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Monday, March 26, 2007
Star Parker :: Townhall.com Columnist
Abortion and the politics of ultrasound
by Star Parker
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South Carolina appears close to becoming the first state in the country to require that women considering an abortion view an ultrasound image of their fetus before deciding to undergo the procedure.

The state House has passed the legislation 91-23, prospects that the Senate will pass it look good and Gov. Mark Sanford has stated his support for the initiative.

Opponents call it "intimidation" and "emotional blackmail" of women seeking to abort.

According to NARAL Pro-Choice America President Nancy Keenan, "The women of South Carolina are fully capable of asking their doctor for information they need to make private, personal medical decisions. Politicians don't belong in the examining room."

Seventeen states already have or are considering legislation that would ensure that ultrasound viewing is available to women considering abortion. But South Carolina would be the first to make the viewing mandatory.

Those advancing the legislation feel that the state must guarantee that women considering abortion have all available relevant information before making this life-changing decision. The powerful images that ultrasound makes possible are surely relevant. I support this view and support the legislation.

Anyone who follows me and my work knows that I am staunchly "pro-life." I aggressively support and work with the nationwide crisis-pregnancy-center movement that counsels women considering abortion, encourages them to have their children and helps them with their lives after they give birth.

From the vantage point of we who deeply care about the abortion debate, there isn't much in the way of shades of gray. It's black and white _ a clashing of fundamentally different worldviews. Which is why the emotions run so deep.

An increasing number of crisis-pregnancy centers now have ultrasound equipment that allows clients to see the child developing within them. Their experience shows that there is little question that this materially impacts the decision that women make. Centers report that anywhere from 62 percent up to 95 percent of women who had intended to abort changed their minds after seeing the images.

Assuming that these statistics are accurate, the question remains whether these young women changed their minds because their perceptions of the reality with which they were dealing changed, or because they were intimidated or emotionally blackmailed.

Intimidation or blackmail implies some kind of threat. What exactly might that threat be?

You might say that a young woman with a pregnancy she did not intend is emotionally vulnerable. I would agree with that.

It's exactly why statements from the NARAL universe that portray these young women ("fully capable of asking their doctor for information they need") as cool, sober and rational, calculating the equivalent of whether or not to have a wart removed, or to get a Botox injection, are so ludicrous. Continued...

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About The Author
Star Parker is the founder and president of CURE, the Coalition for Urban Renewal & Education, a 501c3 think tank which explores and promotes market based public policy to fight poverty, as well as author of White Ghetto: How Middle Class America Reflects Inner City Decay.
 
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ttl & HoneyPie

truetolife, I don't know what to tell you; maybe you should be a vegetarian. (I am.)

Hi HoneyPie,
That was pretty funny! I feel relieved, just like when I'm doing 70 on the Interstate & somebody passes me doing 90. It's not me they'll be looking at!

You are so wrong FLM
If a woman knows a fertilized egg has been flushed out of her body, she should mourn it just as she would a 10 year old child. She should take the egg to the genetics lab and see if they can use the DNA to predict what the child would have looked like. She should name her dead child, and mourn for a period of one year before taking part in any of the joys of life.

Now with women who miscarry after being pregnant for several weeks, they should be prosecuted for killing their unborn child. People go to jail all the time for accidentally killing people in car accidents etc. Why shouldn't the mother be jailed for failing to provide optimal womb conditions for her growing baby? Maybe she drank or smoked too much. Maybe she fell down the stairs. Regardless of why she lost the baby, she adn she alone is responsible and should have to face the consequences- go to the genetics lab to get a sketch of the the child's physical features so that the jury can see the face of the child this thoughtless mother killed.

There can be no mercy or understanding when it comes to women who fail to give birth to babies after getting pregnant. For that matter, we should also jail women who fail to get pregnant after daily tries with their husbands if more than three years have passed. Obviously, these women are resorting to black magic to prevent pregnancies, which is totally disrespecting the hard work the husband puts in every day. For the husband's sake, wives should be forced to bear children who will carry on the husband's name and glory into the next generation. What else could women possibly be good for?
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