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A PRO-LIFE PUBLIC
By Kate O'Beirne
(from Catalyst,
January/February 2006)
For over thirty years, the plain
words of Roe and Doe have been distorted by the media. On
the 30th anniversary of the decisions, media polls reflected the ongoing
disinformation campaign. CNN asked, "Do you favor the Supreme Court
ruling that women have the right to an abortion during the first three
months of their pregnancy?" The Washington Post's poll
misrepresented the 1973 decisions in the same way. Feminists translate
public support for Roe v. Wade, which is based on the public's
misunderstanding of the case, to support for their abortion-on-demand
agenda.
Faye Wattleton was president of Planned Parenthood for 14 years. A
beautiful black woman whose fawning media coverage included a fashion
spread in Vogue magazine, she put an extremely attractive face on
Margaret Sanger's legacy. It was Wattleton who decided that Planned
Parenthood should be in the lead in promoting abortion rights. When an
equally attractive and articulate pro-life black woman was willing to
take her on—Kay James of the National Right to Life Committee—Faye
Wattleton refused to make joint appearances with her. Wattleton's
reluctance to face a well-armed opponent is understandable. Kay James
would have had the better of the argument, because the facts are on her
side.
In 2003, even a poll commissioned by Wattleton's new outfit, the Center
for the Advancement of Women, found that 51 percent of women thought
abortion either should not be allowed or should only be available in
cases of rape or incest or to save the life of the mother. Another 17
percent thought abortion ought to be available but with stricter limits.
Only 30 percent agreed with Faye Wattleton and her abortion absolutist
allies, which was down 4 points from two years earlier. Of the top 12
priorities for women, keeping abortion legal was second to last.
A 1999 poll by another feminist outfit, the Center for Gender Equity,
found a similar 53 percent of American women favor outlawing abortion or
permitting it only for cases of rape, incest, or to save the life of the
mother. In fact, men typically favor abortion more than women do.
In a rare departure from its typically feminist-friendly coverage, in
2003 The New York Times reported on the growing number of young
people with pro-life views. Their own polling found that among people
from 18 to 29, only 39 percent thought abortion should be generally
available, down from 48 percent ten years earlier. One young pro-lifer
explained, "Myself and my classmates have never known a world in which
abortion wasn't legalized. We've realized that any one of us could have
been aborted."
A 2004 Wirthlin Worldwide poll found that 61 percent of those polled
said abortion is "almost always bad" for women. Polls consistently show
that about half of the public would ban abortion with exceptions for
rape, incest, or life of the mother, which would ban about 95 percent of
abortions. Another quarter of the public would ban all but
first-trimester abortions.
Because less than a quarter of the public agrees with Kate Michelman,
Gloria Steinem, Gloria Feldt, and their allies that abortion should be
available at any time for any reason, pro-abortion activists fight to
keep the issue in the courts, beyond the reach of the public's pro-life
sentiments. When she left her top post at NARAL, Kate Michelman headed
to the Democratic National Committee to run a program called Campaign to
Save the Court. But here too, pro-abortion feminists are at odds with
public opinion.
A 2005 poll by Ayres, McHenry and Associates found that 79 percent of
voters disagreed that a pro-life judicial nominee should be disqualified
from serving on the Supreme Court.
Elected officials haven't been kind to the abortion-rights agenda in
recent years. Kate Michelman notes, "Since 1995, states have enacted
nearly 400 restrictions on a woman's right to choose." Gloria Feldt
laments that the White House and both chambers of Congress are
controlled by "anti-choice politicians." So too are the majority of
governorships, and "the state legislatures are overwhelmingly
anti-choice." These abortion absolutists seem to believe that some
strange alchemy has handed such a political advantage to pro-life
politicians given their constant claims that their abortion-on-demand
agenda enjoys the broad support of voters.
When the question has been asked of voters, polls show the pro-life
advantage is unequivocal in the voting booth. A 1996 Wirthlin exit poll
found that among voters who listed abortion as one of their top two
issues 45 percent voted for Bob Dole and 35 percent for Bill Clinton.
A Los Angeles Times poll found even a bigger advantage for Dole
among women who voted on the abortion issue. In 1994, among single-issue
abortion voters, the pro-life advantage was 2 to 1.
Following the election in November 2004, Kristin Day, the executive
director of Democrats for Life of America, explained how her party had
been damaged by abortion-rights forces. She stated, "For the past 25
years, pro-life Democrats have been leaving the party over the issue of
abortion." Day pointed out that 25 years ago, when Democrats held a
292-seat majority in the House, 125 of those seats were held by pro-life
Democrats.
Feminists' unyielding support for this "women's issue" that doesn't have
the support of women puts them at odds with the large majority of
Americans who support recent protections for unborn children, like the
ban on partial-birth abortions.
Feminists vehemently defend the hideous procedure its opponents
descriptively call "partial-birth abortion." A federal judge considering
the constitutionality of a ban on the procedure described it as a
"gruesome, brutal, barbaric, and uncivilized medical procedure—the
fetus's arms and legs have been delivered outside the uterus while the
fetus is still alive. With the fetus's head lodged in the cervix, the
physician punctures the skull with scissors or crushes the head with
forceps."
President Clinton vetoed bans on partial-birth abortion that passed
Congress with bipartisan majorities. In 1996, I had the pleasure of
appearing as a guest on CNN's "Crossfire" with Eleanor Smeal, who was
there to defend the indefensible.
The co-hosts asked us about the political fallout from the president's
opposition to the ban. Smeal warned that the gender gap threatened
anyone who doesn't allow this gruesome procedure, and I pointed out that
64 percent of women supported the ban. Bob Novak noted that people don't
like abortion, and Eleanor Smeal responded, "For some women it saves
their lives."
What is telling about my experience in that debate with Eleanor Smeal is
that these abortion absolutists don't openly defend their radical
agenda. On the show, I freely admitted that I opposed both the
partial-birth abortion procedure and other methods of abortion.
Just as Smeal was only willing to defend a procedure as allegedly
life-saving for the mother, in an editorial urging the election of John
Kerry, Kate Michelman also deceptively avoided making the case for
abortion on demand. "If you are raped, if you are a victim of incest or
if carrying a pregnancy to term will endanger your health, it's a
decision for you—not the government—to make." In the interest of
accuracy, she might have added, "If you decide on the eve of your
full-term delivery that you want to choose an abortion instead, it's
your decision and not the government's."
In fact, these feminists defend every single one of the over 40 million
"choices" that have been made since Roe v. Wade, which itself was
the product of a series of lies. Feminists at the time argued that they
wanted to see "therapeutic" abortions legalized. The plaintiff in Roe
falsely claimed she had been raped. Justice Blackmun falsely claimed
that abortion had never been a common-law crime.
Feminists still lie about the incidence of back-alley abortions that
served as a justification for legalization. In a celebratory column
welcoming the euphemistically titled March for Women's Lives, in the
spring of 2004, Ellen Goodman wrote, "After all, those of us who
remember when birth control was illegal and when ten thousand American
women a year died from illegal abortions don't have to imagine a world
without choices." As she later had to allow, her memory was faulty. When
her column prompted charges that she was repeating "propaganda" or an
"urban legend," she did a little research and admitted in a later column
that the claim that there were thousands of deaths in the years prior to
abortion's legalization (which she hadn't bothered to check in the 30
years since Roe v. Wade) is false.
In 1972, the year before Roe v. Wade, according to the federal
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 39 women died of illegal or
self-induced abortions. Overall improvements in prenatal and obstetrical
care beginning in the 1940s saw the rate of pregnancy-related deaths
from causes other than abortion drop at roughly the same rate as
abortion-related deaths.
Elizabeth Fox-Genovese is the Eleonore Raoul Professor of the Humanities
and professor of history at Emory University. This founding director of
the university's Institute for Women's Studies believes that the
abortion rights agenda betrays women. She writes, "Doubtless we would
benefit from more complete studies, but we now have enough evidence to
say with confidence that for the vast majority of women, abortion
represents a worst-case scenario-and, too often, a confirmation of their
abandonment by the father of the child and by the larger community. More
often than not, girls and women have abortions because they lack the
support to have their child."
Kate Michelman, Faye Wattleton, Gloria Steinem, Gloria Feldt, Eleanor
Smeal, and their abortion allies have been promoting an antiwomen agenda
in the name of women's liberation by waging a campaign for "choice" on
behalf of women who often feel they have no choice at all.
Kate O'Beirne is the Washington editor of National Review and
is a member of the Catholic League's Board of Advisors. She served for
10 years as a panelist on CNN's "The Capital Gang."
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