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A Conservative Case for Abortion Access

Buckle up buttercup … This is going to be a long one…

Preamble

First, let me start by saying I abhor abortion. A piece of me inside cried when I heard that someone I knew had terminated a pregnancy and I said a short prayer for the baby and the mom. Yet, I am sitting here writing an advocacy piece in favor of access to abortion services.

When I hear that a fetus is not yet “life” at six months gestation I think of the preemie pictures of me that my mom keeps in a private album showing me at 987 grams (2lbs 2oz) and of my brother even smaller. Extracted from my mother’s womb in an emergency surgery at six months gestation, and not yet breathing, were we not life?

I’ve posted on abortion here previously (prior to the over-turning of Roe). In those posts, I’ve expressed my reservations about the procedure. And yet I sit here now, after forcing myself to spend many hours thinking about justice and rights and healthcare and society, and I’m about to advocate for preserving access to the procedure.


What is a “Right”?

Notice I said I am going to advocate for access to abortion services and not for abortion rights. Abortion is not a right. Neither is healthcare. Or food. Or housing. People who claim these are “rights” do not understand what a right is (and before you go off on me, I do support universal access to healthcare and food security, but these are not “rights”).

Abortion, and healthcare in general, is a service provided by one person or group of people to another. As a service, comprised of the labors of people, it cannot be another person’s “right”. John Locke discussed the Rights of the Natural Man in his many writings. If you’ve not read him, I strongly recommend you do.

So what are the rights of the natural man (person) and how does this relate to the abortion discussion? In the US Declaration of Independence, our founders stated to the world that…

“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.
- that to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed”
~US Declaration of Independence, 4 July 1776


Now I’ll be the first to admit that America is and our Founders were far from perfect and not everyone was treated equally, but the point made in that Declaration was that our “rights” did not come from the government or from the English Crown or from any congress or any judge. Our rights were pre-existing. Our “rights” were something that was naturally possessed by virtue of having been born. This is an important point. One that our founders came back to when they sought to create a “more perfect union.”

A More Perfect Union

Eleven years after declaring our independence from the English Crown, our founders recognized the need to form a “more perfect union” and set out to codify in a document what the new American government should look like. That document, the US Constitution, has survived and adapted for over 230 years. And while it has survived by adapting to changing times through the amendment process, one thing has remained constant. That is the understanding that “Rights” do not come from the Constitution or from the American government. Rights are part of the pre-existing state of the Natural Man (again, see John Locke).

So, what is all this discussion of “Constitutional Rights”?? Here’s a really important point: There is no such thing as a Constitutional Right. None. Rather, among the MANY rights of the Natural Man, there is a subset listed in the Constitution that government cannot infringe upon. This is the famous five words favored by so many of my conservative friends and repeated over and over in the Constitution: “Congress shall make no law...” infringing on this right or that right.

That’s correct. Your right to free speech is not granted by the Constitution. Rather, the US government (and by extension the states) is prohibited from infringing on your pre-existing natural right to free thought and free expression.

Similarly, your right to freely practice the religion of your choosing or none at all is not granted by the Constitution. Rather, the US government (and by extension the states) is prohibited from infringing on your pre-existing natural right to freely believe whatever you’d like.

And, your right to own and carry (keep and bear) arms is not granted by the Constitution. Rather, the US government (and by extension the states) is prohibited from infringing on your pre-existing natural right to self-defense.

What’s my point here, you ask? Simple. Our Declaration announced our belief that we are each endowed with rights that pre-exist and supersede any government action. Our Constitution went on to enumerate a short list of some of those pre-existing rights.

Whoa Sara! What do you mean a short list of some of those rights?? I mean exactly that. In Constitutional theory, we talk about the enumerated rights contained in the Constitution and its Bill of Rights and we talk about the greater list of unenumerated rights of the natural man (person).

"The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage other {right}s retained by the people."
~US Constitution, 9th Amendment

That’s right! The Bill of Rights, enumerated in the Constitution, which prevents the government from stepping on certain of your rights was never intended to be a complete list of your rights. You have many other rights!

But Sara, you said abortion wasn’t a right? Why are we talking so much about rights?

Two reasons. First because the 9th amendment above has been repeatedly interpreted to mean that the “rights” of the people enumerated in the Constitution should be broadly construed whenever possible.

And secondly, because we do have a very important right that is discussed in the Constitution, but that doesn’t get anywhere near enough attention. Privacy. The pre-existing natural right to privacy that we all cherish. Please, my conservative friends, tell me how you feel when someone from the government wants to know something about your personal life? Right? I feel the same way. It’s none of their business.

So let’s look at this right to privacy? Where is it in the Constitution (if at all)? The answer is that it is everywhere! It underpins your right to privacy in your beliefs, thoughts, and expression (1st amendment), your right to privacy in your home (3rd amendment), your right to privacy in your person and possessions (4th amendment), your right to privacy in your personal information and against self-incrimination (5th amendment). And, of course, the 9th amendment, quoted above, clarifies that our rights are far broader than just those listed in writing.

Let’s look at that right to privacy in our persons and possessions:

“The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated...”
~US Constitution, 4th amendment

Secure in my person??

Against unreasonable searches?

Hmmm. What could that mean? Perhaps that as a Natural (Person), I have a pre-existing natural right to be free from intrusive inquiries and/or restrictions about what I do with and to my body.

As I said at the opening of this essay, I abhor abortion. A little piece of me inside dies with each baby aborted. In a perfect world, I would let Jewish Law govern the abortion issue. The child has a Right to Life unless the mother’s life or health is threatened; in which case, the rights of the mother supersede the rights of the child. I like that. It has balance. But here’s the thing: As a slightly right-of-center person, I do not want, nor do I trust the government to enforce such a policy. That mother has a natural right to privacy and a right to be secure in her person, secure from government intrusion.

I wish for abortion to be rare. I wish for every baby conceived to be given every chance at life and for every baby born to have every advantage and opportunity for success. But this is not a perfect world and I’ve yet to be convinced that there is some compelling government interest justifying intrusion into the decisions made by an expectant mother.

If you live in a state where your right to privacy is respected in law, great. If you live in a state where it is not, then I ask you to consider what freedoms, what liberties, what privacy you are willing to hand over to the people in your state government. For me, that is a very short list. 😔






My hope is for civil discussion in the comments below. In over ten years of active participation in discourse on EP & SW, I have never deleted a comment on any of my stories. For this story, my policy will change: I will allow only civil discourse. Any comment containing derogatory or accusatory statements toward another SWeep or any group of people will be deleted.

You can say anything you want to or about me but be kind to each other or I will delete comments. And yes, for this story, I am the sole judge and jury regarding kindness and all decisions are final. 😉
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pdqsailor1 · 61-69, M
In Canada we all have access to health care including Women's access to abortion services. That said it was not that many years ago that abortion services were neither legal nor accessible and one Doctor, Henry Morgentaler fought this and eventually prevailed at significant personal sacrifice. We do not have the US constitution, neither does the UK, neither does Europe, all democratic areas of the world.. yet abortion services are available in all these jurisdictions.. Like you my Wife was very premature, also 2.2 ounces at birth and she survived..

You have a clear understanding of the Jewish view of abortion, where the fetus is held to be potential life, secondary in importance to the life of the Mother who possesses actual life up until the moment of birth at which point it becomes actual life, regardless at what point birth takes place (premature birth)... The talmud discusses the case of a threat to the life of the Mother including late term abortions... but that does not in any way describe a right to abortion and by this standard it is very rare to establish a case for abortion, certainly not on demand... but as you say no one is going to submit to a rabbinical court for a decision, it simply is not practical even if it has moral standing and standards - biblical law is the foundation for western law - something most people are unaware of, perhaps one reason that for decades half the Harvard Law School graduates have been Jewish.

The idea that states rights should over ride a uniform application of a US Woman citizen's natural rights or interfere with a decision between a Woman, her own moral standards and the advice of her physician is I agree bizarre.. and unwarranted, not to mention cowardly and politically motivated on the part of a Supreme Court who have lost credibility, with the recently appointed justices reneging, let me be so bold and say LYING in their confirmation hearings..

If my own Daughters found themselves having to make this impossible choice.. I would still prefer that they retain the options available to them rather than have someone else decide for them what is best.... We raised them to be independent, to be able to think critically and to choose wisely.. they are adults and our job is done.
sarabee1995 · 26-30, F
@pdqsailor1 It's not that the states have supremacy over the federal government or over women's rights. That is a fundamental misunderstanding of our system.

When we declared independence from your crown, the result was thirteen independent Sovereign nations. So independent from each other, in fact, that there were border skirmishes and territorial disputes between several of them.

When they came together to form a single country under our current Constitution, the last thing they wanted was a strong central and distant government like London. So what we created was a federal government that was very intentionally quite limited in it's authority over life within the various states.

From the outside, you correctly view us as a single nation. That's because we setup our federal government with the exclusive power to deal with the rest of the world. But internally, we are fifty semi-sovereign states who still manage their own affairs. I like living in Massachusetts where we have had universal access to healthcare my entire life and had marriage equality before Canada. But I have no interest in telling Texas how they should live.

With this essay, which I've published in various forms in several places, I seek to influence conservative thought in other state capitals, but I do not seek to run their states for them.
pdqsailor1 · 61-69, M
@sarabee1995 I find it totally bizarre that there is not one uniform law.. what is legal in one state is criminal in another.. yet a US citizen can freely chose where to live or to leave if they have the economic means to avoid law or to embrace it.. As an outside observer it appears to me that the civil war never ended and there are two distinct nations residing within national borders, one democratic, the other conservative... I agree with your formulating the argument for conservative support but I have no delusion about them allowing their emotionally warped values to take precedence over the fact and logic you put forth.... and Texas, well Texas is indeed a state that I will avoid visiting as I would a communist state like Cuba or China, I am not a fan of extreme dictatorial positions... They both share an evil oppressive perspective... Our health care system has allowed my 93 year old Mother to have a hip replacement, a pacemaker, multiple trips to the ICU and expert cardiac care to regain her stabile and remarkable health.. at not one dime out of her pocket for superlative care... My Wife's Grandfather underwent heart bypass surgery at age 93... and then went on to live past the age of 105...He drove his own car until he was 101 and lived in his own home till the day he died. It was a remarkable demonstration of the combination of health care and the will to live. There were members of his family who said he did not drive very well - I disagree - I have his Cadillac, and all opinions to the contrary it is in very good shape...
KiwiBird · 36-40, F
@pdqsailor1 Texas should be ceded back to Mexico from whence it came. 🤣🤣🤣
sarabee1995 · 26-30, F
@pdqsailor1
... two distinct nations residing within national borders, one democratic, the other conservative.
"Conservative" and "democratic" are not opposing political systems or philosophies.

Neither are "conservative" and "Democrat" as some conservative Democrats do exist.

And yes, we actually are far more than two distinct "nations" ("states") existing within one national border. If you understand that, then you are much closer to understanding American politics.
sarabee1995 · 26-30, F
@KiwiBird Nah. We like our Texas brethren. We don't always understand them when they talk, and they have some strange habits, but when push comes to shove, they (like us) are Americans first. 🙂
KiwiBird · 36-40, F
@sarabee1995 I thought they were Mexican first?
pdqsailor1 · 61-69, M
@sarabee1995 I am sorry to not see America though your eyes.

As an outside observer it seems like there are two opposing factions of Republicans and Democrats - the rural and urbanites with wildly divergent views and interests battling to the death to shove each others agendas down the others throats.. waving the constitution to justify their positions when they are not waving bibles instead of letting people decide what they want and leaving them to live their lives free of interference from the whims of the other..

What I do NOT see are people behaving as a unified group of Americans first. I think Obama was mistaken, there are to my observations indeed red states and blue states and a very un-United States of America. The uncivil war never really ended.. it was put aside for WWII while America battled Nazis and Japanese but then it resumed.. And consensus, a unity of purpose and ideals seems impossible to achieve... a most vicious blood sport..
sarabee1995 · 26-30, F
@pdqsailor1
it seems like there are two opposing factions of Republicans and Democrats
Are there not opposing factions in Canada? Are not your oil producing provinces in the west different from le Quebecois?

But let's not forget that there actually is Russian interference in western politics. It manifests in the worst of the worst posts online pretending to be one side and accusing the other of things way beyond reality. And yes, they have both extreme left bots and trolls and extreme right bots & trolls.

Of course, our actual right and left believe and repost these lies. The result of which is further and further polarization of our politics. Please do not be deceived by appearances. They can be deceiving and are quite easy to manipulate.
pdqsailor1 · 61-69, M
@sarabee1995 You ask a fair question... The Conservative party of Canada can not and will not interfere with abortion, universal health care, old age security or any other social entitlement program... to do so would be political suicide... Our conservatives ... are to the left of your Democrats... University tuition is affordable for everyone and our schools are top grade... We pay significantly more in goods and services and taxes despite our wealth of oil - transfer payments between provinces equalize the haves and the have nots.. Gasoline is the equivalent of $5.50 US per US gallon right now despite our wealth of oil reserves.... it is indeed ONE nation... our polarization is non-existent compared to that taking place in the USA...

We could be shipping Canadian oil to the USA refineries in Texas from Alberta except that the Keystone pipeline is not being built to do it.. A choice the current American administration has made.... and right now everyones lives would be a whole lot easier if this supply was on line rather than retained in the ground... Alberta reserves are far more significant than Saudi reserves are...

You want an example of a contentious issue in Canada?

The Federal liberals are introducing a hand gun freeze.. no new hand guns period, no sale of used guns despite the licensing requirements allowing them (for range use ONLY, the singular legal use for a hand gun in Canada period, self defence is not an option or permitted under the law with any gun).. This is a scapegoat political move that will not alter gun violence one iota.. why? All and there is unfortunately a regular amount of it, street gun violence is perpetrated by criminals who purchase guns and ammunition smuggled in from the USA.. and criminals do not ever care what laws say.. The only ones affected by the new law will be legal law abiding responsible gun owners who are each licensed by the RCMP... Still we are Canadians.. and so we say essentially nothing other than wait for the next election when this capricious unfair targeting of law abiding citizens can be properly reversed...that is how we do things here...A liberal candidate comes to the door seeking support - a licensed gun owner shows that candidate his license and the candidate stops speaking and walks away there is no conversation four million households about twenty percent of the population of Canada ... Licensed gun owners scrambled to buy every legal gun available new and used over night to beat the deadline for the new legislation...The government forced their hand and the RCMP is working over time to accommodate them.... Welcome to unintended consequences of blaming people..
sarabee1995 · 26-30, F
@pdqsailor1 So very interesting to hear a Canadian point out that gun control only impacts law abiding citizens!! 🤣🤣🤣

Lol, I will leave the details of your gun control laws for you and the rest of my Great White North friends to figure out, but there is one thing you said that was of interest...

... for range use ONLY, the singular legal use for a hand gun in Canada period, self defence is not an option or permitted under the law with any gun...
Really? So if an armed assailant comes at me guns blazing and I notice a Sig Sauer 9mm just laying there on the ground a meter from me... You're telling me that if I lunge for the weapon and chamber a round while I roll across the ground coming up to empty the magazine into his sorry ass leaving him in a puddle of his own blood, I would be guilty of something?

I hope you answer no, of course Sara you would have the natural right to defend yourself because any other answer would be deeply offensive to this American.
pdqsailor1 · 61-69, M
@sarabee1995 I like and respect you so I do not in any way want to offend you.. as a consequence of work I was doing handling ammunition I had to get my possession and acquisition license and I got both non-restricted (long guns) and restricted (hand guns)... The law as it currently exists for handguns... is while in my possession they must be kept unloaded, trigger locked and then locked in a safe. Ammunition may not be stored in the same room as the gun... To transport a hand gun, an authorization to transport must be obtained (blanket authority for repeat trips) from my home directly to the range and for a return trip from the range to my home - no where else period.. while transporting the hand gun it must be, unloaded (no clip in the gun period), trigger locked and in a locked case.. the singular place it can be used is on a range for target use or in a competition range.. that is it.. the rules are currently so restrictive that I viewed a hand gun as a liability not an asset and resolved not to buy one.. However, with the coming freeze I changed my mind saying now or never.. so I purchased a target (semi automatic) pistol and the RCMP could not have been nicer as it has to be registered in my name and then approved by the Ontario (my province) Chief Firearms Officer - it will be.. they are so backed up it will take four weeks or more to process the transfer... once approved I and the seller are notified by email from the CFO and the shipment can take place... I have contacted a range for membership (a requirement) and I have to pass a range safety course in addition to my license which also included a safety course... To get the license took ... eight months.. I have a safe already.. and it is bolted to the wall and kept locked as I am subject to police inspection at any time for safe storage compliance.. Deviate - criminal charges are involved and it could also lead to forfeiture of firearms and the license which in Canada is a privilege not a right..

Long guns must be kept locked and disabled in a safe.. unloaded ammunition in a separate room... they can be transported trigger locked unloaded with no authorization to transport and they have no restriction as to where they are taken as they can be used for hunting or range use - only... Farmers on their own property are permitted to use long guns for varmint control and to protect livestock...

That is the current state of the law and as I said hand guns are very soon not going to be able to be purchased or sold period... until a change in government takes place...and when you piss off this level of the population (3.6 million households have licenses) you have just lost 20% of the vote which is more than enough to lose an election in Canada... So Trudeau is about to hang himself..

So not to offend you but you will never find that 9 mm pistol, loaded and unlocked in this nation anywhere but on a range... because anyone with a license acts to protect their license and comply with the law.. The RCMP issued EVERY single license and the application has your spouse sign it, multiple guarantors, photograph.. a passport application is similar.. The RCMP calls us responsible gun owners and thanks us for behaving in accordance with the law.. Welcome to Canada.. its different all right...
sarabee1995 · 26-30, F
@pdqsailor1 You avoided my question over a technicality.

So I'll modify the scenario... I'm visiting a range and watching you try to impress me with your shooting skills. An assailant enters the building guns blazing, I jump over the counter grabbing the Sig while airborne, chamber a round, and get off two rounds before I land. They land center mass and he drops like the piece of shit that he is.

So. Am I guilty of something for this selfless act of defending others?
pdqsailor1 · 61-69, M
In the scenario you describe .. you would be be totally exonerated after police questioning.. and they will have you repeat the scenario again and again and again... because on that range is the only place in Canada were that gun may be set down loaded on a shooting table @sarabee1995 I have a good friend on our dock, retired Master of the court.. (a judges Judge)... he and I walked through the scenarios.... The general rule of thumb for self defence in Canada is you can escalate one level beyond an assailant to defend your self excluding a gun because that is the way they structure the law.. He has fists, you can use a club/stick, he has a club/stick, you can use a knife, he has a knife, you can use a sword.. he has a sword.. You have a problem because grabbing a magazine, going to the safe, unlocking it, unlocking the trigger lock and loading that magazine and then moving into position to use that gun after assessing the threat the guy swinging that sword..... well the minutes keep on ticking past and that is exactly what the law was intended to do.. make self defence with a fire arm a practical impossibility in Canada... They did this on purpose...To compound this.. my ammunition and loaded magazines are in locked boxes.....
pdqsailor1 · 61-69, M
@sarabee1995 One of the exceptions to the law that will allow for a carry permit is to protect actual life, yours or someone else's but ... that threat has to be evaluated and agreed to by a local police chief and it has to be REAL... I am Jewish, given the number of hate incidents targeting orthodox small congregations - Pittsburgh, Poway CA, NY and NJ, there was an incident in Texas.. The synagogue I attend has been subject to hate crimes and damage previously... Well if my Rabbi wanted me to carry a loaded side arm, he could write a letter to the local police chief stating that his congregation needs to be protected by a licensed, permitted individual and he would like for this purpose that I be granted a carry permit... for this purpose alone.. and likely ... it would be considered and granted.. A carry permit in Canada for the purpose of protecting a life... is about as rare as it gets..