See also - Precious in His Sight: the Sanctity of Unborn Human Life: http://coryhcollins.blogspot.com/2018/01/precious-in-his-sight-sanctity-of.html
While president, Ronald Reagan penned this article for The Human Life Review, unsolicited. It ran in the Review’s Spring 1983 issue. In 1984 it was published in a book by the same title.
Feb 3, 1983
While president, Ronald Reagan penned this article for The Human Life Review, unsolicited. It ran in the Review’s Spring 1983 issue. In 1984 it was published in a book by the same title.
Feb 3, 1983
THE 10TH ANNIVERSARY
of the Supreme Court decision in Roe v. Wade is
a good time for us to pause and reflect. Our nationwide policy of
abortion-on-demand through all nine months of pregnancy was neither voted for
by our people nor enacted by our legislators—not a single state had such
unrestricted abortion before the Supreme Court decreed it to be national policy
in 1973. But the consequences of this judicial decision are now obvious: since
1973, more than 15 million unborn children have had their lives snuffed out by
legalized abortions. That is over ten times the number of Americans lost in all
our nation’s wars.
Make no mistake,
abortion-on-demand is not a right granted by the Constitution. No serious
scholar, including one disposed to agree with the Court’s result, has argued
that the framers of the Constitution intended to create such a right. Shortly
after the Roe v. Wade decision, Professor
John Hart Ely, now Dean of Stanford Law School, wrote that the opinion “is not
constitutional law and gives almost no sense of an obligation to try to be.”
Nowhere do the plain words of the Constitution even hint at a “right” so
sweeping as to permit abortion up to the time the child is ready to be born.
Yet that is what the Court ruled.
As an act of “raw
judicial power” (to use Justice White’s biting phrase), the decision by the
seven-man majority in Roe v. Wade has so far
been made to stick. But the Court’s decision has by no means settled the
debate. Instead, Roe v. Wade has become a
continuing prod to the conscience of the nation.
Abortion concerns
not just the unborn child, it concerns every one of us. The English poet, John
Donne, wrote: “… any man’s death diminishes me, because I am involved in
mankind; and therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for
thee.”
We cannot diminish
the value of one category of human life—the unborn—without diminishing the
value of all human life. We saw tragic proof of this truism last year when the
Indiana courts allowed the starvation death of “Baby Doe” in Bloomington
because the child had Down’s Syndrome.
Many of our fellow
citizens grieve over the loss of life that has followed Roe v. Wade.
Margaret Heckler, soon after being nominated to head the largest department of
our government, Health and Human Services, told an audience that she believed
abortion to be the greatest moral crisis facing our country today. And the
revered Mother Teresa, who works in the streets of Calcutta ministering to
dying people in her world-famous mission of mercy, has said that “the greatest
misery of our time is the generalized abortion of children.”
Over the first two
years of my Administration I have closely followed and assisted efforts in
Congress to reverse the tide of abortion-efforts of Congressmen, Senators and
citizens responding to an urgent moral crisis. Regrettably, I have also seen
the massive efforts of those who, under the banner of “freedom of choice,” have
so far blocked every effort to reverse nationwide abortion-on-demand.
Despite the
formidable obstacles before us, we must not lose heart. This is not the first
time our country has been divided by a Supreme Court decision that denied the
value of certain human lives. The Dred Scott decision of 1857
was not overturned in a day, or a year, or even a decade. At first, only a
minority of Americans recognized and deplored the moral crisis brought about by
denying the full humanity of our black brothers and sisters; but that minority
persisted in their vision and finally prevailed. They did it by appealing to
the hearts and minds of their countrymen, to the truth of human dignity under
God. From their example, we know that respect for the sacred value of human
life is too deeply engrained in the hearts of our people to remain forever
suppressed. But the great majority of the American people have not yet made
their voices heard, and we cannot expect them to—any more than the public voice
arose against slavery—until the issue is clearly framed and
presented.
What, then, is the
real issue? I have often said that when we talk about abortion, we are talking
about two lives—the life of the mother and the life of the unborn child. Why
else do we call a pregnant woman a mother? I have also said that anyone who doesn’t
feel sure whether we are talking about a second human life should clearly give
life the benefit of the doubt. If you don’t know whether a body is alive or
dead, you would never bury it. I think this consideration itself should be
enough for all of us to insist on protecting the unborn.
The case against
abortion does not rest here, however, for medical practice confirms at every
step the correctness of these moral sensibilities. Modern medicine treats the
unborn child as a patient. Medical pioneers have made great breakthroughs in
treating the unborn—for genetic problems, vitamin deficiencies, irregular heart
rhythms, and other medical conditions. Who can forget George Will’s moving
account of the little boy who underwent brain surgery six times during the nine
weeks before he was born? Who is the patient if not that tiny
unborn human being who can feel pain when he or she is approached by doctors
who come to kill rather than to cure?
The real question
today is not when human life begins, but, What is the value of human
life? The abortionist who reassembles the arms and legs of a tiny baby to
make sure all its parts have been torn from its mother’s body can hardly doubt
whether it is a human being. The real question for him and for all of us is
whether that tiny human life has a God-given right to be protected by the
law—the same right we have.
What more dramatic
confirmation could we have of the real issue than the Baby Doe case in
Bloomington, Indiana? The death of that tiny infant tore at the hearts of all
Americans because the child was undeniably a live human being—one lying
helpless before the eyes of the doctors and the eyes of the nation. The real
issue for the courts was not whether Baby Doe was a human
being. The real issue was whether to protect the life of a human being who had
Down’s Syndrome, who would probably be mentally handicapped, but who needed a
routine surgical procedure to unblock his esophagus and allow him to eat. A
doctor testified to the presiding judge that, even with his physical problem
corrected, Baby Doe would have a “non-existent” possibility for “a minimally
adequate quality of life”—in other words, that retardation was the equivalent
of a crime deserving the death penalty. The judge let Baby Doe starve and die,
and the Indiana Supreme Court sanctioned his decision.
Federal law does not
allow federally-assisted hospitals to decide that Down’s Syndrome infants are
not worth treating, much less to decide to starve them to death. Accordingly, I
have directed the Departments of Justice and HHS to apply civil rights
regulations to protect handicapped newborns. All hospitals receiving federal
funds must post notices which will clearly state that failure to feed
handicapped babies is prohibited by federal law. The basic issue is whether to
value and protect the lives of the handicapped, whether to recognize the
sanctity of human life. This is the same basic issue that underlies the
question of abortion.
The 1981 Senate
hearings on the beginning of human life brought out the basic issue more
clearly than ever before. The many medical and scientific witnesses who
testified disagreed on many things, but not on the scientific evidence
that the unborn child is alive, is a distinct individual, or is a member of the
human species. They did disagree over the value question, whether to give value
to a human life at its early and most vulnerable stages of existence.
Regrettably, we live
at a time when some persons do not value all human life. They want to pick and
choose which individuals have value. Some have said that only those individuals
with “consciousness of self” are human beings. One such writer has followed
this deadly logic and concluded that “shocking as it may seem, a newly born
infant is not a human being.”
A Nobel Prize
winning scientist has suggested that if a handicapped child “were not declared
fully human until three days after birth, then all parents could be allowed the
choice.” In other words, “quality control” to see if newly born human beings
are up to snuff.
Obviously, some influential
people want to deny that every human life has intrinsic, sacred worth. They
insist that a member of the human race must have certain qualities before they
accord him or her status as a “human being.”
Events have borne
out the editorial in a California medical journal which explained three years
before Roe v. Wade that the social acceptance of
abortion is a “defiance of the long-held Western ethic of intrinsic and equal
value for every human life regardless of its stage, condition, or status.”
Every legislator,
every doctor, and every citizen needs to recognize that the real issue is
whether to affirm and protect the sanctity of all human life, or to embrace a
social ethic where some human lives are valued and others are not. As a nation,
we must choose between the sanctity of life ethic and the “quality of life”
ethic.
I have no trouble
identifying the answer our nation has always given to this basic question, and
the answer that I hope and pray it will give in the future. America was founded
by men and women who shared a vision of the value of each and every individual.
They stated this vision clearly from the very start in the Declaration of
Independence, using words that every schoolboy and schoolgirl can recite:
We hold these truths
to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by
their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life,
liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
We fought a terrible
war to guarantee that one category of mankind—black people in America—could not
be denied the inalienable rights with which their Creator endowed them. The
great champion of the sanctity of all human life in that day, Abraham Lincoln,
gave us his assessment of the Declaration’s purpose. Speaking of the framers of
that noble document, he said:
This was their
majestic intheir babiesterpretation of the economy of the Universe. This was
their lofty, and wise, and noble understanding of the justice of the Creator to
His creatures. Yes, gentlemen, to all His creatures, to the whole great family
of man. In their enlightened belief, nothing stamped with the divine image and
likeness was sent into the world to be trodden on … They grasped not only the
whole race of man then living, but they reached forward and seized upon the
farthest posterity. They erected a beacon to guide their children and their
children’s children, and the countless myriads who should inhabit the earth in
other ages.
He warned also of
the danger we would face if we closed our eyes to the value of life in any
category of human beings:
I should like to
know if taking this old Declaration of Independence, which declares that all
men are equal upon principle and making exceptions to it where will it stop. If
one man says it does not mean a Negro, why not another say it does not mean
some other man?
When Congressman
John A. Bingham of Ohio drafted the Fourteenth Amendment to guarantee the
rights of life, liberty, and property to all human beings, he explained
that all are “entitled to the protection of American law,
because its divine spirit of equality declares that all men are created equal.”
He said the rights guaranteed by the amendment would therefore apply to “any
human being.” Justice William Brennan, writing in another case decided only the
year before Roe v. Wade, referred to our society as one
that “strongly affirms the sanctity of life.”
Another William
Brennan—not the Justice—has reminded us of the terrible consequences that can
follow when a nation rejects the sanctity of life ethic:
The cultural environment
for a human holocaust is present whenever any society can be misled into
defining individuals as less than human and therefore devoid of value and
respect.
As a nation today,
we have not rejected the sanctity of human life. The American
people have not had an opportunity to express their view on the sanctity of
human life in the unborn. I am convinced that Americans do not want to play God
with the value of human life. It is not for us to decide who is worthy to live
and who is not. Even the Supreme Court’s opinion in Roe v. Wade
did not explicitly reject the traditional American idea of intrinsic worth and
value in all human life; it simply dodged this issue.
The Congress has
before it several measures that would enable our people to reaffirm the sanctity
of human life, even the smallest and the youngest and the most defenseless. The
Human Life Bill expressly recognizes the unborn as human beings and accordingly
protects them as persons under our Constitution. This bill, first introduced by
Senator Jesse Helms, provided the vehicle for the Senate hearings in 1981 which
contributed so much to our understanding of the real issue of abortion.
The Respect Human
Life Act, just introduced in the 98th Congress, states in its first section
that the policy of the United States is “to protect innocent life, both before
and after birth.” This bill, sponsored by Congressman Henry Hyde and Senator
Roger Jepsen, prohibits the federal government from performing abortions or
assisting those who do so, except to save the life of the mother. It also
addresses the pressing issue of infanticide which, as we have seen, flows
inevitably from permissive abortion as another step in the denial of the
inviolability of innocent human life.
I have endorsed each
of these measures, as well as the more difficult route of constitutional
amendment, and I will give these initiatives my full support. Each of them, in
different ways, attempts to reverse the tragic policy of abortion-on-demand
imposed by the Supreme Court ten years ago. Each of them is a decisive way to
affirm the sanctity of human life.
We must all educate
ourselves to the reality of the horrors taking place. Doctors today know that
unborn children can feel a touch within the womb and that they respond to pain.
But how many Americans are aware that abortion techniques are allowed today, in
all 50 states, that burn the skin of a baby with a salt solution, in an
agonizing death that can last for hours?
Another example: two
years ago, the Philadelphia Inquirer ran a Sunday special
supplement on “The Dreaded Complication.” The “dreaded complication” referred
to in the article—the complication feared by doctors who perform abortions—is
the survival of the child despite all the painful attacks during the abortion
procedure. Some unborn children do survive the late-term
abortions the Supreme Court has made legal. Is there any question that these
victims of abortion deserve our attention and protection? Is there any question
that those who don’t survive were living human beings before
they were killed?
Late-term abortions,
especially when the baby survives, but is then killed by starvation, neglect,
or suffocation, show once again the link between abortion and infanticide. The
time to stop both is now. As my Administration acts to stop infanticide, we
will be fully aware of the real issue that underlies the death of babies before
and soon after birth.
Our society has,
fortunately, become sensitive to the rights and special needs of the
handicapped, but I am shocked that physical or mental handicaps of newborns are
still used to justify their extinction. This Administration has a Surgeon
General, Dr. C. Everett Koop, who has done perhaps more than any other American
for handicapped children, by pioneering surgical techniques to help them, by
speaking out on the value of their lives, and by working with them in the
context of loving families. You will not find his former patients advocating
the so-called “quality-of-life” ethic.
I know that when the
true issue of infanticide is placed before the American people, with all the
facts openly aired, we will have no trouble deciding that a mentally or
physically handicapped baby has the same intrinsic worth and right to life as
the rest of us. As the New Jersey Supreme Court said two decades ago, in a
decision upholding the sanctity of human life, “a child need not be perfect to
have a worthwhile life.”
Whether we are
talking about pain suffered by unborn children, or about late-term abortions,
or about infanticide, we inevitably focus on the humanity of the unborn child.
Each of these issues is a potential rallying point for the sanctity of life
ethic. Once we as a nation rally around anyone of these issues to affirm the
sanctity of life, we will see the importance of affirming this principle across
the board.
Malcolm Muggeridge,
the English writer, goes right to the heart of the matter: “Either life is
always and in all circumstances sacred, or intrinsically of no account; it is
inconceivable that it should be in some cases the one, and in some the other.”
The sanctity of innocent human life is a principle that Congress should
proclaim at every opportunity.
It is possible that
the Supreme Court itself may overturn its abortion rulings. We need only recall
that in Brown v. Board of Education the court
reversed its own earlier “separate-but-equal” decision. I believe if the
Supreme Court took another look at Roe v. Wade,
and considered the real issue between the sanctity of life ethic and the
quality of life ethic, it would change its mind once again.
As we continue to
work to overturn Roe v. Wade, we must also
continue to lay the groundwork for a society in which abortion is not the
accepted answer to unwanted pregnancy. Pro-life people have already taken
heroic steps, often at great personal sacrifice, to provide for unwed mothers.
I recently spoke about a young pregnant woman named Victoria, who said, “In
this society we save whales, we save timber wolves and bald eagles and Coke
bottles. Yet, everyone wanted me to throw away my baby.” She has been helped by
Sav-a-Life, a group in Dallas, which provides a way for unwed mothers to
preserve the human life within them when they might otherwise be tempted to
resort to abortion. I think also of House of His Creation in Coatesville,
Pennsylvania, where a loving couple has taken in almost 200 young women in the
past ten years. They have seen, as a fact of life, that the girls are not better
off having abortions than saving their babies. I am also reminded of the
remarkable Rossow family of Ellington, Connecticut, who have opened their
hearts and their home to nine handicapped adopted and foster children.
The Adolescent
Family Life Program, adopted by Congress at the request of Senator Jeremiah
Denton, has opened new opportunities for unwed mothers to give their children
life. We should not rest until our entire society echoes the tone of John
Powell in the dedication of his book, Abortion: The Silent Holocaust,
a dedication to every woman carrying an unwanted child: “Please believe that
you are not alone. There are many of us that truly love you, who want to stand
at your side, and help in any way we can.” And we can echo the always-practical
woman of faith, Mother Teresa, when she says, “If you don’t want the little
child, that unborn child, give him to me.” We have so many families in America
seeking to adopt children that the slogan “every child a wanted child” is now
the emptiest of all reasons to tolerate abortion.
I have often said we
need to join in prayer to bring protection to the unborn. Prayer and action are
needed to uphold the sanctity of human life. I believe it will not be possible
to accomplish our work, the work of saving lives, “without being a soul of
prayer.” The famous British Member of Parliament, William Wilberforce, prayed
with his small group of influential friends, the “Clapham Sect,” for decades to
see an end to slavery in the British empire. Wilberforce led that struggle in
Parliament, unflaggingly, because he believed in the sanctity of human life. He
saw the fulfillment of his impossible dream when Parliament outlawed slavery
just before his death.
Let his faith and
perseverance be our guide. We will never recognize the true value of our own
lives until we affirm the value in the life of others, a value of which Malcolm
Muggeridge says: “… however low it flickers or fiercely burns, it is still a
Divine flame which no man dare presume to put out, be his motives ever so
humane and enlightened.”
Abraham Lincoln
recognized that we could not survive as a free land when some men could decide
that others were not fit to be free and should therefore be slaves. Likewise,
we cannot survive as a free nation when some men decide that others are not fit
to live and should be abandoned to abortion or infanticide. My Administration
is dedicated to the preservation of America as a free land, and there is no
cause more important for preserving that freedom than affirming the transcendent
right to life of all human beings, the right without which no other rights have
any meaning.
Read more at: http://www.nationalreview.com/article/211049/abortion-and-conscience-nation-nro-primary-document
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