Aloysius Posted October 28, 2012 Share Posted October 28, 2012 [quote name='southern california guy' timestamp='1351460974' post='2499241'] They are? Here are some older videos about Mitt Romney. [media]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xz_ye-CNvDw&playnext=1&list=PL6B6B1A62DEA3E3F7&feature=results_main[/media] [/quote] YES. It's funny how these pro-life groups forget all their own previous points about Romney when it comes to the general election and they're called upon to defeat the big bad democrats. Pay real close attention to that statement about maintaining the status quo from 2005 (after he had already became "pro-life")... it sounds very much like this statement from 2012: "But recognize, this is a decision that will be made by the Supreme Court. The Democrats try and make this a political issue every four years, but this is a matter in the courts. [b]It’s been settled for some time [/b]in the courts." Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
southern california guy Posted October 28, 2012 Share Posted October 28, 2012 [quote name='jaime' timestamp='1351460983' post='2499242'] Ok keep up the hypotheticals. Let's say you are deeply attracted to men sexually. I mean you're pretty old to be single right?? You've posted some sexually inappropriate stories that you've written and a half naked pic of yourself on the phorum but I'm sure that was for the ladies... right??? rigggghhht! See I can make up stuff too. Screwing with your tax returns is a felony. You lie, you usually get caught and it's hard to run for president when you are a felon and you can't vote. What I'm saying is don't accuse a man of stealing when you have zero evidence. [/quote] Please Jamie, you are cracking me up! Good grief... Hmm maybe you've got a point!! It's okay to accuse Romney. He can defend himself. I don't consider the taxes accusation the worst one. I also think that he would increase spending on the military and start wars in the Middle East. And I think that he would turn his back on corruption -- like GW Bush did when the Banks started making outrageous housing loans -- that could potentially break the US economy. And these are all just assumptions, based upon my opinion of Romney. You should see the videos I've posted above. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Aloysius Posted October 28, 2012 Share Posted October 28, 2012 [quote name='Anomaly' timestamp='1351461904' post='2499255'] Do you really think conceding the White-House and majority political power to Democrats is going to create a better political environment for any pro-life politicians, third party or not? If your answer is a sincere yes, then I would believe you are seriously delusional. [/quote] I don't foresee any good consequences of this election for pro-life politicians no matter which side wins. Romney has already done his best to centralize power in the Republican Party and will continue to do so if he's elected, making the Republican Party indeed a much more hostile place for pro-lifers... we'll continue to fight that internally but more and more they are finding ways to centralize power and keep positions away from grassroots supporters and in the hands of the establishment folks who don't actually hold very many principals sincerely, especially not when it comes to life issues. So my answer is NO, I don't think the Democrats in the White House creates a better political environment for pro-life politicians. But I also do not think Romney as President creates a better environment for pro-life politicians either. Denying Romney our vote helps to dissuade the Republican Party from nominating people like him in the future, plain and simple. Romney winning will encourage this type of thing and they will continue to undermine the pro-life cause, centralize power in the party, and keep trying to keep people with principals out of key positions. I am still a registered Republican and will remain a registered Republican. I am a member of my local Republican Committee and am working on various things to advance my causes within the Republican Party; I don't necessarily foresee a third party rising any time soon. But there are no benefits to a Romney victory here. The election has already been lost by the pro-life cause. Romney winning only solidifies eight years of a Republican political machine that at best ignores but at worst subverts the pro-life movement. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Lil Red Posted October 28, 2012 Share Posted October 28, 2012 [quote name='southern california guy' timestamp='1351457349' post='2499214'] I am in agreement with Jaime and Aloysius. blah blah blah [/quote] tl;dr....dude, this isn't your blog. learning to sum up your point a little more concisely would work in your favor. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Aloysius Posted October 28, 2012 Share Posted October 28, 2012 Perhaps I agree with you lil red except when my posts are long, then i disagree. I get to post as long as I want, fool (I keep wanting to use ironic vulgarity here but have to contain myself ) this is my blog and you're all just commentators Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Lil Red Posted October 28, 2012 Share Posted October 28, 2012 [quote name='Aloysius' timestamp='1351463027' post='2499268'] Perhaps I agree with you lil red except when my posts are long, then i disagree. I get to post as long as I want, fool (I keep wanting to use ironic vulgarity here but have to contain myself ) this is my blog and you're all just commentators [/quote] haha well, i don't remember the last time one of your posts was quite that long, or rambling. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
southern california guy Posted October 28, 2012 Share Posted October 28, 2012 [quote name='Lil Red' timestamp='1351462795' post='2499265'] tl;dr....dude, this isn't your blog. learning to sum up your point a little more concisely would work in your favor. [/quote] I tried..... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Anomaly Posted October 28, 2012 Share Posted October 28, 2012 [quote]But there are no benefits to a Romney victory here. The election has already been lost by the pro-life cause. Romney winning only solidifies eight years of a Republican political machine that at best ignores but at worst subverts the pro-life movement.[/quote] That is the point. You are conceding to a Party that will most likely subvert prolife issues ad they have always, because in your fantastical projection, you fear the only Party that gives clout and support to any prolife action we've had may be as negative as the party who has been the negative agent. I am impressed that you know the minds and plans of ALL the National politicians to be so sure that NO One will submitt any sort if Personhood Bill or make Abortion under Obamacare a State Choice instead of a Federal Mandate. Are you aware that Florida has Amendment Six on our ballot this year to make government funded abortion a part if our State Constitution. The Democrats are against it, because its limiting Fed control, it undermines the Democrat victory, and the are ideologically opposed to the issue. Romney, like Paul, cold see the political advantage of making controversial issues decide by the State level because there's less backlash in a National level. Your projection of of what negatives Romney might do demonstrate a spiteful negativity because you're upset about being in the shirt side of inside political games and have let it blind you to the realities and hope in the bigger picture. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Aloysius Posted October 28, 2012 Share Posted October 28, 2012 obviously there will be people who will try to bring up abortion legislation. but without the explicit support of President Romney, it's unlikely that the Republican leadership in congress will support it. Without the support of the party leadership, it is very difficult to get things done. you just don't have enough committed pro-life Republicans to overcome a hostile party leadership, and the party leadership will follow the Republican President's lead on the issues. no matter who wins, there will be unique challenges to trying to get any good things through the house and the senate. Romney is an absolutely pro-choice person who does not want any abortion related legislation to reach his desk, and there are enough Republican members of congress who do not want to stick their necks out on this issue... they'll push the party leadership to allow them to get a few symbolic things brought up in the congress and those are the things the leadership will go for, so that they'll have something to point to in their next re-election campaign; but without the support of President Romney, you're not going to see the Republican Leadership help sponsor or get these things passed... it's an uphill battle either way; with President Obama in power it will be easier to get the Republican Leadership on board because it looks good politically to be fighting Obama, but you'll then have to overcome Obama and his veto... either way it's an uphill battle. I'm not an idiot. I have been participating directly in the process for a while now and with various political activities on the inside, not directly in DC (but I personally know people who have done the work in DC and have talked with them at length about various things) and the fact is there are pros and cons to either side, and your analysis that reduces it simply to "if the Republican Party is in power the pro-life movement is better off" is simplistic at best, and incredibly naive at worst. It completely fails to ignore the complexity of how things actually work in Congress, you are analyzing from the standpoint of a pawn on the chessboard, which is what the entire pro-life movement tends to analyze things from which is why the Republican leadership generally feels that they can easily manipulate them. not to mention that the work the Romney Campaign has begun to centralize power in the National Committee and the various State Committees will make it harder for Republicans with strong pro-life or conservative views to run successfully for nominations within the Republican Party. The National Committee and the State Committees hold tremendous influence over those nomination processes, and we have to continue the fight there as well. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Aloysius Posted October 28, 2012 Share Posted October 28, 2012 And I will say this: it's not that it's entirely impossible that good things could come out of a Romney presidency, or that there isn't a way to work the system with Romney in power to make good things happen. I believe this is why Rand Paul has been campaigning for Romney--he hopes to be able to leverage his support for Romney to help him get some good things brought up and passed in the Senate. There is a line of reasoning there and I don't begrudge anyone for following that strategy, but to act like a Romney Presidency is just peaches and cream to make it more likely to get pro-life legislation done is to paint a picture with rose-colored glasses. There will be big challenges to getting good things done under a Romney Presidency just like there is under the Obama presidency; what I fear most is that the Romney Presidency will aid in the placation of the pro-life movement into thinking they're accomplishing something when in point of fact they are not. (e.g. the "gender-selective abortion ban" that does absolutely nothing but placate the pro-life movement by making it look like something pro-life is being passed) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Anomaly Posted October 28, 2012 Share Posted October 28, 2012 I never said it would be peaches and cream if Romney is elected. He isn't very conservative in my opinion. He's the most conservative that can be elected given the majority opinion of the voting public. I'm my naive either. Wholesale political change does not come from the top down. We both know that. Paul knows that. Of course Romney will want to be a two term president. I think it's a little silly to think he or Obama are trying to be President for life. Pro life abortion issues are never going to come from the Democratic Party. They don't have to be initiated by the President. Presidents can veto a bill or work against it, which Dems have done. I see a significant difference between active antagonistic ideology vs a possible speculative fear of lack of support or maybe antagonism. What you label as boring utilitarianism or naïveté or playing the role of pawn, I call rational and hopeful realism. It may not be as cook, or make me look like a cutting edge intellectual, but I'm happy with that and be liver it's the best moral and realistic course of action along with the best likelihood of a good outcome. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Socrates Posted October 29, 2012 Share Posted October 29, 2012 Romney's a long way from ideal (he's a Rockefeller Republican rather than a real conservative), but the hard cold reality that either Romney or Obama will be the winner of this particular election. I have yet to see one thing to convince me that we will be better off in any way after four more years of Obama (in which he will likely push further to the left, without re-election to worry about). I cringe to think of the leftist activist yes-men he will likely nominate to the Supreme Court. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Aloysius Posted October 29, 2012 Share Posted October 29, 2012 (edited) I only said it's dull utilitarianism to hold to a position that condemns those who choose an option other than choosing the lesser of two evils. I am perfectly okay with the idea of choosing the better over the worse candidate, but Mitt Romney has not met my qualifications for doing so. if you hold that you are morally OBLIGATED to choose a lesser-of-two evils option (thereby condemning the option of choosing someone better even if they have little chance of succeeding), then you are a dull utilitarian. If you simply utilize the strategy but acknowledge that it is not morally obligatory to use that strategy, you're much less so in my opinion, because you recognize the moral value in fighting losing battles. I know they don't have to be initiated by a president. But the difficulty there will be in trying to get something through under a Romney Presidency rivals the difficulty there would be trying to get something through under an Obama presidency, it's just a different kind of difficulty. Party leadership plays a big role in congress, especially considering how many congressmen go lockstep with them; a President generally has his party's leadership in the bag so that his own party is unlikely to put something up that he doesn't want to come across his desk; add that to the fact that there are a ton of lukewarm Repubs on life issues and plenty that are actually pro-choice to varying degrees, it's not going to be any easier under a Romney presidency than it is under an Obama presidency to get life issues put through congress. As regards to Supreme Court Nominations; anyone who thinks the status quo won't be maintained on the court under either president hasn't really been paying attention the supreme court nominations for a couple decades. the two justices must likely to come up for replacement in the next four years were, correct me if I'm wrong, the pro-choice justices nominated by Gerald Ford and George H.W. Bush, right? I guarantee you Romney will replace them with equivalents if he gets the chance. And Scalia's not going to retire under Obama, he'd stick out four more years, I'd be money on that. Edited October 29, 2012 by Aloysius Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Socrates Posted October 29, 2012 Share Posted October 29, 2012 I don't hold that it is immoral to vote third-party, only that it will be foolish in dull, practical reality. I hold no illusions about Romney being a great pro-life president; only that he will do far less damage than Obama. I don't think he has strong convictions on the matter one way or the other; he can be pressured by the base, and will avoid the excesses of Obama and his war on religious freedom. [url="http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=99859"]http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=99859[/url] [url="http://www.catholicvote.org/discuss/index.php?p=26087"]http://www.catholicvote.org/discuss/index.php?p=26087[/url] While GOP nominees to the SCOTUS have been a mixed bag, those nominated by Dems have been uniformly horrendous, and I see no reason to expect that Obama will buck that trend in his second term. Obama is the greater evil no matter which way you slice it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Aloysius Posted October 29, 2012 Share Posted October 29, 2012 When you account for who they've been replacing each time, they're far less a "mixed bag" and far more a clear strategy of maintaining the status quo. Same for the democrats' nominees. I feel like I've laid out pretty well why I don't think Obama is a greater evil than Romney's subversions, but good luck, I hope I'm wrong about Romney. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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