Abortion Information
Person or
Non-Person?
By Frederica Matthewes-Green
Frederica
Matthewes-Green, a founding member of Feminists for Life, is
the author of the book, Real Women, Real Choices, and
is a frequent contributor to numerous magazines
The abortion debate stands or
falls on a single question: is the preborn a person? One would
not necessarily know this from the great heat and little light
that usually surrounds the issue, as pro-lifers target additional
social ills caused by abortion license and abortion defenders
charge that pro-lifers only want to punish women for sexual
activity or keep them pregnant and out of the work force.
However, so much passion would not
arise if the issue was not literally a matter of life and death.
In the Roe v Wade decision, Justice Harry Blackmun wrote
that, "(If the) suggestion of personhood [of the preborn] is
established, the [abortion rights] case, of course, collapses,
for the fetus right to life is then guaranteed specifically
by the [14th] Amendment." Thus, the personhood of the
preborn child is the single point on which the entire debate
turns.
Abortion defenders generally
concede that the preborn is both human and alive, but still they
harbor a half-focused and ill-expressed feeling that he is not
quite yet "one of us" -- not really a person. This
position is one which is impossible to defend logically or
scientifically and can set a dangerous pattern for any other
living human decreed to be not "one of us." Let us
examine some of the arguments used to depersonize the preborn.
The preborn is not a person
because she is so small.
The charge that, "Every good argument for abortion is a good
argument for infanticide," finds confirmation here. Size
remains relative throughout human life; the six-week fetus is
very small compared to a newborn, but one could also justly
compare the newborns size with that of Hulk Hogan. The
argument about size is a version of one of human societys
most durable, least honorable assertions: might makes right. Big
people can throw away small people. As most women are smaller
than most men, it is a dubious assertion for women to champion.
Too many of us know in our own bodies what violence at stronger
hands is like.
The preborn is not a person
because he is unwanted.
We speak here of a womans disabling fear: "Im
nothing without a man. If no one wants me, I dont
exist." If worth depends on someone elses approval,
then we may in turn eliminate our own children who do not please
us. Worth based on wantedness, that chimerical achievement, is
ominous for children, blacks, women, the disabled, and other
living things.
The preborn is not a person
because she does not have
human form.
This is in fact untrue; that "glob of tissue" finds
order quickly, and every baby aborted has a face, hands, eyes,
gender, and a beating heart. But even if a method were available
that could strike during that rush to recognizable form, it would
be an ominous precedent to embrace. Discrimination against living
human beings because they "look funny" has a long and
ignoble history. The truth is that even the earliest embryo has a
human form, though it may be a unfamiliar one. We are "globs
of tissue" of changing form from conception until death.
The preborn is not a person
because he would be disabled.
Our disabled friends may well feel a chill; if wed only
caught them before they were born, we would have "spared
them" their "unhappy, unsightly" lives. Killing in
the name of compassion has had a tenacious appeal throughout this
ruthless and sentimental age. We stand with Scrooge, with the
strong and healthy, and locate the "surplus population"
in the weak and sick. It is worthwhile to recall that we are each
only temporarily able bodied, each potential candidates for
lovingly-administered death.
The preborn is not a person
because she could be abused.
Prenatal dismemberment is indeed an effective preventative for
postnatal abuse, though the net result to the child may not be
what she would have preferred. Implicit here is the assumption
that the lives of the abused, like the lives of the disabled, are
not worth living; that the rape survivor, the battered spouse,
should never have been born. When this future abuse is only
theoretical, as in the case of a preborn child, we make a
devastating affirmation of the abusers power and undermine
the hope of those who believe the past can be overcome. The hope
that abortion would prevent child abuse has been cruelly mocked
by statistics which indicate that, though every child in America
could have been aborted during the past nineteen years of
legality, reported child abuse has in that time increased 500
percent. The notion of the disposable child persists after birth.
The preborn is not a person
because he is not sentient.
Consciousness, self-awareness, is a trait which gradually emerges
and then fades during the course of a normal human life. It is by
no means fully present in a newborn. The average house cat is
capable of more intelligent interaction than a month-old child.
Some would choose six months fetal age as the point that the
potential for this future awareness is present; however,
potential is a slippery concept, as all the potential abilities
of a lifetime are present at the moment of fertilization. To
attach increasing value to those of increasing awareness is no
doubt flattering to the intelligentsia who developed the
standard, but a bit worrisome for the rest of us -- especially
for our mentally disabled friends, who may grow up to star in
their own TV shows for all we know. The preborn child is only
temporarily lacking in awareness, in consciousness, and daily
moving toward its completion. To rush to kill him before he
achieves it is as repulsive as rushing to kill a recovering coma
victim before she can open her eyes.
The preborn is not a person
because she does not yet have a soul.
Although a persons body unquestionably begins at the moment
the sperm dissolves in the ovum, some say their religious beliefs
decrees that the soul is invested later. This reflects
pre-scientific belief that the preborn was an inert lump until
she came to life and the mother felt movement. While some of our
ancestors sincerely believed the pre-quickened fetus not to be
alive, modern proponents hold the eerie notion that she is a
living body without a soul. Religious people have every right to
enter the abortion debate with vigor, but quirky religious ideas
that the soul arrives at six-months gestation, departs at age 48,
or takes the day off alternate Wednesdays cannot be the basis of
law -- especially as the defense of the right to kill. Venerable
religious traditions calling for immolation of children or
throwing of virgins into volcanoes should likewise be ineligible
for exception from laws that protect life.
The preborn is not a person
because he lives inside his mothers body.
The preborn is not a part of his mothers body any more than
an astronaut is part of the space ship. The fact that neither is
viable without necessary access to oxygen, food, and shelter does
not prove that they are not persons. Both the fetus and the
astronaut are tenants, though in the case of the preborn it
cannot be denied that he can be an uncomfortable and demanding
one. Does this give the mother the right to evict her unwanted
tenant? The situation may be like that of a sea captain who
discovers a stowaway and considers whether to throw him
overboard. The missing factor in the analogy is that the preborn
did not take up residence in his mothers body under his own
will but was called into being (in virtually all cases) by a
consciously-chosen act that the participants were aware could
have resulted in pregnancy. For both parents, undertaking to have
sexual relations must be accompanied by a responsible recognition
that (even with careful contracepting) a child may result. That
this result disproportionately taxes the woman, that the man can
walk out abandoning his responsibility to her and his child, does
not prove that it is right for the woman to do the same. Choices
that lead to greater responsibility, greater accountability, are
choices that lead to a stronger society for women and their
children, and men as well. Choices that feed the cycle of
heedless abandonment hurt us all.
This century has already taught
us, in too many bloody lessons, that it is a dangerous thing to
designate any human life as an "unperson." Devaluing,
rationalizing, renaming, discarding seem to spread outward in
concentric rings of expediency. When women so desperately agree
to depersonalize their own children as a condition of full
participation in society, a lot more is at risk than those tiny
lost lives. Better check your size, your sentience, your wantedness; theres no telling who is next.
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Copyright © 2000 California ProLife Council, Inc.
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