This will be the first of what I hope will develop into many reviews of Catholic books as part of the Catholic book Reviewer program from The Catholic Company. Because I have been so caught up recently in Catholic apologetics, I chose Bible Proofs for Catholic Truths, A source Book for Apologists and Inquirers by Dave Armstrong.
Mr. Armstrong had again outdone himself in his thorough research of the scriptures. This work lists over 2,000 scriptures quoted from the Authorized King James Version of 1611 and the Revised Standard Version(© 1971 by Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America), the two versions of the Bible most used by non Catholics in their own studies.
Mr. Armstrong’s stated purpose is to provide a reference work for Protestants seeking to understand Catholicism and Catholics seeking to defend their faith. To that end, Mr. Armstrong tackles the hard topics including the authority of apostolic tradition and the Catholic Church and specifically the popes; the theology of salvation and Purgatory; the Holy Eucharist and the sacrifice of the mass; the sacraments of Baptism, Confirmation, and Anointing of the Sick; sacramentals, liturgy and devotional practices of the Catholic Church; penance, redemptive suffering and atonement on behalf of others; angels and the Communion of Saints; the Blessed Virgin Mary; marriage and sexuality; and a final chapter on abortion.
This is an excellent reference work for anyone in a serious scholarly discussion with our Protestant, and especially Evangelical, brethren as it takes the discussion to them on their own chosen ground, the text of the Bible, and specifically the versions of the Bible they most use.
Thursday, October 22, 2009
Monday, October 5, 2009
Response to John Tesh Radio Show's Degredation of Motherhood
I was disturbed to receive in my email the below article, apparently from the John Tesh Radio Show. I have included what I received by email in italics and my response:
John Tesh Radio Show - October 4th, 2009
What Drives "Bumpaholics" to Keep Having Babies?
You always hear people saying that pregnant women have a “glow” about them. It’s true - most expectant mothers enjoy being pregnant. However, some women may like it a little too much.
Experts say these women are driven to rapidly reproduce out of insecurity, a craving for attention, or feelings of abandonment. Here are the details, courtesy of USA Today.
They’ve been deemed “Bumpaholics” – because of their bellies, and they’re cropping up more and more. According to the CDC, American women gave birth to more than 4.3 million babies in 2007— the highest number ever. More than a quarter of those women were having their 3rd or 4th child.
While many simply want big broods because that’s how they grew up, experts say that some women feel driven to be constantly pregnant. Dr. Carole Lieberman is a psychiatrist in Beverly Hills. She says that bumpaholics feel compelled to procreate for the same reasons that substance abusers turn to booze or drugs - to fill a void inside of them. Only in a bumpaholic’s case - it’s literal. Once they give birth, their infants depend on them, which helps give mothers a clear identity.
Babies also become handy social buffers. At a party or on the playground, a woman struggling
with feelings of anxiety or self-consciousness can hide behind her child. Any pressure to be cute or charming or funny disappears — the baby has that covered. As family therapist Bonnie Eaker Weil puts it, “Bumpaholics breed to blot out their feelings of insecurity.”
Then of course there’s the hormone rush. An expectant mother gets a feel-good oxytocin blast as she rubs her belly – it’s a way of bonding. Some women can’t get enough of this. As you can imagine, psychologists say this “bumpaholic” behavior is harmful to a woman’s emotional health.
That's because eventually, her body won’t physically be able have babies anymore. She’ll inevitably face an emptiness when her kids grow up and leave home - one she won’t be able to fill with another baby. Weil says it’s vital for parents to realize that the only time to bring another baby into the family is when you already have a balanced life, not in an effort to try to create one.
Mr. Tesh is correct in his facts, but incorrect in the conclusions he and his quoted psychobabble psychiatrists draw. Of course it’s true that pregnant women have a glow about them and that expectant mothers generally enjoy being pregnant, but I don’t think that they do it out of insecurity. God has instilled in us the desire, even the need, to have children. This is not a bad thing. It is not a hormone-induced psychosis that should be recognized for the delusion it is and avoided. How is it possible to like pregnancy and children too much!?
Why is it okay to, “want big broods because that’s how they grew up”, but not good that, “women feel driven to be constantly pregnant?” Furthermore, the term “brood” is here used in a derogatory way, as if we are animals reproducing as quickly as possible. It would be just as bad as if Tesh stated we were having litters.
Let’s get it straight. They are children, a precious addition to our families, not our broods.
One part of the article I tend to agree with. Dr. Lieberman is correct that we have children, “to fill a void inside….”, but that void is not caused by some aberrant psychological need as it is with addicted people. The void is caused by God’s plan for us to be open to life and specifically to have children. There is nothing wrong or addictive with a desire that follows God’s plan.
Dr. Lieberman goes on to imply that because the babies depend on the mothers and give the mothers a clear identity, it is somehow wrong. The author expects the reader to take this at face value, but it is an incorrect assumption.
Everything we do in life identifies us. For instance, when we take a job, we become associated with that job. When a person joins the military, they become a soldier, sailor, airman, etc. When someone joins a city police force, they become a policeman. Well, in the same way, when a woman becomes pregnant, they become a mother. There is nothing wrong with that association nor is there anything wrong with wanting to be associated with motherhood anymore than there is something wrong with someone with patriotic attitudes wanting to be associated with the military. Quite the contrary, motherhood is a difficult, good and noble occupation to take on and one worthy of respect and honor every bit as much as a soldier’s is.
Babies are not social buffers, but social enablers. When a mother sits at a playground and watches her children play with other children, she is not hiding behind her children, she is protecting them. She is not cowering behind them but standing in front of them, between them and the dangers of the world. If she also finds support and friendship with the other mothers who are doing the same thing, it is no different from soldiers forming close bonds with their compatriots. It should also be kept in mind that these women did not make the decision to have children, consciously or sub consciously, to make acquaintances. The friendship bonds that mothers make in the course of their motherhood are incidental to their role as mother.
The author goes on to explain that the mother gets a hormone overdose when she is pregnant and that this is harmful to the mother’s emotional health. It’s true that God has created our bodies in such a way that pregnancy is desirable and enjoyable, but that’s His way of encouraging us to follow his plan of life. It is not a psychosis to be avoided, but a way of life to be embraced.
I have been told that parents who have spent 20+ years rearing children go through a period of disappointment when their children finally leave the nest, but I think it is not the emptiness that can only be filled with another baby that the Dr. Weil of the article implies. My children are 9 and 6 years old right now, so It’s possible that I don’t know what I’m talking about, but I think there will not be an unfillable void in my wife’s life when they leave.
I think that sadness only follows from regret and we will not regret the time and effort we put in to our sons’ educations and upbringing. I think we will be proud that our sons are taking their first steps into the world as men and I think we will not be sad for a loss.
They will not be lost to us, but will be with us for visits, telephone calls, letters. They will not be with us in the same way as they were before, but that will have been going on for a long time as we will have watched them develop from infants to men. I cannot see us as the deranged, heartsick people who are so desperate to fill the void that we would have a child for no other reason than to fulfill our own selfish desires. Parenting is an act of love and sacrifice, not selfishness.
John Tesh Radio Show - October 4th, 2009
What Drives "Bumpaholics" to Keep Having Babies?
You always hear people saying that pregnant women have a “glow” about them. It’s true - most expectant mothers enjoy being pregnant. However, some women may like it a little too much.
Experts say these women are driven to rapidly reproduce out of insecurity, a craving for attention, or feelings of abandonment. Here are the details, courtesy of USA Today.
They’ve been deemed “Bumpaholics” – because of their bellies, and they’re cropping up more and more. According to the CDC, American women gave birth to more than 4.3 million babies in 2007— the highest number ever. More than a quarter of those women were having their 3rd or 4th child.
While many simply want big broods because that’s how they grew up, experts say that some women feel driven to be constantly pregnant. Dr. Carole Lieberman is a psychiatrist in Beverly Hills. She says that bumpaholics feel compelled to procreate for the same reasons that substance abusers turn to booze or drugs - to fill a void inside of them. Only in a bumpaholic’s case - it’s literal. Once they give birth, their infants depend on them, which helps give mothers a clear identity.
Babies also become handy social buffers. At a party or on the playground, a woman struggling
with feelings of anxiety or self-consciousness can hide behind her child. Any pressure to be cute or charming or funny disappears — the baby has that covered. As family therapist Bonnie Eaker Weil puts it, “Bumpaholics breed to blot out their feelings of insecurity.”
Then of course there’s the hormone rush. An expectant mother gets a feel-good oxytocin blast as she rubs her belly – it’s a way of bonding. Some women can’t get enough of this. As you can imagine, psychologists say this “bumpaholic” behavior is harmful to a woman’s emotional health.
That's because eventually, her body won’t physically be able have babies anymore. She’ll inevitably face an emptiness when her kids grow up and leave home - one she won’t be able to fill with another baby. Weil says it’s vital for parents to realize that the only time to bring another baby into the family is when you already have a balanced life, not in an effort to try to create one.
Mr. Tesh is correct in his facts, but incorrect in the conclusions he and his quoted psychobabble psychiatrists draw. Of course it’s true that pregnant women have a glow about them and that expectant mothers generally enjoy being pregnant, but I don’t think that they do it out of insecurity. God has instilled in us the desire, even the need, to have children. This is not a bad thing. It is not a hormone-induced psychosis that should be recognized for the delusion it is and avoided. How is it possible to like pregnancy and children too much!?
Why is it okay to, “want big broods because that’s how they grew up”, but not good that, “women feel driven to be constantly pregnant?” Furthermore, the term “brood” is here used in a derogatory way, as if we are animals reproducing as quickly as possible. It would be just as bad as if Tesh stated we were having litters.
Let’s get it straight. They are children, a precious addition to our families, not our broods.
One part of the article I tend to agree with. Dr. Lieberman is correct that we have children, “to fill a void inside….”, but that void is not caused by some aberrant psychological need as it is with addicted people. The void is caused by God’s plan for us to be open to life and specifically to have children. There is nothing wrong or addictive with a desire that follows God’s plan.
Dr. Lieberman goes on to imply that because the babies depend on the mothers and give the mothers a clear identity, it is somehow wrong. The author expects the reader to take this at face value, but it is an incorrect assumption.
Everything we do in life identifies us. For instance, when we take a job, we become associated with that job. When a person joins the military, they become a soldier, sailor, airman, etc. When someone joins a city police force, they become a policeman. Well, in the same way, when a woman becomes pregnant, they become a mother. There is nothing wrong with that association nor is there anything wrong with wanting to be associated with motherhood anymore than there is something wrong with someone with patriotic attitudes wanting to be associated with the military. Quite the contrary, motherhood is a difficult, good and noble occupation to take on and one worthy of respect and honor every bit as much as a soldier’s is.
Babies are not social buffers, but social enablers. When a mother sits at a playground and watches her children play with other children, she is not hiding behind her children, she is protecting them. She is not cowering behind them but standing in front of them, between them and the dangers of the world. If she also finds support and friendship with the other mothers who are doing the same thing, it is no different from soldiers forming close bonds with their compatriots. It should also be kept in mind that these women did not make the decision to have children, consciously or sub consciously, to make acquaintances. The friendship bonds that mothers make in the course of their motherhood are incidental to their role as mother.
The author goes on to explain that the mother gets a hormone overdose when she is pregnant and that this is harmful to the mother’s emotional health. It’s true that God has created our bodies in such a way that pregnancy is desirable and enjoyable, but that’s His way of encouraging us to follow his plan of life. It is not a psychosis to be avoided, but a way of life to be embraced.
I have been told that parents who have spent 20+ years rearing children go through a period of disappointment when their children finally leave the nest, but I think it is not the emptiness that can only be filled with another baby that the Dr. Weil of the article implies. My children are 9 and 6 years old right now, so It’s possible that I don’t know what I’m talking about, but I think there will not be an unfillable void in my wife’s life when they leave.
I think that sadness only follows from regret and we will not regret the time and effort we put in to our sons’ educations and upbringing. I think we will be proud that our sons are taking their first steps into the world as men and I think we will not be sad for a loss.
They will not be lost to us, but will be with us for visits, telephone calls, letters. They will not be with us in the same way as they were before, but that will have been going on for a long time as we will have watched them develop from infants to men. I cannot see us as the deranged, heartsick people who are so desperate to fill the void that we would have a child for no other reason than to fulfill our own selfish desires. Parenting is an act of love and sacrifice, not selfishness.
Sunday, August 30, 2009
The ELCA and the Minneapolis Tornado
On Wednesday, August 19, 2009, a tornado damaged the convention center and the Central Lutheran Church of Minneapolis, MN. There is a video on YouTube claiming that the tornado was sent from God to punish the Evangelical Lutheran Church of America for deciding that they would allow homosexuals in committed relationships to be ministers in their churches. There are a few problems with this interpretation of the events that day.
First, the tornado struck on Wednesday. The ELCA voted on Friday. This was an attempt by somebody to credit God with this event. Clearly God does not punish people for acts they have not yet committed. This would negate free will.
Second, the tornado did more than damage just the ELCA’s event. As tornados do, it created a path of destruction before it finally ended. Surely, God did not want to punish everyone and everything in the tornado’s path that day. God does not throw out the baby with the bath water as he demonstrated at Sodom and Gomorrah when he promised to not destroy the cities if even one righteous person could be found there.
Third, there was nothing miraculous about the tornado. It’s not like the tornado destroyed the convention center on one side of town, lifted up into the sky, and then descended on the Central Lutheran Church on the other side of town, destroying both and touching nothing else in between. I would freely admit that those circumstances would seem miraculous, but this is not what happened.
The convention center and the church were across the street from each other. It would have been strange indeed if one were damaged and the other not. Furthermore, the damage was not extensive. Though thousands of dollars of damage was done, the buildings are still there, no people were killed, and the convention went on after the tornado passed.
Fourth, if God had sent the tornado, two days before the vote, with the intent to do something about it, you’d think that he would have sent one severe enough to put a stop to the vote. He didn’t. The vote took place two days later as planned with only minor disruption during the debate phase due to the evacuation order.
Finally, the claim was made that the tornado was a freak event, unanticipated by weather experts, and that therefore it must be an act of God designed to show his displeasure with the ELCA’s activities. However, there must have been some warning. The convention center was evacuated. Hundreds or thousands of people were evacuated to safety. Clearly, the conditions were right for a tornado and the event was not a freak event explainable only as an act of God.
I believe in miracles, both large, public ones, and the small, every day ones we experience all the time. However, it sickens me to think that someone has cheapened all God’s miraculous works by inventing circumstances to make it appear that God has furthered the video author’s agenda. No matter how much I agree with the author that God does not approve of the ELCA’s decision (And, I do disagree with the ELCA. See my previous blog post on this topic, The Lutheran Frog in the Water.), it does not relieve him from himself adhering to God’s laws, specifically the one about refraining from bearing false witness.
First, the tornado struck on Wednesday. The ELCA voted on Friday. This was an attempt by somebody to credit God with this event. Clearly God does not punish people for acts they have not yet committed. This would negate free will.
Second, the tornado did more than damage just the ELCA’s event. As tornados do, it created a path of destruction before it finally ended. Surely, God did not want to punish everyone and everything in the tornado’s path that day. God does not throw out the baby with the bath water as he demonstrated at Sodom and Gomorrah when he promised to not destroy the cities if even one righteous person could be found there.
Third, there was nothing miraculous about the tornado. It’s not like the tornado destroyed the convention center on one side of town, lifted up into the sky, and then descended on the Central Lutheran Church on the other side of town, destroying both and touching nothing else in between. I would freely admit that those circumstances would seem miraculous, but this is not what happened.
The convention center and the church were across the street from each other. It would have been strange indeed if one were damaged and the other not. Furthermore, the damage was not extensive. Though thousands of dollars of damage was done, the buildings are still there, no people were killed, and the convention went on after the tornado passed.
Fourth, if God had sent the tornado, two days before the vote, with the intent to do something about it, you’d think that he would have sent one severe enough to put a stop to the vote. He didn’t. The vote took place two days later as planned with only minor disruption during the debate phase due to the evacuation order.
Finally, the claim was made that the tornado was a freak event, unanticipated by weather experts, and that therefore it must be an act of God designed to show his displeasure with the ELCA’s activities. However, there must have been some warning. The convention center was evacuated. Hundreds or thousands of people were evacuated to safety. Clearly, the conditions were right for a tornado and the event was not a freak event explainable only as an act of God.
I believe in miracles, both large, public ones, and the small, every day ones we experience all the time. However, it sickens me to think that someone has cheapened all God’s miraculous works by inventing circumstances to make it appear that God has furthered the video author’s agenda. No matter how much I agree with the author that God does not approve of the ELCA’s decision (And, I do disagree with the ELCA. See my previous blog post on this topic, The Lutheran Frog in the Water.), it does not relieve him from himself adhering to God’s laws, specifically the one about refraining from bearing false witness.
Friday, August 28, 2009
The Lutheran Frog in the Water
There is an old metaphor called the “Frog in the Water”. It states that people’s changing attitudes are like a frog and boiling water. If you drop a frog into a pot of boiling water, it will immediately jump out. But, if you put a frog into lukewarm water and slowly raise the temperature, it will happily boil to death and not notice. The lesson being, if you change standards slowly enough, people will not notice that they are on the road to Hell.
In reality, frogs are smarter than that, but apparently, according to page A4 of the August 23rd 2009 Decatur Daily, the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America isn’t. Sexual morals in this country that started out with “traditional” values like the idea that marriage is between one man and one woman, have slowly changed to the point where on Saturday, the Decatur Daily stated, “…in breaking down barriers restricting gays and lesbians from the pulpit, the nation’s largest Lutheran denomination has laid down a new marker in a debate over the direction of mainline Protestant Christianity, a tradition that once dominated American religious life.”
The article goes on further to state that on Friday, August 22nd 2009, the ELCA’s national assembly, “…struck down a policy that required any gay and lesbian clergy to remain celibate. And, “…also signed off on finding ways for willing congregations to ‘recognize, support and hold publicly accountable lifelong, monogamous same gender relationships.’”
How is it possible that a “mainline Protestant” church like the ELCA could disregard 3,000 years of traditional Judeo-Christian values for today’s system of secular morals where anybody can marry and have sex with anybody they wish regardless of current marital status or gender? The answer is incrementalism.
Over the last 50-100 years encouraged by our shortsighted belief in our own ability to set our own standards of conduct and our arrogant belief that we could know what is best for us, we have progressed, almost without even noticing to the current state of affairs. Each small change in our standards, none of which were drastic in and of themselves, added another brick in the road we were building away from the straight and narrow.
One example of these small, incremental changes is the Decatur Daily article itself. This article appears to uphold the decision by the ELCA’s national assembly with subtle language that encourages the reader to agree with the new standard. By calling the previous rule which required that ministers not be gay or lesbian a “barrier” and stating that this rule was “restricting” gays and lesbians, they place the traditional standards in a negative light.
The Decatur Daily goes on to state that, “…the nation’s largest Lutheran denomination has laid down a new marker in the [debate].” This statement implies two things. First, that the “4.7 million member” ELCA is a large and influential religious body having the ability and authority to set standards of conduct for the rest of the Christian world, or at least the Protestant Christian world. This implication, though manifestly false, isn’t refuted, so the reader assumes it to be true.
The ELCA may be the “largest Lutheran denomination”, but in fact, the ELCA is a very small group. The article claims 4.7 million adherents to this particular sect of Lutheranism. Wikipedia quotes the total population of Lutherans to be approximately 70 million. (See Wikipedia’s “List of Christian denominations by number of members”) So, the ELCA is less than 7% of all Lutherans. Furthermore, Lutherans only make up just under 12% of the 590 million strong Protestant division of Christianity, leaving the ELCA with a measly 7/10 of 1% of Protestants. According to Wikipedia, Roman Catholics number 1.116 Billion strong. Clearly, the ELCA does not have the overwhelming numerical weight to set trends or standards for anyone but themselves.
The second implication is that the ELCA has set a new, higher standard (that “new marker” the article mentioned) that all other denominations should be striving to achieve. But, this not a higher standard at all. Rather, this is a relaxing of standards to the point where immorality not only becomes acceptable, but the acceptance of this immorality is upheld as the preferred choice.
I would encourage the ELCA, and all other Christian denominations, to hold fast to traditional values and the Decatur Daily to strive less for sensationalism in their articles and more for a uncovering of the truth. Homosexuality has been a sin from earliest biblical times and continues to be so. God’s laws do not change with the social times. They are clearly defined and immutable. History demonstrates we are not wise enough to set our own moral standards. Trust in God and the rules he has laid out for us to follow, because following them ultimately leads to our happiness, both in this life, and the one to come.
The Golden Compass, A commentary
There are at least two layers of subtle deception in The Golden Compass. The first, are what I would call, “Deep Background Deceptions”, and the second, “Plot Device Deceptions”. Deep Background Deceptions are those that cause one to question your assumptions about what constitutes right and wrong, good & evil, etc. The Golden Compass takes this type of normal plot device to an extreme to the point that it is difficult to tell the good guys from the bad even for adults, let alone children. Plot Device Deceptions are those devices in the movie that tend to make you question which characters are good or evil. This is a common device used in all movies, because the bad guys must always at least appear to fool the good guys into thinking they are not bad. But, in most movies, the audience is in on the deception from the start. Not so with The Golden Compass, which is one of the reasons children should not watch this movie.
Some examples of Deep Background Deceptions include:
This movie is, in my never-to-be-humble opinion, an insidious attempt to degrade the definition of evil and show it to be, in fact, good. Furthermore, The Golden Compass appears to be a serious attempt to undermine the Catholic faith (especially with children) both for Catholics, and non-Catholics who have often been brought up with false ideas about Catholicism in the first place.
My children will not watch this movie, at least until they are much older and then, only with me there to point out the problems. What they do as adults, I cannot control, but hopefully by that point, they have a strong enough grounding in the Faith that these insidious problems will jump out at them as they did for me.
Some examples of Deep Background Deceptions include:
- Fairy Tale Nature: This movie is fairy-tale in nature. In other words, it is a cartoon without the animated look. Fairy tales traditionally, are stories with well-defined good and evil characters (Snow White vs. Evil Queen, Cinderella vs. evil step mother & sisters, etc.). Children expect these simple distinctions in their fairy tales and when those distinctions are blurred, they become confused as to who is good and who is evil. This movie is written in such a way as to not only blur those distinctions, but to make it appear that evil is good and good evil.
- Demons vs. Souls: In this movie, “demons” are changed around from the traditional evil characters that most Christian children are taught are the enemies of God, into one’s personal conscience and helper. The insidious thing is not that in the movie there is such a helper at everyone’s side, but that they are identified with demons in a way that makes it look like this is the normal way of things. Children could become confused into thinking that demons in the real world are in some way similar to the friendly “demons” of the movie, that there is, or should be, a “demon” at everyone’s side. This comparison is made in the prologue of the movie, setting the stage for an entire movie that turns traditional definitions of good & evil upside down.
- The Magisterium or “The Ruling Power”: This is portrayed as an evil group of people who set the rules and determine right from wrong with the aim of oppressing people and secretly forcing them to do things against their nature, like separating them from their demons (their souls/consciences).
In reality,
“In the Roman Catholic Church the word "Magisterium" refers to the teaching authority of the church…According to Catholic doctrine, the Magisterium is able to teach or interpret the truths of the Faith, and it does so either non-infallibly or infallibly.” (Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magisterium)
This body is not an evil group that forces Catholics to their will. It instructs Catholics in what it means to be Catholic and what Catholics believe. The only restriction the Magisterium places on Catholics is that if they do not believe in the teachings of the Church, they cannot be Catholic. There are no threats, no punishments. The movie therefore demonizes a holy institution and, through it, everything for which the Catholic Church stands.
- “Gobblers”: The secret police of the “Magisterium”. This body personifies the evil of the Magisterium further demonizing it. These people are reminiscent of the Nazi Gestapo and are just as evil. They even have uniforms that look like the Nazi brown shirts and speak a language that sounds remarkably like German. Not very subtle.
- Dust: In the movie, Dust is a thing of secret knowledge about which the Magisterium does not wish anyone to know. However, it is the truth of their existence and the Magisterium is hiding it. This implies that there is some evil purpose to their obfuscation since, obviously, the truth is preferable to a lie.
The Catholic Magisterium also requires that Catholics not investigate certain subjects, books, etc., because it might threaten the investigator’s faith. By the analogy above, the Catholic Magisterium must be evil and hiding some truth that should be revealed. It is not. The items deemed dangerous are not completely restricted, just reserved for serious investigators with the proper credentials (university researchers, biblical scholars, theologians, etc.) The goal is not to totally destroy or suppress the knowledge, but to preserve the faith of the innocent who do not have the knowledge to understand what they are investigating and who might become confused in their faith.
Any parent who does not let their five-year-old watch the Terminator, or Basic Instinct has done the same thing. The child is restricted in their entertainment choices, not because the parents do not want them to eventually have the right to watch what they want, but because the parent knows the child is not mature enough to know what is and is not good for themselves. The child must be given time to mature sufficiently before viewing adult material.
- “Intercision”:
“…a type of fictional operation in Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials trilogy that separates an individual from their demon. In effect, the operation separates the person from his or her soul, while (usually) leaving the person alive.” (Wikipedia - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intercision)Some examples of Plot Device Deceptions include:
Intercision is portrayed as an evil process that does great harm to children, especially the poor and underprivileged who should be protected, and by association, to the children watching. This sounds remarkably like “inquisition”, a process that is commonly, and falsely, believed to have had the purpose of burning heretics at the stake. It is another stab at the Catholic Church.
- Mrs. Marisa Coulter: The main evil character, Mrs. Coulter, is portrayed as a good person, when in fact, she subtly is not. She is a beautiful, smiling, befriending, and a mother figure. All these characteristics are what a child uses to determine who their friends are, and the lack of these characteristics are used to determine who the bad guys are that they should avoid. It may sound like I am taking this to something of an extreme, but let’s look at some other examples of characters that appeared good, when they were in fact evil.
- Cruella De Vil, Walt Disney’s “101 Dalmatians”: Cruella was obviously evil. Though she was a woman, dressed nicely, and attempted to be nice to people and the puppies, Disney left no doubt who the evil character was. Her appearance was scrawny. The movie wasted no time in showing the dark side of her character when she interacted with her stooges and with the dogs away from nicer people.
- The White Witch, “The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe”: In this movie, though the White Witch gives the appearance of goodness in her dress and manner, from the start she is surrounded by evil looking characters that give her away and in the first scene with her she strikes Edmund. She is obviously evil, even to children’s eyes.
Mrs. Coulter, on the other hand, is portrayed as beautiful and gives the appearance of being nice to Lyra throughout the movie. Eventually, Lyra does see through her, but not because of the way Mrs. Coulter acts, but because of the way her demon acts. Because there is a separation between Mrs. Coulter and her demon, it preserves the possibility that it is the demon and not Mrs. Coulter that is the evil one, at least to children in the audience, if not to Lyra.
Furthermore, other adults, including the “scholars” into whose care Lyra has been entrusted and to whom she looks for direction, defer to Mrs. Coulter’s authority throughout the movie giving her the aura of an authority figure who should be obeyed. In fact, Lyra is portrayed as a child who blithely disregards authority and views rebellion as something to be aspired to, so it might be construed that Lyra should not be disobeying the authority figure of Mrs. Coulter in the first place, at least by a child who does not know any better.
- Gyptians: The Gyptians are portrayed as evil-looking pirate-people. They embody in their looks and actions all that children are taught to believe is bad. It turns out they are the good guys in the movie, but even I, a discerning adult, questioned whether Lyra had fallen into dangerous hands when the Gyptians rescued her. How much more so would a child?
This movie is, in my never-to-be-humble opinion, an insidious attempt to degrade the definition of evil and show it to be, in fact, good. Furthermore, The Golden Compass appears to be a serious attempt to undermine the Catholic faith (especially with children) both for Catholics, and non-Catholics who have often been brought up with false ideas about Catholicism in the first place.
My children will not watch this movie, at least until they are much older and then, only with me there to point out the problems. What they do as adults, I cannot control, but hopefully by that point, they have a strong enough grounding in the Faith that these insidious problems will jump out at them as they did for me.
Monday, August 24, 2009
Abortion is Wrong....Period! A logical argument against abortion
This paper makes the point that abortion is wrong without resorting to the argument, "Because God said so." It is not that God doesn't figure prominently in my feelings about abortion (since I am a Catholic, He certainly does). It is just that I don't believe pro-choice advocates will accept a religion-based argument, so I have written from a purely logical and legal standpoint.
Let’s start by defining abortion. For the purposes of this essay (and the pro-life vs. pro-choice debate) it should be noted that abortion does not just incidentally cause the death of the fetus, but rather the death of the fetus is one of the reasons for performing the abortion in the first place. I would therefore define abortion as, the intentional termination of a pregnancy when the mother, her doctor, and/or another knowingly performs an act that is accompanied by, results in, is closely followed by, or intends the death of the embryo or fetus for reasons not related to the continued life of the mother. “Abortion” comes from the Latin word aboriri, meaning “to perish.”
Additionally, it is important to note that abortion is defined broadly as the arrest of development (as of a part or process) resulting in the imperfection of that process. In other words, had the process been left uninterrupted, the process would have been completed (or perfected), in this case, resulting in a full-term baby. It is only the arresting of the process that makes it imperfect. Pregnancy is a process of genetically controlled, natural development from conception, through birth, that ultimately leads to adulthood. It is the interruption that is the unnatural event in the process. Because of this definition of abortion as a decision to unnaturally interrupt the natural process of fetal development, miscarriage is not being discussed. Miscarriage is a sad, though natural, event.
Whether abortion is right or wrong now comes down to the reason for doing it. The question before us is, “Is there any circumstance where the interruption of pregnancy with the sole intent to end the life of the fetus is justified?” The answer is always, “No.”
There appears to be only two justifiable reasons to end a pregnancy before the baby can live outside the womb. First when there is a choice between the mother’s death and the child’s, and second when it is known that the child will certainly die before birth and cannot be saved anyway and the mother’s health is in danger should the pregnancy be allowed to continue.
Though there is moral justification to terminate the pregnancy in these two situations, this type of pregnancy termination does not fit the definition of abortion given above, because the sole intent of the termination is not to end the pregnancy, but to save the mother. It is the intent to save the mother that makes the termination of the pregnancy morally justifiable, though still an evil and a great loss.
So, is abortion right or wrong? There are a number of standard arguments pro-choice advocates use to sway others to their viewpoint. These arguments are spurious and sometimes even appear to be purposely misleading.
The first argument is that abortion is not murder, but is equivalent to killing an animal because the fetus is not yet a person. But abortion is murder. Murder is not based in any way on age or stage of development. It makes no difference, for instance, whether a person is killed when he is 85 years old and on his deathbed or an infant in a cradle. To intentionally take any portion of a person's life from them is murder.
The legal concept of murder is based exclusively on one's personhood, not age. In other words, it would not be murder to kill a dog or a fish. It is only murder if one kills another person. Pro-choice advocates argue that a fetus becomes a person when he has reached some arbitrary stage in development, most commonly when he begins to display “human” brainwave patterns, or when he has reached the point of viability. I will discuss viability later.
The brainwave argument revolves around the idea that until the fetus develops recognizably “human” brainwave patterns, it isn't yet human (or a person) and aborting it is no different than killing any other nonhuman living thing such as a cow or other "lower animal."
However, there is no consistent and generally acceptable definition of “human” brainwaves. The definition is entirely empirical in nature, meaning that brainwaves from something known to be a human are recorded. This then becomes the standard against which all other brainwave patterns are measured to determine if they are “human” or not.
Since it was adult human beings whose brainwaves were recorded, their brainwaves became the standard. Obviously infant brainwaves will be different from adult brainwaves, and fetal brainwaves will be different from both adult and children’s brainwaves. That does not make fetal brainwaves less human. (Had embryonic brain waves been measured first and used as the standard, you would not be considered human!).
No one can reasonably argue that when a woman is pregnant, she is carrying anything but a human baby in her womb (as opposed to a whale, a chipmunk, etc.). Furthermore, if a human being, in any stage of its development, does something, it is by definition a human action. If it produces something, it is by definition, a human product. One need only measure and record the fetus’ brainwaves and understand that they are, by definition, human, and suddenly the fetus is emitting “recognizably human” brainwaves. Therefore, the pro-choice argument in this case falls apart. Some would narrow this argument even further by requiring that the brainwave patterns be "adult human" brainwaves. This argument is also ridiculous because adulthood is not a criterion for murder. Everyone agrees it is murder to kill a child. So to require some measure of adulthood before it becomes wrong to kill would merely be another attempt to rationalize the taking of a child's life.
The previability argument states that it is okay to commit abortion because the child is not yet "viable." The argument of viability states that, "Because a fetus is not capable of surviving on its own outside the womb, it is not immoral if someone keeps that fetus from reaching the point of viability."
There are three problems with this argument. First, if one defines viability as being able to survive on one’s own, then it would be permissible to kill an infant, toddler, or preschooler since no child at these stages of development is capable of surviving without copious amounts of love and care from her parents. Since it is murder to kill one of these “older” nonviable children, it is also murder to kill a nonviable fetus, if viability is the only criterion. So the viability argument does not hold water.
Second, the previability argument assumes that survival outside the womb is the standard. Pro-choice advocates argue that if a preborn infant were hypothetically to be removed from the womb and is not capable of survival, she isn't "viable" and therefore doesn't deserve to live, or have a right to her life. But never in the natural course of a fetus's development is she outside the womb. Why should this hypothetical, unnatural situation be a criterion for granting her the right to her life? I could just as easily say any adult who cannot survive under water for 10 minutes does not have a right to life. Therefore, if I kill any such adult, it is not murder.
Every organism on Earth has a certain set of environmental conditions to which it is suited. This is called an organism's "natural environment." If that organism's environmental conditions change, it will attempt to cope with that change, but will only be able to do so up to a point. Beyond that point, the organism cannot survive.
Some notable examples would be the Giant Panda which lives only in the bamboo forests of China, the Koala which lives only in the Eucalyptus forests of Australia, the Orca or killer whale, which can live only in the ocean, etc. All of these animals do live far from their original habitats in zoos, but in these cases, man has recreated the animals' original environmental conditions closely enough that the animal can cope. To put a koala 300 feet under the pacific or an Orca up in a Eucalyptus tree would quickly be fatal to both organisms.
A preborn baby is perfectly viable in the environment of the womb, but naturally, is not viable outside of it. To intentionally change an organism’s natural environment drastically enough to cause its death is to kill it. To do so to a human being is murder. To remove a baby from its mother's womb before it has developed to the point that it can cope with the outside world is removing that child from its natural environment and is murder.
Which brings us to the third problem I have with the viability argument (and with all the arguments that require the fetus to reach a certain stage of development before abortion becomes immoral), which is the noninterference problem. The viability argument should read, "Because a fetus is not capable of surviving on its own outside the womb, and assuming we decide to interrupt the natural course of events in the pregnancy, it is not immoral if someone keeps that fetus from reaching the point of viability."
Pro-choice advocates are making the tacit statement that if left alone the pregnancy will produce a viable person at some time in the future. The very name "abortion" means to stop something in progress before it comes to fruition. If they did not believe this, there would be no reason to have an abortion in the first place. Therefore, by the very act of aborting a fetus, they are admitting that they are taking a person's life who would otherwise have been born and, probably, lived a full life as an adult.
If murder is one person depriving another of some portion of his life, and (as the pro-choice advocates claim) the fetus is not yet a person, but soon will be, then it stands to reason that pro-choice advocates are depriving these unborn babies of their entire postpartum lives. Clearly this would constitute murder.
Then there is the "It-hasn't-been-born-yet" argument. Pro-choice advocates argue that abortion cannot be murder since the child has not been born yet and therefore cannot be considered a person. But they don’t explain why the point of birth should be the starting point of personhood. A person was considered to be legally a person in English Common Law (which is where our legal system largely comes from) when the expectant mother experienced "quickening", the first time she sensed the baby's movement in the womb. It is only because it is convenient for those who want to find some justification for abortions that a boundary for personhood is set at a point beyond which abortions are physically impossible. After all, an “abortion” after birth is a non sequitur, and killing a born baby would be murder!
All the pro-choice arguments that require that the fetus reach a certain stage of development before the act of ending the pregnancy becomes immoral share a common problem. How do you define “person”? If one requires personhood to make an abortion illegal, then one had better be able to reasonably define when a fetus becomes a person. Clearly there is no consensus on this question. Some say this transition occurs at conception, others at the end of the first trimester, others at quickening, and others at birth. Some require intrinsic developmental states be reached such as when “human” brainwaves are detected, or when the fetus is able to react in some self-aware way. Since we cannot decide, is it not reasonable to err on the side of caution and set the boundary at conception? This would make sure that we do not accidentally, through our ignorance, kill even one person.
Besides, why should reaching personhood be the criteria at all? When the original concepts of murder were formulated, it was never considered that there might a "preperson" who could not be murdered because they were not "person" enough. Every human was considered a "person." The term “person” was used to distinguish people from all other living things, not one type of person from another (as for instance, distinguished by age).
Now that English Common Law definition of "person" is being reevaluated. For some, "person" now seems to depend on one's concept of another's mental capacity. A fetus is not a “person” until it displays thoughts/actions that can be recognized as “consciousness.”
Well, what about someone who's body is alive, but whose brain no longer exhibits consciousness? What if someone is conscious, but not intelligent? Do they have to be severely retarded or only mildly retarded before they are considered a nonperson? Where do we draw the line?
What if mental capacity is not the criterion, but a perceived mental capacity? Haven't we gone down that road before? Hitler believed that Jews, Catholics, blacks, and anyone who didn't fit his idea of the Arian race were beneath contempt, good only for firewood. This was because he believed they were mentally and physically inferior to Arians. This is a slippery slope down which we have already started.
Obviously, any definition of "person" dependant on someone's mental capacity would be too vague and/or too flexible to be useful. Instead the criterion should be whether a creature is human or not. Obviously, a baby in the womb is as human as its mother (see above) and therefore should be afforded the same protection against murder that any other human is.
An argument could be made that it is ethically worse to kill an infant in utero than it is to wait until she is a fully-grown adult. In our culture, it is considered worse to harm or kill a child than an adult. Partly, I think this is due to our natural instinct to protect our young and partly due to the argument that, "She had her whole life before her."
Is this fetus not still just as much one of our young as a baby in the cradle? Does she not still have her whole life before her? Obviously, the answer to both of these questions is, "Yes." If everyone believes that it is very wrong to kill or harm a child, then everyone should also believe that it is very wrong to abort a fetus.
Next is the miscarriage argument. Some would argue that because a large percentage of pregnancies end in miscarriage, it does not matter if some are aborted on purpose, that there is no difference in a pregnancy ending through natural means and one purposely terminated. This argument is also fallacious.
First, just because it is possible that the fetus might succumb to some naturally-occurring event, it doesn't follow that we have the right to intentionally kill the child. The logical extension of this miscarriage argument is that it would be permissible to kill a 20-year-old man because it is probable that he will succumb to some naturally-occurring event and die anyway. This argument also does not stand up to reason.
Second, this claim is analogous to someone’s claiming that because millions of children die of a given deadly disease anyway, it is okay to infect infants with that disease in the interests of population or birth control. A similar analogy would be society declaring it permissible to kill X number of teenagers in the interests of family harmony simply because ten times that number of teenagers die in automobile accidents every year anyway. After all, parents have the right to have fewer children in their home and a harmonious home life if they so choose, right? Millions of teenagers die every year anyway, so what would a few more matter, right? Obviously, this argument is both morally and culturally unacceptable.
The next, and possibly most used, argument the pro-choice proponents advocate is that there is a right to privacy which an expectant mother possesses which should prevent the government from stopping her from having an abortion. The United States Supreme Court has ruled that though the U. S. Constitution doesn't explicitly state a right to privacy, such a right does exist. The right to privacy is "embedded" in the assumptions the framers made when they wrote the Constitution. Privacy is implied in many of the rights the framers specifically listed, such as the right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures, and to be secure in one's "persons, papers, houses and effects." (Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution)
The right to privacy also covers things other than the security of "persons, houses, papers, and effects" (ibid.) for example, lawyer-client, confessor-confessed, and doctor-patient privileges. In these examples, the lawyer, confessor and doctor cannot be required to reveal the legal, moral or medical condition of the client, confessed, or patient, respectively.
But, let's be clear. There is no law which protects a person from governmental reprisal when they commit an illegal act just because they do it in private. Just because someone rapes, or murders someone behind locked doors doesn't mean that the government and society don't have a legitimate concern with respect to it.
The pro-choice advocates make statements like, "It's my body. I should have the right to control what happens to my body" and, "I'm having a medical procedure performed and the government has no right to interfere in my private medical treatments."
These arguments are based on their right to be secure in their persons and their right to doctor-patient privilege. They either misunderstand their rights or are purposely misconstruing the meaning of their rights as stated in The Constitution to suit their own purposes.
Let us consider their right to be secure in their persons. The Fourth Amendment states,
"The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized."
As is quite plain, the Fourth Amendment is intended to restrict the government's power to search a person's property, arrest a person, or take a person's property without good reason as attested to before a magistrate (who then issues the warrant). It is not a license to do with one’s body what one pleases, without regard for the rights of others.
Often it is the case that one right will modify, regulate or even supersede another. For instance, everyone has the right to travel freely, but not at speeds exceeding the speed limit. This would be an example of one's rights being modified or regulated.
Another example would be the situation where one person attacks another with a knife. Most states have self-defense statutes which would allow the person being attacked in this example to kill his attacker in self-defense by any means at his disposal without fear of imprisonment. This is an instance where one person's right to live (the victim's) supersedes another's (the assailant's).
It should be noted that the assailant in this case gave up his right to be free from attack when he attacked his victim. It was his choice. No one forced him down that path.
An infant in the womb, however, commits no crime against the mother. The only reason it is being aborted is that its existence is inconvenient. Perhaps it’s because the mother is no longer with the boyfriend she was with when she became pregnant, or the infant is offensive because the mother was raped or a victim of incest, or some other reason dependent on the mother’s discomfort. Clearly, the baby's right to his or her life would supersede the mother's right to take that life if the mother's only argument was inconvenience or personal offense.
Doctor-patient privilege means that the doctor may not reveal a patient's medical condition unless expressly authorized to do so by the patient. This does not mean that the government cannot regulate the practice of medicine or prohibit the performance of a specific procedure. The government already regulates or prohibits many aspects of the practice of medicine including which procedures may and may not be performed. So, for a woman to say, "I'm having a medical procedure performed and the government has no right to interfere in my private medical treatments" is ridiculous. Government "interferes" in the practice of medicine in this way all the time.
It should also be noted that just because one may have the right to control what "happens to" one’s body doesn't give one the right to purposely damage someone else's body. It should be obvious that a baby in the mother's womb is not her body, but rather is simply contained within her body. If the fetus were actually her body, she would be in the impossible position of having two separate and distinct sets of genes, which biologists agree is what defines what (and to a certain extent, who) we are as individual persons.
Another argument is, "This is a women's issue. Men should have no say in it." This is untenable because it is not just the woman who is involved. It is not just a "women's issue." Every baby has a father. The fact of the matter is that pro-choice advocates only admit fatherly responsibility when they say that a baby conceived as a result of rape or incest is the reason for the abortion. The father was just as responsible for creating that baby as the mother and should have an equal say in what happens to it. It is ironic that these same pro-choice advocates who so blithely deny the father’s prenatal rights with regard to their child are the first to scream about dead beat fathers and nonpayment of child support after the child is born.
Another reason it is not just a woman’s issue, is that there is more than the woman involved, even if you discount the father’s rights. Clearly there is another person present, the fetus, who is incapable of defending his rights. The fact that he is unable to do so (a) does not mean that he has none, and (b) should ethically require us to vigorously defend those rights as we would with any other class of people who are incapable.
Some pro-abortion advocates claim, "The government shouldn't interfere." Why not? Our Declaration of Independence declares that each of us has an "inalienable right to Life," and the government "interferes" in our lives all the time to make sure that we all may exercise our "inalienable" rights whenever we wish. Thomas Jefferson defined government's role in this way: "The care of human life and happiness, and not their destruction, is the first and only object of good government." Government should protect all of us regardless of age, but especially before we are born, when we are most vulnerable and least able to defend our own rights.
I have tried to cover all the misleading arguments that pro-choice advocates use to promote abortion. I hope that this article has helped to clear some of the fog surrounding this topic and encouraged the reader to look at the subject objectively.
It should also be noted that just because something is legal does not make it right. People of good conscience must hold themselves to a higher standard of conduct than the minimum standard the law requires.
Let’s start by defining abortion. For the purposes of this essay (and the pro-life vs. pro-choice debate) it should be noted that abortion does not just incidentally cause the death of the fetus, but rather the death of the fetus is one of the reasons for performing the abortion in the first place. I would therefore define abortion as, the intentional termination of a pregnancy when the mother, her doctor, and/or another knowingly performs an act that is accompanied by, results in, is closely followed by, or intends the death of the embryo or fetus for reasons not related to the continued life of the mother. “Abortion” comes from the Latin word aboriri, meaning “to perish.”
Additionally, it is important to note that abortion is defined broadly as the arrest of development (as of a part or process) resulting in the imperfection of that process. In other words, had the process been left uninterrupted, the process would have been completed (or perfected), in this case, resulting in a full-term baby. It is only the arresting of the process that makes it imperfect. Pregnancy is a process of genetically controlled, natural development from conception, through birth, that ultimately leads to adulthood. It is the interruption that is the unnatural event in the process. Because of this definition of abortion as a decision to unnaturally interrupt the natural process of fetal development, miscarriage is not being discussed. Miscarriage is a sad, though natural, event.
Whether abortion is right or wrong now comes down to the reason for doing it. The question before us is, “Is there any circumstance where the interruption of pregnancy with the sole intent to end the life of the fetus is justified?” The answer is always, “No.”
There appears to be only two justifiable reasons to end a pregnancy before the baby can live outside the womb. First when there is a choice between the mother’s death and the child’s, and second when it is known that the child will certainly die before birth and cannot be saved anyway and the mother’s health is in danger should the pregnancy be allowed to continue.
Though there is moral justification to terminate the pregnancy in these two situations, this type of pregnancy termination does not fit the definition of abortion given above, because the sole intent of the termination is not to end the pregnancy, but to save the mother. It is the intent to save the mother that makes the termination of the pregnancy morally justifiable, though still an evil and a great loss.
So, is abortion right or wrong? There are a number of standard arguments pro-choice advocates use to sway others to their viewpoint. These arguments are spurious and sometimes even appear to be purposely misleading.
The first argument is that abortion is not murder, but is equivalent to killing an animal because the fetus is not yet a person. But abortion is murder. Murder is not based in any way on age or stage of development. It makes no difference, for instance, whether a person is killed when he is 85 years old and on his deathbed or an infant in a cradle. To intentionally take any portion of a person's life from them is murder.
The legal concept of murder is based exclusively on one's personhood, not age. In other words, it would not be murder to kill a dog or a fish. It is only murder if one kills another person. Pro-choice advocates argue that a fetus becomes a person when he has reached some arbitrary stage in development, most commonly when he begins to display “human” brainwave patterns, or when he has reached the point of viability. I will discuss viability later.
The brainwave argument revolves around the idea that until the fetus develops recognizably “human” brainwave patterns, it isn't yet human (or a person) and aborting it is no different than killing any other nonhuman living thing such as a cow or other "lower animal."
However, there is no consistent and generally acceptable definition of “human” brainwaves. The definition is entirely empirical in nature, meaning that brainwaves from something known to be a human are recorded. This then becomes the standard against which all other brainwave patterns are measured to determine if they are “human” or not.
Since it was adult human beings whose brainwaves were recorded, their brainwaves became the standard. Obviously infant brainwaves will be different from adult brainwaves, and fetal brainwaves will be different from both adult and children’s brainwaves. That does not make fetal brainwaves less human. (Had embryonic brain waves been measured first and used as the standard, you would not be considered human!).
No one can reasonably argue that when a woman is pregnant, she is carrying anything but a human baby in her womb (as opposed to a whale, a chipmunk, etc.). Furthermore, if a human being, in any stage of its development, does something, it is by definition a human action. If it produces something, it is by definition, a human product. One need only measure and record the fetus’ brainwaves and understand that they are, by definition, human, and suddenly the fetus is emitting “recognizably human” brainwaves. Therefore, the pro-choice argument in this case falls apart. Some would narrow this argument even further by requiring that the brainwave patterns be "adult human" brainwaves. This argument is also ridiculous because adulthood is not a criterion for murder. Everyone agrees it is murder to kill a child. So to require some measure of adulthood before it becomes wrong to kill would merely be another attempt to rationalize the taking of a child's life.
The previability argument states that it is okay to commit abortion because the child is not yet "viable." The argument of viability states that, "Because a fetus is not capable of surviving on its own outside the womb, it is not immoral if someone keeps that fetus from reaching the point of viability."
There are three problems with this argument. First, if one defines viability as being able to survive on one’s own, then it would be permissible to kill an infant, toddler, or preschooler since no child at these stages of development is capable of surviving without copious amounts of love and care from her parents. Since it is murder to kill one of these “older” nonviable children, it is also murder to kill a nonviable fetus, if viability is the only criterion. So the viability argument does not hold water.
Second, the previability argument assumes that survival outside the womb is the standard. Pro-choice advocates argue that if a preborn infant were hypothetically to be removed from the womb and is not capable of survival, she isn't "viable" and therefore doesn't deserve to live, or have a right to her life. But never in the natural course of a fetus's development is she outside the womb. Why should this hypothetical, unnatural situation be a criterion for granting her the right to her life? I could just as easily say any adult who cannot survive under water for 10 minutes does not have a right to life. Therefore, if I kill any such adult, it is not murder.
Every organism on Earth has a certain set of environmental conditions to which it is suited. This is called an organism's "natural environment." If that organism's environmental conditions change, it will attempt to cope with that change, but will only be able to do so up to a point. Beyond that point, the organism cannot survive.
Some notable examples would be the Giant Panda which lives only in the bamboo forests of China, the Koala which lives only in the Eucalyptus forests of Australia, the Orca or killer whale, which can live only in the ocean, etc. All of these animals do live far from their original habitats in zoos, but in these cases, man has recreated the animals' original environmental conditions closely enough that the animal can cope. To put a koala 300 feet under the pacific or an Orca up in a Eucalyptus tree would quickly be fatal to both organisms.
A preborn baby is perfectly viable in the environment of the womb, but naturally, is not viable outside of it. To intentionally change an organism’s natural environment drastically enough to cause its death is to kill it. To do so to a human being is murder. To remove a baby from its mother's womb before it has developed to the point that it can cope with the outside world is removing that child from its natural environment and is murder.
Which brings us to the third problem I have with the viability argument (and with all the arguments that require the fetus to reach a certain stage of development before abortion becomes immoral), which is the noninterference problem. The viability argument should read, "Because a fetus is not capable of surviving on its own outside the womb, and assuming we decide to interrupt the natural course of events in the pregnancy, it is not immoral if someone keeps that fetus from reaching the point of viability."
Pro-choice advocates are making the tacit statement that if left alone the pregnancy will produce a viable person at some time in the future. The very name "abortion" means to stop something in progress before it comes to fruition. If they did not believe this, there would be no reason to have an abortion in the first place. Therefore, by the very act of aborting a fetus, they are admitting that they are taking a person's life who would otherwise have been born and, probably, lived a full life as an adult.
If murder is one person depriving another of some portion of his life, and (as the pro-choice advocates claim) the fetus is not yet a person, but soon will be, then it stands to reason that pro-choice advocates are depriving these unborn babies of their entire postpartum lives. Clearly this would constitute murder.
Then there is the "It-hasn't-been-born-yet" argument. Pro-choice advocates argue that abortion cannot be murder since the child has not been born yet and therefore cannot be considered a person. But they don’t explain why the point of birth should be the starting point of personhood. A person was considered to be legally a person in English Common Law (which is where our legal system largely comes from) when the expectant mother experienced "quickening", the first time she sensed the baby's movement in the womb. It is only because it is convenient for those who want to find some justification for abortions that a boundary for personhood is set at a point beyond which abortions are physically impossible. After all, an “abortion” after birth is a non sequitur, and killing a born baby would be murder!
All the pro-choice arguments that require that the fetus reach a certain stage of development before the act of ending the pregnancy becomes immoral share a common problem. How do you define “person”? If one requires personhood to make an abortion illegal, then one had better be able to reasonably define when a fetus becomes a person. Clearly there is no consensus on this question. Some say this transition occurs at conception, others at the end of the first trimester, others at quickening, and others at birth. Some require intrinsic developmental states be reached such as when “human” brainwaves are detected, or when the fetus is able to react in some self-aware way. Since we cannot decide, is it not reasonable to err on the side of caution and set the boundary at conception? This would make sure that we do not accidentally, through our ignorance, kill even one person.
Besides, why should reaching personhood be the criteria at all? When the original concepts of murder were formulated, it was never considered that there might a "preperson" who could not be murdered because they were not "person" enough. Every human was considered a "person." The term “person” was used to distinguish people from all other living things, not one type of person from another (as for instance, distinguished by age).
Now that English Common Law definition of "person" is being reevaluated. For some, "person" now seems to depend on one's concept of another's mental capacity. A fetus is not a “person” until it displays thoughts/actions that can be recognized as “consciousness.”
Well, what about someone who's body is alive, but whose brain no longer exhibits consciousness? What if someone is conscious, but not intelligent? Do they have to be severely retarded or only mildly retarded before they are considered a nonperson? Where do we draw the line?
What if mental capacity is not the criterion, but a perceived mental capacity? Haven't we gone down that road before? Hitler believed that Jews, Catholics, blacks, and anyone who didn't fit his idea of the Arian race were beneath contempt, good only for firewood. This was because he believed they were mentally and physically inferior to Arians. This is a slippery slope down which we have already started.
Obviously, any definition of "person" dependant on someone's mental capacity would be too vague and/or too flexible to be useful. Instead the criterion should be whether a creature is human or not. Obviously, a baby in the womb is as human as its mother (see above) and therefore should be afforded the same protection against murder that any other human is.
An argument could be made that it is ethically worse to kill an infant in utero than it is to wait until she is a fully-grown adult. In our culture, it is considered worse to harm or kill a child than an adult. Partly, I think this is due to our natural instinct to protect our young and partly due to the argument that, "She had her whole life before her."
Is this fetus not still just as much one of our young as a baby in the cradle? Does she not still have her whole life before her? Obviously, the answer to both of these questions is, "Yes." If everyone believes that it is very wrong to kill or harm a child, then everyone should also believe that it is very wrong to abort a fetus.
Next is the miscarriage argument. Some would argue that because a large percentage of pregnancies end in miscarriage, it does not matter if some are aborted on purpose, that there is no difference in a pregnancy ending through natural means and one purposely terminated. This argument is also fallacious.
First, just because it is possible that the fetus might succumb to some naturally-occurring event, it doesn't follow that we have the right to intentionally kill the child. The logical extension of this miscarriage argument is that it would be permissible to kill a 20-year-old man because it is probable that he will succumb to some naturally-occurring event and die anyway. This argument also does not stand up to reason.
Second, this claim is analogous to someone’s claiming that because millions of children die of a given deadly disease anyway, it is okay to infect infants with that disease in the interests of population or birth control. A similar analogy would be society declaring it permissible to kill X number of teenagers in the interests of family harmony simply because ten times that number of teenagers die in automobile accidents every year anyway. After all, parents have the right to have fewer children in their home and a harmonious home life if they so choose, right? Millions of teenagers die every year anyway, so what would a few more matter, right? Obviously, this argument is both morally and culturally unacceptable.
The next, and possibly most used, argument the pro-choice proponents advocate is that there is a right to privacy which an expectant mother possesses which should prevent the government from stopping her from having an abortion. The United States Supreme Court has ruled that though the U. S. Constitution doesn't explicitly state a right to privacy, such a right does exist. The right to privacy is "embedded" in the assumptions the framers made when they wrote the Constitution. Privacy is implied in many of the rights the framers specifically listed, such as the right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures, and to be secure in one's "persons, papers, houses and effects." (Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution)
The right to privacy also covers things other than the security of "persons, houses, papers, and effects" (ibid.) for example, lawyer-client, confessor-confessed, and doctor-patient privileges. In these examples, the lawyer, confessor and doctor cannot be required to reveal the legal, moral or medical condition of the client, confessed, or patient, respectively.
But, let's be clear. There is no law which protects a person from governmental reprisal when they commit an illegal act just because they do it in private. Just because someone rapes, or murders someone behind locked doors doesn't mean that the government and society don't have a legitimate concern with respect to it.
The pro-choice advocates make statements like, "It's my body. I should have the right to control what happens to my body" and, "I'm having a medical procedure performed and the government has no right to interfere in my private medical treatments."
These arguments are based on their right to be secure in their persons and their right to doctor-patient privilege. They either misunderstand their rights or are purposely misconstruing the meaning of their rights as stated in The Constitution to suit their own purposes.
Let us consider their right to be secure in their persons. The Fourth Amendment states,
"The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized."
As is quite plain, the Fourth Amendment is intended to restrict the government's power to search a person's property, arrest a person, or take a person's property without good reason as attested to before a magistrate (who then issues the warrant). It is not a license to do with one’s body what one pleases, without regard for the rights of others.
Often it is the case that one right will modify, regulate or even supersede another. For instance, everyone has the right to travel freely, but not at speeds exceeding the speed limit. This would be an example of one's rights being modified or regulated.
Another example would be the situation where one person attacks another with a knife. Most states have self-defense statutes which would allow the person being attacked in this example to kill his attacker in self-defense by any means at his disposal without fear of imprisonment. This is an instance where one person's right to live (the victim's) supersedes another's (the assailant's).
It should be noted that the assailant in this case gave up his right to be free from attack when he attacked his victim. It was his choice. No one forced him down that path.
An infant in the womb, however, commits no crime against the mother. The only reason it is being aborted is that its existence is inconvenient. Perhaps it’s because the mother is no longer with the boyfriend she was with when she became pregnant, or the infant is offensive because the mother was raped or a victim of incest, or some other reason dependent on the mother’s discomfort. Clearly, the baby's right to his or her life would supersede the mother's right to take that life if the mother's only argument was inconvenience or personal offense.
Doctor-patient privilege means that the doctor may not reveal a patient's medical condition unless expressly authorized to do so by the patient. This does not mean that the government cannot regulate the practice of medicine or prohibit the performance of a specific procedure. The government already regulates or prohibits many aspects of the practice of medicine including which procedures may and may not be performed. So, for a woman to say, "I'm having a medical procedure performed and the government has no right to interfere in my private medical treatments" is ridiculous. Government "interferes" in the practice of medicine in this way all the time.
It should also be noted that just because one may have the right to control what "happens to" one’s body doesn't give one the right to purposely damage someone else's body. It should be obvious that a baby in the mother's womb is not her body, but rather is simply contained within her body. If the fetus were actually her body, she would be in the impossible position of having two separate and distinct sets of genes, which biologists agree is what defines what (and to a certain extent, who) we are as individual persons.
Another argument is, "This is a women's issue. Men should have no say in it." This is untenable because it is not just the woman who is involved. It is not just a "women's issue." Every baby has a father. The fact of the matter is that pro-choice advocates only admit fatherly responsibility when they say that a baby conceived as a result of rape or incest is the reason for the abortion. The father was just as responsible for creating that baby as the mother and should have an equal say in what happens to it. It is ironic that these same pro-choice advocates who so blithely deny the father’s prenatal rights with regard to their child are the first to scream about dead beat fathers and nonpayment of child support after the child is born.
Another reason it is not just a woman’s issue, is that there is more than the woman involved, even if you discount the father’s rights. Clearly there is another person present, the fetus, who is incapable of defending his rights. The fact that he is unable to do so (a) does not mean that he has none, and (b) should ethically require us to vigorously defend those rights as we would with any other class of people who are incapable.
Some pro-abortion advocates claim, "The government shouldn't interfere." Why not? Our Declaration of Independence declares that each of us has an "inalienable right to Life," and the government "interferes" in our lives all the time to make sure that we all may exercise our "inalienable" rights whenever we wish. Thomas Jefferson defined government's role in this way: "The care of human life and happiness, and not their destruction, is the first and only object of good government." Government should protect all of us regardless of age, but especially before we are born, when we are most vulnerable and least able to defend our own rights.
I have tried to cover all the misleading arguments that pro-choice advocates use to promote abortion. I hope that this article has helped to clear some of the fog surrounding this topic and encouraged the reader to look at the subject objectively.
It should also be noted that just because something is legal does not make it right. People of good conscience must hold themselves to a higher standard of conduct than the minimum standard the law requires.
Labels:
Abortion,
Pro-Choice,
Pro-Life
Wednesday, August 19, 2009
Reverse Discrimination Does Not Exist
When I moved to Alabama 16 years ago, I was confronted for the first time with obvious, unashamed white people who discriminated against black people. Though I found this disturbing, I was familiar with the problem and wasn’t surprised that I found it here. What shocked me then, and continues to surprise me is the pervasiveness of black people who are obviously prejudiced against white people. This latter practice is known by the euphemism, “Reverse Discrimination”.
But there is no such thing as “Reverse” discrimination. “Reverse discrimination” is a term invented by the politically correct to advance an agenda which promotes black against white prejudice. The very name implies that white against black discrimination is the standard, normal, or common form of discrimination and is unacceptable, and that black against white “reverse” discrimination is acceptable because it reverses, combats, or nullifies white against black discrimination.
I have actually heard black people tell me that it is not possible for a black person to be prejudiced, that their condition as a black person precludes the possibility of prejudice. These people believe that by virtue of their skin color alone, black people are incapable of prejudice and white people are not only capable of it but that discrimination is expected of them because they are white.
Several years ago, I had an interesting conversation with a very nice black lady that I worked with. She related a story to me about a white friend of hers that she had invited over to her house one evening along with some other friends. This lady was the only white person there. All the other guests were black. At some point this white lady used the term “my nigga” and all conversation stopped. She was informed that she could not use that term, because only black people may use it to other black people.
I pointed out to my co-worker that I thought that was a prejudiced attitude to take. My co-worker disagreed stating that it was perfectly normal and appropriate for black people to refer to other black people as “my nigga”, but that it was inappropriate and offensive for white people to us it. I tried to convince her pointing out that “nigga” was but a mispronunciation of “nigger” and no better than “nigger” and that no one should use that term regardless of their skin color. I also stated that restricting a person’s speech based on their skin color was wrong no matter what color their skin was.
She replied that “nigga” was not the same as “nigger”, because “nigger” is a derogatory term used by whites toward blacks and “nigga” was a term used by blacks toward other blacks, so it cannot be derogatory. She indicated that I just didn’t understand (presumably because I was white). She also said (and at this point began to become irritated) that it was not the same as a black person calling a white person “cracker” or some other epithet, that black people cannot be prejudiced toward whites.
In another incident, a black co-worker had “100% Nigger” tattooed on his forearm. Clearly he was not attempting to denigrate himself, but was making a statement of solidarity with other blacks. But because he used a term that whites are not allowed to us for fear of being ostracized as a racist, he is himself making a racist comment. If the roles were reversed, if a white person had tattooed “white power” on his forearm, the white person would have been branded as a racist. But he apparently sees nothing wrong with it .
These are but a few examples I have encountered personally where it has become acceptable for black people to think and act prejudicially toward white people. In each instance, if the skin colors were reversed, the white people would have been labeled bigots.
The distinction between discrimination and “reverse” discrimination should never be made. If you judge someone based on the color of their skin (or any other inherent characteristic for that matter) rather than on the content of their character, you are a bigot, plain and simple, and it does not matter a whit what color your skin is. “Reverse” discrimination does not exist.
But there is no such thing as “Reverse” discrimination. “Reverse discrimination” is a term invented by the politically correct to advance an agenda which promotes black against white prejudice. The very name implies that white against black discrimination is the standard, normal, or common form of discrimination and is unacceptable, and that black against white “reverse” discrimination is acceptable because it reverses, combats, or nullifies white against black discrimination.
I have actually heard black people tell me that it is not possible for a black person to be prejudiced, that their condition as a black person precludes the possibility of prejudice. These people believe that by virtue of their skin color alone, black people are incapable of prejudice and white people are not only capable of it but that discrimination is expected of them because they are white.
Several years ago, I had an interesting conversation with a very nice black lady that I worked with. She related a story to me about a white friend of hers that she had invited over to her house one evening along with some other friends. This lady was the only white person there. All the other guests were black. At some point this white lady used the term “my nigga” and all conversation stopped. She was informed that she could not use that term, because only black people may use it to other black people.
I pointed out to my co-worker that I thought that was a prejudiced attitude to take. My co-worker disagreed stating that it was perfectly normal and appropriate for black people to refer to other black people as “my nigga”, but that it was inappropriate and offensive for white people to us it. I tried to convince her pointing out that “nigga” was but a mispronunciation of “nigger” and no better than “nigger” and that no one should use that term regardless of their skin color. I also stated that restricting a person’s speech based on their skin color was wrong no matter what color their skin was.
She replied that “nigga” was not the same as “nigger”, because “nigger” is a derogatory term used by whites toward blacks and “nigga” was a term used by blacks toward other blacks, so it cannot be derogatory. She indicated that I just didn’t understand (presumably because I was white). She also said (and at this point began to become irritated) that it was not the same as a black person calling a white person “cracker” or some other epithet, that black people cannot be prejudiced toward whites.
In another incident, a black co-worker had “100% Nigger” tattooed on his forearm. Clearly he was not attempting to denigrate himself, but was making a statement of solidarity with other blacks. But because he used a term that whites are not allowed to us for fear of being ostracized as a racist, he is himself making a racist comment. If the roles were reversed, if a white person had tattooed “white power” on his forearm, the white person would have been branded as a racist. But he apparently sees nothing wrong with it .
These are but a few examples I have encountered personally where it has become acceptable for black people to think and act prejudicially toward white people. In each instance, if the skin colors were reversed, the white people would have been labeled bigots.
The distinction between discrimination and “reverse” discrimination should never be made. If you judge someone based on the color of their skin (or any other inherent characteristic for that matter) rather than on the content of their character, you are a bigot, plain and simple, and it does not matter a whit what color your skin is. “Reverse” discrimination does not exist.
Labels:
Discrimination,
Reverse Discrimination
Tuesday, August 11, 2009
Truth in Faith, or Faith in Truth?
Is it logically justifiable to believe in something without any assurance that the object of that faith has a basis in truth? More specifically, can Protestantism’s faith in the Bible as the sole fountain and foundation of truth, be justified in light of its inherent contradictions? I think not.
Protestants are not the first people to believe in a groundless system of faith. Mankind has a long history of believing strongly in ideas despite the obvious contradictions staring them in the face.
For a thousand years or more, from the time of Aristotle until the Enlightenment, people believed, because Aristotle said it was so, that the Universe was made up, fundamentally, of the “Elements” Earth, Air, Fire and Water. Through the techniques of logic taught by Aristotle, it was deduced that everything in the Universe was made up of differing concentrations of these four elements.
To our modern ears, this four-element paradigm sounds ridiculous, but to the Greeks of Aristotle’s time and to the entire western world for hundreds of generations, this was unshakable “truth”.
People believed. They believed because they had been taught that it was true, or because, upon a little investigation, they found that Aristotle had asserted it to be true and they believed because of their faith in his infallibility.
But, the belief of thousands of people in the 4-element paradigm didn’t make it true. Truth is completely independent of our belief or failure to believe in it. Our belief in a falsehood (or truth, for that matter) will not make it true and failure to believe in a truth does not make it false.
Some truth can be reliably discovered through testing and verification; the “Scientific Method” we all learned about in school. Using this method, the physical properties of the Universe have been and continue to be investigated and reliably discovered.
Science is quite good at discovering provable truth (or falsehood), but is ill-equipped to deal with those areas where proof or disproof is not possible. For these, faith is required.
Now, I appear to have contradicted myself. How can I have asserted on the one hand that Protestants are not justified in their belief in the Bible based solely on their faith and then on the other hand state that some things must be taken on faith?
The answer lies in the difference between how Protestants and Catholics define, “faith”. To a Protestant, “faith” is belief. Nothing else is required to legitimize their paradigm. Their belief in their religious construct validates it. For a Protestant, their belief makes their object of faith correct, real and true.
The result of this logical inconsistency is that not only is what everyone believes true, but each man can believe a different “truth” and there is no way (and in many cases no desire) to dispute it. So long as that man believes it, for him at least, it is “true”. The result of this philosophy has been, first the Protestant Revolt (“Reformation” to Protestants) of Martin Luther and his followers and then, all subsequent schisms from his ideas which have split the Christian Church into so many denominations in the last four centuries. All because there is no definitive, authoritative definition of truth.
This obviously begs the question, “How do you accurately discover truth?” For a Catholic, the object of belief must be true before it is believed to be so. But, how do you determine what is true before you believe in it? This boils down to a question of authority and strikes at the largest and most fundamental difference between Protestants and Catholics.
For Protestants, the final authority is the Bible, usually the “Authorized” King James Version or one of its variants, as interpreted by the reader for himself through the exercise of his faith. The problem for the Protestant is that the Bible upon which his faith is founded and from where he derives his faith is also being interpreted by that same faith to state that the Bible is the source for the faith in the first place. The truth contained in and the veracity of the Bible are dependent on one’s belief in it and one’s belief is dependent on the truth contained in and the veracity of the Bible.
Any freshman logic student will tell you, circular arguments of this kind do not provide definitive answers. The tenants contained in the KJV could be true or false and this type of logic would still hold up.
So, by what authority do Protestants make the claim that their version of the Christian faith is the true and correct one if the faith alone argument fails?
The answer appears to be one that the Protestants themselves have problems with and which will also not stand up to logical scrutiny. Essentially, they believe what they do because Martin Luther and other founding Protestants like Calvin, Wycliffe, etc. said that that is the way it should be.
Martin Luther was a Catholic Priest in late 15th century Germany who protested certain practices of the Catholic Church which he considered egregious, by nailing 95 theses to the door of the church in Wittenberg, Germany, thereby sparking off the Protestant Reformation (or Revolt, if you’re of the Catholic persuasion). He later went on to edit the Bible, leaving out several books and parts of books, and editing the text of others so that the Bible was now in accord with what Luther thought Christianity should teach.
But, Protestants don’t like it when it is suggested that a mere man could in some way dictate what we are to believe. I have often herd Protestants say that there is only one mediator, Christ and that they need no man to come between them and Christ. This is the argument they use against the validity of the Catholic priesthood in general and especially against the Papacy.
Protestants claim that the Scriptures are unchanging and would agree that no one should rewrite any part of the Bible, regardless of what their faith led them to believe. Many denominations require that their adherents use only the King James version of the bible stating that it is the only true translation. Protestants would immediately reject the idea of the Catholic Church or an individual Catholic priest editing the Bible as sacrilege.
Yet, that is exactly what happened. Protestants have allowed Martin Luther, who broke his priestly vows, to guide their path and determine the tenants of their faith by editing the Bible which they claim as the foundation of their faith. Luther had no authority to make changes to the scriptures, either granted to him by the Catholic Church or (by Protestant standards) by his faith in their erroneous content. But he did so anyway.
So, from where do Catholics derive their faith?
For Catholics, what they believe is founded both on the Bible (in its entirety, not the truncated version used by Protestants) and on the Church’s Sacred Tradition. Tradition (capital “T”) was handed down to us, through the priesthood, from the Apostles. The Apostles were the original receivers of the words of Christ, were there to ask Christ questions, received the Holy Spirit at Pentecost, and were the ones upon whom Christ’s church was founded. Who better to know what Christ intended for his Church than the Twelve? It’s from these original Apostles that the Church gets its Sacred Traditions.
Additionally, Christ gave to Peter the Keys to the Kingdom of Heaven and the power and authority to “loose and bind”. These were very specific and well-defined terms with which the Twelve would have been very familiar.
It was the practice in many Middle-eastern kingdoms at the time of Christ that when the king was away for any extended period of time, a trusted servant, or steward, was left in charge of the affairs of the realm (for example, Joseph in Egypt). The king gave to this steward the keys to the treasury and the granary and he was granted the authority to speak for the king and with his authority in the king’s absence. It was the tradition that this steward would wear these keys pinned to the shoulder of his tunic as a symbol that he had been granted the king’s authority. So, when Jesus told Peter that he was being given the keys to the Kingdom, all the apostles understood that Jesus was saying He would soon be leaving for a time and that Peter was to speak for Him and with his authority while He was away.
The terms “binding” and “loosing” referred to very specific legal terms with which the Apostles were also familiar. The power to bind and loose referred to a Rabbi’s authority to make decisions concerning faith and morals. Jesus was granting Peter the authority to determine, in matters of faith and morals, what was right and what was wrong. Because the Church was founded on Peter, by extension, the Catholic Church has the authority to teach what is right and wrong with respect to faith and morals when those teachings are approved by the Pope.
It was through this authority to decide right from wrong that the Bible took its form in the early Christian era in the first place. The Universal Christian Church (the body as a whole) had the authority to choose which few books out of the many circulating among the several Christian churches (individual communities of Christians living in different cities around the world) were to be included in the cannon and which were to be excluded. The Church determined the cannon.
This authority derived from the Pope alone, not the priesthood or the church by itself. Therefore, no priest, individually, (with the sole exception of the Pope) has the authority to bind or loose nor do priests, (again except for the Pope) have the Keys to the Kingdom.
Therefore, Luther, though a priest, did not have any authority to undo the Church’s decision as to which books were to be included in the Cannon, nor did he have any authority to nullify the Church’s teachings on faith and salvation. Luther had arrogated to himself the authority and power that had been granted to Peter and the Church by Jesus himself.
Protestants, therefore, believe in a paradigm that has no logical foundation. They believe what they believe for one reason only, because they believe it. As I stated at the beginning, believe is independent of truth and belief in something does not make it true.
So, why should Protestants believe in the Catholic paradigm? What makes the Catholic faith better than the Protestant faith? To answer this question, we need to look at the basic tenant of Protestant faith.
For a Protestant, to become a Christian and achieve salvation, all that is necessary is that you, “…accept Jesus Christ as your Lord and Savior” and have faith in the Bible. Yes, it’s a little more complicated than that, but that is the basic foundation of Protestantism. Let’s look at these requirements.
To accept Jesus as “Lord” means to accept him as the boss. We are to follow his example and his instructions as recounted in the Bible. Therefore, faith in the Bible is required.
To accept Jesus as Savior also requires faith in the Bible as that is the place where the story of salvation is recounted. At no point is it even hinted at that there might be another source of knowledge about Christ. The personal experiences of those who knew Christ (except those recorded in the Bible) are ignored, despite the fact that the Bible explicitly states that not all the story of Christ was recorded there. Are not all the words of Christ precious? How can man have just decided to disregard some or even most of them by not writing them down?
The answer is, they were and remain precious and they were preserved, just not written down. They were preserved in the Traditions of the Catholic Church. Protestants, however, ignore this reality, just as they have ignored and defamed the authority of the Catholic Church from the beginning.
Jesus did not found his church on a book, but on men, and in a special way, on one man, Peter. There was no way that Jesus could have instructed Peter and the other Apostles to follow the precepts contained in the Bible. The Bible did not exist in Jesus’ time. Clearly, by granting Peter the authority of the Keys and the power to loose and bind, by instructing the Apostles to go forth to all nations and teach about Christ, by promising to send them the Holy Spirit, and finally by promising them that He would be with them even until the end of the world, He was setting up a church that would be self-sustaining and authoritative until He returned.
Jesus’ actions in this regard are not in dispute. They are recorded in the Bible which Protestants hold sacred and inerrant. There is no justification for the Protestant paradigm.
Protestants are not the first people to believe in a groundless system of faith. Mankind has a long history of believing strongly in ideas despite the obvious contradictions staring them in the face.
For a thousand years or more, from the time of Aristotle until the Enlightenment, people believed, because Aristotle said it was so, that the Universe was made up, fundamentally, of the “Elements” Earth, Air, Fire and Water. Through the techniques of logic taught by Aristotle, it was deduced that everything in the Universe was made up of differing concentrations of these four elements.
To our modern ears, this four-element paradigm sounds ridiculous, but to the Greeks of Aristotle’s time and to the entire western world for hundreds of generations, this was unshakable “truth”.
People believed. They believed because they had been taught that it was true, or because, upon a little investigation, they found that Aristotle had asserted it to be true and they believed because of their faith in his infallibility.
But, the belief of thousands of people in the 4-element paradigm didn’t make it true. Truth is completely independent of our belief or failure to believe in it. Our belief in a falsehood (or truth, for that matter) will not make it true and failure to believe in a truth does not make it false.
Some truth can be reliably discovered through testing and verification; the “Scientific Method” we all learned about in school. Using this method, the physical properties of the Universe have been and continue to be investigated and reliably discovered.
Science is quite good at discovering provable truth (or falsehood), but is ill-equipped to deal with those areas where proof or disproof is not possible. For these, faith is required.
Now, I appear to have contradicted myself. How can I have asserted on the one hand that Protestants are not justified in their belief in the Bible based solely on their faith and then on the other hand state that some things must be taken on faith?
The answer lies in the difference between how Protestants and Catholics define, “faith”. To a Protestant, “faith” is belief. Nothing else is required to legitimize their paradigm. Their belief in their religious construct validates it. For a Protestant, their belief makes their object of faith correct, real and true.
The result of this logical inconsistency is that not only is what everyone believes true, but each man can believe a different “truth” and there is no way (and in many cases no desire) to dispute it. So long as that man believes it, for him at least, it is “true”. The result of this philosophy has been, first the Protestant Revolt (“Reformation” to Protestants) of Martin Luther and his followers and then, all subsequent schisms from his ideas which have split the Christian Church into so many denominations in the last four centuries. All because there is no definitive, authoritative definition of truth.
This obviously begs the question, “How do you accurately discover truth?” For a Catholic, the object of belief must be true before it is believed to be so. But, how do you determine what is true before you believe in it? This boils down to a question of authority and strikes at the largest and most fundamental difference between Protestants and Catholics.
For Protestants, the final authority is the Bible, usually the “Authorized” King James Version or one of its variants, as interpreted by the reader for himself through the exercise of his faith. The problem for the Protestant is that the Bible upon which his faith is founded and from where he derives his faith is also being interpreted by that same faith to state that the Bible is the source for the faith in the first place. The truth contained in and the veracity of the Bible are dependent on one’s belief in it and one’s belief is dependent on the truth contained in and the veracity of the Bible.
Any freshman logic student will tell you, circular arguments of this kind do not provide definitive answers. The tenants contained in the KJV could be true or false and this type of logic would still hold up.
So, by what authority do Protestants make the claim that their version of the Christian faith is the true and correct one if the faith alone argument fails?
The answer appears to be one that the Protestants themselves have problems with and which will also not stand up to logical scrutiny. Essentially, they believe what they do because Martin Luther and other founding Protestants like Calvin, Wycliffe, etc. said that that is the way it should be.
Martin Luther was a Catholic Priest in late 15th century Germany who protested certain practices of the Catholic Church which he considered egregious, by nailing 95 theses to the door of the church in Wittenberg, Germany, thereby sparking off the Protestant Reformation (or Revolt, if you’re of the Catholic persuasion). He later went on to edit the Bible, leaving out several books and parts of books, and editing the text of others so that the Bible was now in accord with what Luther thought Christianity should teach.
But, Protestants don’t like it when it is suggested that a mere man could in some way dictate what we are to believe. I have often herd Protestants say that there is only one mediator, Christ and that they need no man to come between them and Christ. This is the argument they use against the validity of the Catholic priesthood in general and especially against the Papacy.
Protestants claim that the Scriptures are unchanging and would agree that no one should rewrite any part of the Bible, regardless of what their faith led them to believe. Many denominations require that their adherents use only the King James version of the bible stating that it is the only true translation. Protestants would immediately reject the idea of the Catholic Church or an individual Catholic priest editing the Bible as sacrilege.
Yet, that is exactly what happened. Protestants have allowed Martin Luther, who broke his priestly vows, to guide their path and determine the tenants of their faith by editing the Bible which they claim as the foundation of their faith. Luther had no authority to make changes to the scriptures, either granted to him by the Catholic Church or (by Protestant standards) by his faith in their erroneous content. But he did so anyway.
So, from where do Catholics derive their faith?
For Catholics, what they believe is founded both on the Bible (in its entirety, not the truncated version used by Protestants) and on the Church’s Sacred Tradition. Tradition (capital “T”) was handed down to us, through the priesthood, from the Apostles. The Apostles were the original receivers of the words of Christ, were there to ask Christ questions, received the Holy Spirit at Pentecost, and were the ones upon whom Christ’s church was founded. Who better to know what Christ intended for his Church than the Twelve? It’s from these original Apostles that the Church gets its Sacred Traditions.
Additionally, Christ gave to Peter the Keys to the Kingdom of Heaven and the power and authority to “loose and bind”. These were very specific and well-defined terms with which the Twelve would have been very familiar.
It was the practice in many Middle-eastern kingdoms at the time of Christ that when the king was away for any extended period of time, a trusted servant, or steward, was left in charge of the affairs of the realm (for example, Joseph in Egypt). The king gave to this steward the keys to the treasury and the granary and he was granted the authority to speak for the king and with his authority in the king’s absence. It was the tradition that this steward would wear these keys pinned to the shoulder of his tunic as a symbol that he had been granted the king’s authority. So, when Jesus told Peter that he was being given the keys to the Kingdom, all the apostles understood that Jesus was saying He would soon be leaving for a time and that Peter was to speak for Him and with his authority while He was away.
The terms “binding” and “loosing” referred to very specific legal terms with which the Apostles were also familiar. The power to bind and loose referred to a Rabbi’s authority to make decisions concerning faith and morals. Jesus was granting Peter the authority to determine, in matters of faith and morals, what was right and what was wrong. Because the Church was founded on Peter, by extension, the Catholic Church has the authority to teach what is right and wrong with respect to faith and morals when those teachings are approved by the Pope.
It was through this authority to decide right from wrong that the Bible took its form in the early Christian era in the first place. The Universal Christian Church (the body as a whole) had the authority to choose which few books out of the many circulating among the several Christian churches (individual communities of Christians living in different cities around the world) were to be included in the cannon and which were to be excluded. The Church determined the cannon.
This authority derived from the Pope alone, not the priesthood or the church by itself. Therefore, no priest, individually, (with the sole exception of the Pope) has the authority to bind or loose nor do priests, (again except for the Pope) have the Keys to the Kingdom.
Therefore, Luther, though a priest, did not have any authority to undo the Church’s decision as to which books were to be included in the Cannon, nor did he have any authority to nullify the Church’s teachings on faith and salvation. Luther had arrogated to himself the authority and power that had been granted to Peter and the Church by Jesus himself.
Protestants, therefore, believe in a paradigm that has no logical foundation. They believe what they believe for one reason only, because they believe it. As I stated at the beginning, believe is independent of truth and belief in something does not make it true.
So, why should Protestants believe in the Catholic paradigm? What makes the Catholic faith better than the Protestant faith? To answer this question, we need to look at the basic tenant of Protestant faith.
For a Protestant, to become a Christian and achieve salvation, all that is necessary is that you, “…accept Jesus Christ as your Lord and Savior” and have faith in the Bible. Yes, it’s a little more complicated than that, but that is the basic foundation of Protestantism. Let’s look at these requirements.
To accept Jesus as “Lord” means to accept him as the boss. We are to follow his example and his instructions as recounted in the Bible. Therefore, faith in the Bible is required.
To accept Jesus as Savior also requires faith in the Bible as that is the place where the story of salvation is recounted. At no point is it even hinted at that there might be another source of knowledge about Christ. The personal experiences of those who knew Christ (except those recorded in the Bible) are ignored, despite the fact that the Bible explicitly states that not all the story of Christ was recorded there. Are not all the words of Christ precious? How can man have just decided to disregard some or even most of them by not writing them down?
The answer is, they were and remain precious and they were preserved, just not written down. They were preserved in the Traditions of the Catholic Church. Protestants, however, ignore this reality, just as they have ignored and defamed the authority of the Catholic Church from the beginning.
Jesus did not found his church on a book, but on men, and in a special way, on one man, Peter. There was no way that Jesus could have instructed Peter and the other Apostles to follow the precepts contained in the Bible. The Bible did not exist in Jesus’ time. Clearly, by granting Peter the authority of the Keys and the power to loose and bind, by instructing the Apostles to go forth to all nations and teach about Christ, by promising to send them the Holy Spirit, and finally by promising them that He would be with them even until the end of the world, He was setting up a church that would be self-sustaining and authoritative until He returned.
Jesus’ actions in this regard are not in dispute. They are recorded in the Bible which Protestants hold sacred and inerrant. There is no justification for the Protestant paradigm.
The Forgotten Cop
Many have asked me what it is like to be a Correctional Officer. Many of you work in jobs difficult to explain to the uninitiated. This is especially true of Corrections. People see TV shows and movies that show what it is like in prison, but that's entertainment, not reality.
A fellow officer gave me a copy of the essay below. It should give you some idea of what it is like for us day in and day out, 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, without fail, because when we fail, people get hurt or die. It's that simple.
What would the average citizen say if it were proposed that Police Officers be assigned to a neighborhood which was inhabited by no one but criminals and those Officers would be un¬armed, patrol on foot and be heavily outnumbered?
I wager that the overwhelming public response would be that the Officers would have to be crazy to accept such an assignment. However, as you read this, such a scenario is being played out in all areas of the country.
We are Correctional Officers, not Guards (who are people that watch school crossings). We work at minimum, medium and maximum security Correctional Facilities.
We are empowered by the State to enforce its Penal Laws, Rules and Regulations of the Department of Correctional Services.
In short, we are Policemen.
Our beat is totally inhabited by convicted felons who, by definition, are people who tend to break laws, rules and regulations.
We are outnumbered by as many as 250 to 1 at various times of our workday and, contrary to popular belief, we work without a sidearm.
In short, our necks are on the line every minute of every day.
A Correctional Facility is a very misunderstood environment. The average person has very little knowledge of its workings.
Society sends its criminals to Correctional Facilities and, as time passes, each criminal's crime fades from memory until the collective prison population becomes a horde of bad people being warehoused away from decent society in a place where they can cause no further harm.
There is also the notion that prison inmates cease to be a problem when they are incarcerated.
Correctional Facilities are full of violence perpetrated by the prison population against the prison population and facility staff. Felonies are committed daily but are rarely reported. They are called "unusual incidents" and rarely result in criminal prosecution.
Discipline is handled internally and, as a rule, the public is rarely informed of these crimes.
In the course of maintaining order in these facilities, many Officers have endured the humiliation of having urine and feces thrown at them.
Uncounted Correctional Officers have been kicked, bitten, stabbed and slashed with home¬made weapons; taken hostage; murdered; and even raped in the line of duty, all while being legally mandated to maintain their professional composure and refraining from any retaliation which could be the basis for dismissal from service.
In addition to these obvious dangers, Correctional Officers face hidden dangers in the form of AIDS, tuberculosis or hepatitis B and C.
Courts are now imposing longer sentences and the prison population is increasing far beyond the system's designated capacity.
As the public demands more police on the street, governments everywhere are cutting police in prison where violence reins supreme, jeopardizing all those working behind prison walls.
Although you will never see us on "911" or "Top Cops" we are Law Enforcement Profes¬sionals.
We are the "FORGOTTEN COP," hidden from public view, doing a dangerous beat, hoping someday to receive the respect and approval from the public whom "WE SILENTLY SERVE."
A fellow officer gave me a copy of the essay below. It should give you some idea of what it is like for us day in and day out, 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, without fail, because when we fail, people get hurt or die. It's that simple.
The Forgotten Cop
What would the average citizen say if it were proposed that Police Officers be assigned to a neighborhood which was inhabited by no one but criminals and those Officers would be un¬armed, patrol on foot and be heavily outnumbered?
I wager that the overwhelming public response would be that the Officers would have to be crazy to accept such an assignment. However, as you read this, such a scenario is being played out in all areas of the country.
We are Correctional Officers, not Guards (who are people that watch school crossings). We work at minimum, medium and maximum security Correctional Facilities.
We are empowered by the State to enforce its Penal Laws, Rules and Regulations of the Department of Correctional Services.
In short, we are Policemen.
Our beat is totally inhabited by convicted felons who, by definition, are people who tend to break laws, rules and regulations.
We are outnumbered by as many as 250 to 1 at various times of our workday and, contrary to popular belief, we work without a sidearm.
In short, our necks are on the line every minute of every day.
A Correctional Facility is a very misunderstood environment. The average person has very little knowledge of its workings.
Society sends its criminals to Correctional Facilities and, as time passes, each criminal's crime fades from memory until the collective prison population becomes a horde of bad people being warehoused away from decent society in a place where they can cause no further harm.
There is also the notion that prison inmates cease to be a problem when they are incarcerated.
Correctional Facilities are full of violence perpetrated by the prison population against the prison population and facility staff. Felonies are committed daily but are rarely reported. They are called "unusual incidents" and rarely result in criminal prosecution.
Discipline is handled internally and, as a rule, the public is rarely informed of these crimes.
In the course of maintaining order in these facilities, many Officers have endured the humiliation of having urine and feces thrown at them.
Uncounted Correctional Officers have been kicked, bitten, stabbed and slashed with home¬made weapons; taken hostage; murdered; and even raped in the line of duty, all while being legally mandated to maintain their professional composure and refraining from any retaliation which could be the basis for dismissal from service.
In addition to these obvious dangers, Correctional Officers face hidden dangers in the form of AIDS, tuberculosis or hepatitis B and C.
Courts are now imposing longer sentences and the prison population is increasing far beyond the system's designated capacity.
As the public demands more police on the street, governments everywhere are cutting police in prison where violence reins supreme, jeopardizing all those working behind prison walls.
Although you will never see us on "911" or "Top Cops" we are Law Enforcement Profes¬sionals.
We are the "FORGOTTEN COP," hidden from public view, doing a dangerous beat, hoping someday to receive the respect and approval from the public whom "WE SILENTLY SERVE."
-- Author Unknown
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Forgotten Cop
From Where do Our Freedoms Come?
Some would have you believe that the freedoms we enjoy (and so often take for granted) come from our elected representatives in Congress writing and enacting just and wise laws for us to follow. Others say that our freedoms stem from our teachers who guide us wisely when we are young to know the freedoms we have inherited and teach us how to properly exercise them. Others say that our freedoms come from the courts that protect the free by making sure that our laws are applied justly. All of these notions are wrong. These are all people exercising freedoms they already possess through the efforts of the guarantors of our freedom.
Our freedoms come from a long line of people who put their principles before their personal well-being so that present and future generations could live a better life. My freedoms started with God who blessed me with rights when he created me. My rights were then further ensured by 56 men who signed a document that in part affirmed that we have inalienable rights granted to us by our creator, and that those included, but were not limited to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
For the record, of those 56 men who pledged to their brothers and their posterity their life, their fortunes, and their sacred honor, five signers were captured by the British as traitors, and tortured before they died. Twelve had their homes ransacked and burned. Two lost their sons serving in the Revolutionary Army; another had two sons captured. Nine of the 56 fought and died from wounds or hardships of the Revolutionary War. They signed the Declaration of Independence knowing full well that the penalty would be death if they were captured.
Carter Braxton of Virginia, a wealthy planter and trader, saw his ships swept from the seas by the British Navy. He sold his home and properties to pay his debts, and died in rags. Thomas McKeam was so hounded by the British that he was forced to move his family almost constantly. He served in the Congress without pay, and his family was kept in hiding. His possessions were taken from him, and poverty was his reward. Vandals or soldiers looted the properties of Dillery, Hall, Clymer, Walton, Gwinnett, Eyward, Ruttledge, and Middleton.
At the battle of Yorktown, Thomas Nelson, Jr., noted that the British General Cornwallis had taken over the Nelson home for his headquarters. He quietly urged General George Washington to open fire. The home was destroyed, and Nelson died bankrupt.
Francis Lewis had his home and properties destroyed. The enemy jailed his wife, and she died within a few months. John Hart was driven from his wife's bedside as she was dying. Their 13 children fled for their lives. His fields and his gristmill were laid to waste. For more than a year he lived in forests and caves, returning home to find his wife dead and his children vanished.
For the last 233 years this type of heroism has been continuously displayed by this country’s protectors of freedom, it’s military. They leave their homes and families for regular duty and for war, sometimes for months or years at a time. They do it for little pay and less recognition. Their families suffer and are often torn apart as a result of their service to us.
I am blessed to have come from a military family. I have ancestors who served in every war this country has been involved in. Three of my four grandparents served in WWII, one of them retiring from the military after serving in WWII, Korea, and Vietnam in both the Navy and the Air Force. Several of my uncles and cousins have served or are serving in the military. My father served 28 years in the USAF with distinction.
I was taught from whence my freedoms come by the word and example of these brave and committed people. They come from brave men and women all over the world standing to in harm’s way, drawing that line in the sand and then placing their lives on that line and stating categorically that here, in this place, is the boundary of freedom. Friends are welcome. Foes cross this line at their extreme peril.
Our freedoms come from a long line of people who put their principles before their personal well-being so that present and future generations could live a better life. My freedoms started with God who blessed me with rights when he created me. My rights were then further ensured by 56 men who signed a document that in part affirmed that we have inalienable rights granted to us by our creator, and that those included, but were not limited to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
For the record, of those 56 men who pledged to their brothers and their posterity their life, their fortunes, and their sacred honor, five signers were captured by the British as traitors, and tortured before they died. Twelve had their homes ransacked and burned. Two lost their sons serving in the Revolutionary Army; another had two sons captured. Nine of the 56 fought and died from wounds or hardships of the Revolutionary War. They signed the Declaration of Independence knowing full well that the penalty would be death if they were captured.
Carter Braxton of Virginia, a wealthy planter and trader, saw his ships swept from the seas by the British Navy. He sold his home and properties to pay his debts, and died in rags. Thomas McKeam was so hounded by the British that he was forced to move his family almost constantly. He served in the Congress without pay, and his family was kept in hiding. His possessions were taken from him, and poverty was his reward. Vandals or soldiers looted the properties of Dillery, Hall, Clymer, Walton, Gwinnett, Eyward, Ruttledge, and Middleton.
At the battle of Yorktown, Thomas Nelson, Jr., noted that the British General Cornwallis had taken over the Nelson home for his headquarters. He quietly urged General George Washington to open fire. The home was destroyed, and Nelson died bankrupt.
Francis Lewis had his home and properties destroyed. The enemy jailed his wife, and she died within a few months. John Hart was driven from his wife's bedside as she was dying. Their 13 children fled for their lives. His fields and his gristmill were laid to waste. For more than a year he lived in forests and caves, returning home to find his wife dead and his children vanished.
For the last 233 years this type of heroism has been continuously displayed by this country’s protectors of freedom, it’s military. They leave their homes and families for regular duty and for war, sometimes for months or years at a time. They do it for little pay and less recognition. Their families suffer and are often torn apart as a result of their service to us.
I am blessed to have come from a military family. I have ancestors who served in every war this country has been involved in. Three of my four grandparents served in WWII, one of them retiring from the military after serving in WWII, Korea, and Vietnam in both the Navy and the Air Force. Several of my uncles and cousins have served or are serving in the military. My father served 28 years in the USAF with distinction.
I was taught from whence my freedoms come by the word and example of these brave and committed people. They come from brave men and women all over the world standing to in harm’s way, drawing that line in the sand and then placing their lives on that line and stating categorically that here, in this place, is the boundary of freedom. Friends are welcome. Foes cross this line at their extreme peril.
Capital Punishment -- Why NOT
Many may question why a Correctional Officer is against capital punishment. Here's why I am.
Proponents of the death penalty present six arguments for the application of capital punishment. They are that it (1) reduces recidivism against society, (2) provides a powerful deterrent violent crime, (3) is less expensive than a sentence of Life Without Possibility of Parole (LWOPP), (4) provides for societal retribution against the offender, (5) provides for a proportional societal response to the crime committed, and (6) provides an appropriate eugenic excuse. I believe that none of these arguments can sufficiently justify the use of the death penalty.
Let’s look at each in turn. First, does the death penalty reduce the recidivism rate against society for a given offender? Certainly the executed person will never recidivate against society, but might not LWOPP also reduce this rate to zero? Of course it would. Therefore, prevention of possible future crimes against society is not a justification for the capital punishment.
It could be argued that prisoners often commit crimes against each other while in prison and that LWOPP allows a convict to recidivate against his fellow prisoners, but I argue that society should not be responsible for the violent nature of incarcerated people. The purpose of society imprisoning them is to protect society, not to protect them from each other. The dangers inherent in prison life are part of the punishment of being incarcerated. Though, of course, reasonable precautions should be taken and procedures implemented to protect prisoners from each other, if the fact that prisons are dangerous places were to be allowed an argument against incarcerating criminals, no one would ever go to prison.
Another argument against capital punishment to prevent recidivism is that society is then preemptively punishing someone for crimes they have not yet committed. Society would be stating that it believes the offender WILL commit additional crimes and that he is irredeemable. Therefore, capital punishment is the only option to ensure that those future crimes will never be committed.
Notice, I said, “will commit”, not, “might commit”. The finality of the punishment is such that society had better be sure the offender will recidivate, not just believe it “likely” or “possible”, if it is going to use recidivism as a justification. I can see an argument for using recidivism as a justification for punishments less severe than the death penalty, because the offender can be observed as he serves his sentence and if it should be determined at a later time that the convict no longer posses a danger of recidivism sufficient to require his continued incarceration, he can be released. Not so with the death penalty. It is final, permanent, and irrevocable.
The second major argument for the death penalty is that it provides a powerful deterrent to crimes for which the death penalty is imposed. The concept of deterrence states that a hypothetical “rational criminal” will pause before he commits his criminal act to consider the potential consequences of his actions and those potential consequences, being severe in nature, will make him reconsider his plans and refrain from committing the criminal act in the first place.
First, many who commit crimes that warrant the death penalty are not rational at the time of the commission of the crime sufficient to carefully consider the consequences of their actions. These crimes are commonly known as “crimes of passion” where the offender becomes so emotionally agitated that, though still in control of their ability to distinguish right and wrong, they choose to disregard the dictates of their conscience and act in an irrational manner, allowing heir emotions rather than their reason to dictate their actions. These people do not consider the possible consequence3s of their actions in favor of satisfying their emotional needs. Since deterrence depends fundamentally on a rational consideration of consequences, these, by definition irrational people, are not affected by deterrence.
Second, in order for deterrence to work, it must be swift, sure, and severe enough that if it is considered rationally, it will compel the potential offender to reconsider his planned actions and make a different choice. However, our justice system is anything but swift. This slowness starts the moment the crime is committed, because there is not an instantaneous response to the criminal act. It can take anywhere from several minutes to years before the police show up to arrest an offender after he has committed the crime. Then, once arrested, there are many inherent delays in the system put there to ensure that the innocent are not punished along with the guilty. Finally, once conviction occurs, on average, it takes 13 ½ years to actually carry out the execution. Clearly, the swiftness requirement is not met.
Neither is capital punishment sure. Because the system is set up to protect the innocent, even at the cost of letting some guilty offenders to free, there are many who are not convicted, or punished, or whose sentences are reduced to something less than capital punishment. Even those who are duly convicted and sentenced to be executed have hope, because the appeals process often allows them to reduce their sentence to something less than execution.
I know an inmate in prison now who was on death row for multiple murders and who has told me that he is quite willing to kill again if he feels someone wrongs him. He is now a minimum-custody inmate with unsupervised access to the outside of the institution where he is incarcerated. Stories like this one give potential criminals good reason to hope that even if they were to be caught, tried, convicted and sentenced to death, the sentence would not be carried out. Therefore, the death penalty does not happen with sufficient surety to create the fear of it that is required to deter.
The final condition to be met for deterrence to work, severity, is also not met. Our methods of dealing out death are specifically engineered to not be “cruel and unusual” and therefore engender no fear. The three main methods of execution, electrocution, lethal injection, and inhalation of poison gas, all cause nearly instantaneous death. In the case of lethal injection, the victim is put to sleep before the toxin is introduced, so there is no discomfort at all. Even the other methods, death by firing squad or by hanging, are not deemed unduly painful.
Though the thought of their personal death is distressing to any sane person, people are unfamiliar with the concept of death as punishment in their daily lives. We don’t do public executions in the town square anymore, or in the equivalent modern venue, television. People rarely see death take place any longer except in the easily dismissed fantasy world of the movies or television fiction. We see the after-affects of death, the funeral, the burial, graves, and we certainly have to deal with the lingering effects, the loss, the paperwork, the expense, but rarely does anyone outside the medical profession ever see someone actually expire. The actual process of death, the last spoken words, the fear of imminent death, the physical pain experienced by the dying and related first hand to those left behind are all alien to most people. Therefore, because no one is familiar with death on a personal level, no one is really deterred by the personal fear of death.
Another reason I believe that deterrence is a flawed concept is that in many instances, the offender believes himself justified in his actions. One famous example of this concept is the story told in the movie, “A Time to Kill” where the father of a raped girl killed the rapist. The father was tried and the jury refused to convict despite clear evidence of guilt. Another common example is the situation where a man comes home unexpectedly to find his wife in bed with her lover and then kills one or both of them. The justification I have often heard for this is, “Well, he/she/they deserved it.”
Thinking like this indicates that the offender does not believe he has done anything wrong, so he does not expect any societal retribution at all. There is not deterrent value for any punishment that the offender does not expect to be imposed.
The final reason that deterrence is an illusion is that its validity depends on the offender believing that is capture is assured. Except in the possible case of an insane offender who intentionally commits a criminal act for the express purpose of getting caught, “rational” criminals believe they will be able to elude capture indefinitely, so whatever the consequence, it will not affect their decision-making process.
The third major argument put forth for the death penalty is that it is less expensive to the state, and therefore the tax-payer to execute a prisoner than to lock him up for LWOPP. This is actually not true. Death row inmates spend between 10-15 years on death row (depending on individual state laws these averages vary). During this time they use up resources that inmates with LWOPP do not, like additional Correctional Officers, a beefier physical plant, defense counsel, prosecutorial counsel, court costs, the cost of the execution process itself, etc. Taken together, these costs add up to considerably more than the average cost of keeping an offender locked up for the rest of his life. (You can find statistics supporting this all over the web. Many states publish statistics on their state’s death penalty/LWOPP programs. Please see: http://www.deathpenalty.org/index.php?pid=cost for an example of California’s costs.)
The Fourth argument is that the death penalty is justified as societal retribution. Our society says that it will not permit individuals to take their revenge, but that it is permissible for large groups to take revenge in the victim’s name. Presumably this is based on the idea that the group, being detached and more numerous, will be able to make a judgment that is more equitable and avoids the pitfalls of allowing any one individual, with all his flaws and prejudices, to make the decision. In other words, the majority is always right, so we’ll let the group decide for us individuals. (It also has the advantage of spreading out the liability for killing another human being from one person to many, thereby assuaging any personal guilt.) The problem is that groups do not always make ethically justifiable decisions.
Take for instance the Nazis’ campaign to promote the “Master Race” through genocide and how the German people went along. Or, to choose an example closer to home, how about the institution of slavery in this country? This was a practice that was, at best, degrading and, at worst, murderous, on a vast scale. Large numbers of people, a whole society, believed there was nothing wrong with slavery, that in fact, that it was the natural order of things for whites to enslave, abuse, and even murder, blacks. The atrocities do not stop there. There have been wars and invasions of countries for religious reasons. Entire cultures have been wiped out in the New World due to greed and disease. People have been killing each other in the Middle East for centuries, simply because the target didn’t believe as the assailant believed he should. The list goes on and on. Clearly, people cannot be trusted to make the right choice, however you define right and wrong, simply because they are numerous. It is a philosophical truism that might does not make right, whether you are talking about strength of arms or strength in numbers. Society has proven itself a poor judge of when it is or is not appropriate to take the life of a human being, so allowing “society” to determine when retribution is justified seems unwise at best. More likely, it is in itself a criminally negligent act.
The fifth argument is that it provides a proportional response to the offender’s actions. The problem with, “eye-for-an-eye” is that eventually, you run out of eyes. How do you kill someone more than once? How can executing someone like Timothy McVey who killed and injured hundreds, only once, make up for all those deaths he caused? His crime was totally out of proportion to the punishment dealt out to him. Further, in his case, he requested the death penalty. How can giving someone what he requests be considered punishment? (I know, we have to have standards to which everyone is held and we cannot fall into the trap of simply deciding to deal out the opposite punishment from what the criminal requests, but clearly, McVey was spared many years of guilt by his swift execution.)
Additionally, the severity of the crime is always taken into account in capital cases when determining the sentence. This is so that, as much as is possible, sentences are dolled out equitably and fairly. But we must ask ourselves if it is a fair and proportional response to meet out a swift, painless, single, humane death in response to many different severities of capital crimes. Is it fair to treat a McVey the same as someone who commits a single murder in a non-heinous manner?
Finally, there is a “societal eugenics” argument that could be put forth to support the death penalty. Essentially, the death penalty would be used to remove the least desirable elements of society so as to produce a stronger, better society. I mention this only for the sake of completeness as I do not think there are any in this country who would seriously advocate this reason, or if there are, society would not seriously consider this argument. However, as the argument as been used in the past to justify lethal governmental action against its citizens, I think there is a need to refute it.
Quite simply, though there is evidence that predispositions to act in certain ways are passed from generation to generation, heredity in no way pre-determines a person’s actions to the point they are incapable of deciding not to commit an illegal act. No one is compelled to act a certain way by their genes, therefore removing people from the gene pool will not eliminate crime or improve quality of life for future members of society.
So, the death penalty, though it certainly stops all recidivism for the executed person, it is no better at it than LWOPP. It is more expensive than LWOPP, provides no deterrent effect, cannot be justified as a proportional societal response or as societal retribution, and can’t be applied eugenically. I can find no justification for capital punishment over LWOPP.
There is one additional reason not to employ the death penalty. What if the person is innocent? Clearly executing the innocent goes against everything our justice system and societal norms require. The question is, are we willing to allow a few innocent to be executed to be sure we get those that are guilty and if so, how many? I personally think that if even one person is executed erroneously, it is one person too many. Even God, who knows everyone’s heart perfectly, refused to destroy the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah if even one righteous person could be found within. Surely, that same standard should apply to us mere mortals and since we do not possess god-like wisdom and knowledge, surely we should err on the side of caution and abolish the death penalty.
I would like to leave you with a bit of wisdom from the pen of J. R. R. Tolkien:
“What a pity Bilbo did not stab the vile creature, when he had a chance!”
“Pity? It was Pity that stayed his hand. Pity, and Mercy: not to strike without need.”
“I do not feel any pity for Gollum. He deserves death.”
“Deserves death! I daresay he does. Many that live deserve death. And some die that deserve life. Can you give that to them? Then be not too eager to deal out death in the name of justice, fearing for your own safety. Even the wise cannot see all ends.”
Capital Punishment – Why NOT
Many people take the death penalty for granted. We have always had the death penalty in this country and we have all grown up hearing things like, “He killed someone. He deserves to die” or, “He got what he deserved.” But can we really justify execution as a form of punishment?Proponents of the death penalty present six arguments for the application of capital punishment. They are that it (1) reduces recidivism against society, (2) provides a powerful deterrent violent crime, (3) is less expensive than a sentence of Life Without Possibility of Parole (LWOPP), (4) provides for societal retribution against the offender, (5) provides for a proportional societal response to the crime committed, and (6) provides an appropriate eugenic excuse. I believe that none of these arguments can sufficiently justify the use of the death penalty.
Let’s look at each in turn. First, does the death penalty reduce the recidivism rate against society for a given offender? Certainly the executed person will never recidivate against society, but might not LWOPP also reduce this rate to zero? Of course it would. Therefore, prevention of possible future crimes against society is not a justification for the capital punishment.
It could be argued that prisoners often commit crimes against each other while in prison and that LWOPP allows a convict to recidivate against his fellow prisoners, but I argue that society should not be responsible for the violent nature of incarcerated people. The purpose of society imprisoning them is to protect society, not to protect them from each other. The dangers inherent in prison life are part of the punishment of being incarcerated. Though, of course, reasonable precautions should be taken and procedures implemented to protect prisoners from each other, if the fact that prisons are dangerous places were to be allowed an argument against incarcerating criminals, no one would ever go to prison.
Another argument against capital punishment to prevent recidivism is that society is then preemptively punishing someone for crimes they have not yet committed. Society would be stating that it believes the offender WILL commit additional crimes and that he is irredeemable. Therefore, capital punishment is the only option to ensure that those future crimes will never be committed.
Notice, I said, “will commit”, not, “might commit”. The finality of the punishment is such that society had better be sure the offender will recidivate, not just believe it “likely” or “possible”, if it is going to use recidivism as a justification. I can see an argument for using recidivism as a justification for punishments less severe than the death penalty, because the offender can be observed as he serves his sentence and if it should be determined at a later time that the convict no longer posses a danger of recidivism sufficient to require his continued incarceration, he can be released. Not so with the death penalty. It is final, permanent, and irrevocable.
The second major argument for the death penalty is that it provides a powerful deterrent to crimes for which the death penalty is imposed. The concept of deterrence states that a hypothetical “rational criminal” will pause before he commits his criminal act to consider the potential consequences of his actions and those potential consequences, being severe in nature, will make him reconsider his plans and refrain from committing the criminal act in the first place.
First, many who commit crimes that warrant the death penalty are not rational at the time of the commission of the crime sufficient to carefully consider the consequences of their actions. These crimes are commonly known as “crimes of passion” where the offender becomes so emotionally agitated that, though still in control of their ability to distinguish right and wrong, they choose to disregard the dictates of their conscience and act in an irrational manner, allowing heir emotions rather than their reason to dictate their actions. These people do not consider the possible consequence3s of their actions in favor of satisfying their emotional needs. Since deterrence depends fundamentally on a rational consideration of consequences, these, by definition irrational people, are not affected by deterrence.
Second, in order for deterrence to work, it must be swift, sure, and severe enough that if it is considered rationally, it will compel the potential offender to reconsider his planned actions and make a different choice. However, our justice system is anything but swift. This slowness starts the moment the crime is committed, because there is not an instantaneous response to the criminal act. It can take anywhere from several minutes to years before the police show up to arrest an offender after he has committed the crime. Then, once arrested, there are many inherent delays in the system put there to ensure that the innocent are not punished along with the guilty. Finally, once conviction occurs, on average, it takes 13 ½ years to actually carry out the execution. Clearly, the swiftness requirement is not met.
Neither is capital punishment sure. Because the system is set up to protect the innocent, even at the cost of letting some guilty offenders to free, there are many who are not convicted, or punished, or whose sentences are reduced to something less than capital punishment. Even those who are duly convicted and sentenced to be executed have hope, because the appeals process often allows them to reduce their sentence to something less than execution.
I know an inmate in prison now who was on death row for multiple murders and who has told me that he is quite willing to kill again if he feels someone wrongs him. He is now a minimum-custody inmate with unsupervised access to the outside of the institution where he is incarcerated. Stories like this one give potential criminals good reason to hope that even if they were to be caught, tried, convicted and sentenced to death, the sentence would not be carried out. Therefore, the death penalty does not happen with sufficient surety to create the fear of it that is required to deter.
The final condition to be met for deterrence to work, severity, is also not met. Our methods of dealing out death are specifically engineered to not be “cruel and unusual” and therefore engender no fear. The three main methods of execution, electrocution, lethal injection, and inhalation of poison gas, all cause nearly instantaneous death. In the case of lethal injection, the victim is put to sleep before the toxin is introduced, so there is no discomfort at all. Even the other methods, death by firing squad or by hanging, are not deemed unduly painful.
Though the thought of their personal death is distressing to any sane person, people are unfamiliar with the concept of death as punishment in their daily lives. We don’t do public executions in the town square anymore, or in the equivalent modern venue, television. People rarely see death take place any longer except in the easily dismissed fantasy world of the movies or television fiction. We see the after-affects of death, the funeral, the burial, graves, and we certainly have to deal with the lingering effects, the loss, the paperwork, the expense, but rarely does anyone outside the medical profession ever see someone actually expire. The actual process of death, the last spoken words, the fear of imminent death, the physical pain experienced by the dying and related first hand to those left behind are all alien to most people. Therefore, because no one is familiar with death on a personal level, no one is really deterred by the personal fear of death.
Another reason I believe that deterrence is a flawed concept is that in many instances, the offender believes himself justified in his actions. One famous example of this concept is the story told in the movie, “A Time to Kill” where the father of a raped girl killed the rapist. The father was tried and the jury refused to convict despite clear evidence of guilt. Another common example is the situation where a man comes home unexpectedly to find his wife in bed with her lover and then kills one or both of them. The justification I have often heard for this is, “Well, he/she/they deserved it.”
Thinking like this indicates that the offender does not believe he has done anything wrong, so he does not expect any societal retribution at all. There is not deterrent value for any punishment that the offender does not expect to be imposed.
The final reason that deterrence is an illusion is that its validity depends on the offender believing that is capture is assured. Except in the possible case of an insane offender who intentionally commits a criminal act for the express purpose of getting caught, “rational” criminals believe they will be able to elude capture indefinitely, so whatever the consequence, it will not affect their decision-making process.
The third major argument put forth for the death penalty is that it is less expensive to the state, and therefore the tax-payer to execute a prisoner than to lock him up for LWOPP. This is actually not true. Death row inmates spend between 10-15 years on death row (depending on individual state laws these averages vary). During this time they use up resources that inmates with LWOPP do not, like additional Correctional Officers, a beefier physical plant, defense counsel, prosecutorial counsel, court costs, the cost of the execution process itself, etc. Taken together, these costs add up to considerably more than the average cost of keeping an offender locked up for the rest of his life. (You can find statistics supporting this all over the web. Many states publish statistics on their state’s death penalty/LWOPP programs. Please see: http://www.deathpenalty.org/index.php?pid=cost for an example of California’s costs.)
The Fourth argument is that the death penalty is justified as societal retribution. Our society says that it will not permit individuals to take their revenge, but that it is permissible for large groups to take revenge in the victim’s name. Presumably this is based on the idea that the group, being detached and more numerous, will be able to make a judgment that is more equitable and avoids the pitfalls of allowing any one individual, with all his flaws and prejudices, to make the decision. In other words, the majority is always right, so we’ll let the group decide for us individuals. (It also has the advantage of spreading out the liability for killing another human being from one person to many, thereby assuaging any personal guilt.) The problem is that groups do not always make ethically justifiable decisions.
Take for instance the Nazis’ campaign to promote the “Master Race” through genocide and how the German people went along. Or, to choose an example closer to home, how about the institution of slavery in this country? This was a practice that was, at best, degrading and, at worst, murderous, on a vast scale. Large numbers of people, a whole society, believed there was nothing wrong with slavery, that in fact, that it was the natural order of things for whites to enslave, abuse, and even murder, blacks. The atrocities do not stop there. There have been wars and invasions of countries for religious reasons. Entire cultures have been wiped out in the New World due to greed and disease. People have been killing each other in the Middle East for centuries, simply because the target didn’t believe as the assailant believed he should. The list goes on and on. Clearly, people cannot be trusted to make the right choice, however you define right and wrong, simply because they are numerous. It is a philosophical truism that might does not make right, whether you are talking about strength of arms or strength in numbers. Society has proven itself a poor judge of when it is or is not appropriate to take the life of a human being, so allowing “society” to determine when retribution is justified seems unwise at best. More likely, it is in itself a criminally negligent act.
The fifth argument is that it provides a proportional response to the offender’s actions. The problem with, “eye-for-an-eye” is that eventually, you run out of eyes. How do you kill someone more than once? How can executing someone like Timothy McVey who killed and injured hundreds, only once, make up for all those deaths he caused? His crime was totally out of proportion to the punishment dealt out to him. Further, in his case, he requested the death penalty. How can giving someone what he requests be considered punishment? (I know, we have to have standards to which everyone is held and we cannot fall into the trap of simply deciding to deal out the opposite punishment from what the criminal requests, but clearly, McVey was spared many years of guilt by his swift execution.)
Additionally, the severity of the crime is always taken into account in capital cases when determining the sentence. This is so that, as much as is possible, sentences are dolled out equitably and fairly. But we must ask ourselves if it is a fair and proportional response to meet out a swift, painless, single, humane death in response to many different severities of capital crimes. Is it fair to treat a McVey the same as someone who commits a single murder in a non-heinous manner?
Finally, there is a “societal eugenics” argument that could be put forth to support the death penalty. Essentially, the death penalty would be used to remove the least desirable elements of society so as to produce a stronger, better society. I mention this only for the sake of completeness as I do not think there are any in this country who would seriously advocate this reason, or if there are, society would not seriously consider this argument. However, as the argument as been used in the past to justify lethal governmental action against its citizens, I think there is a need to refute it.
Quite simply, though there is evidence that predispositions to act in certain ways are passed from generation to generation, heredity in no way pre-determines a person’s actions to the point they are incapable of deciding not to commit an illegal act. No one is compelled to act a certain way by their genes, therefore removing people from the gene pool will not eliminate crime or improve quality of life for future members of society.
So, the death penalty, though it certainly stops all recidivism for the executed person, it is no better at it than LWOPP. It is more expensive than LWOPP, provides no deterrent effect, cannot be justified as a proportional societal response or as societal retribution, and can’t be applied eugenically. I can find no justification for capital punishment over LWOPP.
There is one additional reason not to employ the death penalty. What if the person is innocent? Clearly executing the innocent goes against everything our justice system and societal norms require. The question is, are we willing to allow a few innocent to be executed to be sure we get those that are guilty and if so, how many? I personally think that if even one person is executed erroneously, it is one person too many. Even God, who knows everyone’s heart perfectly, refused to destroy the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah if even one righteous person could be found within. Surely, that same standard should apply to us mere mortals and since we do not possess god-like wisdom and knowledge, surely we should err on the side of caution and abolish the death penalty.
I would like to leave you with a bit of wisdom from the pen of J. R. R. Tolkien:
“What a pity Bilbo did not stab the vile creature, when he had a chance!”
“Pity? It was Pity that stayed his hand. Pity, and Mercy: not to strike without need.”
“I do not feel any pity for Gollum. He deserves death.”
“Deserves death! I daresay he does. Many that live deserve death. And some die that deserve life. Can you give that to them? Then be not too eager to deal out death in the name of justice, fearing for your own safety. Even the wise cannot see all ends.”
Frodo remembering his conversation with Gandalf in
The Lord of the Rings, The Two Towers, pg. 221
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