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The Totalitarian Denial of Life

If we could reverse the arrow of time and run the phrase "reproductive rights" past people in the 1950s it would doubtless raise a few eyebrows, because, as evidenced by the mass of humanity around us, reproducing doesn't seem to be a right that's been abridged.  But, as Arianna Huffington effortlessly demonstrates, those rights are code for an entirely different license, one that permits the unfettered right to destroy life, a separate, innocent life.

Huffington frames her argument as a foil for Clinton supporters who have pledged not to vote for Obama, and asks, with obvious astonishment:

You'd rather vote for John McCain, a man who has a 25-year history of voting against a woman's right to choose? A man who over the last eight years that NARAL has released a pro-choice scorecard has received a 0 percent rating (in his time in office, Obama has received a 100 percent rating? A man whose campaign website says he believes Roe v. Wade "must be overturned"?  A man who has vowed that, as president, he will be "a loyal and unswerving friend of the right to life movement"?

As we've argued, the tyranny of the unaborted knows no limits, and denying life to the unborn is a more sanitized version of the moral depravity inherent in pogroms because it hides behind the insidiously false idea that a woman's 'right' to control her body extends to the separate life within her--that magnificent miracle that was not denied her by her mother, but which she now believes is hers to deny another.

There's a legacy the left has been building for thirty-eight years now, and, as is the case with all evolving legacies, they clearly lack the imagination to fully grasp its moral contours as it approaches its final form:  To wit, The legal battle of Roe v. Wade momentarily aside, there are 50 million silenced souls lurking in the shadow of liberalism's grim legacy, faces that never smiled, God-given identities that were never blessed with names.

Yet, unlike more tangible atrocities, this liberal legacy lacks a defined sense of accountability, for who among them would confess to such a horrible breach of moral law?  However, as time passes, we can only pray that they will understand the morally corrosive notion of keeping abortion "safe," and that the so-called "right to choose" will mean the moral absolute to choose life, not death.

It may take many more years, and, tragically, the loss of millions of innocent humans, but one day the Huffingtons of the world may recognize the gross irony of their totalitarian denial life to the unborn. 

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Entitlement & The Pathology of Culture

One of the more annoying hallmarks of the Baby Boomer generation is its nearly limitless sense of entitlement, in particular because it's so obviously unearned.  In competition with that medal of dishonor is the desperation they bring to achieving a life sans pain or suffering, one that makes expansive demands without so much as a hint of justification. 

Although much of this arose out of the social pathology of modern liberalism, conservatives have not avoided the cultural undertow and seem at least complicit in the scheme to eschew responsibility for our self-generated woes, our crises-du jour--housing, health care, the financial markets, crime, social security, energy, and, of course, the war in Iraq.  Compounding the problem is the hyper-responsiveness of our politicians, who reflexively drag oil executives before congressional panels for a stern cross-examination.  The truth, in every such instance, is the first casualty.

To call this generation spoiled is far too charitable, but it's even more subtle than that:  The most culturally pernicious habit we've developed in the past forty years is the noxious notion that for every problem there is a government solution.  Within the broad bureaucratic shadow of government is the rich panoply of disincentives to assume responsibility for our individual decisions, and to understand that, regardless of how unpleasant it might be, when we confront our problems, new and entirely unknown internal resources are realized.

Conversely, there's not only an intellectual slovenliness that accrues when problems are solved on our behalf by the indifferent and impersonal hand of government, since we were missing in action during the confrontation, we become progressively disconnected with the effort.  That, in turn, encourages us to downgrade our aspirations, which will make further overtures from anonymous bureaucracies more enticing.  As you can see, it's a cyclical affair that conveniently legitimizes an ever-deeper intrusion by government and its retinue of non-profit self-help agencies.

The result is that this generation has become culturally pauperized, but also convinced of its self-importance and stellar status in the universe, all of which ensures that every 'crisis' will be met with a yet another series of corrections--to wit, encourage home-ownership by changing the definition of credit-worthiness, then knee-cap lending institutions for having the temerity to lend to those less well-qualified; demand the best health care, but recoil when presented with the tab; topple the Iraqi despot with the broad support of the American people and the backing of nearly three-quarters of the senate, then excoriate the president when he wants to finish the job.

Ours is clearly an emasculated, entitled, simpering culture of half-wits and cry babies, where authority has been stigmatized, morality demoted, and responsibility diffused.  It's a place where the Democrats have convinced us that race and gender are determinants of values, predictably resulting in Party infighting, with Obama, Clinton and their surrogates on hair-trigger.  Moreover, our public education system is an antiquated Leviathan run by unions with mediocrity as their goal, and the traditional "3-Rs" are replaced by racism, recycling, and reproduction, which has put a lock on the bet that the upcoming generation will faithfully replicate the Boomers' stupidities.

There is no easy out of this quagmire because the lessons the Boomers so cavalierly ignored were learned first-hand by our ancestors, and without a self-imposed mandate--which is unlikely--there's a self-perpetuating aspect to this that is a kind of promissory note ensuring that we'll live in a judgment-free society where cultural anarchy will flourish.

 

 

 

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