W
Wowbagger
Guest
Since a great deal of abortion law is dealt with at the state level, from Medicare/Medicaid funding to informed consent, parental consent, and waiting period laws – as well as the fundamental state law regarding the legality of abortion (these laws are currently superseded by Roe, but hopefully won’t be forever) – I believe the Church teaches that it is morally negligent to vote for pro-abortion candidates at the state level as well as at the national level. Only at the local level can one consider ignoring abortion as an voting issue, and then only if there are no local abortion zoning disputes or police-protester First Amendment arguments or other such issues.Agree. You can vote in local elections, for ex. State elections. Abortion is legal by Roe v. Wade, which is national.
In other words, if you aren’t voting for liberals, stop voting.As for national elections, you should refrain from voting if your beliefs re abortion trump your beliefs regarding a government’s support of war, attitudes towards social justice, available health care, affordable education for all, and support of the Constitution and Bill of Rights. If your concern for those unborn outweighs your concern for those who have been already born, then stop voting.
(1) Concern for direct, legal murder of absolutely completely innocent people outweighs concern over whether all the other people are receiving everything they deserve out of life. No one would say that education and health care don’t matter, but anyone who says that educating one child justifies the murder of another one is insane.
(2) Concern for 48 million such murders outweighs concern over the combined death tolls of all other issues, which totals somewhere south of 1 million non-murders. (The combined total American death toll from war, lack of health care, insufficient education, warrantless wiretaps, and the Patriot Act does not exceed 5 million, even according to extreme liberal interpretations.)
Thus, by both the nature of legal abortion and its extent, abortion is the dominant issue.
I’ll leave the other counter-arguments to others, with this caveat: your arguments against making abortion illegal run exactly parallel to so-called “prudent” anti-abolitionist arguments over slavery in the pre-Civil War period. Your logic is the same as the pro-slavery camp.
Which isn’t necessarily to say that it’s wrong. In fact, pro-slavery advocates were right about many of the consequences of Emancipation: the abolition of slavery created a massive humanitarian crisis, vast social unrest that lasted for a century, and a great many former slaveowners managed to get an even better deal after Emancipation through the unjust system of “sharecropping.” Emancipation was, in many ways, a catastrophe!
But I think it was probably still the right thing to do, just as abolishing abortion is the right thing to do today. Would you not agree, 1234?