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/pol/ - Politically Incorrect


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### Catholic Church's Core Teaching on Abortion and Civil Law
The Catholic Church teaches unequivocally that direct abortion—whether surgical (e.g., dilation and curettage, aspiration) or chemical (e.g., abortion pills like mifepristone/misoprostol taken at home)—is always a grave moral evil, intrinsically disordered, and equivalent to the deliberate killing of an innocent human life (Catechism of the Catholic Church, nos. 2270–2275; Evangelium Vitae, no. 58). This applies regardless of method or circumstances. The Church imposes automatic excommunication (latae sententiae) on those who procure a completed abortion with full knowledge and consent (Canon 1398), including the woman, though mitigating factors like fear or coercion can reduce culpability.

On civil legislation, the Church calls for laws protecting unborn life (Evangelium Vitae, no. 62; Donum Veritatis) but emphasizes mercy, justice, and proportionality. It recognizes women facing unplanned pregnancies often endure pressure, poverty, abandonment, or manipulation, making them victims as much as perpetrators. Official statements distinguish moral condemnation of abortion from criminal penalties, especially for women.

### Official Major Catholic Figures and Organizations Advocating Against Imprisoning Women
Yes, several major official Catholic entities—national or diocesan bishops' conferences, archbishops, and pro-life leaders aligned with the magisterium—explicitly advocate against criminalizing or imprisoning women for obtaining abortions, whether surgical or via pills at home.
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>>526173068
This aligns with post-Dobbs (2022) discussions in the U.S., where some state laws proposed penalties for women. Key examples:

- **North Dakota Catholic Conference (official voice of North Dakota's bishops)**: Issued a clear April 2024 statement: "The North Dakota Catholic Conference has always, and remains today, firmly opposed to any measure seeking to criminalize or punish women for having an abortion." It argues punishment hinders healing and support, urging focus on providers and societal aid. In February 2025 testimony against House Bill 1373 (imposing criminal penalties on women), the Conference reiterated: "The central problem with HB 1373 is the imposition of a criminal punishment on women who have abortions." This covers chemical and surgical abortions equally.

- **U.S. Catholic Pro-Life Leaders, Including Archbishops (2022)**: Over 70 leaders, including Archbishop William E. Lori (then USCCB Pro-Life Committee chair), signed a May 2022 open letter opposing legislation punishing women (e.g., Louisiana bill post-Dobbs). It states: "Women shouldn't be punished for abortion," emphasizing compassion and provider accountability. This responded to proposals covering self-managed pill abortions.

- **Broader U.S. Bishops' Conference Context (USCCB)**: No single national USCCB statement mandates punishing women; pro-life documents focus on banning abortion, punishing providers, and supporting women (e.g., Walking with Moms in Need). Post-Dobbs guidance prioritizes protecting life without penalizing mothers, viewing them as needing pastoral care.
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>>526173344
- **Papal and Vatican Teachings Emphasizing Mercy**: Pope John Paul II in Evangelium Vitae (1995) notes historical penalties but urges laws considering women's situations (no. 62 implied). Pope Francis stresses accompaniment and forgiveness (Amoris Laetitia; 2015–2016 extensions of absolution). No Vatican document endorses imprisoning women; mercy prevails.

- **International Examples (e.g., El Salvador)**: Strict laws led to women imprisoned (often for miscarriages mischarged as abortions). Local bishops welcomed reduced sentences or releases (e.g., 2023 case), aligning with human rights critiques. Vatican officials indirectly support mercy here.

These positions apply universally to surgical procedures and at-home pill use (self-managed abortion, rising post-Dobbs).

### Official Major Catholic Figures or Organizations Advocating for Imprisoning Women
No, there are no documented cases of major official Catholic figures (popes, Vatican dicasteries, national bishops' conferences like USCCB, or prominent cardinals/archbishops in magisterial roles) or organizations advocating for imprisoning or criminally penalizing women for obtaining abortions—whether surgical or via pills.
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>>526173466
- Searches for bishops, cardinals, USCCB, or Vatican statements yield only opposition or silence on punishing women.
- Lay Catholics or online commenters sometimes argue for equal treatment (e.g., "treat abortion like murder"), but these lack official authority.
- Historical laws varied, but modern magisterial teaching prioritizes provider punishment and maternal support.
- In strict nations like El Salvador, imprisonments occur under secular law, not Church advocacy; bishops often mitigate outcomes through mercy calls.

Dissenting groups like Catholics for Choice advocate pro-abortion views but reject official teaching.

### Summary and Nuances as of January 2026
Major official Catholic entities (e.g., North Dakota bishops, USCCB-aligned leaders) actively oppose imprisoning women for abortions, viewing it as counterproductive to healing and life protection. They focus penalties on providers while offering women support, counseling, and mercy—consistent across surgical and chemical methods.

No major official figures or organizations advocate for such imprisonment; the Church's approach balances justice with compassion, seeing many women as vulnerable rather than primary criminals.

This reflects consistent teaching from Evangelium Vitae through post-Dobbs statements, prioritizing conversion and aid over punitive measures against mothers. For primary sources, consult vatican.va, usccb.org, or diocesan sites.
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Bump
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>>526174101
Bunp
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>>526174846
Bump
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>>526174895
Bummp
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>>526173068
render unto ceaser what is ceasers and unto God what is God. Mans law may say its legal but you are going to have to seek forgiveness from God. 100%
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>>526175279
It should still be illegal. Christians and Catholics should be calling for mothers to be imprisoned for killing their children.
If I kill a adult human abortionist i go to jail and no Catholic bishop calls for my release
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Youre mad theyre not punishing women for having an abortion? Seethe
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>>526175667
It’s a double standard. Hypocrisy is bad



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