Capital Punishment and Abortion


Post By Professor Paul Eidelberg

Barack Obama opposes capital punishment.  Yet he voted against legislation that would put an end to full-birth abortion.  Full-birth abortion means nothing less than “kill the baby”—inflicting capital punishment not on the guilty but on the innocent! Hence, I am prompted to republish an article I wrote three decades ago.  The reader should bear in mind however, that wherever the article refers to the “unborn child,” today we must add the “born but unwanted child.”

*  *  *

In the Mishna we read: “Therefore but a single man was created in the world, to teach that if any man has caused a single soul to perish, Scripture imputes it to him as though he had caused a whole world to perish; and if any man saves alive a single soul, Scripture imputes it to him as though he had saved alive a whole world.”

To avoid misunderstanding, let me state at the outset that, except in extreme cases – such as Islamic terrorism – I do not advocate capital punishment in Israel at this time.  Nor do I regard as correct the Catholic view of abortion.  But there is something very curious about the liberal position on these two issues, especially by liberals who advocate the American practice of “abortion on demand.”

Among the arguments against capital punishment is the contention that society has no right to take the life even of the most savage murderer.  Yet many if not most opponents of capital punishment assert the right of a woman, six and even more months pregnant, to snuff out, with the aid of a physician, the life of her unborn child.  Murderers would thus be spared while the innocent would be murdered.

Oh, but now we have become “humane” and “progressive.”  For now we feel compassion, perhaps some responsibility, for those who have taken life, not for those who have just begun to live.  Without a twinge of moral doubt or remorse we execute the unborn and condemn as cruel and barbaric the execution of murderers.

That capital punishment should be called cruel and barbaric by its opponents is a nice commentary on our forefathers. Meanwhile, their humane descendants each year execute countless unborn babies whose only crime was to be unwanted.

An individual accused of murder receives due process of law.  He is provided legal counsel to defend him, witnesses to testify on his behalf.  In the United States, a jury of twelve persons is empanelled to hear and weigh evidence bearing on his guilt or innocence.  Let only one member of that jury harbor a reasonable doubt as to his guilt and the accused is acquitted, his life spared.

Compare the plight of the unwanted, unborn child.  He is utterly abandoned.  Society affords him no defense, no legal counsel or friendly witness.  Yet the life of the unborn child is on trial.  He is on trial for being an inconvenient “fetus.”

But we too are on trial, on trial in the courtroom of indifference called the “humane” and “progressive” society.  We are not only spectators; we are also the jury.  And we have been instructed by judges.  They have told us that this unborn child is not a human being—which we are all the more ready to believe having been taught to regard it as a mere “fetus.”

Had we not been thus instructed, had we only harbored a reasonable doubt on this life and death issue, we would have acquitted the child rather than become his executioners.  Only a reasonable doubt, nothing more than this, and we would have affirmed the child’s as well as our own humanity.

Liberal advocates of abortion intone the idea that a person has the right to control his or her own body.  Some derive this right from British common law. To stretch the common law to justify “abortion on demand” is rather ironic. For the common law prohibited the arbitrary control of another person’s body and regarded a “fetus” as a “person”! This being so, it was impermissible to execute a pregnant murderess.  But this is not the only irony.

The idea of “abortion on demand” actually violates the very nature of a woman’s body and the essence of motherhood. This can best be seen by reflecting on the Hebrew word for a woman’s womb—rechem.  One cognate of the word means to feel pity or pain at another’s suffering.  Another is to feel joy at another’s happiness.  Who feels more pain than a mother when her child is ill, or more joy when her child is well and successful.  But this is not all.

The mother’s body nourishes the child in her womb.  She gives of her own life’s substance to the child, a giving that signifies her selflessness.  The very opposite character trait underlies “abortion on demand.”

The laws of our supposedly barbaric forefathers prohibited abortion unless the mother’s life was in danger.  Many of our forefathers were doctors. Today many doctors, having added abortions to their repertoire of services, have also multiplied their yearly earnings.  Because of this vested interest, the medical profession has become one of the principal supporters of abortion.

As for capital punishment, consider a few aspects of Judaic law on the subject.  First, neither circumstantial evidence nor the confession of the accused is admissible in court.  Second, the murder had to be witnessed by two eligible persons, and they had to warn the would-be murderer of the consequences of his intended crime.  To be culpable, the malefactor had to be sane, and the act of murder had to be deliberate. These qualifications made conviction for capital punishment exceedingly rare.

Clearly, these laws governing capital punishment do not depreciate the value of human life.  To the contrary. Precisely because human life is sacred, those laws require the execution of convicted murderers, of those whose act of murder was itself a denial that human life is sacred.

By taking the life of a human being the murderer negates his own humanity; he reduces himself to the level of the beast.  And it is more as a beast, homo lupus, than as homo civilis, that the murderer, after being duly tried and convicted, is executed.  Imposing upon him the extreme penalty of death does not deny his humanity so much as it affirms the humanity or dignity of his victim.  Perhaps, in the last analysis, the punishment of death is a profound public affirmation of the sanctity of life.

But these thoughts are not intended as a defense of capital punishment, else far more would have to be said on the subject. Let them rather stand as an argument against capital punishment: the capital punishment tolerated under the name of “abortion on demand” or its equivalent. If capital punishment is opposed on the ground that human life is so precious that even the life of the most vicious murderer must be spared, do we not cheapen life by the wholesale destruction of countless unborn children?  Is the murderer more human than the unborn child?

One last word.  In Alex Haley’s celebrated book, Roots, Omoro, one of the principal characters, tries to explain life and death to young Kunta Kinte: “He said that three groups of people lived in every village. First were those you could see walking around, eating, sleeping, and working.  Second were the ancestors, whom Grandma Yaisa had now joined.” “And the third people—who are they?” asked Kunta.

“The third people,” said Omoro, “are those waiting to be born.”

An Interview with an All-American


Introduction:

Paul Eidelberg writes for us on attempting to show us what really matters and in this post of his I think he gets to the heart of it as this persons in an interview at the end of this post refuses to be anything but an American which he is just as I am and as all the rest of you are as well. If we left them divide us then they will rule us in my opinion you are either a free American or you consent to be a serf/slave; but the choice is yours to make!. After reading this post you will understand why a  Muslims will find it difficult to be an Americans!

Post by Prof. Paul Eidelberg

The provocative nature or question concerning Muslim immigration to the United States arises from certain principles of American liberalism. Some Americans believe that indiscriminate immigration of Muslims may undermine the survival of the United States.

To consider this issue seriously, that is, to avoid doctrinarism or mere dogma, certain demonstrable facts need to be considered:

(1)   According to Islamic doctrine, Jihad (or the slaying of non-Muslims) is a supreme moral imperative.

(2)   Moreover, Islam preaches a theologically inspired Love of Death, This love of death is encapsulated in the Quranic verse Sura 9:111, which exalts the Muslim who “slays and is slain for Allah.” Or as stated in the Islamic doctrines compiled in the Hadith: “the purest joy in Islam is to kill and be killed in the name of Allah.”

These ancient and binding dogmas of Islam are diametrically opposed to America’s primary foundational document, the Declaration of Independence, which affirms man’s God-given and inalienable rights to “Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness.”

Moreover, Islamic theology rejects as blasphemous the Judaic principle of the Book of Genesis, that “all men are created equal.”

This makes Islamic theology a racist or Nazi-like creed. It divides mankind not into “Aryans” and “non-Aryans,” but into “believers” and “infidels”; and it regards infidels  –  as Nazis regarded Jews – as inferior creatures, as “apes” and “dogs” or “pigs” which may be slaughtered indiscriminately – as indeed non-Muslims have been slaughtered in fourteen centuries of Islamic genocide.

Here, let us pause. Back in 1997, there occurred a telephone interview with New York Times reporter Ward Connerly. Connerly was then a leading proponent of an initiative measure in California prohibiting affirmative action by the state government. The following exchange took place:

Reporter: What are you?”

Connerly: “I am an American.”

Reporter: No, no, no! What are you?”

Connery: “Yes, yes, yes! I am an American.”

Reporter: “That is not what I mean. I was told that you are African American. Are you ashamed to be African American?”

Connerly: “No, I am just proud to be American.”

Connerly then explained that his ancestry included Africans, French, Irish, and American Indians. And so the dialogue concluded:

Reporter: “What does that make you?”

Connerly: “That makes me all-American!”

BREAKING: NORTH KOREA JUST MADE A GAME CHANGING ANNOUNCEMENT THAT HAS MILLIONS ON ALERT


Obviously this is not good and can be traced back to the Clinton administration so Hillary is also complicit in this besides all her other disasters.

People Freaking Out About Trump’s Muslim Plan Are Forgetting To Mention One Big Thing


Trump never talks about things that are not true the media and others are too stupid to understand this!

Putin on the origin of ISIS


Putin is mostly right all these problems in the middle east have there source in what Obama has been doing. Putin is not innocent of miss-action himself but one would have to say 90% is Obama and only 10% Putin.

Marco Rubio’s claim that no recent mass shootings would have been prevented by gun laws


We can not let the 2nd amendment be nullified as without the 2nd the rest and the constitution are gone.

deacon303's avatarWhiskey Tango Foxtrot

“None of the major shootings that have occurred in this country over the last few months or years that have outraged us, would gun laws have prevented them.”

— Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.). interview on CBS’s “This Morning,” Dec. 4, 2015

We developed the following list of 12 mass shootings since 2012 listed in the Mother Jones database of U.S. mass shootings, with details obtained from various news and official reports. We will look at whether proposals might have made a difference in how the guns were obtained, or whether existing laws worked as intended.

Mass Shootings since 2012

Dec. 2, 2015: Syed Farook and Tashfeen Malik killed 14 people in San Bernardino, Calif., using a Smith & Wesson M&P AR-15 type rifle, a DPMS Panther Arms AR-15 type rifle, a Smith & Wesson semiautomatic pistol and a Llama semiautomatic pistol. The guns were purchased legally and the rifles were purchased…

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Some Prerequisites on Becoming a Naturalized Citizen of the United States


By Prof. Paul Eidelberg

On becoming a naturalized citizen of the United States, the Naturalization Act of 1790 set the criteria for naturalization to two years of residency, proof of good moral character, and an oath to support the Constitution.

It also mandated that one must “absolutely and entirely renounce and abjure all allegiance and fidelity to every foreign Prince, Potentate, State or Sovereignty.”

Does the latter prerequisite place in question whether a devout Muslim immigrant is eligible for citizenship in the United States?

Thoughts on Citizenship


By Prof. Paul Eidelberg
December 9, 2015

1) Citizenship is the grant of a personal status to the citizen and it creates a bond of loyalty between the citizen and the State, and endows him or her with nationality.

2) Naturalized citizens may be required to take a pledge of loyalty. For example:

“I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States and to the Republic for which it stands: one nation indivisible with liberty and justice for all.”

3) Citizenship carries with it both rights and responsibilities. Citizens should work toward the betterment of their community through economic participation, public service, volunteer work, and other such efforts to improve life for all citizens.

4) Citizenship as thus defined will not be conspicuous in a population whose children were not imbued with a strong sense of national character. This obviously applies to illegal Muslim and Hispanic immigrants in America who maintain their past sympathies or attachments.

5) Japan does not give citizenship to a child born of Japanese parents if the child was raised abroad by his own parents, as might happen if the parents were in the diplomatic corps.

6) Under Jordan’s Nationality law of February 4, 1954, a person became a Jordanian national if, “not being Jewish, he possessed Palestine nationality before May 14, 1948 and, at the date of publication of this law, was ordinarily resident in the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan.” This is less a manifestation of racism than of national pride and political prudence.

7) Making Muslims citizens of a Jewish state is more foolish than making Jews citizens of any Muslim state, considering only the disparity in their respective populations in the Middle East.

Just as only Jews are qualified to make the laws of a Jewish state – think of the knowledge and reverence required to preserve the Jewish tradition, its religious precepts and practices, its methods of education, the memory of its great teachers and leaders – so only Muslims are qualified to make the laws of any Muslim state.

8) A large majority of Muslim citizens of Israel identify with Israel’s enemies, including Hamas, Hezbollah, and Iran. In fact, many of these Muslim citizens have aided and/or committed terrorist attacks against Israel.

9) The Balfour Declaration, the St. Remo Convention, the Anglo-American Accord, the UN Resolution affirming the establishment of the State of Israel, and Israel’s own Declaration of Independence, designate Israel as a Jewish state, and not as a multicultural state. The latter designation simply reflects the disloyal preference of post-Zionists in Israel, as well as of certain members of Israel’s Supreme Court, as may be seen in various rulings of the Court’s former and most influential Chief Justice, Aharon Barak.

10) That it is not simple for a devout Muslim to identify with Israel as a Jewish state is obvious. It is also obvious that Muslims in America are not thrilled to pledge allegiance to secular America. But that is the condition of enjoying the rights and opportunities that come with Israeli or American citizenship.

11) Citizenship for an immigrant with traditional moral values can be problematic in certain democracies.

12) The reason is this. There are two kinds of Democracy, contemporary, normless democracy, and classical normative democracy. Freedom and Equality are their basic principles. However, in a Normless democracy, freedom and equality lack ethical and rational constraints. The situation is otherwise in a normative democracy, where freedom and equality are rooted in the Bible’s conception of man’s creation in the Image of God.

13) Neither Israel nor America can be classified rightly as a Normative Democracy, not only because their Supreme Courts have legalized pornography, homosexuality, and same-sex marriage. The political leaders of these two democracies have amplified their normless propensities by consorting with and appeasing Muslim despots dedicated to their country’s destruction.

14) Therefore, given the absence of substantive normative principles and the pervasive moral equivalency in present-day America and Israel, and further, given the fact that this immoral posture goes on and on in both countries without discernible public protest or outrage; and further, since both countries have thereby betrayed their Judeo-Christian foundations – citizenship in both countries has become a travesty.

As a consequence, one may well wonder whether they are worthy of citizens sacrificing life and limb against their Islamic enemies, whose disloyal acts and pronounced dedication to the demise of both Israel and America, render these Muslims unworthy of respect and even tolerance.

LEVIN GOES NUCLEAR ON OBAMA!! We Don’t Need Your DAMN Lectures!


Levin is right of course! Obama is anti-American and always has been!

Hillary Clinton: No War On Islamic State Over a Few ‘Radicals,’ but All-Out War on Guns Over a Few Criminals


Actually we are at war with both the Muslims and the progressives (Marxists) in our own government. Both want to dominate us and take ALL are freedoms.

deacon303's avatarWhiskey Tango Foxtrot

Clinton responded by almost answering the question–she admitted the existence of “radical elements who use a dangerous and distorted view of Islam to promote their jihadist ambitions,” but she still would not support war against “radical Islam.”

So Stephanopoulos kept at it, asking “What’s the problem with radical Islam?” and asking why Clinton can’t saying we’re fight radical Islam “even though the qualifier ‘radical’ is there?”

Clinton finally gave up the goods:

No, because, look, that — you know enough about religion, you’ve studied it. And there are radicals, people who believe all kinds of things in every religion in the world.

I don’t want to do that because, number one, it doesn’t do justice to the vast numbers of Muslims in our own country and around the world who are peaceful people.

Number two, it helps to create this clash of civilizations that is actually a recruiting tool for…

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