Tell me ANYONE here has ever called for the support of abortion in any form or is your reference aimed at a political candidate?
You just did. You insisted that a candidate who supports abortion, albiet with limits, is legitimately pro-life.
In other words, you are directly endorsing a position that is not licit in Catholic doctrine.
I would not call you a “pro abortionist”, but if you insist that an illicit position is licit, you are not 100% pro life with regards to abortion.
If it helps, think of Vern’s false, but often repeated mantra, that I am calling for ‘perfect’ candidates. If your candidate is not perfect, but you argue, “I know, but I am promoting good and limiting harm”, that may be licit (“limiting the harm”). But if you argue “my candidate IS perfect on abortion…” when he is not, you are much closer in complicency with the evil, so you can no longer justify compromising on a non negotiable issue under theological arguments of “limiting harm” or “proportional reasons”.
Look at EVANGELIUM VITAE, which introduces the concept of “limiting the harm”. One of the conditions in the pope’s example is that the politician’s objection to the evil being voted for is well known. This is because it must be clear that the vote is not, in any way, an endorsement of evil, but
only an attempt at limiting harm.
Similarly, look at Ratzinger’s comments on proportational reasons. In the Cardinal’s example the candidate’s position on abortion cannot be supported, because, again, that would be complicency with intrinsic evil.
These distinctions might seem subtle, but they are very important. Blurring natural law with regards to intrinsic evil, that is, presenting what is always evil as ‘good’, is one of the dangers of compromise with intrinsic evil in the first place (VERITATIS SPLENDOR).