I'm not going into the disastrous night had been the Democrats last night, nor how sad it is that as the greatest country in the world, we have Donald Trump and Joe Biden to choose from.
I want to mainly focus on the moral conundrum Catholics face with voting for a candidate who is solidly pro-choice (Donald Trump) and one who is solidly pro-abortion (Joe Biden). From a moral standpoint this case reminds me of the issue faced at the beginning of Covid, where you had vaccines that were initially developed or tested using the aborted remains of children, BUT were not used in the subsequent manufacturing of the vaccines. Given that an evil has been done or is a foregone conclusion, can a Christian morally vote for a pro-choice candidate like Donald Trump? I have zero questions about whether a Catholic can morally vote for President Biden, that answer is "no"
I am unsure to be honest. The principle of Double Effect states that an action can be morally permissible even if it leads to or permits evil provided that certain conditions are met. I'm paraphrasing but the conditions are usually that the action itself is no worse than morally neutral, that the bad result not be a direct intention, that the good result not be a direct cause of the possible bad result, and that the good outweighs any possible bad that could arise.
Trump stated pretty clearly last night that he wants abortion to be left up to the states, he made some hemming and hawing about politicians "having to say that to get elected" but I do not delude myself into thinking that Donald Trump is a pro-life advocate, except as it suits him.
My question is: Is giving people the decision to do a great evil a morally neutral act? You're not intending the evil be done, you're merely giving people the opportunity to vote on whether an evil is legal. This in and of itself would not be a morally neutral act, except when compared to the alternative which is a gross expansion of abortion everywhere and in areas where it is currently illegal (as championed by President Biden). The good would outweigh any possible bad, because you'd be forced to choose between the current number of abortions; or more abortions, with fewer abortions obviously being preferable.
Interested to see your thoughts.
I want to mainly focus on the moral conundrum Catholics face with voting for a candidate who is solidly pro-choice (Donald Trump) and one who is solidly pro-abortion (Joe Biden). From a moral standpoint this case reminds me of the issue faced at the beginning of Covid, where you had vaccines that were initially developed or tested using the aborted remains of children, BUT were not used in the subsequent manufacturing of the vaccines. Given that an evil has been done or is a foregone conclusion, can a Christian morally vote for a pro-choice candidate like Donald Trump? I have zero questions about whether a Catholic can morally vote for President Biden, that answer is "no"
I am unsure to be honest. The principle of Double Effect states that an action can be morally permissible even if it leads to or permits evil provided that certain conditions are met. I'm paraphrasing but the conditions are usually that the action itself is no worse than morally neutral, that the bad result not be a direct intention, that the good result not be a direct cause of the possible bad result, and that the good outweighs any possible bad that could arise.
Trump stated pretty clearly last night that he wants abortion to be left up to the states, he made some hemming and hawing about politicians "having to say that to get elected" but I do not delude myself into thinking that Donald Trump is a pro-life advocate, except as it suits him.
My question is: Is giving people the decision to do a great evil a morally neutral act? You're not intending the evil be done, you're merely giving people the opportunity to vote on whether an evil is legal. This in and of itself would not be a morally neutral act, except when compared to the alternative which is a gross expansion of abortion everywhere and in areas where it is currently illegal (as championed by President Biden). The good would outweigh any possible bad, because you'd be forced to choose between the current number of abortions; or more abortions, with fewer abortions obviously being preferable.
Interested to see your thoughts.