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Pro-Abortionists Struggle to
"Regain the Moral High Ground"
Editor's note. NRL PAC has issued
an updated statement regarding presidential candidates. You can read it at
www.nrlpac.org. In the statement NRL PAC
points out that all three leading Democratic presidential candidates--Sen.
Hillary Clinton, Sen. Barack Obama, and former Sen. John Edwards
-- as well as Republican Rudy Giuliani take a pro-abortion position.
The statement continued,
"National Right to Life is grateful for
the strong pro-life record established by Mike Huckabee as governor of
Arkansas, and recognizes that Governor Huckabee has taken the strongest
pro-life position on all of the life issues of any of the remaining
candidates for president.
"National Right to Life is also
grateful for the strong pro-life voting record on abortion of Senator John
McCain, and appreciates the pro-life position he has taken in his Senate
campaigns and in this presidential campaign.
"National Right to Life also
appreciates the pro-life position taken in this presidential campaign by
former governor Mitt Romney."
The statement concluded,
"National Right to Life will always be grateful for the strong pro-life
record on all of the life issues Fred Thompson established as a U.S.
senator, and for the strong pro-life position he has taken throughout his
political career. Fred Thompson conducted his campaign with integrity and
honor, and we know that America will be well served by him in any future
public role he is called upon to fill."
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Most often--I mean like 99% of the
time--when you know the source of the abortion commentary you could almost
write it yourself. Take the New York Times editorial page--on most issues
shrill and sophomoric anyway--which goes off the deep end when the topic is
abortion. You knew that its
by-the-numbers editorial take on the 8% reduction in the number of abortions
would be 99% about "prevention." Thus it was no surprise when the Times
hammered NRLC in a January 22 editorial: "Abortion opponents like the
National Right to Life Committee seized upon the numbers as vindication for
their strategy of demonizing abortion and making it harder for women to
obtain one."
Since they didn't actually call us
devil worshippers, this was quite mild by the Times' rip-their-throats out
standard. Likewise, who wouldn't
be able to compose right down to the last slur anything written by Frances
Kissling, the former president of Catholics for a Free Choice, and Kate
Michelman, the former president of NARAL? "Anti-choicers" are stuck in the
13th century while "pro-choicers" represent the cutting edge of societal
progress. Except that it is not what they
wrote in a January 26 op-ed for the Los Angeles Times. [www.latimes.com/news/printedition/asection/la-oe-kissling22jan22,1,3764661.story?ctrack=1&cset=true].
As I've mentioned to any number of
people, "Abortion's battle of messages: It's not 1973. Pro-choice forces
must adjust to regain the moral high ground" is one of the most remarkable
opinion pieces from the other side I've ever read.
To be sure the opening paragraphs are
the usual drivel whining about all the "restrictions" and the unwillingness
of the government (which is reflecting popular opinion) to directly
subsidize the slaughter of the unborn.
And as they turn the corner on their
op-ed, their courage fails them.
They smuggle in, almost as an aside,
their real explanation for the Abortion Establishment's decline which is not
any of the substantive factors they've cited. The real reason, we read, is
that "Disapproval of women's sexuality is a historical constant."
And in the very end, they hide their
embrace of more-of-the-same in the garb of supposedly acknowledging the need
for "a serious reassessment."
But in between the silly beginning and
less-than-honest conclusion, there are blunt admissions conceding that
pro-lifers are leaps and bounds ahead of their pro-abortion opponents.
Kissling and Michelman correctly point
out that their heyday was when, for a season, they were able to shift the
conversation to a discussion of "Who Decides?" rather than what is decided.
"Twenty years ago, being pro-life was déclassé" is a bit of a stretch on
their part, just as "Now it is a respectable point of view" minimizes the
growing willingness of the American public to rethink its attitude.
So what happened, according to these
Abortion Establishment icons? "Did the pro-choice movement fail? Or did
those opposed to abortion simply respond more effectively to the changing
science as well as the social shift from the rights rage of the '60s to the
responsibility culture of the '90s?"
We certainly agree that the impact of
ultrasounds and of more and more premature babies surviving earlier and
earlier represented a frontal assault on the flimsy rhetorical cover of "Who
Decides?" But to their credit Kissling and Michelman understand something
few of their comrades grasp, a development that both incorporates and goes
beyond the increased visibility of the littlest Americans:
"These trends gave antiabortionists an
advantage, and they made the best of it. Now, we rarely hear them talk about
murdering babies. Instead, they present a sophisticated philosophical and
political challenge. Caring societies, they say, seek to expand inclusion
into 'the human community.' Those once excluded, such as women and
minorities, are now equal. Why not welcome the fetus (who, after all, is us)
into our community?" Why not,
indeed? The communitarian challenge--we are all in this together--is
extremely difficult for the Abortion Lobby to parry. (As Kissling and
Michelman observe, pro-choicers have plenty of sympathy for whales, but not
for unborn babies.) They do not
give Pope John Paul the kind of credit he deserves for the late Pontiff's
emphasis on the "culture of life." But at least they understand that
"President Bush adopted it, and the slogan, as much as it pains us to admit
it, moved some hearts and minds." They add, "Supporting abortion is tough to
fit into this package." But
their conclusion, which at first blush combines a candid appraisal of their
dilemma with the fuzzy rhetoric that Sen. Obama so adeptly employs when he
is asked about abortion, circles back on itself.
"If pro-choice values are to regain the
moral high ground, genuine discussion about these challenges needs to take
place within the movement," they tell us. "It is inadequate to try to
message our way out of this problem. Our vigorous defense of the right to
choose needs to be accompanied by greater openness regarding the real
conflict between life and choice, between rights and responsibility. It is
time for a serious reassessment of how to think about abortion in a world
that is radically changed from 1973."
But what does that mean? That if
pro-abortionists furrow their brows, pledge to recognize that there is
"complexity" to the abortion decision that will be enough of a concession to
allow them to weather the gathering storm.
How truly and typically pro-abortion. Far
from not trying to "message" their way out of the corner into which their
beliefs have painted them, this is just their latest update. Message: "we
understand (and pretty please don't bring up what we used to say or what we
actually mean now)." It combines
Obama's soaring flight of rhetorical fancy with the Clintons' more mundane
patent insincerity.
Tomorrow we'll take a look at Sen.
Obama, who is every bit as pro-abortion as Sen.
Clinton but is much more adroit at
masking it. Talk to you tomorrow.
Please send any comments to
Daveandrusko@hotmail.com.
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