• Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.

  • CF has always been a site that welcomes people from different backgrounds and beliefs to participate in discussion and even debate. That is the nature of its ministry. In view of recent events emotions are running very high. We need to remind people of some basic principles in debating on this site. We need to be civil when we express differences in opinion. No personal attacks. Avoid you, your statements. Don't characterize an entire political party with comparisons to Fascism or Communism or other extreme movements that committed atrocities. CF is not the place for broad brush or blanket statements about groups and political parties. Put the broad brushes and blankets away when you come to CF, better yet, put them in the incinerator. Debate had no place for them. We need to remember that people that commit acts of violence represent themselves or a small extreme faction.
  • We hope the site problems here are now solved, however, if you still have any issues, please start a ticket in Contact Us

Imposing Morality

Status
Not open for further replies.

Highway of Life

Radical Middle -- Spirit, Word and Church
Jul 13, 2004
1,431
62
In the middle of the road.
Visit site
✟31,909.00
Faith
Christian
Marital Status
Single
Politics
US-Republican
[font=arial, HELVETICA]Imposing Morality:
The Fallacy of Pro-Abortion Rhetoric
[/font]
[font=arial, HELVETICA]Res Publica, v9n1
July 2001

by: Michael Donatini
[/font] [font=arial, HELVETICA]For true abortion foes, the statistics should have been a shocking call to a new kind of action. [/font]

[font=arial, HELVETICA]On June 18, 2000, the Los Angeles Times released the results of a poll stating that, even though 57 percent of Americans believe that abortion is murder, only 27 percent of Americans would support a Constitutional amendment to ban abortion. [/font]

[font=arial, HELVETICA]The people have spoken. Americans know that an unborn baby is alive. They know that the baby’s heart is beating and the brain is working and pain can be felt by the time a mother is ready to have an abortion. They believe that abortion is a grave injustice, akin to homicide. But they quickly add that the government shouldn’t interfere with a woman’s purported right to commit that homicide. Or, as Susan Carroll of the Center for American Women and Politics explained in the Times article, "Americans, in terms of their own code of morality, may view abortion as murder and may be comfortable with it being illegal, but most Americans don’t want to impose that on other people." [/font]

[font=arial, HELVETICA]Few will deny that a law restricting abortion is a law of morality, but in the minds of Americans, the word morality almost always conjures up images of good personal behavior that doesn’t really affect anybody else - sexual modesty, for example. Abortion, too, looks to some like a personal sexual matter rather than the human life violation that it really is — and Americans more than ever are shying away from regulation of "personal" matters. Nowadays, whatever a liberated woman does with her reproductive system is supposed to be her own moral decision; the exercise of her sexual freedom. [/font]

[font=arial, HELVETICA]Pro-abortion propagandists piercingly proclaim this half-baked libertine reasoning, saying that regulation of any reproductive issues strips women of their precious civil liberties. Recent advertising by the National Abortion Rights Action League (NARAL), for example, has touted the American principle of freedom to choose. The news media, either through accident or through bias, carefully identify activists as supporters of abortion rights or women’s rights, which is more flattering (though less accurate) than calling them supporters of legalized abortion. And NARAL president Kate Michelman shows up frequently in news articles criticizing "anti-choice" activists. When all else fails, pro-abortion advocates deliver the nihilistic question that few people can answer: "Who are you (finger pointing at pro-lifers) to say what I can and can’t do with my body?" These rhetorical tactics have conditioned Americans to believe that abortion is truly a natural right implicit with human sexuality and the property of one’s own body, suggesting that a morality-based law banning abortion would spell the end of American freedom. [/font]

[font=arial, HELVETICA]Sure, it sounds good to give the individual as much liberty over herself and her body as possible. But here’s the catch: The principles of American government dictate that no personal liberty should be a license to attack somebody else’s fundamental rights. Legislating according to morality doesn’t just mean restricting personal "victimless" behavior. Government has its own set of moral obligations: the preservation of natural rights. The government’s obligation to protect human life is neither subjective nor conditional; it is the most basic moral premise behind our government. If the law allows human rights to be denied, the law is immoral and the government is failing in its duty. [/font]

[font=arial, HELVETICA]In fact, virtually all criminal laws are based on moral reasoning. The law dictates that all citizens must exercise control over their own behavior to maintain the rights of others. We have laws against murder, rape and robbery — all of which are laws based on the morality of preserving human rights. Abolitionists in the slavery era, too, charged that slavery was immoral because slave owners deprived their slaves of natural rights. A Constitutional amendment banning slavery emerged from that moral argument. This is the moral basis for the law — that our personal freedom must never deprive others of life, liberty, or property. This is what most Americans fail to understand. It’s clear to many that abortion is the willful taking of a human life. But when the word "morality" is used, few people seem to realize that government’s moral responsibility can trump personal liberty -- including the individual’s freedom to make decisions based on personal morality — when the human rights of a third party are at stake. This is what is really meant when we say that a law is based on morality, which is why abortion restrictions are both necessary and proper in a free society. [/font]

[font=arial, HELVETICA]Pro-life organizations, then, must assume a new duty if they are to succeed in their political mission. Not only must they continue to educate people in the truth that human life begins at conception; they must also convince many individuals who agree that abortion is immoral to reconsider the purpose of government; to understand the meaning of a law based on morality and the circumstances that warrant government action. [/font]

[font=arial, HELVETICA]Pro-abortion groups have been successful in telling the American people that, like it or not, abortion is a human liberty that government is obligated to protect. Now is the time for pro-life groups to fight false logic with good logic. If the pro-life movement is to survive, pro-lifers must explain how the preservation of human life — beginning at conception — fits into the scheme of American government. [/font]

[font=arial, HELVETICA]Michael Donatini is a sophomore from Ashland, Ohio, majoring in political science and journalism/English. He is co-founder of AU’s Right to Life chapter.
[/font]

[font=arial, HELVETICA]Highway of Life [/font]
 

Highway of Life

Radical Middle -- Spirit, Word and Church
Jul 13, 2004
1,431
62
In the middle of the road.
Visit site
✟31,909.00
Faith
Christian
Marital Status
Single
Politics
US-Republican
Contrary to popular belief, the Zogby poll shows that young people are even more pro-life than the general population. Sixty percent of 18-to-29-year-olds are in the pro-life category. In fact, the poll shows that among all Americans, 49 percent classify themselves as pro-life, compared to 45 percent as pro-choice, and women poll more pro-life than pro-choice by a margin of 48 percent to 46 percent.

Highway of Life
 
Upvote 0
Status
Not open for further replies.