Ron Johnson
United States Senator
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I received the above email this morning. I immediately posted it on Facebook and the comments keep coming.
I'm not sure which email Sen. Johnson is replying to here, but I am so appalled by his use of religious language in official correspondence that I have to share it.
I'm referring specifically to Sen. Johnson's candid mention of "our creator." As if everyone believes whatever Sen. Johnson believes. As if imposing his religious beliefs on his constituents is part of his job as a U.S. senator.
Regardless of "our founding documents," I am a strong proponent of separation of church and state. Everyone is entitled to their own religious beliefs or having no religious beliefs, but religion should have no place in government- in theory and practice.
Unfortunately, that's not the reality. After all, organizations like NARAL wouldn't have to exist if it weren't for the religion-politics crossover.
Although the majority of Americans identify as Christians, 3.9-5.5% identify as non-Christian, and 15% don't identify with any religion at all.
Furthermore...
- A recent Gallup poll shows that those who believe that abortion should be illegal in all cases are the minority;
- A Guttmacher report shows 78% of women who have abortions have a religious affiliation;
- And the Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice, for example, is made up of about 40 national religious and religiously affiliated organizations from 15 denominations and faith traditions
I expected Sen. Johnson's response to be anti-choice, but I did not expect such a blatant disregard for religious freedom and separation of church and state. Like many politicians, he is using "the issue of abortion" as a platform to promote his personal religious beliefs rather than to simply state his position.
Sen. Johnson's response illustrates that he is both out of touch and out of line.
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UPDATE 3/5/12:
In 2011, the Guttmacher Institute published an analysis showing 99% of all women of reproductive age who have had sex have used some method of contraception other than natural family planning. 98% of those women are Catholic.
Read it here: http://www.guttmacher.org/pubs/Religion-and-Contraceptive-Use.pdf
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