THE UNBORN CHILD MAY FINALLY BE DEFINED IN LAW AS A HUMAN PERSON, IN MISSISSIPPI OF ALL PLACES – BRAVO MISSISSIPPI !

!!!!

Cliff Zarsky, a beloved pro-life attorney and leader in the fight to define the unborn child as a human person in the law, died two months ago.  We all thought he would be missed here on earth, but I am begining to suspect that Cliff has become far more effective in heaven than he was on earth.  I would like to believe that he has been interceding with the Lord on behalf of the pro-life movement in Mississippi.  Read this column by Wesley Pruden, Editor Emeritus of the Washington Times:

<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

A little cloud in Mississippi

By Wesley Pruden

JACKSON, Miss.—

A funny thing happened on the way to forgetting about the abortion issue that has roiled the country’s politics for four decades. Some people haven’t forgotten about it at all.

 

Mississippi, which nobody ever cited as a bellwether state, will vote Nov. 8 whether to amend its state constitution to protect the civil rights of all “persons,” defined in Amendment 26 to “include every human being from the moment of fertilization, cloning, or the functional equivalent thereof.” Abortion would be effectively defined as murder. This time Mississippi may indeed be a bellwether.

 

“Just about every elected official in Mississippi, black or white and Democrat or Republican, is for Amendment 26,” says one unsympathetic pol pleading anonymity as he sips a mid-morning cup of coffee at the Mayflower, a cafe where the pols gather to gossip down Capital Street from the capitol. “Or at least they say they’re for it. Opposing it is a ticket to oblivion.”

 

Indeed, both candidates for governor, Phil Bryant, the Republican, and Johnny DuPree, the Democrat, support Amendment 26. So do 20 of the leading politicians in the state, including all elected constitutional officers. Curiously, few Mississippians bring up the subject to a Washington visitor in conversations in coffee shops, shopping malls and on the town squares across the state where people gather. Everybody wants to talk about Barack Obama and the prospects to replace him, and most of the happy talk is about Herman Cain. This is not your grandfather’s Mississippi.

 

Supporters and opponents speak of Amendment 26 in the apocalyptic language of the true believer. “This is the first significant battle of a revolution,” says Brad Prewitt, director of the Amendment 26 campaign. “This is the most extreme and dangerous intrusion in the lives of women and families in the history of the Republic,” Stan Flint, a Jackson-based political consultant, tells The Wall Street Journal. There’s a widespread expectation that the validity of the amendment will eventually be determined by the U.S. Supreme Court.

 

There’s no denying that Amendment 26 is far-reaching. By fundamentally changing the debate, it could change the law, even threatening Roe v. Wade, on which all abortion rights rest. There’s already a movement afoot in Arkansas, Oklahoma, Nevada and Montana to put a copy-cat amendment on the ballot in 2012. The Supreme Court follows the election returns, the ancient wisdom goes, and just when a lot of people thought the abortion debate was settled much work for many lawyers appears to lie ahead.

 

The controversy over the amendment has been mostly restricted to Mississippi because the mainstream media, which pretends to be disinterested, is actually merely uninterested. The media consensus, alas, is capable of entertaining only one thought at a time. But there’s a buzz in Washington about the resurgence of the pro-life movement. This week’s cover story in the Weekly Standard is illustrated with a remarkable sonogram showing what is clearly a baby, and not merely a fetus, giving a thumb’s up in the womb. The story is headlined “the unheralded gains of the pro-life movement.” The heralds may be waking up.

 

Kate Michelman and Frances Kissling, two leaders of the pro-choice movement, acknowledge the gains of their pro-life rivals, and cite improved technology as enabling them to take the moral high ground. Supporters of abortion rights, they write in an op-ed essay in the Los Angeles Times, “have had a hard time dealing with the increased visibility of the fetus.”

 

Other pro-choice figures glumly acknowledge that young people—the Millennials, so called because they came of age in the new millennium—are the new face of a movement once regarded as the redoubt of geezers and crones.
“Millennials haven’t grown more religious, politically conservative, or queasy about gay rights,” writes Fred Barnes in the Weekly Standard cover story. “Nor do they go out of their way to vote for pro-life candidates. But they tend to see abortion as a human-rights violation.”

 

If Amendment 26 is the unabashedly extreme measure its opponents say it is, it’s only answering the extreme of the other side. The pro-choice movement, for example, never conceded that partial-birth abortion, in which a doctor typically uses a knife or a pair of scissors to kill the live baby coming out of the womb, was morally wrong, and fiercely resisted the legislation that finally outlawed the practice a decade ago.

 

Extreme always begets extreme. The argument over abortion is far from settled, as Mississippi is expected to demonstrate next week.

 

Wesley Pruden is editor emeritus of The Washington Times.

About abyssum

I am a retired Roman Catholic Bishop, Bishop Emeritus of Corpus Christi, Texas
This entry was posted in Abortion. Bookmark the permalink.

2 Responses to THE UNBORN CHILD MAY FINALLY BE DEFINED IN LAW AS A HUMAN PERSON, IN MISSISSIPPI OF ALL PLACES – BRAVO MISSISSIPPI !

  1. abyssum says:

    @ Curt Stoller

    Bravo, Curt! Excellent analysis! Your last sentence really sums it all up:
    “Today stupidity reigns, and it is culpable stupidity, stupidity with the blood of million of innocents on its hands.”

    – Abyssum

  2. Curt Stoller says:

    Into the mouth of Mitya Karamavov, Dostoevsky placed the words: ” . . .what will become of men then . . . without God and immortal life?” All things will be morally accetable then. . .” So Dostoevsky predicts the coming age of moral relativism which His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI called “the central problem for faith today,” when he addressed the Presidents of the Doctrinal Commissions of the Bishops’ Conferences of Latin America in Guadalajara, Mexico in May 1996. The context was Liberation Theology. But it isn’t hard to see that this is a huge problem for us Americans north of the border too. Abortion and atheism are intimately connected. One leads to the other. Henri Cardinal De Lubac, a favorite author of Pope Paul VI, spoke frequently of a new kind of atheism that was coming, a militant atheism which he called “anti-theism.” Well here it is folks. If God does not exist, then all things are morally acceptable . . . then the killing of the unborn is morally acceptable right and euthanasia and all the rest of the favorite causes of atheists .
    Without moral absolutes we have juridical positivism where society is at the mercy of its citizens’ current values and law is at the mercy of the majority, the majority which often looks to CNN for its’ conscience. Looking at all the pro-atheism books out today, people often seem surprised that anti-theism is morally acceptable. They shouldn’t be. Millions of unborn children are killed each year and this has become morally acceptable even held us as a virtue by Pro-Choice advocates.
    Moral relativism is not just wrong. It is diabolically wrong. It led Nazi Germany to Auschwitz. Evil is not a strong enough word for what abortion is. Atheism leads to relativism leads to the wickedness of abortion. This is not some Manichean exaggeration. This is fact. Like all philosophical relativism it is easily unmasked as utter and compete stupidity: “If there is no truth, then it is true to say: ‘There is no truth.’ But if this is true, then something is true. And if something is true, there is Truth,” said St. Bonaventure in the 13th century. A couple of sentences and relativism is in the trash can. Today stupidity reigns, and it is culpable stupidity, stupidity with the blood of million of innocents on it’s hands.

Comments are closed.