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Abortion Links
Abortion:
Some Medical Facts
Abortion History Timeline
Partial-Birth Abortion:
Facts
Legislation
When Does Life Begin?
RU486
Abortion Alternatives
Pro-Life Response
to Abortionists' Arguments
Summaries
Argument 1: It's not a human being/person -- it's just a blob
of tissue
Argument 2: A woman has the right to control her body
Argument 3: "Every
child a wanted child," and other social arguments
Argument 4: Back-alley abortions
Argument 5: The hard cases
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"When They Say..., You Say..."
Argument 2:
A Woman has the Right to Control Her Own Body.
By Olivia Gans and Mary
Spaulding Balch, J.D.
The
underlying premise to the many arguments that fall within this category - -
that "a woman has a right to control her own body" - - is that it would be
unfair to the mother to "force" her to carry her unborn child to term.
Therefore, it should be her decision alone to decide whether her unborn
child lives or dies.
The argument unfolds in roughly this fashion. It would be "unjust" to
require the mother to carry her baby to term because it would require her to
quit school, abandon her career, suffer for the rest of her life never
knowing where her child was if she placed the child for adoption, or face
the stigma of "unwed" motherhood, or an endless number of other scenarios.
Beyond this basic contention, proponents further claim that the mother has
the "right" to privacy, the "right" to choose, and the "right" to equal
protection, all of which require a "right" to abortion.
The right to privacy, continues the argument, protects the woman's ability
to make personal decisions in private, without the imposition of "Big
Brother."
This mode of argument culminates with the conclusion that it is this
"freedom of choice" that enables a woman to compete equally with a man.
CONTROLLING ASSUMPTIONS
What is astonishing about this reasoning is the
assumption behind each of these "injustices" - - that the only way a
pregnant woman can accomplish anything is for her to kill her baby. What is
even more incomprehensible is that some women accept this specious reasoning
and actually fight to keep the ability to legally kill their unborn child as
a claimed "right"!
What is the rhetorical ploy at work here? Abortion supporters compare
unfavorably the life of one human being (the unborn child) with the "right"
to live without the temporary condition of nine months of pregnancy. The
result is that the temporary condition and its inconveniences trumps the
child's very right to exist.
When you reach this point, remind your listeners that this way of reasoning
threatens everyone's right to life. Determining who shall live and who shall
die has become completely arbitrary.
Let's look more closely at the argument that "a woman has the right to
control her own body."
Certainly she has the right to control the use of her arm by choosing to
swing her arm. However, that right stops when her arm approaches the tip of
my nose.
She may even have the right to scream at the top of her lungs that she hates
the movie Titanic, but she doesn't have the right to scream "fire" in
the crowded theater. Reason and historic experience teaches us that unless
we protect the rights of others, our own rights soon diminish as well.
Note also that, as is so often the case, abortion supporters have simply
defined the unborn out of existence. Or, more specifically, they contend
nobody can know "when human life begins."
An essential part of your response to this family of argument is to remind
your audience that it is not a mere opinion that two bodies are involved in
this decision but a scientific fact. It is important to understand that a
surprising number of people have convinced themselves that the unborn child
is not a separate human being, meaning the entire focus is on the mother.
Shorn of its individual existence, the child is reduced to a "problem" to be
eliminated. What is your counter?
Remind your audience that the unborn child is the smallest, least seen among
us, and thus, is the most vulnerable. Buttress your appeal to our common
humanity with some of the elementary points of embryology. This little human
being has a beating heart as early as 18 days, with tiny little fingers and
toes.
All her genetic definition of who she is for now and always - - the color of
her eyes, her hair, how tall she will grow to be - - was present at the
moment of fertilization. Therefore, in every abortion a helpless someone
dies.
Answering this argument also allows the pro-lifer to bring attention to the
least understood facet of the abortion debate: that most women feel trapped
into their abortions. This is a great opportunity to point out that women
usually make their decision with little or no accurate information about
their pregnancy or knowledge that assistance is available for them from the
over 3,000 pro-life mother-helping centers around the country.
We must help people to grasp that women aren't really in control of anything
if they do not have the right to know the whole truth before they have an
abortion. Point out that anyone who supports "choice" surely should support
an informed choice in this context as well.
Yet, attempts to pass protective legislation insuring that women are given
information about risks and alternatives to abortion and scientifically
accurate information about the developing unborn child are routinely opposed
and challenged by abortion advocates. Only a handful of states have
recognized the right of women to be fully informed. There is a real insult
to women's intelligence in that fact.
As women we believe that perhaps the greatest crime committed against women
by the legalization of abortion is the ugly idea that our ability to bear
children is a punishment or a failure on our part. That notion has sent a
message to three generations of women that they must - - at all costs - -
reject their own children if they are going to avert failure.
Women have to stop apologizing for the fact that they bear children. Gently
but firmly emphasize that, ironically, as long as women give into the
expectation that they ought to kill their children in order to get further
in this world (that is, compete equally with men), they really are
"second-class" citizens.
A major element in much of the rhetoric that is used within this particular
category of arguments is the tragic notion that the unborn child is an enemy
of her mother. Mother and child are pitted against each other.
We must help our questioners to realize that mother and child are not
antagonists but equals who must both be protected by law.
The only reasonable perspective is that every human being's life must be
protected from the moment of fertilization until natural death. It cannot be
subject to the arbitrary whims of others, or soon each of us will find
ourselves or our loved ones being defined out of existence.
Finally, the constant rallying cry attendant to this "women must control
their own bodies" argument is the clever but evasive rejoinder, "Who
decides?" You can point out that the more appropriate question is, "Who
dies?"
Since every abortion does in fact stop a beating heart it is absolutely
essential that a just government pass laws to respect the right to life.
Slogans like "Keep your laws off my ovaries" are simply a distraction from
the power of the truth about the unborn's life. Our elected officials are
bound on our behalf to ensure that protection is provided every human being.
Ultimately the only way to actually protect the mother's rights will be by
enforcing laws that secure her child's right to life.
*This article originally appeared in February 11, 1998 NRL News |