Are social conservatives failing the most elementary test of ethics: to not discriminate? They seem to hand out boatloads of free passes to McCain and his political partner, while withholding the high marks due to Obama and kin.
For decades, social conservatives have extolled the value of marriage. However, we do not hear them cheering for Barack and Michelle, who are clearly honoring their marital vows, and they have precious little to say about John McCain's extra-martial affair or the fact that he has been divorced. (They need not be concerned about engaging in gossip or rumor mongering; McCain openly acknowledges both the divorce and the affair.)
Maybe social conservatives are saying to each other that not all
moral transgressions or sins are created equal. Indeed, Catholicism,
Judaism, and the secular legal codes of all major nations grade
transgressions. One can hold that abortion is a much more serious
offense than divorce and extra-marital affairs put together. Hence, one
may try to argue that McCain's failings can be much more quickly
overlooked than those of Obama. However, such a claim does not stand
for a minute, as it disregards that all the Obamas have done is to talk
about the right of women to choose; McCain committed adultery
and got a divorce. I am hard put to find a religious or
secular ethic, legal system, or set of values that does not draw a
sharp line between talking and doing.
Then there is a matter which is difficult to approach but should not be
shoved under the rug. For decades, social conservatives from Pat
Moynihan to Charles Murray had a special beef with African Americans,
especially the men. They were depicted as promiscuous, quick to move
on, unwilling to marry, and neglectful of the children they spawned.
Social conservatives promoted various plans to encourage marriage --
including denying welfare to single mothers, many whom were African
American -- and they looked for positive role models for African
Americans who did marry, stayed married and attended to their
offspring. They could call them--the Obamas. I am not insisting on
confetti, but how about some coast to coast acknowledgment that here is
the couple we have being praying for, role models by any standard? And
how about one more heartfelt round of applause for Obama for being
willing to take the heat for supporting responsible fatherhood,
especially among African Americans?
I do not blame Sarah Palin for the pregnancy of her unmarried
daughter, although Palin's advocacy of abstinence-only sex education
may well have contributed to the pregnancy of some girls. But it seems
curious to hear from those who have weighed in for decades against
pre-marital sex and teen pregnancy that the news from Palin's family is
welcome because it shows that theirs is a "normal American family, with
its share of travails." It is not hard to imagine what social
conservatives would have shouted from the rooftops if the shoe had been
on the other foot, if Obama had a 17-year-old, unmarried daughter who
became pregnant. Would they not have argued that it showed a profound
character flaw in the parents?
Then there is a point best made by a leading social conservative, the
former dean of the Catholic University Law School and an official in
several past Republican administrations, Douglas W. Kmiec. (A man who,
by the way, was subject to a tirade from the pulpit and denied
communion for his support of Obama.) Kmiec says he expects that Obama
and Biden will fulfill the call by Pope John Paul II to "ensure proper
support for families and motherhood."
I take it for granted that social conservatives share the precept that
"whatever you do for the least of my brothers, you do for me." Better
yet, these days they not care only about poverty and social justice,
but also about the environment and climate control, about preserving
God's gifts to mankind. I assume we can agree that the argument over
who scores better on these points is going to be a short one.
I am not opposed to devout people who draw on their values to judge
political candidates. I am merely concerned when they play it the other
way around: shade, shave and tailor their moral judgments to fit their
political preferences. Such bias surely is not the greatest moral
failing, but it ranks somewhere far from the bottom of the scale of
what is right vs. wrong.
Well said! Your comment that social conservatives "shade, shave, and tailor their moral judgments to fit their political preferences" reminded me of religious fundamentalists who do the same with the Bible, particularly the Old Testament. They pick and choose amongst hundreds of laws in Leviticus to support their agenda of intolerance against homosexuals. It smacks of the same hypocrisy that led conservatives to embrace Sarah Palin and her out-of-wedlock pregnant daughter as some kind of typical American family. It will be interesting to see if, now that the "white hot spotlight" is off them, if the promised marriage will take place.
Posted by: KarenR | November 14, 2008 at 09:56 AM
Conception has not happened yet, but obstetricians say the pregnancy and delivery date from the first day of the last menstrual period, as in the ovary begins to mature egg, ready for the upcoming fertilization.
General Tips on this period:
1. In order to get pregnant and become a mother, you should try to be in good physical shape.
2. Even a few months before conception, you should quit smoking, not abusing alcohol, try to take fewer drugs.
3. You should also give up harmful or nervous work.
4. For the three months before conception stop taking drugs and make vaccinated against rubella.
Infection of pregnant women at 1 week of pregnancy leads to the defeat of the fetus in 80% of cases, for 2-4 weeks. -61%, 5-8 ned.-30%, 9-12 weeks .- 8% of cases.
While the future child - it is one of the many thousands of your eggs are ovaries. The second half praobraza (paternal) have not yet had time to evolve into a mature sperm (this happens in about two weeks).
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