EFFECTIVENESS VS. RIGHTS
When it comes to our support of the use of contraception, some pro-lifers want to put an onus on us to prove that contraception reduces the rate of abortions. When statistics come out about the number of abortions going in one direction or another, they want to examine all the numbers to see whether allowing women to use contraception is "working".
But this ignores a larger issue. That issue is whether a woman has a basic right to do whatever she chooses to do in order to avoid conceiving. We assert that abortion is wrong because there are two people involved in the situation and one of them is going to end up dead. But before a woman conceives, there is no other person in the equation. One person, by herself, making her own decisions about what she wants to do. What she decides is nobody else's business. Whether the availability of contraception reduces the abortion rate or not does not change the fact that it is only right for women to have the right to use it. If we want to reduce the number of abortions, we need to do it by preaching the true message of the sanctity of life of the unborn, not by denying women their right to prevent pregnancy through non-violent means (and I still don't see how people think that taking contraception away would reduce abortions anyway).
Similarly (and I shudder to think about it), there are some people who oppose allowing abortions to save the life of the mother because they fear it would be used as a loophole to achieve unrestricted abortion on demand. The fundamental truth is that no one should ever be required to lose their life in favor of the life of another person. Concerns about subversion of that principle to achieve other ends would have to be addressed in other ways, but not by denying someone their right to save their own life.
Similarly (if I may stray from today's subject), a lot of people try to look at capital punishment in terms of whether it has a "deterrent effect" on other would-be criminals. I don't believe that the effect it has on other people should take priority over the principle of whether or not we believe that the government should have the authority to kill people.
So the overall principle is that if I believe someone has a right to something, I'm not going to be persuaded to trade their rights away to achieve some other goal.
(Ooh, now that's got me thinking about stuff like The Patriot Act. Stay on topic, Joan. Stay on topic.)
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