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Thursday, April 17, 2008
Janet M. LaRue :: Townhall.com Columnist
Why Didn't Campbell Brown and Jon Meacham Ask the Tough Questions?
by Janet M. LaRue
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If Ben Stein watched CNN’s “Democratic Candidates Compassion Forum” Sunday night, he may be considering a sequel to his forthcoming movie: Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed. The sequel will be Expelled II: The Search for Potential Life. There’s no intelligence here either.

The co-hosts of the forum at Messiah College, CNN’s Campbell Brown and Newsweek editor Jon Meacham, questioned Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama on “issues of faith and compassion and how a president’s faith can affect us all,” including some “deeply personal” questions.

Meacham asked both presidential candidates about their faith and abortion: The transcript is available here.   

MEACHAM: Senator, do you believe personally that life begins at conception?

CLINTON: I believe that the potential for life begins at conception. I am a Methodist, as you know. My church has struggled with this issue. In fact, you can look at the Methodist Book of Discipline and see the contradiction and the challenge of trying to sort that very profound question out.

MEACHAM: Senator, do you personally believe that life begins at conception? And if not, when does it begin?

OBAMA: This is something that I have not, I think, come to a firm resolution on. I think it’s very hard to know what that means, when life begins. Is it when a cell separates? Is it when the soul stirs? So I don't presume to know the answer to that question. What I know, as I've said before, is that there is something extraordinarily powerful about potential life and that that has a moral weight to it that we take into consideration when we’re having these debates.

One can only imagine Ben Stein following up when Brown and Meacham dropped the ball:

Stein: Senator Obama, if you don’t know when life begins, how do you know when potential life begins?

Obama: I think I haven’t come to a firm resolution on that either.

Stein: How does “potential life” begin in the first place?

Clinton: It’s a very profound question.

Stein: Right now, I’d settle for a semi-profound answer.

Obama: I think it’s very hard to know.

Stein: Are you saying that organic matter comes from nonorganic matter?

Obama: I think I don’t presume to know the answer.

Stein: I guess you weren’t personally in the pew the day they taught biology.

Clinton: It’s a difficult question that my church has struggled with.

Stein: Didn’t you people learn in your science class that a living organism can only arise from other living organisms similar to itself?

Obama: Maybe it’s when the cell divides. Continued...

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About The Author
Jan LaRue is Senior Legal Analyst with the American Civil Rights Union; former Chief Counsel at Concerned for Women; Legal Studies Director at Family Research Council; and Senior Counsel for the National Law Center for Children and Families. Be the first to read Janet LaRue's column. Sign up today and receive Townhall.com delivered each morning to your inbox.
western bondbeam: blood for blood


"innocent human life"
Of course many Christians believe that children are born with original sin. So they are hardly innocent. The only way to become innocent many say is to be cleansed with the body and blood of Jesus Christ. OR to be baptized. Many think even then you need last rights. Some Christians even think we can never escape our sine and we are dammed accept for the sacrifice Jesus Christ made for us on the cross.

Sin after all is the ultimate wrong... Sin is considered much worse than murder... You can kill innocent women and children in Baghdad all day long and dress them up as enemy combatants, but if you give your self to Jesus Christ you will be cleansed of all your sins and still get to heaven.

And you can live an exemplary life of christen virtue, and be condemned to hell for just denying god.

In this perversion of reality, how can we even make moral clams killing since there is not innocents but threw the magic of worshiping the tortured remains of a middle eastern martyr, threw mock cannibalism of his remains.

CubeCommander: protect the unborn murder
"I think you will agree there is a big difference between Ted Bundy and an unborn child."

I do, "unborn child" is a faceless category of which Ted Bundy was a member for presumably nineish months. Ted Bundy is a definitive personality, even mythic.

If we are in the business of making moral choices about categories, how about "unborn future mass murderers" should we protect that category of unborn?
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