Trump

Just over a week ago The Halcyon Movement launched a petition asking people to sign and demand President Trump fulfill the promises that he made during his campaign to protect and promote life. President Trump made four very specific promises that we are asking him to keep:

  • Appoint pro-life judges;
  • Defund Planned Parenthood;
  • Sign into law the Pain-Capable Unborn Child Protection Act, which would end painful late-term abortions nationwide; and
  • Make the Hyde Amendment permanent law to protect taxpayers from having to pay for abortions.

Thus far, Halcyon has been successful in getting thousands of people to sign and ask the President to protect the unborn.

In order to create the necessary impact we need more signatures.

This has been an important week for the pro-life movement. Besides the inauguration, President Trump reinstated a ban on U.S. funding for abortion overseas. Moreover, it is the anniversary of the Roe v. Wade decision that legalized abortion in America. It is also the week of the March for Life where thousands in the pro-life movement march to protest the killing of the unborn. This seems to be a moment for real and substantial change — and Halcyon wants to ensure that change moves us closer to the end of abortion in America.

The last week has allowed Halcyon to assess the data in regards to responses to the petition, and there are four different reactions: 1) support for the petition; 2) pro-abortion rhetoric; 3) a strong reliance on the President’s character; and 4) A plea to give the President more time. It is important to offer a rebuttal — except, of course, to those who have signed the petition — to these reactions so there is no confusion on The Halcyon Movement’s position and reasoning behind the launch of the campaign.

“I am Pro-Choice”

While Halcyon doesn’t expect someone who is pro-abortion (when it is a matter of life and death there is no such thing as “pro-choice”) to sign the petition, it is surprising to see their voice so quiet in response to the petition. They comment with the typical arguments, attacks, and threats, but all things considered their voice has been relatively quiet, and the pro-life community has been incredibly strong in defending the unborn when pro-abortion comments are made.

A Strong Reliance on the President’s Character

There have been comments regarding a sincere belief that President Trump is a man of his word, and therefore no petition is needed. The President may very well be a man of his word — and we all pray that he is — but this doesn’t abdicate our duty as citizens to make demands of our president. This is not — nor has it ever been — a sign of disrespect to the person or the office. It is a responsibility of the citizenry. James Wilson, a founding father and nominated to the United States Supreme Court by George Washington, stated that the President “is the dignified, but accountable magistrate of a free and great people” (1791). The office of the President requires accountability to the people, which is why our right to petition exists. Our petition rests within this responsibility, and demands our government’s highest office protect our nation’s most vulnerable.

A Plea to Give the President More Time

As many of the thousands of comments noted, one of the President’s first acts was to reinstate a ban on on U.S. funding for abortion overseas. Therefore, it is only right that we give the President more time to act. In fact, many argued that the President has only had the job for a few days. Our petition actually started before President Trump was even inaugurated. Why? We don’t have any time when lives are lost every day…in fact, lives are lost every single second. While the President’s executive order is cause for celebration, there have been nearly 60 million abortions since Roe v. Wade was decided 43 years ago. Demanding action now is not being overly exuberant; it is absolutely necessary. We demand the end of abortion every day until the killing has stopped.

Voting

I don’t know about you, but I am pretty sick of election stuff. Even writing this article is troubling for me, but the election is important, so here it goes.

First, Halcyon will not suggest who you should vote for. We are a 501(c)3 organization, and don’t promote candidates. Second, we are not a political organization, so even if we could we probably wouldn’t comment — Halcyon is neither “right” nor “left.” Third, you are a human being, so you get to make decisions for yourself.

All we want to do is offer some considerations before you cast your vote:

1. Faith is more important than politics.

I love those “separation of church and state” folks. They’re cute. But they don’t get it. I am not an American who happens to be Christian. I am a Christian who happens to live in America. As such, I would encourage you not to look at your faith through the lens of politics; rather look at your politics through the lens of your faith. Christ is bigger than politics . . . bigger than America . . . bigger than, well, any possible thing. So, if you want to build a better world it is best to work with the solution, which is your faith not your political affiliation. 

2. Culture change doesn’t start with the next president.

I am not saying that the next president won’t have any influence on culture, but it is important to remember that the candidates (and all of their many, many flaws) did not create the culture — they are products of it. If you want better leaders, then take charge and create the society that produces better leaders (see You Are The Leader You’ve Been Looking For). Culture change is about playing the long game, and so we need to look beyond Tuesday and start thinking about how we are going shape our culture instead of ceding culture over to elected officials. If you want the world to change, then you are going to have to change it.

3. Voting prolife doesn’t make you a “one issue” voter; it makes you a decent human being.

Lives are at stake and we need to call a spade a spade, or in this context, a baby a baby. If we do not have a culture that understands the value of all human life, then we will never have a proper understanding of human dignity. It is paramount that our elected leaders have a proper understanding of human dignity, and therefore voting prolife is bigger than abortion; it sets the tone for the world we want to live in: a world where the family is our foundation and all human life is valuable.

4. Don’t be a jerk.

OK, this really has to do with what happens after you vote, but no matter what goes down on Tuesday, we are all in the same difficult, complex predicament — and none of the candidates are going to solve that. We need to start figuring out how to work together, or this thing isn’t going to work. A lot of this whole conundrum feels out of our control, but each of us can control how we treat others. So, don’t set Facebook ablaze if things don’t work out (go for it on Twitter . . . there is no preventing that), and instead let’s get to work on building a better world, because . . .  

5. The world is not going to end.

Every election feels like if my candidate doesn’t win the world as we know it will fall apart. It won’t. God was, is, and will be in control. That is not some sort of cheesy Christian cliche — that is truth. 

So, no matter what happens on Tuesday, The Halcyon Movement is full of hope, and will be right here with you on Wednesday ready to change the world. We know that things have to change, and we want you to join us on this journey to create a better world rooted in faith and the family.

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And its kind of awesome . . .