BTW, there were no deaths of unborn American citizens through abortion. Citizenship is bestowed at birth at the same time that the newborn becomes legally a person.
That may be a legal definition, but, as we have seen repeatedly lately, just because something is legal doesn’t make it right. So yes, LEGALLY, millions of unborn American citizens may not have died through abortion, since they were killed before they reached the point in time where they could be legally defined as citizens under civil law.
But as Catholics we are called to listen to a higher power, and to resist unjust laws. Any law, or interpretation of law, that permits abortion is an unjust law. By that definition, which is the definition of the Church, millions of American babies, as well as babies of many other countries, have been murdered through abortion.
The legalistic approach to this topic may work for some people, as some sort of silly salve to their conscience, but it cannot work for Catholics who are required by Catholic teaching to believe/accept that life begins at conception, and that life needs to be protected until natural death. That’s the position of the Church, which, at least for Catholics, takes precedence over civil law.
Those that, for whatever reason, support an alternative position which allows abortion, separate themselves from Church teaching. As Catholics we are called to accept all that the Church has set forth as doctrine. For a Catholic to carve support of abortion rights out as some sort of exception is contrary to Catholic doctrine. That’s just a fact.
There is no rationalizing out of this fact. Any Catholic that supports abortion, or even supports a political candidate that supports abortion, separates themself from Catholic teaching on the subject of LIFE. Those that wonder about this need to talk to their Priest. For the Church, the position is unequivocal. The protection of life trumps all.