Siloam Springs Herald Leader

Abortion opinion stirs passions

- Greg Harton — Greg Harton is editorial page editor for the Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette. Contact him by email at gharton@nwadg.com or on Twitter @NWAGreg.

With more than 20 years of writing opinion columns, I’ve covered a lot of topics, from local political issues to national ones.

The one I’ve tried to mostly stay away from is abortion. It’s important, but people are so entrenched in their positions, there’s not a lot I can say either way to make any difference. It makes for great “hot button” material, if one’s goal is simply to stir the pot and generate letters to the editor. I once had a columnist content to do just that, often.

The Supreme Court last week made the subject pretty hard to ignore. Well, somebody made it hard to ignore by prematurel­y releasing a draft opinion that appears to show the court has preliminar­ily voted to overturn Roe vs. Wade, the 1972 court decision that legalized abortion nationwide. It’s something conservati­ve, anti-abortion forces have dreamed of for 50 years now and they may be getting their wish.

Anyway, I’ll share a few thoughts on this big news developmen­t, less driven by ideology than by curiosity for how this ultimately plays out.

• If same-sex marriage ought not be decided on a state-bystate basis, as the court has ruled, does it make sense that access to a medical procedure — as controvers­ial as it is — is determined by where one happens to live?

• There is truth to the assertion that making abortion illegal will not render it unavailabl­e. Look at the success of laws against drugs and the American experience of prohibitio­n on alcohol. That some people will break the law isn’t a valid reason to legalize any behavior, but it’s a sober reality that must be dealt with in an America that bans the procedure in a large-scale way, particular­ly in areas of high poverty.

• Kudos to foes of abortion who embrace a responsibi­lity to act in a world in which babies are born to people who do not want them or who will not or cannot take care of them. A child born into dark circumstan­ces nonetheles­s deserves to breathe and live as anyone born to the richest or most compassion­ate people on earth. The world is full of people who overcame poverty or abuse or neglect and achieved a victory over their oppressive environmen­t. That a child might face such circumstan­ces is undesirabl­e, but is no excuse for legitimizi­ng the end of his or her opportunit­y for life before that life has a chance to flourish.

• It is a shame and it defies logic that people who have fought so hard to overturn Roe vs. Wade are sometimes also the people who oppose age-appropriat­e sex education — the kind that simply and directly promotes knowledge of intercours­e between men and women and its capacity to produce unwanted pregnancie­s. Yes, this ought to include explanatio­ns of the ways one avoids pregnancy, the most successful of which is abstinence. To end such instructio­n there, however, is a disservice and ignores human sexual impulses. The only way sex education can be considered complete is to include knowledge of contracept­ion as a method to reduce the chances of unwanted pregnancie­s.

• Affirmatio­ns of the many ways people express themselves sexually — inside or outside marriage, through same-gender sex, through solo sexual gratificat­ion and the like — need not be part of sex education, at least within public schools, to achieve the desirable goal of helping young people know how to avoid unintended pregnancie­s.

To fight against abortion and against sex education is like handing adolescent­s a loaded gun to play with and no training for safety. Naturally, the safest decision is to leave the gun in its holster.

If these thoughts make anyone mad, let me just say this: Somebody prematurel­y leaked my opinion, and it may or may not end up the way I really view things.

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