Wednesday, February 20, 2019

Abortion Becomes An Ideology : History Sheds The Light


Photo
South Carolina statesman John C. Calhoun 
defended slavery as a "positive good" 
in an 1838 speech. 
(Photo: Fine Art/Getty Images)
Once a principle or agenda, an ideology is accepted and understood as reality, there cannot be any alternatives. To change a reality becomes virtually impossible. 

To do so, one must accept the truth your position in the debate from the beginning was wrong.

All that remains is to dig the trenches deeper and the fortifications higher and stronger. There cannot be compromise only chaos and conflict.

Right Side of History: How Abortion Became a ‘Positive Good’ to Proponents

“The Right Side of History” is a podcast dedicated to exploring current events through a historical lens and busting left-wing myths about figures and events of America’s past.

Podcast : https://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/574725615/download?client_id=Iy5e1Ri4GTNgrafaXe4mLpmJLXbXEfBR

On this week’s episode, hosts Jarrett Stepman and Fred Lucas interview Kyle Sammin, a lawyer and writer from Pennsylvania, who recently compared the shifting philosophy of pro-abortion proponents to those who defended slavery in the early 19th century.

Sammin explains how a social situation, slavery, once treated as an unfortunate evil, was turned into a “positive good” by John C. Calhoun, a prominent Southern statesman, and why that matters to the abortion debate today.

Sammin wrote in an article for The Federalist ;

''Comparing abortion to slavery is only meaningful if we can learn something from it. Sadly, the course of the 19th century’s great debate does not foreshadow a simple end to our current dispute. It is a mistake to say that our Civil War was inevitable, but once the Slave Power began to embrace slavery as a positive good, once they began to see it as an end in itself and not merely the means to achieve financial comfort, the two sides were no longer aiming at the same eventual result. A negotiated solution became a lot less likely. ''

You can read the rest of Sammin’s article here.

No comments: