Los Angeles Times

Sin should still be a choice

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Re “Church doctrine’s opposite effect,” Gustavo Arellano column, June 25

I am a practicing Catholic. I believe abortion is murder and a grave sin. If I had the opportunit­y to vote on the issue, I would vote to keep the right to abortion.

Here is the reason: The sin of abortion lies with the mother who chooses to end her pregnancy, not with me. There is no civil law or canon law that compels me to interfere with her decision.

Moreover, a major tenet of my religion is to love all people whether sinners or saints. To interfere with a woman’s choice to her Godgiven right to exercise her free will would definitely be unloving.

If I were to interfere with her choice for her own life, the sin would be mine. Ronald C. Rossi

Carlsbad

Thanks to Gustavo Arellano for writing about his disgust as a Catholic with the church’s antiaborti­on indoctrina­tion. I am a “cradle-Catholic,” still practicing, as is my husband of 36 years. I am also mixedrace Hispanic and Black, and a registered nurse.

Nearly 20 years ago, we faced one of our worst fears when our teenage daughter became pregnant. As a family, we decided to place that child with another family through open adoption. While that decision worked for us, and I do believe life begins at conception, I don’t believe abortion rights should be determined by the legislatur­e.

My devoutly Catholic mother is likewise outraged, and I’m certain my late father is spinning in his urn. Years ago, I noticed he was no longer taking Eucharist. When I asked him why, he angrily told me he was protesting the stance that would deny his young granddaugh­ter an abortion even in the case of rape by an escaped prisoner.

Here’s what is also astounding: For all the time and energy the church has expended on this cause, it has yet to even peripheral­ly address its stance on contracept­ion.

Carmel Farnsworth

Valencia

Thanks to Arellano for highlighti­ng the revolting and very faked “abortion murder porn” used by the Catholic Church and antiaborti­on activists.

I became an activist with reproducti­ve rights pioneer Bill Baird during college after a terrifying time saving a girl — hemorrhagi­ng from a botched abortion — who was not allowed into the hospital emergency room during a blizzard. One of our main focuses with Baird’s activism was debunking the kinds of films and photos Arellano was forced to watch as a young Catholic.

Did the church sanction killing a fetus on camera? I don’t remember from that time the specifics of how the photos were faked. But if it was not a fake, the church, by its own teaching, murdered intentiona­lly and overtly on camera.

Fran Offenhause­r

Los Angeles

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