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News: "Keep Your Friends Close and Specter Closer"
Posted on Friday, November 19 @ 11:30:13 PST by Gary DeMar

Politics by Gary DeMar
Similar counsel was given to Michael Corleone from his father in the Godfather saga. It turned out to be very good advice. It looks like Arlen Specter is going to get the chairmanship of the Senate Judiciary Committee. This is not as bad as it seems. Specter got the behind-closed-door message that his pro-abortion obstructionist philosophy would not be tolerated.

Having a bad guy as chairman can have a positive reverse effect. During Ronald Reagan's first administration, the pro-life community pushed hard to have Dr. C. Everett Koop as the nation's Surgeon General. Koop had been surgeon-in-chief at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and professor of pediatric surgery at the University of Pennsylvania. He and his team of surgeons became famous in 1974 when they successfully separated Siamese twin baby girls. His medical credentials were impeccable.

Koop gained wider notoriety when he traveled the country with Francis Schaeffer promoting the film and book series Whatever Happened to the Human Race? Before this, Koop had written a hard hitting book on the horrors of abortion and infanticide--The Right to Live; The Right to Die (1976). He seemed to be the perfect candidate for the position. But because of his pro-life credentials, he went through a rough confirmation hearing. "The nomination was held up for more than eight months. Only after Dr. Koop promised to abandon the antiabortion circuit and to refrain from using the surgeon general's office as a pulpit for his right-to-life beliefs did the Senate finally vote its approval."1

Under questioning, Koop admitted that as Surgeon General he would recommend abortion as one way of dealing with the unborn children of mothers with AIDS. By the spring of 1987, Koop was self-consciously in retreat from his earlier Christian position. With respect to abortion, he commented: "I've written all that I have to write on that issue. There are other, bigger things that I should turn my attention to as surgeon general: Where this country is and where it's going in health care."2

In 1986 and 1987, Koop officially called for sex education on AIDS in the public schools as early as kindergarten and for public school instruction on how to use condoms. Homosexuality had become a politically protected lifestyle. "I am the surgeon general of the heterosexuals and the homosexuals, of the young and the old, of the moral and the immoral, the married and the unmarried. I don't have the luxury of deciding which side I want to be on."3

As Surgeon General, Koop was a big disappointment. The confirmation process neutered him philosophically. He gave away the pro-life store in order to gain confirmation. A similar thing happened to John Ashcroft. The anti-abortion opposition had followed Don Corleone's advice. When Specter is finally given the chairmanship, don't recoil in disgust and defeatism. We have him just where we want him. Instead of being behind the scenes, Specter will be out front where we can keep an eye on him.

1 Quoted in Gary North, Political Polytheism: The Myth of Pluralism (Tyler, TX: Institute for Christian Economics, 1989), 199.

2 Gary North, Crossed Fingers: How the Liberals Captured the Presbyterian Church (Tyler, TX: Institute for Christian Economics, 1996), 1004-6.

3 Quoted in North, Political Polytheism, 201.


 
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Character Counts (Score: 1)
by kfiech on Friday, November 19 @ 15:38:57 PST
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"As Surgeon General, Koop was a big disappointment. The confirmation process neutered him philosophically. He gave away the pro-life store in order to gain confirmation."

Gary's missing the main point. Men of character DO NOT compromise on the big issues that matter to God. The issue of life and death doesn't get any bigger. That's why character more than any perceived political "skill" is what should count for the Christian in the voting process. Unfortunately, we forgot this in the last election. As for Koop, Ashcroft, and others, they will have to answer to God on this as well as we Christians who chose to vote for civil magistrates who support the murder of its citizens.


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Re: (Score: 1)
by MiddleKnowledge on Saturday, November 20 @ 13:54:34 PST
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That's Neoconservative logic for you.

I'm sure if you say it enough the happy gullible will believe it. Christian conservatives in this country are clueless.

"When Specter is finally given the chairmanship.... We have him just where we want him..."



Tim Martin
www.truthinliving.org


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Re: (Score: 1)
by demario on Saturday, November 20 @ 15:26:42 PST
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These are political realities that we have to deal with at the moment until we get more of the good guys in. Work with what you have so you can live to fight another day.
I get angry emails from Christian purists who demand to have it all, and right now! It's not going to happen that way. We lost in incrementally, and that's the way we'll get it back. It's like some preterists who demand that a futurist become a preterist after the first time he/she hears "the truth." If they don't embrace every facet of preterism at that moment, they're written off as "compromisers" or "hypo-preterists." Do they believe that this is a good way to get a future hearing?
It was wrong for Koop to compromise, but it's OK for Specter to compromise. Compromise in Specter's case brings him closer to our position. Compromise in Koop's case moved him away. There's a difference.


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  • Re: by kfiech on Sunday, November 21 @ 01:26:09 PST
    • Re: by Ed on Sunday, November 21 @ 20:11:38 PST
      • Re: by kfiech on Monday, November 22 @ 09:53:03 PST

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