Of course you don’t. But you did use that same argument to explain why it was ok to decline to put up a yard sign in favor of doing something else pro-life. So I ask again, what is so unique about the political actions? Is it that they are orders of magnitude more effective in preventing abortion than anything else you could do? Because on that question I think people can legitimately disagree. Or is there some other reason that only voting is mandatory? I never said that only voting is mandatory. But it can certainly work.
I have seen plenty of very moving and challenging pro-life messages - and the best of them are not even political.
Therefore nothing more needs to be done I that area? So if 51% oppose abortion we should bother trying to raise that number to 70%? You obviously prefer the political approach to solving this problem but why would you then belittle any other approach?
I do not oppose prolife messages, and never said I do. I do not belittle it either. I am talking about the moral imperative to take political action when it’s available to us, which it is. Never did I say working against abortion in any other way is illegitimate or pointless.
No, voting is not the only thing we can do. And no, the root cause of abortions is people wanting abortions. Even if you make abortion illegal at best you will be returning to the 1950’s and 1960’s. And while there were fewer abortions then, there were still quite a lot. Changing hearts has the potential to stop even those abortions. **Unfortunately, a lot of people take their morals from the law. And I believe, as Pope Paul VI believed, that the death culture is not a single thing, but a mosaic. **
That is an extreme exaggeration of what I am saying. Of course voting has moral consequences. But so does putting up a yard sign. For example, suppose I put up a yard sign supporting a women’s right to choose abortion? I’m sure you would say that has moral consequences. So why are you discounting the moral consequences of putting up a yard sign that says the opposite? I’m not.
Yes, I would be at serious moral fault by walking away. But that scenario is much more direct and certain as to the outcome than voting for a politician. So let’s change your scenario a little to make it more like the voting scenario. Suppose that rather than standing in a remote place I am in the middle of a large city. And instead of witnessing a man choking a child hear a rumor that some guy named Fred is going to choke his son as punishment for wrecking the car. Would I be morally at fault if I failed to pass on to the police this vague rumor? That is a little closer to the situation of my voting for a politician.You would be morally at fault in either case. But not reporting on Fred is quite a bit different from not putting up the sign in your yard.