some other dude
New member
Wrong. But I'm just repeating myself.
Would an "anti-abort" vote for a "pro-abort"?
Wrong. But I'm just repeating myself.
Sorry for the delay. I got sidetracked going through Christmas decorations.
My point is this: if you voted for McCain, then in a sense, you voted for what you call a "pro abort", since he is in favor of allowing some abortions. I always get the impression that you are a "no exceptions" kinda guy. Yet if someone voted for Obama, who supports a woman's right to choose, you don't think it is the same thing at all. If you are against abortion, you are against ALL abortions - if not, then you are really a pro choice person. At least in my opinion. I voted third party, since I didn't like either of the big party choices.
As for Sarah Palin...she scares me. I really don't believe she is very smart, or very well informed
Would an "anti-abort" vote for a "pro-abort"?
Possibly.
Arthur Brain: "lets give a big round of applause to the nazis who wiped out so many of the 'scourge' in concentration camps"
Arthur Brain again: "The nazis were right! Jews are absolute evil!"
..
The problem is in the way Sod sets it out. He assumes a connection between the President and the issue that determines on point. There's no such animal. The Court appointments won't end Roe. The President won't either. And any bill the President means to pass relating to it must be sustained by Congress, where objection would overwhelm it.Possibly.
Can you understand why their motivations for doing so might be suspect?
The problem is in the way Sod sets it out. He assumes a connection between the President and the issue that determines on point. There's no such animal. The Court appointments won't end Roe. The President won't either. And any bill the President means to pass relating to it must be sustained by Congress, where objection would overwhelm it.
I've also been clear as to how the practice must and, to my mind, can only be ended.
Now there are/were a number of issues the President could and does determine and this one promised to apply himself to those in ways I agreed with more strongly than his challenger...he mostly failed to honor those promises, but that was the reason for my support, along with a serious reservation concerning Palin's place as second in command given the toll that office takes on the men who step into it.
Sod knows all of this, but he ignores it because it doesn't allow him to do what he really means to do, which is to vent that irrational hostility of his that has nothing, nothing to do with this issue at hand. Both it and the tactic it sponsored in him existed far in advance of this discussion and evidenced itself when the only real foundation for it was that I made fun of him and his practice as a thread-baiter.
:e4e:
But I think that TH has sufficiently explained himself.
So now you know what he thinks of anyone who doesn't agree with him. lain:Indeed he has. In a very "clever" way, designed to sway those who aren't very discerning.
That's because it is reasonable and reasoned.For instance: "He assumes a connection between the President and the issue that determines on point. There's no such animal. "
Accepted on face value, it seems reasonable.
None of that is legalese. :nono: Not a single term of art. And I've never said I try to pound everyone who disagrees with me to sand.Take it apart, and, like much of the legalese Town uses to "pound into sand" those with whom he disagrees, there's no foundation.
Hence, determines on point. The President won't settle the issue. His ideas on it aren't hidden, any more than my disagreement with them is.Does the President have a bully pulpit on issues like this? Of course.
Steer? Who determines, who pays and approves? Like I said in my answer.Does the President have the ability to steer legislation, on stem cell research, on Planned Parenthood funding, on parental notification? Of course.
The Court will not reverse the entrenched precedent of Roe. And Roe was set out by a Court dominated by Republican appointments.Does the President have the ability to appoint Supreme Court Justices who will influence this debate for years to come? Of course.
Which I'd oppose and which will, again, never get through Congress.Meanwhile, we have Obama pushing legislation to include free abortions in his health care plan.
Propose? Gee, that's really something. But he'd have stamped a bill that allowed for abortion when and where he approves of it. The distinction between the two men on that point is in degree. Thankfully, neither control the issue or can/will settle it.McCain probably wouldn't have done that.
Right is right, and wrong is wrong. If abortion is a sin, it is always a sin - and whomever supports it (a little or a lot) is equally sinful. So no matter which of the two candidates you support, both are equally sinful in the eyes of God. By you own logic, in supporting McCain, you are a "pro abort". :juggle:Consider it like this. In 2008 you had a choice between two candidates who had a realistic chance to win the presidency.
Imagine the deaths of aborted babies to be a stream of blood flowing into an empty swimming pool.
One candidate wants to slow that stream to a trickle.
The other candidate is determined to overflow the pool.
The candidates who want to turn that flow off entirely don't have a chance.
Do you vote for the guy who wants to slow the stream, or do you vote for the guy who wants to overflow the pool?
You didn't ask what I thought of Biden, only Palin. But remember, I said I was not happy with either party's candidates, and had voted third party. I think Joe Biden is a bumbling fool. Probably a nice man, but lacking any brakes between his brain and his mouth.The liberal media has done its job.
Interesting that you didn't have the same concerns about Joe Biden.
Arthur Brain: "lets give a big round of applause to the nazis who wiped out so many of the 'scourge' in concentration camps"
Arthur Brain again: "The nazis were right! Jews are absolute evil!"
About me. There's a novelty.kmo, my response was to you.
If you tried it, argument, that would be novel.You seem reasonable. There's no possible way I can convince our slippery little friend here of even admitting the possibility that he might be wrong.
Unlike you, who seem dead set on demonstrating your error at every turn?He has too much personal investment in always being right.
Right is right, and wrong is wrong. If abortion is a sin, it is always a sin - and whomever supports it (a little or a lot) is equally sinful. So no matter which of the two candidates you support, both are equally sinful in the eyes of God. By you own logic, in supporting McCain, you are a "pro abort". :juggle:
Three and a half million children murdered in the three years that Obama's been President.
How many fewer would it take to convince you that McCain would have been a better choice?
One child?
Ten children?
A million?
A president cannot outlaw abortion with the wave of hs hand. If McCain had been elected president, the odds are that abortion would still be legal in the US.Three and a half million children murdered in the three years that Obama's been President.
How many fewer would it take to convince you that McCain would have been a better choice?
One child?
Ten children?
A million?
A president cannot outlaw abortion with the wave of hs hand.