The topic is abortion in
our contemporary society—and what the future may hold. Truly, this meditation is worthy of your time
and attention. Please share it with others.
Pres. Candace
by FREDERICA MATHEWES-GREEN
January 22, 2016
At the time of the Roe v. Wade decision, I was a college student — an anti-war, mother-earth, feminist, hippie college student. That particular January I was taking a semester off, living in the D.C. area and volunteering at the feminist “underground newspaper” Off Our Backs. As you’d guess, I was strongly in favor of legalizing abortion. The bumper sticker on my car read, “Don’t labor under a misconception; legalize abortion.”
The first issue of Off Our Backs after the Roe decision included one of my movie reviews, and also an essay by another member of the collective criticizing the decision. It didn’t go far enough, she said, because it allowed states to restrict abortion in the third trimester. The Supreme Court should not meddle in what should be decided between the woman and her doctor. She should be able to choose abortion through all nine months of pregnancy.
At the time of the Roe v. Wade decision, I was a college student — an anti-war, mother-earth, feminist, hippie college student. That particular January I was taking a semester off, living in the D.C. area and volunteering at the feminist “underground newspaper” Off Our Backs. As you’d guess, I was strongly in favor of legalizing abortion. The bumper sticker on my car read, “Don’t labor under a misconception; legalize abortion.”
The first issue of Off Our Backs after the Roe decision included one of my movie reviews, and also an essay by another member of the collective criticizing the decision. It didn’t go far enough, she said, because it allowed states to restrict abortion in the third trimester. The Supreme Court should not meddle in what should be decided between the woman and her doctor. She should be able to choose abortion through all nine months of pregnancy.
But, at the time, we didn’t have much
understanding of what abortion was. We knew nothing of fetal development. We
consistently termed the fetus “a blob of tissue,” and that’s just how we
pictured it — an undifferentiated mucous-like blob, not recognizable as human
or even as alive. It would be another 15 years of so before pregnant couples
could show off sonograms of their unborn babies, shocking us with the obvious
humanity of the unborn.
We also thought, back then, that few abortions
would ever be done. It’s a grim experience, going through an abortion, and we
assumed a woman would choose one only as a last resort. We were fighting for
that “last resort.” We had no idea how common the procedure would become;
today, one in every five pregnancies ends in abortion.
Nor could we have imagined how high abortion
numbers would climb. In the 43 years since Roe v. Wade, there have been 59
million abortions. It’s hard even to grasp a number that big. Twenty years ago,
someone told me that, if the names of all those lost babies were inscribed on a
wall, like the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, the wall would have to stretch for 50
miles. It’s 20 years later now, and that wall would have to stretch twice as
far. But no names could be written on it; those babies had no names.
We expected that abortion
would be rare. What we didn’t realize was that, once abortion becomes
available, it becomes the most attractive option for everyone around the
pregnant woman. If she has an abortion, it’s like the pregnancy never existed.
No one is inconvenienced. It doesn’t cause trouble for the father of the baby,
or her boss, or the person in charge of her college scholarship. It won’t
embarrass her mom and dad.
Abortion is like a funnel; it promises to
solve all the problems at once. So there is significant pressure on a woman to
choose abortion, rather than adoption or parenting.
A woman who had had an abortion told me,
“Everyone around me was saying they would ‘be there for me’ if I had the
abortion, but no one said they’d ‘be there for me’ if I had the baby.” For
everyone around the pregnant woman, abortion looks like the sensible choice. A
woman who determines instead to continue an unplanned pregnancy looks like
she’s being foolishly stubborn. It’s like she’s taken up some unreasonable
hobby. People think, If she would only go off and do this one thing, everything
would be fine.
But that’s an illusion. Abortion can’t really
“turn back the clock.” It can’t push the rewind button on life and make it so
she was never pregnant. It can make it easy for everyone around the woman to
forget the pregnancy, but the woman herself may struggle. When she first sees
the positive pregnancy test she may feel, in a panicky way, that she has to get
rid of it as fast as possible. But life stretches on after abortion, for months
and years — for many long nights — and all her life long she may ponder the
irreversible choice she made.
This issue gets presented as if it’s a tug of war between the woman and the baby. We see them as mortal enemies, locked in a fight to the death. But that’s a strange idea, isn’t it? It must be the first time in history when mothers and their own children have been assumed to be at war. We’re supposed to picture the child attacking her, trying to destroy her hopes and plans, and picture the woman grateful for the abortion, since it rescued her from the clutches of her child.
This issue gets presented as if it’s a tug of war between the woman and the baby. We see them as mortal enemies, locked in a fight to the death. But that’s a strange idea, isn’t it? It must be the first time in history when mothers and their own children have been assumed to be at war. We’re supposed to picture the child attacking her, trying to destroy her hopes and plans, and picture the woman grateful for the abortion, since it rescued her from the clutches of her child.
If you were in charge of a nature preserve and
you noticed that the pregnant female mammals were trying to miscarry their
pregnancies, eating poisonous plants or injuring themselves, what would you do?
Would you think of it as a battle between the pregnant female and her unborn
and find ways to help those pregnant animals miscarry? No, of course not. You
would immediately think, “Something must be really wrong in this environment.”
Something is creating intolerable stress, so much so that animals would rather
destroy their own offspring than bring them into the world. You would strive to
identify and correct whatever factors were causing this stress in the animals.
The same thing goes for the
human animal. Abortion gets presented to us as if it’s something women want;
both pro-choice and pro-life rhetoric can reinforce that idea. But women do
this only if all their other options look worse. It’s supposed to be “her
choice,” yet so many women say, “I really didn’t have a choice.”
I changed my opinion on abortion after I read
an article in Esquire magazine, way back in 1976. I was home from grad school,
flipping through my dad’s copy, and came across an article titled “What I Saw
at the Abortion.” The author, Richard Selzer, was a surgeon, and he was in
favor of abortion, but he’d never seen one. So he asked a colleague whether,
next time, he could go along.
Selzer described seeing the patient, 19 weeks
pregnant, lying on her back on the table. (That is unusually late; most abortions
are done by the tenth or twelfth week.) The doctor performing the procedure
inserted a syringe into the woman’s abdomen and injected her womb with a
prostaglandin solution, which would bring on contractions and cause a
miscarriage. (This method isn’t used anymore, because too often the baby
survived the procedure — chemically burned and disfigured, but clinging to
life. Newer methods, including those called “partial birth abortion” and
“dismemberment abortion,” more reliably ensure death.)
After injecting the hormone into the patient’s
womb, the doctor left the syringe standing upright on her belly. Then, Selzer
wrote, “I see something other than what I expected
here. . . . It is the hub of the needle that is in the
woman’s belly that has jerked. First to one side. Then to the other side. Once
more it wobbles, is tugged, like a fishing line nibbled by a sunfish.”
He realized he was seeing the fetus’s
desperate fight for life. And as he watched, he saw the movement of the syringe
slow down and then stop. The child was dead. Whatever else an unborn child does
not have, he has one thing: a will to live. He will fight to defend his life.
The last words in Selzer’s
essay are, “Whatever else is said in abortion’s defense, the vision of that
other defense [i.e., of the child defending its life] will not vanish from my
eyes. And it has happened that you cannot reason with me now. For what can
language do against the truth of what I saw?”
The truth of what he saw
disturbed me deeply. There I was, anti-war, anti–capital punishment, even
vegetarian, and a firm believer that social justice cannot be won at the cost
of violence. Well, this sure looked like violence. How had I agreed to make
this hideous act the centerpiece of my feminism? How could I think it was wrong
to execute homicidal criminals, wrong to shoot enemies in wartime, but all
right to kill our own sons and daughters?
For that was another disturbing thought: Abortion means killing not strangers but our own children, our own flesh and blood. No matter who the father, every child aborted is that woman’s own son or daughter, just as much as any child she will ever bear.
For that was another disturbing thought: Abortion means killing not strangers but our own children, our own flesh and blood. No matter who the father, every child aborted is that woman’s own son or daughter, just as much as any child she will ever bear.
We had somehow bought the
idea that abortion was necessary if women were going to rise in their
professions and compete in the marketplace with men. But how had we come to
agree that we will sacrifice our children, as the price of getting ahead? When
does a man ever have to choose between his career and the life of his child?
Once I recognized the inherent violence of
abortion, none of the feminist arguments made sense. Like the claim that a
fetus is not really a person because it is so small. Well, I’m only 5 foot 1.
Women, in general, are smaller than men. Do we really want to advance a
principle that big people have more value than small people? That if you catch
them before they’ve reached a certain size, it’s all right to kill them?
What about the child who is “unwanted”? It was
a basic premise of early feminism that women should not base their sense of
worth on whether or not a man “wants” them. We are valuable simply because we
are members of the human race, regardless of any other person’s approval. Do we
really want to say that “unwanted” people might as well be dead? What about a
woman who is “wanted” when she’s young and sexy but less so as she gets older?
At what point is it all right to terminate her?
The usual justification for
abortion is that the unborn is not a “person.” It’s said that “Nobody knows
when life begins.” But that’s not true; everybody knows when life — a new
individual human life — gets started. It’s when the sperm dissolves in the egg.
That new single cell has a brand-new DNA, never before seen in the world. If
you examined through a microscope three cells lined up — the newly fertilized
ovum, a cell from the father, and a cell from the mother — you would say that,
judging from the DNA, the cells came from three different people.
When people say the unborn
is “not a person” or “not a life” they mean that it has not yet grown or gained
abilities that arrive later in life. But there’s no agreement about which
abilities should be determinative. Pro-choice people don’t even agree with each
other. Obviously, law cannot be based on such subjective criteria. If it’s a
case where the question is “Can I kill this?” the answer must be based on
objective medical and scientific data. And the fact is, an unborn child, from
the very first moment, is a new human individual. It has the three essential
characteristics that make it “a human life”: It’s alive and growing, it is
composed entirely of human cells, and it has unique DNA. It’s a person, just
like the rest of us.
Abortion indisputably ends a human life. But
this loss is usually set against the woman’s need to have an abortion in order
to freely direct her own life. It is a particular cruelty to present abortion
as something women want, something they demand, they find liberating. Because
nobody wants this. The procedure itself is painful, humiliating, expensive — no
woman “wants” to go through it. But once it’s available, it appears to be the
logical, reasonable choice. All the complexities can be shoved down that
funnel. Yes, abortion solves all the problems; but it solves them inside the
woman’s body. And she is expected to keep that pain inside for a lifetime, and
be grateful for the gift of abortion.
Many years ago I wrote something in an essay
about abortion, and I was surprised that the line got picked up and frequently
quoted. I’ve seen it in both pro-life and pro-choice contexts, so it appears to
be something both sides agree on.
I wrote, “No one wants an abortion as she
wants an ice cream cone or a Porsche. She wants an abortion as an animal,
caught in a trap, wants to gnaw off its own leg.”
Strange, isn’t it, that both pro-choice and
pro-life people agree that is true? Abortion is a horrible and harrowing
experience. That women choose it so frequently shows how much worse continuing
a pregnancy can be. Essentially, we’ve agreed to surgically alter women so that
they can get along in a man’s world. And then expect them to be grateful for
it.
Nobody wants to have an abortion. And if
nobody wants to have an abortion, why are women doing it, 2800 times a day? If
women doing something 2,800 times daily that they don’t want to do, this is not
liberation we’ve won. We are colluding in a strange new form of oppression.
***
And so we come around to one more March for
Life, like the one last year, like the one next year. Protesters understandably
focus on the unborn child, because the danger it faces is the most galvanizing
aspect of this struggle. If there are different degrees of injustice, surely
violence is the worst manifestation, and killing worst of all. If there are
different categories of innocent victim, surely the small and helpless have a
higher claim to protection, and tiny babies the highest of all. The minimum
purpose of government is to shield the weak from abuse by the strong, and there
is no one weaker or more voiceless than unborn children. And so we keep saying
that they should be protected, for all the same reasons that newborn babies are
protected. Pro-lifers have been doing this for 43 years now, and will continue
holding a candle in the darkness for as many more years as it takes.
I understand all the reasons why the
movement’s prime attention is focused on the unborn. But we can also say that
abortion is no bargain for women, either. It’s destructive and tragic. We
shouldn’t listen unthinkingly to the other side of the time-worn script, the
one that tells us that women want abortions, that abortion liberates them. Many
a post-abortion woman could tell you a different story.
The pro-life cause is
perennially unpopular, and pro-lifers get used to being misrepresented and
wrongly accused. There are only a limited number of people who are going to be
brave enough to stand up on the side of an unpopular cause. But sometimes a
cause is so urgent, is so dramatically clear, that it’s worth it. What cause
could be more outrageous than violence — fatal violence — against the most
helpless members of our human community? If that doesn’t move us, how hard are
our hearts? If that doesn’t move us, what will ever move us?
In time, it’s going to be impossible to deny
that abortion is violence against children. Future generations, as they look
back, are not necessarily going to go easy on ours. Our bland acceptance of
abortion is not going to look like an understandable goof. In fact, the kind of
hatred that people now level at Nazis and slave-owners may well fall upon our
era. Future generations can accurately say, “It’s not like they didn’t know.”
They can say, “After all, they had sonograms.” They may consider this bloodshed
to be a form of genocide. They might judge our generation to be monsters.
One day, the tide is going to turn. With that
Supreme Court decision 43 years ago, one of the sides in the abortion debate
won the day. But sooner or later, that day will end. No generation can rule
from the grave. The time is coming when a younger generation will sit in
judgment of ours. And they are not obligated to be kind.
—
Frederica Mathewes-Green is the author of Real Choices: Listening to Women;
Looking for Alternatives to Abortion.
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