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COLD OPEN |
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I'm often struck by the dichotomy of liberal impulses. Liberals
have long sought to ban smoking tobacco, but they want to legalize smoking pot.
They don't want America fighting wars, but they want American servicewomen in
combat. They're against the death penalty for society's worst criminals but in
favor of abortion for society's most vulnerable and innocent lives.
But every once in a while
liberalism provides a window into understanding these
contradictions.
Last week a writer named Mary Elizabeth Williams penned
an essay for the liberal web magazine Salon in which she explained, in
great detail, why she is absolutely convinced that life begins at conception,
that every fetus is really just an unborn child, and that women should be free
to kill this life, via abortion, at any point during their pregnancy. It’s one
of the most
bracing pieces of writing you’ll ever see. You should absolutely read the
entire thing, but here’s a flavor of it, just so you'll believe me:
Here’s the complicated reality
in which we live: All life is not equal. That's a difficult thing for liberals
like me to talk about, lest we wind up looking like death-panel-loving,
kill-your-grandma-and-your-precious-baby storm troopers. Yet a fetus can be a
human life without having the same rights as the woman in whose body it resides.
She's the boss. Her life and what is right for her circumstances and her health
should automatically trump the rights of the non-autonomous entity inside of
her. Always.
When we on the pro-choice side get cagey around the life
question, it makes us illogically contradictory. I have friends who have
referred to their abortions in terms of "scraping out a bunch of cells" and then
a few years later were exultant over the pregnancies that they unhesitatingly
described in terms of "the baby" and "this kid." I know women who have been
relieved at their abortions and grieved over their miscarriages. Why can't we
agree that how they felt about their pregnancies was vastly different, but that
it's pretty silly to pretend that what was growing inside of them wasn't the
same? Fetuses aren't selective like that. They don't qualify as human life only
if they're intended to be born.
When we try to act like a pregnancy
doesn’t involve human life, we wind up drawing stupid semantic lines in the
sand: first trimester abortion vs. second trimester vs. late term, dancing
around the issue trying to decide if there's a single magic moment when a fetus
becomes a person. Are you human only when you’re born? Only when you’re viable
outside of the womb? Are you less of a human life when you look like a tadpole
than when you can suck on your thumb?
And then there’s this:
I'm a mom who loved the lives
she incubated from the moment she peed on those sticks, and is also now well
over 40 and in an experimental drug trial. If by some random fluke I learned
today I was pregnant, you bet your ass I'd have an abortion. I’d have the
World’s Greatest Abortion.
The instinctual conservative, pro-life
response to Ms. Williams seems to be horror and outrage. And I understand that,
on an emotional level. Yet intellectually we ought to welcome Williams's
important essay—even be grateful for it. Because she is one of the first
"pro-choicers" to engage in the philosophical foundations of abortion honestly.
She is performing a valuable public service, and she ought to be engaged
thoughtfully and respectfully.
Because here's the thing: The argument
Williams sets forth has always been the foundation of the
abortion-rights movement. But the partisans in the movement never had the
confidence or forthrightness to say so out loud. Instead, they constructed a
series of tangential barricades—about privacy or viability or super-duper
stare decisis—all of which obscured the real core of their beliefs. And
these Potemkin arguments made it difficult to have an honest national debate
about the extent to which America would, or would not, make its peace with
abortion.
And the truth is, if the pro-life movement and Mary Elizabeth
Williams both present their cases to the American public, and the public sides
with Williams, then so be it.
If you scroll through the comments to
Williams' piece—there are almost 500 of them—you'll notice something
interesting. Most of the liberal, pro-abortion responses are horrified by her
essay and try desperately to paint her as a crazy extremist. This is, I think, a
sign of how deeply afraid they are of ever having a debate about abortion on
intellectually transparent terms.
And while we're at it, we should be
grateful to Ms. Williams for something else: She very neatly resolves the
liberal dichotomy by explaining that, for much of liberalism, the paramount
intellectual question remains the same
as it was for V.I. Lenin: "Who? Whom?" |
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LOOKING BACK |
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"Mike Nifong's handling of the case was clearly outrageous. But
he would probably not have gone so far, indeed would not have dared to go so
far, had he not been egged on by two other groups that rushed just as quickly to
judge the three accused young men guilty of gross and racially motivated carnal
violence. Despite the repeated attempts by the three to clear themselves, a
substantial and vocal percentage—about one-fifth—of the Duke University arts and
sciences faculty and nearly all of the mainstream print media in America quickly
organized themselves into a hanging party. Throughout the spring of 2006 and
indeed well into the late summer, Nifong had the nearly unanimous backing of
this country's (and especially Duke's) intellectual elite as he explored his
lurid theories of sexual predation and racist stonewalling."
—Charlotte
Allen, “Duke’s Tenured Vigilantes,” from our January 29, 2007, issue.
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THE READING LIST |
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High
school, explained. * * * Sharecroppers
of the Sea: How solving one economic problem in the world of commercial fishing
created another one. * * * Understanding
“The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down,” 30 years later. |
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INSTANT CLASSIC |
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"We’re sitting in the Oval Office, and the president asked [the
legislative director] Phil Schiliro — who always could figure out what's that
third way — 'Phil, what’s the third way?' Phil said, 'Mr. President, unless
you’re feeling lucky, I don't know what the third way is.' And so the president
gets up from his chair and he walks over and he looks out the window, and he
says, 'Phil, where are you?' Phil says, 'I'm in the Oval Office.' He goes,
'What’s my name?' Phil says, 'President Obama.' He goes, 'Of course I’m feeling
lucky.'"
—Valerie Jarrett on the American Narcissus, New York
Times, January
18, 2013 |
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LOOKING AHEAD |
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We'll have articles on Tibet, the debt, and marijuana in
upcoming issues of THE WEEKLY STANDARD. |
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THE LAST WORD |
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For the last several weeks, I've been harping about the need for
Republicans to adopt a more populist politics, whereby they would turn their
back on the Church of Big Business, stop thumping their chests about "we built
this," and start championing the kinds of policies that speak to growth and
middle-class prosperity and family formation.
Last week, Louisiana
governor Bobby Jindal gave a speech that was designed, basically, to tickle all
of my pleasure centers. It is absolutely worth reading in full because it may be
the most ideologically
significant speech given by a Republican since Reagan. But here are some
highlights:
Balancing our government’s
books is not what matters most. Government is not the end all and be
all.
The health of America is not about government at all. Balancing
government’s books is a nice goal, but that is not our primary
objective.
Our objective is to grow the private sector. We need to focus
our efforts on ideas to grow the American economy, not the government
economy.
If you take nothing else away from what I say today, please
understand this — We must not become the party of austerity. We must become the
party of growth. Of course we know that government is out of control. The public
knows that too. And yet we just lost an election…
We have fallen into a
trap of believing that the world revolves around Washington, that the economy is
based there. If we keep believing that, government will grow so big that it will
take us all down with it.
If our end goal is to simply better manage the
disaster that is the federal government, count me out, I’m not signing up for
that. It’s not a goal worth attaining.
Which of you wants to sign up to
help manage the slow decline of the United States of America? I sure don't.
That’s what we have Democrats for…
As Margaret Thatcher famously observed
—first you must win the argument, then you can win the elections. And by the
way, it's time for all of us to remember that we are not in this just to win
elections.
We are in this to make America the greatest she can be, to
make America the prosperous land of opportunity that she can be. To do this, we
will certainly have to win some elections, but first we must win the
argument.
If this election taught us anything — it is that we will not
win elections by simply pointing out the failures of the other side. We must
boldly paint the picture of what America can be, of just how incredibly bright
America’s future can be…
We must compete for every single vote. The 47
percent and the 53 percent. And any other combination of numbers that adds up to
100 percent. President Barack Obama and the Democrats can continue trying to
divide America into groups of warring communities with competing interests, but
we will have none of it. We are going after every vote as we work to unite all
Americans…
We must quit "big."We are not the party of big business, big
banks, big Wall Street bailouts, big corporate loopholes, or big anything. We
must not be the party that simply protects the well off so they can keep their
toys. We have to be the party that shows all Americans how they can thrive. We
are the party whose ideas will help the middle class, and help more folks join
the middle class. We are a populist party and need to make that
clear.
Wow. I don’t know about you, but I need a
cigarette.
Because that is the way forward for both conservatism
and the Republican party. If only we'd had a nominee in 2012 who understood
it.
But better late than never. |
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