God and,
gasp, recommend following the Vatican’s recommendations on voting completely. Most of my quotes are from Vatican documents.
As I just noted in a post, I reject the premise that Christian justice is a zero sum game. I live in the highest density of Christians in the history of humanity. I see no reason to choose between uncompromisable moral obligations. For example, I won’t choose between abortion and torture/murder. Both are absolutes in my faith. In fact, they are aspects of the same moral principle!
Think about it, “any stage”, “any condition”. We believe that each of us is a unique creation by God, loved INFINITATELY. We cannot grasp that scale, so we are told to love others as we love ourselves - IE, as intensely as we are able.
In math, once you use infinite as a term, comparisions are meaningless. 1 * infinite is no smaller than 1,000,000 * infinite. And this is true in our beliefs as well. A fertilized zygote has only about a 50/50 chance of reaching birth. The mother carrying it may be a dutiful Catholic, baptized and confirmed, a vital member of our community. She could even be a widow and the sole supporter of other young children. Regardless, our belief is that, even if her pregnancy threatens her life, an abortion would be gravely immoral.
Again, 1 * infinite (1 being a fully formed human with a properly formed Christian concience) is not greater than .001 * infinite, or even .000000000000000000001 * infinite This is why we can say “any stage” and “any condition”, the differences we see between ourselves are made irrelevant by God’s infinite love for each of us.
I would be the first to acknowledge that my way of thinking is not easy. It is hard to put one’s trust wholly in God, particularly against seemingly insurmountable odds. Shortcuts seem much easier. But that does not change what our faith teaches us. Saving a mother’s life is a laudable goal, but it does not justify the grave moral disorder of an abortion. Similiarly, stopping abortions is a laudable goal, but it does not justify comprise on the inalienable rights of the Human Person, as laid out in the Dogmatic Constitution of the Church. Evil is never a path to God.
Since I am supposed to Evangelize, I say “stand wholly with God”. I am also supposed to have compassion, so I try to understand trusting in constructs geared towards earthly power instead of God, but I still think it is reasonable to suggest that if one collapses one’s faith to a single issue, the approach used to that issue should pass the reality test. That is, single party rule of every branch of government should yield measurable results.
By the way, the suggestion that collapsing issues is not a good idea or that compromising one moral principle for another is undesirable does not come from me, but from Rome:
“In this context “limiting the harm”], it must be noted also that a well-formed Christian conscience does not permit one to vote for a political program or an individual law which contradicts the fundamental contents of faith and morals. The Christian faith is an integral unity, and thus it is incoherent to isolate some particular element to the detriment of the whole of Catholic doctrine. A political commitment to a single isolated aspect of the Church’s social doctrine does not exhaust one’s responsibility towards the common good. Nor can a Catholic think of delegating his Christian responsibility to others; rather, the Gospel of Jesus Christ gives him this task, so that the truth about man and the world might be proclaimed and put into action.”
vatican.va/roman_curia/congregations/cfaith/documents/rc_con_cfaith_doc_20021124_politica_en.html
Perhaps that is why Mr. Hagee, whose endorsement has been sought by at least one GOP presidential candidate because of his stature in the ‘religious right’ community, claims that one of the reasons that God is angry at the US is that it tolerates Catholics. Rome, like UC Davis and UCLA, is apparently just another corrupt liberal tool…
