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- Newsgroups: talk.abortion
- Path: sparky!uunet!wupost!eclnews!atlas!dgp
- From: dgp@atlas.wustl.edu (Don Porter)
- Subject: Re: Biological Reasons fo
- Message-ID: <1992Nov23.093542.2807@wuecl.wustl.edu>
- Sender: usenet@wuecl.wustl.edu (News Administrator)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: atlas
- Organization: Washington University, St. Louis MO
- References: <1ebjs2INNmmn@hpsdde.sdd.hp.com>
- Date: Mon, 23 Nov 1992 09:35:42 GMT
- Lines: 111
-
- <1ebjs2INNmmn@hpsdde.sdd.hp.com> (Adrienne Regard) writes"
- > A woman's right to abort has nothing to do with her 'right to be a parent'
- > or her 'right not to be a parent'. That isn't a right that anybody has
- > (probably on account of it would make for very difficult definition and
- > protections). What a woman has is the right to define how her physical
- > body will or will not be used.
-
- I came into this thread in the middle, so I'm a little unclear
- on the context. If you are describing a solid philosphical
- argument why it is "wrong" for the government to restrict
- abortion, then I won't argue the point with you.
-
- But if you are describing the legal basis for abortion rights in
- the USA, I believe you are mistaken.
-
- A woman's right to abortion is based on her "right to privacy"
- guaranteed by the US Constitution. Like many constructs of
- constitutional law, it is hard to get a firm grasp on exactly
- what "privacy" covers, and what it doesn't. It is like the
- "right to free expression", which covers armbands in public
- schools, and flag burning on the public square, but not nude
- dancing in a commercial establishment. The only way to map out
- the details is to look at the case law.
-
- "Privacy" has not been interpreted to mean a blanket right to body
- autonomy. Indeed, in Roe v. Wade, the Court explicitly refused to
- endorse such an interpretation:
-
- In fact, it is
- not clear to us that the claim asserted by some amici that one has
- unlimited right to do with one's body as one pleases bears a close
- relationship to the right of privacy previously articulated in the
- Court's decisions. The Court has refused to recognize an unlimited
- right of this kind in the past. Jacobson v. Massachusetts (1905)
- (vaccination); Buck v. Bell (1927) (sterilization).
-
- On the other hand, the "right not to be a parent" has to some
- extent been grouped under the privacy umbrella. Consider the
- case of Eisenstadt v. Baird (405 US 438 [1972]) which
- guaranteed the right of unmarried individuals to use
- contraceptives. An excerpt:
-
- "If the right to privacy means anything, it is the
- right of the individual, married or single, to be
- free from unwarranted governmental intrusion into
- matters so fundamentally affecting a person as
- the decision whether to bear or beget a child."
-
- Note however that the right to avoid parenthood is a right against
- government intrusion, not a right against the actions of other
- individuals. That is, the government may not force you to become
- a parent, nor may it forbid you from becoming a parent. However,
- once you are a parent, the government may force you to carry out
- your parental responsibilities to your children. Legally parenthood
- begins with a live birth.
-
- So, I believe a woman's legal right to an abortion is indeed based
- on her right that the government may not force her to become a
- mother. Men have the same right that the government may not force
- them to become fathers. However, this right applies to men only before
- conception. The government could only interfere with a man's
- reproductive destiny by restraining his liberty at a time when his
- actions could influence his reproductive destiny. After conception,
- his acts are done. It is not the interference of government,
- but the independence of his partner which places his reproductive
- destiny outside of his control after conception.
-
- But doesn't that give women power over men? Yes, it does. That
- is the nature of liberty. When the government keeps its hands
- off the liberty of individuals, they naturally develop relationships
- of power over one another. Your employer has power over you. So
- does your landlord. So does your software vendor. Such is life in
- a free country. Get used to it.
-
- Is all this "good"? Perhaps not, but it is the way our system of
- government is set up. I happen to think this is an area of the law
- where our system doesn't work very well. This is because our system
- is set up on the notion that the fundamental political entities are
- the individual and the state. Thus our legal arguments are framed
- in terms of individual rights and governmental powers. However,
- reproduction is not an individual act. By its very nature it
- requires a partnership. Our legal system is not equipped to handle
- it well.
-
- Social and cultural arrangements such as marriage can help take
- up the slack and smooth over the rough edges by associating sexual
- partnership with broader notions of partnership, commitment, and
- two joining to act as one. But as people abandon such traditional
- arrangements and depend only on legalities to provide order
- to their lives, they must accept how truly blunt an instrument
- our government is.
-
- "Self-government" does not describe only the representative nature
- of our system of government. It also describes the individual
- responsibilty we must take for our own lives in a land where
- we are free to direct our lives in directions of our own choosing.
- We must truly govern ourselves, and take control of our own
- lives. And men, if you control your lives in such a way that
- you give a woman you do not trust power over your reproductive
- destiny, where does the blame truly lie?
-
- Stop trying to join in the increasingly fashionable "grievance group"
- system of politics, where you try to show that you've been victimized
- more than everybody else. You won't win. The traditional whiners
- have been at it longer, and are better at it than you will ever be.
-
- --
- | Don Porter | dgp@saturn.wustl.edu | Washington University in St Louis |
- | "The effect of liberty to individuals is, that they may do what they |
- | please; we ought to see what it will please them to do, before we |
- |___risk congratulations." -- Edmund Burke._________________________________|
-