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Monday, December 08, 2008
Mark Hillman :: Townhall.com Columnist
In Defense of Social Conservatives
by Mark Hillman
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Today's Republican Party seeks to advance freedom through limited government, strong national security, personal responsibility and traditional family values.

Although many Republicans generally adhere to all four of those elements, some do not; yet they remain allied because they are so strongly committed to one, two or three of those principles. Despite inner-party squabbles, most Republicans rationally accept that we must work together to form an electoral majority.

Recently, some have grumbled that social conservatives - pro-lifers, opponents of same-sex marriage and the so-called "Religious Right" - are to blame for the party's recent set backs and should be muzzled. If the goal is winning elections, rather than purging membership rolls at the country club, throwing social conservatives under the bus is a catastrophic idea.

The Republican Party is roughly two-thirds pro-life and one-third pro-choice. However, overwhelming majorities in both camps weigh additional factors before casting their vote. According to Gallup, rigidly single-issue voters constitute just 22% of pro-life Republicans and 8% of pro-choicers.

Just four years ago, pollsters credited "values voters" with re-electing President Bush and expanding GOP majorities. This year, moderate "maverick" John McCain enjoyed 72% support from evangelicals (of all parties) on Election Day, despite ranking as the least favorite primary candidate of pro-life Republicans.

Social conservatives rallied behind McCain and against Barack Obama, but prominent moderates like Colin Powell, William Weld and Lincoln Chaffee endorsed the Democrat. Bob Schaffer experienced similar defections from social moderates who would have disdained defectors had the shoe been on the other foot.

So why do some vocal social moderates and libertarians find it so difficult to coexist with social conservatives?

Some believe social issues are a loser at ballot box, pointing to the 3-to-1 defeat of this year's "personhood" amendment. That's a poor example because Amendment 48 split the pro-life community between those who hope to end abortion in one fell swoop and those who think an incremental approach is more practical.

Gallop says the public "is split nearly down the middle" on abortion, but other measures, like a ban on late-term abortion, enjoy overwhelming support.

The other galvanizing social issue, codifying the traditional definition of marriage, is the most successful citizen initiative since term limits and enjoys even stronger support among blacks and Hispanics than among whites. Continued...

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About The Author
Mark Hillman is a Colorado native, a farmer, "recovering journalist" and a former Majority Leader of the Colorado Senate.
Cavell,
"we'll also have kids who have no idea how to go about safely having sex."

No rocket science in that straw man. If they've been taught abstinence then they know that they can safely have sex inside the confines of a monogamous marriage.

Given the fallen nature of mankind, we will always have wrongdoing. This does not make wrongdoing right. If wrongdoing is punished while virtue is rewarded there will be more virtue and less wrongdoing.

Consider what happened with smoking. When I was a child smoking was as all-pervasive and the culture of sluttification is today. As a child kids could buy candy cigarettes as they now buy those "Bratz" sl*t dolls.

Less than 50 years later public smoking is considered somewhere between impolite and evil. In movies and on TV a cigarette has replaced the black cowboy hat as the Mark of the Beast for the designated villain.

Abstinence from sex can be taught as readily as abstinence from smoking -- especially since there's no such thing as "safe smoking" while sex can be safely enjoyed within the marriage relationship.

Cavell,
Since you don't even know that the so-called "Assault rifles" are nothing more than deer rifles with a few black accessories its obvious that your knowledge in other areas is equally suspect.

"Personally, my rationale for it is based on sentience."

At what IQ level do you think its OK to execute the mentally disabled? How much impairment is permitted before you say its OK to murder Grandma since dealing with her dementia is getting inconvenient?

If you can justify the murder of an unborn baby you can justify the murder of any human being. Who finds your life inconvenient?
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