Related Pages
Ending Abortion
How You Can Help in Any of
a Number of Ways
Contact Your Elected
Officials
Sample Letters on Current
Issues
Various Pro-life
Talking Points and Sample Letters to Obama
Sample Letter on a Current Issue
Various Pro-life Talking Points and Sample Letters to
Obama
Cardinal Francis George's Letter to the then President-elect Obama, January
16, 2009
Using the below letter or
the other sample letters
in this area and the
other food for thought
in writing to President Obama, please put a letter in your own words
(or use a sample letter as is), and mail it to your
federal House
representative and your
two federal
senators as well as
President Obama.
It's much better to send a form letter than not to send a letter at all.
In less than a week since his last letter, in a letter dated January 16,
2009, and released January 19, Cardinal Francis George sent a letter to President
Elect urging him not to use executive orders to overturn the Mexico City
Policy, conscience rights of abortion opponents, or restrictions on funding
embryo destruction.
Source:
http://catholickey.blogspot.com/2009/01/cardinal-george-to-president-elect.html
Dear Mr. President-elect:
I recently wrote to assure you of the prayers of the Catholic bishops of
the United States for your service to our nation, and to outline issues of
special concern to us as we seek to work with your Administration and the
new Congress to serve the common good.
I am writing today on a matter that could introduce significant negative
and divisive factors into our national life, at a time when we need to come
together to address the serious challenges facing our people. I expect that
some want you to take executive action soon to reverse current policies against
government-sponsored destruction of unborn human life. I urge you to consider
that this could be a terrible mistake -- morally, politically, and in terms
of advancing the solidarity and well-being of our nation's people.
During the campaign, you promised as President to represent all the people
and respect everyone's moral and religious viewpoints. You also made several
statements about abortion. On one occasion, when asked at what point a baby
has human rights, you answered in effect that you do not have a definite
answer. And you spoke often about a need to reduce abortions.
The Catholic Church teaches that each human being, at every moment of biological
development from conception to natural death, has an inherent and fundamental
right to life. We are committed not only to reducing abortion, but to making
it unthinkable as an answer to unintended pregnancy. At the same time, I
think your remarks provide a basis for common ground. Uncertainty as to when
human rights begin provides no basis for compelling others to violate their
conviction that these rights exist from the beginning. After all, those people
may be right. And if the goal is to reduce abortions, that will not be achieved
by involving the government in expanding and promoting abortions.
The regulation to protect conscience rights in health care issued last month
by the Bush administration is the subject of false and misleading criticisms.
It does not reach out to expand the rights of pro-life health professionals,
but is a long-overdue measure for implementing three statutes enacted by
Congress over the last 35 years. Many criticizing the new rule have done
so without being aware of this legal foundation - but widespread ignorance
of a longstanding federal law protecting basic civil rights is among the
good reasons for more visibly implementing it. An Administration committed
to faithfully implementing and enforcing the laws of the United States will
want to retain this common-sense regulation, which explicitly protects the
right of health professionals who favor or oppose abortion to serve the basic
health needs of their communities. Suggestions that government involvement
in health care will be aimed at denying conscience, or excluding Catholic
and other health care providers from participation in serving the public
good, could threaten much-needed health care reform at the outset.
The Mexico City Policy, first established in 1984, has wrongly been attacked
as a restriction on foreign aid for family planning. In fact, it has not
reduced such aid at all, but has ensured that family planning funds are not
diverted to organizations dedicated to performing and promoting abortions
instead of reducing them. Once the clear line between family planning and
abortion is erased, the idea of using family planning to reduce abortions
becomes meaningless, and abortion tends to replace contraception as the means
for reducing family size. A shift toward promoting abortion in developing
nations would also increase distrust of the United States in these nations,
whose values and culture often reject abortion, at a time when we need their
trust and respect.
The embryonic stem cell policy initiated by President Bush has at times been
criticized from both ends of the pro-life debate, but some criticisms are
based on false premises. The policy did not ban embryonic stem cell research,
or funding of such research. By restricting federally funded research to
cell lines in existence at the time he issued his policy, he was trying to
ensure that Americans are not forced to use their tax dollars to encourage
expanded destruction of embryonic human beings for their stem cells. Such
destruction is especially pointless at the present time, for several reasons.
First, basic research in the capabilities of embryonic stem cells can be
and is being pursued using the currently eligible cell lines as well as the
hundreds of lines produced with nonfederal funds since 2001. Second, recent
startling advances in reprogramming adult cells into embryonic-like stem
cells - hailed by the journal Science as the scientific breakthrough of the
year - are said by many scientists to be making embryonic stem cells irrelevant
to medical progress. Third, adult and cord blood stem cells are now known
to have great versatility, and are increasingly being used to reverse serious
illnesses and even help rebuild damaged organs. To divert scarce funds away
from these promising avenues for research and treatment toward the avenue
that is most morally controversial as well as most medically speculative
would be a sad victory of politics over science.
I hope you will consider these comments in the spirit in which they are intended,
as an invitation to set aside political pressures and ideologies and focus
on the priorities and challenges that will unite us as a nation. Again I
want to express our hopes for your Administration, and our offer to cooperate
in advancing the common good and protecting the poor and vulnerable in these
challenging times.
As we approach the first days of your new responsibilities as President of
the United States, I will offer my prayers for you and for your family. May
God bless your efforts in fostering justice and peace for all, Mr. President,
as you begin your term.
Cardinal Francis George
Related Pages
Ending Abortion
How You Can Help in Any of
a Number of Ways
Contact Your Elected
Officials
Sample Letters on Current
Issues
Various Pro-life
Talking Points and Sample Letters to Obama
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