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So what exactly did you say? Because I don’t think you fully answered my questions (I’m not trying to be difficult, I just need my conscience to be clearer on this subject).I have nothing to add.
So what exactly did you say? Because I don’t think you fully answered my questions (I’m not trying to be difficult, I just need my conscience to be clearer on this subject).I have nothing to add.
I think your suggestion that we back away from protesting and teaching against abortion is ill-advised and is contrary to our call by Jesus to evangelize. Those who will be upset with this are not likely to be on a path to repentance.So what exactly did you say? Because I don’t think you fully answered my questions (I’m not trying to be difficult, I just need my conscience to be clearer on this subject).
Id say it is still immoral because how cam you prove a person was raped? All the regular non-raped women who get abortions would just start rampantly claiming to have been raped by their BFs or whatever to bypass the law. Problem would not be solved.Of course it is.
Are you seriously arguing that if it were possible to pass a law banning 99% of all abortions (except rape and incest), pro-lifers shouldn’t vote for it because it’s not perfect?
That’s crazy talk. If you can save 990K of the 1M babies aborted every year, it is 100% moral to do so, and then work on the other 1% later.
It would be immoral to oppose such a law, since it outlaws many murders. Every incremental step towards fewer abortions is a win.
God Bless
I did not make that suggestion or any suggestion.I think your suggestion that we back away from protesting and teaching against abortion is ill-advised and is contrary to our call by Jesus to evangelize. Those who will be upset with this are not likely to be on a path to repentance.
Catholic teaching on ethics is a rich and beautiful study. I would encourage independantly studying it, or perhaps taking a course on it, but in brief, here it is.Well even the pastoral document for voter’s conscience, which outlines the “non-negotiables”, accepts that if abortion cannot be prohibited in all cases, then at least in some cases it can be permitted (for instance here politicalresponsibility.com/voterguide.htm). But I’m asking if there are even more scenarios where this is true, testing the principle to see if I interpreted correctly.
There is also a direct correlation between the availability of contraception and abortion and teenage pregnancies… and illegitimate births, if you look at it from an historical rather than geographical pooint of view.There is a direct correlation between sex education and teenage pregnancies. Not just in Texas and not just in the US but worldwide. The more sex education that is available to teenagers, the less pregnancies.
How else was I to take this from the OP?I did not make that suggestion or any suggestion.
For instance, to publicly argue against abortion could make people even more obstinate in their pro-choice convictions. So the only way to get rid of abortion might be to emphasize doing other things so that eventually, abortion could be made illegal. Is this valid moral reasoning?
I re-read the OP several times, and it get more confusing each time I read it. So I no longer think, as I stated in post#2, that you presented a logically valid argument. Short answer, your consequent does not depend on the antecedent and it is true or false independent of the the truth of the antecedent.I’m still wondering if you ever said that I was correct, that if the antecedent of my hypothetical in the OP was true, then the consequent would be true?
To turn the tide of abortion in increments.I read a statement by one of the Archbishops’ regarding the personhood amendment. This particular Archbishop(can’t remember which one) stated that it was more prudent to work for small changes initially,rather than pushing for something like this particular amendement all at one time. This makes sense to me.I stand by what I wrote before, and yes, I’ll give the Church document which states the idea.
The Church indeed permits voting for such a law (within certain circumstances/conditions).
The following is from “Evangelium Vitae,” given to us by Blessed John Paul II, paragraph 73 (my emphasis added):A particular problem of conscience can arise in cases where a legislative vote would be decisive for the passage of a more restrictive law, aimed at limiting the number of authorized abortions, in place of a more permissive law already passed or ready to be voted on…In a case like the one just mentioned, when it is not possible to overturn or completely abrogate a pro-abortion law, an elected official, whose absolute personal opposition to procured abortion was well known, could licitly support proposals aimed at limiting the harm done by such a law and at lessening its negative consequences at the level of general opinion and public morality. This does not in fact represent an illicit cooperation with an unjust law, but rather a legitimate and proper attempt to limit its evil aspects.
(1) It was clear that I was making no suggestions in the OP from the fact that I used so many “ifs” and “coulds” in it. The words “if” and “could” denote hypothetical conditional statements and a suggestion is never a hypothetical -one does not suggest something by saying “hypothetically I would suggest taking medication”. Secondly the OP was a pure question, and a question is never a suggestion, again it would be absurd to say “Could abortion laws be incremental given some conditions?” is equivalent to “I suggest that abortion laws should be incremental”.How else was I to take this from the OP?
I re-read the OP several times, and it get more confusing each time I read it. So I no longer think, as I stated in post#2, that you presented a logically valid argument. Short answer, your consequent does not depend on the antecedent and it is true or false independent of the the truth of the antecedent.
Not necessarily, the qualifiers are too generic.(1) It was clear that I was making no suggestions in the OP from the fact that I used so many “ifs” and “coulds” in it. The words “if” and “could” denote hypothetical conditional statements and a suggestion is never a hypothetical -one does not suggest something by saying “hypothetically I would suggest taking medication”. Secondly the OP was a pure question, and a question is never a suggestion, again it would be absurd to say “Could abortion laws be incremental given some conditions?” is equivalent to “I suggest that abortion laws should be incremental”.
(2) As I said before I’m not even looking for logical validity but only moral validity. I only posted that stuff about “antecedents” because I thought you were implying or going to imply that the OP was both a logical and demonstrative proposition of morality.
But now I see I will have to fully explain myself: I only meant to ask that “If certain conditions (like the obstinacy one) are there, then is that sufficient to not fight for immediate and total abolition of abortion?” That’s not an argument (and I’m not totally sure I even made one but I just left you to your interpretation since it had no effect on my question until now) but only a singular statement so I’m just asking if it is a true statement. Is it?
How about preaching against abortion as a cause of obstinate refusal to accept anti-abortion as a less vague antecedent?Not necessarily, the qualifiers are too generic.
To think about it, I don’t think I ever got an unambiguous answer to this question.How about preaching against abortion as a cause of obstinate refusal to accept anti-abortion as a less vague antecedent?
I for one don’t understand this question. Maybe rephrase it.How about preaching against abortion as a cause of obstinate refusal to accept anti-abortion as a less vague antecedent?