Editorial cartoon by Dick Wright / Columbus Dispatch. Image from Lukas Mikelionis. |
Expanding the dead-end debate over abortion
Rather than settling for simplistic answers or ignoring the question, we can recognize the confusion many of us feel in the face of such a vexing problem.
By Robert Jensen | The Rag Blog | July 3, 2013
The abortion debate in Texas — and throughout the country — has dead-ended: pro-life v. pro-choice, saving the unborn child v. protecting the rights of the mother, responsibility v. freedom. Every encounter leaves each side more dug in.
As the Texas Legislature takes up abortion bills in its second special session, we can deepen that debate simply by recognizing the complexity of the issue, which usually is plowed under in the short-term goal of passing or defeating a particular bill. That’s politics, but beneath are deeper questions.
I am a firm supporter of abortion rights for women. So, let’s take that side first. By framing the issue in terms of women’s right to choose, abortion-rights supporters typically minimize or avoid the question of the moral status of the fetus, which can’t be taken lightly.
Simply asserting that life begins at conception feels like an inadequate answer, but we can’t pretend that viability — the ability of the fetus to survive outside the womb — is the obvious point at which a fetus becomes a person. Rather than settling for simplistic answers or ignoring the question, we can recognize the confusion many of us feel in the face of such a vexing problem.
For the anti-abortion side: It is time to recognize that this debate takes place in a male-dominated society in which women are routinely at risk, including at home. Though many think it’s an old-fashioned word, the United States is a patriarchal society, and in patriarchy women are not safe from men’s control and men’s violence.
A continuum of domination — from subtle forms of harassment and coercion, to physical assault and rape — means that many women become pregnant under conditions in which meaningful options are severely limited. To further constrain women by limiting access to abortion further entrenches male dominance.
We should recognize that the abortion debate is also a debate — overtly or covertly — about sexual behavior. Abortion opponents often are critical of practices such as premarital or gay/lesbian sex. Abortion supporters typically support an expanded conception of acceptable sexual practices. Again, we routinely get locked into a dead-end debate — “family values” v. “sexual liberation” — and, again, the tendency to caricature the other side can obscure deeper questions.
I am a firm supporter of encouraging healthy sexual exploration for everyone, not limited just to heterosexuals who are married. In short, I’m against patriarchal sexual rules that are harsh and life-denying.
But I am a critic of the way in which the liberal approach to sex has led to an increasingly coarse sexual culture, seen most glaringly in the routine objectification and degradation of women in pornography, stripping, and prostitution. In short, I’m against liberalized sexual norms that also can be harsh and life-denying.
Acknowledging the complexity of the moral question doesn’t automatically mean we should outlaw abortion. Acknowledging the brutality of patriarchy doesn’t mean we cannot consider some limits on abortion. Recognizing that the abortion debate embroils us in equally contentious debates about sexual behavior doesn’t magically clear up the issue.
My political positions are rooted in a feminist analysis that highlights the destructive nature of patriarchy. While I don’t expect everyone to agree with me, I hope it’s possible to disagree more constructively.
The United States is a deeply religious country committed to secular government. No single authority can produce easy answers to problems that are morally and politically complex. My hope is that whichever side “wins” any specific political struggle, all sides can recognize that victory does not put to rest questions that should trouble us all.
[Robert Jensen is a professor in the School of Journalism at the University of Texas at Austin and board member of the Third Coast Activist Resource Center in Austin. His latest books are Arguing for Our Lives: A User’s Guide to Constructive Dialogue and We Are All Apocalyptic Now: On the Responsibilities of Teaching, Preaching, Reporting, Writing, and Speaking Out. His writing is published extensively in mainstream and alternative media. Robert Jensen can be reached at rjensen@austin.utexas.edu. Read more articles by Robert Jensen on The Rag Blog.]
As in any such divisive issue, it seems better to create a forum for a dialogue than a rush to a
vote. Unfortunately there isn’t an effective mechanism
for this in our present system outside of legislative committee.
Whatever the final decision, it won’t stop there.
Maybe we should take it to the ballot box?
Preventing pregnancy is the key
Abortion. With about 1.21 million reported abortions in the United States each year, the opinions on the matter cause major conflicts (“Abortions in America,” 2014). Make abortions illegal! Promote more education! Push the subject of abstinence! What is the best solution? The most viable option in preventing abortion is to protect these women from pregnancy. By preventing pregnancy and providing these women with free long term birth control options; this is the only guaranteed way to decrease the amounts of unwanted pregnancies in the United States.
Living in a world where the fights and arguments about abortion are endless, simple solutions can seem to go overlooked. Ted McLaughlin argues that teaching “abstinence only” does not prevent teen sex; neither does educating teens with real sex schooling. He also argues that “Now there is a new study that shows banning abortions does not decrease the number of abortions” (“Preventing Abortion”, para 2). These options are clearly not working. These women do not intentionally want to have abortions; they feel they have no control over the situation. The choices for preventing abortion are realistic. If a law were to be passed providing free long term birth control to women, the want for abortions would no longer be necessary. The IUD would be a perfect example of a long term prevention method that can be used. It prevents pregnancy for up until 5 years, or until the woman is ready for the responsibility. This alternative provides a simple solution to a very large problem.
Sources:
Abortions In America: Incidence of abortion (2014).Retrieved from
http://www.operationrescue.org/about-abortion/abortions-in-america/
McLaughlin, T. (2009, October 14). Preventing Abortion: Contraception more successful then laws. Retrieved from
http://theragblog.blogspot.com/2009/10/preventing-abortion-contraception-more.html