by Ben Schofield
I am writing in response to the previous article, "Why Abortion Should Not Remain Legal", which I strongly oppose for reasons that I will
list in detail below. I invite the writer to write and defend his position
accordingly.
1. The article began with the bold claim: "Abortion is
bad. This should be the start of any discussion about this sensitive
issue." At the same time as calling it a sensitive issue, this statement
is in itself insensitive. Rather than presenting this as the opinion it
obviously is, the writer delivered it as directly as
someone saying "my pen has black ink", which shuts down the debate
the piece was designed to create.
2. The article notably lacked sources for any of the extreme
claims it made about the bad effects of abortion. There is absolutely no
evidence that having an abortion causes psychological harm. I'll say that again
because it is important: there is absolutely no evidence having an abortion
causes psychological harm. [Quoting Tamara Khandaker] "In 2008, the
American Psychological Association formed the Task Force on Mental Health and
Abortion to examine all research on the relationship between abortion and
mental health and found no evidence that having a single abortion causes mental
health problems.
Severe mental health complications are rare, and feelings of loss and anxiety
could easily be associated with whatever led the woman to get an abortion and
not the abortion itself."* Correlation does not imply causality.
Continuing this point, according to the UK 's Royal
College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists there is no link between induced
termination and an increase in fertility**.
These two points are very important and are integral to why
I oppose the previous article; it just reveals it as being poorly researched.
The only places that spread this misinformation tend to be "Crisis
Pregnancy Centres" set up in the appearance of legitimacy only to give
misinformation to women when they are in an extremely vulnerable state.
3. It is not an article saying why abortion is bad. It is an
article that begins with that premise and then goes on to say what we should be
doing. By saying what we should be doing, the writer accepts that we are not
currently doing it (i.e. providing enough financial care for those who can't
afford a baby, or supporting women worried about their future). Surely this
would then provide an argument that abortion should remain legal because we do
not have these facilities, which would be taxing and impossible to run on a
wide enough scale to remove these *un-cited* factors facing women. Once again,
the article provides no evidence to say how many women face economic or social
factors in deciding as to get an abortion, thereby negating the argument to an emotive
one. There could be ten thousand cases or there could be ten. There is no point
including this point if the article does not give a sense of scale.
4. What about the women who have carefully considered that
they are not ready to have a child? If a woman feels unready I would argue it
is perfectly within her rights to avoid the responsibility. I would also say
that it is within her rights not to have to bear the responsibility for a
minimum of 9 months before the baby can be adopted. The duration and difficulty
of pregnancy is criminally misrepresented by those who consider adoption to be
comparable as a method of getting rid of an unwanted child. (Excluding cluster
headaches) labour is the greatest pain women will endure in their lives. Even
before that pregnancy is a horrific responsibility which many are not mature
enough to deal with, for nine months you can't drink, you must control your
eating, you cannot perform simple tasks, your presence is both revered and
marginalized by society, you effectively become a slave to your offspring.
After reading this I hope the writer of “Why Abortion Should Not Remain Legal” consider what he has written and whether he still stands by
it.
*http://www.apa.org/pi/women/programs/abortion/
** http://www.rcog.org.uk/induced-termination-pregnancy-and-future-reproductive-outcomes-%E2%80%93-current-evidence.
*http://www.apa.org/pi/women/programs/abortion/
** http://www.rcog.org.uk/induced-termination-pregnancy-and-future-reproductive-outcomes-%E2%80%93-current-evidence.
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