Pro-Abortionists
Offer Bogus Concessions to Fend Off Pressure for Real
Change
Part Two of Three
By Luis Zaffirini
Frances Kissling,
the former president of Catholics for Choice, wrote an
opinion piece in Friday's Washington Post titled,
"Abortion rights are under attack, and pro-choice
advocates are caught in a time warp."
Kissling concedes
that the pro-abortion movement has steadily lost ground
with the American public because they have been
unwilling to adapt their arguments to the changes in
science and technology which make the unborn child ever
more visible. She wrote that the pro-abortion movement
must (sort of) think about abortion bans when the baby
is viable and also acknowledge that second trimester
abortions are different from first, although her
explanation why that is so is (to be charitable)
incomplete. It also misses that pro-lifers do not
pro-rate legal protection.
Kissling’s op-ed
was a remarkable specimen of a line of argument some
pro-abortion strategists have honed in the last decade:
make portentous sounding statements and then qualify
them essentially out of existence.
"The fetus is more
visible than ever before, and the abortion-rights
movement needs to accept its existence and its value,”
she writes. “It may not have a right to life, and its
value may not be equal to that of the pregnant woman,
but ending the life of a fetus is not a morally
insignificant event."
Talk about
changing course but not direction.
Why does Kissling
even pretend to acknowledge the obvious? Because she
must admit that the right-to-life movement is using
"increasingly sophisticated arguments" against abortion.
This is true, although it leaves the false impression
that we started out with weaker or simple arguments.
In reality,
pro-life success has been due primarily to our constancy
in argument, message, and drive. We have never stopped
believing in the humanity and the rights of the unborn.
We have always
grounded our arguments in that fact, and we have found
tremendous strength in the willingness of our grassroots
base to fight tirelessly for this purpose.
Technology, like
ultrasound, provides visible proof of what we have been
saying for decades: the unborn is like us, only smaller.
The inability of the pro-abortion side to grasp this is
astounding.
Kissling tells her
readers that the pro-abortion movement is trapped in a
time warp. A better description is that it is caught in
a tailspin.
Part Three
Part One |