Make your critics state their case clearly
Don’t let your opponents get away with simply asserting a bunch of things they never have to defend. Make them formally state their case.
Don’t let your opponents get away with simply asserting a bunch of things they never have to defend. Make them formally state their case.
When your opponent makes an assertion rather than a formal argument, the burden of proof is on them to defend their own assertion, not on you to refute it. Knowing that makes all the difference in a conversation you might have on abortion.
The pro-life argument is either sound or unsound. Dismissing it with a phony appeal to tolerance is not going to work.
When Christians engage politically, they are doing so for the right reasons: that of loving their neighbor and promoting human flourishing.
On today’s episode, we dissect a commenter’s arguments against the pro-life stance. We learn to use logic and our syllogism to reveal the fallacies in his reasoning.
It’s not pro-lifers who refuse to protect children once they’re born. It’s pro-abortion Democrats.