The Delaware Gazette

Santorum questions Obama’s ‘world view,’ not faith

STEVE PEOPLES

Asso­ci­ated Press

CUMMING, Ga. — Rick San­to­rum on Sun­day con­demned what he called Pres­i­dent Barack Obama’s world view that “ele­vates the Earth above man,” dis­cour­ag­ing increased use of nat­ural resources.

The GOP pres­i­den­tial can­di­date also slammed Obama’s health care over­haul for requir­ing insur­ers to pay for pre­na­tal tests that, San­to­rum said, will encour­age more abortions.

A day after telling an Ohio audi­ence that Obama’s agenda is based on “some phony the­ol­ogy, not a the­ol­ogy based on the Bible,” San­to­rum said he wasn’t crit­i­ciz­ing the president’s Christianity.

“I’ve repeat­edly said I don’t ques­tion the president’s faith. I’ve repeat­edly said that I believe the president’s Chris­t­ian,” San­to­rum told CBS’ “Face the Nation.”

“I am talk­ing about his world view, and the way he approaches prob­lems in this coun­try. I think they’re dif­fer­ent than how most peo­ple do in Amer­ica,” he said in the broad­cast interview.

The for­mer Penn­syl­va­nia sen­a­tor said Obama’s envi­ron­men­tal poli­cies pro­mote ideas of “rad­i­cal envi­ron­men­tal­ists,” who, San­to­rum argues, oppose greater use of the country’s nat­ural resources because they believe “man is here to serve the Earth.” He said that was the ref­er­ence he was mak­ing Sat­ur­day in his Ohio cam­paign appear­ance when he denounced a “phony theology.”

When pressed by reporters after he made the ini­tial remark, how­ever, San­to­rum made no men­tion of the president’s envi­ron­men­tal poli­cies. Instead, he sug­gested that Obama prac­tices one of the “dif­fer­ent stripes of Christianity.”

San­to­rum walked back those com­ments on CBS Sun­day morning.

But later in the day, he again crit­i­cized Obama’s “the­ol­ogy” — with no ref­er­ence to his envi­ron­men­tal poli­cies — while speak­ing to more than 2,000 sup­port­ers gath­ered at a sub­ur­ban Atlanta megachurch.

The pres­i­dent is “tram­pling on a con­sti­tu­tional right,” San­to­rum said of the Obama administration’s recent deci­sion to allow employ­ees of reli­gious schools and hos­pi­tals to have birth con­trol cov­ered by their insur­ance policies.

“It is impos­ing his ide­ol­ogy on a group of peo­ple express­ing their the­ol­ogy, their moral code,” San­to­rum told those gath­ered in the First Redeemer Church, a megachurch that hosted for­mer pres­i­den­tial can­di­date Mike Huck­abee four years ago.

Obama’s cam­paign said Santorum’s ini­tial remarks were another attack on the president’s faith by Repub­li­can rivals in a nom­i­nat­ing con­test that has grown increas­ingly bit­ter and negative.

“It’s just time to get rid of this mind­set in our pol­i­tics that, if we dis­agree, we have to ques­tion char­ac­ter and faith,” said Robert Gibbs, Obama’s for­mer press sec­re­tary, on ABC’s “This Week.”

“Those days have long passed in our pol­i­tics. Our prob­lems and our chal­lenges are far too great,” Gibbs said.

San­to­rum said his claim that Obama’s health care over­haul encour­ages abor­tions stems from the require­ment for insur­ance com­pa­nies to pay for pre­na­tal test­ing, which he said will result in more preg­nant women hav­ing more pro­ce­dures. He spec­i­fied amnio­cen­te­sis, a pro­ce­dure that can iden­tify phys­i­cal prob­lems in the unborn.

“The bot­tom line is a lot of pre­na­tal tests are done to iden­tify defor­mi­ties in utero and the cus­tom­ary pro­ce­dure is to encour­age abor­tion,” he said.

A doc­tor rec­om­mended abor­tion when a sono­gram dis­cov­ered health prob­lems for Santorum’s youngest daugh­ter, who was born three years ago with a genetic con­di­tion known as Tri­somy 18, which typ­i­cally proves fatal. She has lived longer than most chil­dren born with the condition.

“This is typ­i­cal,” San­to­rum said. “This is what goes on in med­ical rooms around the country.”

He said he’s crit­i­cal of the man­date in Obama’s health care plan that insur­ers must pay for the tests, not of pre­na­tal test­ing in general.

“There are all sorts of pre­na­tal test­ing which should be pro­vided free. I have no prob­lem with that if the insur­ance com­pa­nies want to. I’m not for any of these things to be forced,” San­to­rum said.

AP News Posted by on Feb 19 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

Leave a Reply

 

Search Archive

Search by Date
Search by Category
Search with Google

Open M - F 8am to 5pm | 740-363-1161 | 40 N. Sandusky Street, Suite 202, Delaware, OH 43015

We use third-party advertising companies to serve ads when you visit our Web site. For more information click here.
Click on the following for legal information: Privacy Policy | Terms & Conditions
Copyright © 2010 - 2012, Ohio Community Media