Jude Collins

Sunday 18 November 2012

What did you call yourself? How dare you!



There’s a letter into today’s Sindo, with the heading ‘Few people are anti-life’. It’s from a John Fitzgerald in Co Kilkenny, and he’s taking to task those who are referred to as ‘pro-lifers’ in the abortion debate, because there’s an implication in their title that those not in agreement with them are anti-life.  He says that excluding ultra-right-wingers like the guy who killed 77 people in Norway and people “who peddle death as a matter of routine” (presumably drug-pushers), there are surely very few anti-life people on the planet.

It might be interesting to ask those in the Gaza strip right now if they share John’s view on the hard-to-locateness of anti-lifers. But let’s set that aside. I think people have a right to call themselves whatever (within reason) they like.  If others feel the name is in some way passing judgement on them, then it’s their job to argue a case showing how wrong they are.  Instead of doing this, John Fitzgerald advances the only-the-occasional-nutter argument, and supplements it with the charge that a lot pro-lifers aren’t so hot about looking after the living. This second charge  may or may not be true but it's shifting the argument from its focal point: abortion. It may be ironic if I were, for example, pro-capital punishment and anti-abortion, but drawing attention to that does nothing to answer the central questions around the abortion debate. 

  If those who describe themselves as ‘pro-choice’  are just as pro-life as the pro-lifers ( as John claims)  then presumably they see the foetus as human life, since it’s the foetus we’re talking about here. If they do see it as human life, the abortion debate is over. Human life deserves to be protected, and only in cases of self-defence (in this case defence of the mother’s life) can that right to life be flushed away. If on the other hand pro-choice people believe that there is no human life in the woman’s womb during the early stages of pregnancy, why do they speak of an abortion as always a serious, soul-searching decision?

I would class myself as pro-life in the abortion debate, and that has nothing to do with the Catholic Church’s teaching on abortion, so please, don't start telling me about what a shit your parish priest was/is.  I just believe the pro-choice people are unconvincing in their claims as to when the foetus becomes human, as well as in their claims about abortion always being a serious, soul-searching decision. 

As to the Galway case, to describe reactions to it as knee-jerk would be to understate. Until we hear, clearly and dispassionately,  what actually was said and done - or not done - in this sad, nightmare case, we’re adding our wasted breath to the Irish stereotyping that’s currently being peddled at home and abroad. 

4 comments:

  1. I'd find the pleas of a woman in agony more convincing than any, and all, of the paragraphs above.

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  2. Jude
    "If on the other hand pro-choice people believe that there is no human life in the woman’s womb during the early stages of pregnancy, why do they speak of an abortion as always a serious, soul-searching decision?"
    You have asked this question on other occasions and I have tried to give a reasonable answer in my opinion. As you do not engage I don't know if you consider it rubbish or not.
    The humanity of the foetus is not, I believe, black and white as you suggest.
    We cannot say exactly when a foetus moves from being a collection of cells to having some kind of self awareness, but those like myself who are in favour of abortion are aware that there is a potential person there.
    (No Virginia, a sperm is not a potential person).
    Abortion prevents that potentiality from becoming actuality
    And that is why the decision to have an abortion is not an easy one.
    As for the use of the term 'pro-life', surely the letter writer is making a valid argument that everyone sees themselves as pro-life, in the same way that no-one engaged in conflict would identify themselves as being on the side of 'evil'.
    We are all the 'good guys' in our own minds.

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  3. It is not pleasant to write of these matters.The facts of abortion are ugly.Any form of abortion,however early it is performed and by whatever expert,is so crude and brutal as hardly to bear description.One method is for the little body to be''scraped out',that is to say cut up within the womb and pulled out in pieces with a forceps.Alternatively and more often the body is ''sucked out''in parts by vacuum extraction.A third method,which tends to be avoided now as carrying risk to the mother,was to replace the fluid in which the baby lives by a salt or glucose solution;this burned up the or killed it slowly by poisoning.Need we say any more?

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