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The 'Common Ground' Myth

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  • The 'Common Ground' Myth

    THE 'COMMON GROUND' MYTH
    By Julia Duin

    The Washington Times
    May 21 2009

    Unfortunately I was out last week because of shoulder surgery and was
    only able to observe l'affaire Notre Dame from my living room couch.

    Despite my OxyContin-addled brain, a lot did not seem right about this
    picture of President Obama, resplendent in a royal blue academic gown,
    waxing eloquent about life issues at a Catholic campus. Especially
    about "common ground" on an issue that has none.

    Does this "common ground" idea really work? On peripheral issues,
    yes. On life-and-death issues, no.

    Plus, I wondered, to what other audience has the president lectured
    as to needing to find "common ground" with their opponents?

    When he goes to Egypt in a few days, will he lecture his Muslim
    listeners on finding common ground with Jews?

    Did he tell the mostly Muslim Turks in April they need to find
    common ground with the Orthodox Christian Armenians? And, during his
    well-publicized July 2007 speech at a Planned Parenthood banquet, did
    he tell his listeners they need to find common ground with pro-lifers?

    It seems that one side of the debate is always told it needs to move
    to the center on a given issue, while the other side is told it needs
    to stand firm.

    "So let's work together to reduce the number of women seeking abortions
    by reducing unintended pregnancies," the president said Sunday at Notre
    Dame. But how does one do so? One way is through contraception, which
    the Catholic Church opposes. Another is through abstinence education,
    which the Obama administration opposes and is doing everything in
    its power to defund.

    "Let's honor the conscience of those who disagree with abortion,
    and draft a sensible conscience clause," he went on to say. Wait
    a minute; the Bush administration overhauled the conscience clause
    last year, partly for the benefit of Catholic hospitals and medical
    professionals. And the Obama administration has been working nonstop
    to rescind it.

    As I listened to TV clips of his speech, I kept on thinking there
    was a huge disconnect somewhere.

    Maybe it's that some issues don't have a common ground. Life-and-death
    issues have a problematic way of being black and white.

    Either you abort an unborn child or save it. An unborn child is either
    human or not.

    Or, either Saddam Hussein was a villain and killed thousands of Kurds,
    or he was not and did not.

    Or close to 6 million Jews were killed by the Nazis, or they were not.

    The president did allow that both sides of the abortion debate have
    "irreconcilable" views, but he did not take the next step of saying
    that some views are more right than others. When he appealed to the
    Golden Rule as a principle uniting all faiths, he did not add that
    treating others as we wish to be treated might include allowing that
    other a right to be born.

    And Martin Luther King, who the president quoted, did not waste
    his energies trying to reach common ground with his racist
    persecutors. Instead, he took prophetic stances against them.

    Here in Washington on May 8, Archbishop Raymond Burke, a top Vatican
    official, tore into Notre Dame, saying its invitation to Mr. Obama was
    "a source of the greatest scandal." In this "death" culture, he added,
    it's the nature of Catholicism to be countercultural.

    Not jostling for common ground.
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