Subscribe to Christianity Today
Subscribe to Christianity Today
December 3, 2008
Free E-mail Newsletters:
RSS Feed | More Feeds | RSS Help

Home > 2007 > August (Web-only)Christianity Today, August (Web-only), 2007  |   |  
'How Much Time Should She Serve?'
Pro-life groups answer by defining the victims of abortion.



ADVERTISEMENT

In a July 2005 video clip recently posted on YouTube, an unidentified man asks pro-life activists whether a woman should serve time in jail if she were convicted of abortion in a hypothetical post-Roe v. Wade world. The demonstrators shift feet, flush, show all the signs of thinking as they speak. The interviewer pushes them. Some of their conversations go in circles. Several of the pro-life activists admit they have been participating in anti-abortion demonstrations for years without considering the question of penalties.

Abortion rights advocates see an opportunity in that confusion. Organizations such as Planned Parenthood and the new National Institute for Reproductive Health are encouraging people to ask politicians, "How much time should she serve?" The question shows "that choice can be a winning issue if you force people to stop evading the hard facts," Anna Quindlen wrote in a recent Newsweek column. Quindlen suggests that people who have pro-life convictions haven't thought past their animosity to the idea of abortion.

"Perhaps rank-and-file pro-lifers haven't thought through that," responded Carrie Gordon Earll, senior policy analyst for bioethics at Focus on the Family. "But the people who are doing abortion policy in the pro-life movement have thought about that."

Olivia Gans, who had an abortion in 1981, said, "When I looked at those faces [in the YouTube video], what I saw was a comprehension that women like me are going through something that is extraordinary in its scope, but I also saw a lack of understanding of how the law works." Gans is now director of American Victims of Abortion, a branch of the National Right to Life Committee.

Quindlen wrote, "There are only two logical choices: Hold women accountable for a criminal act by sending them to prison, or refuse to criminalize the act in the first place." Not true, says Earll: "Penalizing the woman is not even on the table."

Historically, abortion legislation has recognized another choice: Hold the person who is most directly responsible for the abortion liable.

Charmaine Yoest, vice president of communications at the Family Research Council, explained that she sees abortion as an act of violence against both a woman and her child. "We've always argued that the doctor is the appropriate target because they're the ones who are actually performing—there's no nice way of saying it—they're the ones who are actually murdering the baby," she said.

As far as prosecution goes, Earll said, abortion is a more complicated issue than murder. She explained that in legal history, a woman who had an abortion was comparable to a battered woman who hurt someone in self-defense.

Richard Land, president of the Southern Baptist Convention's Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission, said abortion is not the same as murder, since there is no cultural understanding that a fetus is a person. But if abortion were made illegal and he were a state legislator, Land said, "I would probably charge voluntary manslaughter for the abortionist. If [a doctor] were convicted, he would lose his medical license for two years and spend a year in prison with the first offense, and with the second offense, he would lose his medical license for life. At which point it'd be very difficult to find a doctor who'd do them."

Such a legal stance is tantamount to "ignoring or infantilizing women, turning them into 'victims' of their own free will," Quindlen wrote. "State statutes that propose punishing only a physician suggest the woman was merely some addled bystander who happened to find herself in the wrong stirrups at the wrong time."





E-mail this pageWrite CTPrint this articlePost a comment





  


Subscribe to Christianity Today and get 3 free trial issues. No credit card required.

Please allow 4-6 weeks for delivery. Offer valid in U.S. only.

If you decide you want to keep Christianity Today coming, honor your invoice for just $19.95 and receive nine more issues, a full year in all. If not, simply write "cancel" across the invoice and return it. The three trial issues are yours to keep, regardless.


Click here for international orders2-for-1 Gifts!

[Reader Reviews]
Average User Rating: 

Displaying 1 - 3 of 23 comments.See all comments
Steve   Posted: August 15, 2007 7:57 AM
Anna Quindlan wants to make this a simple either/or. But it can't be, not if Roe is overturned and the issue of abortion returned back to the authority of the fifty states. In such a situation, we could see a variety of different penalties (or none) being levied. I'm glad the article addressed this (to a point) at the end. Quindlan is building a straw man argument, implying that being pro-life means wanting to lock up and throw away the key on helpless women. Her argument is fallacious. The article helps to point this out.

carolyn   Posted: August 14, 2007 8:42 PM
I think women who have abortions should serve time. And, I have had an abortion.

Christina Dunigan   Posted: August 14, 2007 7:55 PM
This is an example of deliberate fearmongering by abortion advocates. They want the general public to think that banning abortion would mean sending their addled sister to jail because she aborted the baby she made with her crackhead boyfriend. It's not that the prolifers haven't thought through the consequences of their own drive to recriminalize abortion. It's that it never occurs to them to want the woman to go to prison. They just want the babies to live. Something that abortion advocates can't seem to wrap their heads around.

sponsors 








[Browse More Christianity Today]

Search





















Search by Name
Or use Advanced Search to search by program, region, cost, affiliation, enrollment, more!

Search by:





Books & Culture
Christianity Today
Church Law & Tax Report
Church Finance Today
Church Secretary Today
Ignite Your Faith
Leadership Journal
Men of Integrity
Outcomes
Today's Christian Woman
Your Church
ChristianityTodayLibrary.com
PreachingToday.com