Sunday, February 26, 2006

A Note on Judaism & Islam

In a couple of previous posts, both of which were rather lengthy, I made some comments related to Judaism and Islam.

The comments related to Judaism, in part:

If Jesus had opted for the "lesser of two evils," Christianity as we know it would not exist. Jesus would never have found the strength to challenge the deep systemic problems within the Judaism of his day. He would never have found the strength to heal lepers, the most rejected of all outcasts in Jewish society at the time. He would never have found the strength to heal the paralytic and pronounce his sins forgiven. He would never have found the strength to not only forgive the woman caught in adultery, but to turn the whole situation around and transform it into a referendum on her accusers. He would never have found the strength to tell revolutionary parables like that of the Good Samaritan, or to drink water and share the Gospel with a Samaritan woman.


And the comments related to Islam, in part:

It seems that Sr. Chittister's primary concern is avoiding more violence, and with this concern I can sympathize. But it would be wrong to deny the sanctity of a man who clearly was killed out of hatred for his faith just to avoid more violence. What would that say about our Church's commitment to faith and truth? As I've already pointed out, I also think it's a bad idea to do anything to appease violent Muslims. What kind of message do we send if we refuse to recognize a martyr for who he is because we don't want to provoke violence from Muslims? We send the message that violence can quiet us and lead us to attempt appeasement, that we will give them what they want if they kill enough of us. We send a message that we are ready for them to make more martyrs who we will not recognize as martyrs. It would be far better to send a message to the Muslim faith that we believe one of their people killed one of our priests out of hatred for his faith, that we're going to recognize his faith and that he was killed for it, and that we expect better from them. We expect to be tolerated and respected as we have tolerated and respected them.


As I've gone back over these two posts, it's occurred to me that I may have seemed overly antagonistic toward both Judaism and Islam, and that I may have also seemed overly triumphalistic as a Christian. I've received no e-mails or comments saying as much, and it may be that I'm being a bit too critical of my own writing, but I want to make it absolutely clear that I did not intend to be antagonistic toward either religion, nor did I intend to depict Christianity in a triumphalistic manner.

I should begin by saying that I have become less than enthusiastic about all organized religion. My criticism is certainly not reserved for other people's faith traditions, and in fact I make an effort to avoid criticizing other people's traditions and to focus instead upon reforming my own faith tradition. For instance, earlier this month I condemned the Polish Catholic bishops for their part in the persecution of Polish gays and lesbians. I also wrote a scathing letter to Fr. Frank Pavone for his extremist position on abortion, the division he's bringing to the Church and to America, and the profanation of his priestly ministry. I believe that organized religion is a positive institution that can be misused in very negative ways, and when I see it being misused I tend to react to that misuse very frankly and sometimes rather harshly.

I also want to point out that I don't believe in discrimination against people of other faith traditions. Earlier this month, I blogged about Starbucks committing an act of religious discrimination against a Wiccan employee in New York. Now, it's important to understand that Wicca, as one of the faiths outside of the so-called "American mainstream," is among the religions that American Christians least understand and least respect. Wiccans are frequently libeled as Satanists, and any number of immoral and frightening behaviors are attributed to them. But I know better, and I don't put up with discrimination against Wiccans or people of any other faith tradition. There are better ways to discuss our differences than by promoting discrimination, intolerance, and fear.

Finally, I want to emphasize how much I respect both Judaism and Islam.

I believe that the Jews are our elder sisters and brothers in faith, and that we are all children of one God. I condemn and reject all of the anti-Semitism that has been perpetrated against Jews by Christians over the centuries, and I accept the understanding of Reflections on Covenant and Mission which holds "that Jews already dwell in a saving covenant with God" and that "their witness to the kingdom [of God], which did not originate with the Church's experience of Christ crucified and raised, must not be curtailed by seeking the conversion of the Jewish people to Christianity." As someone with Jewish ancestry, I have only the most profound respect for the Jewish people. My comments were only meant to point out problems in the Jewish system at the time of Jesus, most of which have been resolved since then. In fact, in many ways, Jews have surpassed Christians in fidelity to the principles of justice, mercy, and love. If my comments have offended any Jewish readers, I sincerely apologize.

To Muslim readers, I would like to say that I have deep respect for Islam and that I believe it is a religion of peace which appeals to a great variety of people, as is evidenced by its growth -- it is, after all, poised to replace Christianity as the world's most populous religion. In my comments, I was referring very specifically to radicals and terrorists who are Muslims, who distort the Muslim faith to support their radical agenda and acts of terrorism. Even today, we Christians have radicals among us who distort our faith to support their radical agenda; and even today, we Christians have terrorists among us who have blown up abortion clinics and night clubs in the name of our God. And sadly, our past is even more violent than our present, and our own violent past is no doubt part of the reason that some Muslims have turned to radicalism and terrorism in the present. I look forward to working with Muslims in pursuit of a nonviolent future, and I apologize if anything I have written has offended any Muslim readers

If in the course of my writing I have ever offended Jews or Muslims, or people of any other faith, I sincerely apologize. I firmly believe that people of all faiths are striving to know, love, and serve God in the best way each of us knows how, and I pray that God will bless all of us who are on this journey together.
On February 10, I posted about a new bill in the Ohio House of Representatives: H.B. 515, the Adoptive and Foster Children's Protection Act, which would ban GLBT Ohioans and anyone who resides with us from adopting or fostering children. It was cosponsored by ten representatives, all of them Republicans, and is just another example of Republicans trying to promote their warped vision of family values as a way to divide the electorate at the expense of actual children and families.

In any event, I thought I'd update my readers on what's going on with the bill.

Essentially, the bill is dead on arrival. Without the support of Ohio House Speaker Jon Husted (R-Kettering, pictured above), and with opposition by both Republicans and Democrats, it's very unlikely that H.B. 515 will make it out of committee to even be voted on. And Speaker Husted's chief of staff has condemned the bill as "divisive," stating that Speaker Husted would prefer to focus on job creation during this legislative session. While it doesn't look like H.B. 515 will be going anywhere, I've already submitted an article condemning the bill to http://www.whosoever.org/ which will probably appear in the March/April edition when it comes out in a few days, and I will continue to keep track of H.B. 515.

I'm Boston

You Are Boston

Both modern and old school, you never forget your roots.
Well educated and a little snobby, you demand the best.
And quite frankly, you think you are the best.

Famous people from the Boston area: Conan O'Brien, Ben Affleck, New Kids on the Block

http://www.blogthings.com/whatamericancityareyouquiz/

What American City Are You?

Saturday, February 25, 2006

So You Say You Want a Revolution?

I'd say that I'm in my first day of recovery from the flu, since today I can do basic things like a normal person without feeling winded, nauseated, or otherwise debilitated. While I've been sick, pretty much the only thing I've been able to do is lay around, watch TV, and read. I've just finished reading Matt Taibbi's Spanking the Donkey: Dispatches from the Dumb Season. I highly recommend it; it reminded me of my reasons for leaving the Democratic Party, a reminder I needed as I have lately been succumbing to the old "lesser of two evils" and "electability" traps.

I became eligible to vote around the same time that I was involved in the Rite of Christian Initiation for Adults (RCIA), so since the very beginning I have looked at voting through the eyes of faith. The 2004 election season was an agonizing time for me, in which I almost decided to vote for President Bush based primarily upon his opposition to abortion rights. At the last minute, I voted for Sen. John Kerry (D-MA). The driving force behind both of these choices -- the initial choice to vote for Bush, and the last minute decision to vote for Kerry -- was the "lesser of two evils" mentality. Both candidates are really bad, but which candidate would do the least harm? This mentality is quite common among Catholic voters; I suspect the same is true among other Christian voters as well, and perhaps among other people of faith.

I wonder now what I was thinking. Christianity would look very different now if Jesus had opted for the "lesser of two evils." Christ believed that there was something seriously wrong with the Jewish religious and societal system; it's going too far to say that he believed the whole thing was evil, but it's not going too far to say that he saw very serious and very deep systemic problems. And he saw these problems among all of the various Jewish sects, or "parties" if you will. What would have happened to Christianity if Jesus had decided not to challenge the entire system, but rather to align himself with the sect that would have done the least harm in his view? What if he had opted for the Pharisees over the Sadducees, because at least the former believed in the resurrection? Or what if he had opted for the Essenes over the other two, because at least the Essenes had rejected the corrupt Temple system?

If Jesus had opted for the "lesser of two evils," Christianity as we know it would not exist. Jesus would never have found the strength to challenge the deep systemic problems within the Judaism of his day. He would never have found the strength to heal lepers, the most rejected of all outcasts in Jewish society at the time. He would never have found the strength to heal the paralytic and pronounce his sins forgiven. He would never have found the strength to not only forgive the woman caught in adultery, but to turn the whole situation around and transform it into a referendum on her accusers. He would never have found the strength to tell revolutionary parables like that of the Good Samaritan, or to drink water and share the Gospel with a Samaritan woman.

If Jesus had not found the strength to challenge the Jewish system of his day, Christianity would not exist today -- because it was based upon Jesus' own revolutionary and inclusive teaching that the Church later opened its arms to the Gentiles, an act which could never have been tolerated in the Jewish religious and societal system.

I see now how fruitless it is to accept one party over another in our governmental system, to believe that there can be any benefit in choosing the "lesser of two evils" in a system that is evil in and of itself. It doesn't much matter whether there's a Democrat or a Republican in office, because the Democrats and the Republicans are hardly the issue; they are only two faces of the corporate oligarchy that has complete control of our government and our society, an oligarchy which bought both parties before I was even born. The power of this oligarchy is obscured by the media, which is now also owned by the oligarchy. The media spins every campaign and election to make us believe that we're really making a crucial choice, when in fact the only choice we're making is how the same corporate oligarchy will continue its totalitarian rule for the next four years. Ours is a smart dictatorship, effectively hiding from the oppressed that we are under the rule of tyranny by keeping up the appearance of two party government and democratic elections.

Despite the media's best efforts, this inevitable oligarchy and the farcical nature of our elections became apparent during the last presidential election, but many of us still refused to see it. The two parties presented us with candidates who did not differ at all on the most important issues. On the matter of the Iraq War, the only difference between the opposition candidate and the incumbent was that the former would kill Iraqis differently than the latter. On trade issues, inarguably the most important factor in our economic devastation, the only difference between Sen. Kerry and President Bush was that the former would toss economic justice and labor rights over his left shoulder rather than his right, while the President tossed them over his right shoulder rather than his left. On health care, the only difference between the Democrat and the Republican was that the former would substitute his own idiotic-failure-in-the-guise-of-a-real-plan for the President's.

There was only one Democrat who even came close to offering a real alternative to President Bush and the corporate oligarchy, and that was Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-OH). Unlike the other Democrats, Kucinich opposed the Iraq War from the beginning and believed that our troops should have been withdrawn immediately. Several of the Democrats (including both Sen. Kerry and Sen. Edwards) voted for the war and for its continued funding in the Senate and the House, while the ones who didn't vote for the war wouldn't commit to troop withdrawal. Unlike the other candidates, Kucinich opposed NAFTA and other economically devastating "free trade" agreements and promised to withdraw from them. Several of the Democrats voted for NAFTA and other debilitating "free trade" agreements, while the ones who didn't vote for such agreements wouldn't commit to withdrawal from the agreements. Unlike the other candidates, Kucinich promised universal health care for all Americans. None of the other Democrats would commit to universal health care, and all of their plans would have left some Americans deprived of health care -- even though health care is recognized as a human right by the United Nations, and provided as a human right by the governments of most industrialized nations.

What happened to Rep. Kucinich? First, the corporate oligarchy's propaganda department, also known as our free press, ignored and isolated him because he wasn't "electable." When he wouldn't go away quietly, the media ridiculed and laughed at him. And the American people followed the media's lead. I confess to being guilty of this myself, even being stupid enough to initially support the most shallow of the Democratic candidates, Sen. John Edwards (D-NC). And I confess that it was because I liked his hair, I liked his tan, and I liked his Southern accent.

There are no signs that this situation is going to change in time for 2008. Certainly not for 2006. None of the names floated for the 2008 Democratic primaries -- with the possible exception of Sen. Russ Feingold (D-WI) -- would represent any kind of significant change. It would be more business as usual, electing a President who will kill Iraqis differently, who will screw America's workers differently, who will deprive us of health care differently. But any possibility that we'll stop killing Iraqis? Nay. Any possibility that we'll insist upon economic justice and labor rights? Nuh-uh. Any possibility that we'll extend health care to all Americans? No way. For Pete's sake, we may end up with Sen. Kerry, of all people, as the Democratic contender again -- his name appears in close proximity to Sen. Hillary Clinton (the early frontrunner) in every poll, often along with Sen. John Edwards, Gen. Wesley Clark, and even Al Gore. Maybe the Democrats' 2008 campaign slogan will be: "We Recycle!"

So who will get the Democratic nomination? If you're still asking this question, you're not getting it. The point of this whole post is to say that it doesn't matter, because the corporate oligarchy will ensure -- as it always does -- that whoever gets the Democratic nomination will be "one of them," a person (and probably a man) who governs only slightly differently than the Republicans in order to keep up the appearance that we still have a two party government and a stable democracy. Incidentally, I don't think Sen. Clinton will get the nomination; sure, she's the frontrunner now, but that's only because the people don't know the other candidates yet but know her very well -- you'll note that the ones who are directly behind her in the polls are also candidates the people know, but don't like as much (Kerry, Edwards, and Gore, oh my). I suspect that, when the time comes, the media will screw Clinton over with the "electability" card -- and I strongly suspect that Sen. Evan Bayh (D-IN), fiercely loyal to the corporate-controlled Democratic Leadership Council, will get the nomination.

But like I said: It doesn't matter!

It all sounds pretty hopeless, but I don't think that it is. Even though our democracy has been locked away for decades by the corporate oligarchy, the fact of the matter is that the people still have the power -- which is why the corporate oligarchy doesn't opt for outright fascism. We can change the course of our government and our society, but not by simply going to the polls and electing the guy the media tells us to, or the person we see as the "lesser of two evils." We have to stop listening to the media, stop listening to buzz-words like "electability," and start listening to our minds and our hearts. They're a bit rusty, perhaps, but most of them still work. Part of this is about doing what many Americans are terrified of doing: thinking outside the box. If I have to draw a picture for you, it's time to start electing independent or third party candidates who aren't funded and thus controlled by the corporate oligarchy.

We shy away from independent and third party candidates, often afraid to even consider voting for them. Why? Because we are told, again and again, that the threat to our nation is too great to risk losing to "the other guy" by giving too many votes, but not enough votes, to an independent or third party candidate. We've seen it a million times -- with Clinton and Dole, with Bush and Gore, with Bush and Kerry. No to Ralph Nader, no to David Cobb, no to Michael Badnarik, and all because Clinton, Gore, and Kerry had to win. Sisters and brothers, I have two things for you to consider:

  1. The Democrats are losing anyway! Do you see a President Gore or a President Kerry in the White House? No, and although they love to blame the former defeat on Ralph Nader, the latter candidate lost even though Nader and other independent/third party candidates were removed from ballots across the country.


  2. The Republicans are only going to destroy our nation and the world slightly faster than the Democrats, but either way, they're both still going to destroy our nation and the world -- because they're still serving the same greedy, power-hungry creeps bent on having and consuming (and by consuming, destroying) everything. Voting for either party is a vote for the destruction of our nation and the world -- so how can voting for someone else be worse?


And that brings me to my final and most disturbing point. In response to the manipulation of the political discourse by the Religious Right in the 2000 and 2004 elections, a new coalition has come together to build the Religious Left. I have been and remain supportive of this initiative, but not if it's going to become for the Democrats what the Religious Right has become for the Republicans. For one thing, such an endeavor would be completely hypocritical. It's natural for the Religious Right, which does not believe in the Separation of Church and State, to illegally intervene in elections and use their religious influence to get their candidates elected, expecting in return an imposition of their beliefs upon all Americans. But this would be unacceptable for the Religious Left, we who do believe in the Separation of Church and State. How can we say that we believe in this fundamental constitutional principle but then seek to intervene in elections on behalf of the Democrats?

But the Constitution, the First Amendment, and the Separation of Church and State are almost beside the point. What's really at stake here is religion. We need a Religious Left, but not in order to take religion out of the hands of the Republican Party and put it into the hands of the Democratic Party. We need a Religious Left in order to liberate religion from all political parties. The last thing America needs right now, in the face of religious nutjobs supporting President Bush and the Republicans, are more religious nutjobs supporting Hillary Clinton and the Democrats. What America needs now are religious people who actually value their respective religions enough to stand up against their profanation at the hands of diabolical politicians, religious people who will -- like Jesus Christ himself, but also like Moses the Law-Giver, like the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him), like Siddhartha Buddha, like Artemis the Huntress -- stand up and challenge the system itself and the unjust burdens it lays on its people.

Sisters and brothers, our American system is rotten at its core. This is the elephant in every American living room, and the reason that between 35-40% of Americans don't vote. Our politicians can be easily bought and then sold to the highest bidder. In turn, these same politicians -- who are really only puppets -- have made it legal for corporations to buy the media, and now the media can also be easily bought and sold to the highest bidder. In our nation, truth itself has been made subject to a free trade agreement. When we fought the American Revolution, we fought to liberate ourselves from a monarchy imposing unjust burdens upon us. We must now fight an organized, nonviolent Second American Revolution against the corporate oligarchy in control of our government and society. We must replace our appointed corporate puppets with real elected political leaders.

This is the cause that all Americans should be fighting for, and especially American people of faith -- we should not be fighting over which corporate puppets we're going to elect this year.

Thursday, February 23, 2006

The Flu, Redux

I mentioned a couple of days ago that I had the flu and that I would probably be blogging more as a result, since I didn't have much else to do. What I wasn't anticipating was that I would feel so bad that I wouldn't even feel like blogging -- but that's exactly what happened. So that's where I've been for the past couple of days. There will likely be light blogging until I'm feeling better, and no Lisping Lector this weekend.

Wednesday, February 22, 2006

Life and Health Exceptions

Michelle Strausbaugh (Behind the Surface), one of my fellow contributing editors at Sollicitudo Rei Socialis, disagrees with my position on the Partial Birth Abortion Ban Act and its constitutionality. I have the utmost respect for Michelle and her opinions, and I'm fine with the fact that we disagree over some issues; I doubt any two people agree over every issue, and I have always hoped for a diversity of liberal and moderate opinion to be found in the pages of Sollicitudo Rei Socialis. Michelle pointed me to a blog post written by Rob (UnSpace) to help explain why she disagrees with me, and I would like to respond to this post.

Before I begin what will likely be one of my lengthier posts (consider yourselves warned), I want to restate my position on Roe v. Wade and abortion in general. I believe that abortion is objectively immoral; that is, that there is never a case in which abortion can be morally justified, regardless of the circumstances involved. I believe that Roe was wrongly decided and that there can never be any legal justification for a violation of the right to life, which is the most fundamental human right from which all other human rights are derived. Nevertheless, I value the health and lives of women enough to believe that overturning Roe, even though it was wrongly decided, would constitute a serious risk to a significant number of pregnant women who would seek illegal and unsafe underground abortions.

So while I have no respect for Roe v. Wade and believe that the choice to have an abortion is always immoral, I do not advocate for the overturning of Roe at this time. I believe instead that we should work to reduce and eventually eliminate the economic and social pressures which lead women to seek abortion, working to create a culture of life in which all human life is welcomed and respected.

This puts me outside of both the pro-life and pro-choice camps, although for the record I do consider myself pro-life. I'm fine with the fact that I do not belong to either of these movements, and I think it does lend some credibility to what I have to say since it is evident that I am not approaching this from a position of ideological loyalty. My opinion is nuanced and I like to think I keep an open mind, listening to what both sides have to say and offering my own opinions only after careful consideration.

It is from this non-ideological perspective that I hope to approach this issue.

The most fundamental problem with Rob's post is that it is based upon a factual error. Rob states at the very beginning of his post that the problem with the Partial Birth Abortion Ban Act is that "it contained no exception if the life or health of the mother required it" (emphasis mine). In fact, however, Section 3a of the act explicitly states that the ban on partial birth abortion "does not apply" if it is "necessary to save the life of a mother whose life is endangered by a physical disorder, physical illness, or physical injury, including a life-endangering physical condition caused by or arising from the pregnancy itself." Clearly, the Partial Birth Abortion Ban Act does contain an exception for the life of the mother -- Rob is simply in error here.

This critical error undermines much of the rest of Rob's post, which is based primarily upon what the Partial Birth Abortion Ban Act would mean without an exception for the life of the mother. Rob does point out that there are risks to both the life and health of the mother in every pregnancy, but these everyday risks cannot possibly constitute sufficient reason to permit a partial birth abortion. If these everyday risks were to become more verifiably serious in the third trimester and if they were to constitute a serious threat to the mother's life, the Partial Birth Abortion Ban Act would allow a partial birth abortion. It is also important to point out that partial birth abortion itself carries with it a number of risks to the mother, as Rob, to his credit, has pointed out.

What about the health of the mother? Why didn't Congress include an exception for the health of the mother? After nine years of investigation, Congress has determined that it is unnecessary to include an exception for the health of the mother. By his own admission, all of the health risks that Rob brings up in his post, including the frequently mentioned mental health risks, can be addressed well before the third trimester and with other abortion procedures. Any serious health risk that would arise in the third trimester would likely also be a threat to the mother's life, so that the ban would not be applicable. This does beg the question: If partial birth abortion would never be necessary for the health of the mother, why not just include an exception for the mother's health anyway and appease the federal courts?

The reason is that pro-choice advocates and doctors frankly cannot be trusted. There is a very real probability that a broad health exception would be abused, allowing doctors to perform partial birth abortions for virtually any reason as long as they can cite some vague health reason, including vague appeals to mental and emotional health. A broad health exception would undermine the authority of Congress to govern, and the continued insistence upon this requirement by the courts would upset the balance of power between the judicial and legislative branches of government. The courts can interpret the Constitution, but they cannot so severely limit the Congress that the legislative branch's power to make law is effectively crippled -- and that is exactly what a broad health exception has done and would continue to do. It is imperative that such a broad exception be left out of this ban.

There are two other, more specific problems with Rob's post:

  • Rob mentions that partial birth abortion is the preferred method for dealing with a child who dies late in utero, and that the application of the Partial Birth Abortion Ban Act may prohibit such uses of partial birth abortion. This is not the case. The act makes clear that the ban only applies when a "physician . . . knowingly performs a partial-birth abortion and thereby kills a human fetus" (emphasis mine). Later in the act, it is again made clear that the fetus must be "a living fetus."


  • Rob also mentions the possibility that "a mother, grieving over the loss of her child" might have to face prosecution. Again, this is not the case. The act only applies criminal penalties to doctors, and explicitly states that "a woman upon whom a partial-birth abortion is performed may not be prosecuted".


Finally, Rob made a comment in his post that I can't let go:

Some Catholics have even argued that because sex carries the taint of sin with it, and because the mother chose to have sex, the mother should be willing to die rather than be a participant in the death of an innocent -- even if in dying the child will also die.


I would love to be introduced to these Catholics. If they truly exist, and I apologize for having trouble believing that they do, they are no doubt products of an era in the Church when the faithful were improperly catechized, because what is described in Rob's post is not Catholic teaching by any stretch of the imagination.

Catholic teaching regards all human activity since the original sin as having the taint of that original sin and the potential for more sin, and sexuality is certainly not exempted. But there is no special taint that comes with sex that would require a woman to give up her life, and such an idea has no basis in Catholic teaching. In fact, according to the principle of double effect, if the unintended loss of a child's life is necessary to save the life of the mother, then saving the life of the mother is morally licit even if it would result in the unintended loss of the child's life.

Rob may be referring here to St. Gianna Beretta Molla, canonized in 2004, who opted for risky surgery to remove a uterine fibroid (a benign tumor on the uterus) rather than opting for the low risk hysterectomy which would have saved her life but would have cost the life of her child. St. Gianna died as a result of the surgery, but her child did live. It is important to point out that even though St. Gianna's self-sacrifice is rightly considered a heroic virtue, she was not bound by Catholic teaching to choose the risky surgery over the low risk hysterectomy; she could have morally chosen the hysterectomy, and by all accounts she knew that she could have made this choice. Furthermore, St. Gianna was a doctor. She was fully aware of the risks involved in the surgery, and chose to take the risk anyway.

Far from making an ignorant choice based upon a misunderstanding of Catholic teaching, St. Gianna went above and beyond the moral requirements and entered into the same love lived by the Lord Jesus, love which is totally self-giving and does not count the cost. Because she so selflessly gave herself that her child might live, the Church believes that she now lives in the eternal love of he who gave himself that all of the Father's children might live. That is why St. Gianna was canonized. The beauty of St. Gianna's love is that it was freely chosen; it was not imposed upon her by the Church.

In any event, now that I have clarified Catholic teaching on the principle of double effect, I would respectfully ask Rob to amend his post to reflect a more balanced approach to what the Catholic Church teaches and what Catholics believe.

I think what Rob's post and my response illustrate is the importance of knowing and sticking to the facts when it comes to issues as controversial as abortion. Although I am not familiar with UnSpace, there is no doubt in my mind that Rob is a very intelligent individual and that he is striving to live an upright life committed to social justice. I don't hold the errors I've cited against him, and I hope that my pointing them out doesn't become a source of conflict between us. With all of the ideological posturing going on between the pro-life and pro-choice movements, it's easy to pick up on misinformation dressed up to look like fact. Goodness knows I've picked up plenty of misinformation myself and believed that it was factual. The important thing is being open to further discussion and correction; I'm confident that Rob will be open-minded enough for that, and I hope that I will be as well.

To conclude, all of my readers know how loathe I am to support any Republican-led initiative. I see alterior motives in virtually everything the Republican Party does, and the Partial Birth Abortion Ban Act is no exception. I know that Republicans hoped and continue to hope to use abortion and the controversial issues surrounding it to divide and confuse the electorate, and I have trouble believing that most Republican politicians are very concerned about respecting the dignity of human life given their abominable record with helping the most poor and vulnerable among us. That doesn't change my conviction that a ban on partial birth abortion is not only reasonable but morally imperative, that this ban is reasonable and meets the requirements of the Constitution and Roe v. Wade, and that this ban should be upheld as constitutional. While I am reluctant to join with Republicans on any matter, my conscience does not allow me to move in any other direction when it comes to this issue.

Tuesday, February 21, 2006

Partial Birth Abortion

The Supreme Court today agreed to hear Gonzales v. Carhart, a case on the constitutionality of the Partial Birth Abortion Ban Act passed by the 108th Congress in 2003. Three lower courts have ruled that the ban is unconstitutional because it does not include an exception for the health of the mother, even though nine years of congressional investigations have revealed that partial birth abortion is never necessary for the health of the mother.

It's possible (perhaps even likely) that the Supreme Court will overrule the lower courts and uphold the Partial Birth Abortion Ban Act. The last Supreme Court decision on partial birth abortion struck down a Nebraska state ban in Stenberg v. Carhart -- Justice Sandra Day O'Connor was the deciding vote in that 5-4 decision, and it's likely that her successor, Justice Samuel Alito, will swing the court in favor of the dissent which held that Nebraska's ban on partial birth abortion was constitutional. Of course, this is also dependent upon Chief Justice Roberts sticking with the dissenting opinion of the late Chief Justice William Rehnquist.

Planned Parenthood has responded to the Supreme Court's decision to hear Gonzales v. Carhart, referring to the decision as "a dangerous act of hostility aimed squarely at women's health and safety." Cecile Richards, president of Planned Parenthood, added references to "judges far outside the mainstream" and "anti-choice politicians" for safe measure -- even though most Americans oppose partial birth abortion. Unfortunately, Ms. Richards did not address the argument involved in Gonzales v. Carhart, that Congress has already determined that partial birth abortion is never necessary for the health of the mother and that a provision for the health of the mother would therefore be superfluous. Maybe far-left rhetoric will win the battle for partial birth abortion in the court of public opinion and maybe it won't, but I doubt that it will carry much weight with any serious jurist concerned about upholding the law rather than appeasing Planned Parenthood.

The fact of the matter is this: Almost a decade of congressional investigation has determined that partial birth abortion is never necessary to preserve the health of the mother, meaning that partial birth abortion is an unnecessary and barbaric abortion procedure which actually takes the lives of viable babies who could be brought to term and live. We cannot allow such a grievous and indefensible violation of the most important and fundamental human right, the right to life, to be protected by our nation's highest law and those responsible for interpreting it. A federal ban on partial birth abortion is long overdue, and it is time for the Supreme Court to uphold it and stop abusing the Constitution to protect the most serious abuse of human rights that our nation is currently engaging in. History will look back on Gonzales v. Carhart and see either a ruling which upholds the dignity of the human person like Brown v. Board of Education, or a ruling which denies the dignity of the human person like Dred Scott v. Sandford. It will be up to the justices what kind of history they're going to make.

In the meantime, while it is true that the Partial Birth Abortion Ban Act would put an end to a brutal abortion procedure, it is also important to point out that it would not prevent a single late term abortion. There are three other late term abortion procedures, all of which are more painful for the child and all of which are more painful and dangerous for the mother. If the Supreme Court upholds the constitutionality of the Partial Birth Abortion Ban Act, Congress cannot be satisfied -- it's time for a ban on all late term abortion procedures, all of which are flagrant violations of human rights and none of which are necessary to preserve the health of women. In the meantime, pro-life Catholics must work for both social justice and charitable endeavors which would reduce and eventually eliminate the factors which lead women to seek abortion so that we can truly create a culture of life in which all human life is welcomed and respected.

Adventures in Blogging

I'm honored to announce that the Christian Alliance for Progress has invited me to be one of their full time bloggers; this will make me the first Catholic and the first gay man asked to frequently contribute to the Alliance's blog. My assigned day of the week will be Tuesday, and I'll be starting next Tuesday. I can't express how humbled I am to join the Alliance's contributing bloggers -- many of whom I've looked to as examples of how progressive Christian bloggers should interact with the Church and the world.

I'll be sure to post a link to my first post next Tuesday.

Woo Hoo, the Flu

I'm unhappy to report that I've caught the flu. The up side for my readers is that I'll likely be blogging more this week, since that's about all I'll have to do with my free time. I try to look on the bright side.

Monday, February 20, 2006

Episcopal Nominees for California

Karen (Kinesis) reports that the Episcopal Diocese of California has selected its nominees for the next diocesan bishop. Their resumes are available here. It turns out that one of the nominees is a gay man (Very Rev. Robert Taylor) and another is a lesbian woman (Rev. Bonnie Perry). Integrity USA has released a statement (it's in PDF format), and there is also a non-PDF version of the statement available at Orthony.

GLBT issues aside, it seems to me based upon their qualifications and past experience that either Rev. Jane Gould or Rev. Robert Taylor would be the best fit for California. Then again, I'm not Episcopalian nor do I live in California -- and I've never been one to tell other Churches how they should do things.

It almost goes without saying that the nomination of a gay man and a lesbian is causing an uproar, and there are already charges that the Episcopal Diocese of California has abandoned the Windsor Report. Right, because Anglican conservatives have done such a good job of respecting the Windsor Report. Sure. And how does one abandon a non-binding set of recommendations from a non-authoritative ecclesiastical commission, anyway?

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