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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: TigerPaw who wrote (231837)2/27/2002 6:18:22 PM
From: one_less  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
"That would seem to indicate that the loss of "convienience" leads to beatings and a rise in head-trauma related aberrent behavior."

I think this is accurate. I would advocate much more support for persons who bear children than is currently available. The committed core family with support from the extended family is best but less and less the norm. Unless or until that norm returns as an American value, I would like to see some major effort and resources pointed at single moms.

"Often it is claimed that the unborn must be saved but nobody wants to ask why?"

I thought that had been answered over and over again as an abhorance of killing the innocent baby. The notion of helping one get to judgement (killing the baby) while still innocent (free-ride)is what I thought was a facetious comment. Cant have it both ways. Killing an unborn innocent baby (murder) is also caring and helpful.



To: TigerPaw who wrote (231837)2/27/2002 6:23:43 PM
From: PROLIFE  Respond to of 769670
 
I am going to try to say this without sounding like a man-hating feminist. Here goes.

There are few things in life more disgusting than men who, when discussing abortion, use the phrase: "I can't tell a woman what to do with her body."

It's like a password. It's usually pronounced with a self-satisfied smile. They're saying, "I'm cool. I'm a supportive kinda guy. I'm sensitive to the needs of women."

Yea, right.

Sometimes, there's a slight reluctance in their voice as they recite the mantra. Those are the ones who believe that while they, personally, are opposed to abortion, they couldn't tell a woman...blah, blah, blah.

You've heard it before, I'm sure.

In most cases, these guys have never, in their lives, used the words "chaste" and "dating" in the same sentence. You can bet that many of them are pretty adroit at telling a woman what to do with her body, if it happens to serve their own needs.

Abortion, or "choice," as it's euphemistically called, becomes a requirement, for many of them, because it has the ability to erase any unforeseen problems caused by their lack of moral discretion.

I was at a G.O.P. cocktail party last week, and a man used that old line on me: "I can't tell a woman what to do with her body."

I gave him the logical response: "What about the body inside her womb? What if it's a male body, a little boy? Surely that can't be her body, because she can't be a man and a woman at the same time. Can you tell her, in that case?"

He looked at me glumly. This was not the response he expected. He probably assumed, because I'm a young woman, that I'm pro-choice.

Not a wise move. Three major studies within the last four years show that women tend to be more pro-life than men.

Makes sense, doesn't it? We're the ones with the maternal instincts, and if we know the facts of life -- meaning all the stuff you never read in the newspaper, such as what an abortion does to an unborn child -- many of us come down on the side of the baby.

I've been around enough men to know that they occasionally daydream about great feats they would perform if, for example, they suddenly found themselves trapped, with their whole platoon, under enemy fire. It's one of the most charming qualities of men, this desire to prove themselves to be brave and fearless.

But, so many men fail to realize that all around them, in our modern world, are opportunities to show their valor. Every day, they are confronted with opportunities to witness to the truth -- situations which, perhaps, take more courage than saving a platoon from enemy attack.

Once a month, I attend a rosary vigil with about 200 people in front of a local Planned Parenthood clinic. I see the woman going in for abortions, some reluctantly, some being steered through the door by a man who is probably the father of the baby.

After about 45 minutes, some of the men come out, alone, looking relieved. They did their duty and sat in the waiting room with their significant other until it was time for the abortion, and then they get to go off -- get a cup of coffee, read the paper -- while she's in the recovery room.

What bothers me is that most of these guys are dressed as if they were on a date -- as if they were on the way to the movies. Except, this date involves the destruction of their children, and the wounding of their girlfriends.

I'm with the early feminists, when it comes to abortion. Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony, Dr. Alice Bunker Stockham, and the whole crowd of them were staunchly pro-life. They called abortion "child murder," and the "exploitation of women and children."

More emphatically, they pointed out that abortion primarily serves the needs of the predatory male. In a July, 1869, article in "The Revolution," the feminist newspaper edited by Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony, the latter -- of current U.S. one-dollar coin fame-- wrote:

"Guilty? Yes, no matter what the motive, love of ease, or a desire to save from suffering the unborn innocent, the woman is awfully guilty who commits the deed. It will burden her conscience in life, it will burden her soul in death; but oh! thrice guilty is he who, for selfish gratification, heedless of her prayers, indifferent to her fate, drove her to the desperation which impels her to the crime."

In her day, Susan B. Anthony was describing a tiny minority of men. Today, you'll run into hordes of them at just about any political cocktail party you attend.

But, still, there are countless other men who dare to swim against the tide -- men who respect life, and respect women, at a time when neither is required by the world.

Those are men who don't have to daydream about performing feats of great valor. They do it every day.

by Kathleen Howley



To: TigerPaw who wrote (231837)2/27/2002 6:24:21 PM
From: PROLIFE  Respond to of 769670
 
Abortion: Male Coercion and Irresponsibility
Consider this: By vesting all reproductive responsibility in the woman, a pro-choice male creates a situation in which men can easily rationalize their irresponsibility toward women who choose not to abort. Plausible? Read on.

As Daniel Callahan puts it, ``If legal abortion has given women more choice, it has also given men more choice as well. They now have a potent new weapon in the old business of manipulating and abandoning women.`` Given that 80 percent of all abortions are sough by single women (according to the Alan Guttmacher Institute) the advent of reproductive rights has created a situation in which a man can coerce a woman to have an abortion by denying his responsibility towards her, or even abandoning her when she gets pregnant and ``chooses`` to carry the pregnancy to term.

According to feminist legal scholar Catharine MacKinnon, ``Sexual liberation in this sense does not free women, it frees male sexual aggression. The availability of abortion thus removes the one remaining legitimized reason that women had for refusing sex besides the headache.``

The anecdotal evidence for this interpretation is compelling. Consider an encounter captured in the CBS documentary ``The Vanishing Family: Crisis in Black America`` shown on January 26, 1986. The scene is a ghetto in Newark, New Jersey and journalist Bill Moyers is speaking to Timothy, a man in his early thirties who has fathered six children to four different women.

MOYERS: People out there watching are going to say, ``Why didn`t he think about this [his responsibility] before he brought six kids into the world?``

TIMOTHY: Well, the mother had a choice. She could have an abortion or she could have the child. She decided she wanted to have the child, so therefore, I guess it`s not sweating her.

MOYERS: So do you think it`s her fault she got pregnant?

TIMOTHY: Well, maybe, maybe not. I say, ``Mamma`s baby, Papa`s maybe.`` Ya know what I mean?

MOYERS: (later in the interview) Would you have had all these kids if you had thought about it?

TIMOTHY: No.

Empirical studies have also demonstrated that male coercion and pressure play a sizable role in many women`s abortion decisions. A survey from the Medical College of Ohio, for example, examined 150 women who ``identified themselves as having poorly assimilated the abortion experience.`` Of the 81 women who responded, more than one-third felt they had been coerced into having an abortion. Fewer than one-third initially considered the abortion themselves.

In cases where women initially chose to bear the child, their male partners were opposed to the decision by a margin of eight to one. In all of these cases, the man withdrew his support for his partner ``thereby eliminating that alternative.``

Even in Carol Gilligan`s famous study _In a Different Voice_, not all of the women`s abortion decisions she recounts were independent. Male coercion played an important role in about one-third of the cases cited. The men in the women`s lives were unwilling to provide their partners with the moral and material support for pregnancy, childbirth, and child rearing. As one of Gilligan`s respondents noted, ``He made me feel I had once choice to make and that it was to have an abortion and I could always have children another time, and he made me feel if I didn`t it would drive us apart.``

In all these cases, the logic goes something like this: since the man was willing to pay for an abortion, and since the woman had a constitutional right to get one even if he wished to prevent it, by her failure to obtain an abortion she took sole responsibility for the child. Therefore, the reasoning concludes, the man should not be liable for any child support.

Permissive abortion policy has created a climate where men can enjoy sexual relations with little or no concern for their consequences. Abortion is often misrepresented as solely a women`s issue; clearly, however, it is a men`s issue as well as long as men are interested in protecting their sexual liberty.



To: TigerPaw who wrote (231837)2/27/2002 6:24:54 PM
From: PROLIFE  Respond to of 769670
 
Abortion Does Not Liberate Women
(copied with permission from Feminists For Life)
Most modern feminists have made easy access to abortion the very symbol of liberation for women. The literature of the National Organization for Women repeatedly refers to abortion as "the most fundamental right of women" - more important even than the right to vote and the right to free speech. NOW has designated the protection of abortion rights as its top priority.

This is ironic, because abortion does not liberate women. On the contrary, abortion - and the perceived need for it - validate the patriarchal world view which holds that women, encumbered as they are by their reproductive capacity, are inferior to men.

Abortion liberates men, not women. There are three reasons for this:

Efforts to establish abortion as a legitimate solution to the problems of being a woman in a male-dominated society surrender women to pregnancy discrimination. Those feminists who demand the right to abortion concede the notion that a pregnant woman is inferior to a non- pregnant one. They admit that pregnancy and motherhood are incompatible to being a fully functioning adult, and that an unencumbered, unattached male is the model for success. By settling for abortion instead of working for the social changes that would make it possible to combine children and career, pro-abortion feminists have agreed to participate in a man's world under a man's terms. They have betrayed the majority of working women - who want to have children.
Abortion allows men to escape responsibility for their own sexual behavior. A man whose child is aborted is relieved of the requirement that he support his children. It is not surprising that the Playboy Foundation is a major supporter of abortion rights, because abortion is a natural consequence of the Playboy's ideal of uncommitted, anonymous sex without consequences. Women can be reduced to the status of a consumer item, which if "broken" by pregnancy can be "fixed" by abortion.
Proabortion feminists have corrupted feminism by embracing male standards, which hold that it is permissible to treat "unequals" unequally, and for the powerful to oppress the weak. By accepting this patriarchal world view, these feminists have capitulated to male dominance. Women who agree to conform to the ideals of a world made by and for men are not liberated; they have merely altered their roles within the patriarchy.

"Feminism is part of a larger philosophy that values all life."
Truly liberated women reject abortion because they reject the male world view that accepts violence as a legitimate solution to conflict. Rather than settling for mere equality -- the right to contribute equally to the evil of the society -- prolife feminists seek to transform society to create a world that reflects true feminist ideals.

Feminism is, properly, part of a larger philosophy that values all life. Feminists believe that all human beings have inherent worth and that this worth cannot be conferred or denied by another. True feminist thinking recognizes the interdependence of all living things and the responsibility we all have for one another. This feminism rejects the male view that sees all individuals as functioning separately from their fellows, in mutual competition.

Abortion is incompatible with this feminist vision. Abortion atomizes women. It pits them against their own children as competitors for the favors of the patriarchy. Abortion is of no great benefit to employers -- who do not have to make concessions to pregnant women and mothers, to schools -- which do not have to accommodate to the needs of parents, and to irresponsible men -- who do not have to commit themselves to their mates or their children. Women who accept abortion have agreed to sacrifice their children for the convenience of a man's world.

Women who have been liberated from male thought patterns refuse to participate in their own oppression and in the oppression of their children They refuse to accept abortion, which denigrates the life-giving capacity of women. They strive instead to create a world that recognizes the moral superiority of maternal thinking and is, therefore, gentle, loving, nurturing, and prolife. Every abortion frustrates this goal and perpetuates the patriarchy. Liberated women will not cooperate. They refuse abortion and all it represents.

This article may be distributed freely as long as credit is given to FFL.



To: TigerPaw who wrote (231837)2/27/2002 6:25:39 PM
From: PROLIFE  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
Over a Century of Pro-Life Feminism
Susan B. Anthony
She called abortion "child-murder." (_The_Revolution_ 4(1):4 July 8, 1869)
"We want prevention, not merely punishment. We must reach the root of the evil...It is practiced by those whose innermost souls revolt from the dreadful dead." (_The_Revolution_ 4(1):4 July 8, 1869)
"All the articles on this subject that I have read have been from men. They denounce women as alone guilty, and never include man in any plans for the remedy." (_The_Revolution_ 4(5):4 February 5, 1868)
Elizabeth Cady Stanton

She classed it with the killing of newborns as "infanticide." (_The_Revolution_ 1(5):1 February 5, 1868)
"When we consider that women are treated as property, it is degrading to women that we should treat our children as property to be disposed of as we see fit."
(Letter to Julia Ward Howe, October 16, 1871, recorded in Howe's diary at Harvard University Library)
"There must be a remedy even for such a crying evil as this. But where shall it be found, at least where begin, if not in the complete enfranchisement and elevation of women?" (_The_Revolution_ 1(10):146-7 March 12, 1868)
Stanton and Anthony's newspaper, _The_Revolution_, and most other feminist publicaitons of the last century, refused to join in the common practice of printing advertisements for thinly-disguised patent medicine abortifacients.

Matilda Gage

"[This] subject lies deeper down in woman's wrongs than any other...I hesitate not to assert that most of [the responsibility for] this crime lies at the door of the male sex." (_The_Revolution_ 1(14):215-6 April 6, 1868)
Mattie Brinkerhoff

"When a man steals to satisfy hunger, we may safely conclude that there is something wrong in society-so when a woman destroys the life of her unborn child, it is an evidence that either by education or circumstances she has been greatly wronged." (_The_Revolution_ 3(9):138-9 September 2, 1869)
Victoria Woodhull

The first woman to attempt to run for President was a strong opponent of abortion. _Woodhull's_and_Claffin's_Weekly_ proclaimed, "The rights of children as individuals begin while yet they remain in the foetus." (2(6):4 December 24, 1870)
"Every woman knows that if she were free, she would never bear an unwished-for-child, not think of murdering one before its birth." (Wheeling, West Virginia _Evening_Standard_, November 17, 1875)
Sarah Norton

"Child murderers practice their profession without let or hinderance, and open infant butcheries unquestioned...Is there no remedy for all this ante-natal child murder?...Perhaps there will come a time when...an unmarried mother will not be despised because of her motherhood...and when the right of the unborn to be born will not be denied or interfered with." (_Woodhull's_and_Claffin's_Weekly_, November 19, 1870)
Emma Goldman

"The custom of procuring abortions has reached such appalling proportions in America as to be beyond belief...So great is the misery of the working classes that seventeen abortions are committed in every one hundred pregnancies." (_Mother_Earth_, 1911)
Alice Paul

The author of the original Equal Rights Amendment (1923) opposed the later trend inking it with abortion. A colleague recalls her expressing the opinion that "abortion is the ultimate exploitation of women."
Mary Wollstonecraft

As early as 1792, Mary Wollenstonecraft wrote "A Vindication of the Rights of Women," which Susan B. Anthony admired enough to serialize in the _Revolution_. After decrying, in scathing 18th century terms, the sexual exploitation of women, she says, "Women becoming, consequently, weaker...than they ought to be...have not sufficient strength to discharge the first duty of a mother; and sacrificing to lasciviousness the parental affection...either destroy the embryo in the womb, or cast it off when born. Nature in every thing demands respect, and those who violate her laws seldom violate them with impunity."



To: TigerPaw who wrote (231837)2/27/2002 6:26:21 PM
From: PROLIFE  Respond to of 769670
 
Abortion: The Black Woman's Voice
Abortion Incidence Among Blacks Minority women constitute only about 26% of the female population (age 15-44) in the United States, but they underwent approximatly 36% of the abortions. (Morbidity and mortality Weekly Report, U.S. Censuc Bureau, December 18, 1992, Centers for Disease Control).
This incidence of abortion has resulted in a tremendous loss of life. It has been estimated that since 1973 Black women have had about 10 million abortions. Michael Novak had calculated "Since the number of current living Blacks (in the U.S.) is 31 million, the missing 10 million represents an enourmous loss for, without abortion, America's black community would now number 41 milion persons. It would be 35 percent larger than it is currently. Abortion has swept through the Black community cutting down every fourth member. (Flight of Life's Priorities, Cal Thomas, Washington Times, April 1, 1993, p. G1, G4).

Abortion has also affected black women through its connection with breast cancer. A highly significant Howard University study showed that African American women over age 50 were 4.7 times more likely to get breast cancer if they had had any abortions to women who had not had any abortions. (Breast Cancer Risk Factors in African American Women: The Howard University Tumor Registry Experience, Laing AE, Demenais FM, Williams R, Kissling G, Chen VW, Bonney GE, 1993, J Natl. Med. Assoc., 85: 931-939).

Women Speak Out
Erma Clardy Craver, Social Worker and Civil Rights Leader: "Several years ago, when 17,000 aborted babies were found in a dumpster outside a pathology laboratory in Los Angeles, California, some 12-15,000 were observed to be black. Wake up America, and relive Dr. Martin Luther King's Dream! The way of abortion is the way back into bondage!"
Beverly Clark, former Houston city councilwoman and congressional candidate: "People think Planned Parenthood is a counceling-based business. The bulk of their business is from doing abortions. And parents are always shocked when they find out these people are going into schools and teaching our children about birth control. They tie in "helping the poor" with the issue of abortion. They tell us the world is overpopulated. That is brainwashing so they can continue to have clients for their industry. If we stopped abortion, we would hurt somebody's pocketbook."

Noreen Z. Johnson, M.D., F.A.C.O.G.: "Wee see today a common thread of degeneration in our society with the erosion of absolutes set forth by these two noble instruments - the Hippocratic Oath and the Constitution of the United States. The legalization of abortion has opened a Pandora's box of abuse of fetal tissue in research, and has allowed genetic engineering to lurk as a monster at our doorsteps."

Akua Furlow, Executive Director for the Life Education and Resource Network (LEARN): "Planned parenthood started bnack in 1960 by Margaret Sanger. If people would just study the documentation they would find that Planned Parenthood was rooted in racism and founded by a white supremist. She believe there were disgenic groups of people who needed to be exterminated. Most of Planned Parenthood's clinics are in minority communities. The language has changed, but the original intent is still the same - to limit the births of minority people, poor people, and people that are handicapped."

Sharon Weston, Member of the Louisiana State legislature: "When we look at African Americans from a historical standpoint, you do not find abortion as an integral part of our history. The whole abortion issue can minimize the impact that African Americans can have as future leaders. In our history, we have been the major caregivers for our own, whether it is for our young children or our very old, and regardless of our status in life. They (NOW, NARAL, Planned Parenthood, etc.) call this a "poor person's" issue and a "civil rights" issue because they need us and they are trying to give us information that will "help" us. In reality, it is something that will "hurt" us.

Dolores Grier, Psychologist and President of American Black Women Against Abortion: "Since 1973, 78 percent of abortion centers have been located in Black and minority communities. Upper middle class white females are not reproducing and they are trying to keep other groups from reproducing so they can remain in the majority. It is my belief that in pruning the minority population, they're keeping themselves as the majority. NOW and NARAL want only the preferred (white), the privileged (wealthy) and the perfect (no Downs syndrome or handicapped children). They are just trying to play God.



To: TigerPaw who wrote (231837)2/27/2002 6:27:00 PM
From: PROLIFE  Respond to of 769670
 
Quotes from Early Feminists Leaders
Alice Paul (author of the original ERA) - "Abortion is the ultimate exploitation of women."

Elizabeth Cady Stanton (early suffragist leader) - "When we consider that women have been treated as property it is degrading to women that we should treat our children as property to be disposed of as we see fit."

Simone de Beauvoir (prominent feminist author) - "The woman who has recourse to abortion disowns feminist values..."

Despite the large monetary loss involved, The Revolution, the suffragist paper put out by Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony, refused to run ads for abortifacients. Victoria Woodhull and Tennessee Clafin, the free-love advocates, held the same policy in their weekly newspaper. They also ran ads exposing lucrative, male-run abortion practices in New York City.

Susan B. Anthony referred to abortion as "child-murder" and Elizabeth Cady Stanton classed it with the killing of a newborn under the single term "infanticide." Woodhull and Clafin's weekly asserted that "the rights of children as individuals begin while yet they remain the foetus."

As Elizabeth Cady Stanton phrased it, the practice of abortion was one more result of the "degradation of women." Feminists then looked forward to abortion's elimination rather than its adoption.

Ezra Haywood, an outspoken sexual radical in the 1880's, wrote that "this murderous practice is unworthy of Free Lovers." Eliza Duffy characterized abortion as "murder."

Adrienne Rich: "Abortion is violence: a deep desperate violence inflicted upon women..."

Germaine Greer: "It is typical of the contradictions that break women's hearts that when they avail themselves of their fragile right to abortion, they often, even usually, went with grief and humiliation to carry out a painful duty that was presented to them as a privilege. Abortion is the latest in a long-line of non-choices..."

Victoria Woodhull said in 1875: "Every woman knows that if she were truly free, she would never think of murdering a child before its birth."

Elizabeth Cady Stanton declared in 1868 that the remedy for the "crying evil" of abortion was "the complete enfranchisement and elevation of women."
Abortion and Breast Cancer

The Journal of the National Cancer Institute released a study "Risk of Breast Cancer Among Young Women: Relationship to Induced Abortion" by Janet Darling, et al. The study indicates that women who had an abortion in their first trimester, before experiencing a full term pregnancy, may be at increased risk for breast cancer. In some cases, that risk is 100 percent more than among the general population.

Feminists for Life noted a year ago that some 20 studies from the past 10 years indicate a strongly possible link between abortion and breast cancer. Why do abortion supporters, who claim to support women, ignore this information?
Patriarchy and Abortion

Sex selection: Abortion supports patriarchy because of sex-selection abortions. Abortion allows women (or forceful men) to choose to abort children on the basis of sex (i.e. unwanted females). Thus is then comes as no shock that in India out of 8,000 abortions, 7,999 were female.

Pressure: In a recent survey, mothers cited 47% of the time that the reason they had their abortion was because of pressure or threats from a boyfriend/husband. Abortion allows the continued relegation of women to lower status.

Abortionists: Abortion promotes patriarchy as its legal status was handed down by nine old men, abortion facilities are owned and operated primarily by men, abortionists are primarily men, and the people making millions of dollars from abortion each and every year - by exploiting women - are men.

Men are Better: The old argument used to be that men are better than women becausewomen are biologically inferior. Abortion promotes that view by treating pregnancy as a problem rather than as a special gift that only women can provide.

As long as patriarchy is free to reign, a woman's "right" to abortion will be a pitiful surrogate for freedom from the sexual and economic exploitation that compels this "oppressive" choice.
Pro-Woman

The pro-life stances acknowledges that a woman's fertility, her child-rearing, as one of the many gifts that women bring to society.

How can we claim to advance the cause of women - that they are truly capable of performing as well as men in society and that women can handle problems rationally and with common sense - and then assert that should abortion be declared illegal, they would resort to coat-hangers in a back alley. That's hypocrisy!

Women say prolife men should have no say about abortion, because abortion is a "woman's issue." Fine, keep pro-abortion men out of the debate as well.

Just think how terrible it would be if abortion weren't legal and men had



To: TigerPaw who wrote (231837)2/27/2002 6:27:45 PM
From: PROLIFE  Respond to of 769670
 
The Bitter Price of "Choice"
by Frederica Mathewes-Green
When I was in college the bumper sticker on my car read "Don't labor under a misconception -- legalize abortion." I was one of a handful of feminists on my campus, back in the days when we were jeered at as "bra-burning women's libbers." As we struggled against a hazy sea of sexism, abortion rights was a visible banner, a concrete measurable goal. Through our other foes were elusive, within the fragile boundary of our skin, at least, we would be sovereign. What could be more personal? How could any woman oppose it?

I oppose it now. It has been a slow process, my path from a pro-choice to a pro-life position, and I know that unintended pregnancy raises devastating problems. I can no longer avoid the realization that legalizing abortion was the wrong solution; we have let in a Trojan Horse whose hidden betrayal we've just begun to see.

A woman with an unplanned pregnancy faces more than "inconvenience"; many adversities, financial and social, at school, at work, and at home confront her. Our mistake was in looking at these problems and deciding that the fault lay with the woman, that she should be the one to change. We focused on her swelling belly, not the pressures that made her so desperate. We advised her, "Go have this operation and you'll fit right in."

What a choice we made for her. She climbs onto a clinic table and endures a violation deeper than rape - the nurse's hand is wet with her tears - then is grateful to pay for it, grateful to be adapted to the social machine that rejected her when pregnant. And the machine grinds on, rejecting her pregnant sisters.

It is a cruel joke to call this a woman's "choice." We may choose to sacrifice our life and career plans, or choose to undergo humiliating invasive surgery and sacrifice our offspring. How fortunate we are -- we have a choice! Perhaps it's time to amend the slogan -- "Abortion: a woman's right to capitulate."

If we refused to choose, if we insisted on keeping both our lives and bodies intact, what changes would our communities have to make? What would make abortion unnecessary? Flexible school situations, more flex-time, part-time, and home-commute jobs, attractive adoption opportunities, safe family planning choices, support in handling sex responsibly: this is a partial list. Yet these changes will never come as long as we're lying down on abortion tables 1,600,000 times a year to ensure the status quo. We've adapted to this surgical substitute, to the point that Justice Blackmun could write in his Webster dissent, "Millions of women have ordered their lives around" abortion. That we have willingly ordered our lives around a denigrating surgical procedure --accepted it as the price we must pay to keep our life plans intact -- is an ominous sign.

For over a hundred years feminists have warned us that abortion is a form of oppression and violence against women and their children. They called it "child-murder" (Susan B. Anthony), "degrading to women" (Elizabeth Cady Stanton), "most barbaric" (Margaret Sanger), and a "disowning [of] feminine values" (Simone de Beauvoir). How have we lost this wisdom?

Abortion has become the accepted way of dealing with unplanned pregnancies, and women who make another choice are viewed as odd, backward, and selfish. Across the nation three thousand crisis pregnancy centers struggle, unfunded and unrecognized, to help these women with housing, clothing, medical care, and job training, before and after pregnancy. These volunteers must battle the assumption that "they're supposed to abort" -- especially poor women who hear often enough that their children are unwanted. Pro-choice rhetoric conjures a dreadful day when women could be forced to have abortions; that day is nearly here.

More insidiously, abortion advocacy has been poisonous to some of the deeper values of feminism. For example, the need to discredit the fetus has led to the use of terms that would be disastrous if applied to women. "It's too small", "It's unwanted", "It might be disabled", "It might be abused." Too often women are small, unwanted, disabled, or abused. Do we really want to say that these are factors erase personhood?

A parallel disparaging of pregnancy itself also has an unhealthy ring. Harping on the discomforts of pregnancy treats women as weak, incompetent; yet we are uniquely equipped for this role, and strong enough to do much harder things than this. Every woman need not bear a child, but every woman should feel proud kinship in earthly, elemental beauty of birth. To hold contempt is to reject our distinctive power, "our bodies, ourselves."

There is a last and still more terrible cost to abortion, one that we have not yet faced. We have treated the loss of our fetuses as a theoretical loss, a sad-but-necessary loss, as of civilians in wartime. We have not yet realized that the offspring lost are not the enemy's, nor our neighbor's but our own. And it is not a loss of inert, amorphous tissue, but of a growing being unique in history. There are no generic zygotes. The one-cell fertilized ovum is a new individual, the present form of a tall blue-eyed girl, for example, with Grandad's red hair and Great-aunt Ida's singing voice. Look at any family, see how the traits and characteristics run down the generations in stream. Did we really think our own children would be different?

Like the gypsy in Verdi's opera, Il Trovatore, our frustration has driven us to desperate acts. Outraged by the Court's cruel injustice, she stole his infant son and, in a crazed act of vengeance, flung him into the fire. Or so she thought. For, in turning around, she discovered the Count's son lay safe on the ground behind her; it was her own son she had thrown into the flames. The moment of realization will be as devastating for us as it was for her.

Until that time, legal abortion invites us to go on doing it 4500 times a day. And, with ruthless efficiency, the machine grind on.

A former Vice-President of Feminists for Life of America, Frederica Mathewes-Green is currently a nationally syndicated columnist and a contributing editor to World magaine, Books & Culture, and several other publications. Articles by Ms. Green have appeared in the Washington Post, National Review, and The Information Please Women's Sourcebook, as well as other national periodicals and anthologies Ms. Green is the author of Real Choices(Questar Publishers, 1994), the result of nationwide interviews with post-abortion women on the reasons they had abortions and the sort of resources which could have solved their problems and enabled them to have given life to their children.



To: TigerPaw who wrote (231837)2/27/2002 6:29:35 PM
From: PROLIFE  Respond to of 769670
 
Child Abuse

Legalizing abortion was supposed to help reduce child abuse, since it was assumed most abused children were unwanted at birth. But this theory has been disproven by scientific studies as well as by the evidence that child abuse has sharply increased since abortion became legal.

In 1973, when abortion became legal in the United States, there were 167,000 cases of child abus and neglect reported. Yet in 1980 there were 785,100 cases - an increase of 370% from 1973. Furthermore, in 1987, there were 2,025,200 cases reported, which represents an increase of 1112%. (Source: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. National Center of Child Abuse and Neglect; National Analysis of Official Child Abuse and Neglect Reporting).

Rather than helping stop child abuse, legal abortion has actually contributed to its sharp rise due to the effects abortion has had on women's self-esteem and the ability to deal with stress. Dr. Philip Ney in a widely read study on the connection between abortion and child abuse notes:

"... elective abortion is an important cause of child abuse."
"Recent evidence indicates many women harbour strong guilt feelings long after their abortions. Guilt is one important cause of child battering and infanticide. Abortion lowers women's self-esteem and there are studies reporting a major loss of self-esteem in battering parents...."

Source: P. Ney, M.D. "Relationship between Abortion and Child Abuse." Canada Journal of Psychiatry, vol. 24, pp. 610-620.

Damaged Families

Researcher Emily Milling studied over 400 couples with women who had made a decision to have an abortion. Her research confirmed that 70% of their relationships ended within one month of the abortion. Sociologist Arthur Shostak found that three out of four male respondents had persistent day and night dreams about "the child that never was." And Linda Bird Franke has written "In my research, almost every relationship between single people broke up either before or after the abortion."

Stress for Women

Dr. Anne Speckhard, in a 1985 University of Minnesota study, researched "long-term manifestations of abortion" (5-10 years), and found that 81% of mothers reported preoccupation with their aborted child, 54% had nightmares, 35% had perceived visitations with their child, and 96% felt their abortion had taken a human life.

Has Abortion Led to Infanticide?

One of the arguments against legalized abortion around the time of Roe v. Wade was that it would lead to a slippery slope of euthanasia, infanticide, and other destruction of human life. It appears yesterday's naysayers were right.



To: TigerPaw who wrote (231837)2/27/2002 6:31:05 PM
From: PROLIFE  Respond to of 769670
 
More on Illegal Abortion Myths
By Dr. Frank Beckwith
Anyone who keeps up with the many pro-choice demonstrations in the United States cannot help but see on pro-choice placards and buttons a drawing of the infamous coat hanger. This symbol of the pro-choice movement represents the many women who were harmed or killed because they either performed illegal abortions on themselves (i.e., the surgery was performed with a "coat hanger") or went to unscrupulous physicians (or "back-alley butchers"). Hence, as the argument goes, if abortion is made illegal, then women will once again be harmed. Needless to say, this argument serves a powerful rhetorical purpose. Although the thought of finding a deceased young woman with a bloody coat hanger dangling between her legs is -- to say the least -- unpleasant, powerful and emotionally charged rhetoric does not a good argument make.

The chief reason this argument fails is because it commits the fallacy of begging the question. In fact, as we shall see, this fallacy seems to lurk behind a good percentage of the popular arguments for the pro-choice position. One begs the question when one assumes what one is trying to prove. Another way of putting it is to say that the arguer is reasoning in a circle. For example, if one concludes that the Boston Celtics are the best team because no team is as good, one is not giving any reasons for this belief other than the conclusion one is trying to prove, since to claim that a team is the best team is exactly the same as saying that no team is as good.

The question-begging nature of the coat-hanger argument is not difficult to discern: only by assuming that the unborn are not fully human does the argument work. If the unborn are not fully human, then the pro-choice advocate has a legitimate concern, just as one would have in overturning a law forbidding appendicitis operations if countless people were needlessly dying of both appendicitis and illegal operations. But if the unborn are fully human, this pro-choice argument is tantamount to saying that because people die or are harmed while killing other people, the state should make it safe for them to do so.

Even some pro-choice advocates, who argue for their position in other ways, admit that the coat hanger/back-alley argument is fallacious. For example, pro-choice philosopher Mary Anne Warren clearly recognizes that her position on abortion cannot rest on this argument without it first being demonstrated that the unborn entity is not fully human. She writes that "the fact that restricting access to abortion has tragic side effects does not, in itself, show that the restrictions are unjustified, since murder is wrong regardless of the consequences of prohibiting it..." [9]

Although it is doubtful whether statistics can establish a particular moral position, it should be pointed out that there has been considerable debate over both the actual number of illegal abortions and the number of women who died as a result of them prior to legalization. [10] Prior to Roe, pro-choicers were fond of saying that nearly a million women every year obtained illegal abortions performed with rusty coat hangers in back-alleys that resulted in thousands of fatalities. Given the gravity of the issue at hand, it would go beyond the duty of kindness to call such claims an exaggeration, because several well-attested facts establish that the pro-choice movement was simply lying.

First, Dr. Bernard Nathanson -- who was one of the original leaders of the American pro-abortion movement and co-founder of N.A.R.A.L. (National Abortion Rights Action League), and who has since become pro-life -- admits that he and others in the abortion rights movement intentionally fabricated the number of women who allegedly died as a result of illegal abortions.

How many deaths were we talking about when abortion was illegal? In N.A.R.A.L. we generally emphasized the drama of the individual case, not the mass statistics, but when we spoke of the latter it was always "5,000 to 10,000 deaths a year." I confess that I knew the figures were totally false, and I suppose the others did too if they stopped to think of it. But in the "morality" of the revolution, it was a useful figure, widely accepted, so why go out of our way to correct it with honest statistics. The overriding concern was to get the laws eliminated, and anything within reason which had to be done was permissible. [11]

Second, Dr. Nathanson's observation is borne out in the best official statistical studies available. According to the U.S. Bureau of Vital Statistics, there were a mere 39 women who died from illegal abortions in 1972, the year before Roe v. Wade. [12] Dr. Andre Hellegers, the late Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Georgetown University Hospital, pointed out that there has been a steady decrease of abortion-related deaths since 1942. That year there were 1,231 deaths. Due to improved medical care and the use of penicillin, this number fell to 133 by 1968. [13] The year before the first state-legalized abortion, 1966, there were about 120 abortion-related deaths. [14]

This is not to minimize the undeniable fact that such deaths were significant losses to the families and loved ones of those who died. But one must be willing to admit the equally undeniable fact that if the unborn are fully human, these abortion-related maternal deaths pale in comparison to the 1.5 million preborn humans who die (on the average) every year. And even if we grant that there were more abortion-related deaths than the low number confirmed, there is no doubt that the 5,000 to 10,000 deaths cited by the abortion rights movement is a gross exaggeration. [15]

Third, it is simply false to claim that there were nearly a million illegal abortions per year prior to legalization. There is no reliable statistical support for this claim. [16] In addition, a highly sophisticated recent study has concluded that "a reasonable estimate for the actual number of criminal abortions per year in the prelegalization era [prior to 1967] would be from a low of 39,000 (1950) to a high of 210,000 (1961) and a mean of 98,000 per year. [17]

Fourth, it is misleading to say that pre-Roe illegal abortions were performed by "back-alley butchers" with rusty coat hangers. While president of Planned Parenthood, Dr. Mary Calderone pointed out in a 1960 American Journal of Health article that Dr. Kinsey showed in 1958 that 84% to 87% of all illegal abortions were performed by licensed physicians in good standing. Dr. Calderone herself concluded that "90% of all illegal abortions are presently done by physicians." [18] It seems that the vast majority of the alleged "back-alley butchers" eventually became the "reproductive health providers" of our present day.

Dr. Frank Beckwith is Associate Professor of Philosophy, Culture, and Law, and W. Howard Hoffman Scholar at Trinity Graduate School, Trinity International University (Deerfield, IL), California Campus. He holds a Ph.D. from Fordham University.
Prior to coming to Trinity, Professor Beckwith held full-time faculty appointments at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas(1989-96) and Whittier College (1996-97). His many books include Politically Correct Death: Answering the Arguments for Abortion Rights. His articles and reviews have been published in numerous journals including Journal of Social Philosophy, Public Affairs Quarterly, International Philosophical Quarterly, Focus on Law Studies, Simon Greenleaf of Law and Religion, and the Canadian Philosophical Review.

Notes:

[8] John Nolt and Dennis Rohatyn, Schaum's Outline of Theory and Problems of Logic (New York: McGraw-Hill Book Co., 1988), 172. in The Problem of Abortion, 2nd ed., ed. Joel Feinberg (Belmont, CA: Wadsworth, 1984), 103.

[10] See Daniel Callahan, Abortion: Law, Choice, and Morality (New York: Macmillan, 1970), 132-36; and Stephen Krason, Abortion: Politics, Morality, and the Constitution (Lanham, MD: University Press of America, 1984), 301-10.

[11] Bernard Nathanson, M.D., Aborting America (New York: Doubleday, 1979), 193.

[12] From the U.S. Bureau of Vital Statistics Center for Disease Control, as cited in Dr. and Mrs. J. C. Wilke, Abortion: Questions and Answers, rev. ed. (Cincinnati: Hayes Publishing, 1988), 101-2.

[13] From Dr. Hellegers's testimony before the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee on Constitutional Amendments, April 25, 1 1974; cited in John Jefferson Davis, Abortion and the Christian (Phillipsburg, NJ: Presbyterian and Reformed, 1984), 75.

[14] From the U.S. Bureau of Vital Statistics Center for Disease Control, as cited in Wilke, 101-2.

[15] See Davis, 75.

[16] See note 10; Callahan, 132-36; Krason, 301-10.

[17] Barbara J. Syska, Thomas W. Hilgers, M.D., and Dennis O'Hare, "An Objective Model for Estimating Criminal Abortions and Its Implications for Public Policy," in New Perspectives on Human Abortion, ed. Thomas Hilgers, M.D., Dennis J. Horan, and David Mall (Frederick, MD: University Publications of America, 1981), 78.

[18] Mary Calderone, "Illegal Abortion as a Public Health Problem," in American Journal of Health 50 (July 1960):949.



To: TigerPaw who wrote (231837)2/27/2002 6:49:21 PM
From: George Coyne  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769670
 
Studies seem to show that there is a lot less serious abuse of children in a way that coorelates with abortion availability. That would seem to indicate that the loss of "convienience" leads to beatings and a rise in head-trauma related aberrent behavior.

Where did you come up with these absurd statements?