Marco Rubio is only the latest Republican to state that if he were President, abortion would be illegal at any time of a pregnancy. Further, there would be no exceptions, such as for pregnancies resulting from rape or incest or to save the life of the mother. (For the latter, Rubio claimed that he didn’t know of any instances in which abortion would or could save the life of an expectant mother. He’s not a physician, and apparently not a scientist of any kind either --- the reason he sort of gave for not taking a position on global warming. But he is willing to say, in no uncertain terms, that there would never be an instance where abortion would/could be necessary to save the life of the mother, making any exception for that purpose totally unnecessary. Ah well, as I --- and many others --- have said many times, consistency is not a property that runs abundantly in Repub. minds.) Sharing the Rubio position aggressively are such Dominionist Repub. candidates as Mike Huckabee and Rick Santorum. Most of the other Repubs. are chiming in to a greater or lesser extent --- Scott Walker comes to mind --- but right now Rubio is the one out in front on this one.
There has be much response to the
Rubio position. The first level has been
on the very correct “what, not even in the case of rape or incest [much less to
save the life of the mother]?” (Huckabee allowed that it shouldn’t be allowed for a ten
year-old girl raped by her step-father.)
The second level has been on the long-standing and very correct position
of the right of every woman to have control, if she wants it, over what is
going on inside her body, and in the case of fetuses, up to the time of
viability. (The long-time The Nation
columnist, Katha Pollitt, has
recently stated this position very well.)
The next level up in terms of the
potential impact of the ban-choice argument is that Rubio et al would enforce
their views on abortion rights by the use of the criminal law. This is the matter which I think we must now
begin to face, and loudly. Repubs. never
talk about this themselves, and they are rarely questioned on it. But what this policy would mean is that both
licensed medical and nursing professionals performing abortions would be
committing a crime punishable by a fine and prison (that is, if it to be
treated like just about any other felony, and presumably the men and women
holding to this position would make this crime a felony), and so would the
formerly pregnant woman. (The long-term,
predictable, outcome of such a policy is presented in Chapter 7 of my book, The 15% Solution: How the Republican Religious
Right Took Control of the U.S., 1981-2022.
It is entitled “The Morality Amendment” [which, by the way, would put
abstinence-only sex education into the Constitution].)
But it is the next level up that
concerns me the most. That is that the
Republican Party is basing its platform for national policy, not only on
abortion rights, but also on the rights of the LGBT community, entirely on its
own interpretation of certain texts in a particular English translation of the
Bible known colloquially as the “King James version.” (It happens that this so-called “inerrant
word of God” [of course as presented to us by particular human beings
selectively reading the text as they will] is a translation from the Greek and Latin authorized by
King James VI of Scotland, I of England, created by a team of 48 scholars and
theologians appointed by him.) But well
beyond that is the fact that virtually every Repub. candidate this time around
wants to use the criminal law to enforce a particular religious view
as to when life begins. This is one of
the most dangerous challenges that our nation faces. This is just the sort of theological question
that led to 150 years of murderous religious wars in Europe and England in the
16th and 17th centuries.
Further, the Republican Party wants
to place its religious concept of
pregnancy and pregnancy rights above all others. Let us pause to remember that many pregnant
mothers --- as well as many gays who want to marry the person they love --- are
themselves religious. So the Republican
Party is saying that their religion, based on a particular form of
Christian theology (that most would refer to as Right-wing), is to be placed
above everyone else’s and that it and its interpretations are to be enforced
using the criminal law. My book is
just one of those that details the very dangerous slope down which this sort of
politicized theology will certainly lead.
See also, for example, Christian Nation by Frederic Rich. Thus the state would be using the criminal
law to uphold and defend one particular religious doctrine above all others
Contrary to this religious doctrine
is the view, based in the First Amendment by the way, that it is the right of
the pregnant woman, religious or not, to believe that life begins sometime
after fertilization --- presently up to the time of fetal viability, as in Roe
v. Wade. And it is the right of gay
couples to marry, under the 14th Amendment to the Constitution. But I do firmly believe that if this struggle
is to be won in the long run, by both the pro-choice movement and the gay
rights movement it must be raised to the level of religious freedom and
the potential outcomes of the drive to enshrine certain religious beliefs in
the law, by criminalizing others, religious and non-religious alike. This one is not going to won solely on the
psitions that women have the right to control her own bodies (and of course they
should be able to), and that LGBT people have the right to marry whom they
choose, just because it is fair (and of course it is). If the Republican Party is not caught up
short, and soon, on the matter of their drive to put their particular religious
beliefs into the law (already well underway, by the way) and then backing that
up with the criminal sanction, this nation will ultimately doom itself to going
back to the era of Bloody Mary, The 30 Years War, and Oliver Cromwell.
Oh yes, “The Duopoly Watch” aspect
of this is that the Democrats play right into this narrative by never, ever
challenging Republicans on the matter of religious freedom on either the abortion
rights or the gay rights issues.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Senior Editor,
Politics, Steven Jonas, MD, MPH is a
Professor Emeritus of Preventive Medicine at Stony Brook University (NY) and
author/co-author/editor/co-editor of over 30 books. In addition to his role
with The Greanville Post, he is a Contributor for American Politics
to The Planetary
Movement, a columnist for BuzzFlash@Truthout, a
“Trusted Author” for OpEdNews, and the Editorial Director of and a
Contributing Author to The Political Junkies
for Progressive Democracy. Dr. Jonas’ latest book is The
15% Solution: How the Republican Religious Right Took Control of the U.S.,
1981-2022: A futuristic Novel, Brewster, NY, Trepper & Katz Impact
Books, Punto Press Publishing, 2013, http://www.puntopress.com/jonas-the-15-solution-hits-main-distribution/, and
available on Amazon.
No comments:
Post a Comment