Partial-Birth Abortion Ban - Misconceptions and Realities

There was quite the gem in the Cornell Daily Sun today via a column by Laura Taylor ‘07 titled “Life and Death.”

Taylor begins dramatically,

With the aftermath of the Virginia Tech killings monopolizing media attention, a grave regression of women’s rights in this country passed largely unnoticed last week.

Well, you know what they say: One grave regression to women’s rights, one huge progression for unborn children’s lives! Or something like that…

(Disclaimer: In the likely case that some pro-abortion reader does not recognize the sarcasm in that last statement, let me be clear. I do not consider the murder of unborn children to be an inherent “right” of any sort, therefore, in my opinion there is nothing to regress from. In fact, I believe abortion harms women, so this is truly a step forward for both mother and child.)

Anyway, back on topic. There is one part of Taylor’s column where she truly shines:

Much of the reason late-term abortions developed in this country is due to the legislative and judicial decisions promoted by anti-choice advocates. Abortions are expensive (1975 Hyde Amendment bars insurance coverage), difficult to obtain (87 percent of counties in the country have no abortion provider) and are further constrained by state restrictions that limit access to abortion. A pregnancy does not stop to wait for a woman to raise money for medical, travel, lodging and childcare expenses. (emphasis added.)

In that blip is one feature that appears frequently in Taylor’s columns: factual errors. I am in no position to judge whether or not these errors are based in ignorance or purposeful misinformation, but it is her tradition. (She’s had real winners ranging from calling Iranians Arabic - they’re Persian - to calling Israel an apartheid state - which may be all the rage in Jimmy Carter’s circles, but not so popular among observers of the real facts.)

Specifically in this column is the blatant misconception of the 1975 Hyde Amendment, which as everyone knows (even the pro-abortion ACLU) only restricts federal funding for abortions, i.e. Medicaid coverage. The Hyde Amendment even has exceptions for cases of rape, incest, and when the mother’s life is in danger. So… Taylor tries to portray this as completely threatening to a woman’s so-called “right” to an abortion, when it is nothing of the sort.

Furthermore, common sense makes me question her argument that abortions are difficult to obtain because clinics are just so darn hard to find! Does anyone have any statistics or information on this? (There is only so much time I can devote to research when I have 50 pages of essays waiting on me.) At the very least, I am quite positive that every major urban city in the nation (unfortunately) offers an abortion clinic of some variety. I am absolutely sure that every state has something available. If the child is really that much of an inconvenience, I am sure that a woman will go out of her way to find an accessible murderer *cough* I mean, abortionist.

Anyway, I would suggest reading her column simply because she summarizes the pro-abortion crowd’s most frequent arguments against the ban. After reading her column, you absolutely must (I strongly urge you to) visit Douglas Johnson’s (Legislative Director for the National Right to Life Committee) article entitled “The Partial-Birth Abortion Ban - Misconceptions and Realities.

If I had to do a bullet point summary of ways to respond to Taylor’s column simply from Johnson’s article, this would be it:

* Taylor argues that the ban can affect all abortions after 12 weeks. Besides being an unsupported, this claim is completely illogical. This bill bans only partial-birth abortions, defined as any abortion in which the baby is delivered “past the [baby’s] navel … outside the body of the mother,” or “in the case of head-first presentation, the entire fetal head is outside the body of the mother,” before being killed. As Johnson explains, this only occurs at a certain point - far past 12 weeks in the pregnancy.

* Regarding Taylor’s claim that “partial-birth abortion” is not even a medical term: As stated brilliantly by Johnson, “In short, besides being a legal term of art, ‘partial-birth abortion’ is as much a ‘medical term’ as ‘heart attack’ (which both journalists and others usually use in preference to ‘myocardial infarction’).”

* Concerning the so-called safety of partial-birth abortion: According to the Alan Guttmacher Institute, which is affiliated with Planned Parenthood, there are approximately 2,200 partial-birth abortions performed each year out of a total of over 1,000,000. If this procedure is truly the safest for women, as argued by Ms. Taylor, why is it so rare?

* And of course, in response to the argument that the Court is forsaking its duty to protect human life (I love it when the pro-murder-of-unborn-children crowd plays that card): There is an exception if the mother’s life is at risk, so this is not some oppressive law that will kill women. Instead, it merely restricts the ways abortionists can kill unborn children.

Well, what think you?

(Off topic: Does anyone actually know how to do real bullet points in wordpress?)

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7 Responses to “Partial-Birth Abortion Ban - Misconceptions and Realities”


  1. 1

    Excellent Blog!!!

    Thank you for being on top of this Tieki Rae.

    The biggest black eye on our nation…the legalized murder of children.

  2. 2

    “a grave regression of women’s rights in this country passed largely unnoticed last week.”

    Disgusting ain’t it. To think that some women won’t be allowed to have their child partially delivered, and then have its brains sucked out and its skull crushed. What a sad day. But never fear, they can still chop the baby up inside your womb and pull the various and sundry pieces out.

    How did our society reach this point?

  3. 3

    “How did our society reach this point?”

    I wonder that every day. We pride ourselves on being so civilized, yet we murder our unborn in the cruelest of ways. Doesn’t seem that civilized to me.

  4. 4

    The Song of Solomon proclaims that there is nothing new under the sun. An sure enough, some ancient cultures offered their children as burnt sacrifices to gods made of wood and stone, etc. such as Molech. (Lev. 18:21)

    But today, we are “too civilized” to worship gods of wood and stone. Nope. Instead we worship money, careers, success and self, and we sacrifice our children on those altars and chant “choice, choice, choice.”

    Thank God that at least 5 supreme court justices could recognize that infanticide is not a constitutional right! It boggles the mind that in the year 2007 that almost 50% of “civilized” Americans can be so callous and indifferent to our most innocent human life. Some things never change.

  5. 5

    Ya know, I read the Ginsburg dissent and realised that I have not been exercising my rights nor fully participating in our society: haven’t gotten knocked up, decided that having a child is not my cup of tea, asked a doctor to pretty please mostly deliver it for me but then say, “psyche!” and kill it. (Sorry.)

    Don’t forget, there are also exceptions for miscarriages. It’s completely legal to use this method to remove a dead baby from the mother’s body.

    As for abortion clinics: well, if they aren’t avaible, whose fault is that? I LOVE when pro-abortionists use this argument. First off, if abortion were a medical procedure, they would be readily obtained in a doctor’s office. Oh, doctor won’t perform an abortion? Well, then your friendly neighbourhood Planned Parenthood will. What - there aren’t enough people interested in the infanticide industry to have an abortion clinic near every Starbucks? Oh, so now that’s OUR problem?

    It’s the free market. No one likes killing babies (well, no sane person), so women are left finding the small amount of insane people willing to perform this procedure. Really, asking for extra time to do this is a bit like asking to delay a trial in order to find a killer for hire to take out the witnesses against you.

  6. 6

    As “noble” as abortionists are (hopefully the scare quotes let you know I was being sarcastic), the unenlightened public still doesn’t find that to be an impressive title to be shared at dinner parties. “What did you do today?”

    Bridget is right re. the free market. I like to point out to people that there are way more Crisis Pregnancy Centers out there than abortion clinics. Now who cares most about women?

    Re. the bullets: I have found that some WordPress themes work with bullets and some don’t. Hopefully they’ll fix that.

  7. 7

    Most abortionists are male. (Apparently, women get traumatised doing it - go figure - and, should they ever get pregnant themselves, it upsets the patients.) More men than women are pro-abortion. Yet, there aren’t enough male abortion doctors around to meet the demand?

    Perhaps it’s because men support abortion as a way to get laid (to be blunt), but would not go so far as to dedicate their lives to ensuring that “women have access to reproductive choices.”

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