The mainstream media typically offers little in the way of interesting commentary on sanctity of life issues. Sunday’s New York Times editorial by Dorothy Samuels, a member of The New York Times editorial board and former executive director of the New York Civil Liberties Union, is certainly no exception. The whole commentary reads like a NARAL or Planned Parenthood press release. Throughout the editorial Samuels bemoans the incremental progress that pro-lifers have made at both state and federal level and encourages supporters of legal abortion to become more active.
In her op-ed, Samuels deems five particular pieces of pro-life legislation the “most harmful.” These are 1) waiting periods, 2) informed consent laws, 3) parental involvement laws, 4) clinic safety regulations, and 5) prohibition of abortion coverage in insurance policies. One wonders why Samuels deemed these particular pieces of pro-life legislation the “most harmful.” She never explains her methodology. At any rate, the editorial comes complete with a color coded map showing how many of the five “most harmful” abortion restrictions each state has enacted. Not surprisingly, states in the South and Midwest have been more active in passing pro-life laws than their counterparts in the Northeast and on the West Coast.
Of course, during the course of the op-ed, Samuels spins all of these laws in the most slanted way possible. Counseling sessions intended to let women know about sources of support for single mothers are “demeaning.” Parental involvement laws intended to protect minor girls from child predators pose “hardships” for teenagers. When she mentions the safety rules, Samuels is quick to mention the regulations about hall widths. She fails to discuss commonsense requirements that a doctor stay on the premises until a woman is discharged and the mandates for emergency equipment in cases of cardiac arrest.
Commentaries like this provide further evidence that elite opinion on sanctity of life issues does not reflect the attitudes of the rest of the country. Last month, Gallup released a survey which shows that informed consent laws, parental consent laws, partial birth abortion bans, and waiting periods are all supported by well over 60 percent of Americans. Furthermore, one would think the deplorable conditions found in Kermit Gosnell’s Philadelphia abortion mill and numerous examples of clinic misconduct captured on the LiveActionFilms videos would lead some fair-minded observers to conclude that there might be some merit in stronger limits on abortion. Unfortunately, the New York Times has once again demonstrated that they are too ideologically rigid to engage these issues in a thoughtful way.
— Michael New is an assistant professor of political science at the University of Michigan–Dearborn and a fellow at the Witherspoon Institute.
I had a student (basically with pro-choice beliefs, but intellectual honesty) write a term paper for my graduate health policy seminar on thsi topic last spring. She compares new regulations for abortion clinics to those for outpatient surgery centers (which an abortion clinic is) and found, to her surprise, that the new laws were NOT imposing an undue burden on abortion clinics, but rather applying the same requirements to them that were required for other outpatient surgery centers. In other words, abortion clinics were historically UNDERREGULATED compared to other surgery clinics, which implied political favoritism to them in the past, rather than punitive regulation in the present.
I was really pleased with this young lady, who really struggled to understand her personal subjective assumptions (she was a Catholic with a personal distaste for abortion but libertarian impulses that argued that it was not the realm of government to make that decision for someone) and design a study that overcame them to objectively examine the issue. I encouraged her to expand it for a journal article - alas, she transferred due to chaos in the program.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseIt seems a little hypocritical to criticise someone else's use of "slanted terms" when discussing abortion while employing the far more slanted terminology "sanctity of life".
That's a complete begging of the question, and you should know it.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseNone of the laws cited by Ms. Samuels prevent a woman from exercising her Constitutional right to obtain an abortion, therefore, to describe them as harmful - an unfortunate choice of words when applied to a procedure that terminates the lives of more than a million unborn children each year in this country - is as inaccurate as it is irrational.
The Supreme Court’s decision in Roe v. Wade granted women the Constitutional right to abort an unwanted pregnancy; nothing more, nothing less. It does not dictate in what manner abortions are to be made available to women or attach any special privileges or distinctions to them.
Roe v. Wade does not grant women the right to free abortions or more convenient abortions and it does not require insurance companies to pay for abortions. Nor does the decision in Roe v. Wade grant minors the right to an abortion without parental consent or notification and it does not grant abortion clinics the right to violate the laws that regulate abortion.
Yet these are the non-rights Ms. Samuels speaks to in her editorial, ignoring what most reasonable people know. An individual’s right to do a certain thing does not bestow upon other individuals, society or the government the obligation to make that thing more convenient, more affordable, more prevalent and/or more righteous.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseUsing the "Liberal Logic" that waiting periods are bad/wrong/unconstitutional WRT Abortion; then how come waiting periods when exercising 2nd Amendment rights (which are in the Constitution) are permissible?
Reply to this commentLinkReport Abuse"the New York Times has once again demonstrated that they are too ideologically rigid to engage these issues in a thoughtful way."
In related news, the sun comes up in the morning.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseEven the stuff about "hall widths" and such -- these picayune standards are absolutely vital to maintaining public health and safety if you're talking about a community dental clinic, apparently, but if you try to apply them to a "women's clinic," you just want women to die.
Reply to this commentLinkReport AbuseWhen you're fully committed to one side of a question, it seems a little bit silly, if not completely hypocritical, to simply complain that an opinion from someone advocating for the other side is showing bias.
Aren't you the same guy who was offering lies about intent in defending those Virginia regulations placing absurd requirements on facilities performing abortions?
Reply to this commentLinkReport Abuse