My wife couldn’t help but notice this particular point mentioned by Fred Thompson during last night’s speech.
Sounds very familiar.
September 3, 2008
by Chris Arsenault
Comments Off on John McCain was left in a room to die…
September 3, 2008
by Chris Arsenault
Comments Off on John McCain was left in a room to die…
My wife couldn’t help but notice this particular point mentioned by Fred Thompson during last night’s speech.
Sounds very familiar.
September 1, 2008
by Chris Arsenault
Comments Off on This election is about life!
My last post – made as a joking aside about James Carville’s famous quip, has since turned out to be totally and 100% on target: this election is definitely about life. After McCain’s selection of Palin, rumors flew that she was Trig’s grandmother. The latest – Bristol Palin is not Trig’s mother – but she is, indeed, a mother.
Michelle Malkin summed it up that the contrasts between the two teams couldn’t be any stronger. Yet most of America is completely in the dark about Obama’s views, in particular why Obama gave that unusual answer at Saddleback.
While it left many confused – when they learn of Obama’s reason (and, like my younger brother, they get over being sick) then they truly grasp what kind of hope and change he’s pushing.
It’s a story that needs to be told.
August 27, 2008
by Chris Arsenault
Comments Off on James* – it’s not the economy stupid – it’s life!
Jill Stanek at the Emily’s List gala at the Democratic National Convention is hearing silence about choice. Apparently there’s a little issue called IL BAIPA that they don’t want to deal with – if the American people knew the truth about this issue when it come to Barack – they might make a different choice.
*James Carville – who coined the phrase for Bill Clinton.
August 21, 2008
by Chris Arsenault
Comments Off on Born Alive – Clarity & Insight
Hadley Arkes provides a clear discussion of the Born-Alive Act and Obama at The Catholic Thing.
[HT: Francis Beckwith at Whats Wrong with the World.]
August 21, 2008
by Chris Arsenault
Comments Off on Jill Stanek’s Challenge to Obama
So Senator Obama – what’s it going to be?
August 20, 2008
by Chris Arsenault
Comments Off on Obama’s Abortion Position – by the Numbers
August 20, 2008
by Chris Arsenault
Comments Off on Obama is right – BAIPA strikes at choice!
Jill Stanek addresses Obama’s Born Alive facts.
I think Obama is right – as far as his conclusions are concerned. The Born Alive Infant Protection Act does strike at a woman’s choice because it removes an available abortion technique.
During the Partial Birth Abortion Ban SCOTUS hearings Planned Parenthood’s own attorney argued that later term D&E techniques pose a substantial risk to women, and that delivery of the fetus would mitigate that risk.
What Obama was defending was using birth as an abortion technique. That really was his focus – without a thought about the cruelty inflicted both on the mother, the premature person being born or the role of birth in our society.
He, as well as other pro-choice advocates can play semantic games all they want. They still can’t get away from the fact:
Using birth as a means of abortion is abhorrent.
August 18, 2008
by Chris Arsenault
Comments Off on Senator Obama – How does IL BAIPA undermine Roe?
Has Obama finally admitted he’s been lying about Illinois Born Alive Infant Protection Act (SB1082)?
If the news is true, then the most obvious question that needs to be posed is the title of this post.
How will protections granted to the born undermine Roe?
Or maybe put another way:
How will killing newborns protect abortion rights?
If the abortion issue is of deep moral concern, then he should show how deeply moral he is now.
All of those subject to be born want to know.
August 14, 2008
by Chris Arsenault
Comments Off on What more can be said?
[HT: Dawn Eden]
July 14, 2008
by Chris Arsenault
Comments Off on Unanswered Questions
Some abortion-choice advocates make a claim for an individual human being’s sovereign right to use their own body at any moment, as they wish, including giving life, or killing the life inside.
To be meaningful, such a right must be held by a living human being, a somebody; the dead don’t exercise such rights over their bodies, for rather obvious reasons.
What gives rise to individual body rights if there is no life?
This is the studiously avoided question, one which abortion-choice advocates fail to answer.
Human life is a prerequisite for any other right a human being might possess, including bodily sovereignty. Life is of infinite worth, but what is assumed is that it is not of infinite worth (that it has less value than a “right”) for the purposes of killing the unborn. The “right” cannot stand without that question begging assumption. The argument is then made that giving life is an act of voluntary charity that is extended to another human being and so giving life need not be extended to the unborn.
Such an argument is generally ignorant of virtues, and lacks an understanding of how the virtues impact lives. To one who makes such an argument, compassion must be shown, their misunderstanding forgiven, for they are in the dark.
Whenever one lives completely at the sovereign power of another being, they live at the mercy of that sovereign power, because charity is a distribution of benefits, but mercy is shown by the powerful towards the weak, when it comes to life, and the execution and judgement of sovereign power. Mercy is about compassion, that is suffering, whereas charity doesn’t require suffering of the giver. If such suffering does occur in the execution of sovereign power, then that’s called grace.
So the claimed “right” to abort is the “right” to be unmerciful to one who is completely dependent upon that living sovereign, and utterly lacks compassion and grace.
So here’s some more questions:
What does it mean to be merciful?
What’s unique about the mother/child relationship?
Can you kill someone who is fully dependent upon you?
Your mother extended mercy to you, why don’t you extend it to others?
Is such a right a sign of love?
Is killing your child an act of love?
Do you devalue your own life when you do so?
Why should anyone be shown mercy, if a mother doesn’t show it to her own child?
The biggest thing missing in such arguments is love, because it is upon love that the other two, mercy and charity, exist.
So here’s another question: by who’s grace was that original sovereign bodily right given?