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The Wall
Roe Built
Abortion & Politics
by
Fr. Patrick J. Winslow
Enough with
the entrenched “pro-life” vs. “pro-choice”
rhetoric. Let’s talk politics. When it comes to the
abortion debate, the American people and politicians live
in two different worlds. For the average American, the debate
is as simple as it is contentious. For the politician, it
is as strange as it is off point.
For the American
people, the abortion debate is clearly defined. Those who
wish to outlaw abortion speak of conception as the first moment
of human development and thus demand protection under the
law for the preborn. Others speak of a woman’s right
to decide whether that process continues within her. Such
are the two views taken at the dinner table, water cooler,
and ladies guild. When it comes to abortion, the average American
“gets it.” They are, quite simply, on point.
Then there
are those who live in the political sphere, within the walls
of Roe v. Wade. Separated from the rest of us, this
alternate society is entrenched in our nation’s capitol.
Unlike the American people, they are, to say the least, off
point. Hearing them speak on the issue of abortion, the average
person is lost as the conversation swirls around topics such
as judicial precedent and privacy rights. They speak a strange
language and navigate bizarre theoretical terrain. The act
of an abortion is more or less a footnote indistinguishable
from any other act one might want a right to commit.
Whether they know
it or not, politicians appear to the rest of us as living
in another world, aloof and isolated from the average American.
Ask anyone outside the political sphere trying to follow the
debate. They turn on their favorite news program, listen in,
and within minutes ask themselves, “What are they talking
about? I thought this was supposed to be about abortion!”
Adding insult to
injury, the poor viewer, not being from this strange world
of politics, is left to accept the translations of reporters
and pundits. (Apparently, they are fluently bilingual.)
How
Did We Get Here?
In short,
Roe v. Wade. This court decision has become America’s
political version of the Berlin Wall, separating regular Americans
on one side and politicians and Roe supporters on the other.
Roe v. Wade has created a whole new world sheltered
from the central question, new information, and popular opinion.
It is the only place on earth where abortion has nothing to
do with abortion, where privacy has something to do with when
a child becomes a citizen.
Why? Because
the wall Roe built keeps the real questions out, assuring
politicians never have to deal with the serious issues of
life, human development, and protection under law for the
preborn. It is the out-of-touch place where debate reels about
such concerns as stare decisis (the principle of
judicial precedent) and privacy rights. Ironically, those
we ask to represent us on the real issues inevitably abandon
us and enter this strange land. Once elected, they are shown
the gate and pass through the wall, never to return. Quickly
they adapt, learn the language, and explore the landscape.
Meanwhile, the rest of us live on the outside where abortion
still has something to do with abortion.
On behalf
of the American people, I have a request. Could someone from
the strange land of politics, from behind the wall, please
come out and explain to the rest of us what privacy rights
have to do with determining at what point our newest and youngest
citizens can be protected by law?
Such is
the great legacy of Roe v. Wade. Within the center
of a free society, a court ruling, circumventing a true political
process, has constructed a walled fortress made of the strong
substance of precedent, effectively creating a pocket of tyranny.
Here, an elite group of nine Supreme Court Justices rule by
edict propped up by an increasingly strange and only tangential
political process. Appointed by the elected, they build and
sustain the wall, keeping the American people and the central
issue out of the debate.
Imagine if tomorrow
the American people, based on further medical evidence, unanimously
discerned the need to afford legal rights to the unborn child,
protection even from his/her mother. Nothing would change.
Why? Because nothing could change. The wall of Roe, with its
preeminent concern for privacy and precedent, is constructed
out of material impervious to new and relevant information,
keeping the real issues out and securing the majority opinion
of this ruling class. To be sure, when it comes to abortion,
Roe has created an aristocratic, not a democratic, process.
“Tear
Down this Wall!”
As frustrating
and dire as this all seems, there is hope. Just as the will
of the people toppled the Berlin Wall and tore down the Iron
Curtain, so too can this barrier be prevailed upon. Today,
more than ever, we need a courageous politician to come to
the fore, take the podium, look the court in the eye, and
say “tear down this wall!” One can hear the applause
of people, diverse in opinion but united by a yearning for
a true democratic process.
What might this
look like in the upcoming presidential election? Certainly
it would be less dramatic than President Reagan’s cry
to Gorbachev. But consider the possibility of an outsider
to national politics whose previous political position on
abortion might otherwise be problematic reframing the debate:
Debate
Moderator: Sir, you have been called a natural
leader. If you were to become the United States president,
would your administration operate from a pro-life or pro-choice
platform?
Presidential
Candidate: With all due respect, what does it
matter? Moreover, what does it matter if 95 percent of the
American people are pro-life or pro-choice? This question
is a political red herring. The Supreme Court has made it
so by taking it away from the American people and our political
process. In other words, Roe v. Wade said to the American
people, “Your view of abortion does not matter. Five
out of nine of us say it’s OK.”
The
real question is, What kind of Supreme Court justice might
I nominate to the bench? One who takes the issue away from
the American people and presumes to vote on their behalf?
Or one who sees that this is one of the most important modern
ethical questions we as a people face? That is, at what point
of human development will our nation protect life under the
law? We must ask and answer this question as a people, as
a democratic nation.
We
are not an aristocracy where a select few rule the majority,
where a group of nine distinguished citizens known as Supreme
Court justices decide these important societal questions for
the rest of us. Sure, they judge questions directly bearing
upon Constitutional rights, those of the state and those of
the citizen. But the answer to this question is not to be
found there. This issue needs to be returned to the American
people. And only then will I answer the question as to whether
I am pro-life or pro-choice. Because only then will it actually
matter what the rest of us think.
Rev.
Patrick J. Winslow is the pastor of St. John the Baptist Catholic
Church in Tryon, North Carolina, and lectures for Catholic
Scripture Study International.
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