By Shawn Macomber on 8.17.09 @ 6:09AM
In the Obama era, socially transformative legislation is
immediately viable while babies are not.
You would think Barack Obama of all people would be up for
allowing things to gestate a good long while before ultimately
deciding whether they should be allowed to come into being.
This is a man, after all, who during his tenure in the Illinois
State Senate was a staunch enough defender of the Peter
Singer-wing of the pro-choice movement to prefer allowing
infants that somehow survived the tribulation of "induced labor
abortions" with beating hearts to
die in soiled utility closets (the hospital unsurprisingly
preferred the euphemism "comfort rooms") rather than risk voting
for a bill that might define what he nonsensically (or
dishonestly) deemed "pre-viable" fetuses -- what living child
isn't "pre-viable" if you lock it in a grimy closet long
enough? -- as "persons" entitled to Constitutional protections.
"The equal protection clause does not allow somebody to kill a
child," Obama reasoned during a 2001 speech in opposition to an
Illinois
"born alive" bill, "and if this is a child then this would be
an anti-abortion statute."
See how complicated things can get when one delves into the
minutiae of a bill?
So important was it to him to ensure every "i" was dotted and
every "t" crossed, Barack Obama took upon himself the heavy,
lonely task of dragging legislative due diligence into uncharted
waters. "Birth has been the law's bright line, at least since
Roe v. Wade," David Freddoso writes in the harrowing
chapter of
The Case Against Barack Obama on abortion.
"Apparently not for Obama." Later Obama insisted he
would have voted in favor of the almost identical 2001 Born Alive
Infants Protection Act that unanimously passed the U.S. Senate
(98-0). The august body he was destined to soon blip through, it
seems, finally got the language just right.
So…if what is good for the goose really is good for the gander it
would seem safe to presume what is okay for a sentient child just
forcibly evicted, ex utero, would be just fine for the
latest illiberal legislative doorstop Nancy Pelosi or Henry
Waxman are cooking up, right?
The very same Barack Obama who
once fretted over the lack of "any clear deliberation or
debate" on bills "a foot high" that "nobody has read" during the
New Dark Ages of George W. Bush has had an Oval Office epiphany
early on in his presidency: Whatever proposed law his young
administration may be midwifing at a particular moment becomes
inviolable and sacrosanct as soon as Pelosi faxes Obama an
ultrasound of the shadowy legislative zygote.
These days the citizen craving assurance their representatives
might have some idea what is actually in a bill everyone seems to
agree will fundamentally alter the nation is liable to be
shellacked as an "un-American" obstructionist with a nefarious
preference for the Napoleonic Waterloo over the ABBA remix.
(Presumably John McCain
supports both.) We're expected to accept it as natural that
less time is allotted for debating major legislation in Congress
than Obama set aside for mulling over the
merits of Bo the Portuguese water dog with Malia and Sasha.
And crikey! Don't you realize how annoying the President finds
your
jibber-jabber? "I don't want the folks who created the mess
to do a lot of talking," Obama groused recently, a pristine
example of the subjective judgment.
It's an intriguing contrast. When it comes to preventing
theocratically inclined religious fundamentalists from
punishment by means of baby, Obama will deliberate over every
nuance of a bill's wording. But a law that, say, punishes the
country on behalf of an urbane eco-fundamentalism with a
cap-and-trade regime
that will cost the nation millions of jobs, reduce GDP by
trillions of dollars, and increase electricity prices by perhaps
90 percent…well, the President now feels a moral
imperative to "urge" Congress to rubber stamp a mountain of
"ayes" upon what has been aptly
summarized as "1,200 pages of text -- containing, at last
count, 397 new government regulations and 1,090 new economic
mandates -- followed by over 300 pages of text with no index that
amended the previous legislation on paragraph by paragraph basis"
-- on the basis of a mere nine hours, never mind nine months, of
deliberation.
At least a humanoid bad seed, albeit with notable exceptions
(Lyle and
Erik Menendez, Damien Thorn),
is only able to "punish" you for the eighteen years before you
can legally evict him from your basement. A bad government
program can't even be compared to the living dead. It never
expires long enough to be resurrected as such.
Obama is even more radical when it comes to healthcare reform:
Like Kyle
Reese in The Terminator, the President appears
willing to be sent back in time to rescue humanity from the
clutches of the insurance agents he believes make Skynet look like
Amway -- tell me Obama's argument for healthcare can't be reduced
to "Come
with me if you want to live" -- and salvage Obamacare at its
very moment of conception, a date he has variously placed between
sixty ("Whenever I hear people say [health care reform is]
happening too soon, I think that's a little odd. We've been
talking about health reform since the days of Harry Truman") and
100 years ago ("It's not too soon to reform our health care
system, which we've been talking about since Teddy Roosevelt was
president").
The President makes it sound as if the Rough Riders have been
treading around a dusty Big Pharma corral with a satchel
containing Obamacare's exact progenitor since 1905, tragically
unaware that cynical Astroturf enthusiasts in Washington, D.C.
have been killing scheduled vote after scheduled vote on the same
compromise healthcare reform package since 1948 in an effort to
preemptively stymie the Chicagoan Hopemonger of longstanding
prophecy. This sort of misdirection is no doubt much easier to
prettify rhetorically than a full court press for passing an
elephantine bill barely fertilized never mind conceived, just as
the President almost certainly prefers saying
"the time for talk is through" over the less romantic
"You know, I have to say that I am not familiar with the
provision you are talking about."
Indeed, while the public is struggling to discern the contours of
a given Democratic statist brainchild -- will I be knitting pink
or blue booties in the reeducation camp? -- the White House has
signaled Obama may or may not be indifferent to the details. When
the Weekly Standard's John McCormack
queried Robert Gibbs as to whether the President might be
bothered to actually read the healthcare bill he is so passionate
about, the White House press secretary sniffed, "I don't know
what his vacation plans are currently." Hey, Mr. President, it
might not be as interesting as
your beloved Entourage, but for those of us who
would like to believe you'll pull out if the whole enterprise
ends up as actually ill-conceived as it seems (a tall order,
certainly!), the knowledge that you might have taken more than a
cursory peek at the text would offer a measure of comfort. For a
guy so incensed over Waterloo allusions Obama's attitude can at
times seem not all that far off from Napoleon's on the morning of
the battle: "I tell you Wellington is a bad general, the English
are bad troops, and this affair is nothing more than eating
breakfast."
If born infants living completely outside of a woman's womb could
be denied medical attention as well as even a glimpse of human
compassion for the duration of their sad, brief lives in order
for Barack Obama to have the time necessary to become comfortable
with legislative language, it hardly seems too much to ask that
we back away from the haphazard,
crisis-hyping-in-place-of-consideration assemblage process that
has so far characterized the debate over mega-legislation so
pregnant with peril and maybe do a little of that due diligence
our President was once so fond of.
topics:
Health Care, Abortion