• @WaterChi
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    1 year ago

    They also published two formal documents in support of Roe right after it was decided.

    All that was before the fundamentalists took over and drove all the centrists and progressives out and made themselves an arm of the GOP. Ref. also: Moral Majority and Southern Strategy and the fundamentalist takeover of the NRA all around the same time.

    • @Lovstuhagen@exploding-heads.comOPM
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      21 year ago

      That is interesting, I am unfamiliar with that.

      … and this is some mind blowing content:

      When Roe was first decided, most of the Southern evangelicals who today make up the backbone of the anti-abortion movement believed that abortion was a deeply personal issue in which government shouldn’t play a role. Some were hesitant to take a position on abortion because they saw it as a “Catholic issue,” and worried about the influence of Catholic teachings on American religious observance.

      Shortly after the decision was handed down, The Baptist Press, a wire service run by the Southern Baptist Convention — the biggest Evangelical organization in the US — ran an op-ed praising the ruling. “Religious liberty, human equality and justice are advanced by the Supreme Court abortion decision,” read the January 31, 1973, piece by W. Barry Garrett, The Baptist Press’s Washington bureau chief.

      Religious bodies and religious persons can continue to teach their own particular views to their constituents with all the vigor they desire. People whose conscience forbids abortion are not compelled by law to have abortions. They are free to practice their religion according to the tenets of their personal or corporate faith.

      The reverse is also now true since the Supreme Court decision. Those whose conscience or religious convictions are not violated by abortion may not now be forbidden by a religious law to obtain an abortion if they so choose.

      Bill Moyers