M
MillTownCath
Guest
I was not talking about abortion, thanks.There is no moral equivalence between ones preferred method of providing Heath care and abortion.
I was not talking about abortion, thanks.There is no moral equivalence between ones preferred method of providing Heath care and abortion.
It’s called wishful thinking.But the reality is that if abortion were illegal, women would start saying no to sex and not get pregnant and not “need” an abortion.
If these are to be the only criteria, then I have a good candidate for you:The Catholic church puts emphasis on the following items when selecting a candidate for office:
- Abortion
- Euthanasia
- Embronic Stem Cell Research
- Gay Marriage
Heaven forbid that we should be unable to obtain reliable statistics!It’s called wishful thinking.
I live in a country where abortion is illegal. Guess what: women still get abortions. They have no problem to either (1) procure the needed service illegally, (2) do the procedure abroad or (3) (particularly early in the pregnancy) obtain and eat enough hormone pills to induce a miscarriage.
One thing this ban really accomplishes is that it prevents anyone from obtaining realistic statistics.
Well, I would question your saying 3/4, but that aside, you’re looking at this very oddly. The reason that the life issues are non-negotiable is that they are intrinsically evil, that is, they are acts evil in and of themselves. The fact that someone is against them does not make that person *all right *to vote for, merely that being for them means the person is someone one should not vote for.If these are to be the only criteria, then I have a good candidate for you:
I’m talking about Joseph Stalin.
- He outlawed abortion
- Under his rule, euthanasia was illegal
- Stem cells have not been discovered yet
- He did not support gay marriage
Now, Joseph Stalin implemented many other policies which were directly in violation of Roman Catholic moral teaching (or any moral teaching for the matter), however since he was demonstrably right on three of four non-negotiables, then he would make a good candidate by your criteria.
“Most unmarried people” is a stretch. There were other contraceptive methods before the Pill. The Pill became popular, because of the ease of taking them, and the 99% effective rate.Before the US had the Pill, the sexual revolt, and legalized abortion, the rates of illegitimate births was very low. Most unmarried people refrained from sexual activity because the stakes were very high.
Allow me to ask the other question. When we name great leaders in history, they are all progressive or “liberal”, whether politician or pope or social advocate. Name one great conservative.For the sake of informing others, I’d like to hear in this thread why you believe being a Liberal Catholic does not automatically put one in a bad standing with the Church and its social doctrine.
The statistics I hae seen come from more sophisticated analysis than asking people what they are doing. I read about them in print some years ago but will try to find something online for you.“Most unmarried people” is a stretch. There were other contraceptive methods before the Pill. The Pill became popular, because of the ease of taking them, and the 99% effective rate.
I’m of an “age”. I remember the pre-pill, pre-sexual revolt and pre-legalized abortion days. If young people were engaging in sexual activity, using contraceptives—they were not talking about it. Simply, it wasn’t talked about! Any statistics about pre-marital activity among the young unmarried people from that time are very questionable as to accuracy.
Pray tell, how is an illegal abortion different from a legal abortion in the eyes of the Lord?Heaven forbid that we should be unable to obtain reliable statistics!
That’s very convenient, but leads to other problem: if you don’t vote, you enable evil to operate through your inaction.So… what should one do when one cannot vote for either/any of the nominees? If one has only two definitely immoral choices, then one cannot vote.
Since I am not out fighting crime 24/7, by your logic, I am enabling evil to operate by my inaction.That’s very convenient, but leads to other problem: if you don’t vote, you enable evil to operate through your inaction.
From my point of view, a candidate who pushes abortion is ruled out; the evil he fosters is too great to be overcome by any supposed good he might accomplish. In the same way, a man wwho kills millions is also ruled out.I don’t agree with using abortion as primary voting criteria, because that can easily lead to voting for (a new version of) Joseph Stalin. Instead, I try to assess the total amount of good and evil the candidate is expected to do, all issues included, and vote according to that.
The Church does not say we MUST vote for someone because they are pro-life. It merely says we can not vote for a pro-abortion canidate unless they are more pro-abortion than they are. As we see constantly people who use your philosphy to support evil-makng absurd rationalizationtha to vote for a canidate who support taxpayer abortion on demand becuase they think he will increase social spending and/or promises to raise taxes on the rich.That’s very convenient, but leads to other problem: if you don’t vote, you enable evil to operate through your inaction.
I don’t agree with using abortion as primary voting criteria, because that can easily lead to voting for (a new version of) Joseph Stalin. Instead, I try to assess the total amount of good and evil the candidate is expected to do, all issues included, and vote according to that.
I do not think they differ; I just think that those who enable abortion by making or keeping it legal are culpable.Pray tell, how is an illegal abortion different from a legal abortion in the eyes of the Lord?
I disagree. What you are doing when you frame you argument like that is to push the issue of legality under the table.*I believe that the state policy should aim to decrease the number of abortions. This is something we should agree on.
Yes, because we have done such a great job managing the people wrt abortion in other nations!*However, different policies can be implemented in order to decrease number of abortions. Some will be more effective, some will be less effective. Some will have opposite effect. Seemingly unrelated policies (i.e. related to education) can have effect. Obviously, determining the best course of action requires feedback information about policy effectiveness. Without feedback, the policymaking is blind. This is why reliable statistics is of great importance: it allows to guide the policy.
The problem with banning abortion is that the ban precludes obtaining reliable statistics. At the same time, it provides a convenient excuse for the politicians to limit other anti-abortion policies, because if the problem apparently does not exist, solutions are unnecessary, and these other policies cost money. Now, I believe this would be a sensible trade-off if the ban was effective…
Without other supporting informatiin, one cannot tell if this is the correct conclusion at all. Imaginary country B’s people may be refraining from having sexual relatiins when they are not ready to bave a baby; they may be more careful about using birth control; or they may be having illegal abortions at the same rate that imaginary country B’s people are hacing legal abortions. There’s no way to tell from the info you have given.…except that I am familiar with the case where demographic data clearly suggest that it is not. The evidence is very simple: you have two neighboring countries with a similar society and similar economic situation. Country A allows abortion on demand, country B does not. Country A (where abortion is legal) has about the same fertility rate than country B. The same contraceptives are available in both (in fact, in A they are cheaper). So unless people in B have less sex than people in A (no evidence thereof), it follows that the rate of conception is the same in A and B, so abortion-free B should have higher birth rate. It does not (in fact, it is slightly lower!). This indicates that the real abortion rate in A and B is the same.
I think that the example of the US is very clear: we repealed laws against abortion and abortion rates skyrocketed; despite increases in aid to poor people, despite increases in educatiin about birth control, despite increased access to birth control. IOW, despite all the people-managing policies the US put in, the rates went up.Political response? Such problem does not exist. But wait, it gets better! One shining star recently advocated a law which (if passed) would land me in jail for writing the paragraph above, because to him pointing out obvious statistical discrepancy is promoting abortion.*
So the Church view that abortion should be banned is counter productive:
- It prevents enacting other anti-abortion policies, because such policies require abortion to be legal
- At the same time, it prevents policy change, because that would require repealing the ban.
I think that the example of the US is very clear: we repealed laws against abortion and abortion rates skyrocketed; …] despite all the people-managing policies the US put in, the rates went up.
Poland: banned abortion, 88% catholic,18,936$ GDP per capita, fertility rate 1.30 children per woman. Abortion rate uknown.Without other supporting informatiin, one cannot tell if this is the correct conclusion at all.
I’d normally agree. But I have good reasons to suspect (suspect, I am not 100% sure) that the effectiveness of abortion ban in Poland is dubious. Not only demographic data does not show that it works, but it is also relatively easy to circumvent. In effect, the law does not prevent abortions; it hides them.I do not think they differ; I just think that those who enable abortion by making or keeping it legal are culpable.
I notice that most laws cause people to hide their actions, in fact, I can’t think of a single law that people do not hide their breaking of.…Now: why should I support a law which does not eliminate evil, but instead hides it from me?
Let’s see now, you bring up Poland as an example of a nation which outlawed abortion and did not have a decrease in abortion to “refute” my assertion that if abortion were outlawed in the US, women would engage in less sexual activity when they did not want to have children.Poland: banned abortion, 88% catholic,18,936$ GDP per capita, fertility rate 1.30 children per woman. Abortion rate uknown.
Slovakia: legal abortion, 69% catholic, 22,129$ GDP per capita, fertility rate 1.37 children per woman. Abortion rate ca. 11%.
Both countries are quite similar. You can look up any supporting data yourself.
I’d normally agree. But I have good reasons to suspect (suspect, I am not 100% sure) that the effectiveness of abortion ban in Poland is dubious. Not only demographic data does not show that it works, but it is also relatively easy to circumvent. In effect, the law does not prevent abortions; it hides them.
Now: why should I support a law which does not eliminate evil, but instead hides it from me?
No, you are correct about the graph. This is because abortion laws in the various states were liberalized starting in… 1967, the year the rates started their upward climb. Since the states liberalized their laws to allow abortion in case of physical or mental harm to the mother, women just went in and said they were being mentally harmed by the pregnancy, depressed, thinking of suicide, and they were then able to procure an abortionRapid increase in U.S. abortion rates started in 1967. Roe v. Wade was decided in 1973. 1973 does not stand out in anyway when you look at the graph: it is in the middle of an upward trend. The US abortion rate peaked in 1980 and was steadily declining until 2005, when it stabilized. To day, it hovers around 2005 levels.
- How do you know what the real abortion rates were back when the abortion was illegal? IOW, how much of the growth is due to the fact, that abortions started being counted?
- Your claim does not seem to be supported by the data: johnstonsarchive.net/policy/abortion/graphusabrate.html , washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2011/01/11/AR2011011107331.html