Awash in Pro-Abortion Nostalgia
Part One of
Two
By Dave Andrusko
Part Two looks at how social
networks are being used by both
pro- and anti-life forces in the
battle over health care
restructuring. Please send your
comments on either part to
daveandrusko@gmail.com.
If you'd like, follow me on
http://twitter.com/daveha.
The headline in the New York
Times over the weekend was "In
Support of Abortion, It's
Personal vs. Political."
Although it reads like one of
the many plaintive pro-abortion
blogs you read online, it's
ostensibly a "week-in-review"
news story by the Times' Sheryl
Gay Stolberg. (www.nytimes.com/2009/11/29/weekinreview/29stolberg.htm?_r=2)
It's a perfectly wonderful
example of a particularly dreary
brand of by-the- numbers
abortion advocacy. The writer
tells us all is lost (because
younger women "never knew a time
when abortion was illegal") only
to conclude in the end that all
may not be lost after all. Whew!
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Pro-Life Congressman
Bart Stupak |
The flashpoint is--surprise,
surprise--the massive health
care restructuring bill, the
House version of which included
the pro-life Stupak-Pitts
Amendment. A coalition calling
itself "Stop Stupak" is massing
for a rally in Washington, DC on
Wednesday and "will include
abortion rights advocacy groups
that have sprung up in recent
years to reach out to younger
voters," according to Stolberg.
Naturally, the story follows the
accepted mythology that has
sprung up. Under this
once-upon-a-time tale, Prince
Charming (aka pro-abortion
President Barack Obama) assumed
leadership of his kingdom vowing
to "transcend the culture wars."
And for a while it was good.
"Most of his political energy
around abortion has been spent
trying to forge consensus on
ways to reduce unintended
pregnancies," we are told (as if
there were a grain of truth in
this). And then….
"The quiet was shattered this
month," Stolberg writes, "when
the House -- with surprising
support from 64 Democrats --
amended its health care bill to
include language by
Representative Bart Stupak,
Democrat of Michigan, barring
the use of federal subsidies for
insurance plans that cover
abortion."
All heck breaks loose and the
next thing you know at least
some of those heretofore quiet
pro-abortion feminists began to
stir. If all goes well--if the
Senate bill does not include the
Stupak Amendment, as pro-lifers
fear it will not--it could all
end well for the pro-abortion
side with the final bill signed
into law greasing the skids for
the Abortion Establishment.
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Pro-Abortion President
Barack Obama |
Three quick points. First, for
the umpteenth time, Congressmen
Stupak and Pitts did not
suddenly spring their amendment
on pro-abortion Speaker of the
House Nancy Pelosi. Stupak
offered in the amendment in
committee in July, where it was
narrowly defeated. NRLC and
others worked very visibly for
it to be offered on the floor
between that time and the Nov. 7
vote.
Second, it is quite true that
growing up at a time during the
reign of Roe v. Wade changes the
way everyone, not just women,
looks at abortion. I don't deny
that for a second.
We read in the story, "The
language and values, if you are
older, is around the right to
control your own body,
reproductive freedom, sexual
liberation as empowerment," said
Ms. [Anna] Greenberg, the
[Democratic] pollster.
"That is a baby-boom generation
way of thinking. If you look at
people under 30, that is not
their touchstone, it is not
wrapped up around feminism and
women's rights."
But what I would vigorously
dispute is that this is primary
reason why women in general do
not obsess about "abortion
rights" the same way the Baby
Boomer pro-abortion feminists do
to this day. I would argue that
this is not the result of a
false sense of security--which
is the wailing pro-abortion
mantra--but a mature
understanding of where we are as
a culture today.
To be brutally honest, the old
language is just
lame--embarrassingly so--and
does not resonate with a
generation reared on ultrasounds
and storylines in popular
culture that refuse to reduce
unborn children to "fetuses,"
let alone "blobs of tissue."
Third, the reason the story can
end on a "positive" note is that
the three daughters of
pro-abortion Congresswoman
Louise Slaughter (whose personal
journey is the narrative
backbone of the story) are the
"angriest" of what we are to
understand is an army of angry
women. And also because of
assorted oddball characters such
as "Serena Freewomyn (a name she
adopted to reflect the idea that
'I don't belong to any man')."
Freewomyn has started a blog
"Feminists for Choice," proving
that "not all younger women are
indifferent."
Well, okay, if that makes you
feel better....
If you only read Stolberg's
article, you'd think that (a)
there had been no change in
public opinion in a pro-life
direction, which there clearly
has been; (b) people really
didn't care if federal funds
were used to pay for abortions,
when, in truth, they are
vigorously opposed to that; and
(c) the Stupak-Pitts Amendment
was out of step with the
American people, rather than
what it is--a perfect reflection
of public opinion.
Be sure to read
http://nrlactioncenter.com
and find out what is really
going on in the fight over
health care restructuring.
Part Two |