How Abortion Hurts Women: The Hard Proof
Erika Bachiochi
Over
the last three decades, the abortion debate has been characterized as
the clashing of rights: the human rights of the unborn on the one hand
and the reproductive rights of women on the other. This decades-long
rhetorical deadlock has left a good number of Americans — the great
majority of whom understand that an individual human life is taken in
each abortion — personally opposed, yet unwilling to “impose their
beliefs” on anyone else.
The popularity of this so-called pro-choice position is due, in
large measure, to the success abortion advocates have had in convincing
Americans that abortion is a necessary precondition to women’s
well-being and equality. If you want to stand for women’s progress, the
line goes, then you have to stand for abortion. Indeed, in our current
cultural milieu, to oppose abortion is to risk being called anti-woman
— and few, regardless of their sense of the moral wrongness of
abortion, can withstand that accusation. “Personally opposed, but can’t
impose” seems to many the only pro-woman option.
I once numbered myself among the ranks of “personally opposed”
pro-choicers, though I must admit to being more “pro-choice” than
“personally opposed.” I penned the following words during my junior
year at Middlebury College while one of the leaders of our women’s
center: “The state’s suppression of a woman’s right to choose [was]
simply a perpetuation of the patriarchal nature of our society…. To
free women from [the] gender hierarchy, women must have a right to do
what they please with their bodies.”
The story of how I came to change my mind about abortion is rather
lengthy, complicated by elements that are philosophical, religious,
moral, psychological, and political. Suffice it to say, my unwavering
support for abortion was based on my status as a feminist. Thus,
central to my eventual opposition to abortion was the dual realization
that abortion both harms women’s well-being and that it is antithetical
to a genuine feminism — one that recognizes and celebrates the
uniqueness of women as women.
the rest is here:



Leave a comment