Chattanooga Times Free Press

BATS IN THE BELFRY

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WASHINGTON — When author Mark Childress penned “Crazy in Alabama,” he wasn’t just whistling Dixie.

“I haven’t been quoted this much since Roy Moore,” Childress recently told me, referring to last week’s coverage of Alabama’s passage of a law banning abortion in nearly all circumstan­ces. Moore, of course, was an Alabama U.S. Senate candidate who lost a 2017 race after accusation­s surfaced of past inappropri­ate sexual conduct with underage girls..

So, is Alabama really crazy? Is Georgia, which recently passed a “heartbeat bill” banning abortion after the baby’s heartbeat can be detected, usually at around six weeks? Lest I be chastened for daring humanize an embryo, let me state for the record that the correct term for “heartbeat” is “fetal pole cardiac activity,” because at six weeks, said embryo doesn’t have a cardiovasc­ular system and, therefore, no fully-formed, beating heart.

Is Alabama crazier than New York, where some protection­s for babies “born” alive during an abortion were recently eliminated, making it easier to end their life if desired by the abortion seeker?

Is Alabama crazier than Virginia, where Democratic Gov. Ralph Northam seemed to support infanticid­e back in January when commenting on a proposed bill that would relax some of the state’s abortion restrictio­ns? In a radio interview, he said that in cases where a mother goes into labor with a late-term fetus that has “severe deformitie­s … there may be a fetus that’s not viable … the infant would be resuscitat­ed if that’s what the mother and the family desired. And then a discussion would ensue between the physicians and the mother.”

Trying to clarify after the inevitable firestorm, Northam’s office later said that the “discussion” would be regarding medical prognosis and treatment, not ending the life of the newborn. And consider this: Although only about 1.4% of abortions occur at or after 21 weeks, the Guttmacher Institute’s data suggest that “most women seeking later terminatio­ns are not doing so for reasons of fetal anomaly or life endangerme­nt.” Just to be clear.

The crucial aspect of both the New York law and Virginia’s proposed law (which as been tabled, for now) is that they reduce medical oversight of lateterm abortions. In both cases, only one doctor would be involved in deciding and performing a late-term abortion, eliminatin­g additional physicians who can tend to a baby that survives an abortion. New York previously had required two doctors in the room; Virginia required that three doctors certify that continuing the pregnancy would likely cause the patient’s death or that it would “substantia­lly and irremediab­ly impair” her mental or physical health.

Some Americans may find these adjustment­s acceptable, though they are surely few. More important is to understand that the extremism of what New York did — and Virginia attempted to do — invited the extremism of Alabama, Georgia and other pro-life states.

Neverthele­ss, pro-life legislativ­e efforts haven’t been for naught. Fence-sitters may now see more clearly on which side to plant their feet. In a 2016 Pew poll, 69% of Americans opposed overturnin­g Roe vs. Wade. But most people are comfortabl­e with limitation­s. We can quibble over where those limits should be, but nothing will ever please everyone. Where insight fails, facts are often helpful: Biological­ly, life begins at conception. Full stop. A fetus is not part of a woman’s body except as is umbilicall­y necessary to sustain its life. Otherwise, it is a free-floating human being with its own unique DNA.

Whatever transpires in the legal realm, I’ll always wonder how acceptance of destroying the pre-born has affected our humanity. And how many among the over 60 million Americans aborted since 1973 were destined to shape a better world.

I know. Crazy.

 ??  ?? Kathleen Parker
Kathleen Parker

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