Table of Contents

PBA455Y: Consistent Life Ethic: The Ethics of Killing

What are we to make of a Consistent Life Ethic? How should we approach the ethics of killing on issues such as capital punishment, war, euthanasia, non-human animals?

FIXME interesting: “New Pro-Life Movement” Manifesto https://medium.com/@newprolifemovement/the-10-pillars-of-the-new-pro-life-movement-e924728d839c

FIXME need more Socratic structure to talk through this, more like burning IVF lab

Apologetics: Ethics of Killing

Capital Punishment

Decent overview of the debate:

:?: So, what's the pro-life position? (trick question)

Real question is, can the pro-death penalty be consistent with the anti-abortion position? (Yes: difference between guilty and innocent) Can the anti-death penalty be consistent with the anti-abortion position? (Yes: respect for life, or other concerns about the death penalty)

FIXME other notes

Non-Human Animals

FIXME

War

FIXME simplify this: Just War / Pacifism (is there a priority of peace?), Obama Doctrine distinctions, etc

Key question: Which view is compatible with the pro-life position? Which view is incompatible? (e.g. pro-lifers need to care about civilian deaths in a coherent way)

Different perspectives on foreign policy (have nothing to do with different perspectives on “right to life”), from the Obana Doctrine:

One day, over lunch in the Oval Office dining room, I asked the president how he thought his foreign policy might be understood by historians. He started by describing for me a four-box grid representing the main schools of American foreign-policy thought. One box he called isolationism, which he dismissed out of hand. “The world is ever-shrinking,” he said. “Withdrawal is untenable.” The other boxes he labeled realism, liberal interventionism, and internationalism. “I suppose you could call me a realist in believing we can’t, at any given moment, relieve all the world’s misery,” he said. “We have to choose where we can make a real impact.” He also noted that he was quite obviously an internationalist, devoted as he is to strengthening multilateral organizations and international norms.

Abortion:

Consistent Life Ethic

FIXME use Klusendorf and Camosy audio

On Killing: Internal Movement Debate

The consistent life ethic is a challenge to pro-lifers to evaluate the consistency of their opinions on the ethics of killing more broadly. There are moral distinctions that can be made, and differing coherent stances that can be taken. One position does not imply all the rest. But there is a challenge: do we consistently value the right to life in the way that we should across a wide variety of separate issues?

Beyond Killing: Rationalization

Among Pro-Lifers

When we move to health care or immigration, the argument because more tenuous if it's being used as an excuse to overlook the violation of the right to life. The right to life is a fundamental prerequisite for all other rights. The notion that a pro-abortion politician would save more human lives because of other policies on health care or immigration so therefore can be excused on killing babies (1) is probably empirically false on straight numbers, (2) does not excuse the gross violation of justice in condoning abortion.

Sister Joan D. Chittister, O.S.B.

From Pro-Choicers

There's a lazy slander to pro-lifers are not pro-life but only pro-birth and don't care about people after they're born:

First, it's rarely true that pro-lifers don't care about people after birth. http://www.thepublicdiscourse.com/2011/01/2380/

Second, there's a difference between an issue like abortion where some people are arguing that pre-born children are not human persons and shouldn't have any rights, and something like a water crisis where there is a failure to provide the basics of life to children whom we all agree are human persons with rights. Step 1 is being recognized as a person with human rights. Pre-born children don't even have that yet. That doesn't mean it's the end point, but it's an important start.

FIXME Klusendorf: Keep the Main Thing the Main Thing https://townhall.com/columnists/scottklusendorf/2018/01/22/the-essential-prolife-argument-keep-the-main-thing-the-main-thing-n2437702

In Conversation: “Burning Orphanage” Analogy

Maria: this is an analogy that has worked really well for me and my friends in dialogue, when people bring up that either a) we as pro-lifers should be focusing on other after-birth issues, or b) that children should be aborted if they can't be guaranteed to have suffering-free lives, etc….similar to Klusendorf's story, forest fire analogy, etc.

“Imagine that there is an orphanage that is on fire, and the children are inside. What would your first response be to this crisis? Do we first make sure that we have adoptive parents lined up for all the kids, since without parents they may not have happy lives? Do we first make sure that we have health insurance in place for all them? No, we first have to save the children from the fire. Taking care of kids, making sure that they get all their basic needs met, is really important–but that good care isn't much use if the kids are already dead.”

1)
Every Human being is a Person), not OHP((Only Human beings are Persons