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2 Ways of Seeing Babies
BY MARJORIE DANNENFELSER
May 25-31, 2008 Issue |
Posted 5/20/08 at 1:57 PM
Contrast is surely the leaven of politics. And nothing
highlights worldview differences better than candidates’ and legislators’
positions on sanctity of life issues.
There’s almost no issue that candidates, political parties
and legislators try to avoid more. They hope that it will go away, even though
voters who care about life issues consistently provide a winning margin in
tight races.
The fact is, the issue will continue to be hotly debated
until the abortion-on-demand regime of Roe v. Wade begins to unravel and our
nation’s citizens are given the chance to enact each state-by-state consensus
on what abortion laws should be.
I understand abortion rights advocates’ panicked protest at
that prospect. I used to share it.
Now is the time to look very closely at candidates. We are
at a turning point in history when it comes to abortion and euthanasia. The
voters who decide the next president and Senate will also decide the makeup of
the Supreme Court and federal judiciary for generations.
An especially telling difference exists between Sens. Barack
Obama, D-Ill., and John McCain, R-Ariz.
How each perceives and talks about unplanned children is
extremely illuminating. McCain is living the joy of his real-life response to a
“surprise child.” Obama, missing the mystery and blessing, sees only a burden.
You may remember from a few weeks ago, Obama’s answer to a
question at a town hall meeting regarding HIV and STDs: He said, “Look, I got
two daughters — 9 years old and 6 years old. I am going to teach them first
about values and morals, but if they make a mistake, I don’t want them punished
with a baby”
He sees such a surprise baby as punishment for wrongdoing
rather than the natural result of a bad decision to engage in sex.
In the Illinois Legislature in 2002, Obama voted against a
bill to require life-sustaining measures for babies who survive late-term
abortions and are born alive “accidentally.” Then, in 2003, he killed this
measure in the Illinois Senate Health committee he chaired.
His perspective on these “surprise” children: “What we are
doing here is to create one more burden on a woman, and I can’t support that,”
said Obama in 2003.
That’s a living human being he would allow to die because he
judges it to be an expendable annoyance. For him again, the unexpected born
baby is a punishment and burden — an unnecessary affront to the woman’s
decision to abort.
I understand Obama’s position because I once held it.
I considered myself “pro-choice” because I did not believe
the surprise child had separate rights from my own. In that case, a surprise
baby is an invading visitor, an unasked-for imposition.
But technology advanced and my opinion, along with that of
so many others, changed. Sonography, fetology and compassionate friends all
convinced me of the existence of two human beings with rights and needs.
Obama has resisted the pro-life trend in this nation that is
documented in poll after poll. Perhaps thinking he will attract women voters,
he clings to the proposition of baby as burden — that of the powerful over the
weak. This will not help him.
That’s not only because women themselves — especially
younger ones — are moving away from the abortion position. It is also because
the position of generosity and love is the stronger, more attractive position.
Who can resist Mother Teresa? She helped the world
understand the stark contrast between the view of children as burdens or as
gifts. She could see clearly the divisiveness inherent in the abortion position.
Quoted in The Wall
Street Journal, she said, “America needs no words from me to see how your
decision in Roe v. Wade has deformed a great nation. The so-called right to
abortion has pitted mothers against their children and women against men. It
has sown violence and discord at the heart of the most intimate human
relationships. It has aggravated the derogation of the father’s role in an
increasingly fatherless society.
“It has portrayed the greatest of gifts — a child — as a
competitor, an intrusion and an inconvenience. It has nominally accorded
mothers unfettered dominion over the independent lives of their physically
dependent sons and daughters.
“And, in granting this unconscionable power, it has exposed
many women to unjust and selfish demands from their husbands or other sexual
partners. Human rights are not a privilege conferred by government. They are
every human being’s entitlement by virtue of his humanity. The right to life
does not depend, and must not be declared to be contingent, on the pleasure of
anyone else, not even a parent or a sovereign.”
Contrast the perspective of baby-as-expendable-burden and
punishment with the rarely repeated story of John and Cindy McCain’s “surprise”
child.
Sen. McCain told me this story of their family, and, on
another occasion, Cindy McCain related it. Both times I heard the story — each
from the father’s and mother’s perspective — I found it beautiful and
revealing.
Cindy McCain, traveling in Bangladesh, had promised a
Catholic friend she would visit Mother Teresa’s orphanage there. After her
tour, two nuns whom Cindy laughingly describes as “sweet and tenacious” brought
two children to her. They explained that both babies would die (one suffered
from malnutrition issues, the other from severe cleft palate) unless brought to
the United States. Cindy said Yes to their pleas on behalf of the children. She
then engaged in a battle with local officials to allow her to take the babies
out of the orphanage.
As a woman operating in Bangladesh’s culture, she was at a
disadvantage, and so had to take on a tough role — one the town elders had not
yet experienced. Cindy won. She brought the babies back home, presenting one to
her husband: “John, here’s your new baby.”
In a way that defies his tough, military persona, he
describes the “extreme privilege” of receiving his new daughter — surprise or
not. They found a home for the other baby with their own close friends.
The McCains’ immediate and generous Yes to taking
responsibility for two children in an incredibly inconvenient circumstance is
revealing — and inspiring. It is much like the response of Alaska Gov. Sarah
Palin, who recently gave birth to her fifth child — a child born premature with
Down syndrome.
Palin and her husband also embraced the surprise: “We knew
through early testing he would face special challenges, and we feel privileged
that God would entrust us with this gift and allow us unspeakable joy as he
entered our lives.”
Pope Benedict’s words at the first Mass of his pontificate
(which President Bush repeated during his visit at the White House) put the
value of the “surprise” child in context: “Each of us is the result of a
thought of God. Each of us is willed, each of us is loved, each of us is
necessary.”
No matter who you are, how smart or slow you are, how
beautiful or plain you look, how much or little money you have, how healthy and
physically fit you are — you are necessary.
Your right to life is equal to that of all others. Even when
it’s not obvious. Even when your existence requires another’s sacrifice.
The McCains agree. The Obamas disagree. That is why the
choice between the two agendas is easy.
Marjorie Dannenfelser is president of the pro-life Susan B. Anthony
List. She writes from Arlington, Virginia.
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