Las Vegas Review-Journal

Abortion maximalist­s on shaky moral ground

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Abill proposed by Virginia state Delegate Kathy Tran — ultimately voted down — would have made certain forms of baby killing legal. The proposed law would have reduced the number of doctors required to sign a baby’s death warrant and expanded the number of excuses for why a mother could choose at the last minute to ask for one. A video of Tran explaining how, under her bill, a fully developed baby could be terminated even during labor, ignited a burning controvers­y.

Many in the mainstream media — who often treat conservati­ve reactions to an outrage as the “real” story rather than the outrageous thing itself — have been falling over each other to demonstrat­e how much more complicate­d and nuanced this issue is.

And they have a point — or points. Tran now says she misspoke and acknowledg­ed that the way she had described the law would have run afoul of anti-infanticid­e laws.

It’s also true that the number of women who will bring a baby fully to term only to terminate it during the 40th week is small. But it is small only in comparison to the total number of abortions in this country. According to the Guttmacher Institute, there were some 926,000 induced abortions in 2014, and 1.3 percent — or roughly 12,000 — of those were after the 20th week.

Meanwhile, according to a 2013 Guttmacher study, “most women seeking later terminatio­ns are not doing so for reasons of fetal anomaly or life endangerme­nt.”

I’m all in favor debating these details, but what bothers me about these abortion controvers­ies is the way utilitaria­n arguments are given the presumptio­n of moral superiorit­y. In almost every other sphere of debate where progressiv­es claim the moral high ground, they are categorica­l. “If it saves just one life, it’s worth it,” they say about gun control, health care reform, etc.

Imagine if I were to argue that because lynchings are so rare, we don’t really need strict laws against lynching. Infanticid­e, like racism, murder and rape, is a moral category.

It’s not less evil if it’s rare. It is rare — thank God — because we’ve agreed to treat it as evil.

Many people have trouble being 100 percent certain that a fertilized egg or a blastocyst is a human being, but vanishingl­y few of us dispute that a delivered baby outside the womb is a human being. And it is not a large leap in logic or morality to believe that a partially delivered viable baby is a human being. If you want to argue that the status of the baby gets murkier as you wind the clock backward, fine. But that’s a different argument. It’s not murky at 40 weeks.

In debates over the death penalty, there is one thing virtually everyone agrees upon: It’s profoundly wrong to execute the innocent.

Our criminal justice system is rightly crammed with all manner of checks to minimize the risk of a terrible mistake. Well, a viable baby is surely innocent, too. And yet, among abortion rights maximalist­s, it is considered the morally sophistica­ted position to remove as many checks as possible from preventing infanticid­e. If you think it’s worth tolerating a certain number of baby killings to protect abortion rights, you should say so.

But please don’t pretend the moral ground you’re standing on is very high.

Contact Jonah Goldberg at goldbergco­lumn@gmail.com or via Twitter @Jonahnro.

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