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I have heard many Catholics say that they will not vote for a candidate that does not support their values. Or some say they will not vote at all out of disgust for the political system. In fact there is another thread going on right now about whether its okay to not vote. Well I think that it is probably not a requirement that Catholics vote, but I would like to explore another angle.
I believe that when Pro-Life citizens fail to vote, even in cases where neither candidate is Pro-Life, they promote the continuation of legal abortion.
Hopefully as American Catholics (this would pertain equally to many other nations) we can all agree that abortion is by far the worst problem this country faces. 4000 children are murdered every day in the US. That death toll dwarfs every other possible evil. And they are completely innocent victims. Even in cases of rape and incest, the child has done nothing wrong, and is loved by God. And soon the morning after pill will be killing thousands more each day, perhaps tens of thousands! By the way, if you don’t believe killing an unborn baby is a horrible evil, then you are not Catholic no matter what you like to pretend.
Because of how heinous abortion is, it has far more weight than any other issue today. There is no issue in contention today that even comes close to the importance of limiting or preferably stopping legal abortions. Is gay marriage awful? Sure. Would it be bad to elect a bigot? You bet. Is corruption something to be concerned about? Of course. Is war an issue? Maybe if it topped 4000 deaths a day for several decades, which is highly unlikely. But do any of these issues today amount to more than a leaky ceiling compared to the tidal wave of evil brought about by abortion? No. 9-11 could happen every day for the rest of the history of this nation, and still the death rates would be far less than abortion. Shocking huh?
So we agree that abortion is the only valid voting issue unless the two candidates are essentially equal on the matter or won’t have any say on the subject (the local dog catcher perhaps).
Let say now that both candidates are Pro-Abortion. You would hate to vote for either right? Wrong! If you do your research you will probably find that one is more likely to vote for some level of restriction. Or if not the individual, then the party he or she represents would at least be bolstered by their presence and may put pressure on them to vote with the party on the issue. And we all know which party is dramatically more Pro-Abortion than the other.
Some of you will say we cannot commit an evil act in order to stop evil. Voting for a Pro-Abortion candidate in order to prevent an even stronger Pro-Abortion candidate from winning is not evil. See the explanation at Priests for Life for a full understanding of this.
Then there are some of you that would vote for some third party candidate that you know has no chance of winning. Or worse yet write in a name. You could have just as well stayed home. Your candidate will not win and you will have made no point at all. Nobody will look at the election returns and say “wow, 5000 people voted for that pro-life leader”. They won’t even notice.
Not voting for a candidate that has a chance of winning does only one thing. It removes a Pro-Life vote from the pool of voters. And it encourages your government officials to do nothing to stop abortion, thereby promoting its continuation. Your vote does count! By ourselves we can do nothing, but with the grace of God enough Pro-Life voters will turn out and we can hold back the Culture of Death from its advance.
Some of you who don’t like my opinion may ask, what does this have to do with moral theology? I’ll tell you. In this forum we discuss what is right and wrong from a moral perspective. I say that promoting abortion is wrong, and very sinful. I am tying this issue to the right to vote or not vote. You have your God given freedom: What are you going to do with it?
[sign]
Will You Help Stop Abortion?
[/sign]
I believe that when Pro-Life citizens fail to vote, even in cases where neither candidate is Pro-Life, they promote the continuation of legal abortion.
Hopefully as American Catholics (this would pertain equally to many other nations) we can all agree that abortion is by far the worst problem this country faces. 4000 children are murdered every day in the US. That death toll dwarfs every other possible evil. And they are completely innocent victims. Even in cases of rape and incest, the child has done nothing wrong, and is loved by God. And soon the morning after pill will be killing thousands more each day, perhaps tens of thousands! By the way, if you don’t believe killing an unborn baby is a horrible evil, then you are not Catholic no matter what you like to pretend.
Because of how heinous abortion is, it has far more weight than any other issue today. There is no issue in contention today that even comes close to the importance of limiting or preferably stopping legal abortions. Is gay marriage awful? Sure. Would it be bad to elect a bigot? You bet. Is corruption something to be concerned about? Of course. Is war an issue? Maybe if it topped 4000 deaths a day for several decades, which is highly unlikely. But do any of these issues today amount to more than a leaky ceiling compared to the tidal wave of evil brought about by abortion? No. 9-11 could happen every day for the rest of the history of this nation, and still the death rates would be far less than abortion. Shocking huh?
So we agree that abortion is the only valid voting issue unless the two candidates are essentially equal on the matter or won’t have any say on the subject (the local dog catcher perhaps).
Let say now that both candidates are Pro-Abortion. You would hate to vote for either right? Wrong! If you do your research you will probably find that one is more likely to vote for some level of restriction. Or if not the individual, then the party he or she represents would at least be bolstered by their presence and may put pressure on them to vote with the party on the issue. And we all know which party is dramatically more Pro-Abortion than the other.
Some of you will say we cannot commit an evil act in order to stop evil. Voting for a Pro-Abortion candidate in order to prevent an even stronger Pro-Abortion candidate from winning is not evil. See the explanation at Priests for Life for a full understanding of this.
Then there are some of you that would vote for some third party candidate that you know has no chance of winning. Or worse yet write in a name. You could have just as well stayed home. Your candidate will not win and you will have made no point at all. Nobody will look at the election returns and say “wow, 5000 people voted for that pro-life leader”. They won’t even notice.
Not voting for a candidate that has a chance of winning does only one thing. It removes a Pro-Life vote from the pool of voters. And it encourages your government officials to do nothing to stop abortion, thereby promoting its continuation. Your vote does count! By ourselves we can do nothing, but with the grace of God enough Pro-Life voters will turn out and we can hold back the Culture of Death from its advance.
Some of you who don’t like my opinion may ask, what does this have to do with moral theology? I’ll tell you. In this forum we discuss what is right and wrong from a moral perspective. I say that promoting abortion is wrong, and very sinful. I am tying this issue to the right to vote or not vote. You have your God given freedom: What are you going to do with it?
[sign]
Will You Help Stop Abortion?
[/sign]