But it *is the legal issue because that is what Pro-Choice is all about:The legal *right to choose. What do you see as the causes of abortion?
There is legality involved.
But my argument has always been about changing the culture first and foremost.
It is like having laws against rape. I would submit that most men do not rape women because of the laws exist and would punish them for it. I would submit that most men do not rape because they find the idea of raping a woman to be so morally repugnant that they could not contemplate actually carrying a rape against a woman out. Many may actually be turned on by the thought, may even have fantasies about it(as would many women) but they fully understand that to do so would be evil. The existence of laws merely inform them as much.
The laws themselves reflect a culture that finds rape to be morally repugnant.
Now, if all of a sudden the laws were to change, that would be a clear signal to all men that society itself does not find rape repugnant enough to outlaw. Many men would still be turned off by the whole sordid thing, and religion may well still teach that sexual union is a sacrament, but society itself would no longer have laws in place to teach the society that rape is repugnant.
The existence of law in effect inform the culture or what is moral and what is not.
Robert P George makes a very concise argument of the relationship of a law and the teaching of morality.
Now, if the law on rape were to suddenly change one day, and no longer be censured as repugnant, many people may disagree. In a democracy, they would be free to fight to rescind this state of affairs and have the law once again state that rape is illegal, immoral, repgnant, etc. etc.
But to the extent that they do not, even if they personally may find rape repugnant, to the extent that they support politicians who rabidly believe that rape ought to be a man’s choice, then that is teaching the culture something too. It is showing to the world that as much as people might say that they find rape repugnant, it is not a priority where they would actually wish men to be forced into not raping, through law.
The change in law would reflect a cultural change, and to the extent that people think that the law would be forcing men not to rape, then that means that the cultural change has even affected people who are personally against rape.
That is reflected in their language, “ought we to force men to not rape?, ought we force women to not abort?”
Now it is easy enough to see why some men might like to rape. Sex is pleasurable, and being in a position of power and dominance is satisfying to the ego. Likewise it is easy enough to see why women want to abort. Babies are very inconvenient to give birth to, and even more inconvenient to raise for decades on end.
It has always been thus,and always will be. No amount of government largess is ever going to change that.