AlAyeti wrote:Abortion is for convenience and it is murder. Until that crime is wiped away from this land NO Christian or any other fine person can be quiet and a partner to those that promote it.
I have yet to see the Democrat who
promotes abortion. It's not in their platform, and actually there are quite a few pro-life Democrats (take note of Dennis Kucinich's platform).
I don't like abortion at all, but I think that in our society, trying to outlaw it would be like trying to outlaw smoking. Smoking is for convenience and it is reckless endangerment of public safety and health, but if we outlawed smoking, smokers would still continue to smoke and the tobacco companies would be forced underground. Cigarettes would no longer become a 'safe' product, and more people would die sooner because of it.
We already tried something like this. It was called the Prohibition, and it didn't work too well, as I recall.
AlAyeti wrote:Keeping people poor with programs that do not encourage self sufficient behavior is anti-decency.
If you're talking about welfare, let's talk about what welfare actually means here. Most people on welfare actually do work, but their jobs don't allow them self-sufficiency; minimum wage cannot put a roof over a person's head
and food in his or her stomach - same with welfare checks. Our current welfare programmes are designed to make up the difference, not to make the poor completely dependent on it.
I'd like to see conservatives do as much. Actually, what I'd like to see is major companies be
required by law to train their workers in multiple labour skills, so that when they need to lay people off, those people have some other way of working.
The proposed 'welfare reform' programmes the conservatives have put on the table are unsatisfactory, because even the welfare recipients who don't or can't work are not addressed. If unemployed welfare recipients could be somehow educated in a labour skill, that would be better, but it requires that we put more money into welfare and education as opposed to, say, the military.
AlAyeti wrote:Republicans are honest by their actions. They say one thing and do it.
Or rather, they do one thing and then lie repeatedly about why they did it. When the WMD excuse failed, the Bush Admin. shifted to supporting 'democracy' in Iraq. But that obviously isn't what it was really about - no real conservative would waste billions of dollars on this kind of project. This was about asserting U.S. interests in the region, particularly interests conducive to the service and automotive sectors of the economy.
Or, better yet, they do something and then deny they ever did it. Remember Enron? The CEO was a die-hard Repub.
Democratic administrations like Clinton's at least try to think through their actions first. When Clinton went to war, he went with backing and he went on a limited scale so our economy wouldn't be shot through like it is now.
I'm not saying Democratic politicians are honest any more than Republican politicians are. It's just that my views as a mainline Christian are more in line with your average Democrat's than with your average Republican's, so I'm sticking with my party.