Pro-Choice
Related: About this forumCongrats, Pro-Lifers, You Won! Now I Have Just a Few Questions for You
Congrats, Pro-Lifers, You Won! Now I Have Just a Few Questions for You
What would your abortion compromise look like? What will you do for pregnant women who cant afford a child? And more.
Im writing this column before the results of Tuesdays election are known, but Ill go out on a limb and predict that abortion opponents will do very well. Assuming thats true, well be hearing a lot from them. Were all familiar with their talking pointsday-before-birth abortions, confused women, coercion, pro-choicers as a death cult, whatever that means. But surely thats not all theyve got. So in the spirit of rational discourse, here are some questions for abortion opponentsreal questions, not rhetoricalthat Ive tried to frame in an open-ended way. Id love to hear some thoughtful answers.
1. Illegal abortion. You often talk as if banning abortion would drastically reduce or even end it. You dont seem very concerned about death and injury to women who have illegal procedures. (In fact, you tend to discount pro-choice claims about the danger of illegal abortion, while portraying legal abortion as vastly unsafe.) But what about the simple fact that illegal abortion is widespread in countries where abortion is virtually banned? In Brazil, for example, there are between 1 and 4 million abortions a yearat least as many as in the United States in a much smaller populationand more than 200,000 women land in the hospital with injuries or infections. Do you believe illegal abortion can be prevented, and if so, how? If not, what makes criminalization worth so much harm to women?
2. Compromise. You present pro-choicers as intransigent and yourselves as wanting modest restrictions: a twenty-week ban, stricter regulation of clinics, waiting periods. We both know that this is a tactic, and your goal is the end of legal abortionyet most Americans dont share this goal. Do you see any chance of a stable compromise? What would it look like?
3. Birth control. It is obvious to most Americans that birth control is the way to lower the number of abortions. Yet the fight over the Affordable Care Acts no-co-pay birth-control provision is only the most recent demonstration that many abortion opponents want to restrict contraception too. True, a few anti-choice politicians propose putting the pill over the counter, but no major antiabortion organization supports contraception, and many opponents are redefining modern methodsthe pill, the IUD and emergency contraceptionas abortifacients. Is contraception a lesser evil than abortion or just more of the same evil? If the former, would you accept universal provision of birth control to any and all, including teens? Follow-up: Would you support such a provision if it was limited to condoms, diaphragms and other methods that no one, not even you, can call dangerous or abortion-causing?
4. Poverty. Six in ten women who have abortions are already mothers. More than 40 percent are poor, and many more are on the edge. Maybe some of them would have the baby if they had more support: healthcare, daycare, housing, jobsand protection from job discrimination for pregnant women and mothers. Charity cant begin to supply all these needs, and the antiabortion movement is firmly allied with the Republican Party, which cuts social programs wherever it can. What do you offer to women who want to end a pregnancy because they cant support another child?
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http://www.thenation.com/article/congrats-pro-lifers-you-won-now-i-have-just-few-questions-you
Kath1
(4,309 posts)I think this sums it up.....