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Unapologetically Pro-Life
Editor's note. I'd be interested in your
thoughts. Please send them to
daveandrusko@hotmail.com.
As someone who has faithfully watched
presidential debates since 1960, I have come to the conclusion
that the worst thing that can happen is for a moderator's
opinion of himself to be so bloated it makes a revealing
exchange of opinions and ideas nearly impossible. That happened
in last night's second presidential debate between pro-life Sen.
John McCain and pro-abortion Sen. Barack Obama.
It's fine to be low-key, measured, and
restrained. But moderator Tom Brokaw of NBC News was positively
tedious. He came across as a schoolmarmish scold, more concerned
with getting to his own deadly dull questions than drawing out
who these two men actually are.
Is it an accident that we are now three
debates in (two for the presidential candidates and one for the
vice presidential candidates) and no question about abortion?
No, of course not.
For all the bravado from pro-abortionists (aka
they hold the upper hand on the issue), do they really want
Barack Obama defending his straight-ticket pro-abortion voting
record? His enthusiastic support for the "Freedom of Choice Act"
which would nuke every protective law passed over the past three
decades and embed "abortion in all public programs affecting
pregnant women," as Cardinal Justin Rigali, archbishop of
Philadelphia and chairman of the United States Conference of
Catholic Bishops' Committee on Pro-life Activities, explained it
in a letter sent to every congressional office in September?
Or Obama's resolute role in scuttling
legislation to provide legal protection for babies who are born
alive during abortions? Or (from the man who keeps insisting he
wants to "reduce" the number of abortions) his unwillingness to
fund crisis pregnancy centers?
On the other hand, when someone like CBS's
Katie Couric interviews pro-life vice presidential candidate
Sarah Palin she is quite free to frame her questions in the most
difficult manner.
There is no Obama on set to question about the
positions he has taken (see above).
She is also free to edit. In other words, a lot of the context
can be conveniently not shown on television.
I re-read the "unedited" CBS transcript this
morning. Not only did Couric ratchet up the "gotcha" question
quotient in her second interview with Gov. Palin, Couric
shortchanged the audience by omitting the wider setting in which
Palin framed her responses.
Palin answered honestly, forthrightly, and
compassionately. And, although the questions were intended to
make her uncomfortable, Palin's demeanor never comes across as
the least bit defensive
Palin immediately acknowledged that people
have a different position than she does.
"I am pro-life. And I'm unapologetic about my position. And I
understand good people on both sides of the abortion debate. In
fact, good people in my own family have differing views on
abortion and when it should be allowed. So … I respect people's
opinion on this.
"Now, I would counsel to choose life. I would
like to see a culture of life in this country. But I would also
like to see taking it one step further. Not just saying I am
pro-life, and I want fewer and fewer abortions in this country,
but I want, then, those women who find themselves in
circumstances that are absolutely less than ideal, for them to
be supported; for adoptions to be made easier; for more support
given to foster parents and adoptive families. That is my
personal opinion on this."
As a pro-life feminist Gov. Palin brings a
perspective not often heard--and definitely not heard on the CBS
Evening News. None of the following quotes from the transcript
made it on the air. At one point she told Couric, "I want
women empowered to know that we can help them. They can be
strong enough, and they can have the resources provided them to
give that child life." Later she added, "When you consider
what's going on in this world, the most promising and good
ingredients in this world … is a child, the hope that a child
brings. And just understanding that, being near and dear to my
heart, I want to do all that I can to reduce the number of
abortions. And to usher in that culture of life."
Then at the end of this line of questioning,
Palin said (in her role as vice president) that, "I will do all
that I can personally to encourage that culture of life, to
remind women that I believe with more empowerment, they--more
and more women will realize that they are strong enough--[to be]
able to carry a child and still continue a career, still
continue education opportunities, all with the goal being fewer
and fewer abortions in this world."
Well said, Gov. Palin. Too bad more people
couldn't have heard it.
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