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Monday, May 14, 2007
William F. Buckley :: Townhall.com Columnist
Romney's Moral Thought
by William F. Buckley
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There is pretty outspoken derision, on the hustings, on the matter of Mitt Romney and his evolved stand on abortion. In Iowa, which Romney recently visited, a county chairman accosted a skeptic. What he said was that Romney's opposition to abortion was the result of a "thoughtful moral process." People on the other side, whether of Romney, or of abortion, are expressing their skepticism.

I recount, as relevant, a personal experience. In 1965, Vatican II released its paper affirming religious liberty and the rights of conscience of dissenting Christian communities. The following year, I wrote a column citing that Vatican paper as relevant to legislation about abortion pending in various states. Whether to approve abortion, I wrote, citing the Vatican document, was a moral question on which the Catholic Church could not dictate to non-Catholics.

I remember the dismay of Brent Bozell, my closest friend from college days and collaborator in the founding of National Review, of which I was the editor. What Bozell said was that abortion was, in the understanding of basic Christian thought, a fatal intervention in the life of a human being.

The moral narrative is plain enough, and what ensued in my own case was studied reflection on the point. The immunity of life has to begin at some moment after conception. It is nowhere assumed that the day-old child has less than a full, constitutional claim to protection. Yet if so, what protections are owing to a pre-born infant?

There are heavy books and treatises that argue the question, but after my own mind was made on protecting unborn life, I expressed my views not, I hope, tiresomely but with some frequency as the abortion question arose in the arena of American politics.

What I have found most arresting is the refusal of so many in the pro-choice army to submit the question to "thoughtful moral process," as we have been told Mitt Romney did. One can choose to ignore the moral question, but one cannot easily decline to acknowledge that there is a moral question underlying the dispute.

We need to remind ourselves that deep moral questions have at other times in American history engaged public thought. It is at least strange, but we need to remind ourselves of it, that many years after the founding of the Republic, it simply was not questioned that there existed a class of human beings who were slaves, and that it was a right of an American who bought such a creature at a public auction to direct that slave's life as one would a mule's. Continued...

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About The Author

William F. Buckley, Jr. is editor-at-large of National Review, the prolific author of Miles Gone By: A Literary Autobiography.

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Laws and Morality
Pasadena Phil contends that al;l laws are based in morality, and that is factually wrong in a huge way. Most laws are, in fact, based on practical considerations.

Machiavelli suggests, in his name and his position, that the ends justify the means. He explains that Romney should be judged on what he did, not on what he said. However, both his name and his position indicate he is as likely to be lying through his teeth as to be telling the truth. The key tobeing machiavelian is to NOT tell people you are. Otherwise you are completely untrustworthy. His support of Romney is a good reason to NOT support Romney.

Learning something each time
If you do not add a new word to your vocabulary each time you read something from Mr. Buckley, you are either very bright or very stupid.
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