QUOTE: Prior to 1973 - just think about this for
a minute - the laws of America reflected an overwhelming pro-life consensus
that children before birth deserve the protection of the law. That consensus
was a secular consensus. Those laws were not written by clerics, or in monasteries,
or by the great organized religions of America. . . Not unique to our left or
to the right, Democrats or Republicans, Liberals or conservatives, it
represented the mainstream of America. My friends, it still is the mainstream
of America, so don't be fooled. . . The American people have not accepted
abortion on demand. . . We cannot become comfortable with it, because it's
fundamentally contrary to what we believe as Americans. . . Every poll shows a
vast and growing unease with the abortion license and the industry that serves
it. I believe a pro-life consensus already exists in America. And it grows
every time someone looks in a sonogram. [Robert
Casey, prominent Democrat and former governor of Pennsylvania, addressing
students at Notre Dame University, 1995.]
AUTHOR: Robert Patrick "Bob" Casey, Sr.
(January 9, 1932—May 30, 2000) was an American politician from Pennsylvania. A
member of the Democratic Party, he served as the 42nd Governor of Pennsylvania
from 1987 to 1995. He previously served as a state senator (1963–68) and Auditor
General of Pennsylvania (1969–77). Casey was best known for leading the pro-life
wing of the Democratic Party, taking the lead in fighting Planned Parenthood
v. Casey, a major Supreme Court case that upheld almost all the
prohibitions on abortion that Casey signed into law. He championed unions,
believed in government as a beneficent force, and supported gun rights. He was
the father of Bob Casey, Jr., who is currently a U.S. Senator from
Pennsylvania.
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