Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Obama's Notre Dame speech

Actually said something I agreed with which is unusual, said about abortion "in some sense the two sides are fundamentally irreconciliable." This was clever on his part, it had the subtle effect of making Obama look like a kind of disinterested observer of the issue, above it all looking at the debate from the outside, a professorial air being intellectually open to both sides despite his 100% rating from NARAL. Of course they all say they want to reduce the ole abortion rate and it's such a heart-wrenching decision for the woman. Of the second point I personally know of stories where the parties involved were unusually casual about it all and as to the first your average pro-choicer opposes such modest measures as informed-consent legislation so really it's just more pro-forma statements from a liberal president. Despite Clinton's safe, legal and rare it's not really about Choice at all but Abortion and the right to get one freely and without judgement from parents or other parties and to be fully subsidized by the American taxpayer if need be. Pro-forma statements are important though, it shows you have a heart and have properly wrestled with the issue even though your own views just accidentally, ever so coincidentally coincide with those of Kate Michaelman.

4 comments:

  1. He had to sound all moderate about the issue, what with all the protests about his visit to Notre Dame, trying to have his cake and eat it, too.

    (I think my feelings towards moderation has been well documented here already..)

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  2. Let's say you didn't know any better about his brief legislative record on abortion you'd swear he were a moderate and might suspect he even leans pro-life. Well I never said he was dumb.

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  3. I think there is a lot people don't realize about the true Obama.

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  4. A side theory if you will would have it that Obama is finally seeing the radical nature of the pro-abortion agenda but somehow I doubt this. Another depressing chapter in American Catholicism.

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