Some years ago, I testified at the Georgia state capitol in
Atlanta on the subject of abortion regulations and their
constitutionality. I will never forget the testimony that
day of women who have had abortions and have come to greatly
regret that choice. In particular, there was a young, black
woman who tearfully recounted her dreams of a son who asked her
why she ended his life. Moving past the intense power of
her story, she went on to tell what she knew about the disparate
racial impact of abortion on the African-American
community. Afterwards, an African-American state senator
from the Democrat party questioned her about whether her claims
were really true.
Do African-Americans have more abortions? The answer is
yes. A number of pro-life academics have created the
website Moral
Accountability to encourage the group of evangelical and
Catholic intellectuals who supported Obama on the basis that he
would reduce the incidence of abortion to keep him morally
accountable. Writing for that website,
Union University's Micah Watson (a former student of Princeton's
Robert George) offers detailed statistics on
African-Americans and abortion.
Read it all, but here's a sample:
Consider the following: African-Americans make up 26% of the
population of Alabama; they account for 54.7% of the abortions;
29.6% of Georgia’s roughly 8 million citizens are
African-Americans yet African-Americans make up 57.8% of the
abortions; in North Carolina the population percentage is 21.3%
while the proportion of black abortions is 44.2%; in my adopted
home state of Tennessee, African-Americans are 16.6% of the
population yet make up 41.6% of the abortions; most egregious,
however, is Mississippi where African-Americans make up 37.1%
of the population and a mind-boggling 77.2% of the abortions.
In fact, in every state where African-Americans make up more
than 10% of the population, the black abortion rate far exceeds
the population percentage, often by a factor of two or three.
topics:
Abortion