My evidence comes from my fairly wide range of liberal friends, most all of whom are on the pro-choice side of the issue. Take it from me: in their lives, they are just as decent, caring, kind, responsible, and admirable as the good conservative and pro-life people I know. Likewise, their families -- the goodness of their marriages, how well raised their children are and how well they turn out - are as excellent an embodiment of good family values as can be found on the other side of the abortion issue.
These pro-choice people would be just as adamant about protecting an infant from harm as people on the pro-life side. And evidently, the fact that they make a different judgment on the status of what they regard as not-yet-human is not indicative of whether or not they are, in general, good people.
So I would like to ask pro-life activists to consider: if good people can come to different judgments about abortion, doesn't that imply something important about how we should regard each other, and that disagreement?
In the next installment, I will show why this is precisely the kind of issue that our founders sought - with the Constitution -- to prevent from becoming political battlegrounds.
Part II: Political Battles over Religious Differences is Not the American Way
In the first installment of this two-part series, addressed to pro-life activists, I tried to show that it is inappropriate, and damaging to our nation, for pro-life people to assume that those who disagree with them on the issue of abortion are people of bad morals. The evidence just doesn't justify that feeling.
In this installment, I will argue that this is the kind of issue that our founders wanted us to keep government out of.
Many pro-life activists base their positions on abortion on a variety of biblical texts that bear upon the issue indirectly. (Indirectly, because the Bible is mute on the issue of abortion itself.) Even if one were to grant that the Bible clearly supports the pro-life position -- and these texts do not seem nearly as clear and powerful as the biblical texts telling us to care for the needy and the vulnerable, which too many seem to take much less to heart -- it would still be a mistake to battle over this issue in the political arena, as the pro-life movement has been doing.
Our nation's founders were clear about our keeping government power out of our religious disagreements. These men were the heirs of a European history in which, not long before, Protestants and Catholics in Europe had killed each other for generations.
America's founders wanted to create a political system in which religious differences would not be allowed to cripple and damage the society, but could be set aside to enable citizens of diverse beliefs to work together to better their country.
The Constitution's guarantee of religious liberty, and its prohibition against the government to "establish" any religion, were not just for the sake of allowing individuals to be free. These were also key parts of the plans for creating a peaceful and successful society.
It's not the American way to use the coercive power of government to impose the religious judgments of one part of the citizenry on everyone else. Our founders knew that this was a recipe for division and strife and the disabling of the political process.
Sure enough, with Americans having shown themselves irreconcilably divided on the abortion question for some forty years, this issue has poisoned our political process. And in recent years, even while Americans shared the need for action to address the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression, many state legislatures instead inflamed our enduring division over the essentially religious issue of abortion.
It's not a matter of who is right. For more than two centuries, Americans have respected the right of other Americans to live according to religious beliefs they regard not only as wrong but as condemning them to hell for eternity.
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