So you define "victory" as a lack of legislation banning abortion? Interesting...
Education and advances in medical science are doing far more to get rid of willful killing of the unborn than legislation ever could.
I admit that I spent some time thinking about how to phrase the question in the OP. I used the word "won" to avoid any value judgment on it so I could get some responses. Evidently, I failed.
I hope you are right about education and advances in medical science. Even the strongest supporters of privacy (keeping the government out of a woman's uterus) agree that the procedure is gruesome and bad. If abortions can be prevented through education and scientific advances, that will be good for everyone.
That's nice. Now, answer my question, please.
I have looked back, and I can't find a question that you asked on this issue (gay marriage). If you'd like to refresh my memory, I'll try to respond, but my opinion on this subject is that gays
deserve (and will have, within then next 20 years or so) the right to marry in all states (except Utah which I expect to hold out on that issue for much longer). The question I pose is whether the Republican Party has any will to continue to fight on this issue. It appears to me that the left has already won, and that it is only a matter of time before we see the nation's laws start to reflect the national consensus on this issue. If I am wrong about this, and I am asking you directly, I'd like to know.
Again, no real basis other than your opinion. I am using the Amsterdam model of changing policy where marijuana bars are required to be private clubs. Which, it would seem, is a rather large reversal of the previous laws.
No, indeed. My opinion here is irrelevant. I wanted to know what you had to say. You're absolutely right to note that the Dutch are restricting this right. That said, a number of countries are liberalizing on this issue (as I saw in a recent edition of
Time). So, what's your prediction for us here in the States?
Regardless of who deserves credit? After claiming it as a leftist victory? You don't say....
It is, however, a very large metric in the overall indicator of how "liberal" the country truly is. Do you deny that?
Gun control? A metric of how liberal the United States is? Well, I can safely say (from my own experience) that people in many places in the world consider our attitude towards guns to be backwards and frightening. To that, I respond that we are a different country with a different history, and that the 2nd Amendment is the law of the land, and that it's not changing any time soon. They respond to me with puzzled looks and mild disdain. I can live with that.
Thank you for your response.
-Laelth