Reflections on Pro-Life
President Ronald Reagan on the 100th Anniversary of his Birth
Part One of Four
By Dave Andrusko
"My administration is
dedicated to the preservation of America as a free land, and
there is no cause more important for preserving that freedom
than affirming the transcendent right to life of all human
beings, the right without which no other rights have meaning."
-- President Ronald Reagan.
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President Ronald
Reagan |
For pro-lifers of a
certain age, President Ronald Reagan will always be first in our
hearts. It is possible to exaggerate his pro-life
accomplishments, although that would be difficult. But it would
impossible to overstate the extent to which our 40th President
altered the trajectory of the abortion discussion.
What is often
under-appreciated is how keen was the President's peripheral
vision. He clearly saw that if the abortion ethos was not
contained, it inextricably would seek out new categories of
victims. To the left, the very young, born less than perfect. To
the right the medically dependent elderly.
President Reagan took
office almost eight years to the day after the Supreme Court
unleashed the abortion juggernaut in its grotesque Roe v. Wade
decision.
President Reagan's
administration began the journey that you and I are on today--a
journey that recalls us from out of the darkness and into the
light.
Among pro-lifers,
President Reagan may best be remembered for writing a small but
pivotal book: "Abortion and the Conscience of a Nation." In 1983
it was a scandal (in media circles) that a Presidential first--a
book penned while in office--would be "wasted" decrying
abortion, a practice as ensconced in our national life as
pro-abortion bias was in the journalistic establishment.
President Reagan knew
otherwise. He understood that intellectually, jurisprudentially,
and morally we had dug ourselves into a deep hole. Getting out
of it required posing the right question in a spirit that we are
all in this together ("Abortion concerns not just the unborn
child, it concerns every one of us").
He observed very early on
in "Abortion and the Conscience of a Nation" that "The real
question today is not when human life begins [medical science
has already answered that question], but, What is the value of
human life? The abortionist who reassembles the arms and legs of
a tiny baby to make sure all its parts have been torn from its
mother's body can hardly doubt whether it is a human being. The
real question for him and for all of us is whether that tiny
human life has a God-given right to be protected by the law--the
same right we have."
President Reagan
unapologetically linked abortion to its evil twin--infanticide.
This was not a mere intellectual exercise but a real
life-and-death case that had drawn national attention. In 1982
the public learned that the anti-life virus had jumped from the
preborn to the child born with imperfections.
"We cannot diminish the
value of one category of human life--the unborn--without
diminishing the value of all human life," he wrote. "We saw
tragic proof of this truism last year when the Indiana courts
allowed the starvation death of 'Baby Doe' in Bloomington
because the child had Down's Syndrome."
The President came under a
siege of criticism when his administration played a key role in
the enactment of legislation to protect the right to life of
babies born with disabilities. He shrugged it off.
Twenty six years before
Nebraska passed the historic "Pain-Capable Unborn Child
Protection Act," President Reagan boldly introduced the issue of
fetal pain at the annual convention of the National Religious
Broadcasters.
"There's another grim
truth we should face up to: Medical science doctors confirm that
when the lives of the unborn are snuffed out, they often feel
pain, pain that is long and agonizing." The President
immediately came under a barrage of withering criticism. But a
prestigious group of professors, including pain specialists and
two past presidents of the American College of Obstetrics and
Gynecology , sent the President a letter showing their strong
agreement.
I could list dozens of
examples of how this good and decent man called upon his fellow
Americans to honor the better angels of our nature. Or I could
elaborate on policies, such as originating the "Mexico City
Policy," cutting off funds to what was then known as the United
Nations Fund for Population Activities because that agency
violated U.S. law by participating in China's compulsory
abortion plan, or his support for legislation to challenge Roe
v. Wade--to name just three.
Let me conclude with this,
two days before the commemoration of President Reagan's 100th
birthday.
Pro-lifers are frequently
the target of unfair criticism, demeaning caricatures, and
deeply unwarranted assumptions about our motivation. But so,
too, was President Reagan, and in a far more vicious manner. We
are in very good company.
The President once said
there ARE simple answers, but there are no easy answers. The
answer to abortion? No! In thunder.
But the pro-abortionist
will never run out of rationalizations why abortion is always
and in every case "necessary." This always has been and always
will be a minority-of-a-minority opinion.
Moreover the consciences
of a vast majority of Americans are pricked when they hear about
abortionists such as Kermit Gosnell, charged with eight counts
of murder. At some level they must be asking themselves what
hath Roe wrought?
"This is not the first
time our country has been divided by a Supreme Court decision
that denied the value of certain human lives," President Reagan
wrote.
"The Dred Scott decision
of 1857 was not overturned in a day, or a year, or even a
decade. . . . But the great majority of the American people have
not yet made their voices heard, and we cannot expect them to --
any more than the public voice arose against slavery -- until
the issue is clearly framed and presented."
In carrying on the legacy
of Ronald Reagan, that is our responsibility and our privilege.
Please send your
comments to
daveandrusko@gmail.com. If you like, join those who are
following me on Twitter at
http://twitter.com/daveha.
Part Two
Part Three
Part Four |