Thank you for your response, Ender! I think you make some good points. ThoughtsâŚâ>
**It seems that most arguments by pro-life Democrats who voted for Obama - and I think this includes your comments as well - generally fit in one of three buckets.
- McCain is a swine.
- McCain couldnât do anything about abortion if he wanted to and he doesnât really want to anyway.
- Other issues are as important as abortion.
I am less than impressed with the first category. Personal characteristics are not inconsequential but an unpleasant person is not necessarily an unfit one and most of the comments are nothing more than simple nastiness. Virtually all of what goes in this bucket is mere slander, nothing more.**
I disagree that this is all mere slander. Iâve referenced a long, detailed, well researched article that raises a number of brutally damaging points against McCainâs character and which reinforces the uneasy feeling I get whenever I listen to him talk. (Although I have to admit, once he lost he accepted his defeat graciously and has since been more mellow, from what Iâve seenâŚso maybe I spoke too soon.) Still, no one has addressed any of the points in that article and I think one would have to do so in order to anchor oneâs personal opinion of the guy in specific facts.
However, that said, I do agree with you that the fact that he is (in my view) an unpleasant person does not in itself justify voting for a pro-choice candidate instead. There have to be other reasons involved.
Category two is a dodge. There is no honest way to view McCainâs past actions and conclude that he is disingenuous in his opposition to abortion. I agree that there is no way to know for certain that even the most avid anti-abortion president would be able to nominate and have confirmed a fit justice to the Supreme Court, but, as you said, the chances of getting one from McCain were vastly greater than getting one from Obama. In a life and death situation there is no justification for choosing the option that will surely be bad over the option that may be beneficial.
I basically agree with you on this one, too. I mean, on the one hand, half of the currently pro-choice justices were appointed by Republican presidents who were far more religious than McCain â some internal polling suggests that only two of the current justices are really ready to overturn Roe vs Wade because even though it was terrible legislation, stare decisis makes it very difficult to overturn any legal precedent whatsoever. But I will admit that this is beginning to sound like ârationalization.â The fact remains that Roe obviously has a better chance of being taken down under a McCain presidency than under an Obama presidency.
My only point, then, would be that you left out a fourth category in your breakdown: in my attempt to be comprehensive I maybe gave the false impression that McCainâs slight unreliability as a pro-lifer is the main reason I can see for not voting for him. In fact, my main reason is not his unreliability but his inefficacy. Even if Roe were overthrown and the abortion question went to the States, the number of abortions may not go down as significantly as if the problem were addressed economically, as it would be under an Obama administration. That,
coupled with the fact that Obamaâs plans on every other issue (well, except gay marriage) seemed to me to be a million times more responsible than any of McCainâs, could conceivably tip the scale in his favor in my head.
Peace!
+AMDG+