Abortion Rights are Pro-Life

Roe V. Wade Anniversary Still Finds Defense of the Right to Abortion Compromised.

Thirty years after Roe V. Wade, no one defends the right to abortion in fundamental, moral terms, which is why the pro-abortion rights forces are on the defensive.

Abortion-rights advocates should not cede the terms "pro-life" and "right to life" to the anti-abortionists. It is a woman's right to her life that gives her the right to terminate her pregnancy.

Nor should abortion-rights advocates keep hiding behind the phrase "a woman's right to choose." Does she have the right to choose murder? That's what abortion would be, if the fetus were a person.

The status of the embryo in the first trimester is the basic issue that cannot be sidestepped. The embryo is clearly pre-human; only the mystical notions of religious dogma treat this clump of cells as constituting a person.

We must not confuse potentiality with actuality. An embryo is a potential human being. It can, granted the woman's choice, develop into an infant. But what it actually is during the first trimester is a mass of relatively undifferentiated cells that exist as a part of a woman's body. If we consider what it is rather than what it might become, we must acknowledge that the embryo under three months is something far more primitive than a frog or a fish. To compare it to an infant is ludicrous.

If we are to accept the equation of the potential with the actual and call the embryo an "unborn child," we could, with equal logic, call any adult an "undead corpse" and bury him alive or vivisect him for the instruction of medical students.

That tiny growth, that mass of protoplasm, exists as a part of a woman's body. It is not an independently existing, biologically formed organism, let alone a person. That which lives within the body of another can claim no right against its host. Rights belong only to individuals, not to collectives or to parts of an individual.

("Independent" does not mean self-supporting--a child who depends on its parents for food, shelter, and clothing, has rights because it is an actual, separate human being.)

"Rights," in Ayn Rand's words, "do not pertain to a potential, only to an actual being. A child cannot acquire any rights until it is born."

It is only on this base that we can support the woman's political right to do what she chooses in this issue. No other person--not even her husband--has the right to dictate what she may do with her own body. That is a fundamental principle of freedom.

There are many legitimate reasons why a rational woman might have an abortion--accidental pregnancy, rape, birth defects, danger to her health. The issue here is the proper role for government. If a pregnant woman acts wantonly or capriciously, then she should be condemned morally--but not treated as a murderer.

If someone capriciously puts to death his cat or dog, that can well be reprehensible, even immoral, but it is not the province of the state to interfere. The same is true of an abortion which puts to death a far less-developed growth in a woman's body.

If anti-abortionists object that an embryo has the genetic equipment of a human being, remember: so does every cell in the human body.

Abortions are private affairs and often involve painfully difficult decisions with life-long consequences. But, tragically, the lives of the parents are completely ignored by the anti-abortionists. Yet that is the essential issue. In any conflict it's the actual, living persons who count, not the mere potential of the embryo.

Being a parent is a profound responsibility--financial, psychological, moral--across decades. Raising a child demands time, effort, thought and money. It's a full-time job for the first three years, consuming thousands of hours after that--as caretaker, supervisor, educator and mentor. To a woman who does not want it, this is a death sentence.

The anti-abortionists' attitude, however, is: "The actual life of the parents be damned! Give up your life, liberty, property and the pursuit of your own happiness."

Sentencing a woman to sacrifice her life to an embryo is not upholding the "right-to-life."

The anti-abortionists' claim to being "pro-life" is a classic Big Lie. You cannot be in favor of life and yet demand the sacrifice of an actual, living individual to a clump of tissue.

Anti-abortionists are not lovers of life--lovers of tissue, maybe. But their stand marks them as haters of real human beings.

Made available through the Ayn Rand Institute.

 

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Dr. Peikoff was associate editor, with Ayn Rand, of The Objectivist and The Ayn Rand Letter (1971-76). He is author of Objectivism: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand. He is founder of the Ayn Rand Institute.

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Geoff Johnson on 19 May 2010
Pregnancy is not something that happens to people, a women has the choice to not get pregnant. If she inadvertently gets pregnant, the child deserves to be protected by the state like any other person, regardless of the childs physical condition. The "it's not a person" argument is an excuse for legalizing abortion, not the reason why people want abortion.

The child being in an 'unfinished' physical condition does not make it less of a person. Any adult is no more than a blob of cells as well, we arbitrarily decided that one kind of cells counts as a person, and that another does not. Excluding an unborn child from the protections of the state, on the basis of it not being the right kind of cells to be a person, is circular. As we were the ones who defined what kinds of cells are a person is in the first place.

The abortionist opinion, that some cell blobs are not a person, but become a person later on, contains the obvious contradiction that it does not offer a clear distinction between person and not person. The anti-abortionist opinion, that we are a person from conception, has no such internal contradiction. Therefore the anti-abortionist opinion about personhood is inherently more consistent.

Because an unborn child is always a person, abortion is always homicide. We can decide in what instances it should be legal homicide. But excluding 'unfinished' children from personhood is merely an excuse to deprive them of their human rights for personal and selfish reasons.

A mother could have prevented to get pregnant. Once she did, the child's right to protection by the state prevails over the whims of the mother. Just as the right to protection of a victim prevails over the 'freedom' of a murderer.

It is not categorically unthinkable for the state to dictate what a women does with her "own body". The state apparently can confiscate the income she produced with that body, and her right to privacy does not protect her when she attempts to hide that income from the state. The state can dictate her to not drive a motor vehicle if a certain permille of that body consists of alcohol, regardless of her maybe being a safer drunk driver than unsafe sober drivers. And the state can also violate her "right to privacy" in order to protect her unborn child.
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Miranda on 21 May 2010
There are certain circumstances in which the woman has no choice in becoming pregnant such as rape, molestation, and inbreeding. America isn't perfect, and because a woman chooses to terminate a pregnancy does not make her a "killer" it makes her a girl who made a mistake. Not having an abortion usually proves to be a bigger mistake than having the fetus aborted. She has a right to protect herself from a life of poverty and pain if she knows that she is unable to support a child. Women who abort pregnancies multiple times do suffer the consequences to their bodies and to their psyche. It should not be used as a method of birth control, but it should also not be outlawed. In the words of President Clinton, "safe, legal, and rare."
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Dr. Peikoff was associate editor, with Ayn Rand, of The Objectivist and The Ayn Rand Letter (1971-76). He is author of Objectivism: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand. He is founder of the Ayn Rand Institute.
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