When the word terrorism is used, the association is
immediately drawn with militant Muslim individuals who kill people in the
furtherance of some combined religious and political goal. A common definition of terrorism would be the following.
“The unlawful use of violence
and intimidation, especially against civilians, in the pursuit of political
aims.”
If one wished to focus on religious motivations, a
comparable definition of “religious terrorism” would be this.
“The use of violence and
intimidation, especially against nonbelievers, in the pursuit of religious
aims.”
Murdering a person is clearly an act of violence; putting
another person’s life at risk is also a form of violence and intimidation.
Islam is thought of as a violent religion because it tends
to apply its exacting laws and extreme punishments to believers and non-believers
alike wherever it has political power.
All religions that have gained political power behave the same way,
although the implementation of law and punishment can be more subtle. Most European nations had state religions at
one point, and some still do. However,
in nearly all cases the resultant religious rule was so unpopular that any
political power the religions had has essentially been eliminated.
When the United States was founded it was decided that a
state religion was unacceptable because the multiple versions of Christianity
in place hated each other so much it was best to not invite violence by showing
any preference. Not having experienced living
under a religion-dominated society, many in the United States think it would be
a good idea. These people are consumed
by the desire to force others, nonbelievers, to live according to their
rules. This is exactly what Islam
does. Could it be that our Christian-dominated
society is also capable of religious terrorism against its citizens? The answer is yes.
Incitement to violence and intimidation against homosexual
and transgender people is produced by some versions of Christianity in this country,
and they are busy exporting their views around the world. Here the focus will be on abortion and the consequences
of “pro-life” activism.
Marcia Angell provides a concise summary of the
chronology of the pro- and antiabortion chronology in a New York Review of Books article The Abortion Battlefield.
“Women have always been subject
to male domination, sometimes almost completely. Even in as enlightened a
country as the United States, men created the laws under which women lived well
into the twentieth century, and they ensured that women had an inferior status.”
All writers who are pro-choice with respect to abortion
believe that the pro-life movement is mainly aimed at controlling women
and their sexuality.
“Not surprisingly, controlling
sexuality and reproduction was central to keeping women in their place. For
most of the country’s history, motherhood was considered women’s highest
calling. They were expected to submit to their husbands sexually, and marital
rape did not become a crime in all states until 1993. Abortion was illegal in
most of the country for most of its history. Desperate women would take various
folk remedies to end a pregnancy, try to end it themselves with some contrived
implement, or find an illegal abortionist—all risky. There are no reliable
figures for how many women died from illegal abortions but almost certainly
there were many.”
Relief for some women came with the availability of birth
control pills in the 1960s. However, the
number of unwanted pregnancies remained high and the number of women who were
killed or injured in the attempt to terminate their pregnancy was still
large. The carnage was so great that
even some religious leaders believed that access to safe medical abortions was
necessary.
“In 1973 the Supreme Court, in
the case of Roe v. Wade, took the next step. It found by a 7–2
majority that women had a constitutional right to end a pregnancy. The right
was close to absolute in the first trimester, could be regulated by the states
in the second trimester only to protect the woman’s health, and in the third
trimester could be further regulated or even banned to protect ‘potential life,’
unless the woman’s health or life were at stake. Legal abortions rapidly became
common. According to the Guttmacher Institute (a research institution that
gathers data on reproductive health in the US), about 3 percent of women in the
United States had legal abortions in 1980 (one of the peak years), and it was
later estimated that roughly a third of American women would obtain an abortion
at some time in their lives.”
The initial “pro-life” activism came mainly from
Catholics who referred to all life as deserving of reverence and
protection. This included being against war
and capital punishment. Later on, as
other denominations entered the fray, the “life” of interest was only the
unborn embryo or fetus residing in a pregnant woman.
“By the 1980s, the antiabortion
movement had undergone another major shift. It became dominated not by
Catholics but, over time, by evangelical Protestants, and its methods
increasingly included direct confrontations at abortion clinics to block
access. The movement also became increasingly associated with the right wing of
the Republican Party, which as far back as the Eisenhower administration had
set out to win over religious and social conservatives. The 1980 Republican
platform called for a constitutional amendment to protect the life of the unborn,
and the new president, Ronald Reagan, who, like Trump, had once favored
abortion, now, like Trump, opposed it.”
“In 1986 an evangelical
Protestant minister, Randall Terry, started an organization called Operation
Rescue, which advocated stopping abortions by nearly any means possible,
including firebombing clinics and harassing and threatening clinic doctors and
staff and their families. There were more than 60,000 arrests at Operation
Rescue actions, according to [Karissa] Haugeberg [an author], and the
organization went bankrupt within a few years because of the mounting number of
lawsuits. But the turn toward violence continued.”
The violence would include murders and bombings, clearly
acts of religiously-motivated terrorism aimed at preventing a legal activity.
“The total count between 1978
and 2015, writes Haugeberg, was eleven murders (nine of them physicians),
twenty-six attempted murders, 185 arsons, forty-two bombings, and 1,534
vandalizations of clinics.”
The greatest current focus of antiabortion activists is
the creation of legal obstacles to the operation of clinics where abortions are
available, and/or impeding access to such clinics by pregnant women.
“….particularly since
Republicans have gained control of most state governments, states have rushed
to pass new laws that treat pregnant women like errant children. According to
Haugeberg, ‘Between the 2010 midterm elections and 2015, states adopted 231 new
restrictions on abortion’.”
Clearly, murder and bombings are acts of terrorism. But what about the effort to forbid a woman the
ability to terminate an unwanted pregnancy?
Forcing a person to experience injury or death as a result of imposed
religious beliefs should be considered terrorism as well.
“According to the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, c. [about] 4 million women who give birth in
the US annually, over 50,000 a year, experience ‘dangerous and even life-threatening
complications’.”
NPR and ProPublica recently evaluated the maternal deaths
in the United States and reported some startling results in U.S. Has The Worst Rate Of Maternal Deaths In The Developed World. This chart
of the maternal death rate per 100,000 live births over time for various
developed nations was provided.
For some reason, the maternal mortality rate is much higher
than in any of the other wealthy nations listed, and it is increasing over time
rather than decreasing as it is in other countries. In 2015 the death rate was 26.4 per 100,000
live births.
This source
tells us that there are approximately 650,000 abortions reported annually to the
Center for Disease Control (CDC) in recent years. Using these numbers, if the antiabortion movement
actually succeeded in forcing 650,000 women to carry to term an unwanted child,
172 women would die and 8125 would be subjected to “dangerous and even life-threatening
complications.”
The act of forcing women to carry unwanted pregnancies to
full term rather than have a safe abortion means that a significant number of
them will die or suffer bodily harm in the process. This is the result of a few classes of
Christians insisting that all people must live according to their beliefs. This is Christians performing acts of
terrorism.
Return to the above chart on mortality data and note that
the increase in the United States seems to track the increase in measures to limit
access to abortions. Could there be a
correlation? Note also that Ireland, a
nation that prohibits abortions almost completely, has a falling mortality
rate. It turns out that Irish women have
ready access to an abortion; they must merely take an inexpensive trip to the
UK where they are readily available.
Such trips are perfectly legal and accepted in Ireland. The well-covered referendum that was recently
voted on will likely increase the probability that Irish women may be able to
get an abortion within Ireland, but it will not have much of an effect on the
number of women obtaining them. That
leaves the United States as about the only country successfully trying to
eliminate access to a medical abortion and leaves open the question of a mortality
correlation with antiabortion efforts.
When NPR and ProPublica performed their evaluation of
maternal mortality, they focused on what happens to women while giving birth in
a hospital. Their conclusions seem to
fit the simple explanation that no one on the various medical teams seems to
worry much about the mother or plan in a systematic way for any complications
that might occur around the time of birth or soon after. There is much more concern for preparations
for any difficulty the infant might encounter at birth.
Katha Pollitt provides some perspective on why
pregnancies can be dangerous in her book Pro: Reclaiming Abortion Rights.
“The risks of producing a baby
include ectopic pregnancy, gestational diabetes, bacterial vaginosis,
preeclampsia, anemia, urinary tract infections, placental abruption,
hyperemesis gravidarum (the constant and severe nausea that killed Charlotte
Brontë),
depression, postpartum psychosis, and PTSD—to say nothing of morning sickness,
heartburn, backache, stretch marks, episiotomy or caesarian scarring, decreased
marital happiness, and lowered lifetime income.”
Women who have ready access to quality medical care
before, during and after birth are more likely to have a successful pregnancy. That is the experience in the nations where
mortality continues to fall. In the rush
to limit access to abortion have pro-lifers also limited access to more general
medical care for women and thus increased the probability of maternal mortality?
Lawrence Wright suggests there is a relevant bit of data
that emerged from the abortion wars in Texas.
He explored the idiosyncrasies of Texas politics in an article in The New Yorker: America’s Future Is Texas.
“That year [2011], the Republican
state legislature turned its attention instead to defunding women’s-health
programs. ‘This is a war on birth control and abortions,’ Representative Wayne
Christian, a Tea Party stalwart from East Texas, admitted. ‘That’s what family
planning is supposed to be about’.”
“The long-term goal of cultural
conservatives is to cut off access to abortion in Texas, to end state subsidies
for birth control, and to gut state funding for Planned Parenthood—which, in
2011, served sixty per cent of the health needs of low-income women in the
state. The legislators slashed the family-planning budget from $111.5 million
to $37.9 million. Eighty-two family-planning clinics subsequently shut down.”
“Texas has the highest rate of
uninsured people in the nation, and, according to the Center for Public Policy
Priorities, about seventeen per cent of Texan women and girls live in poverty.
After the family-planning budget was cut, there was a disproportionate rise in
births covered by Medicaid, because so many women no longer had access to birth
control. By defunding Planned Parenthood, the legislature also blocked many
women from getting scans for breast cancer and ovarian cancer.”
In 2011, the governor signed into law a bill requiring
women seeking an abortion would have to undergo a highly intrusive sonogram 24
hours before the procedure could be performed.
“When the Senate approved the
bill, Dan Patrick, then a state senator, declared, ‘This is a great day for
Texas. This is a great day for women’s health’.”
“Between 2010 and 2014, the
proportion of women who died in childbirth in Texas doubled, from 18.6 per
hundred thousand live births to 35.8—the worst in the nation and higher than
the rate in many developing countries. These figures represent six hundred dead
women.”
“….a report in the September,
2016, issue of Obstetrics &
Gynecology noted, ‘In the absence of war, natural disaster, or severe
economic upheaval, the doubling of a mortality rate within a two year period in
a state with almost 400,000 annual births seems unlikely’.”
Correlation does not prove causation, but the data is
suggestive, and some analysis of the possible causes seems necessary.
“The mystery might be cleared up
if Governor Abbott released records about how these women died. In 2011, when
he was attorney general, he issued an opinion stating that information about
the deceased would be withheld, supposedly to prevent fraud.”
Katha Pollitt also provides relevant correlations in her
book.
“Among American states, there’s
a correlation between white religiosity, Republican Party power, restrictions
on abortion, and the status of women. The
ten states where women’s status is highest (measured by economic security,
leadership, and health) are strongly Democratic, with strong secular cultures
(in order: Maryland, Hawaii, Vermont, California, Delaware, Connecticut,
Colorado, New York, New Jersey, and Washington). The ten states where women’s status is lowest
are solidly Republican, with churches wielding a lot of political and cultural
power (Georgia, Indiana, South Dakota, Arkansas, Texas, Mississippi, Alabama,
Oklahoma, Utah, and Louisiana).”
If antiabortionists wish to treat their women like crap,
and their women are willing to put up with that, so be it. But they should not be allowed to harm the
other women of the world!
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