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trojan
United States
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imsi12b wrote: <quoted text> Indeed he is a typical liberal hypocrite. Catholics is really beside the point. Aside from the fact that most Catholics don't actually work for the the Catholic Church, charities or hospitals, people who are practicing Catholics or who work for Catholic institutions know the proscriptions and if they feel that strongly that they should be so provided, should find another church or another job. They know the church believes it is wrong. It is a principle of that religion that must be accepted and respected even if they choose not to adhere to it. It's like forcing the Amish elders to buy light bulbs for their brethren. I suppose some cheat and actually use an electric light from time to time, I don't know, but they all know what their faith demands. Regardless, They don't expect a pack of soft-whites on their doorstep. It amazes me how progressive lefties are always popping off yelling "establishment clause" and "violation of 'church and state!'" every five minutes but are hypocritically oblivious to the rights of religion and religious expression. I suppose that some Catholic women cheat and use birth control from time to time. Remember, every sperm is sacred. Drink the contents of rubbers to avoid sacrelige!
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Marvin
Wellington, OH
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trojan wrote: <quoted text>I suppose that some Catholic women cheat and use birth control from time to time. Remember, every sperm is sacred. Drink the contents of rubbers to avoid sacrelige! thou shall not eat from the tree of life
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“Blessed Litha”
Since: Jun 07
Location hidden
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Dances with Wolves wrote: <quoted text> Problem is, both statements are not mutually exclusive. A person can be "pro-life" as it relates to their own beliefs and personal choices. The same person may also realize that they can't dictate the same behavior to others, so are "pro-choice" for the sake of the current law and other individuals, not themselves. The "pro-life" person will not willingly support abortion, but understands that, by law, they cannot stop anyone else from having one. The terms are misleading as a person can technically be both. You have somewhat of a point, given that nearly two-thirds of the country think Roe v Wade should be upheld. Still, the numbers I quoted are what people consider themselves. So, obviously, even some of those who consider themselves pro-life do fit under the category of "personally pro-life", "legally pro-choice for others". And that refutes the claim that most women are pro-life, as is most of the country.
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Dances with Wolves
Baltimore, MD
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CRANK wrote: <quoted text> You are leaving out the cost aspect. Many of those that would support a women's right to choose, also support the concept of not using tax dollars to pay for it. More of the opposition is based upon being forced to subsidize it, than the procedure itself. Those opposed to the economics get lumped in with those opposed for religious reasons. Not the same thing in all cases. Good Point! That's why those polls make no sense. Everything depends on the specific questions asked and room for the most appropriate answer. I'm firmly in the "opposed to subsidize with my tax dollars" camp...lol
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Since: Sep 08
Albuquerque, NM
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Fact wrote: <quoted text> More women are pro life than pro choice, as is the whole population. ALL WOMEN are PRO-LIFE....and that "ALL" includes those who are Pro-choice. The whole population, except for some psychopaths, are PRO-LIFE. Anti-abortion cultists have a damn warped view of 'life.'
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Steinhagen
Erie, PA
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PlacitasRoy wrote: <quoted text> ALL WOMEN are PRO-LIFE....and that "ALL" includes those who are Pro-choice. The whole population, except for some psychopaths, are PRO-LIFE. Anti-abortion cultists have a damn warped view of 'life.' Please idiot, spare your philosophy. All it does is confirm your stupidity.
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TaxNoMore
Los Angeles, CA
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Kathy Dahlkemper has better hair than pelosi
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Since: Sep 08
Placitas, NM
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Not surprisingly Dahlkemper wants to deny to women what she enjoed as a Federal Employee! Just like Tan Man Boner, Turtle McConnel, etc. Republican congressional leaders are entering the fray over the Obama administration’s weeks-old decision to require employer-provided health insurance to cover contraception, including for some religious organizations that don’t employ a majority of people of that faith. The decision has been a hot topic on the campaign trail in recent days, but today, Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) took the House floor to slam it, calling it an “unambiguous attack on religious freedom in our country” and vowed to repeal the regulation. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) had a similarly sharp indictment yesterday. Watch it: But missed in this debate is the fact Boehner and McConnell’s own health insurance plans covers contraception, something they now want to deny to others. Since 1998, every insurer participating in the Federal Employees Health Benefit Program (FEHBP)— including members of Congress — has had access to comprehensive contraceptive coverage, including emergency contraception, such as the morning after pill. Republican lawmakers now want to prevent access to the coverage they enjoy to employees of religious organizations who may not be of that religion or who disagree with anti-contraception doctrine (89 percent of Catholics say contraception decision should be theirs, not the church’s).
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bada bing
Chicago, IL
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Bitner wrote: <quoted text>You have somewhat of a point, given that nearly two-thirds of the country think Roe v Wade should be upheld. Still, the numbers I quoted are what people consider themselves. So, obviously, even some of those who consider themselves pro-life do fit under the category of "personally pro-life", "legally pro-choice for others". And that refutes the claim that most women are pro-life, as is most of the country. You don't even know what Roe said.
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“Blessed Litha”
Since: Jun 07
Location hidden
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bada bing wrote: <quoted text> You don't even know what Roe said. What are you babbling about?
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Joe Root
Washington, DC
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Dahlkemper campaigned as an opponent of abortion, even in cases of rape and incest. She claimed she opposed the Senate version of Obamacare- until they needed her vote. She was told this would happen. This is the final chapter of her hypocrisy.
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libsBlowMe
Erie, PA
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Joe Root wrote: Dahlkemper campaigned as an opponent of abortion, even in cases of rape and incest. She claimed she opposed the Senate version of Obamacare- until they needed her vote. She was told this would happen. This is the final chapter of her hypocrisy. Kathy owes us an apology for calling us liars when we told her this would happen. I don't think she's a hypocrite. This proves she's stupid.
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