By David N. Bass on 9.3.09 @ 6:07AM
Despite a sympathetic administration, abortion advocates are
making no headway. How can that be?
Abortion advocates have got to be scratching their heads.
For the first time in decades, they have staunch allies in the
top echelons of government and the left-wing majorities needed to
advance their agenda. No legislative roadblocks impede their way
-- not a president's veto pen, not hostile committee chairs, not
unfriendly leadership in the House and Senate.
They also have a president who promised
to make the Freedom of Choice Act, a bill that would overturn all
state-level abortion restrictions, his first priority as the
nation's chief executive. More importantly, with Obama the
pro-abortion movement has the luxury of claiming the implicit
support of the American people, 70 million of whom voted for him
last year.
Yet during the first eight months of his administration, abortion
has been far down the president's list of priorities. Even worse
for abortion advocates, the issue is trending away from them even
as they've gained more power.
A Washington Post
story, titled "Abortion Stigma Affects Doctors' Training And
Choices," that ran Tuesday underscores the growing tension. The
Post story, which devotes ample ink to the abortion
lobby and a few paragraphs to the other side, does its best to
lament the latest setback for pro-abortion forces -- a dearth of
up-and-coming doctors willing to conduct the procedure.
The kicker, of course, plays off the murder of George Tiller, one
of only a few abortionists willing to end unborn human life in
the third trimester. The Left hoped that Tiller's death three
months ago would galvanize Americans against pro-lifers; instead,
most recognized that a movement built on the sanctity of human
life has no affinity for a cold-blooded killer.
More than focus on Tiller's murder, however, the Post
story tells the plight of medical school students struggling with
whether to enter the tainted abortion industry, and the angst of
aging abortionists who don't see many up-and-coming med students
to take their place.
"We need young doctors and we need them badly," the president of
one pro-abortion group told the Post. "The situation is
pretty grave, pretty dire."
Although doubtless unintentional, one byproduct of the
Post's thinly veiled call for more abortionists is the
reality that pro-lifers have made gains in the court of public
opinion. Legislative victories, particularly at the federal
level, have been slow in coming. But there are indications of a
cultural shift away from the abortion ethic and toward greater
respect for unborn life.
Compared with the Baby Boom generation, today's young people
view
abortion radicalism as far less chic. In fact, many are more
inclined to view the pro-life cause as trendy. One reason might
be that abortion is now the status quo, while the pro-life
movement is counter-cultural. "Fight the Power" all over again.
Beyond the generational gap, abortion rates themselves have
steadily declined since the early 1980s, and the downward spiral
shows no signs of letting up. In January 2008, Planned
Parenthood's research arm, the Alan Guttmacher Institute,
reported that the abortion rate had reached its lowest level
since 1974, a year after the Supreme Court legalized abortion on
demand.
Although 53 percent of voters marked their ballots for Barack
Obama last year, public support for abortion continues to erode.
A Gallup poll in May
reported that a majority of Americans, for the first time
since Gallup began asking the question in 1995, identify as
"pro-life" rather than "pro-choice."
Such evidence points to the conclusion that even though
pro-lifers have borne election defeats during the last two
cycles, culturally and socially the trend is in their favor. For
years, many pro-lifers have devoted their energy to non-political
ends, such as non-profit pregnancy counseling centers that
educate women about abortion alternatives. Those efforts are now
bearing fruit.
On the other side, try as they might, the abortion industry has
been unable to brand abortion procedures as the equivalent of
getting your appendix or tonsils removed. In reality, Planned
Parenthood's campaign to "normalize" abortion (through products
such as "I Had an Abortion" t-shirts and "Choice on Earth"
Christmas cards) has backfired. Most Americans instinctively
recognize that abortion is a moral evil, even if they mistakenly
view it as a necessary moral evil.
What must be frustrating for the abortion lobby is that 2009
should be the year of unequaled triumphs, but it's turning into
the year of unequaled setbacks. The president, so far, hasn't
fulfilled his many campaign pledges on the issue; public
sentiment is shifting; and support for abortion among the young
isn't the default position it used to be.
In the age of hope and change, it wasn't supposed to happen this
way.
topics:
Abortion, Pro-Life Doctors