Posted on 05/28/2005 7:55:15 PM PDT by CHARLITE
William Saletan of Slate, in a recent article called For the Benefit of Others, sees a contradiction in President Bushs promise to veto embryonic stem-cell research and his support of the death penalty. The logic goes like this: If the only justification for the death penalty is to save lives, as Bush has apparently stated many times, then why isnt embryonic stem-cell research justified by the same rule?
Or reverse that, as Saletan has done: How can Bush not support stem-cell research, which purportedly save lives, but turn right around and support the death penalty, which is claimed to have a similar effect?
Its hard to know which subject is in question here, the death penalty or stem-cell research. Mostly likely its both. One cant be sure about Saletans position on either from this one article, but most garden-variety liberals are against the former and for the latter. The reality is, it is easier to explain Bushs supposed hypocrisy than the following very real contradiction:
How do liberals oppose the immorality of the death penalty, but find it ethical to take innocent life via stem-cell research or its birth-mother, abortion? Lets address each issue one at a time:
The Death Penalty
The key word in all of this is innocent, a term that implies a justice that is inherent to mans existence, a justice that goes deeper than mere codification of the social contract. Regardless of the scripted, politically correct explanation that the White House must giveThe death penalty saves lives!this is only one of many answers, the chief being, It satisfies Justice. Secularists would be crying foul if Bush were to send out the real answer: The death penalty is right and just because God has not only permitted it, he has demanded it.
A secularist cannot deal with that remark because he cannot believe in Justice with a capital J, anymore than he can believe in God with a capital G. Yet mans need for this Justice is borne out every dayin our neighborhoods, in our streets, in our courts, for every situation by which people interact. As children we naturally find ourselves demanding that wrongs done be righted again; and our adulthood is entrenched in the ongoing battle for fairness and restitution. This isnt merely a generated effect of social order (indeed, it is not hard to make the case that our need for justice does society as much harm as it does good, as our out-of-control tort system will attest); it is an indication that we are born with Justice in us, and it must, must, must be satisfied, not only for the good of the individual, but for society at large.
It is true that one need not be a secularist to oppose the death penalty. It is the position of the Catholic church that all human life is sacredand many Protestants have bought into that ideabut this is in direct opposition to the words of Jesus Christ and St. Paul. Jesus, whose focus was the individual and the need for personal forgiveness, stated no objection to a governing body enacting the death penalty as an act of justice, noting, All who draw the sword will die by the sword. Pauls support of the death penalty is incontestable. In Romans 13 he extols the virtue of submitting to rulers (with a presupposition that they are good men, followers of God) and warns men to obey the law:
Rulers hold no terror for those who do right, but for those who do wrong. Do you want to be free from fear of the one in authority? Then do what is right and he will commend you. For he is Gods servant to do you good. But if you do wrong, be afraid, for he does not bear the sword for nothing. He is Gods servant, an agent of wrath to bring punishment on the wrongdoer.
In other words, to recommend the death penalty, as happens often by jury (a temporary representative of the ruler, in our case the law) and to preside over its allowance, as occurred often when George Bush was Governor of Texas, is to act in accordance with Gods will. To oppose it, is to refute Scripture.
Stem-Cell Research
I am not convinced that a human soul is created at the moment of conception. Scientists assure us that eggs are periodically seeded and get flushed out of the body, so there is room for doubt that each one is a human being. But, neither I nor scientist, nor pastor or priest, knows the truth on this issue, so it behooves us not to presume. All we can say is, at some point, whether at the very beginning or during gestation, that little person in the womb is endowed by his Creator with lifewhich means, specifically, he is given a soul.
Atheistic man today hardly believes in a soul. His faithlessness in this area is right in step with his denial of Gods existence, which annuls any notion that man has within him the spark of the divine. If one wants to understand the many large-scale crimes of mankindthe slave trade, for example, or the Holocaust, or Roe v. Wade, one need only recognize that behind them all is a profound discounting of the human soul. In this frame of mind, man can easily rationalize his actions. The Nazis justified human experimentation and extermination by assuring themselves that Jews were mere animals (Palestinians teach their children the same lesson). The abortionist who slices and dices a baby in the womb sleeps well at night by affirming his atheistic, materialistic creed that a fetus is merely a collection of cells. Thats the game: If a living human being can be rendered soulless, he is nothing more than a bug that may be crushed beneath our feet (which helps to explain how the abortion can kill moving life: movement in the insect world doesnt stop us from killing bugs either).
Liberals are more than willing to sacrifice a few embryos to harvest cells because they dont believe human embryos are sacred. Convenience, instant gratification, and the quest for perfect health trump all antiquated notions that an embryo is a human being. It is not really alive, they will tell you, at least not until it takes its first breath. This belief, which ignores all evidence to the contrary, is so well-established that if we discovered that crushed baby head might yield cures for cancer, liberals would be saying, Well, why not? Now abortions can do two good turns ...
Again, the word innocent is the key that makes thinking about the death penalty and stem-cell research an apples-and-oranges consideration. We fight wars today doing our level best to kill as many guilty people as possible without harming the innocent. We do what we can for the poor and downtrodden because we see them as innocent victims of a faulty system or of lifes cruel circumstances. We are incensed to the point of fury when an innocent child is raped and killed by a sex-fiend. Defending the innocentas comprehensively as possibleis an American mantra, spawning all kinds of social programs and new laws designed to protect people in all stages of life. Thus, it is logical and natural to oppose stem-cell research, because we must assume it involves the murder of the innocent.
This explains Bushs reasoning quite well: Saving of the innocent is the goal, not saving of human life itself. Justice prescribes protection for those who have committed no crimes, and it demands punishment of those who transgress. There is no contradiction here, except to an underdeveloped mind.
For the Benefit of Others: Bush's hypocrisy on stem cells and the death penalty, by William Saletan, Slate , May 25, 2005:
http://www.slate.com/id/2119512/
A. M. Siriano is the webmaster of http://www.amsiriano.com/.
BTTT
| ***ACTION ALERT*** | Saturday, May 28, 2005 |
Romney delivers on promise to veto stem cell bill
By Theo Emery, Associated Press Writer | May 27, 2005
BOSTON -- Gov. Mitt Romney vetoed a bill Friday that would expand embryonic stem cell research in Massachusetts, but the measure has more than enough support in the Legislature to override the governor's veto.
The House and Senate passed the bill with veto-proof margins, and both chambers were expected to vote next week to override the veto.
You must encourage your fellow parishoners (family, friends) to contact their legislators by calling the State House switchboard at 617-722-2000 or by e-mailing your state senator (click here)and state representative (click here), urging them to support the Governor's final veto before a vote (likely Tuesday, May 31st) and this legislation becomes law!
To find your elected officials:
www.wheredoivotema.com/bal/myelectioninfo.php
See: Timeline (including Roll Call Votes) -- What's Happened So Far
FORWARD THIS E-MAIL ON TO FAMILY AND FRIENDS IN MASSACHUSETTS!!!
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additional Resources:
Catholic Citizenship is a non-partisan organization which promotes public policy education and Catholic laity involvement in the political process. Catholic Citizenship is headed by former U.S. Ambassador to the Vatican, Raymond Flynn.
Ouch!
If you recall, the Democrat leadership tried their best to create a huge issue out of President Bush's efforts to save Terri Schiavo's LIFE by flying back to Washington to sign the bill which should have resulted in the reinsertion of her feeding and hydrating tubes!
The Democrats criticised this president for making the effort........claiming that he was interfering with the Schiavo case "for political gain"........like he "concocted the war in Iraq" (in Texas), "......for political gain..."
From what I understood, the last thing the Democrats wanted was for Terri to survive.
Char
bump
The Democrats didn't want Terri to survive because they don't believe in universal and objective morality.
Democrats and Liberals are offended by the notion of Bush or anyone else "imposing" their morality on them. They wanted the decision on Terri to made by her husband and the Judge, because the decision was not based on morality, but on what her husband and allegedly she wanted.
But they cannot, for political reasons, openly state that they don't believe in objective morality, so they had to bash Bush for "interfering" in the process.
Liberals and Democrats believe in ALL moral decisions being made by the individual involved, no matter how objectionable it may be to the rest of us. This ties in with much of their philosophy, even Iraq. They see war as "immoral", because the decision to go to war is not made by the individual citizen, but by the government, thereby depriving the individual of that decision.
Now, why do Liberals love big government? Because government, to liberals, represents the power they need to
overcome objective morality. The more regulation on people lives, the more power the government has, and the less power
G-d has over them. Liberals use government to try to overcome objective morality: be it abortion, gay rights or
the death penalty. They want higher taxes, because it gives the government more power, and morality less.
The bottom line: Liberals want the individual to make the decision on moral issues, not to have them imposed, but in situations where there is objective morality, and the moral
choice is "obvious", then they use the power of government to try to overcome that objective morality.
Have I made myself clear? It's late.
The Opposition of the pope to capital punishment is not philosophical. for he concedes to the state the right to kill. Rather it is prudential. John Paul II witnessed how the state loses sight of justice and abuses this right. Opposition to abortion and research on embryonic tissue is absolute because each pracrice denies the humanity of the victim.
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