I see where you are coming from, but I hope you see mine.
I’m Catholic. Mitt Romney brought in publicly funded abortion to Massachusetts.
If the choice is between Mitt and Obama, I cannot in good conscience vote for either one of them.
I am not promoting the rising of a third party, but I will not support a man who has written a policy providing public funding for abortion while he was governor.
Santorum, to me is the last man standing who supports what I believe, and so I will support him, not out of desire to divide the party, but because I sincerely believe that he has the best opportunity to beat Obama.
I fear that Romney, we will sell our souls and still lose, just as what happened with McCain. It will avail to naught.
You don’t think Newt’s anti-abortion?
I am also a Catholic, and I admire Santorum standing firm on his beliefs. And I share them. However I do not believe that he majority of voters will agree.
It would be great if a man of strong faith were to reawaken the Christian values this country was founded on. There is no doubt that Santorum is sincere and lives his life accordingly. I don't think he is that man. Obama will make him out out to be a parody of a eighteenth century fanatic when they burned witches at the stake. Late night comedians will mock him, and the feminist will rail against him as being against "women's rights". He will lose.
The moral issues which plague us have been decades in the making and may take that long to correct. But the issues of sovereignty and solvency threaten to destroy us within the next five to ten years.
We need to get control of this country immediately, fix the financial problems and put the people in charge of the government instead of the other way around. We can then start to weed out the entrenched cancer of marxism and moral decay that is rotting away the country.
I think we agree on the problems, just not in what order we should handle them. In any case I don't think withdrawing from the battle or encouraging others to do so is the best thing.