Pro-life Pretense

By Cristina Page, Moderator, OnCommonGround

October 21, 2009 - 7:00am

Published under:
Cristina Page's picture

President Obama’s still-to-be released common ground agenda in the
abortion conflict is already having a profound and largely overlooked effect: it has exposed deep fault lines in the pro-life movement.
Obama’s focus on reducing the need for abortion has been embraced by
some practical-minded pro-lifers who are tired of decades of
intransigence, and who also appear jaded by the counterproductive
“culture of life” sloganeering of President Bush. Pro-choice Bill
Clinton presided over the most dramatic decline in abortion rates in
the history of our country after all. Pro-lifers Reagan, Bush I and
Bush II did not. For an emerging movement of reasoned,
results-oriented, non-ideological pro-lifers results count. If a
pro-choice president produces pro-life outcomes, they ask, are they
any less worthy?

For the traditional pro-life establishment, however, they are. In
fact, to them, Obama’s common ground call is perceived as a threat.
Since Obama takes them, their beliefs and their proposals seriously
they have been forced to justify some fundamental hypocrisies,
the kind that have in the past led to rhetorical victories and little
progress (unless you count fundraising). Consider, for example, the
clash between pro-life rhetoric and reality when it comes to crisis
pregnancy centers, a much-cherished initiative of the old guard
pro-lifer. A recent report, “A Passion to Serve, a Vision for Life,”
released by the Family Research Council is a valentine to the nation’s
3,000 crisis pregnancy centers (CPCs). It commends them for
communicating “to women and their families that their lives are
valuable and that their needs – emotional, psychological, medical,
spiritual and practical – can and will be met .”

The report details the intense efforts CPCs undertake to persuade
women to not choose abortion. The main message broadcast to those
coming to a center is: “support is available, you do not need to
discontinue this pregnancy for financial reasons.”  But beside the
ultrasound image women are provided and medically inaccurate pitch
against abortion, the most persuasive arguments available to CPCs, as
any staff or volunteer will readily admit, is that women facing crisis pregnancies can make it work by depending on a network of publicly-funded social services. For the vast majority of women convinced to become mothers, CPCs are a gateway to the welfare system.

Theoretically, a pro-life, common ground approach then would be to
take seriously the benefits of CPCs as, essentially, referral agencies
to services which can support women who really do want to keep a
pregnancy. And also to say, "Let’s make sure the right social services
are in place – those that women really need – and that they are
well-funded."

And here’s where that old-guard rhetoric runs into the brick wall of
common ground (and fact-based) reality. The Family Research Council
valentine to crisis pregnancy centers may sound pretty, and even
compelling, but on closer examination is it sincere? In effect, groups
like the Family Research Council as well as most pro-life politicians
have been two-timing their devoted crisis pregnancy center partners.
While professing their love for their work, they batter the social
programs on which the crisis pregnancy center movement places its
trust.

The Family Research Council carefully details in its report the many
federal and state-sponsored programs to which CPCs direct women
including: Head Start, Medicaid, Local Health Departments, Legal Aid,
State Children’s Health Insurance Program (S-Chip), State Health
Departments, Women Infants & Children (WIC), and the Department of Job and Family Services.

Yet when it’s suggested that support for these very agencies should
merit pro-life support, the Family Research Council lines up in
opposition. Michael New, a senior fellow at the Family Research
Council, recently launched an attack on the progressive, pro-common
ground, pro-life group, Catholics in Alliance for the Common Good
(CACG) for suggesting just that. CACG conducted a study linking states
that provide more generous services to the poor with lower abortion
rates. CACG suggested that to reduce abortion rates pro-lifers should
consider the policies traditionally championed by Democrats--
extending publicly-funded social services to poor pregnant women--
rather than exclusively focus on restricting abortion. But suddenly,
the programs that are so effective when used as resources by crisis
pregnancy centers, are suspect. New writes,

“[The study’s] questionable methodology and inconsistent results
should give pro-lifers serious pause before they enthusiastically
embrace higher welfare benefits as a strategy to reduce abortion.
Furthermore, there is little peer-reviewed research which indicates
that more generous welfare benefits have a significant impact. [Other
studies] find that welfare benefits only have a marginal impact on
abortion rates. However, as I will discuss later in the response,
there exists plenty of evidence from studies in reputable peer
reviewed journals that various types of pro-life laws reduce abortion
rates.”

New himself didn’t miss the chance to praise the work of crisis
pregnancy centers; he weighed in when the Family Research Council
report came out, writing,  “PRCs have offered real alternatives to
literally millions of women facing crisis pregnancies. Countless women
regret their abortions. However, the testimonials in FRC's latest
report are evidence of the positive impact of the life-affirming
options offered by many pregnancy-resource centers.”  Of course, the
“life-affirming” options are now no more than a euphemism for the
“welfare” which, according to New, has a “marginal impact on abortion
rates.

New’s attack on the Catholics in Alliance for the Common Good’s policy
proposal is a reflection of an all-consuming hypocrisy plaguing an
ideologically entrenched pro-life establishment. Crisis Pregnancy
Centers rely on a welfare system to support the women they persuade
to become mothers while pro-life groups and politicians actively
undermine the very programs and agencies that are the only resources
available to support many women who want to have a child, as CPCs
know.

In 2007, The Children’s Defense Fund published its Congressional
Scorecard
on the best and worst legislators for children. The
organization scored congressmembers votes on many of the policies that
help pregnant women decide whether to parent or abort. The votes were
on Head Start, increasing the minimum wage, reauthorizing and
increasing funding for S-CHIP, increasing funding for children with
disabilities, job training, Medicaid funding, helping youth pay for
college, and tax-relief for low-income families with children. Based
on their votes on these issues, the Children’s Defense Fund ranked 143
congressmembers as ‘the worst” for children. Of the 143 worst
legislators, 100% are pro-life.

The long-established, and long-dominant pro-life complex speaks out of
both sides of its mouth, praising crisis pregnancy centers and yet
disparaging the social services upon which they rely. In the upcoming
months, the Obama administration will be revealing its common ground
agenda and one part of it promises to be supports for pregnant women.
It is just the sort of agenda designed to appeal to a nascent
pragmatic and moderate pro-life movement. Let’s hope this rising voice
of reason can lead the crisis pregnancy center movement to support an
administration plan to help struggling families and indigent pregnant
women.  Praise for CPCs can’t come packaged with attacks on the very
supports they rely upon. It not only defeats common ground; it defeats
reason.

Joseph Schiedler, president of the Pro-life Action League, wrote an
op-ed in USA Today claiming pro-lifers who embark on the search for
common ground betray the pro-life cause and, in making his case,
reveals the classic characteristics of pro-life schizophrenia. He
writes,

“There is no evidence that increasing social programs — such as
low-cost health care and day care, college grants and maternity homes
— will impact a woman's abortion decision. It is rare in our
experience to find a woman who says the reason she is choosing
abortion is that she doesn't have day care, or that she'd rather go to
college…More than 3,000 pregnancy centers in the U.S. are ready to
help a woman with material needs, emotional support, counseling and
medical care. Anyone who wants to stop abortion should promote these
centers.”

Once we begin to till the soil of common ground, these contradictions
and inconsistencies will become clearer. It is then that pragmatic
pro-lifers may realize there will be unlikely partners along the path
to genuine pro-life victories.


. . . . .
17 comments
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Typical anti-abortion horse hockey. They want to force women to bear children they can't afford, and then cut the safety net that provides for the women and babies.

Yeah,right, guys: Love the fetus, hate the born.

Catseye  ( (|) )

Submitted by Catseye71352 on October 23, 2009 - 6:54pm.

Conservatives object to the idea that people with mental illnesses aren't responsible for their actions because believing that they are interferes with their satisfaction in punishing them.

I think the problem here has similar roots -- loving the fetus in the abstract requires absolutely nothing from them, and at the point where the 'container' could use some help in order to give that fetus the best possible chance, they stop. No finanical support for the pregnant woman so her health can contribute to the health of the fetus, no prenatal care, no obstetric care, no requirement that insurance companies cover those expenses. She doesn't deserve to have help and it's irrelevant if that also hurts the fetus.

 

I don't think it's so much "love the fetus/hate the born" as it is "love the fetus but if its harmed in the course of punishing the woman, well, that's on HER because of her 'poor choices'.

Submitted by crowepps on October 23, 2009 - 7:44pm.

Cristina, it's been a while, but when I was a (professional) social worker, I was on staff or a volunteer for several prolife pregnancy aid organizations. Contrary to popular prochoice belief, there are indeed such organizations that are upfront about what they do and don't do, and that really do help women get through difficult pregnancies and beyond. Otherwise I wouldn't have worked for them.

So I have long been aware of the fact that the work of CPCs is dependent upon programs that exercise a public, collective commitment to women's and children's needs before, during, & ever after birth. And therefore I passionately support those programs, work with other prolifers who agree, & seek to persuade others to support these essential programs.

Whenever any conservative prolifer has said that CPCs instead of such government programs are the answer--I have found many opportunities to talk about the critical importance of those programs to the work of CPCs.

I agree, the Family Research Council & others who bash government social programs in the name of (!!) prolife are ripping up the social fabric even further--and how many pregnant women & unborn babies are falling through?


On Common Ground Columnist & Editor, Nonviolent Choice Directory

Submitted by Marysia on October 24, 2009 - 10:33am.

If the purpose of CPC's is to help pregnant women and their children, social services are vital - if the purpose of CPC's is instead just to prevent women from getting abortions, whether the women 'fall through' into diaster after the abortion has been prevented isn't a problem. Certainly the technique some CPC volunteers use of lying that the pregnancy is farther advanced than it actually is and asserting to the client that legal abortion is no longer possible would fall into the second category.

Submitted by crowepps on October 24, 2009 - 12:59pm.

Marysia,

No one here questions your "bona fides." But there is no getting around the "cause and effect."

Remember the howling over the research indicating that the recession was causing "pro-life" women to choose abortion? And just look at the members of congress opposed to extensions of unemployment and other bottom line benefits..."pro-lifers" all.

Submitted by ahunt on October 24, 2009 - 12:31pm.

I am curious to know which CPCs are actually aboveboard, honest with and present medically accurate information to their clients, because it would be nice to be able to refer women who don't wish to terminate, but don't see how they can afford/accomplish raising a child alone, without any support from either family or sperm donor. Representative Henry Waxman's report found that 87% of federally-funded CPCs lied to or misled their clients regarding the dangers of abortion. The report does not specifically state which ones did or did not provide misleading information, so I would really like to know.

Submitted by BJ Survivor on October 24, 2009 - 5:42pm.

BJ Survivor on October 24, 2009 - 6:42pm: "Representative Henry Waxman's report found that 87% of federally-funded CPCs lied to or misled their clients regarding the dangers of abortion."

 

If you analyze that report closely, you will see that its reasoning makes false assumptions. For example, the report assumes that women who are impregnated from rape are responsible for their pregnancies.

 

As evidence for the assertion that abstinence-only education programs exaggerate the failure rates of condoms, his report referred to the use by crisis pregnancy centers of typical-use, rather than perfect-use, failure rates. He argued that perfect-use failure rates reflected use by "real people in real-life situations" because, as the report stated, "...for couples who use condoms 'scrupulously,' the 2% to 3% failure rate applies." Typical-use failure rates are derived by indiscriminately determing how many women who are relying on a particular form of contraception become pregnant during a one-year period. Thus, failures include women who are impregnated from rape. As a result, the only way to conclude that the perfect-use failure rate applies to people who use condoms scrupulously is by assuming that women who are impregnated from rape became pregnant solely from their own negligence.

 

In case you might be thinking that the rape issue is just a minor exception that does not invalidate the overall conclusion, observe that the basic reasoning is faulty. The report, essentially, assumes that all failures that do not result from a broken condom are attributable entirely to the user. That assumption has no basis in empirical research. In fact, the research shows clearly that most contraceptive failures result from design flaws that make them difficult to use. As examples of such design flaws, a condom can be difficult to use if it is not immediately available or if the partner refuses to use it. A pill might be difficult to take if an emergency arises that prevents the woman from taking the pill at her regular time. But even "non-scrupulous" contraceptive users rarely experience failures when using robust contraceptive methods like Implanon. As such, almost all of the differences between perfect-use and typical-use failure rates can be explained by design flaws in the contraceptive method.

 

www.abortiondiscussion.com

Submitted by GrayDuck on October 25, 2009 - 8:42pm.

I don't know which report you are reading, but it's certainly not the one I linked to, which is strictly about the ways in which the vast majority of certain federally-funded CPCs mislead, lie, and distort the risks of abortion. Further, statistics which discuss failure rates do not do so from a "blame the slut" perspective (so unlike forced-gestation proponents) but are simply reporting typical use failure rates.

Submitted by BJ Survivor on October 25, 2009 - 10:48pm.

Your assertion that it is a "design flaw" if a contraceptive has to be actively USED seems a little extreme to me. Using a condom during sex once a month and not using it the other 29 days is not a flaw in the contraceptive method but instead stupidity.

Since you have repetitively pushed Implanon (are you a pharmaceutical rep) I thought I'd look it up.

"Implanon (etonogestrel implant) 68 mg should not be used in women who have: Known or suspected pregnancy, Current or past history of thrombosis or thromboembolic disorders, Hepatic tumors (benign or malignant), active liver disease, undiagnosed abnormal genital bleeding, Known or suspected carcinoma of the breast or personal history of breast cancer, Hypersensitivity to any of the components".

So do I understand correctly that it protects more surely against pregnancy but raises your risk of stroke and heart attack, doesn't sound that great for the liver and may encourage breast cancer?

Submitted by crowepps on October 26, 2009 - 1:29pm.

http://www.birthright.org/

"Well behaved women seldom make history."-Laurel Thatcher Ulrich

Submitted by Progo35 on October 24, 2009 - 6:51pm.

bj survivor, i include birthright & some other helpful resources here.

http://www.nonviolentchoice.info/crisispregsupport.html

this is one page in an entire directory of resources that i edit to help people prevent pregnancy or, if unintended/difficult pregnancy happens, to go through with the pregnancy & then w/ parenting, adoption, guardianship, whatever the preference may be.

http://www.nonviolentchoice.info


On Common Ground Columnist & Editor, Nonviolent Choice Directory

Submitted by Marysia on October 24, 2009 - 7:36pm.

crowepps wrote:

--If the purpose of CPC's is to help pregnant women and their children, social services are vital - if the purpose of CPC's is instead just to prevent women from getting abortions, whether the women 'fall through' into diaster after the abortion has been prevented isn't a problem. Certainly the technique some CPC volunteers use of lying that the pregnancy is farther advanced than it actually is and asserting to the client that legal abortion is no longer possible would fall into the second category.---

crowepps, of course there are some well publicized examples of cpcs that use scare tactics and lies, most notably those under the rubric of the long, long ago defunct pearson foundation....but this is by no means a universal truth about cpcs. i myself never saw anything like this happen, in fact volunteers & staff were required to be honest.

of course people go into this work with the hope that women will decide not to have abortions--but that sort of concern can be perfectly at home with a belief in helping women before, during, & after birth. have seen it w/ my own eyes. and indeed folks without that all embracing commitment don't last very long, or they never make it in the door.


On Common Ground Columnist & Editor, Nonviolent Choice Directory

Submitted by Marysia on October 24, 2009 - 7:44pm.

<blockquote>of course people go into this work with the hope that women will decide not to have abortions--but that sort of concern can be perfectly at home with a belief in helping women before, during, & after birth. have seen it w/ my own eyes. and indeed folks without that all embracing commitment don't last very long, or they never make it in the door.</blockquote>

 

Since CPC's prefer to operate as 'faith' organizations, they are entirely unregulated, and anything goes.  They do not have to comply wiht the health information privacy rules, they do not have to comply with the ethical guidelines of medical practice, they can do absolutely anything whatsoever.  If people want to organize and financially support any sort of program, naturally they are free to do so. 

 

Beyond that, I'm afraid this is a 'touch pitch and be defiled' problem.  If CPCs wish to be considered a nation-wide collaborative network that provide a real alternative to abortion, it is THEIR responsibility to collectively set ethical standards for their member organization's programs and their own volunteers and to ensure that all materials that are used are accurate and truthful.

 

CPC's enable people to connect to and utilize government programs, in a manner very similar to other 'community organizations' like, say, ACORN.  Considering the screams of anguish any time any ACORN volunteer can be tricked into doing something stupid, I would think you would understand that there would be little sympathy for ANY community organization caught in a similar situation.

Submitted by crowepps on October 26, 2009 - 2:17pm.

ahunt writes:
--Remember the howling over the research indicating that the recession was causing "pro-life" women to choose abortion? And just look at the members of congress opposed to extensions of unemployment and other bottom line benefits..."pro-lifers" all--

i am not some lone exception, although many here on rh reality check seem to think i am! i think a lot of prochoicers need to hear past the loudest voices & listen to the quieter ones.

there are prolifers, not just me, who recognize the plight of women who would rather not have abortions but have situational including economic pressures bearing down upon them.

there are prolifers who recognize the contradiction & hypocrisy of denying vital social benefits while saying you respect life.

one place you can look for such prolifers: go to http://www.nonviolentchoice.blogspot.com/ and scroll down the lefthand menu to "Visting Bloggers & Interviewees." 6 of the 8 identify as prolife.


On Common Ground Columnist & Editor, Nonviolent Choice Directory

Submitted by Marysia on October 24, 2009 - 7:54pm.

Marysia Honey...listening to the "quieter voices" is not going to help the family denied the basic assistance they need to maintain their existing families...and that is the point.

 

I do not think you are some lone exception...I'm telling you that the anti-choice PTBs SILENCE you and your ideals, and before you can legitimately approach women considering abortion, you must confront the PTBs driving the policies that back women into a corner. I don't see a whole lot of confronting going on.

 

 

Submitted by ahunt on October 24, 2009 - 9:50pm.

ahunt on October 24, 2009 - 10:50pm: "I don't see a whole lot of confronting going on."

 

Right-to-lifers confronted elected Republicans in 2006 and 2008 by removing them from power. Republican losses were concentrated in rural districts- mainly in the North- that historically sided with the GOP over abortion and other socially-conservative concerns.

 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_House_elections,_2006

 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:US_Election04-08shift.png

 

www.abortiondiscussion.com

Submitted by GrayDuck on October 25, 2009 - 9:51pm.

ahunt, believe me, i and many of my peers are all too aware of that silencing dynamic, we have been challenging it all our lives!!!

now you are not guilty of it obviously, but there is also a silencing dynamic on the prochoice "side" too that claims folks like us cannot possibly exist *by definition.*

we can & do stand very strongly in solidarity w/ all the families who are denied lifesaving assistance by conservatives, we can take every action we can to ensure that people in need are treated as human beings...

and yet still no one may hear or see what we are doing & have been doing for a very long time if everywhere we turn, we are being silenced & cancelled away. it's immensely frustrating, but it's important to continue plugging away at what needs to be done...


On Common Ground Columnist & Editor, Nonviolent Choice Directory

Submitted by Marysia on October 25, 2009 - 12:14pm.