Posted on 07/22/2004 5:16:55 PM PDT by madprof98
July 22, 2004 Sen. John Kerry sat down for a wide-ranging interview with ABC News anchor Peter Jennings in Detroit today.
The presumptive Democratic presidential candidate discussed his views on abortion, sex and violence in the entertainment industry, and his upcoming acceptance speech at Democratic National Convention. The following are excerpts from the interview.
Peter Jennings: You told an Iowa newspaper recently that life begins at conception. What makes you think that?
Sen. Kerry: My personal belief about what happens in the fertilization process is a human being is first formed and created, and that's when life begins. Something begins to happen. There's a transformation. There's an evolution. Within weeks, you look and see the development of it, but that's not a person yet, and it's certainly not what somebody, in my judgment, ought to have the government of the United States intervening in.
Roe v. Wade has made it very clear what our standard is with respect to viability, what our standard is with respect to rights. I believe in the right to choose, not the government choosing, but an individual, and I defend that.
Jennings: Could you explain again to me what do you mean when you say "life begins at conception"?
Kerry: Well, that's what the Supreme Court has established is a test of viability as to whether or not you're permitted to terminate a pregnancy, and I support that. That is my test. And I, you know, you have all kinds of different evolutions of life, as we know, and very different beliefs about birth, the process of the development of a fetus. That's the standard that's been established in Roe v. Wade. And I adhere to that standard.
Jennings: If you believe that life begins at conception, is even a first-trimester abortion not murder?
Kerry: No, because it's not the form of life that takes personhood in the terms that we have judged it to be in the past. It's the beginning of life. Does life begin? Yes, it begins.
Is it at the point where I would say that you apply those penalties? The answer is, no, and I believe in choice. I believe in the right to choose, and the government should not involve itself in that choice, beyond where it has in the context of Roe v. Wade.
Jennings: Can you imagine yourself ever campaigning against abortion?
Kerry: Well, I don't think let me tell you very clearly that being pro-choice is not pro-abortion. And I have very strong feelings that we should talk about abortion in a very realistic way in this country. It is a very complicated, incredibly important moral issue that people have to face, also. And if you talk to any woman, as I have, who has faced that choice or who's been raped or who's suffered incest or who's faced that kind of choice, there are huge moral implications.
I think leadership needs to honor that, those moral implications, appropriately, and I think we need to adhere to the standard that Bill Clinton, in fact, so adeptly framed, that abortion should be rare, but legal and safe. And that's the standard that I apply. But I think we should talk more about alternatives to abortion.
Jennings: If I were really skeptical, Senator, I would say that when you use the phrase "life begins at conception," you're attempting to speak to those people for whom that is a slogan, making them totally opposed to abortion.
Kerry: Not in the least. It's a belief that is a belief of mine. It's consistent with everything I've always said over 35 years of public life. It is not a new statement, but it is consistent with my personal belief system about who chooses and what happens. I do believe we should talk about alternatives to abortion. I think we should talk about adoption. I think we should talk about, I think it is responsible to talk about abstinence, but I also believe you should talk about proper education of people sex education.
You need to have proper knowledge about use of condoms to avoid AIDS. You need to be smart about these things. So what we need to do is have an honest dialogue and not succumb to the cynicism that sort of reduces these things to simplicity. It's not simple. It's a very complicated, highly emotional, very searing decision. I don't want the government making that decision for people, and that is a bedrock belief. But it doesn't change what I believe about how life goes on.
(Excerpt) Read more at abcnews.go.com ...
BTW .. I hear John Stoffle (sp?) is suppose to do a segment/show/whatever about Edwards and Lawyers .. I can't remember when it will be airing though
Excuse me, but what else would it be then?! DUH!
Will someone nominate this guy for that award Rumsfeld recently won?
Yeah, something...could it be--gasp--introductory biology??? Personal belief, my butt. The creation of unique human DNA--aka "a baby"--doesn't happen just because le Querrie has a belief.
EXACTLY!!
It boggles my mind the way Kerry speaks
It's hard to tell if he coming or going .. or both
Thanks!
You're welcome. Just wait until I send this to my liberal catholic pro-life sister-in-law. She's slowly changing though. This should do the trick.
I lived in Massachusetts for a year and a half, and I know the people there are decent and not stupid. Yet, I am mystified that they chose this man to speak for them in the Senate.
Pretty much EVERYBODY is more honest than Kerry.
John Kerry is a one man tennis match
All Abbot and Costello routines make more sense than Kerry!!
Jennings is a lightweight. Amazing how such an annoying fellow with such a scarcity of neurons can rise to the heights he did. Ain't America grand?
I think Sean said "20/20" tomorrow night. What times does it come on do you know? Thanks.
He said they represented the true values of America..
or some such bovine shiite as that.
Jennings, when are you going to get your sorry, news corrupting carcass back to the foreign country you came from?
What's your "slogan" you very unfortunate person?
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