49 million American babies have been aborted since Roe V. Wade in 1973
Tomorrow I'll be voting early and I'm voting for John McCain. Is it because I'm a business owner that would love to create some jobs for others but don't want to be taxed more, forced to provide health care or any other economic issue???? NO NOT AT ALL, though I am deeply passionate about a balanced budget, justice for all, civil rights, equal opportunity etc. etc. etc. For me the single most important issue is the issue of life!!!
Now I'm going to paste in a text from John Piper, he say's exactly what I feel about the single issue voting argument. Below this text I'm going to include two photos, one of a fetus that has not been aborted at 7 weeks and then one that has, I'm also going to include a link to one of the most aweful yet very real and honest sites I've ever seen. Image after image of aborted babies and late term, I'm mean they are truly horrible, but they are real, every day 4,400 babies are killed in the USA alone. Think about all those tax paying, social security building citizens that we murder in the name of choice! There are plenty of choices to be made before getting pregnant and plenty of humane ones to be made after getting pregnant, but killing a child for any reason is never ok. I've spent the last 5 years of my life laboring to save children's lives and yet people "choose" to kill them every day!
Here is John's text, so worth reading:
By John Piper
Investigating dog life in Minnesota has solidified my decision to vote against those who endorse the right to abortion. So then what is my response to the charge of being a one-issue voter?
No endorsement of any single issue qualifies a person to hold public office. Being pro-life does not make a person a good governor, mayor, or president. But there are numerous single issues that disqualify a person from public office. For example, any candidate who endorsed bribery as a form of government efficiency would be disqualified, no matter what his party or platform was. Or a person who endorsed corporate fraud (say under $50 million) would be disqualified no matter what else he endorsed. Or a person who said that no black people could hold office—on that single issue alone he would be unfit for office. Or a person who said that rape is only a misdemeanor—that single issue would end his political career. These examples could go on and on. Everybody knows a single issue that for them would disqualify a candidate for office.
It's the same with marriage. No one quality makes a good wife or husband, but some qualities would make a person unacceptable. For example, back when I was thinking about getting married, not liking cats would not have disqualified a woman as my wife, but not liking people would. Drinking coffee would not, but drinking whiskey would. Kissing dogs wouldn't, but kissing the mailman would. And so on. Being a single-issue fiance does not mean that only one issue matters. It means that some issues may matter enough to break off the relationship.
So it is with politics. You have to decide what those issues are for you. What do you think disqualifies a person from holding public office? I believe that the endorsement of the right to kill unborn children disqualifies a person from any position of public office. It's simply the same as saying that the endorsement of racism, fraud, or bribery would disqualify him—except that child-killing is more serious than those.
When we bought our dog at the Humane Society, I picked up a brochure on the laws of Minnesota concerning animals. Statute 343.2, subdivision 1 says, "No person shall...unjustifiably injure, maim, mutilate or kill any animal." Subdivision 7 says, "No person shall willfully instigate or in any way further any act of cruelty to any animal." The penalty: "A person who fails to comply with any provision of this section is guilty of a misdemeanor."
Now this set me to pondering the rights of the unborn. An eight-week-old human fetus has a beating heart, an EKG, brain waves, thumb-sucking, pain sensitivity, finger-grasping, and genetic humanity, but under our present laws is not a human person with rights under the 14th Amendment, which says that "no state shall deprive any person of life...without due process of law." Well, I wondered, if the unborn do not qualify as persons, it seems that they could at least qualify as animals, say a dog, or at least a cat. Could we not at least charge abortion clinics with cruelty to animals under Statute 343.2, subdivision 7? Why is it legal to "maim, mutilate and kill" a pain-sensitive unborn human being but not an animal?
These reflections have confirmed my conviction never to vote for a person who endorses such an evil—even if he could balance the budget tomorrow and end all taxation.
Excerpted from A Godward Life, Book I: Savoring the Supremacy of God in All of Life by John Piper (Sisters, OR: Multnomah Publishers, 1997, pp. 279-280). Used with Permission.
To see more pix go here:
http://www.priestsforlife.org/resources/photosbyage/index.htm
Thursday, October 30, 2008
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