Volume > Issue > Inconsistencies in the Abortion Debate

Inconsistencies in the Abortion Debate

AN APPEAL TO REASON

By Mark W. Roche | March 1993
Mark W. Roche is Chairman of the Department of Ger­manic Languages and Literature at Ohio State Universi­ty. He is the author of Gottfried Benn's Static Poetry and Dynamic Stillness: Philosophical Conceptions of Ruhe in Schiller, Hoelderlin, Buechner, and Heine.

Emotions may blind us to the inconsisten­cies and absurd consequences of our positions on abortion. Precisely on an issue where emo­tions run high we need logical clarity. Each side of the abortion debate is capable of incon­sistency, and we will look at both.

One inconsistency lies in the major me­dia’s claims to objectivity and fairness, which contradict their indirect, perhaps even uninten­tional, biases. Although the country’s premiere newspapers and television networks seek to be impartial vehicles of the news, most of them fail when it comes to abortion. In an analysis published in the Los Angeles Times (July 1-4, 1990), David Shaw discussed at length the media’s manipulative use of language. This manipulation ranges from graphics focusing on women, rather than fetuses, to seemingly ob­jective language that describes “harsh” “re­strictions” on “women’s reproductive rights,” rather than “benevolent” “protection” of the “rights of unborn children” or simply “strict regulations.” The media also tend to employ the preferred labels of only one party: “pro-choice” or “pro-reproductive rights” (rather than “pro-abortion”) versus “anti-abortion” (rather than “pro-life”). Instead of weighing ar­guments, the media already manipulate lan­guage in such a way as to make the arguments seem superfluous.

Equally strange is the implicit media view that the Catholic Church should not advise politicians or enforce discipline on them. Cath­olics are voluntary members of a Church, re­ceiving Sacraments that are a privilege con­ferred by ecclesiastics whose role it is to nur­ture a particular worldview and to discipline infractions. In earlier eras the Church’s strong stances on political issues — bishops denying Sacraments to slaveholders during the Civil War and to segregationists during the civil rights movement, or, more recently, support­ing a nuclear freeze or protesting Reagan Administration economic policies — were heralded by the media.

Also of interest is the moral integrity of a politician who privately sees abortion as uneth­ical but publicly condones it. The absurdity of the position is clear if we consider a parallel scenario: A politician claims to be anti-racist or anti-sexist, but, recognizing no consensus against racism or sexism, neither votes against nor defies racist or sexist laws. Could it be that the otherwise progressive politician fears that the biased media would only decry his anti-a­bortion stance?

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