What are we talking about, exactly? I clicked the link, scanned the first few posts, didn’t see anything that was a new low-- it was just more of the same.
This is exactly where the abortion debate is moving. In the old days, the pro-aborts would talk about the tough cases, the non-viable infant, the rape victim, the 13 year old impregnated by her own father.
But when you looked at the numbers, it was clear that these were only a tiny fraction of the abortions performed. As ultra sound became common, there seemed to be a genuine support in mainstream America to limit aborition-- the born alive act, the partial birth ban, the baning in South Dakota.
Polls show that most Americans would ban abortion in all but these tough cases, which scares the heck out of PP and other members of the billion dollar industry.
So the pro-aborts have changed to this new, seemingly extreme stance, enshrining abortion as an absolute right. They pointedly ignore that no other right is absolute and without restriction.
At most, this represents a change in tactics, not philosophy, which has always boiled down to radical individual autonomy. It even re-inforces Church teaching in a weird way, in that it puts every abortion on equal footing: either every abortion is wrong [Catholic], or no abortion is wrong [Planned Parenthood].
How do we, as pro-lifers, respond? Is it better to keep nibbling away at the edges, of do we confront them head on? Which tactic will yeild the best results?
Seems to me we ought to continue to fight the small battles as they occur while pressing the philosophical case that murder isn’t acceptible. We need to keep making the case that ‘bioligical independence’ is not an adequete definition of life since none of us are completely independent.
Just as the unborn depends on his mother, the city dweller depends on the farmer, and the farmer likely depends on the worker at the electric or gas company to keep him from freezing on a winter night.
The world would very quickly become a better place if our interdependence were recognized and celebrated. A much better focus than today’s ‘diversity’ obsession.