Category Archives: politics

Plainspoken Reality

Stuart Smalley knew a thing or two.  My favorite line of his was, “Denial is not only a river in Egypt, you know.”

The other week , that little gem popped into my head as I engaged in a discussion on Facebook.  My friend Ken had written a status update insinuating that Barack Obama is not a Christian.  As Ken’s status updates oftentimes do (he has a knack–some would even call it a gift–others a curse–for this), it sparked quite a response.

A few Obama supporters jumped into the fray almost immediately, calling Ken’s ability to see accurately into question.  After reading their statements and cleverly worded questions (I gotta give props, honestly), I decided to jump right in.  My comments were generally ignored  (Perhaps that’s my “gift.”  Or maybe folks think I’m on crack and it’s best to leave me alone.  I can’t tell which.), but they generated a wee bit of conversation here and there.

My first comment was:

“You shall know them by their fruits.”

We harp on the importance of actions all the time. If ever there were an instance to put stress on one’s actions, this would be it.

 

Though one can no doubt find many relevant actions, I had his actions on one issue primarily in mind.  Anyone care to take a guess?

I don’t care what euphemisms he uses to describe the act.  Thinking it’s ok for doctors to crush and dismember an unborn child is incompatible with the Holy Spirit.  When folks suggest that someone with his kind of record on abortion and his apathy toward the carnage can know Jesus, they jump the shark.

My friend replied:

We don’t know him well enough to be a proper judge of his fruit. We may wish that he uses his platform differently, but none of us are close enough to the President to be able to make that judgement.

I dunno ’bout that.  When a politician works to defeat legislation that would protect children who are born alive after a failed abortion attempts (read the above link), I don’t need to sit down and have a beer with him to evaluate the fruit.  He has pledged his life and resources to defending the “right” for parents to kill their unborn children. He is part of the 40 million legacy. That is a rotten fruit of an enormous magnitude. This is something more than being merely wrong or misguided.

Here’s where the conversation got real interesting.  Or frustrating…you decide.  He replied:

So the test if someone is a believer in Christ or not is their stance on Roe v Wade?

Me:

You make it sound merely intellectual, like I’m saying that someone’s mere opinion on a mere court case determines salvation. That is a straw man. You know better.

It is really not that complicated. Giving oneself towards the cause of killing babies (that they are in utero makes no difference…they’re still babies. In Obama’s case, it’s even worse than that–he’s defended killing babies that are 90% out of the womb) is really hard to square with claiming to know Jesus.

Watch an abortion or see pictures of what it does to the unborn, and you will no longer be able to ask that question with a straight face.

I’ve reflected since then, and I’m convinced I should have spoken even more plainly.  As Princeton Professor Robert George quips, “One does not treat an interlocutor with respect if one refuses to speak plainly. Candor, far from being the enemy of civility, is one of its preconditions.”  The Old Testament prophets, Jesus, Paul, and the apostles all lived by that principle.  Some might balk at the harshness of the reflections that follow, but they are needed; this is no mere intellectual matter. My friend and I disagree deeply about a very important issue.  Sometimes “making nice” is not the best policy.  My hope is that if you call yourself pro-life but think that Roe, for some reason, should remain the law, my words make you think twice.

My friend made other comments: that Republicans vocally say they are against Roe but do nothing about it (not true), and that Obama wants to lower abortion rates by teaching about contraception (disingenuous, given his record, and his comments at Notre Dame.  What’s more, the goings on of a “common ground” meeting at the White House two days before his Notre Dame speech showed his intent even more clearly.).  These are claims I wanted to respond to, but they did not represent what concerned me most about the discussion.  Really, the question that kicked off dicussion–is Obama Christian?–wasn’t my main focus at this point.

Two things concerned me most: 1) The clever euphemisms surrounding abortion that my friend continued to employ, and 2) his failure to see or acknowledge a heinous evil entrenched in current law.

He tried to make it sound like I was claiming that just someone’s thoughts on a court case determines his/her salvation. In doing so, he attempted to suck the meaning out of the word “abortion.” A moment’s thought at what abortion actually is will show that question to be a strawman. This is no esoteric court case. Roe entrenched discrimination into our law. From 1973 onward, the notion that some human beings are more worthy of protection than others has been a part of our legal fabric. Not just that, but Roe made dismembering unborn human beings limb-by-limb an ok thing to do.

How could someone who is pro-life, who supposedly believes in the equal fundamental value of all and that every member of the human family possesses certain rights (including the right to life) just in virtue of being human, really think that Roe should remain intact?  Roe cemented into our culture the exact opposite of that bedrock pro-life value.  Ever since 1973, our law has declared that some human beings are more deserving of protection than others; that some human beings can be killed solely due to their parents’ whim; that the most vulnerable human beings–the unborn, who have no voice–are less worthy and valuable.

How can someone be pro-life but not be for doing away with that law?  Even though overturning Roe won’t bring the number of abortions to 0, it is an absolutely disgusting and vile law, just like laws allowing slavery, and just like segregation laws.  It should not just be done away with; it should be trashed.

Abortion in the Case of Rape

There are a thousand reasons why I love my job.

Reason # 856:

I had my students write on a journal question today: what is something you believe in so strongly that you’d continue to believe in it even if it was unpopular?

Some students struggled to think of something.  They asked me for an example.  I gave them one from my life: “I’m pro-life.  I have excellent reason to think that the unborn is a human being from conception, and human beings have rights.  Therefore, even if all my friends became avidly pro-choice, I’d still be pro-life.”

One student immediately objected: “what about a child conceived by rape?”

Situations like this are an open invitation to get them to think and reason.  I love it.

My answer: “you know, I agree that that is a horrible situation.  I can’t even imagine the pain the woman in that situation would be going through.  But, you know, why punish the child just because his father is a rapist?”

Some would consider that too much, but I reason: if the unborn are human beings (we have excellent reason scientifically and philosophically to think they are), then they have rights.  Why wouldn’t we allow a mother to kill his three year old because she reminded her of a traumatic event?  Answer: because she is a human being.  Same in the case of abortion.

He balked, and continued to object.  “Every time the woman would look at the kid, it would remind her of the rape.  Would you want her to go through that?”

I assured him that his question was an emotionally powerful one (you always want to give props where you can to those that disagree with you); I can’t even begin to conceive of the pain, but I reiterated that the woman shouldn’t victimize the child because she herself was victimized.  I also noted that having the abortion wouldn’t solve the emotional problem; it would only compound it with some hefty guilt.

He hung onto his beliefs tenaciously, which wasn’t surprising; people tend to dig in when their friends are watching.
Eventually, I called his bluff: “I disagree with your reasoning, but let me concede the point just for the sake of discussion.  So abortion in the case of rape is permissable.  Will you then join with pro-lifers in fighting for the rights of the unborn who stand to be aborted for elective reasons?”

His answer: NO.

This was very revealing.  The “rape” question was a red herring.  Many pro-choicers I’ve met go to that case immediately, not because it’s a really sticky question for them, but because they are using it as a way to justify abortion for any reason whatsoever.

That’s a hard leap of faith for them to make, though.

Quote of the Day

The great irony is that abortion has done what the Klan only dreamed of.

 

- Dr. Alveda King, niece of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

 

HT: Neil

Teachable Moment About the Same-Sex Marriage Debate

For some reason, lately I’ve had several “teachable moments” come up with the students in my classes.  It’s why I absolutely love my job.

Taking advantage of some of the teachable moments are risky, but that’s the way it goes.  With these moments, they are the sorts of risks I want to be taking.

One girl in one of my classes is doing her research on same-sex marriage.  She is 100% for it…big time.
On Thursday, while we were in the library, I walked by her table and took a look at one of her sources.  It was a radio address by James Dobson.  Not exactly the most erudite defender of traditional marriage (Jennifer Roback-Morse, Greg Koukl, Alan Shlemon, and a handful at The Public Discourse do a better job), but she gets points for at least looking at potential counterarguments to her position.

Continue reading

Facing Reality

There are a few things that abortion advocates forget when discussing the procedure.  One of them is “what is the unborn?”  As Greg Koukl has said, if the unborn is not a human being, no justification is necessary.  If the unborn is a human being, no justification is enough.

Another issue abortion advocates typically scoot over is accurately describing just what an abortion is.  Some merely state, “women should have the right to choose…”
Well, choose what?  Describe the choice you want women to have.

Others settle for a sterile dictionary definition: “the termination of a pregnancy.”  Yes, a pregnancy is terminated, but that’s not the whole of it.

This is the quandry one of my research class students is getting herself into. She is doing her paper on abortion, and she is defending the pro-choice view.  She asked me to give her some pointers, so without jumping in and bombarding her with the pro-life view, I honed in on these questions immediately.  They are questions she must face if she wants to honestly deal with the issue and face the counter-arguments to her position.

This, by the way, is what any researcher must do…without addressing counter-arguments put in their strongest possible fashion, the researcher is not engaging in research, but mere confirmation bias.

At first, she didn’t get it.  “Do you mean, ‘what is an abortion to me’?” she asked.

“No,” I replied, “that is a subjective question.  Though you can bring that in towards the end, like in your conclusion, the question you need to primarily address is an objective one.  Abortion is an objective procedure that objectively does something to an objective entity.  Therefore, scientific and philosophical considerations, rather than your personal feelings, are what you need to lead with.”

I went on to give her two specific questions she needed to address in her paper:

What is the unborn?  Human or blob?

Describe an abortion in detail.  What is involved in a D&C and D&E abortion, for example?  What are the tools used, and what happens to the unborn and the mother?

No doubt, there are other questions she could raise.  If she ends up changing her mind (if she really faces the two questions above, it will be difficult for her to not change her mind), for instance, she might want to address the issue of what should happen legally to those who perform abortions.  But the two issues above are of primary importance.  No one who honestly deals with abortion can avoid them.

Somewhat ironically, the second question above played itself out just a few moments later.  One of the other students–a pro-lifer also researching abortion–came upon a website that had pictures of aborted fetuses.  She watched, as other students gathered around.  A look of shock and disgust came upon their faces.  In some instances, they voiced their disgust.  Did the situation make me uncomfortable?  Yes–How could it not?
I let her continue, however.  Why?  Because the pictures accurately reflected reality. When researching an issue, you must look at the whole picture (pun intended).  Were a student to research the treatment of blacks before the civil rights era or during slavery, I would fully expect him/her to wrestle with Emmett Till, the testimony of the Little Rock Nine, and the stench of slave trading ships.

The girl viewing the website didn’t push the pictures in the face of her classmates or any pro-choicers in my class.  She just let the website play the pictures of what happens to a fetus when an abortion is performed.  Any researcher who delves into the procedure must face them.  Any researcher who doesn’t do so is researching not reality, but an air-brushed version of only half the issue.

Homosexuality and Public Schools

I just finished watching “Tolerance and Teaching Homosexuality in Government Schools” by Chris Neiswonger.

He makes some good points.  Highly recommended.

Are There any Alternatives?

A while back, Anitra, a friend of mine, asked a good question about the debate on healthcare:

I usually never comment on your blogs, but I do read them and love your insight and straight forwardness. Could you post an alternative to what is being proposed? I am not understanding what is wrong with a government run health care plan? Illegal immigrants are covered now…you just pay out of your taxes. I worked at a hospital as un undergrad; uninsured people can go to the ER and can’t be turned away. The problem with that is they could probably benefit from preventive care, etc. My mom died of cancer in 2005; by the end of her illness, even though she’d worked her entire adult life, except for the time she took off to raise children until the youngest was five and could go to school; she had insurance and when her cancer bills kept mounting, they started denying our claims saying that her treatment was ‘experimental.’ We ended up having to pay out of pocket for meds and drugs and her illness wiped us out financially. That is not fair. The US is ranked 37th in Healthcare according to the World Heath Organization (http://www.photius.com/rankings/healthranks.html) and countries that are being criticized in the health care debate are ahead of us. What is the alternative to what Obama is proposing? Medicare is just about broke right now and the baby boomer generation is quickly approaching the age to be eligible. What do we do? On TV and in conservative forums, there seems to just be opposition to what Obama is proposing…it’s too expensive, etc. Fine. What is the alternative? What’s wrong with a single-payer system where ALL Americans are covered? What we have is not working, and I have seen it first hand through the inhumane way that we were treated during my mother’s battle for life. Please point me in the direction to some links or info on viable solutions to the current issue. Thanks and I appreicate your blog. Know that you touch people even if they don’t leave comments. =)

She raises a few good questions.  Here are my thoughts:

First, even if there is no good alternative that conservatives propose, it does not follow that we must accept Obama’s plan.  Not only is suggesting so a false dichotomy, but it turns on an equivocation as well.  It’s a common “politician’s ploy” that goes something like this:

Something must be done.

This is something.

Therefore, it must be done.

I’m not buyin’.  Bottom line, if the “something” that is being proposed is morally suspect and could potentially make things worse, we are not obligated to accept it, even if it’s the only solution currently on the table.

In fact, Anitra mentions one of the reasons we have for thinking Obama’s solution will make things worse: Medicare.  If you click on the second link above, you’ll see that a Obama’s plan (well, at least as it was about a month ago.  I haven’t kept up with the debate since then so I admit things might have changed.   If they have, someone feel free to correct me) will dump millions of Americans into a Medicare-like system, which isn’t made to handle that many people.  That’s what the government option basically is: Medicare for the public.  As the Verum Serum fellas put it, if Medicare is driving us into further debt, why burden it more with more people?

Secondly, my main concern with government-run healthcare isn’t an economic concern.  It is more basic and has to do with government’s proper role.  In my view, government’s role is to provide law and order and ensure that citizens have equal opportunity to pursue life, liberty, and happiness.  It is not government’s role to provide those things for us.  In other words, the state protects it’s citizens from harm, but should not provide us with benefits and goods.  Some might denigrate this by calling it abstract philosophizing, but I’m not persuaded by the loaded words.  Since ideas are connected to people’s lives, flourishing, and wellbeing, ideas have consequences.  I’ve commented on the consequences many times before on this blog, as have many others.

Thirdly, again as Anitra mentions, there are legitimate concerns with our current system.  The consensus seems to be that a) people are being denied coverage for frivolous reasons (i.e “pre-existing conditions,” Anitra’s mom’s experience, etc), b) the people who want coverage should be able to get it (crucial distinction.  Some can afford coverage but willingly forego it because they want to purchase something else, like a nice car), and, similarly, c) make coverage more affordable.  No need to move to a single-payer system (and many a Dem has admitted that a “government/public option” is a good intermediary step to that end goal) to take care of those issues.

Here are some alternatives that conservatives have proposed (HT: Wintery).  WK also has some good, short podcasts here that might help put things in perspective.

Here’s Paul Ryan talking about the alternative he’s spearheaded:

HT: Hotair

FWIW, here’s a critique of Ryan’s bill I found, plus a critique of the critique.  By the time I read the critique of the critique, my head was spinning, so I simply point all those interested parties to them…make up your own minds, folks.  Again, I’ve been out of the loop on healthcare for over a month now (150 17 year olds beckon), so this post might be horribly out of line with the current state of affairs, so I welcome any and all comments/corrections.   As for now: were it summer, I’d trudge through it all and write a detailed post on it, but I have a late night Congress session with senators pillow and sheet in a few minutes, so I have to go…:)