Justin (Wiccan)
New member
Turbo said:Have you met the God of the Bible, the Lord Jesus Christ?
Briefly speaking--yes. If you like I can post my "testimony" here, but it's quite long.
Turbo said:Have you met the God of the Bible, the Lord Jesus Christ?
monochrome said:Like all other tings, if abortion were illegalized, it would simply open another avenue for black market enterprise. Back-alley abortion would once again become a problem, as women who truely believe that what they do is not wrong go off to poor surgery in order to protect their "rights".
jhodgeiii said:I really have to scoff at those foolish enough to believe that change can only come through "one heart at a time" and not legislatively. Very disturbing. Don't be so caught up in your apathy that you become ignorant.
Think hard and heavy about this:
If theft were not illegal, do you not think that theft would be more prevalent in our society? Surely there would be best-selling books published on the best way to rob from your neighbor! But Justin would flippantly say to an anti-theft activist "Theft will never be eliminated by writing laws against it: it will only be eliminated by changing the hearts of the people, one heart at a time."
Seeing how quick significant portions of our population would defraud others for their own gain (and sometimes sport), who here would trust that logic? All I did was interchange one moral issue with another--abortion with theft.
Furthermore, it's quite evident that people with the short-sighted logic of Justin and others with this "change hearts and not law" crap, if they're consistent with their own logic, would have opposed the Civil Rights Acts based on the fact that people will still discriminate based on color. Duh! Well tell me, Justin: did we need the Civil Rights Acts or should we have just waited for white people's hearts to change in order to treat us with equal respect?
Use your head. We're in the real world here. Your logic stinks or you're in a different world. If something is wrong and harms another innocent person, it MUST be counteracted with good law. PERIOD.
jhodgeiii said:Further regarding this change-hearts-not-the-law nonsense:
Clearly this is a statement by those who are content with the status quo. Turn the tables around where somehow their own civil rights are being violated and watch them change their philosophy. Thus, in the abortion debate, those who argue that we shouldn't change law, but "change hearts" are being very disingenuous. In their own hearts they know they are happy with the status quo, and thus, champion a cliche designed to make themselves appear reasonable.
Can Justin or anyone else who believes in the "change hearts" argument provide any case example of a nation "completely eliminating" a moral wrong by its own volition, that is, without a law enforcing such?
This will be a daunting challenge for you disingenuous folk.
granite1010 said:The problem with not changing hearts is that whatever laws you pass today will be overturned tomorrow.
Many "pro-life" supporters have also been supporters of captial punishment and preemptive warfare.
To the best information I have available, Bob never expected Dobson to change his politics, and still does not.
Rimi said:Justin (Wiccan) wrote:
To the best information I have available, Bob never expected Dobson to change his politics, and still does not.
Say you're right: does this mean you think Bob should only speak about the horrors of abortion when he's absolutely certain he'll change a heart?
theo_victis said:Lets do both, starting with the most important! Changing hearts! Isnt that one of the fundamental aspects of Christianity? Repenting?
Justin (Wiccan) said:Not necessarily. But I am honestly persuaded that his letter was not about arguing against abortion, but about gaining influence in the pro-life community at the expense of Dobson. You can call that influence by any number of names--political power, public recognition, the Dozens, "counting coup," or whatever--the purpose is not to stop abortion, but to gain power.
Poly believes I am wrong--well, I very well could be, and I have never claimed that I cannot be mistaken on this issue. But to the best of my knowledge, that's what Bob did.
Rimi said:Say you're right, why would gaining influence in the pro-life community be wrong no matter how he did it, since (where you clearly are wrong) Bob's completely for the sanctity of innocent life? Why should the tactic bother you?
Justin (Wiccan) said:Because I am persuaded that one cannot do an honest act by dishonest means. If my assesment of Bob's actions are accurate, then his actions were dishonest. One cannot lead a person to the truth by telling lies.
Rimi said:Ahhh, but now you say IF your assessment is wrong. IF. IF. You sounded so sure before.
Ought you not to have confirmed it first? (you could call his show to discuss and have him present to you his thoughts on the matter and why he did what he did)
Exactly, a sea change.granite1010 said:The problem with not changing hearts is that whatever laws you pass today will be overturned tomorrow. A fundamental sea change needs to take place to end abortion long term.
Why can't that argument be made? It seems reasonable to me to think that it was introduced because enough people had had a change of heart, and that having the law simply made it easier to accept it -- resulting in a faster change of hearts afterwards.jhodgeiii said:The real question I would like the "changing hearts" people to answer is this: given that the argument CANNOT be made that America's hearts had changed at the time of the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1965, how long were black people supposed to wait for law-enforced civil rights?
Well your assumption is wrong. Please do some research on this and educate yourself. The people did NOT drive this legislation. Even though many people deep down inside felt uneasy about the treatment of blacks, because they themselves were not the victims, a change to the status quo was hardly a priority for the average white household.skeptech said:It seems reasonable to me to think that it was introduced because enough people had had a change of heart
Rimi, if anything I am more persuaded that my assesment was accurate than when I first made the statements.
Do you not see that there would be a problem with that? If Bob was being dishonest, then he would certainly have no problem continuing the dishonesty. Yet if his letter was completely honest, I would receive the same response. Either way, it's a Catch 22.