Being both pro-life, and committed to the rule of law
I fear that the political pro-life movement is about to collide with the rule of law.
That will be self-defeating, and it won't help the rule of law either. If
you really want to protect human rights and dignity at all stages of life, you
are asking to expand the rule of law to equally include all persons, especially
those most under threat. This includes the poor, the sick, the stranger, the
young and the old, the prisoner and the unborn. Of course this assumes you have
established and will maintain that same rule of law.
For decades most of the
political pro-life movement has narrowed its target to reversing Roe v Wade.
More recently, in order to achieve that one thing, many have chosen to support
persons and groups that are working now to deeply damage the rule of law. The
aim seems to be winning, with little concern for collateral damage. Changing the
law means little if law itself is debased. One is asking for too little, and is
willing to pay far too much for it. Enough now. More on that rule of law later .
. .
No comments:
Post a Comment