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TMC
Guest
I am not sure I understand your question. But it is clear that the bishops have said that Catholics are to look at all issues and make a judgment as to the best candidate to vote for. Voting for a candidate because of their position on an intrinsic evil with the intent of furthering that evil is always wrong. Voting for a candidate in spite of such a position can be justified. In the current election each candidate takes positions against Church teaching, including advocating positions the Church teaches are inherently evil. So each Catholic must evaluate that situation and make a judgment and choice. Neither candidate is compelled by Church teaching. Neither candidate aligns with Church teaching on abortion, but many Catholics feel so strongly about abortion that they will go with the candidate they feel is better on that issue. But good Catholics can come to other conclusions. I am sure that millions of good Catholics will vote for each candidate, including good priests and bishops.Every? Unless you have an equal intrinsic evil thats a factual reality?
Then they have to qualify not just 2000 years of social teaching but the very USCCB that they rely on for their argument, and especially in this climate of social transition of the past 50 years and the culture of death well spoken on?
usccb.org/issues-and-action/human-life-and-dignity/abortion/on-the-importance-and-priority-of-defending-innocent-human-life.cfm