By Daniel Allott on 3.11.08 @ 12:07AM
How about jail time for politicians who lie about pro-lifers?
"You wanna' criminalize women and their doctors and we disagree.
...You would want to put every doctor and every mother as an
accessory to murder in prison."
So roared Bill Clinton, who, campaigning for his wife recently
in Steubenville, Ohio, seemed stunned by a pro-life protestor who
responded to his remarks on health care by asking: "What about the
4,000-plus children that are scheduled for abortion tomorrow? They
are people too and we want answers."
Clinton's red-faced response, thinly reported in the media but
an instant hit on YouTube, highlighted more than his famous temper.
It also underscored an increasingly familiar pro-choice retort: If
abortion becomes illegal, women who abort would be thrown in
jail.
Consider Third Way, a new strategy center for progressives, part
of whose mission is to help conservatives and liberals find common
ground -- a third way -- on abortion "without throwing women in
jail." Consider also a new initiative by the National Institute for
Reproductive Health (NIRH) that focuses on developing the "winning
message" that "[i]f abortion is outlawed, the woman having one will
be a criminal."
"How Much Time Should She Do?" asks NIRH, which insists abortion
advocates can prevail if they make "an emotional connection by
focusing on the real life consequences of criminalizing
abortion."
THAT THE "JAIL TIME" argument is raised at all is cause for
encouragement to pro-lifers. It means the old pro-choice arguments
no longer work. It wasn't so long ago that abortion advocates
invoked science to discuss the amorality of aborting what involved
little more than a "clump of cells."
But the debate over partial-birth abortion as well as
advancements in ultrasound technology and fetal development
research have produced "windows to the womb" that reveal unborn
children as living, breathing, feeling human beings.
Such developments forced abortion advocates to concede, as Kate
Michaelman and Francis Kippling, two leading voices in the
abortion-rights movement, did in a recent editorial, that
"[s]cience facilitated the swing of the pendulum" that allowed
pro-lifers to gain "the moral high ground." A recent Third Way poll
found two-thirds of respondents felt abortion is the "taking of a
human life" and "morally wrong."
As the child in the womb became more visible, the abortion lobby
began to talk less about science and more about choice (as in,
"It's my body, my choice"). But abortion opponents began to focus
their efforts on exactly that: passing laws that offer women more
information with which to make that choice. In 2007 alone,
approximately 400 state bills related to abortion were considered
(more than double the number in 2006). A significant number of
these laws focused on informed consent.
Abortion advocates' opposition to most of these measures made
pro-lifers appear more "pro-choice" than the so-called pro-choice
advocates. As Third Way admits: Conservatives have won "the battle
of reasonableness on abortion."
The changing abortion landscape has produced some striking
results. A recent report by the Alan Guttmacher Institute found a
25-percent decline in the number of abortions since 1990. According
to Gallup, the percentage of Americans who consider themselves
"pro-life" has increased 12 points in 12 years, while the share
calling itself "pro-choice" has gone down 8 points -- a 20-point
swing.
Numerous polls show a sea change in abortion views among young
people, who are now significantly more pro-life than any other age
cohort since Roe v. Wade. As Michaelman and Kippling
lamented, "Twenty years ago, being pro-life was declasse. Now it is
a respectable point of view."
Having relinquished the mantles of science and "choice" to
pro-lifers, it's easy to see why abortion advocates have resorted
to the "jail time" scare tactic. The only trouble is, as columnist
Bob Novak has noted, "No serious anti-abortion legislation ever has
included criminal penalties against women who have abortions, much
less their parents. Jailing women is a spurious issue raised by
abortion rights activists."
Proposed state abortion bans in South Dakota and elsewhere
explicitly state that aborting women would not be criminally
penalized.
PRO-LIFERS OPPOSE prosecuting women who abort because they regard
them as the "second victims" of abortion. In Great Britain
recently, artist Emma Beck committed suicide after aborting her
twins.
A suicide note read: "I should never have had an abortion. I see
I would have been a good mum....I told everyone I didn't want to do
it, even at the hospital. I was frightened, now it is too late. I
died when my babies died. I want to be with my babies: they need
me, no-one else does."
Beck's tragedy sheds light on the growing body of empirical
research suggesting a causal link between abortion and
psychological problems and confirms the reality that some women are
seriously hurt by abortion.
It also highlights what pro-life activists who counsel women
with crisis pregnancies learn well, and polling confirms: many
pregnant women feel intense pressure to abort. Beck's mother said,
"She was only going ahead with the abortion because her boyfriend
did not want the twins. I believe this is what led Emma to take her
own life -- she could not live with what she had done."
Jail time for women who abort? No chance. As Georgette Forney,
co-founder of the Silent No More Awareness Campaign, has stated,
"Women are already serving time for abortion right now in our own
prisons...of guilt, shame and remorse." It's the prison of abortion
from which pro-lifers seek to liberate would-be mothers, and their
children.
topics:
Health Care, Bill Clinton, Abortion, Law