Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Unlike Don Wagner, Melissa Fox is agin the government imposing values

     Don Wagner’s Democratic opponent in the race for the 70th Assembly District seat, Melissa Fox, writes about abortion in today’s Orange Juice Blog. Her piece is called The Most Personal Decision. (See also here.)
     Fox explains that the abortion issue is very personal for her because her unmarried, eighteen-year-old mother faced the difficult choice of whether to seek an abortion 43 years ago.
     She goes on to state her position and her disagreement with Don Wagner:
     Whether or not to have an abortion – or whether to give a child up for adoption – is a deeply personal and often painful decision for a woman or couple to make, and it is a decision they have to make based on their own faith and values, not someone else’s – and certainly not the government’s.
     My opponent for the 70th Assembly District believes otherwise.
     He believes that he has the right to impose his own faith and beliefs on every woman and family in California. He has vowed to use his position in the legislature “to defend life from conception to natural death” – bringing back the days when thousands of women each year in California were forced to make the horrific choice between having unwanted children or illegal, dangerous abortions. And he has already received thousands of dollars in contributions from groups outside our district that are determined to use the government to impose their particular faith on everyone else.
     Responses to Fox’s piece run the gamut. At least one response is thoughtful.
     Don usually describes himself as a libertarian. Evidently, he makes an exception in the case of pregnancies to the familiar libertarian rejection of government "interference." Perhaps he is inclined to insist that a fetus is a person and the government should therefore be protecting fetuses from, well, being killed by anyone.
     Does anyone know how Don explains the prima facie conflict between his libertarianism and his hostility to abortion rights?
     Wagner doesn’t discuss abortion on his campaign website, but I don’t doubt that he holds the position that Fox attributes to him. I'll try to locate an explanation of his views on abortion. [CORRECTION: at the end of his comment regarding the "protection" of families, Wagner writes: "I believe that life is precious and will fight to defend life from conception to natural death."]

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...