No Surprise: Pro-Abortionists
Misread Pro-Life Gov. Sarah Palin's Speech
Editor's note. I hope you will
both pass this edition along to others and send
your thoughts to
daveandrusko@gmail.com.
By Dave Andrusko
Thanks to all of you who wrote
last Friday in response to
my thoughts on pro-life
Gov. Sarah Palin's candid and honest and genuine
speech delivered at Vanderburgh County Right
to Life's annual fundraising dinner held last
Thursday in Evansville, Indiana. Palin spoke
frankly of what went through her heart and mind
in a "fleeting moment" when she learned she was
pregnant at 44.
Palin was already the mother
of four children, the governor of the state of
Alaska, the wife of a husband whose own job
required him to be hundreds of miles away, and
her oldest son was about to be deployed to Iraq.
In addition, her 17-year-year old daughter would
soon confide that she was pregnant.
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Sarah and Todd Palin, shown with Trig
as a newborn. Trig turned one on
Saturday. |
Speaking to 4,500 pro-lifers
who were in the banquet hall or watching her
speak via a live feed, Palin explained that she
had first learned she was pregnant when she was
away from home at a conference.
"While out of state, there
just for a fleeting moment, wow, I knew, nobody
knows me here, nobody would ever know," Palin
told her audience. "I thought, wow, it is easy,
could be easy to think, maybe, of trying to
change the circumstances. No one would know. No
one would ever know.
"Then when my amniocentesis
results came back, showing what they called
abnormalities [Trig, now one-year-old, has Down
syndrome], oh, dear God, I knew, I had instantly
an understanding for that fleeting moment why
someone would believe it could seem possible to
change those circumstances. Just make it all go
away and get some normalcy back in life. Just
take care of it. Because at the time only my
doctor knew the results, Todd didn't even know.
No one would know."
Palin said, "It was a serious
time of testing" where "I had to ask myself,
'Was I going to walk the walk, or was I just
going to talk the talk?'"
What does someone make of
this--that, however briefly, Palin contemplated
an abortion? If you are pro-abortion and
tone-deaf (one and the same), you might pretend
to admire her for telling this in front of "such
a judgmental group" (as columnist Bonnie Erbe
wrote last week).
Or, if you are the Washington
Post's Ruth Marcus, you can write this morning
that you "respect" Palin's decision. "She speaks
as someone who is confident that she made the
correct choice. For her," Marcus hastily adds.
"In fact, the overwhelming majority of couples
choose to terminate pregnancies when prenatal
testing shows severe abnormalities."
And she is right: 90% of women
who learn their baby will have Down syndrome
abort the child. Strike one against Palin: she
swims against the tide of opinion.
Strike two is that "Palin's
disclosure served the comfortable role of moral
reinforcement," Marcus continues. "She wavered
in her faith, was tempted to sin, regained her
strength and emerged better for it." A strange
argument that we'll come back to in a second.
Palin's third strike is
reflected in the statement Sarah and Todd Palin
issued last summer regarding their daughter's
pregnancy: "We're proud of Bristol's decision to
have her baby." Palin "seems deliberately
obtuse" to the "not particular[ly] complex
point," Marcus writes. Which is that "in the
world according to Palin, there would be no
decision at all. Abortion would be illegal
except to save the life of the mother."
At the end of the day Marcus
and Erbe and others concluded that Palin did
them a favor. Why? Because having even a
moment's doubt proves, according to Marcus, that
"Abortion is a personal issue and a personal
choice."
So, what do pro-lifers say?
What people who have no commitment either way
might say, if they knew the full story.
To begin with where would any
of us be if it were a sign of hypocrisy (or a
weak argument) that we were tempted to make a
huge mistake but rose above it? Most of mankind
knows that that when you successfully pass
through fiery temptations you can come out not
only stronger but also far more likely to
empathize with someone who is facing the same
trials.
If you actually listened to
Palin's speech, rather than trolling for
pro-abortion talking points, you'd understand
how her experience made Palin even more
sensitive to what women and girls go through in
a crisis pregnancy. Pro-lifers, like Palin, know
more firmly than ever that choosing life is the
right decision.
Second, what does it say about
us as a culture that willy nilly we are engaged
in a campaign to exterminate an entire class of
people? Would Ruth Marcus be playing the
"majority opinion prevails" card if the class
under assault were homosexuals, blacks, Jews, or
middle-age pro-abortion feminists? Is ethnic
cleansing horrific but cleansing the gene pool
of babies with Down syndrome to be celebrated as
"choice"?
Third, I find Marcus'
characterization of Palin's "discourse" as
having "served the comfortable role of moral
reinforcement most curious, although
predictable. Palin "wavered in her faith, was
tempted to sin, regained her strength and
emerged better for it." Really, is that why
Palin brought down the house?
When we egregiously fail,
whether we call it sin or something else, we
miss the mark in two ways. We fail ourselves by
not living up to our own expectations and
standards; and we fail others who are hurt (in
the case of abortion, lethally so) by our
behavior.
Marcus is saying that because
Palin did not have an abortion, the audience
sees her as a proxy for themselves. She lived up
to what Marcus called Palin's "moral
certainties." Since she is a public pro-life
figure, by extension so, too, did the audience.
The implication is that the audience was smugly
self-satisfied, but had Palin failed, they would
have thrown her under the bus.
This is spectacularly wrong on
numerous counts. Let me mention only two. First,
it misses altogether that because Palin passed
through a "serious time of testing," a real-live
baby is with us today. The "other"--in this case
Trig--not only was not hurt, he became (in
Palin's words) "the best thing that has ever
happened to me."
Second, our Movement would be,
comparatively speaking, a rivulet if it
consisted only of women and men who had never
walked through the shadow of the valley of
death. But the Right to Life Movement is an
ocean because it is filled with mere mortals,
many of whom failed that test and who are
determined to help other women and girls not
make the same mistake.
If you think about it, the
response of Marcus and her ilk represent the
ultimate pro-abortion default position. No one
can ever attempt to reign in the carnage, let
alone return legal protection to unborn baby,
until each and every pro-life person not only
lives a life of perfection but is immune to the
temptations that are common to all of us.
Can you think of any reform
movement in the history of mankind that meets
that criteria? Can you think of any individuals?
Of course not.
Gov. Palin knew that the
reliably pro-abortion CNN was there along with
other news outlets. She knew that the usual
suspects would turn her comments inside out to
draw their own conclusion.
We know better because most of
us have been there.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=WiG72pOls0c