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Pro-aborts Decline En
Masse to Debate Pro-life Bioethicist at U-M Abortion Forum
Editor’s note. The
following is a press release sent out by the University of
Michigan Students for Life.
ANN ARBOR, MI—Despite its
reputation as one of the most liberal universities in the
country, the University of Michigan and surrounding Ann Arbor
community has failed to produce an opponent to challenge
pro-life bioethicist and author Scott Klusendorf at a public
abortion awareness forum. The on-campus event, to be hosted by
U-M Students for Life (SFL) on March 30, was originally planned
to be a co-sponsored debate-styled forum in which each side
would present its view on abortion. However, the absence of both
a co-sponsor and speaker for the pro-abortion side has resulted
in the transformation of the scheduled debate into a pro-life
rally.
UMSFL had contacted dozens
of pro-abortion individuals, groups, and organizations—including
the local Planned Parenthood—over the course of a month and a
half, according to president Claire Levis. While a few
individuals expressed initial interest, in each case the
invitation to participate in the forum was ultimately declined.
"We exhausted the list of
every influential pro-abortion person we could find," Levis
said. "In a place like Ann Arbor, that's a lot of people."
University clubs contacted
included Students for Choice, F-word, and FemDems of U-M College
Democrats. Individuals contacted were members of the university
women's studies program, philosophy department, and stem-cell
research lab. UMSFL indicated that each speaker would be given
equal time and promised a "civil, unbiased setting" because "our
club and indeed the movement itself has nothing to fear and
nothing to lose from an unbiased event." Some of those clubs and
individuals who did respond to the invitation apparently felt
otherwise.
"We are under no illusions
about the event's intent or the speaker's bias," one response
email stated. "We certainly won't legitimize the event with our
time, financial resources or members."
Another reply stated, "We
are not interested in participating in this event…Understand
that we are confident in our beliefs and we are not too ‘scared'
to discuss them. There's really just no point in us getting
together to fight, as it will do nothing but make people upset
and further
divide us."
To aid the search, the
club posted flyers around campus seeking "pro-choice advocates
who can passionately and intellectually defend the merits and
strengths of the pro-choice position." Ironically, the only
responses received were from concerned members of the pro-life
movement.....
Klusendorf, author of the
book The Case for Life, specializes in defending the pro-life
position from a philosophical and scientific point of view. He
will still speak at the event and address any challenges from
the audience afterward, but Lipa says he expects the atmosphere
to be more conducive to a pep rally than to a debate.
"You can't really have a
debate without two debaters," Lipa said. "Nevertheless, it's
still an opportunity for people of both sides or in the middle
to further explore the pro-life position."
While Levis also has high
hopes for the revised event, she expressed regret that so many
university abortion advocates were so reluctant to discuss such
an important issue.
"We are disappointed that
those who support abortion in private will not stand up in
public and give an intelligent account of why they believe what
they do. Perhaps it's because they question if a convincing
rationale exists."
The Abortion Forum will
take place on Wednesday, March 30, at 7pm at Rackham
Amphitheatre on the University of Michigan Central Campus. There
is no cost and everyone, regardless of opinion on abortion, is
invited to attend.
Part Four
Part One
Part Two |