supporter
Posted by Stone (+1596) 11 years ago
"Editor's note: David Frum, a CNN contributor, is a contributing editor at Newsweek and The Daily Beast. He is the author of seven books, including a new novel, "Patriots," and was a special assistant to President George W. Bush from 2001 to 2002.

(CNN) -- When Richard Mourdock delivered his notorious answer about rape and abortion, I was sorry that the debate moderator failed to follow up with the next question:

"OK, Mr. Mourdock, you say your principles require a raped woman to carry the rapist's child to term. That's a heavy burden to impose on someone. What would you do for her in return? Would you pay her medical expenses? Compensate her for time lost to work? Would you pay for the child's upbringing? College education?

"If a woman has her credit card stolen, her maximum liability under federal law is $50. Yet on your theory, if she is raped, she must endure not only the trauma of assault, but also accept economic costs of potentially many thousands of dollars. Must that burden also fall on her alone? When we used to draft men into the Army, we gave them veterans' benefits afterward. If the state now intends to conscript women into involuntary childbearing, surely those women deserve at least an equally generous deal?"

That question sounds argumentative, and I suppose it is.

But there's a serious point here, and it extends well beyond the anguishing question of sexual assault.

If you're serious about reducing abortion, the most important issue is not which abortions to ban. The most important issue is how will you support women to have the babies they want.


As a general rule, societies that do the most to support mothers and child-bearing have the fewest abortions. Societies that do the least to support mothers and child-bearing have more abortions.
Germany, for example, operates perhaps the world's plushest welfare state. Working women receive 14 weeks of maternity leave, during which time they receive pay from the state. The state pays a child allowance to the parents of every German child for potentially as many as 25 years, depending on how long as the child remains in school. Women who leave the work force after giving birth receive a replacement wage from the state for up to 14 months.

Maybe not coincidentally, Germany has one of the lowest abortion rates, about one-third that of the United States. Yet German abortion laws are not especially restrictive. Abortion is legal during the first trimester of pregnancy and available if medically or psychologically necessary in the later trimesters.
Even here in the United States, where parental benefits are much less generous, abortion responds to economic conditions. In the prosperous 1990s, abortion rates declined rapidly. In the less prosperous '00s, abortion rates declined more slowly. When the economy plunged into crisis in 2008, abortion rates abruptly rose again.

These trends should not surprise anyone. Women choose abortion for one overwhelming reason: economic insecurity. The large majority of women who chose abortion in 2008, 57%, reported a disruptive event in their lives in the previous 12 months: most often, the loss of a job or home.

Of the women who choose abortion, 58% are in their 20s. Some 61% of them already have a child. Almost 70% of them are poor or near poor.
Three-quarters say they cannot afford another child.
Pro-life and pro-choice debaters delight in presenting each other with exquisitely extreme moral dilemmas: "Would you ban abortion even in case of rape?" "Would you permit abortion even when done only to select the sex of the child?"

These dorm-room hypotheticals do not have very much to do with the realities of abortion in the U.S. and elsewhere.

Here's an interesting example of those realities: The Netherlands has one of the the most liberal abortion laws in the world. Yet for a long time, the Netherlands also reported one of the world's lowest abortion rates. That low incidence abruptly began to rise in the mid-1990s. Between 1996 and 2003, the abortion rate in the Netherlands jumped by 31% over seven years.

What changed? The Guttmacher Institute, the leading source of data on reproductive health worldwide, cites "a growing demand for terminations from women in ethnic minority groups residing in the country." Well over half of all abortion sperformed on teenagers in the Netherlands are performed on girls of non-Dutch origins.
These girls and women weren't being raped. They weren't selecting for the sex of their child. They chose abortion because they had become sexually active within male-dominated immigrant subcultures in which access to birth control was restricted, in which female sexuality was tightly policed, in which girls who become pregnant outside marriage are disgraced and in which the costs and obligations of childbearing loaded almost entirely on women alone.

Abortion is a product of poverty and maternal distress.
A woman who enjoys the most emotional and financial security and who has chosen the timing of her pregnancy will not choose abortion, even when abortion laws are liberal. A woman who is dominated, who is poor and who fears bearing the child is likely to find an abortion, even where abortion is restricted, as it was across the United States before 1965.

So maybe at the next candidates' debate, a journalist will deflect the discussion away from "what if" and instead ask this:
"Rather than tell us what you'd like to ban, tell us please what you think government should do to support more happy and healthy childbearing, to reduce unwanted pregnancies and to alleviate the economic anxieties of mothers-to-be?"

Those are the questions that make the difference. It's amazing how little we talk about them."
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supporter
Posted by Denise Selk (+1670) 11 years ago
Frank Schaeffer, son of one of the Christian Right's most influential families and himself a pioneer in the Evangelical antiabortion Religious Right movement, had this to say in his book Sex, Mom & God...

The politics of the antiabortion movement became about everything but saving babies. Just as Glenn Beck's mentor, Robert George, was misusing abortion as a handy stick with which to beat up on Obama during the 2008 election, so, too, other Far Right Republicans used abortion when they were in power to do everything but help women. If the Republicans had wanted to prevent abortions, they would have funded a thorough and mandatory sex education initiative from the earliest grades in all schools and combined it with the distribution of free contraceptives in all high schools, public and private (religious schools included). They would have legislated generous family leave for both mothers and fathers. They would have provided federally funded day care as a national priority. They would have expanded adoption services, including encouraging gay parents to adopt children, and they would have encouraged gay couples to marry and adopt. They would have provided a generous tax incentive to have children and direct financial assistance and educational opportunities for all families, including single parents. They would have raised taxes to pay for these programs. They would have never equated stem cell research with abortion, much less with murder, thereby making the antiabortion position patently ridiculous. Above all, they would have addressed the injustice of the growing gap between the superrich and everyone else and fought to raise the living standards of poor people.
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supporter
Posted by Amorette Allison (+12826) 11 years ago
When abortion is "illegal," it becomes a purely economic issue. Rich women get them. Poor women, who can probably least afford another child, have the child. Ditto for contraceptives. Rich women will find a way to buy whatever they want, poor women will hope their husbands and/or boyfriends will use a condom and that everything works.

Republicans want poor people and brown people and anyone who isn't rich and white to just STOP HAVING SEX. Especially recreational sex. Shudder.

It has never been about babies. As Denise pointed out, if it had been about babies, the Republicans would care about them after they were born.
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supporter
sponsor
Posted by Hannah Nash (+2537) 11 years ago
^^^ All of the above (all three) are extremely well articulated. 100%. Thank you.

We all hope to someday live in a society where people are truly cared for and respected. Someday...
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supporter
Posted by howdy (+4943) 11 years ago
As long as giant corporations own the media and make the journalists only report what they want reported, we will rush headlong into a permanent state of fascism...Heed my words, as it is already happening...
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Posted by Tom Cat (+163) 11 years ago
The internet allows everyone to have a voice...for now...
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supporter
Posted by Bridgier (+9547) 11 years ago
If you keep this up Tom, I'm going to give you a crappy bunk assignment at the FEMA camp...
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Posted by Tom Cat (+163) 11 years ago
You gonna be there too! At least your considering letting me sleep on a bunk!
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supporter
Posted by Bridgier (+9547) 11 years ago
no man, listen - the local democratic precinct captain came by and asked if I wanted to be on the Death Panel or the Re-Education board. I went with Re-education, mostly because I want to make sure no one ever uses the phrase "begs the question" ever again, and because I already told tax_payer that he was going to have to share a shower stall with korky, and I wanted to make sure that happened.
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Posted by Tom Cat (+163) 11 years ago
I can see you have deciced to be a fair master with me compared with others. I shall attempt to filter what I say to you...
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supporter
Posted by Wendy Wilson (+6173) 11 years ago
Bridgier, is there room on that board for me?
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