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The Abortion
Distortion
By Dave Andrusko
Even someone who writes as much
as I do can use the occasional reminder that items that make
their way onto the Worldwide Web have remarkable staying power.
An example: I wrote a piece for "Today's News & Views" last
December under the headline,
"What Happens
When a 'Pro-Choicer' Faces the Gruesome Truth about Abortion?"
Just today I received an email
from someone who had just bumped into my piece on the Internet.
Her request (ALL IN CAPITALS) was, "Where do I find this?!"
referring to the article in New York magazine about which I had
commented. As it happens you can find "Abortion Distortion: Just
How Pro-Choice is America, Really?" at
http://nymag.com/news/features/62379.today. There is much
about Jennifer Singer's article that is even more true today
than it was when first written. Let me talk for a few minutes
about what she had to say, beginning with a couple of quotes
from her article.
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Even the most radically pro-choice will tell you that the
political discourse they hear about the subject, with its easy
dichotomies and bumper-sticker boilerplate, has little
correspondence to the messy, intricate stories of her patients.
They hear about peace and guilt,
relief and sin. And it is they who will acknowledge, whether we
like it or not, that the rhetoric and imagery of the pro-life
movement can touch on some basic emotional truths. Peg Johnston,
who manages Access for Women in upstate New York, remembers the
first time her patients unconsciously began to co-opt the
language of the protesters outside.
"And it wasn't that these
protesters were brainwashing them, she says. It's that they were
tapping into things we all have some discomfort about."
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Senior's "Just How Pro-Choice is America, Really?" is the kind
of pull-back-the-covers-and-reveal-the-truth-about-abortion
article that were it to come from the word processor of a
pro-lifer would be instantly trashed. On those increasingly
frequent occasions when pro-abortion authors are telling tales
out of school, it's a pretty clear sign they are grappling with
more important issues than caricaturing pro-lifers.
And aside from an occasional nod
to pro-forma by-the-number denunciations, Senior's essay is
remarkably free of snide asides.
What it is replete with, however,
is candid admissions that the pro-abortion creed is wearing
thin, outpaced by technology, outflanked by the
consciousness-raising impact of the debate over partial-birth
abortion, and a mystery to many young people who find NARAL's
the-sky-is-falling clichés outlandish.
The best debunking typically
begins by critiquing whatever reassuring blather it is that
helps someone feel at peace. For pro-abortionists it is the
assurance that they are in the majority. Senior provides a quote
from two pro-abortion names from yesteryear who wrote an op-ed
for the New York Times bashing Democrats for allowing a pro-life
amendment to pass (which was later thrown under the bus).
Kate Michelman, NARAL's former
head, and Frances Kissling, once the head of Catholics for
Choice, insisted, "The House Democrats reinforced the principle
that a minority view on the morality of abortion can determine
reproductive-health policy for American women."
Senior's bold question: "But is
that actually right?" Her analysis is unflinchingly honest and
no doubt deeply unsettling to her colleagues.
Senior paraphrases a conclusion
from a very interesting three-year-old essay that makes all
pro-abortionists squirm, then and now: "Roe v. Wade was one of
the few Supreme Court decisions that was out of step with
mainstream public opinion." She goes through the poll numbers
which, on first blush, do not seem to have changed all that
much, but when examined more closely reveal a ticking time bomb.
"If forced to choose, Americans
today are far more eager to label themselves 'pro-life' than
they were a dozen years ago. The youngest generation of
voters--those between the ages of 18 and 29, and therefore most
likely to need an abortion--is the most pro-life to come along
since the generation born during the Great Depression, according
to Michael D. Hais and
Morley Winograd, authors of
Millennial Makeover, who got granular data on the subject from
Pew Research Center. Crisis Pregnancy Centers, dedicated to
persuading women to continue their pregnancies, now outnumber
the country's abortion providers, who themselves are a rapidly
aging group (two-thirds are over 50, according to a National
Abortion Federation study from 2002)."
Not to be overly obvious, but
with an aging cadre of abortionists, at one end, and a growing
pro-life sentiment among young people, at the other end--it's
not hard to figure out that the demographic trends are trending
well for us.
There are 20 different points
that could be developed at length.
Let me summarize four.
#1. The stigma surrounding
abortion is alive and growing.
#2. Roe's out-of-control approval
of abortion for any reason or no reason never enjoyed majority
support. Nearly 37 years later, there is more popular support
for limitations than ever before.
#3. What was once a kind of
abstraction was personalized in a terrain-shifting manner by the
enormously important debate over partial-birth abortion. Even
though the simple line drawings showing what these abortions
actually are were quite mild and meek, "The procedure was
extremely upsetting to behold," Senior writes. "In it, the
fetus--or is it a baby?--is removed from the uterus and stabbed
in the back of the head with surgical scissors. It's a revolting
image, one to which the public was ritualistically subjected on
the evening news as the debate raged on the House and Senate
floors." She adds, unnecessarily, "Defending it was a pro-choice
person's nightmare."
#4. An awful lot of women had
(and have) difficulties with their decision to abort. The impact
of the pressure boyfriends exert to abort cannot be exaggerated.
(Any relationship between the two?) Often it is a sick joke to
say that a woman--and particularly a girl--has exercised her
"choice" to abort.
Abortion is (as one former
abortion clinic owner once confessed) "a kind of killing." And
although Senior does not recite the actual words, in 1993
Michelman admitted to the Philadelphia Inquirer, "We think
abortion is a bad thing." (Michelman soon backtracked, but the
interview had been taped which left her flailing for a way to
explain the discrepancy.)
Why is this important? Because at
least some pro-abortionists (for whatever amalgam of
psychological reasons) have grown perilously close to being
almost casual about abortion's soul-numbing brutality.
My conclusion is simple: to quote
Senior. Having talked at great length and with admirable
honesty, she concludes, "[I]t's hard for a pro-choice person
like myself to see how the ball rolls forward."
Be sure to also read
Today's News & Views. |