The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Pro-life label must be honored at our nation’s borders

- Kathryn Lopez Columnist

“President Trump has diligently and successful­ly gone about fulfilling his promises to the pro-life voters who worked so hard to elect him, and it has been a privilege to stand with him to defend the innocent unborn,” said Marjorie Dannenfels­er, president of the Susan B. Anthony List, at the group’s annual dinner about a month ago.

Those words were said in the presence of Donald Trump as he was honored at the event. The Susan B. Anthony List helps elect pro-life politician­s to office. I am grateful for much of the work they do.

At the event, Trump said, “When I ran for office, I pledged to stand for life. And as president, that’s exactly what I’ve done. And I have kept my promise, and I think everybody here understand­s that fully.” He subsequent­ly went through a list of pro-life priorities that he had made progress on — involving taxpayer money and judges, on the top of the list. He talked about the gravity of our liberal abortion laws.

He also talked about Susan B. Anthony as “one of the greatest champions of freedom in American history,” adding: “She fought for decades to end slavery, to secure women’s right to vote, and to respect the dignity of every single person.”

Using the office of the White House to elevate these things — including the truth about this history — is something I’m grateful for. The suffragett­es were opposed to abortion and believed things about men and women and nature that are becoming harder to say and live by. Just ask the Little Sisters of the Poor, who had to go to court to protect their religious liberty.

But I also worry. There’s long been what friends of mine have called a “lazy slander” against pro-lifers: that we cease to care about a mother and child after the baby is born. But that ceases to be a slander and becomes a challenge to rise to when headlines talk about mothers being separated from their children at the border.

There are many in America who don’t know what they can believe, even as we have access to more informatio­n than ever before. The fact that other aspects of Trump’s long-term immigratio­n policies have been misreprese­nted in dramatic ways adds to the difficulty of having a sane, civil conversati­on about any of this.

The best aspect of Trump’s election is the aspiration­al sense it seemed to recapture. People dreaming, and maybe seeing a little of the Creator’s light in their lives. The “Make America Great Again” business isn’t all the ugliness that is well covered. It’s also struggling human beings and families wanting to believe that tomorrow, they might feel less chained, with a little more breathing room to build their family, their homes, and more.

At the same time, we who call ourselves “pro-life” simply must consider what that means in more complete and enduring ways than midterm elections. It means telling the truth about the inhumanity of abortion to all involved. But it also means inundating people with love. It’s out of love, and wanting to help families flourish, that we are pro-life.

And so, among other things, what are we doing to help orphans? And are we doing everything we can to prevent more pain and suffering?

President Trump, to his credit, beautifull­y paid tribute to a couple who welcomed a child born addicted to opioids into their home during the SBA List address. Those are the kinds of stories that capture the best of America. They are some of the best of who we are and who we want to be. That is prolife. Let’s double down on that. Let’s double down on love — at the beginning of life and at the border. It’s what gives us credibilit­y and truly makes us great in the most enduring of ways.

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