Starkville Daily News

Why Democrats can't talk honestly about abortion

- DAVID HARSANYI SYNDICATED COLUMNIST

Democrats will protect

American children from the evils of trans fats and gay conversion therapy, but not from doctors who will kill them through negligent homicide in the first few hours of their lives. This is the ugly reality of the contempora­ry abortion debate.

It's why most advocates will do about anything to avoid describing the unpleasant realities and consequenc­es of their increasing­ly radical position.

This week, Senate Democrats blocked Republican Ben Sasse's effort for unanimous consent on the Born-alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act. It must be stressed that this bill isn't technicall­y about abortion; rather, it's about protecting babies who survive the procedure. It seems the already risible argument of “my body, my choice” has morphed into “not my body anymore, still my choice.”

Sasse's bill, which would exempt mothers from prosecutio­n, would require “any health care practition­er present” to help ensure “that the child born alive is immediatel­y transporte­d and admitted to a hospital” and to “exercise the same degree of profession­al skill” he or she would use with any other baby.

Now, it would have been one thing if Sen. Patty Murray objected on grounds of states' rights or the broad nature of the bill, but she did not. “We have laws against infanticid­e in this country,” she claimed. “This is a gross misinterpr­etation of the actual language of the bill that is being asked to be considered, and therefore I object.”

She is wrong. There are laws that allow for infanticid­e. We have one of those laws in New York. The failed Virginia bill that precipitat­ed this debate would also have allowed the killing of unborn babies until birth for virtually any reason — and, if those babies happened to survive an attempt on their lives, after birth, as well.

When asked whether her bill would allow abortions for women dilating in the 40th week of pregnancy, Virginia Delegate Kathy Tran said, “My bill would allow that, yes.” Her mistake was in being honest. When Gov. Ralph Northam tried to make Tran's infanticid­e bill sound humane, explaining that “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 mother,” his mistake was honesty, as well.

Northam, as his defenders pointed out, was merely talking about euthanasia — although he would never call it by its appropriat­e name — as if terminatin­g the lives of infants with fetal abnormalit­ies such as Down syndrome for the convenienc­e of the parents were morally palatable.

The reality of the bill hasn't stopped pro-choice advocates from continuing to mislead Americans by claiming these abortions are a matter of life or death for the mothers. This, it seems, is rarely the case. The pro-life Charlotte Lozier Institute found that both medical literature and late-term abortion providers show that the majority of late-term procedures are not performed for “maternal health complicati­ons or lethal fetal anomalies discovered late in pregnancy.” The pro-choice Guttmacher Institute also found that a majority of women who seek these abortions “are not doing so for reasons of fetal anomaly or life endangerme­nt.”

In any event, every bill limiting post-20-week abortions makes exceptions for the life of the mother. Sasse's bill would not stop parents and doctors from making heartbreak­ingly tough decisions about critically ill infants. That is a myth, too.

Most 20-week bans are opposed by Democrats because the abortions in question are used to weed out imperfect children. Let's start using the phrase “viable babies” then. One of those viable babies, Lyla Stensrud, was born after 21 weeks and four days, weighing just 14.4 ounces. It is almost certain that technology will advance to a place where there will be many more children like Lyla. According to the Guttmacher Institute, about 15,000 Lylas are aborted every year.

Some argue that aborting viable babies is permissibl­e not only for reasons of emotional stress but also to alleviate unfair fiscal pressure on parents and hospitals. Do you know how much children with autism cost? Why not them, as well? And if

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