Fifty Million Lives After
Roe
By: Christopher G. Adamo
This week marks thirty five years since the Supreme Court's
monstrous "Roe v. Wade" decision gave a blanket legalization to abortion, and by
which the feminists claim that women have been greatly elevated in
society. At this milestone, it is worthwhile to ponder the horrendous
consequences they have paid.
The network news headlines on any average day reveal the grim
facts. Women can comfortably degrade themselves in public, burdened with far
less vocal judgment than they endured in the past. Perhaps, according to the
twisted thinking of some, this constitutes an improvement. Yet on too many other
fronts, their status in society has been significantly lowered. And abortion has
been a major contributing factor.
Women are attacked, abused and demeaned by brutish men, just
as they always have been. Clearly, Roe did not fix that. Furthermore, the moment
the PC police are not around, male discussions of women rapidly degenerate to
the same crass themes that have always characterized such talk.
Despite the proliferation of rules and regulations ostensibly
prohibiting this manner of treatment in the workplace and elsewhere, the pattern
continues unabated. Far too many men still regard women as targets to be preyed
upon.
The number of young girls who suddenly disappear, only to be
recovered some time later as "remains," has reached a horrific level. Could it
be that, despite all of the "I am woman hear me roar" rhetoric that deluged
America since the 1970s, an underlying mindset of complete scorn for them,
disregarding their worth as anything other than sexual "playtoys," increasingly
pervades the culture?
Any intellectually honest assessment of the situation (and
admittedly, both intellect and honesty are in very short supply these days,
especially among the so-called "politically correct") would have to conclude
that no single activity has contributed more than abortion to the demeaning of
women in modern culture.
It has always been among the oddest of ironies that, in
post-modern America, pro-abortion men are lauded by the liberal establishment as
being "pro-woman." The evidence proves quite the contrary.
Consider, as the most striking example, Bill Clinton who was
undoubtedly the most ardent pro-abortion individual ever to serve as president
of the United States. Within the angry circles of embittered feminism, he
is universally held in the highest esteem, having ensured by both his policy
decisions and his Federal and Supreme Court appointments that no limitations on
abortion would ever be implemented on his watch. A woman's best friend, was he
not?
Yet in a seeming complete contradiction to that posture, the
track record of his personal treatment of women was one of unredeemable
harassment, abuse, intimidation, and overall contempt. Clearly, as a reflection
of his personal feelings towards the "fairer sex," Bill Clinton was (and no
doubt still is) a complete monster. So, why does this stark incongruity between
official policy and personal behavior exist?
In truth, it is no disparity at all. Rather, the two
situations are in complete harmony with each other. As is the case with every
other man who regards women only from a perspective of their potential for
personal gratification, Bill Clinton and his kind have known that abortion is
their best means of absolving themselves from any responsibility for the actions
they take. Corroborating reports, like those of rape and other misogyny, lurk
within the dark shadows of Clinton's past.
The woman, and only the woman, would be faced with the
consequences of an unwanted pregnancy. It is the woman who is left with the
horror and guilt (for those who are honest enough to admit to its reality) of
having taken the life of an innocent child in order to deflect the immediate
consequences of her actions. Rampant cases of severe post-abortion depression
inarguably attest to this fact.
Nor is Bill Clinton alone in this. The pattern is widespread
throughout our increasingly self-absorbed culture. And this toxin does not
remain only within the realm of those who have actually participated in such
behavior. It is of secondary importance that any particular man has actually
aided, abetted, or more accurately, coerced a woman to abort the child they
conceived together. The fact that such an option exists in his mind defines his
real regard for, and relationship to, the women he encounters.
Thus, the mere fact that he would be willing to follow such a
course indelibly poisons any real respect that he might otherwise have for her,
verbal platitudes and genuflections towards the feminists notwithstanding.
But the situation gets still worse. With the advent of Roe v.
Wade, and the "popularization" of abortion on demand, society henceforth
notified its budding members that they too had once been worthless and
ultimately "expendable," and thus the lives they currently live resulted merely
from the beneficent whims of those who had the power, and "legal authority" to
eradicate them.
It is a lesson that the ensuing generation has learned well,
and all-too-often puts into practice among its own. Who would attempt to argue
that within the current crop of young people, a callous disregard for the
rights, sensibilities, and sadly, even the lives of others is spreading like a
disease?
Consider the numbers. A term like "fifty million" (give or
take a few million), the approximate number of human beings that have been
systematically slaughtered in this nation's abortion mills since that fateful
Supreme Court decision, defies comprehension. But perhaps an illustration might
give the situation some substance.
Anyone watching or attending a game at a pro football stadium
knows of the vast sea of faces encountered there. When filled to capacity, that
typically amounts to sixty-thousand spectators. It would take more than eight
hundred arenas of such capacity to accommodate the number of tiny helpless
people who have been removed from our midst since the decision was made to
institutionally turn a blind eye and deaf ear to their humanity.
No amount of excuses or euphemisms offered by the abortion
advocacy can ever erase the horrific scope of this silent holocaust. And no
amount of denial can heal the scars, both physical and spiritual, that America
now bears from it.