gurneyhalleck1
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- Oct 15, 2008
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I'm in favor of making it illegal as well. I'll agree to do that right now. But I'm merely saying that it's not the one and only issue at the ballot box. Death comes in many forms. The death toll in Iraq was well over 110,000 and the death and injury to our troops, all in the name of a pre-emptive strike, I'm not ok with that. The death penalty, war-adventuring, and deaths from being uninsured, it's all bad stuff. Abortion numbers are far higher, infinitely higher, I'll admit. But our economy, our middle class status, relations with the rest of the world, the rich 1% running it all while paying less taxes than secretaries, so many things bother me from the Right that I have to balance the abortion issue with my country turning into a third world hovel. I hate both options!
If we ban it, and I'm ok with that, arresting women for abortions and trying to enforce it and the huge outcropping of protests and pro-abortion folks will really amount to a prohibition-like era again. Instead of making moonshine in their basements or at speak-easies, people will just restort to underground abortion rings. We need to educate everyone better as Christians and realize that economies where the 1% have all the wealth with no middle class, that's a breeding ground for the despair that gives birth to the abortion mentality.
If we ban it, and I'm ok with that, arresting women for abortions and trying to enforce it and the huge outcropping of protests and pro-abortion folks will really amount to a prohibition-like era again. Instead of making moonshine in their basements or at speak-easies, people will just restort to underground abortion rings. We need to educate everyone better as Christians and realize that economies where the 1% have all the wealth with no middle class, that's a breeding ground for the despair that gives birth to the abortion mentality.
I just want to clarify that although I strongly disagree with the pragmatic approach of leaving it legal, I do see those with this point of view as true allies in the fight.
What necessarily fundamentally separates is belief in the dangerous myth that right to abort is human right. To be pro-life one must be clear that this is not a human right regardless of what a nation decides is so. It is an affront to God and humanity at the deepest level. So, there are many who agree on me with this even if they take a more pragmatic approach on the legal issue not fighting for the law to stay in place but not seeing it as useful to expend resources and energy there until it is a practical objective. We both agree that abortion is evil and defilement of humanity and that it needs to stop. We both agree that education offered in compassion, nonjudgmentalness and understanding need to be the first line of defense and offense regardless of how the law may or may not change. On that principle, I unite with them in respect and pray for those who have been trained by society to believe that such could even be a human right.
Josh
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