I want to write about the greatest public policy issue
facing our nation. It is not the
economy, foreign relations, the environment, or health care. It is the matter of the sanctity of life at
all stages of life. The biblical
evidence in support of the sanctity of life from conception to natural death is
overwhelming (see, e.g., Psalm 139 and Jeremiah 1). There is no other issue if the sanctity of
life is not upheld. The first
“unalienable right” mentioned in our Declaration of Independence is the right
to life. Be a one issue voter.
I refuse to vote for anyone who is not solidly
pro-life. It does not matter that one
pro-abortion candidate is better than another on some other issue. I am glad that in Abraham Lincoln’s day there
were one-issue voters who sought above all else to remove the blight of slavery
in our land. The value of life can
never, never be compromised on the altar of political expediency, even if the vote
is “wasted” on an “unelectable” candidate.
The pro-abortion candidate who tries to gain pro-life votes by appealing
that he/she is better than the alternative will boast, if elected, that only
the pro-abortion position can “win.” If pro-life
voters do not vote their convictions, do you think that we will ever see our
laws allowing abortion on demand changed?
If pro-life voters compromise, what do you think will happen to our
senior citizens as health care costs spiral upward? No, someone must stand in the gap, and that
someone, dear pro-life voter, is you. Be
a one issue voter.
The issues of fetal stem cell research (which is nothing but
a sophisticated form of cannibalism) and euthanasia are real and upon us to say
nothing of the horrors of partial birth abortion. The reality is that a candidate that is not pro-life will not hold back the tide of the decreasing value of life at all stages. Many, many more issues about life are coming before our elected officials. Even if abortion cannot be rolled back, these issues will be before our elected officials and soon. I disagree with socialist Eugene Debs on nearly everything, but he was right when he said, "I’d rather vote for what I want and not get it, than for what I don’t want and get it." Be a one issue voter.
You might say that you don’t need to be a one issue voter for
so-called minor offices. But you
do! I learned this lesson the hard
way. I helped a neighbor a few years ago
in her campaign for city council. She
was a great alderwoman, but I had failed to ask her about her position on
abortion. Today, based on her
effectiveness in city government, she is a pro-abortion Congresswoman from
Illinois, financed largely by the pro-abortion lobbies. I regret having helped her. Be a one issue voter.
The ad linked below was in the Chicago Tribune on Tuesday October 14, 2014
celebrating that "both candidates for Illinois governor are pro-choice."
The ad was paid for by 8 people, including Diana Rauner (see the fine
print at the bottom). http://illinoisreview.typepad.com/.a/6a00d834515c5469e201b8d07d750d970c-pi
Be a one issue voter.
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