Sunday, May 17, 2009

I am pro-choice. I have friends who are not. I certainly don't want women of any age to face that choice and have never heard of a woman who had an abortion who was not devastated and saddened by it. I am always wary of people who are ready - rain or shine - to lecture about religiously-based morality but do little or nothing to follow words with concrete action that could reduce the need or desire for abortion.

Wake up Notre Dame protestors. Where were you protesting the war when thousands of American military personnel were killed in Iraq? Where are you when the social service network fails and children go without food, a home or proper education? Your selective piety is insulting to those who have very thoughtful reasons for saying that religion should not dictate policy in a free society, especially one that has two important constitutional religious protections. One is the right to freely exercise your religious beliefs without government inteference. The other is that the government must not promote the establishment of religion by using religious teachings from any faith to set policy.

There was a time 40 years ago when the Catholic Church (and many other Jewish, Muslim and Christian faiths) helped in their own way to end the Vietnam War, worked on ending poverty and preached about civil rights for ethnic and racial minorities. I hear very little of that today. The only rallying point seems to be about the extent to which women should be entitled to reproductive freedom.

It should be no secret to you that abortion clinics have largely been replaced by public and private hospitals with seemingly innocuous medical records of 16 year olds that show a D & C due to unexplained menstrual bleeding, likely induced by an internist who was never trained to perform an abortion. They start the process and then refer the patient to the hospital. The young woman gets the abortion while you were busy making signs to scare the daylights out of young women as they entered clinics.

If you get what you want, more women (especially poor women) will die. I hope that you confess your complicity in taking that right away and seek absolution for that sin. Before you do that, I'd like to know that every single child who needs adoption is adopted. When I hear your protests, I always wonder how many of you have opened your homes to hard-to-place kids. If you are going to take the responsibility for overturning Rowe v. Wade, you should take responsibility for the aftermath. You should be on the front line promising your tax dollars to guarantee that every child will never have to live in a homeless shelter and will get all the education they desire. You should throw in a guaranteed job, at a living wage, for the mothers and fathers of these kids.

By the way, I'm Catholic.

1 comment:

dcastle said...

Terrific observations, and they take on even greater meaning in light of the murder of Dr. Tiller over the weekend (as he worked as an usher at his church). It never ceases to amaze me that the most vocal and extreme abortion proponents are white, middle class men.