Re: The Power of the SCOTUS Part VII - The Bedrock of the Republic!
Agreed.The word "whimper" comes to mind for some reason.
Agreed.The word "whimper" comes to mind for some reason.
No, I wouldn't say so in retort, though there is a vein of truth to it. But I honestly believe that people who are pro-choice/abortion think that they are doing what is right for the most part, but that they are just sadly misguided and have some values mixed up. I'd also guess that your exposure to the pro-life movement is mostly via the media. I'd encourage you to visit a local crisis pregnancy center or other such places and you'll get a whole different flavor. My wife and I have volunteered at such places and they are filled with people who love those who are in difficult spots and even if they decide to have an abortion, they are welcomed with open loving arms. Many of the women who volunteer at such places have had abortions themselves and know first hand the struggles pre and post abortion. But that kind of stuff never gets a New York Times or CBS News or such cover story.I will grant that I get a little impatient with the mendacity of some in the "pro-life" industry. I would hope that those who make up the sane majority would be just as sick of those crazies and I wish they would take the public face of the movement back from the Tartuffes Burroughs termed "the mean pinched hate-filled faces of decent church-going women and men."
Presumably, there are very few monsters. It is a shame they are so prominent and influential, and have warped our public policy for so long, and hurt so many.
But no doubt you would say the same in retort.
No, I wouldn't say so in retort, though there is a vein of truth to it. But I honestly believe that people who are pro-choice/abortion think that they are doing what is right for the most part, but that they are just sadly misguided and have some values mixed up. I'd also guess that your exposure to the pro-life movement is mostly via the media. I'd encourage you to visit a local crisis pregnancy center or other such places and you'll get a whole different flavor. My wife and I have volunteered at such places and they are filled with people who love those who are in difficult spots and even if they decide to have an abortion, they are welcomed with open loving arms. Many of the women who volunteer at such places have had abortions themselves and know first hand the struggles pre and post abortion. But that kind of stuff never gets a New York Times or CBS News or such cover story.
I will grant that I get a little impatient with the mendacity of some in the "pro-life" industry. I would hope that those who make up the sane majority would be just as sick of those crazies and I wish they would take the public face of the movement back from the Tartuffes Burroughs termed "the mean pinched hate-filled faces of decent church-going women and men."
Presumably, there are very few monsters. It is a shame they are so prominent and influential, and have warped our public policy for so long, and hurt so many.
But no doubt you would say the same in retort.
You'd be surprised as to how not pro-life some pro-lifers are. Wait, you probably wouldn't...
After all, let's take a look at the people that kill abortion doctors, call for taking Planned Parenthood workers "out back", amongst other things. Reciprocation isn't in the vocabulary of most.
To be fair, I think that's only the absolute lunatic fringe -- maybe a few thousand in the whole country.
But the scary thing about the moral absolutism underlying the pro-life position is it's a royal road to the idea of using violence to achieve your ends. "Extremism in the defense of virtue is no vice." That's how you get clinic bombers, or those Jewish settlers who just oven roasted a Palestinian child because יהוה said to.
You assume I don't know such people. You would be wrong. That's why I said I think they mean well, but are just misguided.Well, by the same token you're only getting the side of people who have changed their minds and become anti-choice. I would likewise encourage you to expose yourself (ahem) to the people who volunteer in clinics and see the women who come in, the challenges they face, the circumstances, and often the incredible levels of hatred and political opportunism they have to fight their way past, either physically at the clinic itself or psychologically in their lives. You would probably lose some of the cartoonish ideas you have about what PP does, why it does it, and who the women involved are.
That's why I said I think they mean well, but are just misguided.
It's an enormous step to understand that the other person, who you may totally disagree with on something important, generally means well, as of course you do. If that kind of thinking could seep into our national consciousness and political arenas, things would look drastically different. Mostly things are going the opposite direction though, as the other side is put in the worst light possible.
I read an article recently where this concept is applied to marriages, where one person did something that seemed hurtful to the other, but if the other recognizes that the first person meant well, it makes for a very different scenario than if one gives in to the temptation to think that they purposely were hurtful.
It's an enormous step to understand that the other person, who you may totally disagree with on something important, generally means well, as of course you do. If that kind of thinking could seep into our national consciousness and political arenas, things would look drastically different. Mostly things are going the opposite direction though, as the other side is put in the worst light possible.
I read an article recently where this concept is applied to marriages, where one person did something that seemed hurtful to the other, but if the other recognizes that the first person meant well, it makes for a very different scenario than if one gives in to the temptation to think that they purposely were hurtful.
Despite court order, Kentucky clerk Kim Davis still refuses to issue marriage licenses to gay couples
I don't see this ending well for her.
I really hope she gets fired
Can she be held in contempt?
Ms. Davis, a member of an Apostolic Christian church who says she attends “whenever the doors are open,”...
Despite court order, Kentucky clerk Kim Davis still refuses to issue marriage licenses to gay couples
I don't see this ending well for her.
Yeah, I can't imagine why he wouldn't want to to say one way or the other.Davis, elected last November as a Democrat, took over the office from her mother, Jean Bailey, who served as county clerk for 37 years, according to the Morehead News. Davis worked under her mother as a deputy clerk for 26 years. Nathan Davis refused to say if he is related to Kim Davis.
I really hope she gets fired
Can she be held in contempt?
I don't see this ending well for her.
It would really be best if she would quietly ... go away, but she'll just scream to the press that she was persecuted.
Can she be held in contempt?
Probably can't be held in contempt until she refuses to obey a court order addressed specifically to her. But if she can be, I hope she is.
I was a bit confused for a minute, I skimmed these comments really quickly and I thought I was reading about Hillary Clinton and her email server for a second....