Thursday, 18 July 2013

A Terrible Symptom of Women's Oppression


Abortion is something so horrible it has to be described with euphemisms: ‘a woman’s right to control her own body’; ‘a woman’s right to control her reproductive choices’. But the most common is ‘a woman’s right to choose’.

The sentence is left incomplete: it is short for ‘a woman’s right to choose between a pregnancy she fears may destroy her financially or professionally, possibly even physically, and the killing of the baby in her womb.’

In other words, many if not most women who have abortions feel they have no choice. Overworked women with low incomes, unsupportive families, unsympathetic employers, no partners and/or existing children to care for may simply be unable to cope with a baby; nursery care in the UK is prohibitively expensive – on average around £50 per child under two per day in London.

Women may find their careers or education derailed by pregnancy. Not to mention the stigma attached to unplanned pregnancy, particularly for teenagers; this may literally be fatal for those whose relatives are of the ‘honour killing’ variety.

A woman-friendly society would readjust itself to support pregnant women and mothers, removing the shame of pregnancy and alleviating the burden of childcare.

And yet contemporary Britain despises fecund low-income women. When Mick and Mairead Philpott were convicted of killing their six children, conservatives from chancellor George Osborne to the Daily Mail seemed to feel the problem was not just that they had killed them but that they had had them in the first place.

Tory politicians such as Work and Pensions Secretary Iain Duncan Smith have suggested limiting child benefits to the first two children.

In a culture where children are viewed, not as the citizens and taxpayers of the future in whose support the current generation has a stake, but as a luxury to be supported only by parents prosperous enough to afford them without burdening the taxpayer, it is unsurprising that the extermination of unwanted babies through abortion is effectively encouraged.

In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, abortion was rightly viewed by almost all first-wave feminists as a terrible symptom of women’s oppression. According to Sylvia Pankhurst: 

“It is grievous indeed that the social collectivity should feel itself obliged to assist in so ugly an expedient as abortion in order to mitigate its crudest evils. The true mission of society is to provide the conditions, legal, moral, economic and obstetric, which will assure happy and successful motherhood.” 

It is a great coup for Moloch when the ugly expedient can be passed of as a ‘choice’ for which women should be grateful; still more when supposed feminists, instead of seeking to free women from it, celebrate it as their totem.

For some women – financially better off, with supportive family and employers – abortion might really be a ‘choice’. But it is a ‘choice’ whose exercise increases the burden for other women. If an unplanned baby is viewed not as the responsibility of both parents, but purely as the woman’s choice alone, it effectively absolves the father of any moral responsibility for it.

It also absolves society of the duty to support her. So abortion undermines women who don’t want it.

Our culture fetishises personal freedom, choice and self-gratification but despises concepts like duty and responsibility. So the idea that when two adults conceive a child through consensual sex, then find themselves faced with an accidental pregnancy, they should both take responsibility for the baby even if they didn’t want it, is not popular.

And it really is a baby: anyone who has seen an ultrasound scan of a twelve-week-old fetus and listened to its heartbeat, but still claims that it is merely a ‘clump of cells’ rather than a tiny human being, is in denial; turning their eyes and ears away from the evidence and clinging to an unscientific (libertarian, pseudo-feminist) dogma.

Dehumanising the unborn baby (‘fetus’) turns it into a disposable commodity with no value except as an extension of its parent’s desires, after which all liberal values go out the window. In the UK, an unborn baby after twenty-four weeks is legally protected from abortion – but not if it is disabled, in which case it can be legally killed right up to birth.

Thus in the UK, the overwhelming majority of unborn babies detected as having Down’s syndrome, spina bifida or cerebral palsy are aborted; even a ‘defect’ as minor and correctible as a cleft palate or a club foot can spell a baby’s doom.

This murderous discrimination is taking place in the country that indulged in an orgy of self-satisfaction last summer when it hosted the Paralympic Games.

In other countries, other groups are disproportionately killed off through abortion. In the US, as well as the poor and the disabled, it is Hispanic and particularly black babies. In India and China, it is baby girls: abortion is popular in both these extremely misogynistic societies, greatly contributing to their huge gender imbalances in favour of men over women.

Women, of course, have the right to control their own bodies. But it is questionable if this principle encompasses a procedure that in the UK is performed by largely male NHS doctors, paid for by largely male taxpayers. And for every body so ‘controlled’, another is destroyed or mutilated.

As a result of failed attempts to abort them, Gianna Jessen was born heavily disabled with cerebral palsy, Ana Rosa Rodriguez was born with her right arm missing, while Carrie Holland-Fischer was born with a facial disfigurement, as a result of which, she recalls, ‘society had labelled me as ugly and unacceptable. I was made fun of all during school, and even the teachers made fun of me.’

These women were at least lucky enough to survive.

Women who seek abortions are victims of a society that does not respect them or their babies; they should not be stigmatised or treated as criminals. But let us stop pretending that this ongoing bloody tragedy is a manifestation of their emancipation.

12 comments:

  1. Great piece. I am rather frightened by how many people seem to support eugenic abortions. They always say something like “the baby will grow up and have an awful, sad life.”

    I fail to see how this is significantly different from the Nazi theory of “life unworthy of life.”

    And it is not just children with Down’s syndrome or spina bifida who are the subjects of this theory.

    I often hear the exact same argument applied to perfectly healthy babies born to poor mothers. The abortion movement has always had a strong anti-poor, anti-working class bias, even when it tries to present itself as a progressive force in society.

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  2. Everyone, and I mean absolutely everyone, should read my friend Ann Farmer’s Prophets and Priests: The Hidden Face of the Birth Control Movement, London: The Saint Austin Press, 2002, ISBN 1 901157 62 8.

    In addition to its unyielding racism, the war against fertility is, and has always been, the war against the working class, the war against the poor at home and abroad, the war against the electoral base of the Left, the war against the social provisions for which the Left exists, and, above all, the war against women.

    Furthermore (this bit is Lindsay, not Farmer - but I’m sure that she would agree with it), the idea of fertility as a medicable condition, requiring powerful drugs or even surgical interventions to prevent a woman’s body from doing exactly what it does naturally, is basically and ultimately the idea that femaleness itself is such a condition, a sort of XX Syndrome.

    I can think of nothing that is actually more misogynistic than that, although some things are equally so, notably the view that the preborn child is simultaneously insentient and a part of the woman’s body. Is it the whole of a woman’s body that is insentient, or only the parts most directly connected with reproduction?

    In America, and increasingly also in Britain, the black male is the victim of a triple genocide in the womb, on the streets, and on the battlefield.

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  3. Your against abortion, Lindsay?

    Then quit the party that brought us 180,000 abortions a year.

    I'll give you a clue-its the same party that brought us easy divorce (so that soon over 50% of all kids will be born outside wedlock).

    As Hitchens wrote last week-if Labour had told us this in the first place, would anyone have voted for them in 1964?

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  4. Drivel.

    And we have been over all of this dozens of times before.

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  5. I'm not sure what you mean by "been over this"-what Hitchens wrote is historical fact.

    No-fault divorce and easy abortion caused almost every social problem we see today.

    Today's 180'000 abortions a year and 50% of kids born outside wedlock, are the products of that 1964 Labour Government-as proved by the meteoric rise in divorce (and, of course, abortion) from the 1960's onwards.

    Check the statistics.

    The current level of abortion and the decline of marriage has taken decades to achieve.

    Your party must be proud.

    Nobody else is.

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  6. Further to my last post, if abortion really is "a war on the working class" then one must wonder why the Labour Party introduced it.

    Even Sir David Steele came to regret his act-he preposterously claimed that he never realised it would lead to 180'000 a year.

    But the Labour Party certainly did realise-as Peter says, they knew exactly what they were doing.

    I wish the electorate had known in 1964.

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  7. And the subsequent Tory Governments, over half of the intervening period beginning at the 1970 General Election? Well, there you are then. The Tories certainly did not oppose either of these measures at the time. Very, very, very far from it, in fact. Not least in the person of Margaret Thatcher.

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  8. What does that matter? The Tories didn't introduce these changes, and neither party has ever reversed them.

    Neither, needless to say, would Miliband the gay marriage fan.

    That should tell you something about the two parties.

    Stop wasting time on them (or I should say, on one of them).

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  9. Anonymous. I cannot help but think that if you see the main use of the article as an opportunity to criticise a political party, rather than comment on the tragedy that is abortion, you've both missed the point and do not have much concern about it.

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  10. Andrew.

    I take your point-but what on Earth is the use in "commenting on the tragedy" if we, as Mr Lindsay does, continue to support the parties that brought it into widespread existence here, and will keep it in existence if we keep voting for them?

    If we wish to do something practical about this and the many other things wrong with Britain, (crime, the legislative bar on new grammar schools, our EU membership, mass immigration...take your pick) we need to have a little imagination.

    Unless we all just take P. Hitchens latest advice-give up on Britain and emigrate to Canada.

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  11. Canada? Look up a few things about Canada.

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  12. I was repeating Hitchens advice.

    But a lovely country-far better than ours is now.

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