(By Kathleen Parker, Washington Post, 26 October 2012)
We shouldn’t
be talking about this silliness — Big Bird, “bulls----er” or a girl’s “first
time.” We should be talking about The
Issues, we keep telling ourselves. But in the waning days of the presidential
campaign, these are the issues — binders full of cultural issues that continue
to divide us and by which Barack Obama hopes to win reelection. It is no accident that the war of competing
economic theories has devolved into the same old culture war, beginning with
the debate about the contraception mandate under the Affordable Care Act. Ever
since, the Obama campaign has strategically tried to push the Republican Party
and Mitt Romney into a corner by advancing the war-on-women narrative.
That Obama
has had ample help from certain outspoken players (Missouri and Indiana Senate
candidates Todd Akin and Richard Mourdock, respectively, to name the most
notorious) has only made Romney’s challenges greater. But the war against women
has always been a red herring. Random
comments by a couple of outliers provided wind for Obama’s sails. Akin’s
remarks, that women don’t get pregnant when “legitimately” raped, was just
idiotic and immediately dismissed by Republican Party leadership, including
Romney. Yet Mourdock’s view, that a child conceived by rape is God’s will,
deserves some perspective. Obviously,
he wasn’t endorsing rape. He apparently belongs to that sliver of pro-lifers
who insist that even babies conceived of rape are worthy of protection. They,
too, are God’s children.
Although
most Americans, including those who are enthusiastically pro-life, support
exemptions for rape and incest, Mourdock’s argument is not nonsensical. If life
begins at conception, then one life is not worth less than another owing to the
circumstances of creation. The embryo bears no blame. Given this context, Mourdock’s argument is
logical. But we bend logic as needed. We
weigh pros and cons and make difficult choices. Thus, most would resolve Mourdock’s
Muddle as follows: Given the horror of rape and the consequences for the woman,
we find for the woman. It is no good solution, certainly not for the gestating
human, but it is acceptable to most. It is also certainly not a decision one
should make for another.
Mourdock may
have been indelicate in stating his position, but he is hardly a monster for
believing that the definition of life, like the definition of rape, should not
be parsed. As to Romney’s choice to not comment, why would he? This is the
ultimate no-win — and the answer is meaningless except as a political point,
which perhaps explains the media’s insistence on a response. Romney’s position on the subject is clear. He
supports exceptions for rape and incest. He also said early in the primary
season: “Contraception, it’s working just fine. Just leave it alone.” So why are we still talking about it? This
pseudo-debate is, as Joe Biden would put it, “malarkey.” Just possibly, a child
could recognize the “bulls----er” aspect to this non-issue, to borrow the
phrasing of Obama during a recent Rolling Stone interview.
The
contraception issue never would have come up but for Obama’s decision to force
the hand of the Catholic Church. By placing religious institutions in the
position of having to provide health insurance to pay for contraception as well
as sterilization, which, agree or not, are against church teaching, Obama
created the conversation. Some church
leaders support Obama’s position, but not the U.S. Conference of Catholic
Bishops. Nor do many religious institutions, including the University of Notre
Dame, that have sued the Obama administration on First Amendment grounds.
Obama
reasoned correctly that he had the majority with him, especially among women
and youth, for many of whom these debates seem antiquated to not-applicable.
Hence, a new Obama ad by the creator and star of HBO’s “Girls,” Lena Dunham, in
which she compares voting for the first time (for a man who understands women)
to, you know, “doing it” for the first time. It’s . . . what it is: a message
to young women that losing one’s virginity is top of the bucket list, but first
you gotta vote for the president who will give you free contraception. The same ol’ culture wars. But, of course, women have had access to birth
control for decades, and no one is trying to take it away. Anyone who suggests
otherwise may have been spending too much time with Big Bird.
No comments:
Post a Comment