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The Abortion Debate--Chapter Seventeen, Debate Handbook
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"A Pragmatic Conservative Approach To The Debate
***Chapter Seventeen--Conservative Debate Handbook***
Issues In The Debate Over Abortion [And How To Deal With Them Effectively]
Synopsis Wrong approaches to debate. The essential facts. Focus on what is undeniable. The general assault on the family and traditional values. The romantic ethic as a weapon. How to persuade others to a maximum extent; to rally the most possible support. Hanging together, or hanging apart. How to hang your enemy instead.
The Abortion question is a legal issue. It is also a moral issue. It is also a biological, sociological and psychological issue. Unhappily, it evokes such strong feelings that the debate frequently (and rapidly) becomes tangential to the real issues, legal or moral. In an era distinguished by imprecise thought patterns and advocacy by 30 second sound bites, the quality of debate on Abortion tends to be even poorer than on other issues. This phenomenon largely reflects the fact that many of the participants in that debate, on one side or the other, are of the "single issue" variety; people who define their associations, allegiances and voting patterns, by attitudes on Abortion; treating one's position on Abortion as the determinant--the litmus test--for love or hate, virtue or vice, in their world view.
This sort of obsession never serves a constructive purpose. It isolates those in its grip from their contemporaries, and renders them peculiarly unable to persuade those who do not share the obsession. From the standpoint of the Conservative, seeking to restore legal prohibitions on Abortion, it creates numerous problems not easy to solve or negotiate. Not the least of these is how to keep those, who are obsessed, from hurting the very cause to which they are so totally committed.
How Not To Fight Abortion
Because of this obvious disadvantage, we are going to begin this treatise on how to debate against legal abortion, by detailing some o"
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