Thursday, January 2, 2020

“Abortion is Healthcare”: A Misogynistic 

Non-Argument

 OPINION   RACHEL CRAWFORD   DEC 30, 2019   |   10:36AM    WASHINGTON, DC
Did you know that if you repeat the same phrase over and over on social media, it will suddenly manifest as an articulate syllogism? You may need to use capitalization or the universal “hands clapping” emoji which converts your unfounded 👏 assertions 👏 into 👏 sound 👏 arguments that are sure to convince even the most stubborn political opponent! Sometimes called the “Beetlejuice” transformation, this new persuasion tool has streamlined civil dialogues into surface-level slogans guaranteed to get you likes from your followers faster than you can say “unproductive monologue!”
So, let’s address one of the most common slogans repeated by the pro-choice lobby: “Abortion is healthcare.” There isn’t a shred of actual argumentation going on in this statement, but I am going to respond to it anyway because pro-life advocates should do better than simply shouting back, “Abortion is NOT healthcare!” We need to explain whythis misogynistic rhetoric is unhelpful to the larger discussion about abortion legality, ethics, and access.
Proponents of legal abortion access will be incredibly unhappy that I am claiming the statement “abortion is healthcare” is sexist, but, rest assured, I do not say this flippantly. I am going to defend that claim in a moment through a feminist framework. (Finally, a chance to apply my minor in Women’s Studies Gender and Health!)
In this article, I explain why defending legal abortion access with this statement plays into a male hegemonic narrative that has harmed women’s health for decades and should be abandoned by anyone who believes that female reproductive health should be treated by health professionals with the same respect and dignity as male reproductive health. I am not saying that you have to oppose legal abortion or “you’re not a real feminist.” I amsaying that the statement “abortion is healthcare” is discriminatory language against female bodies, and you can and should do better to defend your viewpoint on abortion.
Let’s try and make this slogan into the best argument it can be:
  • Abortion is a fundamental part of women’s healthcare.
  • People should have access to fundamental healthcare.
  • Therefore, people should have access to abortion.
Healthcare can be preventative to maintain wellness, like a flu shot, or it can be restorative, like occupational therapy after an injury. The exact definition of healthcareincludes both of these categories:
“efforts made to maintain or restore physical, mental, or emotional well-being especially by trained and licensed professionals” (Merriam-Webster Dictionary, emphasis added).
I will explain why it is factually incorrect to classify abortion as preventative, and then I will explain why it is sexist to classify abortion as restorative. If you want to say that abortion is healthcare, but is neither preventative nor restorative, then you must argue that the current definition of healthcare is too narrow. Normally, you would bear the burden of proof to argue why that is justified, but I am going to explore it anyway to save some time. If you say we need a broader definition, then you will inevitably run into larger problems, or you will be incredibly inconsistent. I address this in the third section below (under “Broadening the Definition of Healthcare to Include Abortion”).

Abortion as Preventative

Many pro-choice people think of abortion as preventative medicine. Often they have this unstated presupposition that abortion solves a problem before it arrives or that if abortion isn’t an option then other social issues, like poverty or the broken foster care system, will increase in severity. Most pro-choice people don’t see abortion as fully preventative like birth control but, rather, as a semi-preventative solution.
Think about some of the difficult circumstances that women and families face which pro-choice people bring up to justify abortion. There is usually a legitimate compassion for people in those difficult situations coupled with the idea that abortion access gives them agency to combat their circumstances and allows the rest of us to allocate resources into helping children that “are already here” and in need.
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Ethical positions about abortion aside, people sometimes agree that abortion pragmatically solves social and economic issues and sometimes they disagree about that evaluation. No matter how someone evaluates abortion as an effective or ineffective solution to these problems, from a scientific perspective, it is factually incorrect to say that abortion is a preventative or even semi-preventative solution.
The human organism that is killed in abortion is already physically present and biologically classified as alive, not about to be created or soon-to-be alive or soon-to-be human. Is that human embryo’s life valuable? Should it be given the same moral consideration as an adult woman? Or is that life as meaningless as a tumor? These are all ethical questions which can only be answered using philosophy, not any branch of science or any amount of empirical data. Abortion is not simply a medical question, and if you try to pretend otherwise you will come across as uninformed, so avoid making this mistake (which is committed by both pro-life and pro-choice people). For further reading about this specific subject, I highly recommend J.P. Moreland’s brilliant book Science and Scientism.
Because we are talking about abortion in the context of healthcare, it is only fitting to evaluate whether or not it is preventative from a scientific perspective. Embryology tells us scientific facts, one of which is that a human organism is killed by abortion. The purpose of an abortion procedure is to ensure embryonic or fetal demise. That’s the whole point. On the other hand, the purpose of contraception is to prevent embryonic life. That’s the whole point. They are different in kind.

Abortion as Restorative

Restorative healthcare is treatment that seeks to combat pathology in one way or another. It plays an important role in reproductive healthcare just as in any other kind. For example, a person struggling with infertility might seek restorative treatment from an endocrinologist, nutritionist, or another medical expert to combat whatever pathology is causing their reproductive system to malfunction. However, pregnancy is something the female body does when it’s functioning well, not something it does when it’s broken.
In order to say abortion is restorative, you must pathologize the healthy, functioning female reproductive system. It doesn’t get much more misogynistic than saying that the distinctly female human ability to gestate babies is a sickness that should be corrected with medical intervention. This kind of thinking is predicated on the sexist belief that the male body is the normal human model and the female body is an abnormal variation. The narrative of what is ideal versus pathological has real world consequences because how we define anatomical norms shapes societal, cultural, and political beliefs.
You might think my argument so far seems a little weird; after all, pro-choice people don’t think that all of pregnancy is some sort of illness that must be stopped! They just think that women should have access to abortion because sometimes that would be best for her wellness. She is the one deciding what would be best for her wellness, with her doctor’s help. The problem with this line of thinking is that from a medical perspective, either something is pathological or it is not, regardless of the subjective desires of the patient. Pathology, diagnosis, and treatment are based on objective facts. It is incorrect to say that some pregnancies must be stopped for the sake of wellness while others are perfectly fine to continue dependent on the patient’s wishes. You can’t radically relativize medical facts and say that your position is the “scientific” or “rational” one.
By contrast, there are objective cases when a pregnant woman’s life is at risk because of some pathological conditions related to the pregnancy. In these cases, there is a legitimate pathology that is not simply the functioning female reproductive system. Often people bring up ectopic pregnancy as an example. This is when the embryo is developing outside of the uterus. It isn’t a matter of subjectivity. If the embryo doesn’t die on its own, there must be medical intervention to save the woman’s life, independent of how she feels about the pregnancy. It is not sexist to say “we need to use medical intervention to solve this problem and save her life” because it doesn’t consider the healthy female body to be the problem; rather, it correctly identifies a legitimate pathology, that isn’t the pregnancy itself, to be the problem.

Broadening the Definition of Healthcare to Include Abortion

Redefining healthcare to remove the aspect of maintaining or restoring well-being leaves us with a definition like “[some sort of intervention or action] by trained and licensed professionals.” That is a really broad definition, but I have struggled to find other qualifiers around healthcare to add to this definition that don’t immediately fall apart by excluding too many obvious examples of healthcare which we would consider to be uncontroversial cases.
If we put this broader definition to the common-sense test, we can immediately find larger problems. For example, many communities who practice female genital mutilation (“FGM”) have elderly women in their community perform the procedure, but in some cases medical professionals perform FGM. This is sometimes called the “medicalization of FGM.” It is widely understood that there is no “safe” version of (or medical justification for) FGM, even if it is preformed by a licensed physician. This horrific procedure is rightfully recognized globally as a human rights violation, but if we applied this broad definition of healthcare to FGM then it would pass our test. It would technically be considered healthcare—because recall that under this broad definition, any act or intervention performed by a licensed medical professional is healthcare. If we are looking at any kind of intervention, not just ones that restore or maintain well-being, then we are including ones like FGM that can cause significant adverse effects to the person’s well-being “as long as they are done by a medical professional.”

The Necessity of an Ethical Argument

So, if the “abortion is healthcare” slogan doesn’t work as an argument, what is it that the people shouting it are trying to say? They’re trying to appeal to abortion as something that is merely medical or scientific, not ethical: “If you’re against abortion rights, you’re against science, because ABORTION 👏 IS 👏 HEALTHCARE.” But I’ve shown repeatedly that abortion can’t be justified solely by an appeal to science; it’s an ethical question, and muttering “healthcare” under your breath can’t bring it out of the realm of ethics and into the field of medicine. [Tweet that!]
There is a general attitude of “this shouldn’t even be up for debate.” It is an attempt by activists to throw around the weight of scientific language and pretend their position has objective authority. This is straight-forward rhetorical cheating to escape actually defending your ideas. It relies on the faulty presupposition that science is the only way to discover truth and that ethics is mere opinion; this is why they feel the need to dress up their ethical arguments with scientific language.
When people don’t know how to articulate their ideas well, they will often try to bolster their hand with identity trump cards. Pointing the finger at your political opponent to say if they disagree it can only be because they are morally inferior is a desperate attempt to win the argument without intellectual honesty. If you want to say that the only reason someone could possibly disagree with you is because they are a bad person, not because they may have a perspective you haven’t considered or rational arguments that you haven’t thought of, then you are locking yourself in a confirmation bias bunker.
LifeNews Note: The post [“Abortion is Healthcare”: A Misogynistic Non-Argument] originally appeared at the Equal Rights Institute blog.  Click here to learn more about our pro-life apologetics course, “Equipped for Life: A Fresh Approach to Conversations About Abortion.”

Liberal States Open More Abortion Centers to Kill More Babies in Abortions

 NATIONAL   MICAIAH BILGER   DEC 31, 2019   |   11:52AM    WASHINGTON, DC
Abortion businesses are expanding in some states even though abortion rates are falling and more women are choosing life for their unborn babies.
While the overall number of abortion clinics is down across the United States, a new report from the Guttmacher Institute shows that the abortion industry is expanding in liberal, pro-abortion states. The pro-abortion site Rewire reports at least eight states saw an increase in the number of abortion facilities between 2011 and 2017.
They include Connecticut, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, Vermont and Washington.
In Maine, 17 new facilities began doing abortions via telemedicine, according to the report. Webcam, or telemedicine, abortions mean a woman never sees a doctor in person. Instead, she chats with the abortionist over a webcam before being given drugs to kill her unborn child.
New York gained an additional 19 abortion facilities, and New Jersey added 17, while Massachusetts saw seven new abortion clinics open in the six-year time period, according to the report. Oregon and California each added one abortion facility, but California soon will be expanding abortions even more by forcing every public college campus to provide them free to students.
The news is troubling for pro-life advocates and the rights of unborn babies, but it is only a small part of a larger picture. That picture shows a steady decline in abortion rates – including in states that are trying to promote and expand abortions.
As Guttmacher, a pro-abortion research group, found earlier this year, abortions dropped to a historic low between 2014 and 2017, the same time period in which these abortion facilities opened. The group reported a 7-percent decline in abortion numbers and a similar decline in the abortion rate.
There were 862,320 abortions reported in 2017, down from 926,200 in 2014, according to the report. The abortion rate also fell to 13.5 per 1,000 women of childbearing age, down from 14.6 in 2014 and 16.9 in 2011.
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Not since the U.S. Supreme Court allowed abortion on demand in 1973 through Roe v. Wade have abortion numbers been so low. And though the abortion industry appears to be trying to reverse the trend, it does not seem to be working.
Overall, a record-number of abortion facilities are closing across the U.S. A recent reportfrom the pro-abortion Abortion Care Network found that almost one third of all independent abortion facilities have closed since 2012. Meanwhile, few new abortion facilities are opening.
The pro-life organization Operation Rescue also tracks abortion facility openings and closures. Its report, published earlier this year, found a similar trend. According to its research, 40 abortion facilities closed or stopped doing abortions in 2018. The total number of abortion facilities in the U.S. was 697 at the time of publication.
The abortion industry has been shrinking rapidly since the 1990s. According to Operation Rescue, there were 2,176 surgical abortion facilities in 1991.
Even abortion activists admit that pro-life efforts are saving lives. Through laws, pregnancy resource centers, educational efforts, sidewalk counseling and more, pro-life advocates are helping America see that unborn babies are valuable human beings and both they and their mothers deserve human rights.

Michael Bloomberg Would Force Americans to Fund Killing Babies in Abortions

 NATIONAL   MICAIAH BILGER   DEC 31, 2019   |   10:34AM    WASHINGTON, DC
Michael Bloomberg announced a presidential health care plan Monday that includes forcing taxpayers to pay for abortions.
The former New York City mayor touted his plan during a campaign stop in Montgomery, Alabama, The Birmingham News reports.
Focusing on women’s health care, Bloomberg included the killing of unborn babies in abortions as a priority. According to the report, he would expand abortions by repealing the Hyde Amendment, which prohibits taxpayer-funded elective abortions in Medicare.
Bloomberg said he also would codify Roe v. Wade into federal law, if elected. The 1973 ruling made the United States one of only seven countries in the world that allows elective abortions after 20 weeks of pregnancy. Since it was handed down, about 61 million unborn babies have been aborted. Yet, Democrat leaders are pushing to expand abortions.
Bloomberg’s plan, for example, also would encourage states to pass laws allowing non-doctors to abort unborn babies, the report states. Some states already do.
Though Democratic leaders are embracing an increasingly extreme position on abortion, most Americans are not. Most voters oppose most abortions, and polls consistently show strong opposition to taxpayer-funded abortions.
A recent Gallup poll found that 60 percent of Americans want abortion to be legal “only in a few circumstances” (39 percent) or “illegal in all circumstances” (21 percent). That number jumped 7 percent from 2018.
A January poll by Marist University found an overwhelming majority of Americans support restrictions on abortion. It found that three-quarters (75 percent) of Americans oppose taxpayer funding of abortion abroad, while just 19 percent support such funding. By a double-digit margin, a majority of all Americans oppose any taxpayer funding of abortion (54 percent to 39 percent).
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But Bloomberg is not alone.  All of the top polling Democrat presidential candidates want to force taxpayers to fund abortions. Even Joe Biden recently flip-flopped on the issue and now supports it.
Bloomberg’s record on abortion shows that his policies are radical and out of touch with most voters. As mayor of New York City, he pushed for an ordinance that restricted pro-life pregnancy centers’ free speech. He also donated $250,000 to Planned Parenthood, the nation’s largest abortion chain, in 2012 and received an award from it in 2014.
His non-profit organization Bloomberg Family Foundation gave at least $13.9 million to Planned Parenthood between 2014 and 2017, according to Foundation Directory Online Data. Planned Parenthood is the largest abortion provider in America, aborting about 330,000 unborn babies every year.

NBC Host Chuck Todd Trashes Christians: They’re “Trained to Believe Fairy Tales” Like Noah’s Ark

 NATIONAL   NICHOLAS FONDACARO   DEC 30, 2019   |   11:43AM    WASHINGTON, DC
On Sunday, NBC News political director Chuck Todd dedicated the final Meet the Press of 2019 to insisting President Trump had brought about a “post-truth society.” The same network that pushed the totally-bunk Steele dossier for years and tried to sink Justice Brett Kavanagh’s nomination with the ridiculous allegations from Julie Swetnick, wanted to lecture the public about falling for and spreading lies and misinformation. In the process, Todd lashed out at Christians for believing in “fairy tales.”
This Sunday, alternative facts. The assault on truth (…) This morning, Meet the Presstakes an in-depth look at our post-truth society and how a changing media landscape has created chaos out of order,” Todd indignantly announced during the opening tease.
Todd began the show by lauding Buzzfeed News for discovering a “fake news farm” in the Macedonian town of Veles. “Some 140 websites pushing out made-up, pro-Trump, quote, ‘news stories’ written for Americans,” he added.
Unfortunately for Todd, Buzzfeed News was itself a kind of fake news farm. They were the first news outlet to publish the debunked Steele dossier, which was maliciously used by the FBI to obtain spy warrants against a Trump campaign aide. They were also the subject of one of the rare public statements from the Special Counsel during the Russia probe. Robert Mueller rebuked reporting claiming Trump lawyer Michael Cohen was directed to lie to Congress by the President.
Todd would eventually bring on New York Times executive editor Dean Baquet and Washington Post editor Marty Baron to opine about fake news. In a conversation about the media’s need to fact-check in the Trump-era, Baquet seemed to admit his paper wasn’t interested in fact-checking presidents until Trump came along:
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I mean, Marty has a very extensive fact check operation as do we. And those things didn’t exist three or four years ago and they’re an acknowledgment that one of the jobs of the news media is to sort through all of the BS, if I can say that.
In the midst of their conversation, Todd latched onto a random, almost year-old letter to the Lexington Herald Leader. It was a letter he held up as a “fascinating attempt to kind of explain why some people support President Trump.” Reading from the letter, Todd proceeded to bash Christians, Jews, and Muslims for their religious beliefs:
“Why do good people support Trump? It’s because people have been trained from childhood to believe in fairy tales. This set their minds up to accept things that make them feel good. The more fairy tales and lies he tells the better they feel. Show me a person who believes in Noah’s ark, and I will show you a Trump voter.
“Look, this gets at something, Dean, that my executive producer likes to say, voters want to be lied to sometimes. They don’t always love being told hard truths,” Todd proclaimed.
In Todd’s report about the evolution of fake news, he spoke with Ben Nim, from Graphika, a social media analysis company. According to Nim, there were “four Ds” when looking at how leaders try to deceive. As explained by Todd:
Number one, dismiss, attack critics to erode their credibility and invalidate the facts. (…) Number two, distort. If the facts are against you, make up your own facts. (…) Number three, distract. Whataboutism or the “I’m rubber, you’re glue” defense. If are you accused of something, accuse someone else of the same thing. (…) Number four, dismay. Threats and intimidation.
Interestingly, the liberal media have done every one of those things. Todd and the CNN media team have attacked their critics and those who reject the narrative. In fact, later in the show, Todd would compare Fox News to Russian state media. On the second point, NBC and other news outlets were being sued for falsely labeling a 16-year-old conservative as racist because they wanted to invent a racist incident on the step of the Lincoln Memorial. Just to name a few.
Unwilling to admit the media have been actively campaigning against President Trump since before he was elected, Todd seemed to demand that they start a campaign to “market the truth.” His plan was to go around the country and lecture people into believing the media.
But in the middle of those remarks, he seemed to make a critical slip up by angrily declaring: “by the way, if I utter a fact on TV on purpose I get fired.” Obviously, he meant if he uttered a lie purposely he would get fired. But that was equally laughable since Lyin’ Brian Williams and Joy ‘a time traveler edited my blog’ Reid were still his colleagues at NBC/MSNBC.
LifeNews Note: Nicholas Fondacaro writes for Newsbusters, where this originally appeared.

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