There are three basic problems with this argument. First, (Roberts and Alito) both upheld Roe and Casey in Carhart Absolutely, totally wrong. The rules in Roe and Casey were not the law of the case, nor were they before the Court. In any event, the majority is still pro-abortion, by one. You might also reflect on the fact that the Chief Justice (Roberts) has the greatest power in deciding what cases will be accepted by the Court. Do you really think he didn’t know in advance that Kennedy would at least vote in favor of bans on partial-birth abortions before he accepted the case? Why, if the avowedly prolife candidates aren’t going to change the composition of the Court, does the abortion lobby think so?
Second, there is no evidence that even overturning Roe v. Wade will eliminate abortion in the US. It would simply make it a matter for the states. ** Whether it would be left to the states depends on how the Court might overrule the abortion cases. There will be abortions anyway, you say, so why allow its regulation or prohibition? You could say the same about infanticide or rape. Possily some states would allow abortion on demand to continue. Possibly not. Probably few, if any, would make it an absolute right, because few people support that. **
Third, your profession that voting purely on a single issue is a clear test of one’s spiritual committment is deeply heretical. Catholics are called upon to be unwaveringly pro-life, not just anti-abortion. These teachings have the support of multiple Popes and the authority of ecumenical council. Rome has clearly instructed us on how to properly apply this to voting:
** Oh, I never said that voting on a single issue is a clear test of one’s spiritual commitment. Only God knows the state of any person’s soul. But that doesn’t mean I can’t oppose objective evil. To support abortion is clearly sinful. There is no countervailing and more serious moral issue presently in the balance. What, exactly and in detail, is your pro-abortion candidate going to do that, to you, overbalances the evil of abortion?**
There are 9 broad principles,:**Please quote for me, then, the statement by the Pope, or from the Catechism if you prefer, that says it’s not sinful to support abortion. Then tell me, concretely, (no platitudes or generalities, please) what your pro-abortion candidate is going to do that is greater in importance than one million innocent lives per year. **
The reason is that compromising our pro-life stance, which includes life in every stage (fertilization to natural death) and in every state (rich, poor, sickness, health), devalues life over all, as the Church explains:**And how many millions die each year in the U.S. because of poverty? How many are dismembered because of it? Please give me the statistics. Poverty can be addressed in the next election cycle, and the next and the next, because the poor will live. The unborn millions will not./B]
Picking and chosing when and how to apply our teaching on life is what Pope Benedict calls “moral relatism”. And who did that? Tell us how many millions of innocents are going to be saved from death by your pro-abortion candidate, and how, exactly, it’s going to be effected. Maybe you can persuade me still. Or, you could just say you favor abortion on demand, and want to persuade Catholics to vote for those who support it.**
Similiarly, there are faiths which put great emphasis on the moral conclussions of the individual but, again, Catholicism is not one of them. It is a matter of Canon Law, the Dogmatic Constitution, and the Catechism, lay members simply cannot proclaim themselves to be morally superior in interpreting and applying Church doctrine than the Magesterium.And how is one proclaiming himself to be morally superior in stating an absolute; that supporting abortion is a moral evil, and observing that neither party has done jack for the unfortunate in decades, and may therefore be reasonably doubted when either of them claims they now will do so? I’m sorry to be this way, but it is you who are sitting in judgment (subjective) of politically conservative positions on matters of prudential judgment, and have found them so gravely immoral that their immorality overbalances the (objective) evil of abortion, upon which prudential judgment may not be exercised. And I am the one who is assuming moral superiority?