We've heard about Barack Obama's hope from his bestselling book "The
Audacity of Hope." Now we are getting a glimpse of his audacity.
As the Christian Broadcasting Network's David Brody first reported on
Friday, Obama has decided to go after two constituencies that have mostly
voted Republican in recent years - Roman Catholics and Protestant
Evangelicals - and take up an issue that the GOP and conservative Christians
have owned in recent election cycles - pro-life.
The Obama campaign has formed the "National Catholic Advisory Council,"
co-chaired by Democratic Senator Bob Casey of Pennsylvania and former
Democratic Congressman Tim Roemer of Indiana, both Roman Catholics. Casey's
late father, Gov. Bob Casey, always claimed he was barred from speaking to
the 1992 Democratic National Convention because of his strong pro-life
views. Obama has said he wants to change his party's antipathy toward
pro-lifers, though not its pro-choice position.
This is a crafty political move on Obama's part. It could not only strike at
the heart of the Republican base, but it will reveal how seriously
politicians are when they claim to favor legal protection for the unborn,
but act as if they are pro-choicers. Obama has said that while he strongly
favors "a woman's right to choose," he is open to hearing other opinions.
That's nice, but hearing and acting are two different things. And why are
two pro-life Catholics giving moral cover to Obama who, when he had the
chance, did not even join with several of his Democratic Senate colleagues
in voting to ban the horrid practice of partial-birth abortion, in which the
brains of a fully developed baby are extracted as the child emerges from the
womb?
How can a Catholic in good standing and good conscience endorse someone who
violates a basic tenet of the Catholic Church? The lust for power and
position, apparently, has become so strong that some people are willing to
sell not only their own souls, but also the beating hearts and souls of
unborn children to the highest political bidder.
Obama compounded his insult to Catholics, ahead of next week's primary in
heavily Catholic Pennsylvania, when he said small-town Americans are "bitter
and cling to guns and religion as symptoms of frustration." That remark
brought a quick rebuke from Hillary Clinton and John McCain. "Pennsylvania
doesn't need a president who looks down on them," said Sen. Clinton. "They
need a president who stands up for them, who fights for them, who works hard
for your futures, your jobs, your families." McCain spokesman Steve Schmidt
said Obama's initial remarks, made at a fund-raiser in San Francisco, "shows
an elitism and condescension towards hardworking Americans that is nothing
short of breathtaking."
Obama also wants to repeal the military's carefully crafted compromise
"don't ask, don't tell" policy, which allows homosexuals to serve in the
military, as long as they don't reveal their sexual orientation. And Obama
favors same-sex "unions." Though he might call them something other than
marriage, he would allow all of the benefits government conveys on
heterosexual married couples to be given to same-sex partners. This, too,
runs afoul of Catholic Church doctrine.
How much more cynical can politics get? Obama knows he would never have a
prayer of getting the nomination were he anything but pro-choice, but he
makes nice with a couple of pro-lifers who ought to know they have zero
chance in moving Obama from his radical position. They apparently are so
enamored by political power they are willing to use their pro-life
"credentials" to help Obama get elected, though he has no plan - other than
more "sex education" - for reducing the abortion carnage that has already
taken the lives of nearly 50 million unborn children since 1973.
Leaders of the Catholic Church, perhaps beginning with Pope Benedict XVI
during his visit to America this week, ought to condemn this kind of cynical
politics and content-less religion and remind Catholics that just because a
Catholic politician endorses another politician, it does not mean the
Catholic Church is giving its blessing to the endorsers or the endorsee.
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