Writing as someone who is imperfect (God knows), I have a few thoughts.
The right to life is the most fundamental right. Yes, compassion needs to be shown to those who were forcibly made pregnant and mothers whose lives are in danger. The best outcome for any group, large or small, or as big as a country, is rule by majority. In the end, decisions need to be made. While aggressive nationalism needs to be avoided, the people who are governed need to feel that the people who govern them do, in fact, represent them. That the actions the government takes not only represent the will of the people but reflect the common good. Embodied in the government is the right to protect the people from threats both internal and external. These threats can come in the form of misguided and categorically evil ideas spread by small groups.
Such groups can stand up and demand rights but the soundness of what they are proposing needs to be examined in light of certain fundamental criteria: the right to life, the right to worship freely, the right to live without undue search and seizure, and public order and security. If radical ideas are popularized that demand the dismantling of commonly held goods, then the government is in a position by virtue of its leadership role, to examine and then reject such things. The great world religions did not spring up recently. The precepts which they follow have existed since antiquity.
In the United States, a statue of Moses holding the Ten Commandments is on the Supreme Court building. Secularists have been pushing for a more secular society. And they have very concrete ideas about how to accomplish this. But does it serve the common good? Once again, the government needs to decide with (name removed by moderator)ut from the people. As secularism is popularized in the United States, I think anyone who watches the media can see its effects: a coarse, pagan, and increasingly selfish culture that is knowingly and unknowingly, embracing a society being modeled by secularists who claim it is the way American society should be. Speaking as a Catholic who wants to model his life after Jesus Christ, the secularists want a religiously impotent, free for all society. Everything is OK. They speak as if thousands of years of wisdom, blood, work and sacrifice for certain beliefs and ideals have suddenly been found wanting. They are wrong.
God bless,
Ed