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Guest
I recently read an article in Commonweal Magazine that confirmed what I had thought about the history of the pro-life movement. That is, before attempts to legalize abortion, there was no pro-life movement:
My issue with the modern pro-life movement is that I still see very little done to reduce the types of abortions that occurred prior to Roe v. Wade. Crisis pregnancy centers do some of this, but there’s no outreach to prevent the kinds of situations that were so prevalent before Roe v. Wade. If it’s overturned, does that mean that abortion returns to the “conspiracy of silence,” or this time, will it really be different? What do you believe?
Furthermore, growing up Catholic I did not hear priests rail against abortion. To the contrary… the subject was seldom mentioned. On the rare occasions when it was mentioned, abortion was certainly assumed to be a grave wrong. So were many other things mentioned far more often…
So it was largely to philosophical reasoning that I turned in the years before and after Roe, when the moral and legal status of abortion began to be extensively debated in the United States—and when people my age, including friends and family members, began to confront the question in personal terms…
One paper arguing for liberalizing abortion published in 1966 said this:In the years preceding Roe, campaigns to loosen legal restrictions on abortion at the state level had simmered and occasionally flared. But that decision, as we all know, did not only modify but swept aside laws in fifty states. It sent shock waves through a large portion of the population, Catholics in particular, who held abortion to be an unjustified taking of a human life. A genuine grassroots antiabortion movement arose, which church leaders, already active in those state-level battles, quickly reinforced but never controlled. Stunned by Justice Blackmun’s dismissal of any need to “resolve the difficult question of when life begins,” the antiabortion movement focused on that as the crux of the matter. When a few prominent ethicists followed their defenses of abortion to the conclusion that indeed infanticide, too, might well fall into the realm of the permissible, the antiabortion movement found further grounds for insisting on the “moment of conception” as the single factual firewall against a thoroughgoing collapse of the right to life.
Millions of American have been personally involved in abortions… in most cases illegal ones. Despite this widespread personal experience, there has been too long a conspiracy of silence on the subject of abortion.
A representative sample of 1,484 adult Americans were asked their views…
…
…support the view that women should be able to obtain a legal abortion under the following circumstances:
- 71 percent if the woman’s own health is seriously endangered by the pregnancy.
- 56 percent if she became pregnant as a result of rape.
- 55 percent if there is a strong chance of serious defect in the baby.
…there was very little religious group differences. Although official Catholic doctrine makes no allowance for abortions in the event of high probability of deformity in the fetus or for pregnancies following sexual assault, close to a majority of Catholic men and women were in favor of legal abortion to cover such situations…
…
The study also showed that attitudes toward abortion cut across both political orientation and party lines. People with a liberal political orientation who are independent of any political affiliation, show the most liberal attitudes toward abortion (mean of 51 percent [in six circumstances]). But at the next level of liberal views on abortion are Republicans of both liberal (47 percent) and conservative (46 percent) persuasion, and liberal Democrats (42 percent). Those least sympathetic to abortion law reform are conservative Democrats (36 percent) and those who are politically uncommitted or apolitical.
As the second paper argues, it seems like there was a “conspiracy of silence.” This “conspiracy” seems to have no problem that (according to the same paper from 1966) abortion was taking place a lot.What the American public clearly does not support, however, are abortions in situations which all studies indicate to be the predominant conditions for women who seek abortions…
- 21 percent if the family has a very low income and cannot afford any more children.
- 18 percent if she is not married and does not want to marry the man.
- 15 percent if she is married and wants no more children.
On a per-capita basis, the range given here overlaps with current ranges estimated by CDC. To me, this information collectively suggests that as long as abortion took place “underground,” most people were OK with it. There was no grass root movement, just church leaders arguing with politicians.Where illegal abortion is concerned, the estimated range of operations is from 250,000 to somewhat over 1,000,000 per year in the United States. We are on somewhat firmer ground in gauging the incidence of legal abortions conducted in hospital settings, particularly when they are based on statistics from municipalities where such abortions are required to be justified and recorded. The most recent estimate for the United States is somewhere between 8,000 and 10,000… to many people opposed to law reform this is not a “significant” problem because there is no agreement on exactly how extensive the incidence of illegal abortion is. Further, many persons refuse to believe even the lower limit of the estimated range, on the grounds that they personally know of no woman who has had an illegal abortion."
My issue with the modern pro-life movement is that I still see very little done to reduce the types of abortions that occurred prior to Roe v. Wade. Crisis pregnancy centers do some of this, but there’s no outreach to prevent the kinds of situations that were so prevalent before Roe v. Wade. If it’s overturned, does that mean that abortion returns to the “conspiracy of silence,” or this time, will it really be different? What do you believe?