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- Newsgroups: talk.abortion
- Path: sparky!uunet!mnemosyne.cs.du.edu!nyx!mcochran
- From: mcochran@nyx.cs.du.edu (Mark A. Cochran)
- Subject: Re: Abortions should be rare
- Message-ID: <1993Jan28.080751.12568@mnemosyne.cs.du.edu>
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- References: <1993Jan25.115252.2129@guvax.acc.georgetown.edu> <1993Jan25.195007.11399@mnemosyne.cs.du.edu> <1993Jan27.030431.20479@wuecl.wustl.edu>
- Date: Thu, 28 Jan 93 08:07:51 GMT
- Lines: 96
-
- In article <1993Jan27.030431.20479@wuecl.wustl.edu> dgp@atlas.wustl.edu (Don Porter) writes:
- ><1993Jan25.115252.2129@guvax.acc.georgetown.edu> hasselbring@guvax.acc.georgetown.edu writes:
- >>> How can Clinton say that he
- >>> thinks aboritons should be rare when his actions will make abortions
- >>> more common?
- >
- ><1993Jan25.195007.11399@mnemosyne.cs.du.edu> (Mark A. Cochran) writes:
- >> Perhaps because (being a rational man) he realizes tha tthe way to
- >> reduce the number of abortions is to address the causes of abortion.
- >> By education, ensuring the availability of effective, affordable
- >> contraceptives, and by education.
- >
- [Deletions]
-
- >> If no girl ever got pregnant because of birth control failure, or
- >> because no effective birth control was available, or because she
- >> didn't know that 'you can't get pregnant if we do it standing up, with
- >> our left arms tied behind this tree while singing _Amazing Grace_' is
- >> a lie, how many abortions would be unecessary?
- >
- >Not as many as you think, I expect.
- >
- >First of all, you talk about a "girl", so I assume you are focusing
- >on teenage pregnancy. Keep in mind that teen pregnancies account
- >for only about 27% of the abortions each year. Even if you
- >got them all, there would still be a lot left for pro-lifers
- >to protest.
- >
- Pregnancy as a result of ignorance is certainly not limited to teens.
- Witness the number of individuals who actually believe that NFP is as
- effective as the pill.
-
- >Second, can you name even one person over the age of nine with
- >an IQ greater than 70 who is so ludicrously ignorant of the nature
- >of sex, pregnancy, and childbirth to believe your "Amazing Grace"
- >story? This is typical of the sort of sex myths we are told are
- >widespread among teenagers, but the only reaction I've ever seen
- >from a teenager hearing these myths is rolled eyes and laughter.
- >
- Names? No, because names are a confidentiality issue. Can I cite case
- histories? Sure. How about the 14 yo girl who gave birth (with no
- prenatal care at all, she has no insurance) to a 26 week microcephalic
- boy last week at our hospital. Baby is dead. The girl (who is a B
- student, according to her mother) claims she didn't even know she was
- pregnant. Not too suprising, since her mother has admited to us that
- she does not discuss sex with her daughter, and has consistenly
- opposed efforts by the local schools to provide sex education and
- contraceptive advice. The girl in question consented to sex with her
- 15 yo boyfriend based on a line which was every bit as silly as the
- one I gave above.
- Perhaps you should spend a bit more time with underpriveledged teens.
- Ignorance is incredibly pervasive, and more powerful then you may
- imagine.
-
- >Third, birth control is available. Granted, there are barriers to
- >teens getting the most effective kinds (prescriptions and expense),
- >but birth control is certainly more available now than it ever
- >has been. Furthermore, concern about "access" is misdirected.
- >I don't know of anyone too destitute to afford condoms, nor
- >too stupid to know where to find them. On the other hand, I know
- >of several people foolish enough to go ahead and have sex without
- >birth control anyway.
- >
- Condoms have a pretty poor record. How about making NORPLANT available
- free of charge to any female who wants it? No barriers, no parental
- consent, no cost. It would sure be cheaper then paying for welfare.
-
- >And that is the key. Knowledge doesn't solve a damn thing by itself.
- >Putting knowedge to use; changing behavior. That is the key.
- >And doing that requires more than knowledge. It requires wisdom.
- >If you have any proposals on how to impart wisdom to the mass of
- >American teenagers, I'm all ears. Foolishness is a formidable
- >enemy. And I should not close this paragraph without noting
- >that a propensity to foolishness does not leave a human being
- >on his/her 20th birthday.
- >
- You cannot combat foolishness until after you combat ignorance. A wise
- idiot will still manage to get into trouble.
-
- >Please don't get me wrong. I think education is great. But I get
- >tired of hearing again and again how it will single-handedly solve
- >all of our most troubling social ills. Perhaps if humanity were
- >composed of perfectly rational creatures this might be true. But
- >then it wouldn't be humanity, would it?
- >
- I deleted lots of stuff, but left in the paragraph where I think I
- made it quite plain that I do not think education will
- 'single-handedly' solve anything. I listed several things which would
- make a start towards removing the need for abortion. Why did you
- ignore that and latch onto only one aspect of my suggestion?
-
- --
- Mark Cochran merlin@eddie.ee.vt.edu
- These are the views of my employer, your employer, your government, the
- Church of your choice, and the Ghost of Elvis. So there.
- Member, T.S.A.K.C.
-