S
SoCalRC
Guest
Then the question would be, just how low does the bar have to be for you to decide to finally not vote for someone on the basis of abortion?There you and I agree. But the reality of the situation is that under our system of government, there can only be two major parties. Only one time in our history has a third party triumphed (the Republicans in 1860), and when that happened, it killed off one of the two major parties (the Whigs) and sparked a civil war.
For the last 3 presidential elections, you have favored supporting someone who has take a public position that Roe should be upheld in the past and who currently holds a position on abortion which is considered intrinsically evil. Is there a threshold at which your need to stand on principle with regards to abortion would pass the ‘realities’ of two party rule?
In other words, is there actually a limit, or do you believe that ‘lesser of two major party evils’ should always be applied? Remember, not only are the last three GOP presidential candidates only recently reformed from wholly pro choice (upholding Roe), two primary contenders this year had contributed and supported to pro-choice causes, a third had worked as a paid lobbiest for an abortion clinic. So we could have been confronted with two essentially identical major party positions. Would it then come down to ultra hair spitting (ex. tiny restrictions vs. no restrictions)?
Again, I’m just asking at what point (if any) the balance tips between voting ‘principle’ and voting ‘viable’.