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'Life' Issues Position
paper
Categories
covered in the position paper below include: abortion; the plan; crisis
pregnancy safety nets; death penalty; embryonic stem cell research; euthanasia. “Life” points “The
candidate (Schriner) calls for an end to abortion, while at the same time
developing a much more comprehensive safety net for those in crisis pregnancy.” –The Community
Common newspaper, Schriner, a Catholic, said that as president, he
“would be protesting in front of an abortion clinic – and praying.” --Lewistown (MT) News-Argus. abortion: It is my belief, and the belief of my faith (Catholic), that Life begins at conception. Conception is when Life begins because the genetic code is totally in place at that moment. And conception is when an immortal soul is infused. “(With abortion) we are living in a modern
Holocaust unparalleled in the history of mankind,”
I told The Courier newspaper in A vignette: Several years ago in Las Cruces, New Mexico,
our family stood in solidarity with some Franciscan nuns (including one who had
been involved with Project Rescue and had several times been arrested
for Pro-Life civil disobedience) protesting in front of an abortion doctor’s
office. A TV News crew from the Some four
years later, on a campaign swing through the South, we stood in solidarity with
a group protesting in front of an abortion clinic in And while we would work stridently to change many conditions leading to abortion, we agree with Mr. O’Brien. Feminists for Life (FFL) would agree with Mr. O’Brien too. On a campaign stop in Kayenta, Arizona, Fr. Jerome Herff (who is a supporter of the group), told us FFL has chapters around the country and uses strategies like going into ultra-liberal universities – Brown in the Ivy League, as an example – to carry their message. On a stop in In In Pro-Life
activist Paul Mayeaux fights vigorously for
Life. We walked with Mr. Mayeaux, his wife and some of their seven children at a
Pro-Life March in And The After
giving a talk to a class of high school students in Ridgeville Corners, the plan: I would use a multi-level approach. For one, as president I would work exhaustively to try to help reverse societal trends that often lead to abortion. Among the most prominent, in my opinion, are: increasing poverty, the wide scale breakdown of the nuclear family, declining social mores leading to rampant promiscuity; a growing cultural perception children are a “burden” in respect to lifestyle choices; and, an ever increasing devaluation of Life (with the unborn, the handicapped, the elderly…) in this country. (*All of these are addressed, at length, in other position papers on the site.) Secondly, as “First Family” we would continue to regularly stand in solidarity with groups in front of abortion clinics around the country, protest signs. And as president I would, for instance, talk about abortion during the State of the Union address, including showing graphic slides, excerpts from movies (like “Silent Scream”), on the horror of what truly happens to the unborn baby in an abortion procedure. As president, I would also lend my voice in rallying behind groups like Project Rescue, Feminists for Life, Collegians for Life, Priests for Life… with the hope of galvanizing more support for them. In addition, I would work in an ad hoc fashion to try to help unite these groups more, because as a more united front – they would be that much more affective in changing the climate. As president, I would appoint judges (across the board) who, among other things, have demonstrated they are sympathetic to Pro-Life issues. There’s no way to get around it, judging from the bench is a subjective process. A judge brings a set of personal beliefs, both conscious and unconscious, to the job. And these beliefs influence his/her decision-making. In addition on the Pro-Life front, I would stridently work toward helping build more of a safety net for women in crisis pregnancy – from community to community. And how I would do this, primarily, would be to -- as president, with a big press entourage following -- go to many of programs we’ve researched across the country to help women in crisis pregnancy, and hold them up as models that would work in any community. crisis pregnancy safety nets And one of our first stops
would be The Maria Goretti House in And at
Mom’s House, in In Another
safety net we would strongly back is: adoption.
While we realize there must be thorough background checks, and so on,
our administration would recommend shorter waiting periods and reduced fees for
non-private adoptions. In Freehold, Sometimes
in the short term, before adoption, good foster homes may be needed. In Note: While we couldn’t legislate
all these models, we could use the presidency as a bully pulpit to get the
message out about them, with the hopes that a tremendous safety net, featuring
similar programs, would spread throughout every community in “We think it’s not enough to
just say no to abortion. You have to
provide more help,” [said Schriner]. – Valley
Courier newspaper, Embryonic Stem Cell Research : We believe government subsidy for
research, even on the current existing stem cell lines, is wrong. It is not
right, even for what it seems like the best of reasons, to do evil so that good
may follow. The current research the government is funding is being done on
stem cell lines that were taken as a result of abortions. What's more,
government subsidy for this
could well be opening the door to more abuses down the
line. Death Penalty : Abolish
the death penalty. While we were campaigning in I interviewed author Antoinette Bosco, a nationally known anti-death penalty advocate from Ms. Bosco,
who wrote the book Choosing Mercy, said she wondered what the killer’s eternal
consequences would be, if he’d been executed before the change of heart? “Only God has a right to take a life,” said Ms. Bosco.
“I don’t believe we should rob thieves, rape rapists, burn an arsonist, or kill
a killer.” I don’t either. Ms. Bosco
said she also believes in “Restorative Justice,” as would our administration. That
is, providing much more rehabilitative help to prisoners, and in turn, allowing
them to more fully atone for past crimes, including murder. For instance, Ms. Bosco said she observed a murderer who was now working in a
prison hospice in Ms. Bosco
also noted that since the death penalty was reinstated in And even when people are guilty of
murder, there is often a tremendously complex set of issues to discern. Take the case of Sam McDonald. During an interview, Dayton
University Professor Bill Trollinger told me about
Sam. (Professor Trollinger said he and Sam had become
friends through a death row correspondence program.) Trollinger
said he and Sam conversed about family, about football and about… Sam’s past. Sam had grown up black and poor in
the inner city of Sam was then sent to In Drug addiction followed him back to
the states. And while he was on heroine one
night, Sam killed an off duty police officer during a store robbery. Same was executed at “Emmit
Jones” wasn’t executed in “Emmit”
(not his real name) had killed his wife. In Geisal
told me Emmit grew up in In prison, Emmit
found God, found the 12-Step Recovery Movement, went back to school in jail,
and got a degree in Forestry. After 17 years, Emmit
was paroled, got married, got a job in forestry, and now volunteers to help
other recovering addicts and alcoholics. Coincidentally, 17 years is the
longest prison sentence anyone gets in the country of Bluffton College Professor Jeff Gingerich also said that once someone is incarcerated in And then… all these things are
provided as comprehensively as possible, with the sincere hope that, not only
will the inmate not repeat their criminal behavior pattern; but more
importantly, that they have a much better chance at a more fulfilling life. This, we believe, is a very socially
responsible (and spiritually-centered) criminal justice approach. Note: I once wrote a column saying maybe it was time we started
getting tougher on the: “non-criminals.” That is, maybe it was time to start
getting much more focused on mobilizing those who are currently doing little
(but could do much more) to help all the “Emmits and Sams” growing up in these inner city war zones. This would lessen the crime rate in
Not to mention, it would give these
kids a much better shot at a “fulfilling life” – the first time around.
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