That's a good point, our government is racking up debt faster than locust on a wheat field, and we're arguing about gay - marriage, race and
still abortion issues.
Not exact matches
My
issue is with your statements that
abortion is a «quick fix» (your words) and that you
still seem to feel that women who have an
abortion do it without exploring other alternatives first.
From Bet: My
issue is with your statements that
abortion is a «quick fix» (your words) and that you
still seem to feel that women who have an
abortion do it without exploring other alternatives first.
Leaving aside the fact that nearly twenty - five years later legalized
abortion still remains our most pressing legal and social
issue, the claim that the
issue of
abortion could be medicalized turns out to be wrong in a way that we should have been able to predict long before: the medical profession has for the most part declined to join the partnership.
I
still am curious why people (anti and pro
abortion alike) make the
issue about religion.
Though we hold opposed views, my hope is that we can
still engage profitably in a rational discussion of the
abortion issue, once we come to....
And if half of these aborting «mothers and fathers» have had two
abortions, the Immoral Majority would
still be a huge voting bloc i.e. ~ 50 million, enough votes to give any presidential candidate the differential votes needed considering many voters vote straight Democratic or Republican tickets no matter what the
issues are.
Abortion was
still characterized as a «Catholic
issue.
The great
issues of our time are moral: the uses of power; wealth and poverty; human rights; the moral quality and character of society; loss of the sense of the common good in tandem with the pampering of private interests; domestic violence; outrageous legal and medical costs in a system of maldistributed services; unprecedented developments in biotechnologies which portend good but risk evil; the violation of public trust by high elected officials and their appointees; the growing militarization of many societies; continued racism; the persistence of hunger and malnutrition; a
still exploding population in societies hard put to increase jobs and resources;
abortion; euthanasia; care for the environment; the claims of future generations.
Today, thirty years after Roe and Doe, polls tell us that the
abortion issue is
still more important to women than to men.
The meeting began on a Wednesday night at the bucolic campus of the University of Saint Mary of the Lake in Mundelein, Illinois, and the frank discussion quickly moved into a variety of topics including several difficult ones such as the Council of Trent, which is particularly anti-Protestant but
still binding for Catholics, and the Catholic doctrine of the church as the prolongation of the incarnation of Christ (presented by Father Thomas A. Baima, the Catholic co-chair of the event), as well as social
issues ranging from care for the poor,
abortion, and the recent developments in gender and sexual ethics in the West.
From my perspective the focus of the
abortion debate should be sentience; however, even if we are at some point able to determine definitively when during pregnancy fetal sentience begins, we would
still be faced with dealing with the ethical
issue of law denying women autonomy.
First, given that it is true that some Christians focus more on these two
issue, but the fact
still remains «
abortion» is murder of an innocent baby, and sodomy is explicitly condemned in the bible.
But look at the polls: The public appears to be moving right on
abortion —
still, as it has long been, the top social
issue.
At the same time, Klein has argued key
issues such as strengthening
abortion laws
still would not be accomplished with a Democratic majority.
IDC Leader Jeff Klein has countered in recent days will calls for votes on key liberal
issues such as
abortion rights and protections for transgender New Yorkers, inferring the bills
still wouldn't pass amid opposition from lawmakers like Sen. Ruben Diaz, a socially conservative Democrat from the Bronx.
While politicians elsewhere in the UK do their best to avoid touchstone moral
issues such as
abortion and gay rights come election season, they're
still a staple of Northern Ireland politics.
Still, Nevada's voters tend to be more conservative on social
issues like guns and
abortion and the Western appeal of the McCain / Palin ticket should not be overlooked.
Certainly
abortion, although it was legalized in Britain at the end of the Sixties (just a few years before it became legal in the U.S.), is
still an
issue that sets moral compasses aquiver.
The
Abortion Rights Coalition of Canada has complied a list of our 308 MPs and where they stand on the abortion issue, and the picture is still
Abortion Rights Coalition of Canada has complied a list of our 308 MPs and where they stand on the
abortion issue, and the picture is still
abortion issue, and the picture is
still unclear.