You can argue semantics all you want
I made a substantive distinction and explained how it worked. You have not responded to it.
but the Pope and the bishops have made it clear that some issues are more important than others. We must not pretend that how we setup the Department of Education is as important as abortion etc.
Indeed. Nor is same-sex marriage as important as abortion, as I said.
You are not responding to what I actually said.
Regarding laws permitting abortion, Catholic doctrine written by Pope John Paul II states that we are “never licit to obey it, or to take part in a propaganda campaign in favor of such a law, or to vote for it.”
Indeed. But note that he did not say that it is illicit to vote for a candidate who votes for such a law. Obviously such an immoral stance is a serious reason not to vote for a candidate. But no Pope has said that there could never be any reasons strong enough to justify voting for a pro-choice candidate. Certain individual American bishops have said or strongly implied this. And I can understand why. I share your frustration with Catholics who think that all issues are equal. But I’m also frustrated with the way the concept of the “non-negotiables” is being exploited to silence any part of Catholic social teaching that doesn’t line up with the agenda of the right wing of the Republican party.
Please understand that to the Catholic Church, abortion involves the killing of an innocent human life,
I understand that very well, and I agree.
thus making this issue far and away the most important for Catholic voters.
Non sequitur. There are other issues which also involve the taking of innocent human life.
People are executed for crimes they did not commit; innocent people die in American bombing raids.
Do these lives not matter to you?
And while it’s true that the numbers are smaller and that one can argue that the deaths are generally not directly willed, it’s also true that these actions are direct actions of the U.S. government. I think that when we’re talking about the killing of innocents, these various considerations should not be used to privilege one issue over another. (It’s also true that President Obama cannot claim the kind of moral advantage on the war issue in 2012 that he claimed in 2008, since he has several times shown a lack of consideration for human life in his foreign policy.)
While the aforementioned issues are important, they do not contain the evil that the Catholic Church recognizes in the act of aborting human life.
Unjust war and the execution of innocent people contain exactly the same evil. Other issues, like environmental devastation and the gutting of social welfare programs in the interest of large corporations, also affect human life seriously and are not worthy of simply being dismissed.
The problem with the “non-negotiable” approach is that it chops up a unified Catholic social teaching, acting as if only certain bits really matter and it’s OK to support a political agenda that is in its general outlines and direction diametrically opposed to the overall tenor of Catholic social teaching.
This forum is
full of people who support precisely those aspects of the Republican political agenda that contradict Catholic social teaching. They revel in the “non-negotiable” talking point, because it lets them off the hook.
I can entirely support those people who vote for right-wing Republican candidates with great reluctance and sorrow, doing their best to exert pressure on them to take more consistently moral positions. But that isn’t what most conservative Catholics seem to be doing. Certainly most of the folks on this forum aren’t doing that. They support the agenda of “tea party” Republicanism as a whole, and they use the “five nonnegotiables” to justify themselves.
I note that your last paragraph, to which I responded above, comes from the letter to which you now link.
Again, these panelists are illogically classifying same-sex marriage as a “life issue” and eliding the difference between importance and non-negotiability.
This takes us back to the conscience issue. If my conscience tells me that the foreign wars presently waged by the U.S. are unjust and are killing innocent people, then I am justified in treating that as an issue comparable to abortion and far more serious than same-sex marriage. The fact that the Church has not
specifically said which wars are just really isn’t relevant to that consideration.
That being said, I agree with much of what the panelists are reported as having said, especially about the abominable irrationality of Kerry’s position. I certainly think that you would need
extremely serious reasons to vote for a pro-choice candidate over one who was prolife (with regards to abortion–the only reason even to consider such a vote would be a belief that the “prolife” candidate was not consistently in favor of a culture of life). I also agree that it’s false to say that the Republicans haven’t done anything to limit abortions. They have. It’s practically the only good thing they’ve done recently, but they have.
Edwin