Let Roe Go: Winning Abortion Rights
Jim Kavanagh
With Roe v. Wade overturned, and multiple states rushing to institute draconian abortion bans, the abortion-rights movement faces the task of winning—anew, but effectively for the first time—a right many of us mistakenly thought was secured. To do that requires, I think, recognizing and abandoning the diversionary legal-constitutional and partisan-political paths in which confidence was misplaced, and sharpening the tools needed for a strong and irreversible victory in the wider political sense.
Judge Not
Of course,
the abortion-rights battle must be waged on all fronts. But legal and legislative
victories will only be won securely as a result of winning broad and
deep political support—persuading a majority of people of the justice and
necessity of the cause. That is the kind of political work that created the
conditions for Roe v. Wade—independent, risky personal and collective political
action, including civil disobedience, that highlighted the plight and right of
pregnant women, and the hypocrisy and cruelty of criminalizing abortion.
Though it
was, at the time, a punctual victory that resulted from such work, Roe
also turned out to be Pyrrhic. Roe has arguably weakened the abortion-rights
movement, which centered itself on defending the decision, searching for
Supreme Court nominees who would support it, and engaging in partisan battles
about it—at the expense of building wider and deeper popular support for the
substantive right throughout the country.
Roe pre-empted an offensive strategy of growing a mass political movement for abortion rights, and channeled it into defensive, system-reaffirming, judicial and partisan “politics.” The abortion rights movement complacently placed its trust in an alliance with sympathetic magistrates and Democratic politicians and forewent the task of non-partisan persuasion—continually making its case and strengthening its support among masses of people whose support cannot be taken for granted or written off. While “pro-choice” liberals were playing with their RBG dolls, 15-year-old girls (and their parents) throughout the country were being talked to, and shown pictures of dead fetuses, by conservative pastors. Who’s approach was more effective?
So, I say: Good
riddance to the Supreme Court! Entranced by the historically anomalous rulings
of the Warren-Douglas years, most liberals and some lefties forgot that, throughout American history, the Supreme Court has been an
overwhelmingly reactionary actor. As political scientist Rob Hunter put it, SCOTUS is “an inherently
conservative institution to defend an inherently conservative constitution” that
was never going to be turned into a reliable tool of progressive reform. Stare decisis is not a rallying cry
for any movement, and abortion-rights supporters wasted too much political time
and energy insisting on it. As law professor Samuel Moyn said, in his critique
of “Juristocracy”: “The notion that empowering judges would serve progressive
outcomes is a flickering star that collapsed long ago, and it is long since
time to accept the dying of the light.”
Roe v.
Wade is dead, and
the abortion-rights movement must come back to life from the somnambulance in
which the judicial-institutional strategy represented by Roe enveloped
it.
What we’ve
witnessed in the abortion-rights battle is another failure of the liberaloid
tendency—which happily marries what Hunter calls “the framers’ skepticism of
popular sovereignty [and] mass politics—of securing elite support rather than
persuading the minds and securing the support of the people.” It’s time to
recognize, once and for all, that SCOTUS-imposed progressive reforms based on “judicial
subtlety and clever interpretations of superannuated texts” (Of course there’s
no clear abortion right in the 1789 constitution.) are thin ice that will melt
under heated political assault—"precisely because they were made through
elite deliberation rather than mass mobilization…[and] usually lacked broad
constituencies that could be mobilized to defend them.” Because, end of day,
Supreme Court decisions are “ratifications of accomplished political facts.”
So, let Roe
go. As Moyn says, abortion-rights supporters (and all progressives) must let go
of “the single-minded focus upon the higher judges and their selection,” and “embrace
democracy and its risks.” Let’s hope the demise of Roe will “force
progressives to take their case to the people to win majorities for their
policies, including in places across the country they have given up for lost.”
Because if they don’t, we will never have a strong national policy protecting
the right of women to terminate their pregnancies.
Party Off
What goes
for the Supreme Court goes as well for the Democratic Party, which is also a
reactionary, anti-democratic organization. While it’s true that abortion rights
has become a bright marker in American partisan tribalism, with the
“Pro-Choice” badge pinned prominently on the Democratic Party uniform, it’s
also true that the signal has far outweighed the substance.
The
Democratic Party knows exactly what it’s doing when it repeatedly supports and promotes anti-abortion-rights
candidates against abortion-rights supporters—like Tim Kaine in 2016, Henry
Cuellar this year, and its current leader, Joe Biden, who for years said that
Roe “went too far” and supported a constitutional amendment to
overturn it, because he did not “think that a woman has the sole right to say
what should happen to her body.” The party knows exactly what it’s doing when
its super popular president with his super-majority Congress ignores his pledge
to, first thing, “codify Roe”—i.e., pass an
actual law that would obviate any “judicial subtlety and clever
interpretations.” That party is telling you that it has more important things
on its imperialist-capitalist mind than your abortion-rights stuff.
That is, of
course, the predicament of any single-issue movement in relation to a national,
multi-issue party, a predicament that means it—in this case, the anti-abortion
movement—must avoid becoming an instrument or adjunct of, and fund-raising
vehicle for, any—in this case, the Democratic—party. Good riddance to that,
too.
At this
moment, the single-issue abortion-rights movement will find more
at-least-rhetorical support from Democratic rather than Republican quarters,
but that’s an inessential, contingent circumstance that the movement should not
take as a self-defining constant, let alone constraint. Which party did you
think, 10 years ago, was and would always be the antiwar party? The movement
must seek and use support among all people, regardless of party affiliation.
Any
political movement, any conception of politics, that defines itself
within the U.S. partisan framework will remain an opportunistically manipulated
instrument of a duopoly whose main concerns lie elsewhere.
Indeed, as
the recent decisive defeat of an anti-abortion rights amendment in Kansas demonstrates, taking the case for
abortion rights to people and places across the country the Democrats have written
off, and want you to write off, is an effective and necessary strategy. Abortion
rights will be won with the support of a lot of people who today consider
themselves Republican, Libertarian, or Independent—or who yesterday voted for
Trump—or it will not be won at all.
The cause of
abortion rights in this country has two important assets. One is that it is
supported by a large—it’s fair to say the dominant—faction of the elite
(however you construe it—ruling class, PMC, etc.). That’s because, as Glenn
Greenwald said of same-sex marriage, it’s an
issue that does not “threaten entrenched ruling interests …undermine oligarchs,
the National Security State, or the wildly unequal distribution of financial
and political power.”
That is why the
right to an abortion was able to be instituted quite quickly from the
elite, by a sympathetic Supreme Court in an exceptional conjuncture. That is
also why the abortion-rights movement will now benefit from a lot of establishment
financial, media, and political support. And this is the asset, the base of
support, the abortion-rights movement has preferred to depend on for the last
50 years. Dependence on this asset is also what made the Roe-established
abortion right politically precarious.
As a
leftist, anti-imperialist socialist, I point this out to understand where this
issue lies in the socio-political landscape, not to distance myself from the
abortion-rights movement, which I support wholeheartedly. Abortion rights are
women’s rights, and I understand that as in reciprocally beneficial relation with
the struggle for socialism. But that’s a relation not an identity. Other people
see it in very different terms, and, like many other issues, abortion rights is
a cause that’s necessary to support on its own merit—even if it puts me in
alliance with despicable characters, who hold other despicable views, among my class
enemies. The abortion-rights movement has, and must be, willing to seek support
from people with other despicable views—even those who don’t have money.
The
abortion-rights movement’s other big asset, which the Kansas outcome
demonstrated, is that it is supported in by a majority of the population. To be
more precise, when the case is presented in clear and forthright manner, the
majority of the population will reject criminalizing women who terminate their
pregnancies. This is the asset that much of the abortion-rights movement has
been too often ignoring, and the anti-abortion rights movement has worked hard,
and too successfully, to undermine, over the last 50 years. “Pro-Choice” has
not worked as well as dead-fetus pictures and “Pro-Life” in holding and
building this crucial base of support—the 15-year-old girls and their
parents—which is the most important asset for the abortion-rights movement.
This is perhaps
because too many abortion-rights supporters do recoil from talking to, let
alone building alliances with, people who hold other objectionable views within
the ridiculous American partisan framework—even though those people are not
class enemies, are intensely affected by the issue, and can and should and must,
in large numbers, be persuaded. Insofar as it encourages this rejectionist attitude,
the first asset—establishment support—threatens to become not an asset at all,
but the abortion rights movement’s greatest liability.
Case
Sensitive
I’m
convinced that putting the case for abortion rights in the right terms is a
necessary condition and, in itself, a most effective support of any political
movement for abortion-rights. I think the consistent use of terminology that
accurately and honestly identifies what’s at stake is crucial.
To wit: I am
not in favor of “abortion.” I’m in favor of abortion rights, and I think
it’s necessary, no matter how annoying, to always use that terminology.
I am not
“Pro-Choice” (a hopelessly abstract, patently evasive, and therefore
politically harmful slogan); I am against criminalizing women who
terminate their pregnancies. This is not a question of an abstract “freedom to
choose”; it’s a question of whether or not a woman has the concrete freedom to
remove from her body whatever it is that’s in it, without being
imprisoned for doing so.
I am not
invested in denying that, or arguing whether or not, the fertilized
egg/zygote/blastula/embryo/fetus is “a human life” The anti-abortion rights
position is based on the notion that the answer to the “life” question dictates
the answer to the criminalization question. But it does not, it is relatively
easy to demonstrate that it does not, and most people, including many who
are opposed to abortion, do not want it to.
Opposition
to abortion can and should be—and, waiting to be recognized in many
people, already is—broken away from opposition to abortion rights. That non
sequitur, which the anti-abortion-rights movement has managed to gloss over,
is its weakness, and the abortion-rights movement’s best bet is to focus on it,
precisely and relentlessly.
Here, from an
anti-abortion-rights demonstration in Libertyville, IL in 2005, is what I mean:
And here, I
think (reluctantly giving credit where due), is the best exchange on the
subject I’ve ever seen on mainstream media, with Chris Matthews interrogating
Bishop Thomas Tobin in 2009 regarding the Bishop’s criticism of Rep. Patrick Kennedy’s support
for abortion rights.
In this
interview, Matthews zeroes right in on the core points: If you hesitate to
punish a woman for having an abortion, that should be instructive to you. The
only relevant question is: What should be the criminal penalty for a woman or
girl even to have an abortion? If you know that advocating for imprisoning a
woman who has an abortion will be rejected by most people—who may not like
abortion or may think it’s immoral, but don’t think it is or should be a
criminal offense—then you know your position is politically untenable, and you’re
hiding it.
The points
were spot on in Libertyville in 2005, on MSNBC in 2009, and they still are,
here and now. The response to the Libertyville video from the
Pro-Life Action League that sponsored the event is “instructive,” in precisely
Matthews’s sense:
[The video] unwittingly dispels a common misperception. To wit, the absurd notion that vindictive pro-lifers are gleefully anticipating the day when they can begin rounding up women who have abortions and exact Torquemada-style justice upon them. The idea of punishing women who have abortions could not be further from pro-lifers’ minds …Pro-lifers’ real motivation is rooted in charity and compassion for unborn children and their mothers. This video … plainly shows that vengeance has no rightful place in pro-lifers’ minds…
When he asked her if she thought there should be a legal penalty for women who have abortions, [a longtime pro-life activist at the Libertyville demonstration] said:
“No, I believe she should be dealt with in a pastoral way, compassionately, and that the crime should be placed on the physician who is breaking the law and performing the abortion.”
So, the
Pro-Life Action Leaguers could not have been more adamant that they oppose
criminalizing women who have abortions. Like Bishop Tobin, they like to invoke the
situation “before that disastrous decision of Roe v. Wade”—a legal
regime in which abortionists would be penalized but women would not, and “certainly
not with prison terms.”
That stance
is repeated today by “national and state pro-life organizations, representing
tens of millions of pro-life men, women and children across the country,” who declare,
in an open letter: “let
us be clear: We state unequivocally that any measure seeking to
criminalize or punish women is not pro-life and we stand firmly opposed
to such efforts.” [my italics]
Of course, it
is now clear that doing away with the abortion right that Roe v. Wade introduced
does not result in some “pastoral, compassionate” regime for pregnant women,
but in exacting precisely the Torquemada-style justice upon them that was “the farthest thing” from most
abortion-rights opponents minds. When Norfolk, Nebraska police track down a 17-year-old girl through her
Facebook posts and bring a felony charge against her as an adult (and
multiple felony charges against her mother) for acquiring and using abortifacient pills, when lawmakers in states like Louisiana and Idaho propose laws explicitly allowing women
who have an abortion to be prosecuted for murder—well, Torquemada has nothing
on the New Model Special Victims Units.
In Texas, 26-year-old Lizelle Herrera was arrested and charged with murder for self-induced abortion. In California, 29-year-old Adora Perez served four years in prison after giving birth to a stillborn son. And in Mississippi, Latice Fisher was jailed after losing her baby at 36 weeks after police found she’d searched for abortion information online. (Bloomberg)
Unfortunately, for those mainstream pro-life groups—and fortunately for us abortion-rights supporters, I think—there is a band of hard-core “abortion abolitionists,” who are not going to allow mainstream “pro-lifers” to avoid understanding what they have been and are doing by opposing abortion rights. Abolitionists will not stop insisting that mainstream pro-lifers must, if they oppose abortion, also oppose abortion rights and support criminalization of women who abort. The pro-lfers’ premise, they say, demands the abolitionists’ conclusion: conception = human life = fully protected person under criminal law. As Louisiana Rep. Danny McCormick insists: “a woman who has an abortion should be in the same legal position as a woman who takes the life of a child after birth” (or the life of an adult, for that matter). [my emphasis]
The
hard-core abolitionists are in effect saying: “We have not just been opposing
abortion for the past fifty years. We’ve not just been making an ethical
argument about abortion; we have been demanding a legal prohibition of
abortion rights. That means criminalizing, calling the force of
law—the cops, the courts, and the prisons—on all responsible parties who
undertake an abortion, and that necessarily includes the women, since
they are competent, responsible actors who are not forced, but choose to terminate
their pregnancies. Anything less would be dishonest and patronizing. If you
don’t accept this, you do not understand what it means to oppose abortion rights,
and need to decide whether you really do or not.”
The
abolitionists, in other words, are playing the Chris Matthews role, post-Roe,
from the other side of the issue, and we should join them from ours. We should
do everything we can to encourage the split between hard-core legal
abolitionists and mainstream ethical pro-lifers, and to encourage the latter to
recognize and embrace, in a new way, the difference that always existed between
their and the abolitionists’ ethico-legal position.
Abortion abolitionists
are right in saying that opposing abortion rights means criminalizing women who
abort. More mainstream pro-lifers were wrong in not recognizing that, and they must
now resolve their confusion—either by recognizing and embracing that their
consistently-stated position against criminalizing women means that, however
they oppose abortion, they do not actually oppose abortion rights—indeed
it is, in their own terms, “not pro-life” to do so—or by abandoning
their own long-standing, unequivocal position and taking up the thumbscrews.
I know, one
can say the mainstream pro-lifers repeated anti-criminalization position was
always a ruse, meant to be abandoned once it helped clear the stage for inquisitorial
legislation. And that it is certainly
true for some pro-life leaders and organizations. But it’s also certainly true that it was a necessary
ruse, because it was leading a lot of people to a place they did not want to
go. Because, per old Chris, too many of those people “deep down...do not
think it’s a criminal act to have an abortion. They may not like it. They may
think it’s immoral. But they don’t think it’s criminal.” In opposition to
Danny McCormick, they do not think “a woman who has an abortion should be in
the same legal position as a woman who takes the life of a child after birth.”
In other
words, there are a lot of—perhaps even most—people who think of themselves as “pro-life”
who can come to see that their ethical objection to abortion does not
require, and has actually never meant for them, opposing legal abortion rights.
As obvious as it was to us, they did not (want to) see—even "unequivocally"
rejected—that legally abolishing abortion rights would mean criminalizing women,
and would produce effects at least as ethically objectionable to them. Concrete reality now forces them to confront
that, and provides a key leverage point for the abortion-rights movement.
If this is
not the case, if there are not many persuadable people, or if we give up on the
process of persuading them—i.e., actual politics—we will never get secure
national abortion rights. It’s definitely annoying to have to repeat the
obvious to people who have not wanted to hear it, but nowhere is Thomas Sankara’s dictum more relevant: “We don’t
have the right to say we are tired of explaining.” And
if you want people to change their minds, best not to
complain when they do.
When
this guy—South Carolina state Rep. Neal Collins, who voted for six-week,
so-called “heartbeat,”
abortion ban—is starting to
crack, the whole edifice can be made to crumble:
I know, one
wants to smack people like Collins upside the head, and say “What the hell did
you think you were voting for?” (As we
might do to so many absurdly oblivious people—like, you know, “leftists” who support
the “domestic terrorism” agenda.)
But if we’ve
reached the point where so many people have been led politically to create
policies they themselves reject, where they’ve been able to think of enacting a
law as an ethical statement rather than a legal
policy that criminalizes real people, “a
symbolic vote against abortion rather than a very real threat to women,” that may be because they have not
been consistently and clearly engaged, because there haven’t been enough Chris-Matthews
moments at every level of social interaction. Engaging in frank, concrete
discussions with all kinds of people all across the country is a pain in the
ass. Much simpler to write off all “pro-lifers” as irredeemable “Christian
fascists,” and just vote Blue no matter what.
This is
Your Life
A lot of people preferred to avoid acknowledging the concrete reality of what’s involved in the specific choice of terminating a pregnancy, and keep the discourse in the realm of abstract “choice.” It was another example of the political delusion many leftists have, that they can ignore arguments they find uncomfortable, as if their enemies—or even unconvinced but sympathetic people whom they can and should persuade—will let them. But pregnancy—the relation between a woman and the incipient life within her body—is a unique, concrete human situation that makes it not ridiculous to have religious or secular ethical qualms about abortion.
There’s no
avoiding the ethical ambivalence involved in one day treating the
zygote/blastula/embryo/fetus as a dispensable interruption in your life and a
few years later (or before) handing out pictures of the sonogram and making
sure it gets constant doses of Brahms and baby-talk. There’s no dismissing the
ethical concerns regarding abortion for sex or race selection, for desirable
genetic “appearance” traits, for organ-harvesting purposes, for all the new uses
profitable biological technologies will invent to commodify the woman’s
body and the zygote/blastula/embryo/fetus. The black and minority activists who
express concerns because they know that, historically and now, many white
people favor abortion rights for racist reasons, cannot be dismissed as “anti-woman.”
The anti-war, anti-poverty, anti-death penalty, pro-social justice religious
people who express concerns based on an anti-commodification, “seamless web of
life” ethic—Yes, Virginia, I’ve known many of them—cannot be dismissed
as “Christian fascists.”
As much as abortion-rights supporters
may be loath to discuss it, there’s no avoiding that supporting abortion rights
can reasonably be perceived as sanctioning killing an incipient human life.
Hiding behind an abstract invocation of non-specific “choice”—what Sophie Lewis
calls “the euphemistic, apologetic,
placatory ‘pro-choice’ strategy”—to avoid that ethical problematic has not
worked and will not work.
The
assertion of “human life in the womb” must be frankly and effectively
addressed—which, I emphasize, does not mean refuted. I agree wholeheartedly with Sophie Lewis’s
recent essay in The Nation: “When
“pro-life” forces agitate against feticide on the basis that it is killing,
pro-abortion feminists should be able to acknowledge, without shame, that yes,
of course it is.”
Supporters
of a woman’s right to terminate her pregnancy should not feel compelled to
deny that an abortion is arguably killing something that’s arguably a human
life, or to denigrate, or dismiss the possibility of talking to, anyone who
believes that. They should point out that it’s inarguable that the
pregnant woman whose body is carrying that something is a living human, in
every possible sense of the word.
The answer
to “It’s a human life” is not, “No, it isn’t and you’re a religious nut for
saying so and I’ll try to shut you up if you do.” It’s: “Maybe. So what?
Whatever it is, it’s in my body.”
The answer
to the question: “Why should we allow you to kill a living organism?” is quite
simple: “Because it’s in my body and I don’t want it there.“
The concrete
images of the zygote/blastula/embryo/fetus are not to be denied, but countered
with insistence on the equally concrete body of the woman. “Good for you for
being so concerned about human life; now look and listen to the inarguably
living human women who are carrying dead fetuses around in their womb, who are
imprisoned and their families destroyed, who are dead from botched self-abortions,
etc., because you thought the life of the zygote/blastula/embryo/fetus was more
worthy of protection than theirs.”
Why should a
woman not have the right to terminate a process that’s happening entirely
inside her body? A process that takes over her body for nine months, has
significant physical effects, and carries significant risks to her? Who, under
what conditions, could possibly have the right to force her, with the threat of
felony conviction and imprisonment, to undergo that with her body for nine
months?
As Lewis
says. “A desire not to be pregnant is sufficient reason in and of itself to
terminate” a pregnancy. Why should a woman suffer criminal penalties for doing so?
“It’s a
life” is not the answer. As “pro-lifers” like Rep. Collins are starting
to realize, an arguable ethical claim about life of the zygote/blastula/embryo/fetus
does not dictate a criminal policy toward the inarguably human person
whose body is its host. There is no
reason any such organism should be entitled to more rights under the
law over the body of a fully enfranchised, undeniably human and alive woman
than the woman herself.
Indeed, since we live in a polity that claims to honor bodily autonomy—the right of every person, women equally as men, to control what happens to and in his/her body—why should there even be a need to establish some special right about that? Isn’t it entirely natural that a woman should be able to control her own body?
In a polity
like we once, and some still do, live in, where a woman’s body was explicitly not
under her control, but her husband’s, or her cleric’s, the answer to that
question would be easy. And, while some may argue that such a paradigm is
implicit in the anti-abortion rights movement, it is not the dominant explicit
argument, and does not carry the day politically. In our polity, anti-abortion
rights advocates do not try to persuade people to support criminalizing
abortion by arguing that women are subservient to men. They try to persuade
people to criminalize terminating a pregnancy, abolish a woman’s bodily
autonomy, and force her to surrender her body for nine months, because the
zygote/blastula/embryo/fetus is alive, and women are subservient to that.
From the moment of conception, the product of conception is, in
effect, given superior legal rights over the pregnant person who is
its host.
Again, an unforced
legal-criminal conclusion from an arguable ethical assertion. Why
should the pregnant woman—in every politico-legal sense fully enfranchised and
“human”— not have the legal dispositional right to decide what she carries
around in her body, no matter how arguably "human" that entity is,
and whatever anyone else thinks of that choice morally.
For abortion-rights supporters, she does. For them, and for anyone who values bodily autonomy, it is no different than anyone having the right to refuse to graft one’s fully human and alive two-month- or twenty-year-old child, or forty-year-old brother, on their back (or even, less dramatically, give them a blood transfusion every day) for nine months, if it were necessary to save that person’s life.
You can ethically
excoriate such a person as a rotten, selfish killer for refusing to do that,
but, as most people would recognize, that does not mean they should be
made criminally liable for homicide, murder one, if they decline. Because
bodily autonomy is not something to be legally dismissed so easily. (And
those who have been led to think otherwise by some recent ideological campaigns
are in the “What did you think would come of that?” company with Rep. Collins
above, as I’ve argued elsewhere.)
If you think
that’s a far-fetched example, consider the case of the man who was pregnant
for thirty-six years. Yup, a man (no fancy-pants transgender stuff needed
in this case) who, unaware, carried in his body a “living” creature—his twin
brother—who had “survive[d] as a parasite” for thirty-six years. This was a
natural product of conception, at least as completely “human” as a six-week-old
embryo. It had “feet and hands that were very developed” and “quite long” fingernails.
As the doctor who removed it said: “I could shake hands with” it.
This is a
case of fetus in fetu, where a fetus gets trapped inside its twin and “survives
as a parasite even past birth.” Unusual, but it makes the point in exactly the
gruesome way it needs to be made. This is a completely "innocent"
creature that grew and "lived" in a man’s body for 36 years, only to
be rudely cut into pieces and "killed" by his doctors and removed. Doesn't
it "deserve to live" as much as a blastosphere? Can anyone who wants to criminalize
abortion on the “life-begins-at-conception” principle not also want to
criminalize this forcible removal and destruction of a 36-year-old human life?
Anyone who
does not want to criminalize this pregnant man and his doctors is acknowledging
that the concrete realities of bodily autonomy make it such that you cannot
simply criminalize the act of terminating a pregnancy, no matter when, ethically,
“life” begins.
Or ends.
Because this
36-year-old fetus in a pregnant man raises the question: When does it end?
When does the human host’s criminal liability for expelling the parasite
from its body end? Does the arguably living product of conception have an overriding
legal right over the inarguably living host whose body it’s in forever? Or is there some point, after the moment of
conception but before leaving the host's body—whether 36 months or 36 years—at
which the host person has the legal right to assert control over his or
her body, no matter how genetically human or developed the parasite entity is?
Indeed, as
unusual as this pregnant man example is, it is, in fact, not dissimilar to precisely
the plight of pregnant women that Rep. Collins had to confront—women who are forced,
by the laws he and his pro-life-but-unequivocally-against-criminalizing-women
friends have passed, to carry their dead or skull-less fetuses until these living organisms
decide to leave the body.
This example
shows that it is realistically impossible not to admit there must be some
end of the entity’s legal priority over the host. And if the ethical precept
“life-begins-at-conception” cannot tell you when legal, criminally liable
“life” ends, it can’t tell you when it begins, either.
Many unequivocally-against-criminalizing-women
“pro-lifers” are going to have to realize that ethical claims about the
zygote/blastula/embryo/fetus are not so simple, that any ethical claim does not
necessarily dictate criminal policy, and that it’s impossible legally,
politically, and ethically not to recognize a different criminal
liability for terminating a pregnancy at some point between conception
and birth than for killing a child outside the women’s body. They will find
themselves recognizing
that, even if ethical life begins at conception, politico-legal, criminally
liable “life” begins somewhere else—if not after birth, no sooner
than somewhere between conception and birth. They will, in other words, find
themselves supporting—effectively arguing for!—exactly the principle and framework
of the “disastrous decision of Roe v. Wade” they fought so hard to
annul. Because Roe v. Wade was itself a compromise on bodily
autonomy. Abortion rights are dead! Long live abortion rights!
They will
have to choose between one thing that “could not be further from their minds”
or another.
I think that
logic, which derives from the concrete cases we are facing, can—and if we are
to achieve secure national abortion rights, must—prompt many unequivocally-against-criminalizing-women,
casual “pro-lifers” to re-think their explicitly expressed, but in deed denied,
opposition to abortion rights.
Due Date
I know it will, unfortunately, tempt some to recant the position they’ve always held and expressed, and join the hard-liners in insisting that “the full personhood of an unborn life [at all stages of pregnancy] must entail equal protection under the law that is afforded to all other persons in the U.S. Constitution” (my italics and interpolation). Well, then, we can insist that they must also raise their voices to demand that the zygote/blastula/embryo get child support payments, citizenship status, census enumeration, tax dependency status, etc.
If a fetus is a person at 6 weeks pregnant, is that when the child support starts? Is that also when you can’t deport the mother because she’s carrying a US citizen? Can I insure a 6 week fetus and collect if I miscarry? Just figuring if we’re going here we should go all in.
— Carliss Chatman (@carlissc) May 9, 2019
Anyone who does not accept this, for any reason, is, in fact, making a legal distinction between the organism that exists within the mother's body and a full-born baby or a legal "person" of any age. They are in fact defining the zygote/blastula/embryo/fetus as, at some stage, not as fully legally and politically enfranchised as a child or legal "person" of any age. They have acknowledged that, even if biological, spiritual, or ethical "life" begins at conception, fully enfranchised legal life does not. They voided "life begins at conception" as an argument against giving the pregnant woman a distinct legal, criminal law right over whatever the entity is in her body.
If it’s not legally
murder one from moment one, it’s something else at some other time that has to
be determined by a social discussion that takes into account the unique,
concrete circumstances of pregnancy, starting with bodily autonomy.
And that
is the only issue here—not whether the developing organism is a
"life," or whether it's immoral to stop it from growing, but whether
the woman in whose body it exists must be held criminally liable for removing it from her body. Hey, pro-lifer, a woman has at
least as much right to decline to surrender her body to the
zygote/blastula/embryo/fetus for nine months as you do to decline to offer it
the all the social, political, and economic support to which a fully
enfranchised legal "person" is entitled.
We will not persuade
everyone, but we can and must persuade enough. We must stand our ground with a
consistent, forthright argument, as well as fierce, confrontational political
action, including civil disobedience. Let’s rub their noses in, refusing to ignore
or accept, the criminal law shit that anti-abortion-rights forces have gotten
themselves as well as pregnant women into. I support all kinds of mass action—including
fighting the cops—to refuse arrests and incarceration of women who get, and
doctors who provide, abortions. Make them see and have to fight for, every day
in every state, all the necessary consequences of the legal subjugation
of a woman to the zygote/blastula/embryo/fetus in her body—consequences that
most people, including many of them, do not want, and have defined as
“not pro-life.”
The bottom
line is this: The cops and the courts either prevent women from having
abortions or they prevent people from preventing women having abortions.
There’s a hard battle ahead, and abortion-rights supporters will have to wage
an effective ideological and political fight in every town, county, and state
to securely and nationally win—to reverse the defeat they’ve suffered in—that
battle, on their terms.
Roe is gone. The Supreme Court is not our
savior. The Democratic Party is a fickle friend. As Sophie Lewis says, “the
euphemistic, apologetic, placatory ‘pro-choice’ strategy hasn’t worked out.”
It’s time to “risk coming out for what we actually want,” and, per Samuel Moyn,
“embrace democracy and its risks.”
The fight for
abortion rights can only be won with the best tools, none of which is more
effective than the clear and consistent argument so well summarized in: My
Body, My Choice!
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