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The President's Irrelevance to the Abortion Debate.

For many – a candidate’s position on abortion acts as a litmus test. Whether they are pro-life, pro-choice or something in between, this issue strongly binds many citizens at the ballot box. In regards to the upcoming presidential election, therefore, most may find interesting that a President’s position on this controversial question has not historically meant much, if anything. Surely the pro-life movement, for instance, has not gained much ground despite the fact that a pro-life President resided in the White House for the last 8 years, let alone the fact that pro-life Presidents held this highest of offices for roughly 22 out of the 35 years since Roe v. Wade (1973). Hence, it seems odd that people have let themselves to be but pawns of demagogic ideologues on both sides of the issue that pretend it matters what the President’s personally feels regarding this subject.

Either way, why is this? Why can the leader of the free world do virtually nothing regarding abortion? To begin with, traditionally, the issue of abortion has never been a federal matter. These types of “morality” laws – like murder and stealing as well – have always been under the authority of the states and their elected officials, i.e. Governors, Mayors and State Legislatures. Thus, for the same reason that a state legislature’s position on a foreign war is of little consequence, the President’s position on abortion is of equally little concern.

Secondly, as hinted to above, the President’s abortion leanings do not amount to much because the courts have taken away the democracy’s ability to speak on this polarizing topic. In becoming a modern day version of Plato’s Philosopher Kings – our very own oligarchy – the courts decided long ago that they are smarter and wiser than the democratic public and their elected representatives. As such, they handed down the decision of Roe v. Wade and its many progeny, and in the process, usurped the democratic channels that usually decide these controversial issues. Thus, since the President easily falls under the “democratic channels” mentioned above, he too is now left on the sidelines of history, waiting for our wise rulers at the Supreme Court to hand down its next oligarchy-like edict.  

Nevertheless, one would be remiss if they did not mention one way the President could, theoretically, enter the debate on abortion. According to the Constitution, the President is charged with the duty of appointing Federal judges. Therefore, if abortion law now turns solely on what these nine unelected judges feel about it, then appointing like-minded judges will affect our nation’s stance on abortion. Right? Wrong.

Even if, for example, the pro-life movement gets its dream court – a court that strikes down Roe v. Wade as having no actual basis in the Constitution – this will not ban abortion. Rather, this will once again, as the founders intended, render abortion a state-issue. At the very least, we would decide this issue by some form of democratic self-governance, even if that form is a constitutional amendment. In other words, overturning of Roe v. Wade will merely allow for the people of this country to decide for themselves how they feel about abortion.

As a result, a quick look at recent polling data would lead one to the undeniable conclusion that abortion will remain utterly unchanged in almost every state and in almost every way. True, many of the court’s more recent usurpations of the democratic voice will then become law, i.e. the parental consent requirement when young teens seek an abortion or the law that makes sure the fetus is not in any unnecessary pain. But, for the most part, Americans agree that while we should not have abortions anytime, anywhere or anyhow, we should allow a consenting adult woman to, at times, choose whether she would like to bring a life into this world            

Consequently, even though people complain that Presidents do too little – in this case, they have an excuse. Therefore, when we decide which candidate to vote for come November, we should base that choice on the candidate’s positions which are of consequence. Definitely we should not let the demagogic pundits confuse us to pay attention to the candidate’s personal feelings about topics that he has no control over anyways – abortion, regrettably, being one of far too many.             
Tags: abortion  
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Innocent life demands we employ the Death Penalty

This may go without saying, but we should never punish a criminal more harshly than their crime warrants. In fact, we should not cast aside this Biblical principle of only “an eye for an eye” even if the punishment can deter others from committing that crime. A punishment must first and foremost be commensurate with the crime, and thus just. After that, if it happens to deter as well, then great. But a society should never employ deterrence alone as a basis for the extent of one’s punishment.  

The deterrent effect of the death penalty is therefore only relevant in response to the notion that, in administering it, we may put innocents to death. At some point, the debate becomes no longer an issue of whether the death penalty is a just dessert for a vile murder. Logical people will grant that. But, they argue, that we should still discard it from our country’s arsenal of punitive tools, as our inevitably fallible justice system may spill innocent blood. To that, one can—and in fact, honesty demands one should—respond by explaining that not administering the death penalty saves more lives. This is due to none other than—you guessed it, its deterrent effect.

Obviously less innocent people die if murderers are deterred from murdering. Indeed, even if one doubts the overall deterrent effect of state-punishment, one must concede that in regards to the death-row inmate himself, the sooner he is dead, the less of a chance he has to kill another inmate, a courageous guard, a vital witness, or an old enemy. For that reason, if saving innocent lives is where the issue now turns, we as a nation have a moral obligation to turn to the death penalty.

 

 

 

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Judges use information obtained by torture all the time.


No one really, I mean really, thinks that torture cannot help one obtain credible information – or at least I hope not. We use it all the time. When we obtain testimony via a plea agreement – testimony used in a court of law – we acquire it using force or the threat of force – in other words, torture. We either threaten them with prison, and all the pain and suffering associated with it, or we actually put them into prison until they decide to become more helpful. So if it’s always good enough for a judge with all his rules of evidence, how is it never good enough for an intelligence operative who is trying to keep us safe?

Now, of course, this should not lead one to condone torture or even coerced interrogation (i.e. water-boarding) at every possible chance. We must still use it rarely because of a zealous officer's inevitable abuse. Yet, little integrity attaches to  the odd claim that threatening or using force cannot, at times, acquire valuable information that polite cajoling will not. Sure, there will be times when force gets us information of little use. But surely no one can seriously argue that civilly asking a murderer questions will not leave us with information that is of no use as well. Therefore, for all those with even a shred of intellectual honesty, let’s get rid of this odd and utterly untrue talking point that force does not obtain credible information – it can, and clearly, it does.

Tags: Politics  
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America: Great, Greatest or none of the above?

                

                I think many people (we won't mention any names) have to figure out what they believe. They say: "America is the greatest country in the world." But their rhetoric doesn't really allow for this possibility.

When you ask them: "Ok, so America is great. When? Throughout its history?" They answer: "Of course not! America was one of the most racist, sexist, homophobic, xenophobic etc… nations in all of history"—or what ever other one-word pejorative the intellectually lazy invoke.

In response, we comment: "Fine, so then even though it was all those bad things, it has become the greatest country, right?" They answer: "Well, no. Really, America was a beacon of hope and opportunity, but now it is a sexist, racist, homophobic, imperialistic, anti-environment etc...nation."

Thus, now a bit confused, we ask: "OK, so maybe you mean: it is the greatest country, but it is just not perfect. But it is still the best, or among the best, out there, right?" They answer again: "Well, maybe. But in truth places like Sweden with their moral relativism and socialism are far better at almost everything."

So in the end, really, in the eyes of many people on one side of the political/cultural spectrum, America is a mediocre country, at best. And that's fine. I have no problem per se with someone taking that foolish position. But please, be candid about it.  

Tags: culture  
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The constitution is not alive, let alone a leftist.

             If one thinks the times have changed, then bring that notion to the ballot box. Written laws do not change with the changing of times unless the democracy, through its legislature, changes them. So if, for instance, you think the establishment clause is not working well enough because irreligious people, due to a mere moment of silence in a public school, are not being respected equally, then lobby this cause before the American people. See if they agree with you. But to say that this is what the Bill of Rights—the democracy’s written voice from 200 years ago—means now, is preposterous. The constitution is not a living creature that can change its mind based of course on what 9 unelected minds think it should be; indeed, this notion is quite undemocratic and should be discarded out of hand as such.   

Tags: courts  
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Government's role


A government fulfills its role when it protects the weak who are good from strong who are evil --  by allowing for the weak to take care of themselves.

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