By David N. Bass on 2.6.09 @ 6:07AM
Grandchildren on her knee, Vera, Chuck, but no Dave.
"Let's hear it for the children. We're here for the children,"
said Nancy Pelosi moments after becoming America's first female
Speaker of the House.
The date was January 4, 2007. Two months earlier, the Democrats
had swept the mid-term elections and ended the Republicans'
12-year control of Congress. It was a momentous occasion for
Democrats, sweetened by Pelosi's ascendancy to the top
congressional job. She had "broken the marble ceiling," to quote
her own words. She was the uber-feminist, free from the
constraints of motherhood and the female proclivity for nurturing
children.
Or was she? Much to the amusement of conservative pundits, Pelosi
addressed the House for the first time as Speaker surrounded by
children. As the votes were tabulated, she held an infant in her
arms. She looked the picture image of the affectionate
grandmother. She ended her speech with these (somewhat) immortal
words: "For these children, our children, and for all of
America's children, the House will come to order."
My, how time has tempered those words. Recently, Pelosi faced
widespread criticism for saying that
boosted federal funding for family planning services (i.e.,
contraception and abortion) would stimulate the economy. Her
subtext was that children imperil our prosperity. Rather than see
kids as an investment in the future, Pelosi suggested they are a
net economic drain.
Despite being buoyed by a new ally in the White House and
expanded majorities in both chambers of Congress, Democrats
backed down and nixed the condom bucks from the stimulus bill.
Lefty bloggers still in their religious trance after the
coronation of Obama a few days earlier suddenly turned sour. One
complained that Obama had traded women's rights to please
Republicans. The spell was broken.
Clear-thinking Americans see the inherent stupidity of bailing
out Planned Parenthood and its ilk during an economic implosion,
but that didn't stop liberals from griping. Nevertheless, Obama
and company would rather have a few dissatisfied activists than
the PR nightmare generated by a family planning funding orgy. To
their credit, Republicans spun the issue truthfully -- as a load
of pork in tumultuous economic times. And they won. When
Republicans show some backbone, often that's the result.
But there is another lesson to be learned from the controversy:
Pelosi's duplicity. Social conservatives routinely are
eviscerated for supposedly caring about human life only during
pregnancy but not after birth. If they oppose entitlements such
as SCHIP but support restrictions on abortion, they are said to
be anti-child. While the facts don't tally with that conclusion,
it's a regular argument of the left.
The argument is a two-way street, though. Pelosi is willing to
manufacture a photo op by holding an infant moments before
becoming the first female Speaker, yet she would have supported
the mother's choice to end that infant's life before birth.
Hardly pro-child.
Pelosi and her allies approach family planning in the same vein
as their ideological forbearers. In the early 20th century, the
progressive movement had some less-than-flattering ideas about
reproduction among the poor and migrant. Today, we're seeing a
renewed strain of eugenics-type thinking tied to economic
prosperity and the environment.
One recent example is in Great Britain. Jonathon Porritt,
chairman of the UK's Sustainable Development Commission,
said that couples who have more than two children contribute
to the destruction of the planet. He suggested that contraception
and abortion be at the core of anti-global warming policies.
I doubt Pelosi would go that far publicly, but Porritt's thinking
is not out of line with her approach. What liberals fail to see
is the economic benefit that children bring to a nation, beyond
their inherent worth as human beings. They are the future labors,
innovators, and leaders. No children, no future.
That scenario is already becoming reality as Baby Boomers begin
to retire and collect Social Security. Thanks to abortion and
declining birth rates, the old will soon drastically outnumber
the young. And I doubt the young will be happy about footing the
bill. The same generation that brought us legalized
abortion-on-demand might face euthanasia at the hands of their
children, and all for the same reason: convenience and the bottom
line.
I wonder what Madame Speaker will have to say about that.
topics:
Nancy Pelosi, Abortion