Trying to Hide How
Abortion Hurts Women
Part Two of Three
By Dave Andrusko
This
post is by way of preliminary heads-up. Researchers far more
knowledgeable than I am will deal with the specific errors of a
piece that appeared in yesterday's Washington Post. ("The Big
Lie about Abortion and Mental Health," by Brenda Major.)
In the first couple of
paragraphs Major grants that "The decision to terminate a
pregnancy can be difficult, and some women end up regretting it.
It's commendable to help women make an informed choice."
So, in the abstract
providing information to women contemplating an abortion is
okay, but not if state laws talk about informing women of the
possibility of abortion having a deleterious impact. Why?
Because that's not "accurate" information, according to Major.
For support Major trots
out the usual naysayers--the pro-abortion Guttmacher Institute
and professional organizations, such as the American
Psychological Association, which are wholly committed to
legalized abortion. (Major tells us that she chaired the APA
task force which did not "substantiate the claim that abortion,
compared with its alternatives, causes an increased incidence of
mental health problems.")
As I say, the experts will
rebut Major tomorrow. Today let me make just one point. Her
opening sentence reads, "The latest war on abortion is being
fought less over women's bodies than over their minds."
And in a real sense this
is true, although not in the way Major means it.
For the past 50 years,
women have been told without ceasing that abortion is
essentially problem-free for all but a tiny subset of women (the
baby, of course, is ignored except when the argument is that she
if she is "unwanted," she is better off dead!). But does that
make any sense, intuitively? No, of course it doesn't.
Just in the past year, we
have witnessed a stream of quality research documenting the
negative aftershocks of abortion. We have written about almost
all of them in National Right to Life News and on this blog.
According to Prof. Michael New, these peer-reviewed journals
include The Journal of Reproductive and Infant Psychology,
Journal of Pregnancy, and The Canadian Journal of
Psychiatry."These studies find evidence that women who have had
abortions are at greater risk for health problems ranging from
PTSD to depression, alcoholism, and drug abuse," he writes.
Major tells us that the
"stigma" surrounding abortion colors the way women respond. So,
for example, if you were to see (as we ARE seeing) women
increasingly coming forth to say they regret their abortion,
that is because it is only when women say their abortion was
wrong ("repent," is Major's word) that they are not condemned.
The truth is gradually
working its way out of the darkness and into the light. No
wonder pro-abortionists such as Brenda Major are so nervous.
Please send your
comments on Today's News & Views and National Right to Life News
Today to
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Part Three
Part One |