"One of the leading factors with the Danforth
case was the right of fathers to legally prevent the brutal abortion
death of their own prenatal children. In the Danforth decision, despite
laws in many states which upheld and supported that right, the Court
declared that every father’s natural right to protect his own preborn
infant was to be rendered legally null and void."
What 'Choice' Do Fathers Have?
December 24, 2003
by
Isaiah Flair
The meaning of life has been debated by philosophers for a great
many millenia. Yet, it is very basic: we were Created to procreate.
And to make the world a better, safer, more enlightened, and fulfilling
place for our descendants than it was for our ancestors.
“Each of us has a unique beginning, the moment of conception. The
human nature of the human being from conception to old age is not
a metaphysical contention. It is plain experimental evidence. Life
has a very, very long history, but each individual has a very neat
beginning: the moment of conception.”
That is the expert testimony of Dr. Jerome Lejeune, known as “The
Father of Modern Genetics”. Dr. Lejeune, a professor of Fundamental
Genetics for over twenty years, discovered the genetic cause of Down
Syndrome. Dr. Lejeune also won the Memorial Allen Award Medal, which
is the world's highest award for work in the field of Genetics.
His testimony establishes the concrete basis for the right-to-life
movement: empirically, the life cycle of every human being begins
at conception, when the 23 chromosomes of the father conjoin with
the 23 chromosomes of the mother to form a new human being with a
unique 46-chromosome DNA sequence. That sequence both defines the
newly-conceived baby as a human being and differentiates her or him
from every other human being on Earth.
That individual human uniqueness, which begins at conception, defines
everything from hair color, to height, to genetically-based talents
and interests.
Some of you may look more like your father; some of you may look
more like your mother. Either way, it was determined at your conception.
Who you are began at that point, with the conception of your genetically-unique
life.
In this new year of 2004 A.D, our country is faced with a great debate
over procreation itself. There are two sides to the debate: those
who are pro-abortion, and those who are pro-life.
The pro-abortion side is focused on engorging the misanthropic “moral
relativity” of Marxist theology. In contrast, the pro-life side is
focused on committed faithfulness to the beautiful, timeless reality
of moral absolutes.
Moral absolutes exist, and they are eternally immutable. Public recognition
of them has been under fire in America for over forty years now. They
are often dismissed as purely mystical, religious, and ethereal. As
evidenced by this article’s opening quote, however, scientific fact
supports moral absolutes. There are a great many moral absolutes in
existence, and the first amongst them directly precludes killing innocent
human beings.
Those in the right-to-life movement, popularly known as pro-lifers,
recognize that this applies to the most innocent human beings on Earth,
pre-natal babies. The pro-life quest is to protect tiny, vulnerable
pre-natal babies from abortion death.
For Christians and atheists alike, there can be no greater calling.
In the end, protecting our sons and daughters is the foundation of
what it means to be a human being. Protecting our sons and daughters
is mankind’s deepest responsibility.
It is also mankind’s most fundamental right.
To set the context of the current debate, let’s clarify the impact
of two key United States Supreme Court decisions on abortion:
1973’s Roe vs. Wade, approaching its 31st anniversary,
un-Constitutionally overturned every pro-life/pro-baby state law in
the nation with a stroke of Associate Justice Harry Blackmun’s pen.
Roe vs. Wade had two dissenters.
One of them, William Rehnquist, is now Chief Justice. However, he
only has two associate justices, Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas,
who are willing to overturn Roe and the rest of the Court’s pro-abortion
decisions. The other justices currently on the U.S. Supreme Court
(Stevens, Ginsberg, O’Connor, Souter, Kennedy, and Breyer) are religiously
pro-abortion.
A few years after Roe vs. Wade, another pro-abortion decision was
handed down by the United States Supreme Court.
The decision was for a case called Danforth vs. Planned Parenthood.
Planned Parenthood, the nation’s most heavily-bankrolled abortion
provider and lobbying group, is subsidized by hundreds of millions
of your tax dollars compliments of your selectively-generous federal
government.
One of the leading factors with the Danforth case was the right of
fathers to legally prevent the brutal abortion death of their own
prenatal children. In the Danforth decision, despite laws in many
states which upheld and supported that right, the Court declared that
every father’s natural right to protect his own preborn infant was
to be rendered legally null and void.
In effect, they declared that no father’s child could ever be held
safe while the Court’s decision stood, and that even the best of men
were to be stripped of the right to protect their own pre-natal baby
daughters and sons from death by abortion.
A father’s child should not be killed by anyone. It is just plain
wrong.
Justice William Rehnquist expressed exactly that position in his
dissent from the Danforth decision. Referring to the state law that
the Supreme Court had just struck down, Rehnquist wrote:
“The Act provided that a married woman may not obtain an abortion
without her husband's consent. The Court strikes down this statute
in one sentence. It says that 'since the State cannot proscribe
abortion the State cannot delegate authority to any particular person,
even the spouse, to prevent abortion’.”
“However, the State was not delegating to the husband the power to
vindicate the State's interest…it was instead recognizing that the
husband has an interest of his own…which should not be extinguished
by the unilateral decision of the wife.”
“A father's interest in having a child may be unmatched by any other
interest in his life.”
It is no small irony that the federalization of child-support collection
was instituted exactly one year before the Danforth decision. It is
in no small measure incongruous that the two have co-existed ever
since:
How can a rational legal system contend that a father is liable for
eighteen years of financial obligation by virtue of his procreative
role in conception, while simultaneously disenfranchising his right
to save his own pre-born child’s life, a right also rooted in his
procreative role in conception? Having both conditions co-exist in
law is not only unparalleled hypocrisy, but is a violation of the
USA’s most central principle, that rights and responsibilities must
be wed and inextricable.
In 1776, this principle was encapsulated by the phrase that the Founding
Fathers used to launch the Revolutionary War:
“No taxation without representation.”
Additionally, fathers simply love their sons and daughters and want
them to live. Fathers have an innate need to protect their childrens
lives. This core fact of fatherhood, this immortally deep paternal
instinct, is the foundation of civilization itself. The United
States Supreme Court has wrapped judicial chains around that instinct,
which is the most devastating thing it could have done to the human
race.
A nation that tells fathers not to protect their daughters and sons
is a nation telling fathers not to love their daughters and sons.
Such a nation is proactively engineering its own social collapse,
an assertion to which observers of the devolution of America’s moral
character over the last three decades bear regretful witness.
Abortion is the ultimate cruelty. We have, thanks to ultrasound technology,
full-motion video of adorable prenatal babies very humanly sucking
their thumbs, sleeping, stretching, reaching out…again thanks to modern
ultrasound technology, we have full-motion video of those babies being
dismembered until dead: “abortions”, the artificial termination of
the babies’ innocent, defenseless lives in the most unspeakably violent
way.
I doubt that any of the tens of thousands of young people reading
this essay would ever subject themselves to such a painful fate. If
empathy lives yet in this world, they would not subject a baby to
it either. With that fact in mind, kindly look deep into the angelic,
sinless, faithful, trusting eyes of an innocent little baby and ask
yourself the critical question: “Is the baby’s life worth less than
your own life is?”
Infants are without fault of character. They deserve to be held,
fed, rocked, kept warm, and protected from any who would do them harm.
Their lives began with their conception, and developed day by day
ever since. As pre-natal infants in the first nine months of their
lives, from their conceptions to their births, their right for legal
protection from those who would do them harm is the most basic of
all civil rights. As a civilization, we need to protect infants pre-natally.
Indeed, the obligation to do so is humanity’s most sacred trust. Abortion
breaks that trust, and betrays the perfect innocence of the prenatal
baby who very simply wants to live.
America must restore that trust. Infants, from conception forward,
must be protected in law.
Earlier, we clarified the social impact of two key United States
Supreme Court decisions on the life versus death issue of abortion.
And in that simple phrase, “life versus death,” is found the incomparably
ancient and primordial nature of this ongoing war.
Moral absolutes do exist, and they are eternally immutable. They
don’t falter at the Orwellian behest of cultural winds, but are forever
timeless and unchanging.
Because of that, and solely because of that, there will always be
things worth faithfully protecting: life, love, faith, family, innocence,
innocents…
Much of what will happen on the abortion-death versus right-to-life
issue from this point forward hinges upon the current race for the
Presidency of these United States and the changes that our 2005-2009
President will most certainly make to the roster of the Supreme Court.
The shape of this nation gets decided in Campaign ’04, which is in
progress right now.
In tandem with the political, we have the personal. Procreation is
as personal as it gets. In our society, decades of devolution have
wrought a culture of death.
Instituting a culture of life is a task charged only to the strong,
only to those with the fortitude to walk uphill, to walk against the
winds that set the Winter in challenge against the Spring.
Pro-lifers willingly do this in order to defend millions of vulnerable
little pre-born babies who are given no voice in civilization save
by those who care about their lives.
Real political progressives are pro-life, pro-fatherhood, and pro-family.
Progressive social change on this issue requires those who care about
protecting humanity’s most endangered and innocent members to stand
up for them bravely and firmly: in romantic relationships, in families,
in Campus Christian groups, in local churches, in political parties,
and in America’s courts and legislatures.
The pro-life trust is to strongly protect tiny, innocent, frightened
little pre-natal babies from ever suffering the horrific violence
of abortion death.
For Christians and atheists alike, there can be no greater calling.
In the end, protecting our sons and daughters is the foundation of
what it means to be a human being. Protecting our sons and daughters
is mankind’s most fundamental right.
It is also mankind’s deepest responsibility.
Isaiah Flair