|
|
|

ARE
THE EVILS OF ABORTION, CLONING AND EXPERIMENTING ON
HUMAN EMBRYOS ONLY RELIGIOUS BELIEFS? |
Former New York Governor Mario Cuomo, speaking in Washington
at a Forum on Politics and Faith in America, made an
extended application of his argument given at Notre Dame
back in 1984. Then he defended the right of Catholic
politicians to vote in favor of pro-abortion legislation.
Now he claims that citizens, motivated by their religious
beliefs, can consider that abortion, cloning, and embryo
destructive research are wrong and they have religious
freedom to take this position. By the same standard, thinks
Cuomo, people whose religious beliefs allow them to abort
unborn human babies, clone and do embryo destructive
research also have a claim upon religious freedom to support
them in their choice. Thus the pro-life politician cannot
attack a pro-abortion politician who advocates abortion,
because the right to religious freedom protects both the one
and the other. Cuomo’s conclusion: If you deny the
pro-abortionist’s right to pursue his agenda, then you also
must deny the pro-lifer’s right to pursue his.
How convenient a solution for Cuomo, the “great
compromiser”! Since the life issues are simply matters of
religious belief, a citizen can take any position he or she
wants to with impunity, since civil law cannot support, or
be influenced by, religious beliefs. The legislatures and
the courts must back off from dealing with these issues.
Of course, the reality is that the Supreme Court directly
involved itself with making abortion legal at any stage of
the pregnancy. It overturned the laws which most states had
constructed precisely to defend the right to life of the
unborn babies residing in their states. Roe V. Wade removed
the protection of the law from the most innocent and most
highly vulnerable member of our community. The Supreme Court
depersonalized the unborn baby, and made its continued
survival, its right to life, depend upon the whims and
convenience of his or her mother.
Cuomo’s position loses its plausibility when we hold it up
to the light of reality. The reality of an unborn baby is
not a matter of religious belief. The unborn baby is a new
member of our race, whose physical development is completely
self-directed, and whose natural birth after nine months of
gestation, if left unmolested, is guaranteed. This is an
observable reality upon which all unbiased people can agree.
The need for health care of children, good nutrition,
corrections for impaired hearing and seeing are not matters
of religious belief. They are simple natural realities which
everyone can recognize. Young persons have human dignity,
and human rights, which flow out of their dignity.
Corresponding to these rights, society has duties to address
them. This is a matter of simple justice, not religious
belief.
Religious beliefs (sometimes called dogmas) generally refer
to God and what He has done for us. Think of the twelve
articles of the Nicene Creed. Since God remains hidden from
our view, so as not to impede our freedom, we need divine
revelation to know religious truths. When we appeal to
religious truths, we simply confirm what we can already know
by the use of good reason. Good reason can arrive at a true
anthropology, that God designed us as bodied persons,
endowed with a God-given dignity with all the human rights
that flow from that dignity. Human reason can construct
valid moral principles that guide our choices and direct our
acts, that are coherent with our dignity as human persons.
Anyone open to the use of good reason can arrive at these
moral principles.
The flaws in Cuomo’s thinking are easily seen when we apply
his smokescreen to other moral issues like slavery, racial
discrimination, genocide, infanticide and the exploitation
of human labor. The injustice, and moral evil, of all these
grievous offences against human dignity are not merely the
results of religious beliefs. We need not appeal to divine
revelation to understand what makes these choices abominable
and highly destructive of human relations. We can figure
these matters out on our own. Just observe what these
practices do to their victims and to their perpetrators!
Chattel slavery always was wrong, and always will be, for
the same reasons. The same applies to genocide, racial
discrimination, infanticide and the exploitation of human
labor.
Cuomo wants to create a smokescreen which promotes a
specious cover for “politically correct” Catholic
politicians and those who advocate legalized abortion. He
wants a pro-abortion vote to appear to be a decent thing to
do. He wants citizens, who have moral insights derived from
their knowledge of the Creator of the human race, to stay
out of the public square, where the important decisions are
being formulated. This, in effect, would cancel their
citizenship. He wants a climate of pluralism to prevail,
where nothing directly contrary to human dignity and human
rights can be ascertained and repudiated. He wants the
status quo to continue, whereby only those who appeal to our
baser instincts can continue to manipulate the democratic
system so as to serve their special interests. Bad
arguments, like smokescreens, should be identified, seen
through and rejected.
For a more extensive analysis of Cuomo’s argument by Robert
George, see Voices, Vol. XXII: No 2, pp. 15-19.
Cordially yours,
Fr. Matthew Habiger OSB
- back to
Q & A --
|
|