I had an enlightening exchange on Facebook last night with a
liberal. There’s no thread to produce because this person deleted it after
their non-arguments for abortion were exposed as arbitrary and inconsistent. I pointed out only a sampling of informal fallacies - one false disjunction, one red herring, an argument from
silence, all in a very brief discussion. Question begging abounded. There were also isolated instances of equivocation and ad hominem. (This is not intended to be a praise of my refutations. Far from it. It merely serves to highlight what is typical of liberals. It's not that liberals aren't intelligent. It's just that liberal ideologies are rationally indefensible.)
They deleted the posts in stages. Once I noticed what was
happening I posted that I can understand why the record had been deleted given
the bad showing on behalf of an unargued pro-abortion position. They strikingly
responded with “showing?” as if no exchange had taken place.
Some of the highlights and observations.
The discussion did not begin with abortion. It began by my pointing out that when one is unwilling to acknowledge the faults
of their own party affiliation, a tension can ensue. Rather than live in tension,
those disagreements can be rationalized away by minimalizing them. Even worse,
one can eventually surrender to the void and end up embracing those positions
they otherwise wouldn’t so to relieve the uncomfortable tension that comes
with covertly disagreeing with one's own peers. (Peer pressure isn’t something just for teens. For adults, too, resistance can give way to non-resistance. Non-resistance to embracing.)
Assuming this high school friend was still Roman Catholic (Catholic upbringing with devout mother), I simply
wrote “the unborn?” (I wanted to see if they'd voice what I hoped would be a disagreement with a fundamental position of the Democratic Party.) Their coy response was that they didn’t mix religion with politics.
Well, I was happy to change gears into a religious discussion, but instead I
pointed out that abortion is a political matter as well as a religious matter; abortion
is fair game in either arena. It was said since abortion was law it wasn’t
political. Really? Then why during presidential debates do moderators ask
questions pertaining to Roe v. Wade? Why do nominees to the Court suffer under
congressional scrutiny on this matter? Obviously, this person’s stated reason
for not wanting to discuss the matter was disingenuous.
After a bit of back-and-forth this person simply volunteered they were “comfy” with their pro-abortion position. Assuming they disagreed with other types of murder, I asked what conditions necessary for murder are not met by abortion. Crickets.
After a bit of back-and-forth this person simply volunteered they were “comfy” with their pro-abortion position. Assuming they disagreed with other types of murder, I asked what conditions necessary for murder are not met by abortion. Crickets.
They immediately changed the subject, impugning hypocrisy to those
who are pro-life yet don’t support social programs for the born. This person called
these sorts "not pro-life but anti-abortion." (Implication being, if they were
pro-life they’d care about the born too.)
Note the equivocation. Pro-life has a distinct meaning that pertains
to the question of whether abortion entails taking innocent life. It does not
pertain to one’s concern for the quality
of life after birth. One might dare consider granting a revision to the label “pro-life”
if persuasive statistics could be offered that would suggest pro-lifers are in favor of
assisted suicide or genocide. But even then, all that might show is that
pro-life people are inconsistent on the matter of sanctity of life. It would
not prove a pro-life position is wrong.
When I suggested that it is happily consistent to be pro-life
while believing that giving toward social concerns should primarily be left up to individuals
and ecclesiastical organizations, I was met with the insufficiency of those means.
So, for this person, it’s fair to conclude that people who are traditionally
considered pro-life and, also, give large sums of money to the poor are not truly
pro-life but rather just anti-abortion. To be pro-life, one must not only be
concerned for the poor, they must also agree with the insufficiency of giving
toward those causes through other means other than government mediation. Only a big government liberal can be pro-life. False premises lead to silly conclusions, like that one.
1 comment:
Brilliant
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