Thursday, March 23, 2006

Extreme views on abortion

I have yet to find a good radio station here in New Jersey and, like I did when I was here 3 years ago, find myself listening to NPR on my 1/2 hour commute to and from work. Although the reporting is generally left of center, its not the extreme that is complained about. On the way home from work, there was a piece on the plan B emergency drug. A bill that would force all hospitals to offer the drug to rape victims is in the Connecticut legislature. Many Connecticut hospitals are run by the Catholic Church and my knee jerk reaction was that no private hospital should be forced to offer such a terrible, life destroying drug. But, but by the end of the entire report, I was left offended by a group of social conservatives with whom my views might have usually aligned.
During a hearing for lawmakers to hear both sides of the issue, a woman who was raped reported how grateful she was that one hospital offered her the drug so that she would not get pregnant. Then, a group of Catholics basically said that the morally responsible thing is not to offer this drug, and that instead, a rape victim should have the baby.
What worries me is not whether a woman decided to have a baby caused by rape, because in my opinion it is morally justifiable to have an abortion after rape, but the fanatical extremes that are the voices being covered in this important issue. This is the case of the silent majority who believe that wanton abuse of abortion is wrong but who understand that there are a few morally justifiable reasons. Unfortunately, those who want abortion on demand and those who want to ban it for any reason are the loudest. It's dangerous on the edges.

Wednesday, March 22, 2006

Where is the Domestic Agenda?

With so much focus on foreign problems, it feels like media coverage of important domestic issues has been replaced by misleading stories on the Iraq conflict. Republicans seem to be floundering for anything positive and Democrats are struggling to come up with a better message than "You're wrong". We need somebody or something to step up and lead elected officials back to issues at home like the rising costs of health care, possible social security failure and struggling public schools when compared with other countries. And, how can we expect politicians to come up with good solutions when they are shielded from the effects we all feel? Too few in the media question why government officials have lavish health care plans, impressive pensions and who seldom let their own kids attend public schools. It's not that these benefits are bad; I certainly would be happy with them. The problem is that when many Americans clammer for changes that could make it easier for us to secure such benefits, politicians of both parties drag their feet. I'm talking about social security privitization and school vouchers . . . of even a limited kind as to test their effectiveness. Unless they feel the actual pressures of middle class America, I'm afraid that our elected officials have no real reason to address these issues.

Monday, March 20, 2006

BYU Football Preview

It's never too early to start speculating about BYU football. Here's a preview of the team. Last year's 6-5 regular season team was better than their record indicated and their offense should prove one of the best in the country this year. I'm predicting 9-3 regular season this year and if the defense shows up, I'm not sure there are three teams on the schedule who could outscore them (only Tulsa and TCU even averaged the same scoring last year as BYU). One thing you can be sure of, with John Beck, Curtis Brown and Jonny Harline returning you will see vintage BYU offense.

First Posting

Here is the first post on judlog. Enjoy!