Abortion
No doubt, there are some who will tear their garments (to use the old biblical phrase) at the extremity of my beliefs — if only because they lack the power, for the time being, to tear my garments — but this paragraph from Mona Charen strikes me as ceding too much rhetorical ground (emphasis added):…
In addition to the areas that Marc mentioned, members of the Projo editorial board (and some other organs of the MSM) are playing fast-and-loose also with their description of Republican Vice-Presidential nominee Sarah Palin’s position on stem cell research. Here’s the the unsigned editorial from Saturday… Governor Palin didn’t mention…that she opposes stem-cell research.…and the…
Well, it may not be at quite the level of signing one’s own death warrant as the Declaration of Independence, but the recent shenanigans of the government of Tiverton have spurred local action in the form of Tiverton Citizens for Change (TCC), a non-partisan political action committee. The town charter amendment that will appear on…
Apparently, it presents a particularly acute public safety hazard to cause discomfort among those walking by abortion clinics, per these “legislative findings” (PDF): Preservation of public safety is a fundamental obligation of state government. Pedestrians have a right to travel peacefully on Rhode Island streets and sidewalks. Clearly defined boundaries around reproductive health care facilities…
I can’t help but think that New York Times movie reviewer Stephen Holden misses the significance of Bella by, well, by the distance between life and death: It is not hard to see why “Bella,” a saccharine trifle directed by Alejandro Monteverde, won the People’s Choice Award at the 2007 Toronto International Film Festival. This…
This is for those who think that Rudy Giuliani’s philosophy on the judiciary will compensate for his personal view on abortion: “But with Roe—a strict constructionist judge could come to either conclusion about Roe v. Wade. He could come to the conclusion that it was incorrectly decided, overturn it, or he could decide well, it’s…
Legislators, activists and especially judges often seem to operate from the assumption that laws related to abortion should be evaluated according to different rules than other laws. Today’s Projo has an sensible editorial reminding its readers that this shouldn’t be the case…Under current Massachusetts law, anti-abortion protesters must observe a six-foot “bubble” within 18 feet…
This is a touching story, and whether one would have made different decisions as a parent requires much reflection, but it’s easy to imagine Gabriel reacting to it quite differently than his parents might expect: When doctors found that Gabriel was weaker than his brother, with an enlarged heart,and believed he was going to die…
Jonah Goldberg has opened up the topic of ensoulment with respect to abortion, and an email that he published concerning the Christian view doesn’t take its conclusions quite far enough to be entirely relevant to his broader stance on abortion: What Christianity actually teaches is that man—and man alone—is a psychosomatic entity consisting of a…
The problem with the cult of moderation is that it requires there to be two extremes equidistant from the middle line of wisdom, or else it must define the two opposing groups as the extremes, no matter where they actually lie. To present his — certainly welcome — “compromise” position of sending abortion policy back…