A Culture Of Life
I have a question for the pro-lifers: if you truly believe that
there is no distinction between someone that shoots and kills
another human being and an impregnated mother who decides to
abort a fetus, then why don't you do something about it? If your
child or your neighbor's child was being attacked by a madman
that was going to kill, wouldn't you defend that child? Why do
you talk about abortion like it is murder and express the belief
that nothing separates it from a violent homicidal attack by
adults, and yet a majority of you stand by and do nothing?
I have a question for the pro-choicers: if you truly believe
that abortion comes about because of unwanted pregnancies, what
have you done to prevent them? At what point do you think
abortion is murder? If you believe that life doesn't begin at
conception, where does it begin? Don't you understand that just
because you terminate a fetus early doesn't mean that the fetus
would not have developed into a life as we know it? If you do
have a life that is capable of reaching independence inside you,
why do you think that it is "just" your body, after all, no one
would live very long without help from others?
Wouldn't the both of you agree that we need to promote a
"culture of life"? But what does that mean?
I respectfully ask the Pro-lifers to put themselves in the
positions of people that are faced with these hard decisions.
Think about the possible circumstances in which your strongly
held beliefs might change. Think about a situation where you are
a married man and your wife is raped by someone that is HIV
infected, or a crack fiend. Do you abort then? O.K. maybe that's
an improbable example, but what do you do if your child is
impregnated by another family member? Again that's another rare
scenario, but these things do happen. Here's one that isn't as
rare as you think: your married and your partner becomes
pregnant. "Great", you think because that was your goal. The
doctor then informs you that if your wife continues with the
pregnancy she could become severely ill or die. What do you do?
Or a more probable situation is one where 2 teenagers go to a
party and get drunk, have sex and the girl becomes impregnated
because they didn't use protection or used it improperly. The
girl can't talk to her parents about it and the guy is nowhere
to be found. She has plans for college and didn't plan on
getting pregnant until after graduation, no less by a guy who
was just in it for the sex. What would you do?
Does a "culture of life" accept the reality that these things go
on all the time, and offer real solutions, including birth
control, sexual education, and expedited adoption, to combat
abortion? To take it a step further, would you be willing to
adopt an "unwanted" child, educate children about sex and
financially support those that cannot provide for themselves?
What should be the government's responsibility if they tell
citizens that all unwanted pregnancies legally cannot be
aborted?
I respectfully ask the pro-choicers to put themselves in the
position of someone who believes so much in their convictions
that they would be willing to sacrifice to the point of death,
to uphold them. Do you understand that a fetus, barring any
complications, will grow to the point of complete independence?
With that being the case, do you understand why someone would
say that life does indeed begin at conception? As a woman, don't
you understand that having the ability to abort a fetus isn't
power, it's responsibility? That responsibility gets shifted off
both the man and the woman, and is put squarely on you. By
insisting that it is your "choice", you have, for all intents
and purpose, removed the father's responsibility to not only
assist in making that decision but also to care for the child,
after birth.
Wouldn't a "culture of life" need to address issues like
poverty, crime, responsibility and famine? How can we allow
children to be born into an environment where the mother can't
afford to feed, clothe, educate and protect herself? Why
shouldn't fathers have as much legal responsibility to their
children as mothers do? Why should women have the sole
responsibility for making decisions about the termination of
pregnancy? Why should anyone be faced with the decision to
terminate because they have no support, no food, no money, no
healthcare, no way to provide and no hope?
Before condemning someone for having the opinions or convictions
that they do, why don't you try to first accept the reality that
these problems are real and affect people from every race,
culture and economic status, and that complete understanding of
these problems is necessary, before any real world solutions can
be formulated? Both sides should agree that these problems are
real. Both sides have different solutions to these problems, as
each of you understands them. Neither side is completely right
or wrong. Neither side has all the answers. Neither side is the
only holder of the truth. You can either combat each other or
combat the problem. You can either accept that there are good
people with strongly held beliefs on both sides of the aisle,
and that you both seek to solve these very human problems, or
you can dismiss each other and leave these issues for future
generations to fight.
The first step in the process of coming to any answers is
communication, understanding, and tolerance of one another. The
first step towards having a "culture of life" would be to
promote these values.