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The Pennsylvania Treason (Arlen Specter)
© 2004 WorldNetDaily.com ^ | Posted: May 1, 2004 | By Mark Crutcher

Posted on 11/06/2004 8:45:55 PM PST by vannrox

1:00 a.m. Eastern



I have often asserted that, for the pro-life movement, the only practical distinction between the Democrat and Republican parties is that one is an enemy who will stab us in the chest and the other is a friend who will stab us in the back.

Tuesday's Republican primary in Pennsylvania proved my point. Hard-core abortion enthusiast Republican Arlen Specter was being challenged by pro-lifer Pat Toomey for the U.S. Senate. As the incumbent, Specter was predicted to win easily. But as Election Day approached, the polls clearly showed that Toomey was closing in fast and had a legitimate shot to pull off an upset.

That's when the GOP's power brokers pulled out the heavy guns. President George W. Bush personally rushed to Pennsylvania and implored Republicans to get behind the candidacy of ... Arlen Specter. Equally amazing, Pennsylvania's other senator, Rick Santorum, also chose to walk away from his long-espoused pro-life principles. He joined Bush on the campaign trail and urged voters to defeat the pro-life challenger.

The fact that Specter's eventual margin of victory was so razor-thin made one thing absolutely undeniable. Without the influence and treachery of Bush and Santorum, we would have seen a raging pro-abort who has always been viciously hostile toward anything that the pro-life movement does replaced with a pro-lifer. It is laughable to suggest that the combined efforts of a Republican president and a Republican senator can't influence even 2 percent of the votes in a Republican primary. Given that, it is simply a fact that Bush and Santorum cost the pro-life movement this election.

One of the things that made this particular election so crucial for the pro-life movement is that, if re-elected, Specter's seniority will give him the chairmanship of the Senate Judiciary Committee. Pro-lifers often say that we must support the Republicans and George Bush because of Supreme Court appointments. However, that is now a dead issue given that no pro-life nominee to the Supreme Court is going to get past Specter.

If George Bush didn't know this when he used his influence to get Specter re-elected, then he really is as stupid as the Democrats say he is.

But of course, Bush is not stupid. He knew that by insuring Specter's victory he was ending any chance of putting a pro-lifer on the Supreme Court. That may not have been his goal; it was simply the price he was willing to pay to support an incumbent Republican.

Moreover, Specter's term is six years, which means that even if Bush wins in November, Specter will be in place for Bush's entire second term and beyond. With that reality in place, the practical difference between who John Kerry might get confirmed to the Supreme Court and who Bush might get confirmed becomes zero.

Bush and Santorum defenders will claim that if Toomey had won he might turn around and lose in the general election and, thereby, turn control of the Senate over to the Democrats.

That's garbage. First, upon what do these people base the assumption that Toomey could somehow beat the senior incumbent United States senator in his state, but then not be able to beat a non-incumbent Democrat? If their claim is that Toomey's advocacy for the right-to-life makes him unelectable in a Pennsylvania general election, how do they explain Santorum's election?

Second, from a pro-life perspective, who cares if the Democrats win if the alternative is a pro-abortion Republican? Are we supposed to believe that the unborn are better off with their fate is in the hands of pro-abortion Republicans than pro-abortion Democrats?

Third, what happened to principle? Regardless of political considerations, if Bush and Santorum were more than just rhetorically committed to the pro-life cause they would have never come to the aid of a pro-abortion candidate who was about to lose to a pro-life one. In fact, when they saw that Toomey actually had a chance, their response should have been to do what they could to secure the victory not work against it.

While we're on the subject of principle, there are going to be those who try to dismiss what these two did by regurgitating that old chin drivel about abortion being just one issue, and the GOP has to look at "other issues" as well. It's the same old worn-out "no litmus test" nonsense that we hear ad nauseam.

I'm always curious about this particular argument. I wonder whether the people who make it are willing to apply it across the board, or if it's just a convenient way to dodge the abortion issue. For example, if it were discovered that Specter was secretly a member of the Ku Klux Klan, would that be a litmus test? Would Bush and Santorum still campaign for him saying that they disagreed with him on this one issue but that they have to look at all these "other issues" as well?

I think not, and that points out the abysmal dishonesty of what they did in Pennsylvania. If a Republican candidate was a Klansman who openly espoused racism, neither of these guys would be caught in the same county with him. You can also bet that this Klansman's position on "other issues" would never even come up.

So despite all their beautiful rhetoric about the humanity of the unborn child, the fact that they will also work to elect politicians who say unborn children should be legally butchered by the millions speaks much louder. Their message is that when the subject is racism nothing else matters, but when the subject is baby killing there are "other issues" to consider. If you believe those are the actions of people who are truly committed to the pro-life cause, then you are in desperate need of a reality check.

In the final analysis, the Bush/Santorum betrayal was obviously the result of party politics. These guys sold the unborn down the river for political reasons, and they felt comfortable doing so primarily because the pro-life movement has always let them get away with it. For 30 years we have shown the Republican Party that whatever they do we'll stick with them, and as long as we keep sending that message we are fools to think they will ever change.

That is the bottom line, and while the American pro-life establishment is so enamored with having a seat at the Republican table that they will never say this, I will:

Through their participation in The Pennsylvania Treason, the Republican Party, George Bush and Rick Santorum have lost the right to ever again ask for the support of pro-lifers.

By the way, in a speech he gave to a Catholic prayer breakfast less than a week after the election, Rick Santorum told the audience that they should "... get closer to God to hear what He wants done ... God speaks in whispers and you will not know His will unless you are close (to Him). He is calling, let me assure you, He is calling."

Apparently, Santorum believes that God called him to work for baby killers.

I'm skeptical.

Mark Crutcher is president of Life Dynamics Incorporated of Denton, Texas.


TOPICS: Activism/Chapters; Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Editorial; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Government; Philosophy; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2004; arlin; bork; bush; chair; clinton; democrat; dnc; election; freedom; liberal; liberty; rnc; socialist; spector
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To: vannrox

spRectum must not ascend to Judiciary Chair BTTT!


21 posted on 11/07/2004 10:15:26 AM PST by ApesForEvolution (Tag Line Conservationist Week)
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To: metalurgist

RINO apologist on board...


22 posted on 11/07/2004 10:16:13 AM PST by ApesForEvolution (Tag Line Conservationist Week)
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To: VaBthang4

I'm glad to see that you admit you are Rove and Bush's minion...


23 posted on 11/07/2004 10:17:21 AM PST by ApesForEvolution (Tag Line Conservationist Week)
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To: vannrox

Don't blame me, I volunteered for Toomey.


24 posted on 11/07/2004 10:18:10 AM PST by NeoCaveman (John Edwards, hair today, gone tomorrow (/gloat))
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To: ApesForEvolution

Go away LP wannabe.

5


25 posted on 11/07/2004 10:25:04 AM PST by VaBthang4 ("He Who Watches Over Israel Will Neither Slumber Nor Sleep")
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To: Siobhan
Here is something else to consider. In the 1992 Supreme Court case Planned Parenthood v. Casey, the Supreme Court had an opportunity to overturn Roe v. Wade. Chief Justice William Rehnquist and Associate Justices Byron White, Anthony Scalia, and Clarence Thomas voted to do so.

Those who voted to uphold Roe v. Wade included Associate Justices John Paul Stevens, Sandra Day O’Connor, David Souter, and Harry Blackmun. It was Associate Justice Anthony Kennedy who would cast the deciding vote in the case. Kennedy was initially going to vote to overturn Roe v. Wade but ultimately caved in to pressure from pro-abortion groups and voted to uphold it.

Kennedy should never have been a judge in the case. He was appointed to the Supreme Court only after the man nominated before him, Judge Douglas Ginsburg, was voted down by the Senate after admitting he had smoked marijuana in the past. And Ginsburg was only nominated because the man nominated before him was none other than Robert Bork, whose fate we already know. If not for Arlen Specter, it would have been Bork, not Kennedy, casting that deciding vote.

Thanks to Arlen Specter, one golden opportunity to overturn the atrocity that is Roe v. Wade has already been squandered. Can we really afford to put him in a position to do it again?

Remember: those who do not learn from the past are doomed to repeat it.

With 45 million babies dead and counting, perhaps it is time we informed Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist of the folly of giving Specter the power to replace Tom Daschle as obstructionist-in-chief.

26 posted on 11/07/2004 1:12:55 PM PST by St. Johann Tetzel
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To: St. Johann Tetzel

BTTT


27 posted on 11/07/2004 1:15:32 PM PST by Siobhan (Pray without ceasing.)
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To: dubyaismypresident; narses; St. Johann Tetzel; NYer; Salvation

A good time though to tell Sen. Santorum that there will be hell to pay from all that capital the President has earned if pro-Life voters are slapped in the face and repaid with Specter as Judiciary Chair.


28 posted on 11/07/2004 1:19:02 PM PST by Siobhan (Pray without ceasing.)
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To: topher

Specter resigns from Judiciary because of health (and he may have to do that at the age of 74 with all the stress this is causing

The Specter that I have observed does not experience stress: he gives stress! And the PA people take him every time he is offered.


29 posted on 11/07/2004 3:04:56 PM PST by Theodore R.
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To: VaBthang4

Bork...so YOU are the stealth-abortion FReeper, masked as a Conservative GOPer?


30 posted on 11/07/2004 3:20:54 PM PST by ApesForEvolution (Tag Line Conservationist Week)
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To: ApesForEvolution
~grin~


31 posted on 11/07/2004 3:59:58 PM PST by VaBthang4 ("He Who Watches Over Israel Will Neither Slumber Nor Sleep")
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To: vannrox

WE need to take care of this and NOW.

Senator Frist: 202.224.3135, 202.224.3344


32 posted on 11/07/2004 9:44:49 PM PST by Libertina (We praise You Lord, You have granted America a Christian leader!)
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To: vannrox

Specter is very creepy. It would seem some weird deviancy
explains his discomfort with Christians and pro-life conservatives. It's time to Bork Specter.


33 posted on 11/08/2004 9:07:56 AM PST by HowlinglyMind-BendingAbsurdity
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To: vannrox
Thanks for posting this.

These are good reasons to support the Constitution Party in their effort to field committed pro-life candidates.

34 posted on 11/10/2004 7:04:24 AM PST by The_Eaglet (Conservative chat on IRC: http://searchirc.com/search.php?F=exact&T=chan&N=33&I=conservative)
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