That Fred Thompson claims to be pro-life but would leave the abortion decision to individual states really angers me. This is actually a pro-abortion position, simply “pro-choice” in a different arena.
Professor Hadley Arkes, crafter of the Born Alive Infants Protection Act, has written an article for the December issue of First Things that could be carved up and served for discussion in many areas, which I just may do.
In the following section, he discusses the similarites between Stephen Douglas’ pro-slavery position and Rudy Giuliani’s pro-abortion position. But I see Fred Thompson’s name next to Giuliani’s every time.
As I was preparing photos for this post, I discovered something bizarre. Douglas and Thompson even look alike:
thompson%20douglas2.jpg
Here’s what Arkes said….

During the famous debate between Lincoln and Douglas, Douglas professed to be neutral on the matter of slavery. He professed to have reached no moral judgment. And so, he concluded, people should be free in the separate territories to vote slavery up or down. But, as Lincoln pointed out, he had indeed reached a moral judgment. If he had regarded slavery as a wrong – as Douglas had regarded polygamy – he would have understood that a wrong is that which no one ought to do, that anyone may be properly restrained from doing. To say slavery is something legitimate to choose is to say that slavery stood in the class of things “not wrong.”
In an eerie echo, Giuliani reproduced precisely the same argument in an interview with Charlie Rose. Rose asked, “Don’t you think that abortion is a national issue?” Giuliani replied:

Sure it’s a national issue. But… since it’s an issue of conscience for people, a deep personal issue where some people morally believe it’s wrong and some people strongly morally believe it’s right. My conclusion about that is that government can’t dictate and intervene and make that choice….
Honestly, I think – my own personal view is it’s better off if that is left to people to choose. And then what you do is you do everything you can to correctly limit the number of abortions, encourage adoption instead of abortion. I supported the ban on partial-birth abortion when it passed and when – and the decision of the Supreme Court I agree with. I agree with parental notification, but ultimately I think this is not the area where government should be completely dictating.

Lincoln said that Douglas was trying to “blow out the moral lights” among us by teaching a policy of “indifference” – that slavery just did not matter enough to stir such divisions in the country.
In a similar way, Giuliani is teaching us, in the style of Douglas, that we should not care overly much, that we should treat as a matter of indifference a right to take a human life for wholly private reasons that need not rise beyond convenience….

Fred Thompson holds basically the same view of abortion as Rudy Giuliani. They are both pro-adoption, anti-pba, pro-parental notification, and pro-strict constrictionist judges. They both say they don’t like abortion, even “hate” it.
The only area where they disagree is which governmental entity should be responsible for its legality.

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